{"title": ["FA Cup: Theo Walcott scores 100th Arsenal goal - BBC Sport", "Wayne Rooney not guaranteed to stay at Manchester United, says Jose Mourinho - BBC Sport", "These are the London Fashion Week designers shaping the way we see gender - BBC News", "Meet the plasterers, teachers and builders taking on Arsenal - BBC News", "FA Cup: Sutton players will go down in history for FA Cup run, says manager - BBC Sport", "Which pop stars deserve a blue plaque in their honour? - BBC News", "Stormzy: 'Awards don't define you' - BBC News", "Unilever: Profile of a consumer goods giant - BBC News", "FA Cup: Wayne Shaw's pie resignation 'a nightmare' says Sutton boss Paul Doswell - BBC Sport", "Kim Jong-nam killing: Footage shows airport 'attack' - BBC News", "Angelina Jolie exclusive: Cooking bugs in Cambodia - BBC News", "Singapore 'fire rainbow' cloud phenomenon lights up sky - BBC News", "Battle for western Mosul will be toughest fight yet - BBC News", "Syria crisis: Footage shows girl 'Aya' rescue - BBC News", "Ireland target first Test appearance in 2018 - BBC Sport", "Pie-eating Sutton keeper Wayne Shaw resigns - BBC News", "Former US law chief leads Uber probe - BBC News", "Migrant workers join labour boycott - BBC News", "Reality Check: Are business rates figures misleading? - BBC News", "The riddle of Europe's election season - BBC News", "Sutton United 0-2 Arsenal - BBC Sport", "European Indoor Championships 2017: Laura Muir heads GB line-up - BBC Sport", "The house changing lives in memory of Amy Winehouse - BBC News", "Shopper's lucky escape as car crashes through window - BBC News", "Thistlecrack: Gold Cup favourite out for season with tendon tear - BBC Sport", "Who spends $150,000 on a kid's birthday party? - BBC News", "Newspaper review: The '£1m bomber' and 'storm chaos' - BBC News", "Driver proves Southampton Central station parking bays 'too small' - BBC News", "Cake or biscuit? Why Jaffa Cakes excite philosophers - BBC News", "How drug development is speeding up in the cloud - BBC News", "Ordsall Chord: Manchester rail link bridge lifted into place - BBC News", "Campaign for David Bowie Brixton memorial launched - BBC News", "Pie-eating Sutton keeper Wayne Shaw resigns as FA launches investigation - BBC Sport", "Gibraltar seizes Russian's superyacht over German debt claim - BBC News", "The woman who's baking big news stories - BBC News", "Facing the robotic revolution - BBC News", "Met Police Commissioner: Who will be Britain's next top cop? - BBC News", "Scientists 'solve' the ketchup problem - BBC News", "The rising risk of showdown between Trump and Iran - BBC News", "Owen Coyle: Blackburn boss leaves club by mutual consent - BBC Sport", "Delray Beach Open: Kyle Edmund through as Adrian Mannarino defaults - BBC Sport", "Newcastle United 2-0 Aston Villa - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Sexton 'set to start for Ireland' against France - BBC Sport", "Sutton v Arsenal: Wayne Shaw's pie-eating investigated by FA & Gambling Commission - BBC Sport", "Trafficking victim: 'I was raped and blindfolded underground' - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: 'Business rates battle' and the £6bn bill - BBC News", "'Stubborn' swan blocks M27 at Fareham - BBC News", "Slippery bottle solves ketchup problem - BBC News", "Steve Hewlett: Eddie Mair announces broadcaster's death - BBC News", "Manchester City 5-3 Monaco - BBC Sport", "7 moments to watch for at the Brits 2017 - BBC Music", "Kevin Pietersen says IPL auction is a 'slap in Test cricket's face' - BBC Sport", "Hospital saves dehydrated baby hippo at Cincinnati Zoo - BBC News", "Chancellor Hammond’s £10bn of green shoots - BBC News", "Olympics & Paralympics 2020: Badminton among seven sports to lose funding appeals - BBC Sport", "Ohio policeman helps girl, 10, with maths homework - BBC News", "'Enemies of the people': Trump remark echoes history's worst tyrants - BBC News", "David Baddiel on impact of dad's dementia - BBC News", "Snapchat of Muslim teacher escorted off US-bound plane - BBC News", "Light plane crashes into Melbourne shopping complex - BBC News", "How far into the red will the NHS sink? - BBC News", "British Cycling gave 'light-touch version of report' - UK Sport chief - BBC Sport", "Ben Stokes: IPL record as Rising Pune Supergiants buy England all-rounder - BBC Sport", "Trump state visit: Protests outside as MPs debate petition - BBC News", "Louvre visitors in lockdown after attack - BBC News", "Hockney redesigns the Sun's logo - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: Vegetable 'rationing' and lawyer under attack - BBC News", "Our changing attitudes to chimpanzees - BBC News", "Pregnant Beyonce 'to perform at Grammys' - BBC News", "Six Nations: World-beating crowds to flock to rugby showpiece - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Eddie Jones says England v France will be 'war' at Twickenham - BBC Sport", "Bungling burglar caught after getting stuck in a bathroom window - BBC News", "Trump travel ban: Pakistanis fear they're next - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: Louvre attack and MP's China cash 'link' - BBC News", "Dubai Desert Classic: Players criticise play suspension - BBC Sport", "Davis Cup: Why competition is loved but needs to change - BBC Sport", "The new property trap affecting thousands - BBC News", "Davis Cup, Canada v Great Britain: Dan Evans beats Denis Shapovalov in opener - BBC Sport", "How virtual reality is transforming art - BBC News", "Tiger Woods pulls out of Dubai Desert Classic after back spasm - BBC Sport", "Vegetable shortage: How to cope as supermarkets ration lettuces - BBC News", "Preserving memories: Readers share their time capsule stories - BBC News", "Blue Peter time capsule dug up 33 years early - BBC News", "Past the point of no-return - BBC News", "Workington police blow up 'suspicious' car parked by fellow officers - BBC News", "I'll dress like a woman when you act like a president, police officer tells Trump - BBC News", "Davis Cup, Canada v Great Britain: Vasek Pospisil levels after Dan Evans wins opener - BBC Sport", "Frank Lampard v Steven Gerrard: Who did you say was better? - BBC Sport", "'I have tuberculosis in my brain' - BBC News", "Beyonce celebrates motherhood with more pregnancy photos - BBC News", "Ferry port worker from Greenock wins £4.3m in lottery - BBC News", "The iceberg lettuce and broccoli crisis - BBC News", "British Antarctic Survey's Halley base on the move - BBC News", "Bob Stanley on tracing the pre-history of pop music - BBC News", "Rafael Benitez: Newcastle United boss remains committed to job - BBC Sport", "David Cameron and Arnold Schwarzenegger on Snapchat - BBC News", "The man with a titanium chest - BBC News", "Wada has 'full confidence' in McLaren report despite 'discrepancies' - BBC Sport", "Ciaran Maxwell: The Marine who turned to terror - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: The six key questions Eddie Jones is facing - BBC Sport", "Aidy Boothroyd takes permanent charge of England Under-21 team - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Pundits pick winner and key players - BBC Sport", "If I ever get pregnant, I won't be an 'expectant mother' - BBC News", "Tube ticket office row resolved but at what cost? - BBC News", "'I signed £1.3bn rent contract by mistake' - BBC News", "France Galop female jockey rule criticised by Turner, Gordon and Kirby - BBC Sport", "Can a 'superpower force field' protect us from hackers? - BBC News", "Ozzy Osbourne on fame and reality TV - BBC News", "Is Sweden's deputy PM trolling Donald Trump in Facebook photo? - BBC News", "French security forces gather at Louvre after attack - BBC News", "Glasgow's Willow Tea Rooms owner wins name battle - BBC News", "Dubai Tour: Marcel Kittel punched by Andriy Grivko during stage three - BBC Sport", "What's the hidden message behind Beyonce's pregnancy photo? - BBC News", "Christian charity abuse claims: Daughter 'didn't see anything' - BBC News", "Does Shiraz wine come from Iran? - BBC News", "Quiz of the week's news - BBC News", "Should you have two bins in your bathroom? - BBC News", "Saido Berahino: Striker served eight-week FA suspension - Mark Hughes - BBC Sport", "Goat predicts winner of Italy v Wales Six Nations match - BBC News", "IPL: Kevin Pietersen pulls out of Indian Premier League auction - BBC Sport", "Trump's telephone un-diplomacy - BBC News", "Canada mint worker who hid $130,000 of gold in rectum jailed - BBC News", "Supreme Court Neil Gorsuch: Who is Trump's nominee? - BBC News", "Skydivers compete in Wind Games 2017 - BBC News", "Saido Berahino: Striker not my problem anymore - West Brom boss Tony Pulis - BBC Sport", "Sculptors sought for Ben Nevis Ford Model T sculpture - BBC News", "Jose Mourinho: Man Utd players 'must realise they need to win' - BBC Sport", "The man hiding tenners round Cardiff - BBC News", "BBC presenter Emily Maitlis in 'torture' tweet mix-up - BBC News", "Sheffield City Council 'failed to stop predatory sex offender' - BBC News", "Huddersfield Town 3-1 Brighton & Hove Albion - BBC Sport", "Frank Lampard: Former Chelsea & England midfielder retires - BBC Sport", "Freezing tips - BBC Food", "Six Nations 2017: Johnny Sexton joins opener absentees - BBC Sport", "Who are the nurdle hunters on Britain's beaches? - BBC News", "Alpine Ski World Championships: Display plane causes camera crash - BBC Sport", "The corpse factory and the birth of fake news - BBC News", "Call for brain donors - BBC News", "British queuing and 'the power of six' - BBC News", "Jeanette Winterson: 'Character of London will disappear' - BBC News", "Is school funding the next crisis? - BBC News", "Jose Mourinho: Manchester United boss learned from 'throwing away' FA Cup games - BBC Sport", "Reality Check: Are there more winners than losers on business rates? - BBC News", "Best-selling Miffy the rabbit author Dick Bruna dies - BBC News", "Arsene Wenger: Key questions on Arsenal's manager future - BBC Sport", "Welsh Open 2017: Judd Trump beats Barry Hawkins in final frame to reach semi-final - BBC Sport", "Premiership: Gloucester 31-23 Saracens - BBC Sport", "Germany leads fightback against fake news - BBC News", "Quiz of the week's news - BBC News", "'Keep sex abuse dad's name off my wedding certificate' - BBC News", "Russian media no longer dazzled by Trump - BBC News", "Tech regret: Five inventors who questioned their creations - BBC News", "Forbidden love: The WW2 letters between two men - BBC News", "What do pop star autographs reveal about their personality? - BBC Music", "Kim Jong-nam: Many questions after airport murder - BBC News", "Should you take your phone to the United States? - BBC News", "Brisbane pedestrians corner high speed chase driver - BBC News", "Mesut Ozil: Arsenal forward is being made scapegoat, says agent - BBC Sport", "Trump's most extraordinary news conference - BBC News", "Comedian: Should I mention disability when online dating? - BBC News", "Harry Redknapp: Tottenham to win title within four years, says former Spurs boss - BBC Sport", "Sutton v Arsenal: Clem tours the Gunners' dressing room - BBC Sport", "Arsene Wenger: Arsenal boss says he will manage next season - BBC Sport", "'Fake news city' is now pumping out odd Facebook videos - BBC News", "Sandown: Amputee jockey Guy Disney takes historic victory in Royal Artillery Gold Cup - BBC Sport", "The man who dresses up as his ancestors - BBC News", "Liam Kelly: Leyton Orient captain banned for six games for ball boy 'shove' - BBC Sport", "Anna LeBaron: How I escaped my father's murderous polygamous cult - BBC News", "British troops given guide to Estonian strip clubs - BBC News", "Manchester United 3-0 Saint-Etienne - BBC Sport", "Newspaper headlines: Business rates and woolly mammoths in the news - BBC News", "Donald Trump aide accuses BBC of 'fake news' - BBC News", "Disability Works: Breaking down barriers in business - BBC News", "Little Britain star Matt Lucas awarded honorary degree by Bristol University - BBC News", "Somalia faces 'catastrophic' famine if drought continues - BBC News", "The secret world of Russia football hooligans - BBC News", "Fridge doors: What does yours say about you? - BBC News", "New York Fashion Week: Six talking points - BBC News", "Donald Trump press conference: Highlights - BBC News", "NHS apology to Devon woman over wrong 111 questions - BBC News", "Pakistan's bloody week: Who is really to blame? - BBC News", "Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg lays out his vision - BBC News", "Gabriel Jesus: Manchester City forward 'may be out for season' - BBC Sport", "Trump to BBC correspondent Jon Sopel: Here's another beauty - BBC News", "PJ Crowley: Trump unveils a subtle but vital shift in US policy - BBC News", "Gent 1-0 Tottenham Hotspur - BBC Sport", "Six Nations: Scotland's Josh Strauss ruled out of rest of campaign - BBC Sport", "Is Iceland now cool? - BBC News", "Zealandia: Is there an eighth continent under New Zealand? - BBC News", "150-year-old lost wedding dress returned to family - BBC News", "Life after death? Resurrecting a modern ruin - BBC News", "Six Nations: Eddie Jones' England don't know how to lose - BBC Sport", "Adele fluffs cover of George Michael's Fastlove - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: Crime and punishment divides press - BBC News", "Joe Root: Is England Test captain the right Alastair Cook replacement? - BBC Sport", "Protests in France over alleged police rape - BBC News", "Joe Root: New England captain ready made for role - Michael Vaughan - BBC Sport", "Alec Baldwin's Trump act fools newspaper - BBC News", "Bell ringing is a 'contact sport' - BBC News", "Who was the only English Premier League scorer this weekend? - BBC Sport", "Japanese women on their 'angry panda' moment - BBC News", "Oroville Dam: Aerials show damaged overspill - BBC News", "Romanian protesters use mobile phones to protest - BBC News", "Drugs testing in football: At least 39% of EFL players not tested in 2015-16 - BBC Sport", "The man with millions of jobs that need doing - BBC News", "Is Saudi Arabia on the cusp of change? - BBC News", "Grammys 2017: The rise of Chance the Rapper - BBC News", "Trump welcomes Trudeau to White House - BBC News", "Baftas 2017: In pictures - BBC News", "Your stories: Breastfeeding toddlers - BBC News", "Reality Check: Are pensioners better off than workers? - BBC News", "Swansea City 2-0 Leicester City - BBC Sport", "Thousands evacuate Californian homes amid dam collapse fears - BBC News", "Joe Root: England name batsman Test captain, succeeding Alastair Cook - BBC Sport", "CEO Secrets: Airport boss 'lives in goldfish bowl' - BBC News", "Isle of Man ferry crash forces cancellation of UK services - BBC News", "Tom Arscott: Sale Sharks winger leaked team information to Bristol - RFU - BBC Sport", "The children of Oxford Children's Hospital's craniofacial unit - BBC News", "Corbyn guessing game rises to new pitch - BBC News", "Cheltenham Festival brings in four alcoholic drinks rule - BBC News", "Australia bushfires: 'Most buildings' in community affected - BBC News", "Waking up under the surgeon's knife - BBC News", "The woman whose mum inspired her to track ethical food - BBC News", "The angry red panda that is Japan's new working woman - BBC News", "Worcester Cathedral bell-ringer thrown in air - BBC News", "Beyonce 'epitome of talent', say famous fans - BBC News", "Alpine World Ski Championships: Luca Aerni wins combined gold by 0.01 secs - BBC Sport", "What makes this New Zealand beach a whale graveyard? - BBC News", "Tesco multi-buy offers widely out of date, BBC investigation finds - BBC News", "Grammys mix hip flasks with politics - BBC News", "Leicester City manager Claudio Ranieri threatens changes after Swansea defeat - BBC Sport", "Bournemouth 0-2 Manchester City - BBC Sport", "'Conned trying to get my children back' - BBC News", "The clock is ticking for Spotify - BBC News", "Lance Armstrong: Banned cyclist fails to block £79m US government lawsuit - BBC Sport", "Leaked sex tapes provoked woman's suicide - BBC News", "The Netherlands' populist moment? - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Jeremy Guscott on England, Wales, Scotland & Ireland - BBC Sport", "Has Facebook slipped up with VR? - BBC News", "Wedding dresses passed onto the next generation - BBC News", "What is the 'gig' economy? - BBC News", "Trudeau 'won't lecture Trump on refugees' - BBC News", "Reporting undercover from the prison front line - BBC News", "Antonio Conte: Chelsea boss unhappy with Jose Mourinho's 'joking' - BBC Sport", "China drone 'performance' may be record-breaker - BBC News", "Lego fans build giant Cambridgeshire Great Fen wetland model - BBC News", "Six Nations: Scotland 'chucked it away' against France - Stuart Hogg - BBC Sport", "Money via mobile: The M-Pesa revolution - BBC News", "BBC Sport - Scores, Fixtures, News - Live Sport", "The town with the world's most romantic postmark - BBC News", "Co-op Bank running out of options - BBC News", "Nathan Dyer: Swansea City winger out for season with Achilles injury - BBC Sport", "Council apology over trees planted on football pitch - BBC News", "How Burnley exposed a weak spot in Chelsea's defence - Ruud Gullit - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: France 22-16 Scotland - BBC Sport", "Local voting figures shed new light on EU referendum - BBC News", "Claudio Ranieri: Leicester City back Italian coach despite poor form - BBC Sport", "Shopping robots on the march in Ocado - BBC News", "Subway commuters scrub anti-Semitic graffiti - BBC News", "Alastair Cook was 'drained' by England captaincy - Andrew Strauss - BBC Sport", "Public finances and the shadow of Osborne - BBC News", "Is a 'seven-day NHS' feasible? - BBC News", "Joost van der Westhuizen: Matt Dawson on friend & former South Africa scrum-half - BBC Sport", "Housing White Paper: Radical or feeble? - BBC News", "NBA: LeBron James' 'jaw-dropping' three-pointer - BBC Sport", "Newspaper headlines: John Bercow 'silences' Donald Trump - BBC News", "Use talk not tech to tame your children's online habits - BBC News", "'Don't let parents have social media' - BBC News", "Steve Hewlett marries as cancer treatment halted - BBC News", "Joe Root is 'obvious candidate' for England captaincy says James Anderson - BBC Sport", "Reality Check: How much could NHS recover from foreign patients? - BBC News", "Lord Coe denies misleading select committee MPs over doping in Russia - BBC Sport", "Joost van der Westhuizen: Former South Africa captain dies, aged 45 - BBC Sport", "Honours quiz - the people who refused, returned or lost medals and awards - BBC News", "Reality Check: Will it be easier to build on green belt? - BBC News", "The woman trying to revive a century-old leather brand - BBC News", "The mind of Donald Trump - BBC News", "Sean Spicer: 'I don't think the President owns a bathrobe' - BBC News", "Thousands executed in prison, claims charity - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: Barack Obama kitesurfing and Brexit hard talk - BBC News", "Obamas to get Freedom of the City of Dublin - BBC News", "Six Nations: England 'can compare' to New Zealand - Sam Warburton - BBC Sport", "CV test pits Adam against Mohamed - BBC News", "'Last Concorde' makes its final journey - BBC News", "Why bother with seven-day GP opening? - BBC News", "Wigan Athletic 2-2 Norwich City - BBC Sport", "Towering teen Brandon Marshall closes in on record - BBC News", "Freddy Tylicki: Paralysed rider has no regrets on becoming a jockey - BBC Sport", "Laura Muir hails strength of Scottish athletics with another record in her sights - BBC Sport", "A look inside Number 10 at Theresa May's top team - BBC News", "NHS Health Check: How one GP practice tackled waiting times - BBC News", "Alastair Cook: Playing under new England captain 'not an issue' following resignation - BBC Sport", "Petition started for retiring officer to keep his police dog - BBC News", "Huge meteor blazes across US skies - BBC News", "The village aiming to create a white utopia - BBC News", "Paris tries to seduce the City - BBC News", "Obama chills with Branson: What about other post-presidency wind downs? - BBC News", "Russia to remain suspended for World Athletics Championships - BBC Sport", "The president and the bathrobe - BBC News", "David Hockney on Tate Britain retrospective - BBC News", "Crossing the border - BBC News", "Retiring mole catcher in Calderdale seeks apprentice - BBC News", "Alastair Cook had toughest ride as skipper - Jonathan Agnew - BBC Sport", "Ticket inspector attack man jailed after train assault filmed - BBC News", "Donald Trump, media saviour - BBC News", "Sascha Kindred: Paralympic swimming champion announces retirement - BBC Sport", "FA reforms: Chairman Greg Clarke to quit if government does not back plans - BBC Sport", "The Ocado warehouse run by robots - BBC News", "Will robots replace workers by 2030? - BBC News", "NHS Health Check: 'How NHS changed our lives' - BBC News", "Women's Sport Week backed by minister Tracey Crouch - BBC Sport", "Comedian says Simon Cowell 'furious' about BGT prank - BBC News", "How to own a home by the age of 25 - BBC News", "Muppet gaffe by Breakfast presenter Dan Walker - BBC News", "What will the BP board decide to pay Bob Dudley this year? - BBC News", "Oscars class photo: Seven things we spotted - BBC News", "Davis Cup: Denis Shapovalov fined over Great Britain default - BBC Sport", "Traditional retail markets and the battle to stay afloat - BBC News", "Did Trump win because his name came first in key states? - BBC News", "Kim Jong-nam death: Unravelling the mystery - BBC News", "Women's Six Nations 2017: Scotland 15-14 Wales - BBC Sport", "Chelsea 3-1 Swansea City - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: 'I wanted three points, kickers said no' - Wales captain Jones - BBC Sport", "Is the reporter an endangered species? - BBC News", "Crystal Palace 1-0 Middlesbrough - BBC Sport", "Jose Mourinho defends Claudio Ranieri by blaming Leicester players - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Scotland 29-13 Wales - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Vern Cotter hails Scotland's second-half show against Wales - BBC Sport", "Can community projects offer a way to affordable care? - BBC News", "Kyle Edmund loses to Milos Raonic in Delray Beach Open quarter-finals - BBC Sport", "Claudio Ranieri: Sacked Leicester manager says his 'dream died' - BBC Sport", "Reality Check: Has a governing party gained a by-election since 1878? - BBC News", "Claudio Ranieri: Jamie Vardy says speculation over manager's sacking 'untrue' - BBC Sport", "Gavin McDonnell loses on points to Rey Vargas in WBC world title fight - BBC Sport", "Inverness Caledonian Thistle 2-1 Rangers - BBC Sport", "Why is RBS still losing money? - BBC News", "Should 'catfishing' be made illegal? - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Scotland v Wales starts pivotal weekend - BBC Sport", "Andrew Trimble: Rugby, religion and me - BBC News", "Lizzy Yarnold wins Skeleton World Championships bronze - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Ireland 19-9 France - BBC Sport", "Wayne Rooney not guaranteed to stay at Manchester United, says Jose Mourinho - BBC Sport", "Tinder wants AI to set you up on a date - BBC News", "Helen Bailey: A life shaped by death - BBC News", "Stormzy: 'Awards don't define you' - BBC News", "The housemates who found a lost plane wreck - BBC News", "FA Cup: Wayne Shaw's pie resignation 'a nightmare' says Sutton boss Paul Doswell - BBC Sport", "The people with arthritis struggling to work - BBC News", "Women's Six Nations: Scotland bring in Jemma Forsyth v Wales - BBC Sport", "Plea for Irish army to fight 'aggressive' rhododendrons - BBC News", "What is a weather bomb? - BBC Weather", "Champions League: Man City must score at Monaco or go out, says Pep Guardiola - BBC Sport", "Pie-eating Sutton keeper Wayne Shaw resigns - BBC News", "Former US law chief leads Uber probe - BBC News", "Italian village torn apart by slow-moving landslide - BBC News", "Brit Awards: Skepta and Bowie expected to win prizes - BBC News", "FA Cup: Chelsea v Man Utd and Tottenham v Millwall live on BBC One - BBC Sport", "Katy Perry talks to BBC Radio 1's Nick Grimshaw - BBC News", "US children's hospital helps save life of baby hippo - BBC News", "Helping hand Skegness PCSO 'Just doing my job' - BBC News", "UK braces for Storm Doris - BBC Weather", "Reality Check: Are business rates figures misleading? - BBC News", "The riddle of Europe's election season - BBC News", "The Premier League Show: Juan Mata fancies role as presenter - BBC Sport", "Footage released of Harrison Ford's plane near-miss - BBC News", "View from a plane of giant Antarctic ice crack - BBC News", "Couples speak of pain over spouse visa rules - BBC News", "Wayne Rooney: Man Utd captain's agent in China to discuss potential move - BBC Sport", "Saint-Etienne 0-1 Manchester United (agg 0-4) - BBC Sport", "Ryan Sidebottom: Yorkshire's ex-England seamer to retire at end of the season - BBC Sport", "Medieval McDonald's in Shrewsbury set to close - BBC News", "'Foreign spouse income deportation would leave us homeless' - BBC News", "Newspaper review: The '£1m bomber' and 'storm chaos' - BBC News", "Who spends $150,000 on a kid's birthday party? - BBC News", "Driver proves Southampton Central station parking bays 'too small' - BBC News", "Wheelchair user creates mannequin to target disabled consumers - BBC News", "How drug development is speeding up in the cloud - BBC News", "Driverless cars - no halfway house? - BBC News", "Ordsall Chord: Manchester rail link bridge lifted into place - BBC News", "Unilever stung into action by Kraft - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: George North to start for Wales against Scotland - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: England leave out Jonathan Joseph for Italy game - BBC Sport", "How Milo's downfall split the alt-right - BBC News", "Helen Bailey murder: Fiance Ian Stewart found guilty - BBC News", "UK supermarkets: Why don't they sell more British food? - BBC News", "Duchess of Cambridge plays pool on Torfaen Wales visit - BBC News", "Met Police Commissioner: Who will be Britain's next top cop? - BBC News", "Adam & Simon Yates to miss Tour de France to focus on Giro d'Italia - BBC Sport", "In pictures: Miniature worlds - BBC News", "Hibernian 3-1 Heart of Midlothian - BBC Sport", "Princess Diana's changing fashion style explored in exhibition - BBC News", "Tomorrow's cities - nightmare vision of the future? - BBC News", "Transgender dolls and all that Jazz - BBC News", "Lewis Hamilton believes new Formula 1 cars will be a 'massive challenge' - BBC Sport", "'Red alert' as Chile wildfires blaze - BBC News", "Brit Awards 2017: Ceremony highlights - BBC News", "Trafficking victim: 'I was raped and blindfolded underground' - BBC News", "Women missing out on workplace pensions, says charity - BBC News", "Owen Farrell on Jonny Wilkinson's advice and winning his 50th England cap - BBC Sport", "Manchester City 5-3 Monaco - BBC Sport", "7 moments to watch for at the Brits 2017 - BBC Music", "Seven Earth-sized planets found orbiting single star - BBC News", "Adam Lallana: Liverpool midfielder extends contract until 2020 - BBC Sport", "Sergio Aguero: Man City striker proves he is priceless against Monaco - BBC Sport", "Chancellor Hammond’s £10bn of green shoots - BBC News", "Ohio policeman helps girl, 10, with maths homework - BBC News", "Donald Trump's golf hobby under scrutiny with Clinton tweet - BBC News", "NHS 'rapped' over leaks of A&E data - BBC News", "British Cycling gave 'light-touch version of report' - UK Sport chief - BBC Sport", "London Fashion Week: The highlights - BBC News", "Fifty Shades of Grey blamed for fire brigade sex game callout rise - BBC News", "Adele fluffs cover of George Michael's Fastlove - BBC News", "Donald Trump vs Justin Trudeau: The political handshake - BBC News", "Joe Root: Is England Test captain the right Alastair Cook replacement? - BBC Sport", "Tom Hardy on CBeebies is mums' Valentine's Day delight - BBC News", "Crossing the border: US migrants seek refugee status in Canada - BBC News", "Russia looms large behind Flynn affair - BBC News", "Joe Root: New England captain ready made for role - Michael Vaughan - BBC Sport", "Trudeau meets Trump: A diplomatic balancing act - BBC News", "MoD owes soldiers duty of care - father - BBC News", "The most 'swiped-right' man on dating app Tinder - BBC News", "Joe Root: Natural cricketer has a huge job as captain - Jonathan Agnew - BBC Sport", "Which countries love and hate Valentine's Day? - BBC News", "Oroville Dam: Aerials show damaged overspill - BBC News", "India tiger cubs 'adopt' stuffed toy after losing mother - BBC News", "James Nesbitt: Hair transplants helped me get better roles - BBC News", "Council apology over trees planted on football pitch - BBC News", "The man with millions of jobs that need doing - BBC News", "Is Saudi Arabia on the cusp of change? - BBC News", "Laura Kenny and husband Jason expecting first child - BBC Sport", "Rolls Royce – The good, the bad and the ugly - BBC News", "India to launch 104 satellites in single space mission - BBC News", "Police job candidate arrested for drinking and driving - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: Brexit consequences debated in the press - BBC News", "Where is Nigeria's president? - BBC News", "'Recognising the symptoms of toxic shock syndrome saved my life' - BBC News", "Reality Check: Are pensioners better off than workers? - BBC News", "Things not to say to a single person - BBC Three", "Iceland police tell drivers to stop staring at sky - BBC News", "Isle of Man ferry crash forces cancellation of UK services - BBC News", "The children of Oxford Children's Hospital's craniofacial unit - BBC News", "Norwich City 2-2 Newcastle United - BBC Sport", "Trump-Russia inquiry: How did we get here? - BBC News", "Is losing top job in 24 days a record? - BBC News", "Cheltenham Festival brings in four alcoholic drinks rule - BBC News", "Most swiped-right man on Tinder - BBC News", "Fireworks and faith at general synod - BBC News", "Gabriel Jesus: Manchester City forward has broken metatarsal - BBC Sport", "Waking up under the surgeon's knife - BBC News", "Monte Carlo Hillman Imp rally car's £50k auction hope - BBC News", "Breast cancer survivors model lingerie at New York Fashion Week - BBC News", "Retired army sniffer dog inspires readers - BBC News", "Worcester Cathedral bell-ringer thrown in air - BBC News", "EU split over pace of reform as crisis bites - BBC News", "Laureus Awards 2017: Bolt, Biles, Rosberg, Atherton & Leicester among winners - BBC Sport", "Now you can get an 'adult toy' with your burger meal - BBC News", "Gabriel Jesus: Manchester City hopeful on forward's injury - BBC Sport", "Champions League: Barcelona's trip to PSG headlines last-16 fixtures - BBC Sport", "Can your smartphone make you a safer driver? - BBC News", "Reunited after 65 years, and more remarkable love letters - BBC News", "Bournemouth 0-2 Manchester City - BBC Sport", "George Ford: Leicester Tigers re-sign England fly-half, Freddie Burns joins Bath - BBC Sport", "'Conned trying to get my children back' - BBC News", "French Vogue gets first transgender cover star - BBC News", "Iranian Oscar contender to screen in Trafalgar Square before ceremony - BBC News", "The boy who watched IS beheading videos - BBC News", "Birmingham man makes videos to sign pop lyrics for deaf people - BBC News", "Welsh Open 2017: Ronnie O'Sullivan and Mark Selby make second round - BBC Sport", "Fed Cup: Great Britain to face Romania on clay in Constanta - BBC Sport", "Lance Armstrong: Banned cyclist fails to block £79m US government lawsuit - BBC Sport", "The Netherlands' populist moment? - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Jeremy Guscott on England, Wales, Scotland & Ireland - BBC Sport", "New York Fashion Week: Breast cancer survivors hit the catwalk - BBC News", "Ben Stokes: England need to make people 'fall in love' with Test cricket again - BBC Sport", "West Indies v England: Steven Finn replaces David Willey for one-day series - BBC Sport", "Trudeau 'won't lecture Trump on refugees' - BBC News", "Meet Austria's Vegetable Orchestra - BBC News", "Reality Check: Is the UK spending 2% of GDP on defence? - BBC News", "Co-op Bank running out of options - BBC News", "Council apology over trees planted on football pitch - BBC News", "Cybersecurity: Queen opens centre to protect against attacks - BBC News", "Six Nations heavy artillery: Picamoles, Hughes, Furlong, O'Brien, Te'o, Roberts - BBC Sport", "How firms should best react to a crisis - BBC News", "Trump presidency: Opponents boosted by 'rage donation' - BBC News", "Trump travel ban: What did we learn from the ruling? - BBC News", "Trump's America: Are things as bad as he says? - BBC News", "Mariya Savinova: Russian London 2012 gold medallist stripped of title - BBC Sport", "The health service taking a holistic approach to patients - BBC News", "Germany warns the City over Brexit risk - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: George North - I'll be fit to face Scotland - BBC Sport", "Prince's music is coming to streaming services this Sunday - BBC News", "UK child refugee effort challenge: The background - BBC News", "NHS Health Check: How Germany's healthcare system works - BBC News", "Raymond Briggs: Lifetime award for The Snowman creator - BBC News", "Pimlico Plumbers boss Charlie Mullins on losing legal case - BBC News", "Arsene Wenger: Arsenal manager 'coming to the end', says Ian Wright - BBC Sport", "Football Association of Wales to appeal against Fifa poppy fine - BBC Sport", "What is the 'gig' economy? - BBC News", "Musicals come last in sexy music poll - BBC News", "The health workers that help patients stay at home - BBC News", "River Wear's new bridge in Sunderland is lifted into place - BBC News", "Why did Turkey hold a referendum? - BBC News", "FA reform: MPs pass 'no confidence' motion after House of Commons debate - BBC Sport", "Leicester City: What has changed at the Premier League champions? - BBC Sport", "Australian man stuck in a pond for hours recounts ordeal - BBC News", "Rangers: Mark Warburton replaced as manager ahead of Scottish Cup tie - BBC Sport", "Sheffield Wednesday 3-0 Birmingham City - BBC Sport", "Window fall killed Shergar jockey Walter Swinburn - BBC News", "Kellyanne Conway criticised for Ivanka Trump product promotion - BBC News", "Domestic abuse victim's hands severed by ex-partner - BBC News", "The archaeological legacy of the Crossrail excavations - BBC News", "Mason Foulkes: Darts wonderkid, aged 4 - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: NHS 'returns to 1950s' and tax bills to rise - BBC News", "NHS Health Check: 'Most staff have been attacked', doctor says - BBC News", "The Republican women learning to love Trump - BBC News", "Orphaned dik-dik raised by keepers - BBC News", "The NHS v German healthcare - BBC News", "Tiger Woods withdraws from two tournaments with 'ongoing back spasms' - BBC Sport", "George and Amal Clooney 'expecting twins', Matt Damon confirms - BBC News", "Hunt not in the mood to make excuses - BBC News", "Ghana presidential fleet 'missing 200 cars' - BBC News", "Reality Check: Did government go back on its word on child refugees? - BBC News", "'Record numbers' of dolphins detected off west Scotland - BBC News", "Kaziranga: The park that shoots people to protect rhinos - BBC News", "Russian choir celebrates Diplomats' Day in song - BBC News", "Quiz of the week's news - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Wales-England is highlight of second weekend - BBC Sport", "Has Tom Hiddleston damaged his brand? - BBC News", "Storm Desmond: Back home a year after floods - BBC News", "NHS Health Check: What's causing hospital delays? - BBC News", "Bradley Lowery: Sunderland players visit terminally ill boy in hospital - BBC Sport", "Will Brexit bill face trouble in the Lords? - BBC News", "Jeremy Hunt responds to BBC's NHS Health Check - BBC News", "How do fake news sites make money? - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Scotland flanker John Barclay replaces Ryan Wilson for France match - BBC Sport", "Shopkeeper fights off gunman in Walsall - BBC News", "Does by-election pain await Labour in its heartlands? - BBC News", "Fed Cup: GB through to play-off after beating Turkey to top Group C - BBC Sport", "England: Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Stuart Broad meet with Strauss - BBC Sport", "Should I worry about arsenic in my rice? 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- BBC Sport", "Mo Farah's coach Alberto Salazar may have breached drug rules - leaked Usada report - BBC Sport", "Andy Murray says he is 'ready to go' for Dubai Tennis Championships - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: England 36-15 Italy - BBC Sport", "Manny Pacquiao and Amir Khan to fight in April - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Italy tactic wasn't rugby, says England coach Eddie Jones - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Vern Cotter hails Scotland's second-half show against Wales - BBC Sport", "Can community projects offer a way to affordable care? - BBC News", "Mo Farah says he is 'a clean athlete' and 'frustrated' by leaked report on Salazar - BBC Sport", "Mo Farah's trainer rejects allegations he broke anti-doping rules - BBC Sport", "Tottenham Hotspur 4-0 Stoke City - BBC Sport", "Claudio Ranieri: Jamie Vardy says speculation over manager's sacking 'untrue' - BBC Sport", "Gavin McDonnell loses on points to Rey Vargas in WBC world title fight - BBC Sport", "Should 'catfishing' be made illegal? 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What did he mean? - BBC News", "The health workers that help patients stay at home - BBC News", "Six Nations: Will Georgia always be on the outside looking in? - BBC Sport", "Barack Obama goes kitesurfing with Richard Branson - BBC News", "Sports Illustrated: Christie Brinkley praised for posing aged 63 - BBC News", "Why carmakers have the most to fear from protectionism - BBC News", "The late Hans Rosling tells the modern world's story - BBC News", "Face of Orkney's St Magnus reconstructed - BBC News", "Reality Check: Will it be easier to build on green belt? - BBC News", "Family rescued from dangling cliff-edge truck - BBC News", "Sean Spicer: 'I don't think the President owns a bathrobe' - BBC News", "Winter Olympics 2018: Team GB medal chances 'exciting' - BBC Sport", "Newspaper headlines: Barack Obama kitesurfing and Brexit hard talk - BBC News", "Six Nations: England 'can compare' to New Zealand - Sam Warburton - BBC Sport", "Fire rages through shanty town - BBC News", "The Moorside: Sheridan Smith drama praised by critics - BBC News", "Fed Cup: Heather Watson & Johanna Konta help Great Britain to win over Portugal - BBC Sport", "'Last Concorde' makes its final journey - BBC News", "Leicester City 3-1 Derby County - BBC Sport", "Wigan Athletic 2-2 Norwich City - BBC Sport", "FA Cup: Derby level against Leicester through Abdoul Camara - BBC Sport", "Miriam Gonzalez Durantez: Don't call me Mrs Clegg - BBC News", "Mark Simpson: How Karen Matthews made a fool out of me - BBC News", "What really happened when Swedes tried six-hour days? - BBC News", "NHS Health Check: How one GP practice tackled waiting times - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Wales' Faletau fit for England, North and Biggar doubtful - BBC Sport", "Obama chills with Branson: What about other post-presidency wind downs? - BBC News", "Why Dutch populist Geert Wilders is scenting victory - BBC News", "Rowan Cheshire: Concussions left me with panic attacks, but Olympic hope remains - BBC Sport", "Does India have a problem with false rape claims? - BBC News", "The president and the bathrobe - BBC News", "Coming to America: One translator's harrowing journey - BBC News", "Tara Palmer-Tomkinson describes a privileged life - BBC News", "Crossing the border - BBC News", "Shirley Collins: Star who couldn't sing for 30 years is nominated for two awards - BBC News", "Philipp Lahm: Bayern Munich caught cold by German World Cup winner's announcement - BBC Sport", "FA Cup: Wilfred Ndidi's wonder strike puts Leicester ahead - BBC Sport", "Bank warns 'lax financial rules' are a route to failure - BBC News", "FA Cup: Demarai Gray's moment of magic for Leicester - BBC Sport", "Tiger Woods: Injuries and operations mean I'll never feel great - BBC Sport", "Snow church for Russia village - BBC News", "Fireman, wrestler, politician? What do footballers do in retirement? - BBC Sport", "Rosy signs for quality journalism market - BBC News", "Donald Trump, media saviour - BBC News", "Sidmouth summerhouse crashes over cliff edge - BBC News", "NHS Health Check: 'How NHS changed our lives' - BBC News", "Indian cricketer Mohit Ahlawat scores T20 triple hundred - BBC Sport", "Tara Palmer-Tomkinson - the ultimate It girl in pictures - BBC News", "Davis Cup: Denis Shapovalov 'very lucky' umpire Arnaud Gabas not seriously injured - BBC Sport", "Reality Check: Who gets social care and who pays for it? - BBC News", "World Grand Prix: Mark Selby loses to Martin Gould in Preston - BBC Sport", "Comedian says Simon Cowell 'furious' about BGT prank - BBC News", "How to own a home by the age of 25 - BBC News", "The gruelling life of a Kurdish smuggler - BBC News", "Obituary: Alan Simpson - BBC News", "Deal or no deal? - BBC News", "What will the BP board decide to pay Bob Dudley this year? - BBC News", "Oscars class photo: Seven things we spotted - BBC News", "Leicester City 0-3 Manchester United - BBC Sport", "Arsene Wenger: Arsenal boss has 'serious thinking to do' on his future - Ian Wright - BBC Sport", "Trump travel ban: Mike Pence defends president - BBC News", "Manchester City 2-1 Swansea City - BBC Sport", "Week in pictures - BBC News", "Iran shows off air defences - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: England's Eddie Jones aims to improve after France win - BBC Sport", "Retailers 'left behind' as consumers change habits - BBC News", "Davis Cup, Canada v Great Britain: Jamie Murray & Dom Inglot win doubles - BBC Sport", "Growing waiting times threat to NHS - BBC News", "Nigel Owens asked to be chemically castrated - BBC News", "Heather Knight column: Women's Big Bash League, Taylor Swift and the oldest living Test cricketer - BBC Sport", "Hull City 2-0 Liverpool - BBC Sport", "St Johnstone 2-5 Celtic - BBC Sport", "US Yemen raid: Bomb-making video 'mix-up' - BBC News", "Black Sabbath final gig: Osbourne 'a doddering god' - BBC News", "Six Nations: Are Eddie Jones and Owen Farrell the new Ferguson and Keane? - BBC Sport", "Davis Cup: Belgium beat Germany but celebrate early in late drama - BBC Sport", "Ukraine: Inside civilians' living nightmare - BBC News", "Africa Cup of Nations 2017: Cameroon 2-1 Egypt - BBC Sport", "Scotland 27-22 Ireland: Scots 'finding ways to win' - Vern Cotter - BBC Sport", "Government plans laser pen clampdown - BBC News", "Met Police chief Hogan-Howe horse patrol at Chelsea-Arsenal - BBC News", "Fire engulfs recycling centre in Milton, Stoke-on-Trent - BBC News", "Rio's iconic Maracana stadium abandoned - BBC News", "Ancient shopping list found as stately home renovated - BBC News", "Quad series: Australia beat England in dramatic finale to win series - BBC Sport", "Jessica Ennis-Hill takes part in Sheffield park run - BBC News", "Sheffield City Council 'failed to stop predatory sex offender' - BBC News", "The people behind famous phrases - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: MPs call to 'shut down Iraq abuse inquiry' - BBC News", "10 things we didn't know last week - BBC News", "Super Bowl LI guide: Patriots v Falcons - Osi Umenyiora and Jason Bell's lowdown - BBC Sport", "Phnom Penh's No 1 ladies taxi scooter agency - BBC News", "Trump travel ban: Iraqi family boards flight to JFK - BBC News", "Winning photos of great gardens - BBC News", "Victory over France secures a record breaking 15th straight victory for England - BBC Sport", "Davis Cup: Denis Shapovalov defaulted for hitting umpire with a ball, GB beat Canada - BBC Sport", "Trump protests: LGBTQ rally in New York - BBC News", "Guy Hamilton: The James Bond director who went undercover in WW2 - BBC News", "South Africa v Sri Lanka: Bees stop play in third ODI - BBC Sport", "Teenager's Facebook search uncovers missing mother's death - BBC News", "Black Sabbath: 'We hated being a heavy metal band' - BBC News", "What numbers make up Super Sunday? - BBC News", "Vegetable shortage: How to cope as supermarkets ration lettuces - BBC News", "United Arab Emirates sees rare snowfall - BBC News", "2017 Six Nations: Scotland 27-22 Ireland - BBC Sport", "Caught between Trump and a liberal place - BBC News", "Louvre attack: Friend defends 'respectful' suspect - BBC News", "Five cult films audiences hate to love - BBC News", "Rex Tillerson is the opposite of Donald Trump. Will he have any sway? - BBC News", "Germany's Bundesbank plays down Brexit 'punishment' - BBC News", "Oscars 2017: The moment La La Land producers realised they hadn't won - BBC News", "Garth Crooks' team of the week: Ibrahimovic, Gabbiadini, Kane, Fabregas, Kante - BBC Sport", "Reality Check: Is a £3.7bn cut in disabled funding planned? - BBC News", "The multi-millionaire who is giving his business away - BBC News", "Oscars: Iranian winner Asghar Farhadi blasts Trump travel ban - BBC News", "Leicester City 3-1 Liverpool - BBC Sport", "Oscars 2017: And the Academy Award goes to... diversity - BBC News", "Brexit: Sir John Major's warning to Theresa May - BBC News", "EFL Cup final: Does Manchester United win make season a success? - BBC Sport", "Oscars 2017: Sartorial protests on the Hollywood stage - BBC News", "Craig Shakespeare: Leicester caretaker boss in frame to get job on permanent basis - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Italy's tactics test England - and Eddie Jones' patience - to the limit - BBC Sport", "'Ready for honesty?' An anonymous message site takes off - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: England 36-15 Italy - BBC Sport", "Why Moonlight shone on Oscar night - BBC News", "Kim Jong-nam: What is South Korea's take on the killing? - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Italy tactic wasn't rugby, says England coach Eddie Jones - BBC Sport", "Manchester United: Zlatan Ibrahimovic says he will wait and see on his future at club - BBC Sport", "Oscars 2017: Emma Stone reacts to La La Land's best picture miss - BBC News", "Lewis Hamilton fastest for Mercedes on first pre-season testing day - BBC Sport", "Why do people swear? - BBC News", "David Wagner and Garry Monk banned by FA after touchline altercation - BBC Sport", "In pictures: Fashion at the Oscars - BBC News", "Mo Farah's trainer rejects allegations he broke anti-doping rules - BBC Sport", "School funding plans spark passionate protests - BBC News", "Oscars 2017: 'It's like witnessing a fire!' - BBC News", "England Lions: Liam Livingstone matches feat achieved by Kevin Pietersen - BBC Sport", "David Haye & Tony Bellew kept apart at Liverpool news conference - BBC Sport", "The Brits hurrying to become German citizens - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Jeremy Guscott on Scotland, England, Wales & Ireland - BBC Sport", "Oscars 2017: On the Vanity Fair red carpet - BBC News", "England v Italy: World Rugby says it is 'too early to speculate on law changes' - BBC Sport", "'Well-behaved' pupils get to leave school earlier - BBC News", "Government adviser walks away from child protection plans - BBC News", "Mariya Savinova: Russian London 2012 gold medallist stripped of title - BBC Sport", "Egypt's '500kg' woman arrives at India hospital for surgery - BBC News", "Super League: Castleford Tigers 44-16 Leigh Centurions - BBC Sport", "Arsene Wenger: Arsenal manager 'coming to the end', says Ian Wright - BBC Sport", "The bounty hunter from Brechin - BBC News", "Liverpool 2-0 Tottenham Hotspur - BBC Sport", "Quiz of the week's news - BBC News", "Six Nations - Italy v Ireland: Garry Ringrose scores blistering try - BBC Sport", "BBC News - The NHS in Winter", "Six Nations: England boss Eddie Jones says 'no more get-out-of-jail-free cards' - BBC Sport", "Boy, 16, dies after Harehills street stabbing - BBC News", "Public parks in danger of falling into neglect, warn MPs - BBC News", "Donald Trump considers issuing new travel ban - BBC News", "Arsene Wenger: I gave no indication on Arsenal future - BBC Sport", "Nato says viral news outlet is part of \"Kremlin misinformation machine\" - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: End of Iraq abuse unit welcomed - BBC News", "Kaziranga: The park that shoots people to protect rhinos - BBC News", "Week in pictures: 4-10 February 2017 - BBC News", "Fed Cup: Great Britain beat Croatia to reach World Group II play-offs - BBC Sport", "Oates Vic Open: England's Melissa Reid takes two-shot lead - BBC Sport", "CCTV captures moment slurry tank crashes through garden wall - BBC News", "Hunt not in the mood to make excuses - BBC News", "Sheffield Wednesday 3-0 Birmingham City - BBC Sport", "Trump's America: Are things as bad as he says? 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- BBC News", "Has Facebook slipped up with VR? - BBC News", "War photographer Ron Haviv: 'I won't die for a photo' - BBC News", "What is the 'gig' economy? - BBC News", "Russian choir celebrates Diplomats' Day in song - BBC News", "How I overcame anorexia and bulimia - BBC News", "Highlights: Celtic 6-0 Inverness CT, Scottish Cup - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Dylan Hartley on Cardiff's unbelievable atmosphere - BBC Sport", "Vintage spy gadgets go under hammer - BBC News", "Six Nations: Wales 16-21 England - BBC Sport", "Spy gadgets up for auction - BBC News", "Rangers: Mark Warburton replaced as manager ahead of Scottish Cup tie - BBC Sport", "Brexit: Labour rebels to receive formal written warning - BBC News", "Pimlico Plumbers boss Charlie Mullins on losing legal case - BBC News", "Love Actually cast to reunite for Comic Relief film - BBC News", "The pull of Putin - BBC News", "Donald Trump vs Justin Trudeau: The political handshake - BBC News", "Crossing the border: US migrants seek refugee status in Canada - BBC News", "Russia looms large behind Flynn affair - BBC News", "The most 'swiped-right' man on dating app Tinder - BBC News", "Paris St-Germain 4-0 Barcelona - BBC Sport", "Carli Lloyd: Manchester City Women sign Fifa World Player on short-term deal - BBC Sport", "Which countries love and hate Valentine's Day? 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What did he mean? - BBC News", "Nabila Ramdani: 'Marine Le Pen won't do a Donald' - BBC News", "Daily Politics coverage of PMQs - BBC News", "BBC iPlayer - BBC News", "Bank warns 'lax financial rules' are a route to failure - BBC News", "Super League: St Helens 6-4 Leeds Rhinos - BBC Sport", "The Body Shop: What went wrong? - BBC News", "Reality check: Is Donald Trump's cabinet facing historic obstruction? - BBC News", "Has Tom Hiddleston damaged his brand? - BBC News", "Snow church for Russia village - BBC News", "World Ski Championships: Haitian skier competes in Switzerland - BBC Sport", "Welsh Open 2017: Judd Trump to face Stuart Bingham in final - BBC Sport", "FA Cup: Harry Kane fires Tottenham ahead against Fulham - BBC Sport", "World Club Series: Warrington Wolves 27-18 Brisbane Broncos - BBC Sport", "Princess Diana's changing fashion style explored in exhibition - BBC News", "Welsh Open 2017: Stuart Bingham beats Judd Trump 9-8 in final - BBC Sport", "Hidden Figures: How Nasa hired its first black women 'computers' - BBC News", "FA Cup: Harry Kane completes hat-trick for Tottenham at Fulham - BBC Sport", "Newspaper headlines: Russia 'assassination plot' and Brexit 'limbo' - BBC News", "Ray Woodhall survives 27 heart attacks after walking football - BBC News", "Blackburn Rovers 1-2 Manchester United - BBC Sport", "FA Cup: Lincoln City win is 'football miracle' on dramatic fifth-round day - BBC Sport", "FA Cup: Fulham 0-3 Tottenham Hotspur highlights - BBC Sport", "Spencer Oliver on boxer Michael Watson, after suspected car-jack - BBC News", "Welsh council staff 'should check pets for microchips' - BBC News", "Jeanette Winterson: 'Character of London will disappear' - BBC News", "Dan Vickerman: Former Australia lock dies at the age of 37 - BBC Sport", "Don Juan role shows David Tennant 'as you've never seen him before' - BBC News", "Bill Gates: Pathogen could kill 30m in a year - BBC News", "Thousands vie for Naked Man title in Japan - BBC News", "Wrong national anthem played for gold medallists - BBC News", "FA Cup: Marcus Rashford equalises for Manchester United with cool finish - BBC Sport", "Paris unrest: Banlieue youths see French state as the enemy - BBC News", "Sister of Paris police 'rape victim' speaks out - BBC News", "South Africa's amputee homeless artist - BBC News", "Trump: 'I'm only worried he's gonna give me a kiss' - BBC News", "Facebook bereavement leave: How long is long enough? 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- BBC News", "World Ski Championships 2017: Dave Ryding in contention after opening run - BBC Sport", "Rich rewards in tricky treasure hunt - BBC News", "Lincoln City: How Imps became FA Cup legends - BBC Sport", "Trump travel ban: Mike Pence defends president - BBC News", "Local voting figures shed new light on EU referendum - BBC News", "Subway commuters scrub anti-Semitic graffiti - BBC News", "Alastair Cook was 'drained' by England captaincy - Andrew Strauss - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017: Italy 7-33 Wales - BBC Sport", "John Bercow defends plans to axe Commons clerks' wigs - BBC News", "Super Bowl LI: New England Patriots recover from record deficit to beat Atlanta Falcons - BBC Sport", "BIBA to introduce head scans following Mike Towell and Nick Blackwell incidents - BBC Sport", "Putting the fun into funeral - BBC News", "Fire engulfs recycling centre in Milton, Stoke-on-Trent - BBC News", "Queen's Sapphire Jubilee: 41-gun salute marks 65 years on the throne - BBC News", "Tractor used as 'taxi for drunk mates' in Ripley - BBC News", "Phnom Penh's No 1 ladies taxi scooter agency - BBC News", "Trump protests: LGBTQ rally in New York - BBC News", "Guy Hamilton: The James Bond director who went undercover in WW2 - BBC News", "Super Bowl LI: Unforgettable moments including Rio Ferdinand & Lady Gaga - BBC Sport", "United Arab Emirates sees rare snowfall - BBC News", "Louvre attack: Friend defends 'respectful' suspect - BBC News", "Lady Gaga dives into Super Bowl history - BBC News", "Joost van der Westhuizen: Former South Africa captain dies, aged 45 - BBC Sport", "NHS care: Iris Sibley's six-month wait to leave hospital - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Biggar and North injuries worry Wales - BBC Sport", "The mind of Donald Trump - BBC News", "France election: Hard-left candidate Melenchon appears by hologram - BBC News", "Super Bowl LI: New England Patriots beat Atlanta Falcons in greatest comeback - BBC Sport", "Alastair Cook: England captain resigns after a record 59 Tests - BBC Sport", "CV test pits Adam against Mohamed - BBC News", "Leicester City: Kasper Schmeichel says title defence has been 'embarrassing' - BBC Sport", "Formula 1: Nico Rosberg wanted Fernando Alonso as his Mercedes replacement - BBC Sport", "Ciaran Maxwell: The Marine who turned to terror - BBC News", "Migrants take public transport to Calais - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: England's 'horrendous' record in Wales puzzles Eddie Jones - BBC Sport", "Tube ticket office row resolved but at what cost? - BBC News", "Petition started for retiring officer to keep his police dog - BBC News", "Huge meteor blazes across US skies - BBC News", "Paris tries to seduce the City - BBC News", "Why don't more African Americans become organ donors? - BBC News", "Russia to remain suspended for World Athletics Championships - BBC Sport", "Davis Cup: Denis Shapovalov 'ashamed' after default for hitting umpire with a ball - BBC Sport", "David Hockney on Tate Britain retrospective - BBC News", "Is the Eagle Huntress really a documentary? - BBC News", "Moussa Dembele hat-trick rounds off superb Celtic team move - BBC Sport", "Alastair Cook had toughest ride as skipper - Jonathan Agnew - BBC Sport", "Southern rail: Could drivers reject deal? - BBC News", "Why the falling cost of light matters - BBC News", "CCTV of Russell Square knife attacker released - BBC News", "Romanian protesters light up huge rally with phone torches - BBC News", "Leicester City 0-3 Manchester United - BBC Sport", "Ticket inspector attack man jailed after train assault filmed - BBC News", "High security: The man who protects our bank accounts - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: Health tourists crackdown 'to save £500m' - BBC News", "Super Bowl LI: Julian Edelman's miracle catch for New England Patriots - BBC Sport", "Man City: Why Gabriel Jesus is not ready to replace Sergio Aguero yet - BBC Sport", "Growing waiting times threat to NHS - BBC News", "Should you have two bins in your bathroom? - BBC News", "Africa Cup of Nations 2017: Cameroon 2-1 Egypt - BBC Sport", "The coolest president? - BBC News", "Donald Trump UK visit opposed by Commons speaker - BBC News", "Sapphire Jubilee: The Queen makes history - BBC News", "Alastair Cook: England's record breaker - BBC Sport", "The people behind famous phrases - BBC News", "Romania protesters demand more - BBC News", "Caught between Trump and a liberal place - BBC News", "Davis Cup: Denis Shapovalov fined over Great Britain default - BBC Sport", "Traditional retail markets and the battle to stay afloat - BBC News", "Kim Jong-nam: How N Korea could have used potent VX to kill - BBC News", "Why some fear a shortage of immigrants - BBC News", "Are we tough enough on animal cruelty? - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Ben Te'o to start for England against Italy - BBC Sport", "The secret of why we like to eat chocolate - BBC News", "Women's Six Nations 2017: Scotland 15-14 Wales - BBC Sport", "IAAF clears three Russians to compete as neutral athletes - BBC Sport", "Who are Britain’s jihadists? - BBC News", "'How my mother's organ donations brought new friendships' - BBC News", "Lewis Hamilton: Mercedes's new car given debut at Silverstone - BBC Sport", "Claudio Ranieri: Leicester caretaker boss denies player revolt - BBC Sport", "Jose Mourinho defends Claudio Ranieri by blaming Leicester players - BBC Sport", "Jasvinder Sanghera: I ran away to escape a forced marriage - BBC News", "Six Nations: Warburton, Stander, Itoje, Barclay, O'Brien, Nowell - BBC Sport", "Claudio Ranieri: Leicester manager sacking made Gary Lineker 'shed a tear' - BBC Sport", "Copeland by-election: Three major problems for Labour - BBC News", "The town halls trying to tackle Trump's agenda - BBC News", "Reality Check: Has a governing party gained a by-election since 1878? - BBC News", "Skeleton: Lizzy Yarnold fourth overnight in World Championships - BBC Sport", "Claudio Ranieri: Sacked Leicester manager says his 'dream died' - BBC Sport", "Tottenham 2-2 Gent (agg 2-3) - BBC Sport", "Fernando Alonso: McLaren driver says podium finishes are not enough in 2017 - BBC Sport", "Claudio Ranieri: Leicester got sacking wrong - Gary Lineker - BBC Sport", "Jack Barsky: The KGB spy who lived the American dream - BBC News", "Inverness Caledonian Thistle 2-1 Rangers - BBC Sport", "Why is RBS still losing money? 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Resurrecting a modern ruin - BBC News", "Six Nations: Eddie Jones' England don't know how to lose - BBC Sport", "Week in pictures: 4-10 February 2017 - BBC News", "The clock is ticking for Spotify - BBC News", "'Well-behaved' pupils get to leave school earlier - BBC News", "Fed Cup: Great Britain beat Croatia to reach World Group II play-offs - BBC Sport", "Catwalk models put cancer in spotlight - BBC News", "Nazi-era German anthem at tennis tournament sparks outrage - BBC News", "Campaign to preserve 'Queen's' Malta cathedral - BBC News", "Has Facebook slipped up with VR? - BBC News", "Baftas 2017: In pictures - BBC News", "Wedding dresses passed onto the next generation - BBC News", "Egypt's '500kg' woman arrives at India hospital for surgery - BBC News", "Isle of Man night sky is a stargazer's dream - BBC News", "Your stories: Breastfeeding toddlers - BBC News", "Protests in France over alleged police rape - BBC News", "Hunt not in the mood to make excuses - BBC News", "What is the 'gig' economy? - BBC News", "Swansea City 2-0 Leicester City - BBC Sport", "How I overcame anorexia and bulimia - BBC News", "Speaker John Bercow: I voted to remain in EU - BBC News", "Burnley 1-1 Chelsea - BBC Sport", "Alec Baldwin's Trump act fools newspaper - BBC News", "China drone 'performance' may be record-breaker - BBC News", "Lego fans build giant Cambridgeshire Great Fen wetland model - BBC News", "Entertainment pictures of the week: 5-11 February 2017 - BBC News", "Corbyn guessing game rises to new pitch - BBC News", "Jonny Dymond tracks President Trump's third week - BBC News", "BBC News - The NHS in Winter", "Does by-election pain await Labour in its heartlands? - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: Trump to 'snub Parliament' - BBC News", "Six Nations: England boss Eddie Jones says 'no more get-out-of-jail-free cards' - BBC Sport", "The town with the world's most romantic postmark - BBC News", "How Burnley exposed a weak spot in Chelsea's defence - Ruud Gullit - BBC Sport", "Sport must do more to fight homophobia, says report - BBC Sport", "Arsene Wenger: I gave no indication on Arsenal future - BBC Sport", "Vintage spy gadgets go under hammer - BBC News", "Spy gadgets up for auction - BBC News", "New Zealand whales: Frantic bid to save stranded mammals - BBC News", "Nato says viral news outlet is part of \"Kremlin misinformation machine\" - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: France 22-16 Scotland - BBC Sport", "The female soldiers serving in Israel's army - BBC News", "Liverpool 2-0 Tottenham: Jurgen Klopp excited by 'perfect Sunday' after win - BBC Sport", "Germany leads fightback against fake news - BBC News", "Aberdeen 7-2 Motherwell - BBC Sport", "Welsh Open 2017: Ronnie O'Sullivan knocked out by Mark Davis in second round - BBC Sport", "Venus Williams: ESPN's Doug Adler to sue over sacking - BBC Sport", "Arsene Wenger: Decision on Arsenal manager's future at end of season - BBC Sport", "Trump's first month in 90 seconds - BBC News", "The man who dresses up as his ancestors - BBC News", "Analysis: What does Nato want from Trump? - BBC News", "Trump and Netanyahu - in 90 seconds - BBC News", "Miranda Hart gears up for Annie role - BBC News", "Manchester United 3-0 Saint-Etienne - BBC Sport", "Love Actually cast to reunite for Comic Relief film - BBC News", "US actor Ashton Kutcher urges end to child sexual exploitation - BBC News", "Redrawing women: Tackling sexism in comic books - BBC News", "British queuing and 'the power of six' - BBC News", "The pull of Putin - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: Clergy backing for gay marriages makes the news - BBC News", "London Dungeon apologises for 'upsetting' tweets - BBC News", "Norway's seal hunters hang up their clubs - BBC News", "NHS apology to Devon woman over wrong 111 questions - BBC News", "Brisbane pedestrians corner high speed chase driver - BBC News", "Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg lays out his vision - BBC News", "Mesut Ozil: Arsenal forward is being made scapegoat, says agent - BBC Sport", "Arsene Wenger: Arsenal boss must be considering future - Martin Keown - BBC Sport", "Trump to BBC correspondent Jon Sopel: Here's another beauty - BBC News", "PJ Crowley: Trump unveils a subtle but vital shift in US policy - BBC News", "Meet Laura Muir, GB's latest track sensation training to be a vet - BBC Sport", "Gent 1-0 Tottenham Hotspur - BBC Sport", "Little Britain star Matt Lucas awarded honorary degree by Bristol University - BBC News", "Argentine player chases and fights steward after cup defeat - BBC Sport", "Running ants: Why scientists built an insect treadmill - BBC News", "Bayern Munich 5-1 Arsenal in memes - BBC Sport", "Donating my kidney saved two lives - BBC News", "You're never alone at the Museum of Broken Relationships - BBC News", "Winston Churchill's views on aliens revealed in lost essay - BBC News", "The secret world of Russia football hooligans - BBC News", "Undercover policing inquiry delayed amid new row - BBC News", "Is Iceland now cool? - BBC News", "Donald Trump: 'I inherited a mess' - BBC News", "BBC iPlayer - BBC News", "Is Nokia bringing back the 3310 and who would want a retro phone? - BBC News", "Is Russia's Arctic presence 'aggressive?' - BBC News", "New York Fashion Week: Six talking points - BBC News", "Mark Clattenburg: Premier League official quits to take up job in Saudi Arabia - BBC Sport", "Uefa to launch study into link between playing football and dementia - BBC Sport", "Google CEO Sundar Pichai writes back to girl, 7, who wants a job - BBC News", "Championship clubs agree 'in principle' to use goalline technology - BBC Sport", "British and Irish Lions: Three former captains back Alun Wyn Jones as skipper - BBC Sport", "Daily Politics coverage of PMQs - BBC News", "Why the merger of Essilor and Luxottica matters - BBC News", "Sia asks Kanye West to go fur-free as he unveils Yeezy Season 5 - BBC News", "Why eating a lot of fat is worse for men than women - BBC News", "Bayern Munich 5-1 Arsenal - BBC Sport", "FA Cup: Theo Walcott scores 100th Arsenal goal - BBC Sport", "Grace Hopper's compiler: Computing's hidden hero - BBC News", "The house changing lives in memory of Amy Winehouse - BBC News", "Great Yarmouth church saved by 'exploded' bric-a-brac - BBC News", "These are the London Fashion Week designers shaping the way we see gender - BBC News", "Driverless Roborace car crashes at speed in Buenos Aires - BBC News", "Toto Wolff & Niki Lauda sign new Mercedes deals until 2020 - BBC Sport", "Meet the plasterers, teachers and builders taking on Arsenal - BBC News", "How female explorers face challenges of south pole trek - BBC News", "Facing the robotic revolution - BBC News", "Which pop stars deserve a blue plaque in their honour? - BBC News", "Baby food with a touch of the Mediterranean - BBC News", "Islamic State battle: View from Iraq's front line - BBC News", "Sweden Twitter account: 'Nothing happened here' - BBC News", "Slippery bottle solves ketchup problem - BBC News", "CEO Secrets: Sex toy boss shares his tips - BBC News", "Unilever: Profile of a consumer goods giant - BBC News", "Princess Diana's changing fashion style explored in exhibition - BBC News", "Welsh Open 2017: Stuart Bingham beats Judd Trump 9-8 in final - BBC Sport", "Angelina Jolie on Cambodia, film and family - BBC News", "Kim Jong-nam killing: Footage shows airport 'attack' - BBC News", "Angelina Jolie exclusive: Cooking bugs in Cambodia - BBC News", "FA Cup: Lucas Perez puts Arsenal ahead against non-league Sutton - BBC Sport", "Scientists 'solve' the ketchup problem - BBC News", "Breast cancer diagnosed after breastfeeding problem - BBC News", "Blackburn Rovers 1-2 Manchester United - BBC Sport", "Sir David Attenborough to present Blue Planet sequel - BBC News", "Manchester City v Monaco: Pep Guardiola says critics will 'kill' City if they lose - BBC Sport", "Angelina Jolie on family, film and Cambodia - BBC News", "Battle for western Mosul will be toughest fight yet - BBC News", "America's extremist battle: antifa v alt-right - BBC News", "Spencer Oliver on boxer Michael Watson, after suspected car-jack - BBC News", "Syria crisis: Footage shows girl 'Aya' rescue - BBC News", "Cake or biscuit? Why Jaffa Cakes excite philosophers - BBC News", "Don Juan role shows David Tennant 'as you've never seen him before' - BBC News", "Exploring Glasgow's secret 'ghost station' - BBC News", "Thousands vie for Naked Man title in Japan - BBC News", "Wrong national anthem played for gold medallists - BBC News", "Olympics & Paralympics 2020: Badminton among seven sports to lose funding appeals - BBC Sport", "Sister of Paris police 'rape victim' speaks out - BBC News", "This 14-year-old made the best Facebook Messenger chatbot - BBC News", "'Enemies of the people': Trump remark echoes history's worst tyrants - BBC News", "Newcastle United 2-0 Aston Villa - BBC Sport", "David Baddiel on impact of dad's dementia - BBC News", "Migrant workers join labour boycott - BBC News", "Iran 'will not instigate hostilities' - foreign minister - BBC News", "Trump: 'I'm only worried he's gonna give me a kiss' - BBC News", "Facebook bereavement leave: How long is long enough? - BBC News", "Could Glasgow Prestwick airport host UK's first spaceport? - BBC News", "First scheduled steam train service used by 5,500 people - BBC News", "FA Cup: Best fifth-round goals include Rudy Gestede's acrobatic volley - BBC Sport", "Newspaper headlines: Brexit 'blackmail' and 'plotting' peers - BBC News", "Sutton United 0-2 Arsenal - BBC Sport", "How far into the red will the NHS sink? - BBC News", "Gibraltar seizes Russian's superyacht over German debt claim - BBC News", "Sutton v Arsenal: Clem tours the Gunners' dressing room - BBC Sport", "Hitler's phone sold for $243,000 at US auction - BBC News", "Munich Security Conference: Europe's concerns with Trump government far from over - BBC News", "FA Cup quarter-final draw: Lincoln City to play Arsenal - BBC Sport", "SpaceX successfully launches rocket after Saturday setback - BBC News", "Ben Stokes: IPL record as Rising Pune Supergiants buy England all-rounder - BBC Sport", "US student grades his ex-girlfriend's apology letter and posts it on Twitter - BBC News", "World Club Challenge: Wigan Warriors 22-6 Cronulla Sharks - BBC Sport", "Perfect storm: The agency for disabled talent - BBC News", "Roadkill and lawnmower exhibitions: The weird ways museums are finding funding - BBC News", "Leicester rugby players push ambulance stuck in mud - BBC News", "The cost of Punjab's heroin 'epidemic' - BBC News", "Halal snack pack: The kebab that defined Australia in 2016 - BBC News", "Dan Roan asks whether welfare should come before winning - BBC Sport", "Six Nations 2017 - England v France: Elliot Daly starts on wing - BBC Sport", "Hockney redesigns the Sun's logo - BBC News", "Newspaper headlines: Vegetable 'rationing' and lawyer under attack - BBC News", "Our changing attitudes to chimpanzees - BBC News", "Chelsea Cameron wrote letter thanking drug addict parents - BBC News", "James Ibori: Nigerian ex-governor challenges UK conviction - BBC News", "West Ham United 0-4 Manchester City - BBC Sport", "Weekend camping resets body clock - BBC News", "British cancer patient trapped in Dubai: 'I'm bleeding profusely' - BBC News", "The new property trap affecting thousands - BBC News", "Brexit: When MPs voted to back Article 50 bill - BBC News", "Marking 20 years of European crash testing - BBC News", "Trevor Bayliss: India defeat shows England must learn to play spin - BBC Sport", "Thailand displays biggest ever haul of pangolin scales - BBC News", "IPL 2017: Ben Stokes tipped to land 'big bucks' deal by Yuvraj Singh - BBC Sport", "Reality Check: Was pollution worse in London than Beijing? - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Rhys Webb returns as Wales make five changes for Italy game - BBC Sport", "Davis Cup: Dan Evans plays Denis Shapovalov in Great Britain v Canada opener - BBC Sport", "Find out how LA officers rescue exploited children - BBC News", "Rare 'lava firehose' from Hawaii's Kilauea volcano - BBC News", "Preserving memories: Readers share their time capsule stories - BBC News", "Blue Peter time capsule dug up 33 years early - BBC News", "The art of a President Trump state visit - BBC News", "Non-Muslim Americans wear hijab in solidarity for World Hijab Day - BBC News", "Workington police blow up 'suspicious' car parked by fellow officers - BBC News", "Past the point of no-return - BBC News", "Transgender pupil treated 'like freak' by school - BBC News", "British Antarctic Survey's Halley base on the move - BBC News", "Jose Mourinho: Man Utd manager says rules are different for him - BBC Sport", "BBC iPlayer - BBC News", "Daniel Radcliffe 'yet to see' Harry Potter and the Cursed Child - BBC News", "How long should you stay in one job? - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: Josh Strauss in for Scotland to play Ireland - BBC Sport", "Newcastle fan's train journey sees 56-ticket split - BBC News", "Six Nations 2017: The six key questions Eddie Jones is facing - BBC Sport", "Australia PM Malcolm Turnbull on Trump call: 'Call ended courteously' - BBC News", "Pregnant Beyonce photo mesmerises America - BBC News", "Manchester United 0-0 Hull City - BBC Sport", "If I ever get pregnant, I won't be an 'expectant mother' - BBC News", "'I signed £1.3bn rent contract by mistake' - BBC News", "Trump unapologetic on 'tough phone calls' - BBC News", "Six Nations: England's George Kruis out of France match with injury - BBC Sport", "Trump cabinet: Rex Tillerson hails 'extraordinary opportunity' - BBC News", "The man who sold his back to an art dealer - BBC News", "Dubai Tour: Marcel Kittel punched by Andriy Grivko during stage three - BBC Sport", "Kris Marshall swaps Death In Paradise for family time - BBC News", "Daily Politics coverage of PMQs - BBC News", "Romania clashes flare over corruption decree - BBC News", "Christian charity abuse claims: Daughter 'didn't see anything' - BBC News", "Drake offers free gig after Travis Scott fell into a hole - BBC News", "Will Spain's coal belt survive through online barter? - BBC News", "Cameroon 2-0 Ghana - BBC Sport", "JK Rowling hits back over threats to burn Harry Potter books - BBC News", "Australia sharks: Campaigners call for end to nets - BBC News", "NHS staff trigger Google cyber-defences - BBC News", "Manchester United 0-0 Hull City: Jose Mourinho walks out of interview - BBC Sport", "Entrepreneurs Nick Jenkins and Sarah Willingham are leaving Dragons' Den - BBC News", "Beyonce pregnant: Couple 'blessed' to be having twins - BBC News", "Huddersfield Town 3-1 Brighton & Hove Albion - BBC Sport", "Frank Lampard: Former Chelsea & England midfielder retires - BBC Sport", "Berkeley student anger at right-wing speaker invitation - BBC News", "Freezing tips - BBC Food", "Six Nations 2017: Johnny Sexton joins opener absentees - BBC Sport", "Newspaper headlines: Rejoice and revolts as 'Brexit begins' - BBC News", "Gabriel Jesus: Man City boss Pep Guardiola compares Brazilian to watermelon - BBC Sport", "Football stadiums disabled access: Deadline approaches - BBC News"], "published_date": ["2017-02-21", "2017-02-21", "2017-02-21", 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[], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], [], [], [], [], ["https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews"], [], []], "description": ["Theo Walcott scores his 100th goal for Arsenal as he doubles the Gunners' lead in their FA Cup fifth-round tie against non-league Sutton United at Gander Green Lane.", "Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho has not ruled out captain Wayne Rooney leaving the club this month.", "Meet the London Fashion Week designers using clothes to shape how we see gender.", "Meet Sutton United's team as they prepare to take on Arsenal in the fifth round of the FA Cup.", "Sutton's players will \"go down in history\" despite missing out on a place in the FA Cup quarter-finals, says manager Paul Doswell.", "Forty blue plaques will be unveiled on BBC Music Day this year - and you can decide who gets one.", "Grime star Stormzy talks to BBC News about his music and global recognition ahead of the Brit Awards.", "Profile of Unilever, the business behind brands from Marmite to Pot Noodle and Persil.", "The resignation of pie-eating goalkeeper Wayne Shaw following Sutton United's FA Cup heroics is devastating, says manager Paul Doswell.", "Footage from an airport in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, is said to show the moments before Kim Jong-nam died.", "Angelina Jolie and her family try some of Cambodia's delicacies.", "The multi-coloured glow appeared in the late afternoon, to the delight of people in the city-state.", "Losing its most cherished prize will present IS with an existential challenge, says Renad Mansour.", "Footage released by Syria Civil Defence shows a girl being pulled alive from rubble, apparently in Damascus amid reported air strikes.", "Ireland aim to play their first Test in 2018 rather than this year, according to Cricket Ireland chief executive Warren Deutrom.", "Sutton United have accepted the resignation of reserve goalkeeper Wayne Shaw, who is under investigation for potentially breaching betting rules.", "Uber has hired Barack Obama's attorney general Eric Holder to lead an investigation into claims of sexual harassment at the firm.", "Migrant workers have signed up to a labour boycott to highlight the role they play in British society.", "Aggregate figures exclude inflation and an adjustment for successful appeals.", "Might voters in three key countries hold the future of the European project in their hands?", "Arsenal reach the FA Cup quarter-finals as goals from Lucas Perez and Theo Walcott beat non-league Sutton United.", "Laura Muir will attempt to win 1500m and 3,000m gold at the European Indoor Championships in Serbia in March as GB announces its team.", "Amy's Place is the UK's only recovery house dedicated to helping young women overcome their addictions.", "A man had an extraordinary escape when a car crashed through a shop window in New York.", "Cheltenham Gold Cup favourite Thistlecrack is ruled out for the rest of the season with a slight tendon tear.", "Children's birthday parties are getting expensive in some countries - but how much would you spend keeping up with the Joneses?", "A British suicide bomber makes many of the front pages, while others warn of the incoming Storm Doris.", "Jago Lawless has had an £80 fine overturned and some parking spaces will now be repainted.", "It's a delicious structure consisting of sponge, chocolate and orange jelly. But is a Jaffa Cake actually a biscuit? And what can it teach us about philosophy?", "How cloud computing is speeding up the development of potentially life-saving drugs.", "The 600 tonne bridge across the River Irwell will link Manchester's Victoria and Piccadilly stations.", "The proposed art installation takes its inspiration from the flash on Bowie's sixth album, Aladdin Sane.", "Sutton accept the resignation of pie-eating keeper Wayne Shaw, who is under investigation for potentially breaching betting rules.", "Billionaire owner Andrey Melnichenko is alleged to owe 15.3m euros to the shipbuilder.", "The Nobel Prize, viral videos, Beyonce's pregnancy photo... Amber Spiegel has covered them all - on cookies.", "Why machines and AI are set to transform the way we live and work.", "The UK's next top police officer will be chosen on Wednesday - who are the contenders?", "A super-slippery coating for bottles could make getting liquids out much easier, US scientists say.", "The new Trump presidency could have profound implications for US relations with Iran, says the BBC's Kambiz Fattahi.", "Blackburn Rovers manager Owen Coyle leaves the Championship side by mutual consent with the club in relegation trouble.", "Adrian Mannarino becomes Kyle Edmund's second opponent in succession to default after an angry outburst at Delray Beach.", "Newcastle United move one point clear at the top of the Championship, scoring in each half to defeat Aston Villa.", "Johnny Sexton and Rob Kearney look set to be fit for Ireland's Six Nations game with France on Saturday after training on Tuesday.", "Sutton goalkeeper Wayne Shaw is being investigated by the Football Association for potentially breaching betting rules during Monday's FA Cup loss to Arsenal.", "'Anna' was trafficked from Albania into the UK last year by someone pretending to be her boyfriend.", "Accusations over the proposed changes to business rates make the front pages.", "A traffic camera captures the moment an officer chases a swan down the M27 in Hampshire.", "Scientists in Boston have found a way to get every last drop of ketchup out of the bottle.", "Eddie Mair of BBC Radio 4's PM programme announces the death of fellow Radio 4 presenter Steve Hewlett.", "Man City twice come from behind to beat Monaco in a thrilling Champions League last 16 first-leg tie at the Etihad Stadium.", "Glitz, glamour, oddballs and glitterballs: The Brits are back.", "Former England batsman Kevin Pietersen says the IPL auction on Monday delivered \"another slap in Test cricket's face\".", "Cincinnati Zoo's premature baby hippo Fiona needed urgent treatment for dehydration.", "Ahead of the Budget, the chancellor may have more money to play with than he thought. He’s likely to save it up for what the Treasury still believes could be a Brexit rainy day.", "Badminton is one of seven sports to lose its appeal against UK Sport funding cuts for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic cycle.", "Brave Lt BJ Gruber, of Marion, Ohio, offered up his help without realising the subject was maths.", "The US president calls the media \"enemies of the people\" - a phrase favoured by Stalin and Mao.", "Comedian David Baddiel has made a documentary about the impact of his father's rare form of dementia.", "A Muslim teacher on a school trip posts a video to Snapchat of him being escorted off a US-bound plane.", "A plane carrying five people has crashed into a Melbourne shopping complex, Australian authorities say.", "The financial picture for the NHS in England is worse than it looked last November.", "British Cycling is accused by the chief executive of UK Sport of watering down the findings of an internal review in 2012.", "England all-rounder Ben Stokes becomes the most expensive foreign player in IPL history as he is bought for £1.7m by Rising Pune Supergiants.", "Protests take place in London as MPs debate whether Donald Trump should be given a state visit to the UK.", "Footage shows the scene outside the Louvre in the immediate aftermath of the attack and visitors inside sitting on the ground in a locked room.", "The Yorkshire artist has redesigned the newspaper's logo for a one-off souvenir edition", "The papers lead on lettuce rationing in supermarkets and a lawyer being struck off for dishonesty.", "The illegal trade in chimps highlights the long, often shameful relationship between them and humans.", "Beyonce will perform at this year's Grammys complete with that twin baby bump, according to her dad Mathew.", "The Six Nations - which has the highest average attendance per match of any tournament in world sport - begins on Saturday.", "England head coach Eddie Jones says France should expect another \"war\" when they visit Twickenham in Saturday's Six Nations opener.", "Sean Crawshaw was caught dangling from the bathroom window of a home he had tried to burgle.", "Pakistan is not part of President Trump's executive order, but US residents are still concerned.", "The attack in Paris, the funding of a shadow minister's office and energy bill price rises attract headlines on Saturday.", "The decision to suspend play at the Dubai Desert Classic with almost half the field still to finish round two angers some players.", "This weekend may see some dramatic tennis, but Russell Fuller explains why the 117-year-old competition needs reform.", "Buying a home can be expensive enough but some owners are facing unexpected bills to buy the freehold of their property.", "Watch the best of the action as Dan Evans sees off Canada's 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov in straight sets in the Davis Cup.", "Virtual reality is offering artists the chance to express themselves in ways that were unimaginable just a few years ago.", "Tiger Woods withdraws from the Dubai Desert Classic before the second round because of a back problem.", "With experts warning that salad shortages are the tip of the iceberg, what can leaf lovers do?", "Readers share stories of their childhood time capsules and the items they buried.", "Workers at the O2 arena accidentally unearth the trove which has a wealth of late 90s memorabilia.", "After decades of debate on the EU, MPs have finally done it - we are off.", "The force says it was \"an internal communications error\" and has apologised to the owner.", "The US president is the focus of another social media storm over purported dress-code comments.", "Vasek Pospisil beats Kyle Edmund in the second singles match to draw Canada level at 1-1 with Britain in the Davis Cup.", "As Frank Lampard follows Steven Gerrard into retirement, you decide which former England midfielder was the better player.", "Johnny Islam took part in a pioneering scheme where his TB medicine was supervised via a smartphone.", "Beyonce posts further images of herself naked, under water and posing as a \"black Venus\".", "A ferry port assistant from Greenock says he is \"a bit shaken up\" after winning more than £4m from Saturday night's National Lottery draw.", "Some supermarkets are rationing the amount of iceberg lettuce and broccoli customers can buy - blaming poor growing conditions in southern Europe for a shortage in UK stores.", "The British Antarctic Survey's Halley research station is towed 23km inland to avoid an icy fate.", "St Etienne's Bob Stanley is writing a book about pop before the Beatles. He shares his discoveries with the BBC.", "Newcastle United manager Rafael Benitez reassures fans he will remain at St James' Park to maintain a promotion bid.", "The former prime minister and Mr Schwarzeneggar appeared in a video on the ex-California governor's Snapchat page.", "After seven years with part of his breastbone missing, Edward Evans gets a revolutionary titanium implant.", "The World Anti-Doping Agency says it still has \"full confidence\" in a report into Russian doping despite \"discrepancies\" in the evidence.", "How Royal Marine Ciaran Maxwell turned to terror and stored arms smuggled from the military.", "England seem well set for the Six Nations, so what are the six questions facing coach Eddie Jones? Tom Fordyce reports.", "Former Watford and Coventry boss Aidy Boothroyd is confirmed as manager of the England Under-21 team.", "Who will be the game-changers? What new rule will have the biggest impact? And who will win? Our pundits have their say.", "Freddy McConnell, a trans man who intends to have children in future, says it makes sense for medical staff to talk about \"pregnant people\" instead of \"expectant mothers\".", "After a long three years, there finally seems to be a resolution over Tube ticket office closures.", "Luke Mosson bought a flat for £150,000 but later realised that a clause in his contract meant the ground rent over the whole lease would cost more than £1.3bn.", "A new rule in France giving a weight concession to female jockeys draws criticism from across horseracing in the UK.", "As the number of cyber-attacks escalates, can a new approach to security help keep us safe?", "Ozzy Osbourne reflects on his fame and how reality TV affected his life.", "Isabella Lovin posted an image of herself signing a new law while surrounded by female colleagues.", "See the scene outside the Louvre as a police spokeswoman gives further detail on what happened.", "The woman who ran the Willow Tea Rooms on Sauchiehall Street for more than 30 years has won a legal battle to keep its name.", "Race leader Marcel Kittel is punched by Astana rider Andriy Grivko during stage three of the Dubai Tour.", "We take a look at the possible hidden meanings behind Beyonce's pregnancy pic.", "One of the daughters of former Christian charity head John Smyth QC says having boys around the house was a normal part of her childhood, after allegations of abuse against him emerged.", "Is there a link between the Iranian city of Shiraz and the wine of the same name found in supermarkets around the world?", "A weekly quiz of the news, 7 days 7 questions.", "How much difference could you make by having separate bathroom bins for recycling?", "Stoke City boss Mark Hughes says striker Saido Berahino served an eight-week Football Association ban when he was at West Brom.", "A goat predicts the winner of Sunday's Six Nations rugby match between Italy and Wales.", "Former England batsman Kevin Pietersen says he will not be entering this year's IPL auction following his busy winter.", "Donald Trump brings his brash, direct, unscripted style to talks with foreign leaders. Will it work?", "The 35-year-old was caught after he had laundered 17 of the gold pieces through a gold buyer.", "Mr Gorsuch has been likened to the late Justice Scalia based on his strict interpretation of law.", "The invention of wind tunnels has given skydivers a new way to hone skills that usually require jumping from a plane.", "West Brom boss Tony Pulis says he does not \"give a damn\" about Stoke striker Saido Berahino's future after it emerges he served an eight-week ban at the Baggies.", "Artists have been sought to create a life-size bronze replica of a Ford Model T car that was driven to the summit of Ben Nevis in 1911.", "Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho says some of his players need to leave their \"comfort zone\" and to learn how to win.", "Why film maker Matt Callanan has hidden £10 notes around Cardiff for others to spend.", "Human rights campaigner apologises to BBC's Emily Maitlis for accusing her of role in \"CIA torture\".", "Roger Dodds was jailed earlier for 16 years after pleading guilty to four counts of indecent assault.", "Huddersfield show their promotion credentials by beating 10-man Brighton, who fail to extend their Championship lead.", "Former Chelsea and England midfielder Frank Lampard retires, bringing to an end a 21-year career in the professional game.", null, "Ireland fly-half Johnny Sexton is the latest star to miss the Six Nations start, as we round up the views from around the camps.", "People who collect the microplastics explain why and how they are collected.", "Watch as the second run of the men's Giant Slalom at the Alpine Ski World Championships in St Moritz is delayed after a military air display plane clipped a cable, causing a camera to drop onto the course.", "How did a gruesome story fool the world 100 years ago?", "Scientists are calling for more people to donate their brains to research to help find cures for mental and psychological disorders.", "What are the rules behind the great British pastime of standing in line?", "Award winning author Jeanette Winterson has been speaking to the BBC about having to close her deli in Spitalfields because of rising rates.", "After the NHS and social care, is the next funding crisis going to be in England's schools?", "Jose Mourinho says he \"threw away\" FA Cup games in the past but will not make the same mistake against Blackburn in the fifth round.", "Some businesses will see their rates change on 1 April 2017.", "The Dutch author who sold more than 80 million children's books dies in the city of Utrecht.", "BBC Sport's David Ornstein assesses the key questions facing Arsenal and Arsene Wenger as they decide on their longest-serving boss' future this summer.", "World number four Judd Trump edges past Barry Hawkins to reach the semi-finals of the Welsh Open in Cardiff.", "Mako Vunipola returns from injury to stake a claim for an England return, but it is not enough as Gloucester beat Saracens.", "How and why Germany is taking a stand against false reports by dubious media outlets.", "A weekly quiz of the news, 7 days 7 questions.", "Abuse victim hails MP's attempt to let people add mothers' names to the marriage register.", "Russian media euphoria about Donald Trump has turned to scepticism, Steve Rosenberg reports.", "Inventors who, like Mark Zuckerberg, have looked back with mixed feelings on what they created.", "Love letters written during World War Two and discovered in a trunk in Brighton reveal a forbidden relationship between two men.", "We ask a graphology expert what pop signatures say about the people who write them", "A mass of unanswered questions still swirl around the death of North Korea's Kim Jong-nam.", "What happens if border agents demand your smartphone and passcode?", "Drivers leapt from their vehicles to help capture a man who led a high speed chase through Brisbane, Australia.", "Forward Mesut Ozil believes he is being made the scapegoat for Arsenal's problems, according to his agent.", "President Trump was at times angry, proud and obsessed by a media he professes to despise.", "Comedian Romina Puma asks whether she should mention her disability when online dating.", "Tottenham Hotspur will win the Premier League in the next \"three of four years\", says former manager Harry Redknapp.", "Mark Clemmit is shown around the away dressing room at Sutton United by manager Paul Doswell, which Premier League side Arsenal will be using during their FA Cup fifth-round match on Monday.", "Arsene Wenger says he will definitely be managing next season, whether that is at Arsenal \"or somewhere else\".", "After a \"fake news\" town was rumbled, residents turned their attention to a new form of media.", "Guy Disney makes history by becoming the first amputee jockey to win at a professional racecourse in Britain.", "Artist Christian Fuchs is obsessed with his ancestors and spends months painstakingly recreating portraits of them, which he poses for himself", "Leyton Orient captain Liam Kelly is banned for six games by the FA for pushing over a ball boy in Tuesday's win at Plymouth.", "Anna LeBaron - whose father Ervil was one of the most infamous cult leaders in American history - tells of how she escaped his murderous grip and now wants to \"redeem\" the family name.", "A booklet included details of three clubs in Tallinn and other ideas for soldiers in the town.", "Zlatan Ibrahimovic scores his first Man Utd hat-trick as his side opens up a commanding Europa League last-32 lead against Saint-Etienne.", "A revolt over a rise in business rates and the potential return of woolly mammoths make the news.", "Watch the heated exchange between Newsnight's Evan Davis and an aide to the president.", "Up to 1.2 billion people around the world live with some sort of disability - and businesses are increasingly realising they have a lot of spending power.", "Matt Lucas high-fives chancellor at ceremony and says comedy partner David Walliams will be fuming.", "Somalia's landscape is littered with dead animals and there are warnings of a full-blown famine.", "In rare interviews, the Orel Butchers speak about their lives as Russian football hooligans.", "One man's story behind thousands of magnets - but what does your fridge door say about you?", "As New York Fashion Week draws to a close, here are some highlights from the catwalk.", "President Donald Trump launches a defence of his administration over 77 minutes at the White House.", "The NHS says sorry to a Devon woman told \"the computer is asking the questions\" when she dialled the non-emergency service.", "The Pakistani military points the finger at Afghanistan and India, but some believe the answer is more complex.", "The Facebook founder's manifesto blurs the edges between business and politics. In a 21st Century of technology giants, the two will become increasingly intertwined.", "Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola says forward Gabriel Jesus may not play again this season after breaking a metatarsal bone in his foot.", "President Donald Trump has made a dig at the BBC in a sharp exchange during a heated White House press conference.", "The playful exchange between Netanyahu and Trump said a great deal, writes PJ Crowley.", "Tottenham's Europa League hopes are dealt a blow as Gent earn a surprise 1-0 win in their last-32 first-leg meeting.", "Scotland suffer a second injury blow as Josh Strauss follows Greig Laidlaw in being ruled out of the remainder of the Six Nations campaign.", "Iceland is the UK's favourite online supermarket, says consumer group Which? so is it now \"cool\"?", "It's almost all under water, but Zealandia should be considered a continent, say researchers.", "A 150-year-old antique wedding dress that was lost after a dry cleaners went bust is returned to the family.", "The derelict St Peter's Seminary - in Scottish woods - is receiving a second chance.", "England's late victory against Wales is testament to a head coach and side who are full of determination, character and conviction.", "Adele calls halt to cover of George Michael track at Grammys and starts again.", "There are widely different views ahead of a speech on prison numbers by Justice Secretary Liz Truss.", "Joe Root may have been the only realistic candidate to replace Alastair Cook as England captain, but does that make him the right man for the job?", "Violence has broken out at a protest in Paris in support of a young black man who was allegedly assaulted by police.", "New England Test captain Joe Root is ideally suited to the role, says former England skipper Michael Vaughan.", "A national newspaper in the Dominican Republic apologises after using the wrong photo.", "Worcester Cathedral's ringing master Mark Regan describes how bell ringing accidents can happen", "An unlikely sole English scorer in the Premier League and has Big Sam lost that new manager bounce? The weekend in stats.", "A heavy metal-loving panda full of rage is a new character Japanese working women can identify with.", "Water gushes down a damaged overspill at the country's highest dam, where 180,000 people have been evacuated.", "Thousands of people protested in Bucharest on Sunday night.", "Almost 800 players who appeared in the English Football League last season were not drugs tested by UK Anti-Doping.", "How Australian entrepreneur Matt Barrie set up and grew website Freelancer, which links people who need tasks done with others who bid for the work.", "Observers say the country needs to adapt as its oil reserves start declining.", "He's gone from releasing his first mixtape to Grammy winner in five years - without a major label.", "The US president and Canadian prime minister exchange greetings ahead of their first face-to-face talks.", "Images of this year's Bafta film awards at the Royal Albert Hall in London.", "Should nursing a toddler be controversial? Mothers share their experiences of breastfeeding for longer.", "Resolution Foundation figures take household income after housing costs.", "Leicester City slip to a fifth straight Premier League defeat to drop to 17th in the table, one point above the relegation zone.", "Nearly 190,000 people in Northern California have been told to evacuate their homes after the tallest dam in America was weakened by heavy rainfall.", "Batsman Joe Root succeeds Alastair Cook as England Test captain, with all-rounder Ben Stokes promoted to vice-captain.", "Declan Collier, head of London City Airport, shares his business tips for the CEO Secrets series.", "The incident happened on the Isle of Man as the captain tried to dock in strong winds.", "Sacked Sale Sharks winger Tom Arscott is found guilty of passing on confidential team information to Bristol by the RFU.", "The children whose lives have been changed by Oxford Children's Hospital's highly-specialised craniofacial unit.", "Labour's new election coordinator 's comments on his leader's future crank up the volume on speculation.", "Festival bosses want to avoid a repeat of anti-social behaviour witnessed at last year's event.", "Aerial footage shows how bushfires have almost completely destroyed a small community in Australia.", "Donna Penner woke up in the operating room, just before the surgeon made his first incision. She describes how she survived the excruciating pain of being cut open while awake.", "The woman who uses blockchain technology to prove where food comes from.", "A new character to compete with Hello Kitty draws on the frustrations of Japan's working women.", "A bell-ringer is recovering after being dropped in a \"freak accident\" at Worcester Cathedral.", "Beyonce's famous fans tell us why she is the Queen.", "Luca Aerni of Switzerland win's the men's combined downhill and slalom by 0.01 seconds at the Alpine World Ski Championships, despite being in last place after the downhill leg.", "Shallow water and unusual geography are blamed for making a New Zealand beach a 'whale graveyard'.", "A BBC undercover reporter found shoppers being overcharged on out-of-date multi-buy offers around the country.", "Adele was the night's big winner, but what else was going on at the Grammy awards?", "Claudio Ranieri admits he may have been too loyal to his Leicester players as their title defence descends into a relegation battle.", "Manchester City move up to second in the Premier League with a hard-fought victory over Bournemouth at Vitality Stadium.", "A mother paid thousands of pounds to a man who said he could win her child custody battle.", "Spotify may be \"too big to fail\", according to Billboard magazine, but the clock is ticking as the company hatches its plans to go public.", "Banned cyclist Lance Armstrong loses his bid to block a $100m (£79m) lawsuit by the US government in relation to doping.", "Tiziana Cantone killed herself after private sex videos of her were leaked online.", "Assessing the national mood as the Netherlands prepares to go to the polls", "England will lose at some point, but their win over Wales fed their player's belief in their own invincibility, says Jeremy Guscott.", "It's been a brutal few weeks for Facebook's virtual reality ambitions - Mark Zuckerberg may have made a rare miscalculation.", "After a bride is reunited with her 150-year-old wedding dress, BBC News hears more stories of family heirlooms.", "What is the so-called \"gig\" economy, a phrase increasingly associated with employment disputes?", "US President Donald Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are quizzed on their opposing views on immigration.", "Undercover reporter Joe Fenton tells his story of working in the crisis-hit prison system.", "Antonio Conte does not like Jose Mourinho's \"joking\" after the Man Utd boss said Chelsea cannot be caught because they are a defensive team.", "Up to 1,000 coloured drones flew through the sky in Guangzhou, southern China.", "Lego dragonflies and spiders will feature on the 3D \"map\" of a conservation project.", "Full-back Stuart Hogg laments \"costly errors\" for a 10th consecutive Scotland defeat in Paris as they lose 22-16 to France.", "How mobile technology is profoundly changing access to money in the developing world.", "Sports news and live sports coverage including scores, results, video, audio and analysis on Football, F1, Cricket, Rugby Union and all other UK sports.", "Loveland, Colorado, is smitten with Valentine's Day. Ask nicely and they'll even send you a card.", "Determining the right price for Co-op Bank will be hard, as the amount of capital any buyer needs to sink in is far from clear.", "Swansea City winger Nathan Dyer is ruled out for the rest of the season with a ruptured Achilles tendon.", "A council apologises after trees are planted on a football pitch, sparking social media reaction.", "Burnley's fast transition from defence to attack helped them cause trouble down Chelsea's left, says Match of the Day pundit Ruud Gullit.", "Scotland suffer a 10th straight defeat in Paris as France emerge victorious from a tense tussle at the Stade de France.", "The BBC gets localised voting figures for the EU referendum - giving more detail of voting patterns.", "Leicester City stand by boss Claudio Ranieri despite the reigning Premier League champions being one point above the relegation zone.", "How online retailer Ocado is automating its processes and experimenting with robotics.", "A group of commuters raided their bags and pockets to clean racist graffiti from a New York subway car.", "Alastair Cook had become \"drained\" as England Test captain, says England's director of cricket Andrew Strauss.", "The IFS’s Green Budget reveals that the financial crisis and austerity still cast a long shadow over the UK economy.", "The \"seven-day NHS\" has been a key pledge of the Conservative government. But is it feasible?", "Former England scrum-half Matt Dawson tells BBC Sport about his battles - and friendship - with South Africa's Joost van der Westhuizen.", "Many \"ground-breaking\" housing initiatives prove to be business as usual - is this any different?", "Watch Cleveland Cavaliers star LeBron James score a \"jaw-dropping\" three-pointer in the last second to force overtime against the Washington Wizards.", "The fall-out from Speaker John Bercow voicing his opposition to Donald Trump addressing Parliament makes most of Tuesday's front pages.", "Hi-tech controls will not do all the work for parents keen to ensure their children stay safe online.", "A group of 10 to 12-year-olds tells CBBC's Newsround what they think about social media.", "Steve Hewlett marries in hospital after being told his treatment for oesophageal cancer must end.", "Joe Root is the \"obvious candidate\" to be named as England Test captain - but the role must not affect his batting, says James Anderson.", "The BMA's Dr Mark Porter says between £200m and £500m may be recouped. Is he right?", "IAAF president Lord Coe insists he did not mislead an MPs' inquiry over what he knew about the state-sponsored doping program in Russia.", "Former South Africa captain Joost van der Westhuizen dies aged 45, six years after he was diagnosed with motor neurone disease.", "How well do you remember these other people who refused, returned or were stripped of honours and awards?", "The government has said that the green belt remains safe in its hands. Is it right?", "How Isabel Ettedgui is single-handedly trying to revive century-old leather brand Connolly.", "What does his first fortnight as president reveal about Donald Trump's beliefs?", "The New York Times has referred to President Trump wearing a bathrobe but his press secretary Sean Spicer has come out to refute that.", "Amnesty International says as many as 13,000 people, most of them civilian opposition supporters, have been executed in secret at a prison in Syria.", "A photograph of Barack Obama learning to kitesurf is printed on a number of Wednesday's front pages.", "The couple are honoured in recognition of their \"progressive\" influence and human rights work.", "Sam Warburton says Six Nations rivals England are justifiably regarded as being on a par with world champions New Zealand.", "A BBC test pitted Adam's CV against Mohamed's. Here's what happened.", "As the 'last Concorde' made its final journey, we look back at the iconic plane's history.", "The government is setting out its plans to boost GP numbers to help achieve a seven-day service. But is this all really worth it?", "Two Omar Bogle goals on his first Wigan start help earn the Championship strugglers a draw against Norwich City.", "Brandon Marshall, who is 6ft 11.5ins (2.12m) tall, hopes to become a professional basketball player.", "Freddy Tylicki says he has no regrets about becoming a jockey despite a fall which left him paralysed from the waist down.", "Laura Muir is thrilled by the strength of Scottish athletics as she bids to break another British indoor record next month.", "Who is in Theresa May's new Downing Street team?", "A GP practice in Plymouth is using paramedics and pharmacists to free up doctors to see more patients.", "Alastair Cook says playing under another England captain will \"not be an issue\" following his resignation as skipper on Monday.", "The officer is upset at the prospect of not being able to keep four-year-old Ivy when he retires.", "Dashcam footage captures a fireball over US Midwestern states on Monday.", "A Hungarian village is leading \"the war against Muslim culture\" with its own laws.", "The French capital is aiming to win billions in business and thousands of jobs from London in the months ahead.", "As Barack Obama enjoys a five-star Caribbean break, how did past presidents unwind from the big job?", "Russia will not be eligible to compete at this summer's World Championships in London, says athletics' world governing body.", "The US president's spokesman has caused a bit of a Twitter storm by claiming Mr Trump does not own a bathrobe.", "David Hockney reflects on his career as the Tate Britain puts on the biggest ever retrospective of the artist's work.", "", "Albert Morton, who started catching moles in 1963, is looking to pass his skills on before retiring.", "Alastair Cook had a rough ride as England captain with some up-and-down results, says BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew.", "The fare dodger ranted and lashed out at London Midland staff after refusing to buy a £2.20 ticket.", "Could the new president benefit the mainstream media?", "Seven-time Paralympic swimming champion Sascha Kindred announces his retirement after a 23-year international career.", "Football Association chairman Greg Clarke says he will quit if the government does not support the organisation's own plans to reform the way it is run.", "The BBC visits online grocery retailer Ocado's factory", "According to some predictions, robots will go on to replace people in a third of UK jobs by 2030.", "Patients and families discuss their recent experience of NHS services.", "Women's Sport Week will \"encourage more women to try a new sport\", says minister for sport Tracey Crouch.", "Simon Brodkin, known for his comedy character Lee Nelson, posed as a fake act on Britain's Got Talent. He said he thought Simon Cowell would 'find the whole thing funny'.", "Budget meals and foregoing holidays are among four couples' tips for getting on the property ladder by 25.", "BBC Breakfast presenter Dan Walker was left red-faced after getting a reporter's name wrong.", "The group chief executive's pay award will shed light on the executive pay debate.", "There are several quirks and questionable outfits in this year's Oscars \"class photo\".", "Canada's Denis Shapovalov is fined after being defaulted from his match against Great Britain's Kyle Edmund in the Davis Cup.", "BBC News visits the winner of \"Britain's Favourite Market\" to see how these community cornerstones are coping in the competitive world of modern retail.", "A leading US political scientists thinks Donald Trump is president because his name came first on the ballot in some critical swing states.", "All the markings of a John Le Carre novel: a world leader's brother, an international airport and a deadly nerve agent.", "Scotland secure their first Women's Six Nations win since 2010 after recovering from two tries down to beat Wales.", "Chelsea stretch their lead at the top of the Premier League table to 11 points after victory over Swansea City at Stamford Bridge.", "Captain Alun Wyn Jones wanted to kick for goal at a crucial point against Scotland, but says his kickers said \"no\".", "Each US election heralds a new way to communicate to the masses, and increases the threat to old-school reporting.", "Patrick van Aanholt scores the winner for Crystal Palace, as they move out of the Premier League's relegation zone by beating Middlesbrough.", "Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho defends sacked Leicester City manager Claudio Ranieri and says he was let down by \"selfish\" players.", "Scotland produce a spirited second-half display to defeat Wales at Murrayfield, with Tommy Seymour and Tim Visser the hosts' try-scorers.", "Head coach Vern Cotter lauds Scotland's second-half display against Wales, as they rack up 20 unanswered points to win.", "Around the UK different schemes are trying to deliver better affordable care to those who need it.", "Kyle Edmund loses to Milos Raonic in the Delray Beach Open quarter-finals to miss out on his first win over a top-10 player.", "Claudio Ranieri says his \"dream died\" when he was sacked as Leicester manager nine months after winning the title.", "Was the last comparable by-election to Copeland 139 years ago?", "Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy says speculation he was involved in Claudio Ranieri's dismissal is \"untrue and extremely hurtful\".", "Gavin McDonnell fails in his bid to join his twin brother Jamie as a world champion with a majority-decision loss to Rey Vargas.", "Billy Mckay scores a stunning overhead kick as Inverness Caley Thistle beat Rangers to move off bottom spot in the table.", "A lost decade: watching RBS develop has not been a very rewarding experience - for anyone.", "Anna Rowe is calling for a law change after being duped by a man with a fake profile online.", "Injury-hit Scotland will attempt to end a decade-long winless streak against Wales as the Six Nations resumes this weekend.", "Ireland rugby international Andrew Trimble on how his spirituality enhances his love of the game.", "British Olympic champion Lizzy Yarnold holds her nerve to finish third at the Skeleton World Championships in Germany.", "Ireland beat France 19-9 in Dublin to keep alive their hopes of winning a third Six Nations Championship in four years.", "Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho has not ruled out captain Wayne Rooney leaving the club this month.", "Leaving matchmaking up to artificial intelligence could be the future of dating, suggests Tinder's co-founder.", "Author Helen Bailey tried to build a new life after her husband died, but it was ripped from her by the man she chose to build it with.", "Grime star Stormzy talks to BBC News about his music and global recognition ahead of the Brit Awards.", "Eastern Airlines Flight 980 crashed into a mountain in Bolivia in 1985. Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner spent an unusual holiday trying to work out why.", "The resignation of pie-eating goalkeeper Wayne Shaw following Sutton United's FA Cup heroics is devastating, says manager Paul Doswell.", "How do people juggle staying in work with a painful and debilitating condition like arthritis?", "Jemma Forsyth replaces the injured Karen Dunbar in Scotland's only change for their Women's Six Nations match against Wales.", "'Aggressive' plants are taking over a national park, says an Irish politician as he calls for action.", "Heard the term but not sure what it means? Chris Fawkes explains.", "Man City \"will be eliminated\" if they do not score at Monaco in their Champions League last-16 second leg, says manager Pep Guardiola.", "Sutton United have accepted the resignation of reserve goalkeeper Wayne Shaw, who is under investigation for potentially breaching betting rules.", "Uber has hired Barack Obama's attorney general Eric Holder to lead an investigation into claims of sexual harassment at the firm.", "The village of Ponzano in the Abruzzo region of Italy is being torn apart by a landslide, following earthquakes in 2016.", "The countdown to the Brit Awards has begun. Who's performing, and who's going to win?", "The FA Cup quarter-finals between Chelsea and Manchester United and Tottenham and Millwall will be broadcast live on BBC One.", "Ahead of her Brits show, Katy fills in Nick Grimshaw on the power of performing as a thirty-something, and what it's like seeing her peers in the audience.", "Doctors from a children's hospital have saved the life of a premature baby hippo.", "PCSO Dave Bunker says he is \"surprised\" at the reaction to something he considers \"nothing special\".", "Doris threatens snow for some, heavy rain for others and high winds for all across the UK", "Aggregate figures exclude inflation and an adjustment for successful appeals.", "Might voters in three key countries hold the future of the European project in their hands?", "Manchester United's Juan Mata tells Gary Lineker he would love to take over as the presenter of Match of the Day when he retires from playing football.", "An airport in California has released video of a plane, being flown by the actor Harrison Ford, mistakenly flying low over an airliner.", "New video is released of an Antarctic ice crack that may produce a giant iceberg.", "Three couples speak of their struggle to stay in the UK with their partners because of visa rules.", "Wayne Rooney's agent Paul Stretford is in China to see if he can negotiate a deal for the forward to leave Manchester United.", "Manchester United reach the Europa League last 16 despite seeing Eric Bailly sent off and Henrikh Mkhitaryan sustain an injury.", "Yorkshire's ex-England seam bowler Ryan Sidebottom announces he will retire at the end of the County Championship season.", "Parts of the McDonald's store in Shrewsbury date back to the 12th Century.", "The Supreme Court has upheld rules which prevent some British citizens' foreign spouses coming to the UK.", "A British suicide bomber makes many of the front pages, while others warn of the incoming Storm Doris.", "Children's birthday parties are getting expensive in some countries - but how much would you spend keeping up with the Joneses?", "Jago Lawless has had an £80 fine overturned and some parking spaces will now be repainted.", "British businesses could be losing out on a potential £420 million a week by failing to target disabled consumers.", "How cloud computing is speeding up the development of potentially life-saving drugs.", "Ford hopes to avoid a lengthy transition to autonomous vehicles.", "The 600 tonne bridge across the River Irwell will link Manchester's Victoria and Piccadilly stations.", "Kraft Heinz's failed bid for Unilever has forced the Anglo-Dutch company to focus on the bottom line.", "Wing George North recovers from a bruised thigh to start for Wales in Saturday's Six Nations match against Scotland.", "England centre Jonathan Joseph will not face Italy in Sunday's Six Nations match after being left out of the 24-man training squad.", "Leading figures and activists on the alt-right have split over controversial comments made by one of the movement's champions.", "The fiance of the suffocated children's author Helen Bailey has been found guilty of murder.", "Importing food is getting more expensive so why don't UK supermarkets get more of their supplies from home?", "The Duchess of Cambridge shows off her pool-playing skills on a visit to a children's charity in south Wales.", "The UK's next top police officer will be chosen on Wednesday - who are the contenders?", "Britons Adam and Simon Yates will miss the Tour de France to tackle the Giro d'Italia and Vuelta a Espana.", "Artist Joshua Smith's tiny creations replicate real buildings.", "Holders Hibernian beat Edinburgh rivals Hearts to set up a home Scottish Cup quarter-final with Ayr United.", "An exhibition tracing the changing styles of Diana, Princess of Wales, opens at Kensington Palace featuring iconic outfits throughout her life.", "Cities and citizens are increasingly connected - are we creating an urban machine?", "What has been described as the first transgender doll has gone into production in the US.", "Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton says he believes the new faster Formula 1 cars this year will be a \"massive challenge\".", "Dozens of houses and almost 3,500 hectares of forest are destroyed by fires which continue to burn in Chile.", "Little Mix, Emeli Sande and Rag 'N' Bone Man on winning Brit Awards.", "'Anna' was trafficked from Albania into the UK last year by someone pretending to be her boyfriend.", "As many as 72,000 women fail to qualify for a workplace pension, as they have more than one employer.", "Owen Farrell hails the \"massive understanding\" of England coaching consultant Jonny Wilkinson as he prepares to win his 50th Test cap.", "Man City twice come from behind to beat Monaco in a thrilling Champions League last 16 first-leg tie at the Etihad Stadium.", "Glitz, glamour, oddballs and glitterballs: The Brits are back.", "Seven planets orbiting a single star have been discovered in a solar system 40 light-years from Earth.", "Liverpool midfielder Adam Lallana extends his contract with the club until 2020, with the option of a further year.", "Striker Sergio Aguero demonstrated why he is fit to play his part in Pep Guardiola's side after scoring in Manchester City's 5-3 win over Monaco.", "Ahead of the Budget, the chancellor may have more money to play with than he thought. He’s likely to save it up for what the Treasury still believes could be a Brexit rainy day.", "Brave Lt BJ Gruber, of Marion, Ohio, offered up his help without realising the subject was maths.", "Donald Trump, a frequent critic of Barack Obama's time on the links, is now himself under scrutiny.", "The health service is advised to publish performance data more quickly.", "British Cycling is accused by the chief executive of UK Sport of watering down the findings of an internal review in 2012.", "A round-up of some of the weird and wonderful outfits to have come out of this season's London Fashion Week.", "London Fire Brigade warns adventurous couples inspired by the erotic hit to be careful.", "Adele calls halt to cover of George Michael track at Grammys and starts again.", "Watch how Canadian PM Justin Trudeau handles President Trump's dominant handshake.", "Joe Root may have been the only realistic candidate to replace Alastair Cook as England captain, but does that make him the right man for the job?", "News that Tom Hardy will read the Bedtime Story on CBeebies on Valentine's Day has been met with delight on social media.", "An increasing number of people are crossing into Canada seeking refugee status.", "Mike Flynn's resignation won't put to rest wider questions about the Trump administration's connection with Russia.", "New England Test captain Joe Root is ideally suited to the role, says former England skipper Michael Vaughan.", "Prime Minister Justin Trudeau refuses to criticise his host on thorny issues such as immigration.", "One father on why the Ministry of Defence owes soldiers a duty of care, and should be held accountable in court when it fails.", "Stefan-Pierre Tomlin, the most \"swiped-right\" man in the UK on Tinder, shares his tips.", "Joe Root is a natural cricketer but he has a huge job ahead of him as captain, says BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew.", "From condom raids to emoji bans: Valentine's Day gets political", "Water gushes down a damaged overspill at the country's highest dam, where 180,000 people have been evacuated.", "Three tiger cubs \"adopt\" a life-sized toy after their mother is found dead in an Indian park.", "\"In terms of the range of leading roles I've had since then, it's probably helped,\" the actor says.", "A council has apologised after trees were planted on a football pitch.", "How Australian entrepreneur Matt Barrie set up and grew website Freelancer, which links people who need tasks done with others who bid for the work.", "Observers say the country needs to adapt as its oil reserves start declining.", "Olympic cycling champions Laura and Jason Kenny announce they are expecting their first child.", "On the face of it, the latest results couldn't be more ugly - but they're not as ugly as they look.", "India is set to launch a record 104 satellites into space in a single mission.", "Man arrested for drink-driving after he turned up for a police job interview smelling of alcohol.", "A leaked document warns of a Brexit backlash for Brits living abroad - and a new Bake Off judge is heralded.", "Muhammadu Buhari has not been seen in public recently and the Nigerian rumour mill is in overdrive, as Martin Patience explains.", "A student wants more to be done in schools to raise awareness about toxic shock syndrome.", "Resolution Foundation figures take household income after housing costs.", "With Valentine's Day upon us, we ask a group of singletons to reveal some of the most irritating questions they get asked about their relationship status.", "Tourists mesmerised by the Aurora Borealis are causing a hazard on Iceland's roads.", "The incident happened on the Isle of Man as the captain tried to dock in strong winds.", "The children whose lives have been changed by Oxford Children's Hospital's highly-specialised craniofacial unit.", "Norwich City and Newcastle United play out a thrilling draw at Carrow Road after the Magpies had led after 23 seconds.", "How the sacking of James Comey may be tied to the dismissal of Mr Trump's top aide Michael Flynn.", "The former Trump adviser - fired after three weeks - set a record, but he's not alone when it comes to short political tenures.", "Festival bosses want to avoid a repeat of anti-social behaviour witnessed at last year's event.", "The top tips from the most swiped man on Tinder.", "The Church of England's legislative body faces a further rigorous debate on same-sex marriage.", "Manchester City forward Gabriel Jesus is diagnosed with a broken metatarsal after their 2-0 win at Bournemouth.", "Donna Penner woke up in the operating room, just before the surgeon made his first incision. She describes how she survived the excruciating pain of being cut open while awake.", "The car made in Scotland was bought by its current owner after he saw an advert while on holiday.", "Women who survived breast cancer proudly bare their scars in alternative lingerie.", "The story of a sniffer dog who was retired from the front line in Afghanistan after becoming scared of loud noises is used to inspire those who struggle to read.", "A bell-ringer is recovering after being dropped in a \"freak accident\" at Worcester Cathedral.", "Brexit fuels a sense of EU crisis - but reforms are likely to be slow, Kevin Connolly reports.", "Sprinter Usain Bolt and gymnast Simone Biles claim the top accolades at the Laureus World Sports Awards in Monaco.", "Burger King in Israel unveils a new \"adult meal\", which comes which a free \"adult toy\".", "Manchester City are hopeful forward Gabriel Jesus did not suffer a serious foot injury in the Premier League win at Bournemouth.", "Barcelona's trip to Paris St-Germain is the stand-out tie as the Champions League returns on Tuesday with the knockout stage.", "Drivers using mobile phones on the road are four times more likely to have an accident - but can apps also make us safer?", "Tales of heartbreak, elation, rejection and redemption - to mark Valentine's Day, here are four love letters, each telling a unique story.", "Manchester City move up to second in the Premier League with a hard-fought victory over Bournemouth at Vitality Stadium.", "Leicester Tigers re-sign Bath's England fly-half George Ford for the start of next season, with Freddie Burns moving the other way.", "A mother paid thousands of pounds to a man who said he could win her child custody battle.", "Model Valentina Sampaio is going to be French Vogue's first transgender cover star.", "An Iranian Oscar hopeful impacted by President Trump's travel ban is to have an open-air premiere.", "The nine-year-old put through the Prevent scheme after viewing violent websites .", "Online videos feature man signing pop music lyrics for those who have never heard them.", "Defending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan and world number one Mark Selby progress to the second round of the Welsh Open.", "Great Britain will take on Romania in April's Fed Cup World Group II play-offs, looking to reach the second tier for the first time since 1993.", "Banned cyclist Lance Armstrong loses his bid to block a $100m (£79m) lawsuit by the US government in relation to doping.", "Assessing the national mood as the Netherlands prepares to go to the polls", "England will lose at some point, but their win over Wales fed their player's belief in their own invincibility, says Jeremy Guscott.", "An alternative lingerie show at New York Fashion Week raises funds for charity.", "England need to make people \"fall in love\" with Test cricket again, says new vice-captain Ben Stokes.", "David Willey is ruled out of England's tour of the West Indies through injury and will be replaced by Steven Finn.", "US President Donald Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are quizzed on their opposing views on immigration.", "The musicians out to prove it's okay to play with your food.", "A research body claims the UK spent less than 2% of national income on defence.", "Determining the right price for Co-op Bank will be hard, as the amount of capital any buyer needs to sink in is far from clear.", "A council apologises after trees are planted on a football pitch, sparking social media reaction.", "The Queen is shown how hackers could target power supplies as she opens a centre to see off cyber attacks.", "Who are the most destructive ball carriers in the Six Nations? Jeremy Guscott picks his top six - but do you agree?", "A number of companies and experts explore how businesses should best react to a disaster, be it a cyber-attack, financial scandal or other series issue.", "Civil rights campaigns, charities, parodies, and the media are all seeing a surge in support.", "Anthony Zurcher explains three things we learned (and two we didn't) from the court ruling.", "Trump decries urban violence, terrorism and police shootings. Is his image of 'American carnage' fair?", "Russia's Mariya Savinova is stripped of her Olympic 800m gold and 2011 world title but has 45 days to appeal against the decision.", "\"It's about 3% of our population that use about 50% of the resources.\"", "A Bundesbank executive says London is likely to stop being the “gateway to Europe” and warns the UK against a post-Brexit “regulatory race to the bottom”.", "Wales wing George North says he will be fit to face Scotland on 25 February in the Six Nations after being \"gutted\" to miss out on facing England.", "After months of rumour, it's been confirmed Prince's music will become available to stream this weekend.", "The UK government is being challenged over its handling of child refugees - here's the background to the row.", "Branwen Jeffreys asks if more spending on healthcare in Germany improves the system.", "Author and illustrator Raymond Brigg is recognised with a lifetime achievement award by BookTrust.", "Pimlico Plumbers boss Charlie Mullins says they're very likely to appeal after losing a significant court case.", "Arsene Wenger has given Ian Wright \"the impression\" that he will leave as Arsenal boss, claims the Gunners legend.", "The Football Association of Wales will appeal against sanctions imposed by Fifa for displaying poppies during a World Cup qualifier.", "What is the so-called \"gig\" economy, a phrase increasingly associated with employment disputes?", "Want to get lucky this Valentine's? Then you'd better leave show tunes off your shuffle queue.", "Wakefield is seen as a pioneer in helping more patients stay at home and saving the NHS money.", "The new river crossing in Sunderland weighs more than 125 double decker buses and will open by 2018.", "The BBC's Mark Lowen explains why a draft new constitution for Turkey had such fierce opposition.", "A motion of \"no confidence\" in the Football Association is passed by MPs debating the organisation's ability to reform itself.", "Eight months after leading Leicester to the title, Claudio Ranieri is battling to prevent his side being relegated. So what has changed?", "An Australian farmer tells how he survived for hours trapped in a pond with only his nose above water.", "Rangers say they have replaced Mark Warburton as manager after his resignation, but the Englishman says he has not stood down at Ibrox.", "Sheffield Wednesday beat Birmingham City 3-0 in the Championship to strengthen their place in the top six.", "Walter Swinburn was found by his father in the courtyard of his house in Belgravia, London.", "President Donald Trump's senior aide Kellyanne Conway is being criticised for promoting Ivanka Trump's products live on air from the White House press briefing room.", "Simonne Butler recounts her ex attacking her with a sword and having her hands reattached, in New Zealand in 2003.", "What will be the archaeological legacy of the Crossrail excavations?", "He's only four, but Mason Foulkes is probably better at darts than you.", "Friday's papers feature stories about pressures on the NHS and claims council tax bills are to increase for many.", "The body which advises hospitals on keeping their staff safe is to stop its work in March.", "Not everyone was won round by Donald Trump when he became the Republican presidential nominee last year - even members of his own party had their doubts. Not any more.", "He's only 19cm (7.4 in) tall and has been named Thanos.", "How does healthcare compare in these two European countries?", "Back spasms force 14-time major winner Tiger Woods to pull out of next week's Genesis Open and the Honda Classic.", "Matt Damon says he \"almost started crying\" when the actor told him the news.", "The health secretary appears to be crossing his fingers for more money in the Budget.", "Ghana's new government counts its presidential fleet only to find more than 200 cars are unaccounted for.", "The government says it has met the \"intention and spirit\" of the Dubs Amendment, but Lord Dubs disagrees.", "Record numbers of three dolphin species found off Scotland's west coast are detected during a conservation trust's survey.", "National park guards shoot suspected poachers dead. But has the war against poaching gone too far?", "It was Diplomats' Day in Russia on Friday and the country's Diplomacy For Peace choir, made up of newly qualified diplomats, has been singing the praises of their diplomacy.", "A weekly quiz of the news, 7 days 7 questions.", "Wales host champions England in the highlight of the second weekend of the Six Nations as Ireland travel to Italy and France host Scotland.", "Two media commentators discuss whether recent headlines about the British actor have dented his image.", "One year on from devastating flood damage, Mike Stubbs has finally been able to move back home.", "The NHS is under unprecedented pressure. But how do patients flow round the system and what happens to hospitals when they cannot cope?", "Terminally ill Sunderland fan Bradley Lowery visited in hospital by the club's players on Thursday.", "Despite the sabre-rattling it's more likely to be skirmishes than apocalyptic battling over this historic legislation.", "The health secretary says there's no silver bullet to ease pressure on the NHS but that he has a plan.", "The issue of fake news on social media has been grabbing headlines, but how do these sites make money?", "Scarlets flanker John Barclay is promoted from the bench to replace Ryan Wilson as Vern Cotter makes only one change for the match against France.", "CCTV shows gunman biting off more than he can chew at shop run by former special forces soldier.", "UKIP and nuclear power should be making Labour nervous in Stoke and Copeland, says John Pienaar.", "A third-straight win in Group C sees Great Britain qualify for the Fed Cup play-off.", "Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Stuart Broad meet with Andrew Strauss to discuss the England Test captaincy.", "Does rice really contain harmful quantities of arsenic? Dr Michael Mosley of Trust Me, I'm A Doctor investigates.", "Drawing comparisons between then and now, Karishma Vaswani takes a look at how a Trump-led America is akin to life and politics in the 1980s.", "It takes a special kind of person to run a radio station in an area controlled by Islamist militants in northern Syria. Raed Fares, who has never lost his sense of humour despite being gunned down by IS.", "Colonel Medica grows 100kg of cannabis a year for Italy's army to provide for medical use.", "A quarter of Europe's cricket and grasshopper species are being driven to extinction, say experts.", "St Helens earn a narrow win in a low-scoring but enthralling Super League season opener against Leeds Rhinos.", "With French owner L'Oreal wanting to put The Body Shop up for sale, BBC News asks what's gone wrong at the UK cosmetics chain?", "Wales Women get their Six Nations off to a winning start with a gritty 20-8 victory over Italy Women at Jesi.", "BBC football expert Mark Lawrenson takes on BBC NFL analyst Osi Umenyiora in this week's Premier League fixtures.", "How Royal Marine Ciaran Maxwell turned to terror and stored arms smuggled from the military.", "Parents explain why they have brought their children to anti-government protests in Bucharest.", "Ireland could be granted Test cricket status as soon as April following a meeting of the ICC board in Dubai.", "England seem well set for the Six Nations, so what are the six questions facing coach Eddie Jones? Tom Fordyce reports.", "Technology bosses seem open to talking with President Trump - but their staff seem to have other ideas.", "France beat Japan in Tokyo to set up a potential Davis Cup quarter-final against Great Britain in April.", "Within days of an Iranian missile test and a subsequent warning from the Trump administration, the US has now followed up by imposing a new round of economic sanctions.", "A weekly quiz of the news, 7 days 7 questions.", "Who will be the game-changers? What new rule will have the biggest impact? And who will win? Our pundits have their say.", "Jamie Murray and Dom Inglot put Great Britain 2-1 up against Canada with victory in the Davis Cup doubles in Ottawa.", "Data shows declining sales on the High Street due to the abandonment of seasonal shopping patterns.", "A new rule in France giving a weight concession to female jockeys draws criticism from across horseracing in the UK.", "Eight-time Olympic gold medallist Usain Bolt's team of All-Stars win the first day of the inaugural Nitro Athletics event in Melbourne.", "How much difference could you make by having separate bathroom bins for recycling?", "Ozzy Osbourne reflects on his fame and how reality TV affected his life.", "The Six Nations - which has the highest average attendance per match of any tournament in world sport - begins on Saturday.", "A goat predicts the winner of Sunday's Six Nations rugby match between Italy and Wales.", "Alfred N'Diaye scores on his Hull City debut as Liverpool's dreadful start to 2017 continues with a fourth defeat in five league and cup games.", "Nasa releases a video of the ISS crew preparing to watch the Super Bowl from 250 miles above Earth.", "A new Chatsworth garden show will include freeform gardens with weeds, wildflowers and boulders.", "Amateur footage captures a pile-up on an icy stretch of road in Oregon, but no-one is seriously hurt.", "Donald Trump brings his brash, direct, unscripted style to talks with foreign leaders. Will it work?", "In eastern Ukraine, one woman cannot tell her grandson his mother is dead after another night of heavy shelling.", "The US president is the focus of another social media storm over purported dress-code comments.", "The attack in Paris, the funding of a shadow minister's office and energy bill price rises attract headlines on Saturday.", "The invention of wind tunnels has given skydivers a new way to hone skills that usually require jumping from a plane.", "A BBC News investigation has revealed how Sheffield City Council failed to stop an employee, a predatory sex offender, from abusing his victims in council offices over two decades.", "Australia is again accused of \"putting politics above lives\" over the case of a high-risk pregnancy.", "Vasek Pospisil beats Kyle Edmund in the second singles match to draw Canada level at 1-1 with Britain in the Davis Cup.", "The story of Wales' remarkable journey to the semi-final of Euro 2016 is to be released in cinemas.", "Britain's top cop goes on mounted patrol at Chelsea-Arsenal game.", "Just months after the Olympics, a dispute over the condition of Brazil's Maracana stadium has erupted.", "Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho says some of his players need to leave their \"comfort zone\" and to learn how to win.", "Why film maker Matt Callanan has hidden £10 notes around Cardiff for others to spend.", "Jan Cutajar, the man responsible for renovations at Knole House in Kent, describes the rare find dated October 1633.", "Chelsea move 12 points clear at the top of the Premier League with a comfortable win over Arsenal.", "The retired athlete ran two laps of a Sheffield park with dozens of other runners.", "The Washington State Attorney General says he is \"certain\" the president will not like the ruling.", "Roger Dodds was jailed earlier for 16 years after pleading guilty to four counts of indecent assault.", "Watch the best of the action as Dan Evans sees off Canada's 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov in straight sets in the Davis Cup.", "A demand by MPs to halt the Iraq troops abuse inquiry and claims of a gap in UK defences make Sunday's front pages.", "A ferry port assistant from Greenock says he is \"a bit shaken up\" after winning more than £4m from Saturday night's National Lottery draw.", "Johnny Depp's alleged wine bill, and more news nuggets.", "Seventy years ago the post-war government promised to help victims of the London blitz by building \"new towns\".", "Team Sky believe Chris Froome can retain his Herald Sun Tour title, despite trailing race leader Damien Howson going into Sunday's final stage.", "From rural UK to rocky outcrops in China - winners from International Garden Photographer of the Year.", "Scot Laura Muir breaks the European 3,000m indoor record in Karlsruhe, Germany to maintain her superb start to the year.", "A swarm of bees stop play midway through Sri Lanka's innings in the third one-day international against South Africa in Johannesburg.", "The former prime minister and Mr Schwarzeneggar appeared in a video on the ex-California governor's Snapchat page.", "Marco's viral Facebook search for a mother he barely knew prompted police to look at the case again.", "Black Sabbath reflect on their 50-year career as they play the final gig of their last world tour.", "After seven years with part of his breastbone missing, Edward Evans gets a revolutionary titanium implant.", "With experts warning that salad shortages are the tip of the iceberg, what can leaf lovers do?", "Scotland withstand a superb Ireland fightback to record their first opening-round Six Nations victory since 2006,", "England leave it late before coming from behind to start their Six Nations defence with a narrow win over France - a national record 15th in a row.", "As Sharknado 5 begins production, here are five other critically-panned films audiences have grown to love.", "England head coach Eddie Jones says his side weren't allowed to play \"proper rugby\", but Italy boss Conor O'Shea insists that any criticism is \"hypocritical\".", "A leading US political scientists thinks Donald Trump is president because his name came first on the ballot in some critical swing states.", "Which two players are 'the coach's dream? Whose presence at Old Trafford is like that of Roy Keane? Find out in Garth's team of the week.", "All the markings of a John Le Carre novel: a world leader's brother, an international airport and a deadly nerve agent.", "Chelsea stretch their lead at the top of the Premier League table to 11 points after victory over Swansea City at Stamford Bridge.", "Captain Alun Wyn Jones wanted to kick for goal at a crucial point against Scotland, but says his kickers said \"no\".", "Jose Mourinho and Zlatan Ibrahimovic's partnership hints at more success for Manchester United, writes Phil McNulty.", "The American coach of Olympic champion Mo Farah may have broken anti-doping rules to boost the performance of some of his athletes, says a leaked report.", "World number one Andy Murray says he is \"ready to go\" at the Dubai Tennis Championships after a bout of shingles.", "England overcome a stern challenge from Italy to remain unbeaten in this year's Six Nations and stretch their winning run to 17 matches.", "WBO world welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao and Great Britain's Amir Khan agree to fight on 23 April.", "England coach Eddie Jones says an unexpected Italy tactic \"wasn't rugby\" as the Six Nations champions struggle to victory.", "Head coach Vern Cotter lauds Scotland's second-half display against Wales, as they rack up 20 unanswered points to win.", "Around the UK different schemes are trying to deliver better affordable care to those who need it.", "Mo Farah says he is a \"clean athlete\" after a leaked report suggested his American coach may have broken anti-doping rules.", "The American coach of Olympic champion Mo Farah rejects claims he may have broken anti-doping rules.", "Harry Kane scores his third hat-trick in nine games as Tottenham react to their European exit by hammering Stoke to go second in the league.", "Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy says speculation he was involved in Claudio Ranieri's dismissal is \"untrue and extremely hurtful\".", "Gavin McDonnell fails in his bid to join his twin brother Jamie as a world champion with a majority-decision loss to Rey Vargas.", "Anna Rowe is calling for a law change after being duped by a man with a fake profile online.", "Germany's Francesco Friedrich and Johannes Lochner both win gold in the four-man bobsleigh, after finishing with the same time after four heats at the World Championships in Konigssee, Germany.", "Ireland rugby international Andrew Trimble on how his spirituality enhances his love of the game.", "People who collect the microplastics explain why and how they are collected.", "Donald Trump is exhausting the news-hungry journalists. What he is doing to the rest of the world?", "Judd Trump will face Stuart Bingham in the Welsh Open final after the Englishmen enjoy comfortable wins in the last four.", "A selection of the best news photographs from around the world, taken over the past week.", "They formed a \"human wall\" to protest US President Donald Trump's plans for a wall between the countries.", "A weekly quiz of the news, 7 days 7 questions.", "Anna LeBaron - whose father Ervil was one of the most infamous cult leaders in American history - tells of how she escaped his murderous grip and now wants to \"redeem\" the family name.", "Warrington get the first win for an English club over Australian opponents since 2012, beating Brisbane in the World Club Series.", "Profile of Unilever, the business behind brands from Marmite to Pot Noodle and Persil.", "Russian media euphoria about Donald Trump has turned to scepticism, Steve Rosenberg reports.", "How did a gruesome story fool the world 100 years ago?", "The history of black women working for Nasa goes back much further than the 1960s - the period of the film Hidden Figures - and their struggles continued afterwards.", "Posters and spoof news stories criticising the Pope have been springing up across Rome. What's going on?", "Scientists are calling for more people to donate their brains to research to help find cures for mental and psychological disorders.", "Claims Moscow planned a coup in Montenegro and fears EU nationals could be caught in a legal no man's land after Brexit make the front pages.", "Father-of-three Ray Woodhall survived 27 heart attacks in 24 hours. He first became ill during a game of \"walking football\".", "Love letters written during World War Two and discovered in a trunk in Brighton reveal a forbidden relationship between two men.", "Non-league side Lincoln achieve a 'football miracle' by reaching the FA Cup quarter-finals, while Millwall knock out Leicester.", "Lifelong Fulham fan Richard Osman reveals a number of fascinating facts about his beloved club, but are they truthful or 'fake news'?", "After the NHS and social care, is the next funding crisis going to be in England's schools?", "Celtic restore a 27-point advantage at the top of the Scottish Premiership with victory over Motherwell.", "A forgotten and abandoned platform hidden beneath Glasgow Central Station could be given new life.", "Mick Jagger can't remember writing his autobiography and more news nuggets.", "Jose Mourinho says he \"threw away\" FA Cup games in the past but will not make the same mistake against Blackburn in the fifth round.", "The Pakistani military points the finger at Afghanistan and India, but some believe the answer is more complex.", "Watch the heated exchange between Newsnight's Evan Davis and an aide to the president.", "The BBC's James Longman assesses the mood in the deprived suburbs of Paris after days of unrest.", "Some businesses will see their rates change on 1 April 2017.", "The Dutch author who sold more than 80 million children's books dies in the city of Utrecht.", "Social media reacts to a black woman being cast for the first time as a popular reality TV dating show lead.", "A simple-yet-clever chatbot gives Dave Lee hope that this immature technology will be worth while.", "The US president calls the media \"enemies of the people\" - a phrase favoured by Stalin and Mao.", "Facebook last week doubled its bereavement leave allowance for its staff. Employees can now take up to 20 days off on full pay. Is it enough?", "Sean Raggett heads Lincoln City ahead in the 89th minute against Burnley in the FA Cup fifth round at Turf Moor.", "Watch the FA Cup fifth round's best goals, including Rudy Gestede's acrobatic volley for Middlesbrough and a lovely finish from Blackburn's Danny Graham.", "Emily Nelson wins silver for Great Britain in the omnium at the Track Cycling World Cup in Colombia.", "Tottenham Hotspur will win the Premier League in the next \"three of four years\", says former manager Harry Redknapp.", "Late drama as Shaun Cummings puts 10-man Millwall ahead in the last minute against Leicester City in their FA Cup fifth-round tie.", "Mark Clemmit is shown around the away dressing room at Sutton United by manager Paul Doswell, which Premier League side Arsenal will be using during their FA Cup fifth-round match on Monday.", "The drama of cars tumbling into a sinkhole is shown on live TV.", "Mo Farah takes victory in the 5,000m at the Birmingham Grand Prix to win the final indoor race of his career.", "Economist Ken Rogoff on why it makes sense to get rid of large banknotes.", "A slowdown in home sales, fears over recruitment of GPs and nurses, and Tony Blair's Brexit speech attract headlines.", "The 3ft violinist who chose music over life-changing surgery.", "Some see Kim Jong-nam's death as a slap in the face for Beijing from the North Korean leader.", "Five objects, each worth at least £2,500, have been hidden around Scunthorpe, and the deal is finders keepers.", "Mako Vunipola returns from injury to stake a claim for an England return, but it is not enough as Gloucester beat Saracens.", "Ray Johnstone was flown across Australia by a 22-year-old man moved by his online post.", "Hypothyroidism affects one in 70 women and one in 1,000 men, but it can be tricky to diagnose and treat", "The United Nations has launched an emergency appeal for Yemen, warning that its population is on the brink of famine after two years of war. The BBC's Our World filmed and first broadcast this report in September 2016. It shows some of the suffering endured by children in the country.", "The IFS’s Green Budget reveals that the financial crisis and austerity still cast a long shadow over the UK economy.", "Apple chief executive Tim Cook repeats his opposition to US President Donald Trump's travel ban.", "Canada's Erik Guay wins super-G gold at the Alpine World Ski Championships in St Moritz with a time of 1:25.38.", "Who will France's working-class voters back in the forthcoming presidential election?", "The \"seven-day NHS\" has been a key pledge of the Conservative government. But is it feasible?", "Mums Abigail Tumfo, Sheila Navacroft and Shakeria Wright describe the difficulties of raising their children in one room.", "Many \"ground-breaking\" housing initiatives prove to be business as usual - is this any different?", "Watch Cleveland Cavaliers star LeBron James score a \"jaw-dropping\" three-pointer in the last second to force overtime against the Washington Wizards.", "The setting sun perfectly aligned with Melbourne streets to cast a golden light between skyscrapers.", "Joe Root is the \"obvious candidate\" to be named as England Test captain - but the role must not affect his batting, says James Anderson.", "The president tweeted about an 'EASY D', which immediately had people guessing what he meant.", "Wakefield is seen as a pioneer in helping more patients stay at home and saving the NHS money.", "As Italy’s poor start fans the flames of the Six Nations relegation debate, Joe Wilson asks if the likes of Georgia will always be on the outside looking in.", "The former US president Barack Obama has enjoyed a spot of kitesurfing with Richard Branson.", "Model Christie Brinkley appears with her daughters on the latest cover of Sports Illustrated.", "From Trump to Brexit, globalisation is under threat, and it's the car industry that has the most to lose, writes Jamie Robertson.", "Hans Rosling, who has died in Sweden aged 68, tells 200 years of world history in four minutes.", "A facial reconstruction has been made of Orkney's St Magnus by a forensic artist to help mark the 900th anniversary of his death.", "The government has said that the green belt remains safe in its hands. Is it right?", "A family has been rescued from their truck that was dangling over a cliff-edge in southern China.", "The New York Times has referred to President Trump wearing a bathrobe but his press secretary Sean Spicer has come out to refute that.", "Great Britain should be excited about their medal chances at the 2018 Winter Olympics, says chef de mission Mike Hay.", "A photograph of Barack Obama learning to kitesurf is printed on a number of Wednesday's front pages.", "Sam Warburton says Six Nations rivals England are justifiably regarded as being on a par with world champions New Zealand.", "Thousands of slum dwellers in Manila have lost their homes after a fire raged overnight.", "Sheridan Smith plays Julie Bushby, the mother who led the community search for missing Shannon.", "Heather Watson and Johanna Konta win singles matches as Great Britain beat Portugal at the Fed Cup in Estonia.", "As the 'last Concorde' made its final journey, we look back at the iconic plane's history.", "Leicester secure a first home win of 2017 as Demarai Gray's superb goal seals an extra-time victory over Derby in their FA Cup replay.", "Two Omar Bogle goals on his first Wigan start help earn the Championship strugglers a draw against Norwich City.", "Abdoul Camara's deflected strike brings Derby level against Leicester in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.", "Lawyer whose husband is ex-deputy PM notes the \"irony\" of women's day invite in her married name.", "As Shannon Matthews 2008 disappearance is dramatised, Mark Simpson looks back on her mother's deception.", "Sweden has been experimenting with six-hour days but now the trials are over, has it really worked?", "A GP practice in Plymouth is using paramedics and pharmacists to free up doctors to see more patients.", "Taulupe Faletau will be available for Wales' match against England while George North and Dan Biggar will have time to prove their fitness.", "As Barack Obama enjoys a five-star Caribbean break, how did past presidents unwind from the big job?", "Geert Wilders promises to stop Islam and make the Netherlands great again and is leading in the polls.", "British halfpipe skier Rowan Cheshire describes the difficulties of life after a series of concussions and how her Olympic dream has been rekindled following Sochi disappointment.", "There has been an increase in false rape reports against men in India - but do the figures tell the real story behind India's rape crisis?", "The US president's spokesman has caused a bit of a Twitter storm by claiming Mr Trump does not own a bathrobe.", "One week. One family. One goal: To immigrate to Donald Trump's America.", "Tara Palmer-Tomkinson, who has died at the age of 45, described living a privileged life, in an interview with Jane Garvey on BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour in 2010.", "", "Folk star Shirley Collins, who was unable to sing for 30 years, is nominated for two Radio 2 Folk Awards.", "Bayern Munich say they were surprised by the timing of captain Philipp Lahm's retirement announcement.", "Wilfred Ndidi scores a spectacular goal to put Leicester 2-1 up in extra-time against Derby County in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.", "The BoE's deputy governor warns against abandoning bank rules amid claims the UK could become an offshore tax haven.", "Demarai Gray produces a moment of magic as he slaloms past Derby defenders to score for Leicester in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.", "Fourteen-time major winner Tiger Woods says he will always feel \"a little sore\" due to the injuries he has suffered.", "Villager Alexander Batyokhtin has built a church out of snow in Sosnovka in Siberia.", "Ex-Liverpool striker Djibril Cisse has quit football to become a DJ, but what other careers have ex-players done in retirement. Play our quiz to find out.", "Two weekly political magazines have upped their circulation, suggesting a growing appetite for analytical news.", "Could the new president benefit the mainstream media?", "It used to have one of the best views in England - now a Devon summerhouse is a pile of splintered wood at the bottom of a cliff.", "Patients and families discuss their recent experience of NHS services.", "Indian cricketer Mohit Ahlawat hits an extraordinary 72-ball triple century in a local Twenty20 match in Delhi.", "The classic \"It girl\", Tara Palmer-Tomkinson spent much of her life facing a camera lens.", "Canada's Denis Shapovalov says he would not have forgiven himself if the umpire he hit in the eye with a ball had been seriously hurt.", "With rising demand and shrinking budgets, who is receiving social care from the state?", "World champion Mark Selby suffers a shock first-round defeat by world number 18 Martin Gould at the World Grand Prix in Preston.", "Simon Brodkin, known for his comedy character Lee Nelson, posed as a fake act on Britain's Got Talent. He said he thought Simon Cowell would 'find the whole thing funny'.", "Budget meals and foregoing holidays are among four couples' tips for getting on the property ladder by 25.", "BBC Persian's Jiyar Gol reports on the arduous lives of Iranian Kurdish goods smugglers.", "Comedy scriptwriter who, together with Ray Galton, wrote for Tony Hancock and created Steptoe and Son.", "Ministers eased Surrey County Council's social care cash concerns - but can they do the same elsewhere?", "The group chief executive's pay award will shed light on the executive pay debate.", "There are several quirks and questionable outfits in this year's Oscars \"class photo\".", "Manchester United ease to victory at Leicester to leave the defending champions just one point above the relegation zone.", "Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has \"some serious thinking to do\" about his future with the club, says Gunners legend Ian Wright.", "US Vice-President Mike Pence defends Donald Trump, after he called the man who suspended his travel ban a \"so-called judge\".", "Gabriel Jesus scores twice as Manchester City move up to third in the Premier League after overcoming Swansea City.", "The past seven days in the entertainment world, including Winona Ryder at the SAGs and Ed Sheeran in Liberia.", "It comes amid rising tensions between Iran and the US.", "England coach Eddie Jones says \"it does not get much uglier\" than his side's performance in their 19-16 Six Nations win over France.", "Data shows declining sales on the High Street due to the abandonment of seasonal shopping patterns.", "Jamie Murray and Dom Inglot put Great Britain 2-1 up against Canada with victory in the Davis Cup doubles in Ottawa.", "With waiting lists growing longer, the subject could soon raise fierce debate.", "Rugby union referee Nigel Owens speaks to BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs about coming to terms with being gay.", "England captain Heather Knight reflects on the Women's Big Bash League, Taylor Swift songs, an \"orphans' Christmas\" and yoga with a centenarian.", "Alfred N'Diaye scores on his Hull City debut as Liverpool's dreadful start to 2017 continues with a fourth defeat in five league and cup games.", "Moussa Dembele scores a hat-trick as Celtic beat St Johnstone and go 27 points clear at the top of the Premiership.", "The Pentagon shares footage from a seized computer, that turns out not to be as valuable as it first thought.", "Colin Paterson speaks to fans for BBC radio from Black Sabbath's final gig.", "As England make it 15 wins in a row, is the relationship between Eddie Jones and Owen Farrell growing to resemble that of Sir Alex Ferguson and Roy Keane?", "Belgium's Steve Darcis celebrates too early in a dramatic fourth set tie-break against Germany's Alexander Zverev but eventually wins on his fourth match point.", "In eastern Ukraine, one woman cannot tell her grandson his mother is dead after another night of heavy shelling.", "Cameroon come from behind to beat Egypt 2-1 and seal a fifth Africa Cup of Nations title in a thrilling, edgy final in Libreville.", "Scotland coach Vern Cotter says his players have learned how to win close games after beating Ireland in their Six Nations opener.", "The UK promises tougher penalties for people who shine laser pens at transport operators.", "Britain's top cop goes on mounted patrol at Chelsea-Arsenal game.", "Amateur footage captures the blaze at a recycling centre in Milton, Stoke-on-Trent.", "Just months after the Olympics, a dispute over the condition of Brazil's Maracana stadium has erupted.", "Jan Cutajar, the man responsible for renovations at Knole House in Kent, describes the rare find dated October 1633.", "Australia retain the Quad series title after a dramatic 47-46 victory over England at Wembley Arena.", "The retired athlete ran two laps of a Sheffield park with dozens of other runners.", "Roger Dodds was jailed earlier for 16 years after pleading guilty to four counts of indecent assault.", "From \"Bob's your uncle\" to \"Gordon Bennett\" - are there real people behind such English phrases?", "A demand by MPs to halt the Iraq troops abuse inquiry and claims of a gap in UK defences make Sunday's front pages.", "Johnny Depp's alleged wine bill, and more news nuggets.", "BBC NFL pundits Osi Umenyiora and Jason Bell offer tips on staying awake and pick out the best players before Sunday's Super Bowl.", "In Cambodia, motorbike taxis are everywhere - but it's rare to see women drivers transporting tourists. One entrepreneur is trying to change that.", "An Iraqi family board a flight to the US after President Donald Trump's travel ban is blocked.", "From rural UK to rocky outcrops in China - winners from International Garden Photographer of the Year.", "England surpass the national record set by Sir Clive Woodward's 2003 World Cup winners as they recorded their 15th win in a row by beating France.", "Britain reach the Davis Cup quarter-finals after Canada's 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov is defaulted for hitting the umpire with a ball.", "An immigrant rights campaigner has five things to say at the LGBTQ Solidarity Rally in New York.", "The James Bond director who risked his life during a daring secret mission in Nazi-occupied France.", "A swarm of bees stop play midway through Sri Lanka's innings in the third one-day international against South Africa in Johannesburg.", "Marco's viral Facebook search for a mother he barely knew prompted police to look at the case again.", "Black Sabbath reflect on their 50-year career as they play the final gig of their last world tour.", "It's the second largest food consumption day in America after Thanksgiving.", "With experts warning that salad shortages are the tip of the iceberg, what can leaf lovers do?", "The United Arab Emirates is dealing with some weird weather.", "Scotland withstand a superb Ireland fightback to record their first opening-round Six Nations victory since 2006,", "Technology bosses seem open to talking with President Trump - but their staff seem to have other ideas.", "Social media updates by the Egyptian suspected of launching a machete attack at a Paris museum suggested nothing untoward, says his friend.", "As Sharknado 5 begins production, here are five other critically-panned films audiences have grown to love.", "Can the outsider secretary of state find a way to wield power in a chaotic Washington?", "Bundesbank official says leaving the EU should not be used to \"penalise\" the City, but argues jobs could be lost.", "The moment when La La Land producer realised Moonlight had won the Oscar for best picture", "Which two players are 'the coach's dream? Whose presence at Old Trafford is like that of Roy Keane? Find out in Garth's team of the week.", "Do changes to Personal Independence Payments amount to a £3.7bn cut?", "A profile of businessman John Elliott, who rather than sell his business, or allow his children to inherit it, has handed it over to a trust, to ensure that it cannot leave its base in the North East of England.", "Director Asghar Farhadi's The Salesman won best foreign language film but he boycotted the awards.", "Leicester produce a superb display to beat Liverpool and move out of the bottom three in their first game since the sacking of Claudio Ranieri.", "Was diversity the real winner on a night where an LGBTQ film won the Oscar for best picture?", "Ex-Conservative PM offers what he calls a \"reality check\" on Brexit.", "Jose Mourinho and Zlatan Ibrahimovic's partnership hints at more success for Manchester United, writes Phil McNulty.", "Celebrities used a variety of ways to protest against President Trump's travel ban during the ceremony.", "Caretaker boss Craig Shakespeare is firmly in contention for the Leicester manager's job on a longer-term basis after Claudio Ranieri's sacking.", "Italy's tactics at Twickenham tested England - and Eddie Jones' patience - to the limit, writes Tom Fordyce.", "A new site allows users to send and receive anonymous messages from people in their social networks.", "England overcome a stern challenge from Italy to remain unbeaten in this year's Six Nations and stretch their winning run to 17 matches.", "The BBC's Lizo Mzimba suggests the reasons behind Moonlight's surprise Oscar upset.", "Speculation is rife and defectors are unnerved by the death of the North Korean in Malaysia.", "England coach Eddie Jones says an unexpected Italy tactic \"wasn't rugby\" as the Six Nations champions struggle to victory.", "Zlatan Ibrahimovic on how his kids - and Jose Mourinho - convinced him to join Manchester United, and whether he will be staying.", "Emma Stone says this year's Oscars have felt 'like another planet'.", "Mercedes and Ferrari enjoy impressive starts to pre-season testing as Red Bull and McLaren hit trouble.", "If you see the F-word spelled out with all four letters, are you more offended than when you read F with asterisks? And if so, why?", "Huddersfield boss David Wagner is given a two-match touchline ban and a £6,000 fine after his altercation with Leeds counterpart Garry Monk.", "Alex Eagle looks at the best dressed stars on the red carpet at the Academy Awards.", "The American coach of Olympic champion Mo Farah rejects claims he may have broken anti-doping rules.", "The biggest shake-up of school funding in England for a generation is fraught with political difficulty.", "Stars react to \"the craziest Oscar moment of all time\".", "England Lions lose their second four-day match with Sri Lanka A, but Liam Livingstone matches a feat achieved by Kevin Pietersen.", "David Haye and Tony Bellew are kept apart by security guards but exchange insults at a heated Liverpool news conference.", "The Brexit debate in the UK is focusing on the rights of EU migrants in the country, among them about 300,000 Germans. But how are the 100,000 Brits in Germany feeling?", "Scotland are not just winning, they are winning in style and with space to spare says Jeremy Guscott.", "Vanity Fair's after party is the one to go to, and the invitees are letting their hair down before they get through the door.", "It is \"too early to speculate\" on rule changes after Italy used controversial tactics against England, says the sport's governing body.", "Pupils who behave well during the day can go home 10 minutes before those who do not.", "A former government adviser attacks plans to allow councils to set aside child protection duties.", "Russia's Mariya Savinova is stripped of her Olympic 800m gold and 2011 world title but has 45 days to appeal against the decision.", "She is believed to be the world's heaviest woman and will undergo weight reduction surgery.", "Castleford highlight their Super League title ambitions with a seven-try victory over new-boys Leigh Centurions.", "Arsene Wenger has given Ian Wright \"the impression\" that he will leave as Arsenal boss, claims the Gunners legend.", "Christian Matlock, from Brechin, is a bounty hunter who spends his days and nights tracking down fugitives who have skipped bail in the US state of Virginia.", "Sadio Mane lifts Liverpool's recent gloom by scoring twice in two first-half minutes to see off top-four rivals Tottenham.", "A weekly quiz of the news, 7 days 7 questions.", "Ireland's Garry Ringrose scores a blistering try in the 63-10 victory over Italy in the Six Nations.", null, "Coach Eddie Jones says England \"don't want to be in that position again\" after a dramatic late Six Nations win over Wales.", "A 15-year-old boy has been arrested on suspicion of murder.", "A funding squeeze is seeing amenities closed and an increase in litter and vandalism, MPs warn.", "The US president tells reporters on Air Force One that a \"brand new order\" may be issued next week.", "Arsene Wenger says he gave no indication on his future as Arsenal manager to club legend Ian Wright.", "Critics, including NATO, say it's part of a campaign of Russian misinformation. But its UK editor says his outlet has been unfairly attacked by the West.", "The end of the unit handling abuse claims against British troops in Iraq is welcomed in many papers.", "National park guards shoot suspected poachers dead. But has the war against poaching gone too far?", "A selection of the best news photographs from around the world, taken over the past week.", "Great Britain qualify for April's Fed Cup World Group II play-offs with a 2-1 victory over Croatia.", "England's Melissa Reid cards a six-under-par 67 to take a two-shot lead going into the final round of the Vic Open in Australia.", "CCTV shows the dramatic moment a slurry tank crashes through the garden wall of a house in County Antrim.", "The health secretary appears to be crossing his fingers for more money in the Budget.", "Sheffield Wednesday beat Birmingham City 3-0 in the Championship to strengthen their place in the top six.", "Trump decries urban violence, terrorism and police shootings. Is his image of 'American carnage' fair?", "Schools will help find teenagers who could plug a skills shortage and be the experts of the future.", "Anthony Zurcher explains three things we learned (and two we didn't) from the court ruling.", "Dogs mirror their owners' personalities and more news nuggets.", "The mass stranding of whales on a remote beach in New Zealand has taken a turn for the worse as 240 more arrived.", "Former Wales flanker Martyn Williams heads to the woods to catch up with Sam Warburton to talk about dogs, fatherhood, captaincy and his future plans amongst other things.", "The BBC speaks to women in the Israeli army - one of the few in the world to conscript females.", "Hat-tricks from CJ Stander and Craig Gilroy help Ireland to a 63-10 victory over Italy in the Six Nations.", "President Donald Trump's senior aide Kellyanne Conway is being criticised for promoting Ivanka Trump's products live on air from the White House press briefing room.", "Does rice really contain harmful quantities of arsenic? Dr Michael Mosley of Trust Me, I'm A Doctor investigates.", "CJ Stander and Craig Gilroy hat-tricks help Ireland regroup from their Scotland defeat to earn a nine-try win over outclassed Italy.", "A largely forgotten Victorian botanical artist has emerged as the most prolific female for works in the UK's oil painting collection.", "Donald Trump told reporters on Air Force One that a new executive order could be issued as early as Monday or Tuesday.", "A nationwide depot search was carried out but the painting was never found.", "UKIP and nuclear power should be making Labour nervous in Stoke and Copeland, says John Pienaar.", "The BBC's Mark Lowen explains why a draft new constitution for Turkey had such fierce opposition.", "A Bundesbank executive says London is likely to stop being the “gateway to Europe” and warns the UK against a post-Brexit “regulatory race to the bottom”.", "Wales host champions England in the highlight of the second weekend of the Six Nations as Ireland travel to Italy and France host Scotland.", "England thrashed Wales at Cardiff Arms Park to continue their unbeaten start to the Six Nations.", "Coach Rob Howley was \"proud and delighted\" of Wales' display until the last five minutes in which England sealed victory in Cardiff.", "The NHS is under unprecedented pressure. But how do patients flow round the system and what happens to hospitals when they cannot cope?", "It's been a brutal few weeks for Facebook's virtual reality ambitions - Mark Zuckerberg may have made a rare miscalculation.", "Photojournalist Ron Haviv is making a documentary about the stories of two of his photographs.", "What is the so-called \"gig\" economy, a phrase increasingly associated with employment disputes?", "It was Diplomats' Day in Russia on Friday and the country's Diplomacy For Peace choir, made up of newly qualified diplomats, has been singing the praises of their diplomacy.", "How I overcame anorexia and what to look for if you're worried someone you know has an eating disorder", "Moussa Dembele scores a hat-trick as Celtic thump Inverness CT to reach the Scottish Cup quarter-finals (UK only).", "England captain Dylan Hartley says Cardiff is one of the \"rugby capitals of the world\" as his side prepare to play Wales in the Six Nations.", "The collection includes a dagger disguised as a pen and a watch with a hidden microphone.", "Wales are unable to prevent England extending their winning run to 16 games in a row as the visitors win a Six Nations thriller in Cardiff.", "A collection of items used by British spies during the Second World War is going up for auction.", "Rangers say they have replaced Mark Warburton as manager after his resignation, but the Englishman says he has not stood down at Ibrox.", "Frontbenchers who voted against the party's three-line whip on the Brexit Bill will not be sacked.", "Pimlico Plumbers boss Charlie Mullins says they're very likely to appeal after losing a significant court case.", "The original cast of 2003 comedy is filming a short sequel for Comic Relief.", "What attracts some Western politicians to the President of Russia?", "Watch how Canadian PM Justin Trudeau handles President Trump's dominant handshake.", "An increasing number of people are crossing into Canada seeking refugee status.", "Mike Flynn's resignation won't put to rest wider questions about the Trump administration's connection with Russia.", "Stefan-Pierre Tomlin, the most \"swiped-right\" man in the UK on Tinder, shares his tips.", "Angel di Maria scores twice as PSG stun Barcelona to leave the Spanish side on the brink of Champions League elimination.", "World Cup winner and Fifa World Player of the Year Carli Lloyd signs for Manchester City Women on a short-term deal.", "From condom raids to emoji bans: Valentine's Day gets political", "A recent study found that men and woman respond differently to eating large amounts of unhealthy fats. Dr Zoe Williams goes on a high fat diet to test the research.", "Adam Rooney hits a hat-trick as Aberdeen cruise three points clear of third-placed Rangers by mauling a woeful Motherwell side.", "Defending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan blows a 3-0 lead to lose to Mark Davis in the Welsh Open second round.", "An international ranking puts Montreal as best world city for students, overtaking Paris.", "Mark Warburton says Rangers have yet to answer \"key questions\" regarding his departure as manager.", "Olympic cycling champions Laura and Jason Kenny announce they are expecting their first child.", "Man arrested for drink-driving after he turned up for a police job interview smelling of alcohol.", "A student wants more to be done in schools to raise awareness about toxic shock syndrome.", "With Valentine's Day upon us, we ask a group of singletons to reveal some of the most irritating questions they get asked about their relationship status.", "Jen donated a kidney to a stranger to make sure her husband would receive a kidney transplant.", "A newly unearthed essay by Winston Churchill reveals he was open to the possibility of life on other planets.", "Hungary are looking for 3,000 new recruits to defend the Hungary-Serbia border fence.", "Norwich City and Newcastle United play out a thrilling draw at Carrow Road after the Magpies had led after 23 seconds.", "Apple have delayed the series, but judging by the trailer, it will be worth waiting for.", "Guinea pigs may be seen as pets in the UK, but in Peru they are an increasingly popular delicacy.", "The former Trump adviser - fired after three weeks - set a record, but he's not alone when it comes to short political tenures.", "App will still let users play video noiselessly and will not override phones that are set on silent.", "The top tips from the most swiped man on Tinder.", "How tapping into a growing middle class in emerging markets saw Tupperware Brands go from failing to a global phenomenon.", "The Church of England's legislative body faces a further rigorous debate on same-sex marriage.", "Author Philip Pullman's long-awaited follow-up to his best-selling series comes out in October.", "Sacked commentator Doug Adler is to sue broadcaster ESPN, claiming he compared Venus Williams' tactics to a \"guerilla\", not a \"gorilla\".", "Barcelona's 4-0 thrashing by PSG leaves manager Luis Enrique's future increasingly uncertain, says Spanish football writer Andy West.", "The new £5 note will not be withdrawn, despite protests over its animal fat content.", "Women who survived breast cancer proudly bare their scars in alternative lingerie.", "What can be expected from the alliance's first formal meeting during the Trump presidency?", "The story of a sniffer dog who was retired from the front line in Afghanistan after becoming scared of loud noises is used to inspire those who struggle to read.", "President Trump prodded PM Netanyahu to compromise with Palestinians on a peace plan.", "BBC Sport takes a look at the two-time reigning Fifa World Player of the Year Carli Lloyd's career following her arrival at Manchester City Women.", "The death of the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un makes headlines in the press.", "Brexit fuels a sense of EU crisis - but reforms are likely to be slow, Kevin Connolly reports.", "Sprinter Usain Bolt and gymnast Simone Biles claim the top accolades at the Laureus World Sports Awards in Monaco.", "The London Dungeon attraction apologises after complaints that a marketing campaign was distasteful.", "London will host the final stage of the 2017 Women's Tour, with the opening stage on 7 June to run from Daventry to Kettering.", "Fifteen-year-old Welsh schoolboy Jackson Page reaches the third round of the Welsh Open after knocking out a player ranked 78 in the world.", "The long-awaited inquiry into allegations of wrongdoing by undercover police could be delayed for years amid a growing legal row with Scotland Yard over its scope.", "The effects of the violent war against drugs are still keenly felt in Manila's poor \"promised land\" district.", "Youth worker Solomon Smith tells the Victoria Derbyshire programme he lives \"hand to mouth\" on £9,000 a year.", "New England captain Joe Root says he will seek the advice of his predecessors before taking charge for the first time in July.", "The BBC's Jonathan Beale reports from the Arctic circle, where Russia is building up its forces.", "Basil Kirchin was a maverick musician and pioneering composer who is credited as a founding father of ambient music. Yet despite being hailed by acts such as Brian Eno and St Etienne, he remains an obscure figure.", "Fester was born with a narrow jaw which causes his lower teeth to stick out.", "The insurance market's no-alcohol rule sounds the death knell for the traditional City lunch.", "Floyd Mayweather denies reports he is set to fight Conor McGregor but calls on the UFC champion to 'get the fight done'.", "An Iranian Oscar hopeful impacted by President Trump's travel ban is to have an open-air premiere.", "How new signing Carli Lloyd brings single-mindedness, determination and a quest for perfection to Manchester City.", "The nine-year-old put through the Prevent scheme after viewing violent websites .", "Online videos feature man signing pop music lyrics for those who have never heard them.", "Defending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan and world number one Mark Selby progress to the second round of the Welsh Open.", "\"Who would have thought a high-functioning sociopath could be so popular?\" says the Sherlock star.", "Footballers suffer similar brain damage to boxers, a small scientific study suggests.", "England need to make people \"fall in love\" with Test cricket again, says new vice-captain Ben Stokes.", "Suffering a post-Valentine's crash? One museum turns the detritus of breakups into art.", "Former Sunderland striker Asamoah Gyan is one of more than 40 players deemed to have \"unethical hair\" in the United Arab Emirates.", "Rumours suggest the iconic mobile from the year 2000 will return to shelves but the company has refused to comment.", "A research body claims the UK spent less than 2% of national income on defence.", "A rare look into the daily workings of the EU's law enforcement organisation.", "Scotland captain Greig Laidlaw is ruled out for the rest of the Six Nations after suffering an ankle injury in the defeat by France.", "Arsenal's Champions League hopes lie in tatters at the last-16 stage yet again after they suffer a first-leg battering at Bayern Munich.", "The veteran rockers yell \"Sydney\" to a Melbourne crowd, to a chorus of boos.", "A growing number of people are using running clubs and events as business networking opportunities.", "Statistics suggesting a fall in UK net migration are likely to worry employers reliant on foreign labour.", "David Haye calls for a physical barrier to be placed between him and Tony Bellew in the build-up to their 4 March fight.", "Wayne Rooney's agent Paul Stretford is in China to see if he can negotiate a deal for the forward to leave Manchester United.", "Researchers are trying to design new smoke alarm sound after it was discovered they fail to wake most children.", "Why a former trader left Wall Street to target an overlooked market worth trillions globally.", "Amazon ad imam called on by government to promote harmony between Muslims and other faiths.", "Author Helen Bailey tried to build a new life after her husband died, but it was ripped from her by the man she chose to build it with.", "Eastern Airlines Flight 980 crashed into a mountain in Bolivia in 1985. Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner spent an unusual holiday trying to work out why.", "Hulya Arif is one of a number of disabled women breaking into the beauty business.", "Donald Trump, a frequent critic of Barack Obama's time on the links, is now himself under scrutiny.", "At least 800 people from the UK have travelled to support or fight for jihadist organisations in Syria and Iraq, according to British officials. But what do we know about them?", "When her late mother donated her organs, Ella hoped one of the recipients might contact her. It turned into two wonderful friendships.", "Kraft Heinz's failed bid for Unilever has forced the Anglo-Dutch company to focus on the bottom line.", "Manchester United reach the Europa League last 16 despite seeing Eric Bailly sent off and Henrikh Mkhitaryan sustain an injury.", "How do people juggle staying in work with a painful and debilitating condition like arthritis?", "Seven planets orbiting a single star have been discovered in a solar system 40 light-years from Earth.", "Lewis Hamilton puts the first laps on the Mercedes car he hopes will make him world champion for the fourth time in 2017.", "Chelsea manager Antonio Conte visits England rugby union boss Eddie Jones to \"gain inspiration and tactical ideas\".", "Holders Hibernian beat Edinburgh rivals Hearts to set up a home Scottish Cup quarter-final with Ayr United.", "HS2 high speed railway is given final approval, but with costs of £60bn, not everyone is happy.", "A young disabled woman discusses how she overcame barriers to find a fulfilling job in South Africa.", "Newly convicted killer Ian Stewart makes most of the front pages as police look again at ex-wife's death.", "Heard the term but not sure what it means? Chris Fawkes explains.", "Oscars season is all about the stars, but for women behind the camera, it takes a lot more to get noticed.", "The village of Ponzano in the Abruzzo region of Italy is being torn apart by a landslide, following earthquakes in 2016.", "Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton says he believes the new faster Formula 1 cars this year will be a \"massive challenge\".", "An unlikely stables in the heart of Brixton teaching more than just riding skills.", "Dozens of houses and almost 3,500 hectares of forest are destroyed by fires which continue to burn in Chile.", "Rumours are rife about the state of Muhammadu Buhari's health - and about his grip on power.", "The Great British Bake Off winner will be travelling around Britain in search of innovative cooking.", "Fit-again Johnny Sexton is named in the Ireland team to face France in Saturday's Six Nations game in Dublin.", "Barclays is making plans in case the UK loses access to the EU single market after Brexit, but is committed to London, chief executive Jes Staley says.", "Britain's Amir Khan says he is in talks with Manny Pacquiao to be the WBO world welterweight champion's next title challenger", "Republican Senator Chuck Grassley faced tough questions from his constituents at a town hall meeting.", "Olympic skeleton champion Lizzy Yarnold says she is \"fired up\" for the World Championships after a \"disappointing\" return.", "Republican politicians are returning to their home districts to face a barrage of criticism", "Aggregate figures exclude inflation and an adjustment for successful appeals.", "A third runway at Heathrow can only be justified if it does not breach climate change laws, MPs say.", "Leicester boss Claudio Ranieri praises his side's \"big heart\" after scoring an away goal in their Champions League last 16 tie at Sevilla.", null, "The first samba school in the world designed for people with disabilities helps them take part in Carnival.", "Tottenham Hotspur are knocked out of the Europa League at the last-32 stage as Gent hold them to a draw at a sell-out Wembley.", "The health service is advised to publish performance data more quickly.", "An airport in California has released video of a plane, being flown by the actor Harrison Ford, mistakenly flying low over an airliner.", "The remarkable double life of undercover agent Jack Barsky who lived the American dream at the KGB's expense.", "England centre Jonathan Joseph will not face Italy in Sunday's Six Nations match after being left out of the 24-man training squad.", "The year-long occupation near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation is over.", "Jamie Vardy's away goal keeps alive Leicester's hopes of reaching the last eight of the Champions League despite a narrow first-leg defeat in Sevilla.", "Prime Minister's Questions on the BBC's Daily Politics.", "Little Mix, Emeli Sande and Rag 'N' Bone Man on winning Brit Awards.", "England captain Wayne Rooney says he is staying at Manchester United, after being linked with a move to China.", "Three couples speak of their struggle to stay in the UK with their partners because of visa rules.", "John Barclay will captain a Scotland side featuring five changes for the Six Nations encounter at home to Wales.", "Maddie Hinch is named Female Goalkeeper of the Year as Great Britain win a hat-trick of world hockey awards.", "A round-up of some of the weird and wonderful outfits to have come out of this season's London Fashion Week.", "Sam Allardyce has traditionally made an instant impact at clubs - so why is it not happening at Crystal Palace?", "The fiance of the suffocated children's author Helen Bailey has been found guilty of murder.", "US President Donald Trump nominates Neil Gorsuch to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court.", "After bursting onto the political scene in 2016, \"halal snack pack\" becomes Australians' Word of the Year.", "In light of recent accusations made within cycling, Dan Roan asks whether it is more than just the sport's reputation that is on the line.", "Passengers were left at the next stop waiting for another train.", "Chelsea Cameron explains why she's grateful to her drug addict parents.", "Huge supertanker planes from the US, Russia and Brazil have been deployed to fight forest fires in Chile.", "A former Nigerian governor and convicted money-launderer claims UK investigators in his case were corrupt.", "Relive the key moments in England's rise under Eddie Jones - and the ones they are set to face in the 2017 Six Nations.", "Gabriel Jesus scores his first Manchester City goal as they tear West Ham apart for a comfortable victory at London Stadium.", "President Donald Trump has nominated Colorado federal appeals court judge Neil Gorsuch for the US Supreme Court.", "MPs argued for and against, then voted, by a majority of 384, to allow Theresa May to get Brexit negotiations under way.", "Doctors treating children whose mothers were infected with Zika say microcephaly is not the only problem.", "Track all the latest signings in the January transfer window as they happen in England, Scotland and across the world.", "Trevor Bayliss believes England need to work on how they play spin bowling after their tour of India ended in a crushing defeat.", "Globalisation's already had a huge impact on workers' lives and is now set to hit middle-class jobs.", "Was pollution in the British capital worse than it was in the Chinese capital last week?", "Jeremy Vine posted footage of a driver screaming obscenities at him as he cycled in Kensington.", "A gang of puppy farmers which sold hundreds of dogs kept inside cages on a farm has been spared jail.", "Dramatic footage shows the unusual phenomenon as lava flows through a crack in a sea cliff.", "Police in Los Angeles carry out their biggest-ever operation to rescue sexually exploited children.", "After decades of debate on the EU, MPs have finally done it - we are off.", "Football's law-making body Ifab is to look at introducing sin-bins for yellow-card offences when it meets in London in March.", "Russia are stripped of their 4x400m relay silver at London 2012 as Antonina Krivoshapka tests positive for steroid turinabol.", "Gary Barlow says he did not wash his hair for 14 years, but are there benefits to ditching shampoo?", "Arsenal's Premier League title hopes suffer a huge blow with a shock defeat against Watford at Emirates Stadium.", "The taxation policies of President Trump will show, among other things, why the subject is not boring.", "Native River, who was joint-favourite with some bookmakers, has been left off the list of Grand National entries by trainer Colin Tizzard.", "At least three clubs are at risk of missing a self-imposed deadline to improve access for disabled fans, the Premier League says.", "Can the number of people reported to have signed parliamentary petitions be believed?", "Olympic and Paralympic medals for the Tokyo 2020 Games will be made from recycled mobile phones.", "Dedryck Boyata's header is enough for Celtic to extend their Scottish Premiership lead to 25 points by beating Aberdeen.", "Is there a magic number to how many years you should stay in one job before moving on?", "England lose their last eight wickets for eight runs as India power to a 75-run win in the third Twenty20 in Bangalore to take the series 2-1.", "Eldin Jakupovic makes a string of saves as Hull frustrate Manchester United by claiming a goalless draw at Old Trafford.", "Veteran Conservative Ken Clarke likens post-Brexit trade hopes to Alice in Wonderland.", "A young woman in Syria refuses to let a war and lack of electricity stop her ambition to be a student.", "Rail fare costs and criticism of the EU by the Trump administration make Wednesday's front pages.", "England lock George Kruis is out of the Six Nations opener against France on Saturday with a knee ligament injury.", "After years of living and working on the streets of Mexico City, Carmen Munoz set up a retirement home for former - and homeless - sex workers.", "Protesters condemn the nomination of Neil Gorsuch by Donald Trump outside the US Supreme Court.", "Tom Burridge reports from the city of Avdiivka in eastern Ukraine, on the front line between government troops and Russian-backed rebels.", "Emails appear to contradict IAAF president Lord Coe’s claim he was unaware of corruption allegations in athletics before they became public.", "Tim Steiner has an elaborate tattoo on his back which was designed by a famous artist and bought by an art collector. For 10 years now he has been showing it in art galleries.", "Australian rugby league player Ben Barba will be allowed to play rugby union in France after switching codes, despite a 12-match drug ban.", "Liberals demand a scorched-earth opposition to Donald Trump's Neil Gorsuch Supreme Court pick.", "Christian and Jewish leaders are among those criticising President Trump's order restricting immigration.", "Virtual reality is opening up new revenue streams for the music industry and reviving the pop video.", "It looks a bit like bribery at first...", "Premier League clubs make a transfer window profit for the first time despite spending reaching a six-year January high of £215m.", "The annual Up Helly Aa Viking fire festival has been celebrated in Shetland, culminating in the traditional burning of a longboat.", "Who is the mystery VIP who's been memed as Trump's African half-brother?", "Can you change your gut bacteria for the better? Michael Mosley investigates for Trust Me I'm A Doctor.", "As a new national commission for loneliness is launched, two women share their experiences.", "Profiles of the six worshippers who were killed by a gunman at a Quebec City mosque on 29 January.", "Reality Check looks at some of the facts and figures behind refugee numbers in the US.", "Mr Gorsuch has been likened to the late Justice Scalia based on his strict interpretation of law.", "A team from Manchester University is travelling to Antarctica to search for rare iron meteorites they believed may be buried in the ice.", "Chelsea stretch their lead at the top of the Premier League to nine points despite Diego Costa missing a penalty in a draw at Liverpool.", "Conservationists say the nets are killing too many dolphins and turtles.", "Man Utd boss Jose Mourinho walks out of his BBC interview after the draw with Hull, telling Martin Fisher: \"If you don't know football, you shouldn't have a microphone.\"", "NHS staff using Google's search engine triggers one of its cybersecurity defences.", "The final Dragons' Den episode featuring Nick Jenkins and Sarah Willingham will air on 26 February.", "Just how big a threat are Germany's populist parties to the country's political establishment?", "The FA Cup fifth-round ties between Sutton United and Arsenal, and Fulham and Tottenham will be broadcast live on BBC One.", "Newcastle United midfielder Cheick Tiote joins Chinese second-tier side Beijing Enterprises Group FC for an undisclosed fee.", "Soul star Jodie Abacus was inspired to write his new single about the refugee crisis. He explains why.", "Two weekly political magazines have upped their circulation, suggesting a growing appetite for analytical news.", "Hypothyroidism affects one in 70 women and one in 1,000 men, but it can be tricky to diagnose and treat", "A number of companies and experts explore how businesses should best react to a disaster, be it a cyber-attack, financial scandal or other series issue.", "European football's governing body will ask for its teams to be given 16 places at the expanded 48-team 2026 World Cup.", "Civil rights campaigns, charities, parodies, and the media are all seeing a surge in support.", "Flanker Jack Clifford will make his second start for England in Saturday's Six Nations match with Wales, while Jack Nowell also starts.", "Terminally ill Sunderland fan Bradley Lowery visited in hospital by the club's players on Thursday.", "The United Nations has launched an emergency appeal for Yemen, warning that its population is on the brink of famine after two years of war. The BBC's Our World filmed and first broadcast this report in September 2016. It shows some of the suffering endured by children in the country.", "As Shannon Matthews 2008 disappearance is dramatised, Mark Simpson looks back on her mother's deception.", "Sweden has been experimenting with six-hour days but now the trials are over, has it really worked?", "A motion of \"no confidence\" in the Football Association is passed by MPs debating the organisation's ability to reform itself.", "Ghana's new government counts its presidential fleet only to find more than 200 cars are unaccounted for.", "Despite the sabre-rattling it's more likely to be skirmishes than apocalyptic battling over this historic legislation.", "The government says it has met the \"intention and spirit\" of the Dubs Amendment, but Lord Dubs disagrees.", "A family has been rescued from their truck that was dangling over a cliff-edge in southern China.", "An Australian farmer tells how he survived for hours trapped in a pond with only his nose above water.", "Heather Watson and Johanna Konta lead Great Britain to a second successive 3-0 win at the Fed Cup in Estonia.", "\"It's about 3% of our population that use about 50% of the resources.\"", "The first \"historically accurate\" portrait of Jane Austen's Mr Darcy is revealed by academics.", "Simonne Butler recounts her ex attacking her with a sword and having her hands reattached, in New Zealand in 2003.", "The classic \"It girl\", Tara Palmer-Tomkinson spent much of her life facing a camera lens.", "The issue of fake news on social media has been grabbing headlines, but how do these sites make money?", "Great Britain should be excited about their medal chances at the 2018 Winter Olympics, says chef de mission Mike Hay.", "Wales wing George North says he will be fit to face Scotland on 25 February in the Six Nations after being \"gutted\" to miss out on facing England.", "Baby Daphne-Louise was given just nine minutes to live after complications during labour.", "Fourteen-time major winner Tiger Woods says he will always feel \"a little sore\" due to the injuries he has suffered.", "Friday's papers feature stories about pressures on the NHS and claims council tax bills are to increase for many.", "As MPs get ready to debate whether the Football Association is fit for purpose, Richard Conway asks if it is capable of self-reform.", "Wakefield is seen as a pioneer in helping more patients stay at home and saving the NHS money.", "With rising demand and shrinking budgets, who is receiving social care from the state?", "World champion Mark Selby suffers a shock first-round defeat by world number 18 Martin Gould at the World Grand Prix in Preston.", "Not everyone was won round by Donald Trump when he became the Republican presidential nominee last year - even members of his own party had their doubts. Not any more.", "Bob Howden steps down from his position as chairman of British Cycling, but will remain as the organisation's president.", "Tara Palmer-Tomkinson, who has died at the age of 45, described living a privileged life, in an interview with Jane Garvey on BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour in 2010.", "One week. One family. One goal: To immigrate to Donald Trump's America.", "Premier League champions Leicester can use the FA Cup win over Derby to kick-start their season, says midfielder Andy King.", "Scottish National Party MPs were told off by the deputy speaker for whistling the EU anthem \"Ode to joy\" as MPs voted on Brexit legislation.", "Comedy scriptwriter who, together with Ray Galton, wrote for Tony Hancock and created Steptoe and Son.", "Branwen Jeffreys asks if more spending on healthcare in Germany improves the system.", "Ministers eased Surrey County Council's social care cash concerns - but can they do the same elsewhere?", "Feng Shui consultant Joey Yap tells us how Trump's year may go.", "It takes a special kind of person to run a radio station in an area controlled by Islamist militants in northern Syria. Raed Fares, who has never lost his sense of humour despite being gunned down by IS.", "He's only 19cm (7.4 in) tall and has been named Thanos.", "Leicester secure a first home win of 2017 as Demarai Gray's superb goal seals an extra-time victory over Derby in their FA Cup replay.", "Folk star Shirley Collins, who was unable to sing for 30 years, is nominated for two Radio 2 Folk Awards.", "Lawyer whose husband is ex-deputy PM notes the \"irony\" of women's day invite in her married name.", "Ex-chairman Greg Dyke fears \"stupid, old men\" at the Football Association will fight reform proposals even though it may cost them £40m in grassroots funding.", "The death of Tara Palmer-Tomkinson and the government's Brexit Commons victory dominate Thursday's front pages.", "Dennis the puppy got himself in a pickle trying to get outside to play in the garden.", "Demarai Gray produces a moment of magic as he slaloms past Derby defenders to score for Leicester in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.", "The president tweeted about an 'EASY D', which immediately had people guessing what he meant.", "Viewsnight is BBC Newsnight's new place for ideas and opinion. Here, French-Algerian journalist Nabila Ramdani argues Marine Le Pen will not win in France.", "Prime Minister's Questions on the BBC's Daily Politics.", null, "The BoE's deputy governor warns against abandoning bank rules amid claims the UK could become an offshore tax haven.", "St Helens earn a narrow win in a low-scoring but enthralling Super League season opener against Leeds Rhinos.", "With French owner L'Oreal wanting to put The Body Shop up for sale, BBC News asks what's gone wrong at the UK cosmetics chain?", "Donald Trump says it is taking longer to get his appointments confirmed than any other president.", "Two media commentators discuss whether recent headlines about the British actor have dented his image.", "Villager Alexander Batyokhtin has built a church out of snow in Sosnovka in Siberia.", "Haiti's Celine Marti competes in the skiing World Championships, despite only starting training for the event three months ago.", "Judd Trump will face Stuart Bingham in the Welsh Open final after the Englishmen enjoy comfortable wins in the last four.", "Harry Kane guides home a Christian Eriksen cross to give Tottenham an early lead against Fulham in the FA Cup fifth round tie at Craven Cottage.", "Warrington get the first win for an English club over Australian opponents since 2012, beating Brisbane in the World Club Series.", "The Kensington Palace exhibition will bring together clothing from throughout Princess Diana's life.", "Stuart Bingham holds his nerve in a tense final frame to beat Judd Trump 9-8 and win his first Welsh Open title.", "The history of black women working for Nasa goes back much further than the 1960s - the period of the film Hidden Figures - and their struggles continued afterwards.", "Watch as Tottenham striker Harry Kane rifles home to seal his hat-trick in the FA Cup fifth round tie against Fulham at Craven Cottage.", "Claims Moscow planned a coup in Montenegro and fears EU nationals could be caught in a legal no man's land after Brexit make the front pages.", "Father-of-three Ray Woodhall survived 27 heart attacks in 24 hours. He first became ill during a game of \"walking football\".", "Zlatan Ibrahimovic comes off the bench to score the winner as Manchester United are made to work hard to beat Blackburn in the FA Cup fifth round.", "Non-league side Lincoln achieve a 'football miracle' by reaching the FA Cup quarter-finals, while Millwall knock out Leicester.", "Harry Kane scores a hat-trick as Tottenham reach the FA Cup quarter-finals with a comfortable 3-0 win over Championship side Fulham.", "Former boxing champion Spencer Oliver describes the attack on friend and former boxer Michael Watson.", "Animal lovers hope to make it mandatory for pets found by council workers to be checked for microchips.", "Award winning author Jeanette Winterson has been speaking to the BBC about having to close her deli in Spitalfields because of rising rates.", "Former Australia and Northampton lock Dan Vickerman, who won 63 caps, has died at the age of 37.", "The actor's role in Don Juan in Soho will see him play 'an anti-hero', says writer and director Patrick Marber.", "Microsoft's founder warns a virus, possibly created by terrorists, could have a catastrophic effect.", "Thousands of men wearing just loincloths gathered at the Saidaiji Kannon-in Temple, Okayama, Japan for an annual festival.", "Russian gold medallists at the biathlon world championship in Austria had to sing their national anthem after the wrong one was played.", "Marcus Rashford slots home to equalise for Manchester United in their FA Cup fifth-round tie against Blackburn Rovers at Ewood Park.", "The BBC's James Longman assesses the mood in the deprived suburbs of Paris after days of unrest.", "The sister of the young man who was allegedly sexually assaulted by French police, calls for justice in a BBC interview.", "Chuma Somdaka, a disabled artist living in a South African park, gets her own exhibition.", "The US president invited a supporter on to the stage at his rally in Florida.", "Facebook last week doubled its bereavement leave allowance for its staff. Employees can now take up to 20 days off on full pay. Is it enough?", "A hat-trick from Denny Solomona helps push Sale to victory in a high-scoring affair against leaders Wasps.", "Tornado, the newest steam locomotive in Britain, pulled 12 Northern services over three days.", "Watch the FA Cup fifth round's best goals, including Rudy Gestede's acrobatic volley for Middlesbrough and a lovely finish from Blackburn's Danny Graham.", "Austrian Marcel Hirscher wins men's slalom gold as Britain's Dave Ryding misses out on a medal after finishing 11th at the Alpine World Championships.", "Stories on pre-negotiation warnings from European politicians and to \"remainer\" peers make the front pages.", "Mark Clemmit is shown around the away dressing room at Sutton United by manager Paul Doswell, which Premier League side Arsenal will be using during their FA Cup fifth-round match on Monday.", "The drama of cars tumbling into a sinkhole is shown on live TV.", "Mo Farah takes victory in the 5,000m at the Birmingham Grand Prix to win the final indoor race of his career.", "Lincoln City will play Arsenal in the FA Cup quarter-finals as reward for their fifth-round victory over Burnley.", "The US rocket company sends a cargo ship to resupply the International Space Station.", "Vice-President Mike Pence represents the new Donald Trump administration at the Munich Security Conference.", "Joe Burgess scores a hat-trick of tries as Wigan beat Cronulla Sharks to win a record fourth World Club Challenge.", "The 3ft violinist who chose music over life-changing surgery.", "As our arts centres and museums suffer funding cuts, several are seeking innovative ways to increase their income and footfall. But can quirky fundraisers keep our tourist attractions afloat?", "Some see Kim Jong-nam's death as a slap in the face for Beijing from the North Korean leader.", "British skier Dave Ryding puts himself in contention for a medal with a strong opening run in the men's slalom at the Alpine World Championships.", "Five objects, each worth at least £2,500, have been hidden around Scunthorpe, and the deal is finders keepers.", "BBC Sport takes a look at how non-league side Lincoln City became FA Cup legends after beating Premier League side Burnley 1-0 in the fifth round.", "US Vice-President Mike Pence defends Donald Trump, after he called the man who suspended his travel ban a \"so-called judge\".", "The BBC gets localised voting figures for the EU referendum - giving more detail of voting patterns.", "A group of commuters raided their bags and pockets to clean racist graffiti from a New York subway car.", "Alastair Cook had become \"drained\" as England Test captain, says England's director of cricket Andrew Strauss.", "Wales score 30 unanswered points in the second half as their Six Nations begins with a win against Italy in Rome.", "The Speaker and a Tory MP clash over the ending of a traditional dress code for parliamentary staff.", "The New England Patriots produced the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history to beat the Atlanta Falcons 34-28 in overtime and claim a fifth title.", "The British & Irish Boxing Authority are to introduce head scanners to check for bleeding on the brains of boxers.", "A village in Cuba holds a burial, with a twist.", "Amateur footage captures the blaze at a recycling centre in Milton, Stoke-on-Trent.", "The Queen has become the first British monarch to reach a Sapphire Jubilee.", "The vehicle was seen leaving a North Yorkshire town with no lights on.", "In Cambodia, motorbike taxis are everywhere - but it's rare to see women drivers transporting tourists. One entrepreneur is trying to change that.", "An immigrant rights campaigner has five things to say at the LGBTQ Solidarity Rally in New York.", "The James Bond director who risked his life during a daring secret mission in Nazi-occupied France.", "BBC Sport looks back at some of the best moments of Super Bowl LI, including some dazzling footwork from Atlanta Falcons Taylor Gabriel and Lady Gaga's dramatic half-time entrance.", "The United Arab Emirates is dealing with some weird weather.", "Social media updates by the Egyptian suspected of launching a machete attack at a Paris museum suggested nothing untoward, says his friend.", "The pop star leaps 79 metres from the roof of Houston's NRG stadium during her Super Bowl show.", "Former South Africa captain Joost van der Westhuizen dies aged 45, six years after he was diagnosed with motor neurone disease.", "Justin Webb looks at an elderly Bristol woman's struggle to find a care home place.", "Wales have injury worries over Dan Biggar and George North as they look forward to hosting England in the Six Nations on Saturday.", "What does his first fortnight as president reveal about Donald Trump's beliefs?", "One of the candidates in the French presidential election doubles his audience with a hologram.", "The New England Patriots complete the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history to beat the Atlanta Falcons 34-28, having trailed 28-3.", "Alastair Cook resigns as England Test captain after leading the side in a record 59 matches.", "A BBC test pitted Adam's CV against Mohamed's. Here's what happened.", "Leicester City goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel calls the Foxes' title defence \"embarrassing\" and says they could go down.", "Retired world champion Nico Rosberg reveals he wanted Fernando Alonso to replace him as Lewis Hamilton's Mercedes team-mate", "How Royal Marine Ciaran Maxwell turned to terror and stored arms smuggled from the military.", "Scores of migrants take buses to Calais each day, and use them to get home again if they fail to stow away on a lorry to the UK.", "Eddie Jones will seek to address England's \"horrendous\" record in Cardiff before the Six Nations meeting with Wales on Saturday.", "After a long three years, there finally seems to be a resolution over Tube ticket office closures.", "The officer is upset at the prospect of not being able to keep four-year-old Ivy when he retires.", "Dashcam footage captures a fireball over US Midwestern states on Monday.", "The French capital is aiming to win billions in business and thousands of jobs from London in the months ahead.", "When her daughter, Thalya, was diagnosed with chronic kidney disease, Chantal Onelien's initial reaction was shock. But, as Adam Harris reports, it was only the beginning of a long and difficult fight.", "Russia will not be eligible to compete at this summer's World Championships in London, says athletics' world governing body.", "Canada's Denis Shapovalov is \"incredibly ashamed\" after his default for hitting the umpire with a ball in the Davis Cup.", "David Hockney reflects on his career as the Tate Britain puts on the biggest ever retrospective of the artist's work.", "The Eagle Huntress, a film about a Kazakh girl in Mongolia learning to hunt with a golden eagle, divides opinion. It's described as a documentary, but is it staged?", "Twenty-four passes involving every member of the Celtic team lead to Moussa Dembele completing his hat-trick against St Johnstone.", "Alastair Cook had a rough ride as England captain with some up-and-down results, says BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew.", "Some members of the Aslef union say they are unhappy with a deal to avert strike action at Southern rail.", "Once too precious to use, now too cheap to notice – the significance of the light bulb is profound.", "CCTV showing police chasing Zakaria Bulhan moments after stabbing six people in London is released.", "Hundreds of thousands of protesters shone torches on their phones at an anti-corruption rally in the capital Bucharest, lighting up Victory Square.", "Manchester United ease to victory at Leicester to leave the defending champions just one point above the relegation zone.", "The fare dodger ranted and lashed out at London Midland staff after refusing to buy a £2.20 ticket.", "Francisco Fernandez and software firm Avaloq are key to the security of millions of bank accounts.", "Moves to target 'health tourism' and claims David Beckham was blackmailed over hacked emails are among Monday's headlines.", "Watch Julian Edelman make a miraculous catch which helps New England Patriots complete the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history to beat the Atlanta Falcons.", "Gabriel Jesus has made an impressive start at Man City, but he is not better than Sergio Aguero says MOTD 2 pundit Jermaine Jenas.", "With waiting lists growing longer, the subject could soon raise fierce debate.", "How much difference could you make by having separate bathroom bins for recycling?", "Cameroon come from behind to beat Egypt 2-1 and seal a fifth Africa Cup of Nations title in a thrilling, edgy final in Libreville.", "President Trump is just one of the sculptures carved out of snow and ice featured in the annual Sapporo snow festival.", "MPs applaud the speaker of the House of Commons for declaring he would not choose to invite President Trump to Parliament.", "The Queen makes history again, becoming the first British monarch to reign for 65 years.", "BBC Sport looks back at key milestones in Alastair Cook's England Test career after the 32-year-old Essex batsman resigned as skipper.", "From \"Bob's your uncle\" to \"Gordon Bennett\" - are there real people behind such English phrases?", "Romania protesters demand more, as government scraps corruption bill, BBC's Steve Rosenberg reports.", "Technology bosses seem open to talking with President Trump - but their staff seem to have other ideas.", "Canada's Denis Shapovalov is fined after being defaulted from his match against Great Britain's Kyle Edmund in the Davis Cup.", "BBC News visits the winner of \"Britain's Favourite Market\" to see how these community cornerstones are coping in the competitive world of modern retail.", "The substance could have easily been smuggled into Malaysia without detection, expert Bruce Bennett says.", "Statistics suggesting a fall in UK net migration are likely to worry employers reliant on foreign labour.", "High-profile cases of animal cruelty have provoked public outcry over apparent leniency. Is the law tough enough?", "Rugby league convert Ben Te'o makes his first Test start and scrum-half Danny Care is recalled in the England team to face Italy.", "It may seem simple - we like chocolate because it tastes nice. But there's more to it than that - and it relates to a balance that is set right from the very beginning of our lives.", "Scotland secure their first Women's Six Nations win since 2010 after recovering from two tries down to beat Wales.", "Three Russian athletes given clearance to compete internationally under a neutral flag by athletics' world governing body the IAAF.", "At least 800 people from the UK have travelled to support or fight for jihadist organisations in Syria and Iraq, according to British officials. But what do we know about them?", "When her late mother donated her organs, Ella hoped one of the recipients might contact her. It turned into two wonderful friendships.", "Lewis Hamilton puts the first laps on the Mercedes car he hopes will make him world champion for the fourth time in 2017.", "Leicester caretaker boss Craig Shakespeare denies a player revolt led to the sacking of Claudio Ranieri as manager.", "Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho defends sacked Leicester City manager Claudio Ranieri and says he was let down by \"selfish\" players.", "Honour crime campaigner Jasvinder Sanghera recounts her blighted childhood and her fight for change.", "Forget jackals, these guys are hyenas - the aggressive beasts who are turnover kings at the ruck. Jeremy Guscott has picked his top six.", "Leicester's decision to sack Claudio Ranieri nine months after winning the Premier League made former Foxes striker Gary Lineker \"shed a tear\".", "Labour's defeat in Copeland illustrates three inter-linked problems facing the party.", "Republican politicians are returning to their home districts to face a barrage of criticism", "Was the last comparable by-election to Copeland 139 years ago?", "Olympic skeleton champion Lizzy Yarnold is fourth overnight at the World Championships after the second run is cancelled.", "Claudio Ranieri says his \"dream died\" when he was sacked as Leicester manager nine months after winning the title.", "Tottenham Hotspur are knocked out of the Europa League at the last-32 stage as Gent hold them to a draw at a sell-out Wembley.", "Fernando Alonso says podium finishes will “probably not” be enough to satisfy him in this year, but is realistic about McLaren's expectations.", "Match of the Day host and ex-Leicester striker Gary Lineker says the club should have built a statue in honour of Claudio Ranieri rather than sacking him.", "The remarkable double life of undercover agent Jack Barsky who lived the American dream at the KGB's expense.", "Billy Mckay scores a stunning overhead kick as Inverness Caley Thistle beat Rangers to move off bottom spot in the table.", "A lost decade: watching RBS develop has not been a very rewarding experience - for anyone.", "Anna Rowe is calling for a law change after being duped by a man with a fake profile online.", "England captain Wayne Rooney says he is staying at Manchester United, after being linked with a move to China.", "Man Utd boss Jose Mourinho says Wayne Rooney will be part of the EFL Cup final squad, a day after the forward announced he was staying.", "Injury-hit Scotland will attempt to end a decade-long winless streak against Wales as the Six Nations resumes this weekend.", "Banned cyclist Lance Armstrong's $100m (£79m) legal fight with the US government has been set for trial in November.", "Maddie Hinch is named Female Goalkeeper of the Year as Great Britain win a hat-trick of world hockey awards.", "Thousands of people protested in Bucharest on Sunday night.", "Coach Rob Howley was \"proud and delighted\" of Wales' display until the last five minutes in which England sealed victory in Cardiff.", "Rural areas of Australia's New South Wales state have been evacuated as wildfires rage across the state, threatening homes and closing roads.", "The derelict St Peter's Seminary - in Scottish woods - is receiving a second chance.", "England's late victory against Wales is testament to a head coach and side who are full of determination, character and conviction.", "A selection of the best news photographs from around the world, taken over the past week.", "Spotify may be \"too big to fail\", according to Billboard magazine, but the clock is ticking as the company hatches its plans to go public.", "Pupils who behave well during the day can go home 10 minutes before those who do not.", "Great Britain qualify for April's Fed Cup World Group II play-offs with a 2-1 victory over Croatia.", "Cancer patients took to the catwalk as part of New York Fashion Week.", "A German tennis team in Hawaii express outrage as a verse banned since Nazism is heard.", "The cathedral where the then-Princess Elizabeth worshiped when she lived in Malta is in need of renovation.", "It's been a brutal few weeks for Facebook's virtual reality ambitions - Mark Zuckerberg may have made a rare miscalculation.", "Images of this year's Bafta film awards at the Royal Albert Hall in London.", "After a bride is reunited with her 150-year-old wedding dress, BBC News hears more stories of family heirlooms.", "She is believed to be the world's heaviest woman and will undergo weight reduction surgery.", "If stargazing is your idea of a great night out, the Isle of Man is the place to be.", "Should nursing a toddler be controversial? Mothers share their experiences of breastfeeding for longer.", "Violence has broken out at a protest in Paris in support of a young black man who was allegedly assaulted by police.", "The health secretary appears to be crossing his fingers for more money in the Budget.", "What is the so-called \"gig\" economy, a phrase increasingly associated with employment disputes?", "Leicester City slip to a fifth straight Premier League defeat to drop to 17th in the table, one point above the relegation zone.", "How I overcame anorexia and what to look for if you're worried someone you know has an eating disorder", "This video has been removed for right reasons", "Chelsea miss the chance to move 12 points clear at the top of the Premier League as they are held by a resilient Burnley at Turf Moor.", "A national newspaper in the Dominican Republic apologises after using the wrong photo.", "Up to 1,000 coloured drones flew through the sky in Guangzhou, southern China.", "Lego dragonflies and spiders will feature on the 3D \"map\" of a conservation project.", "A look at some of the images from this week's world of showbiz.", "Labour's new election coordinator 's comments on his leader's future crank up the volume on speculation.", "Jonny Dymond tracks President Trump's third week", null, "UKIP and nuclear power should be making Labour nervous in Stoke and Copeland, says John Pienaar.", "Speculation about US President Donald Trump's state visit to the UK appears in the Sunday papers.", "Coach Eddie Jones says England \"don't want to be in that position again\" after a dramatic late Six Nations win over Wales.", "Loveland, Colorado, is smitten with Valentine's Day. Ask nicely and they'll even send you a card.", "Burnley's fast transition from defence to attack helped them cause trouble down Chelsea's left, says Match of the Day pundit Ruud Gullit.", "MPs call for sports authorities to adopt a zero-tolerance approach, with lengthy bans for offenders.", "Arsene Wenger says he gave no indication on his future as Arsenal manager to club legend Ian Wright.", "The collection includes a dagger disguised as a pen and a watch with a hidden microphone.", "A collection of items used by British spies during the Second World War is going up for auction.", "The mass stranding of whales on a remote beach in New Zealand has taken a turn for the worse as 240 more arrived.", "Critics, including NATO, say it's part of a campaign of Russian misinformation. But its UK editor says his outlet has been unfairly attacked by the West.", "Scotland suffer a 10th straight defeat in Paris as France emerge victorious from a tense tussle at the Stade de France.", "The BBC speaks to women in the Israeli army - one of the few in the world to conscript females.", "Manager Jurgen Klopp is delighted by Liverpool's \"fantastic\" 2-0 win over Tottenham and looks forward to a \"perfect Sunday\".", "How and why Germany is taking a stand against false reports by dubious media outlets.", "Adam Rooney hits a hat-trick as Aberdeen cruise three points clear of third-placed Rangers by mauling a woeful Motherwell side.", "Defending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan blows a 3-0 lead to lose to Mark Davis in the Welsh Open second round.", "Sacked commentator Doug Adler is to sue broadcaster ESPN, claiming he compared Venus Williams' tactics to a \"guerilla\", not a \"gorilla\".", "Despite the Champions League thrashing by Bayern Munich, there is no current prospect of boss Arsene Wenger leaving Arsenal before the summer.", "Donald Trump has just finished the fourth week of his presidency. What happened?", "Artist Christian Fuchs is obsessed with his ancestors and spends months painstakingly recreating portraits of them, which he poses for himself", "What can be expected from the alliance's first formal meeting during the Trump presidency?", "President Trump prodded PM Netanyahu to compromise with Palestinians on a peace plan.", "\"Excuse me, I have some leg-warmers to put on…\" says the Call the Midwife star ahead of her West End debut.", "Zlatan Ibrahimovic scores his first Man Utd hat-trick as his side opens up a commanding Europa League last-32 lead against Saint-Etienne.", "The original cast of 2003 comedy is filming a short sequel for Comic Relief.", "Actor Ashton Kutcher says he has seen things \"no person should see\".", "Women are fighting back against sexism in an industry steeped in a history of hyper-sexualised female characters.", "What are the rules behind the great British pastime of standing in line?", "What attracts some Western politicians to the President of Russia?", "A shift in attitude by Church of England clergy and Trump's troubles with US intelligence chiefs make the news.", "The London Dungeon attraction apologises after complaints that a marketing campaign was distasteful.", "Following the demise of the seal-hunting trade, Norway is focusing on a new Arctic gold rush.", "The NHS says sorry to a Devon woman told \"the computer is asking the questions\" when she dialled the non-emergency service.", "Drivers leapt from their vehicles to help capture a man who led a high speed chase through Brisbane, Australia.", "The Facebook founder's manifesto blurs the edges between business and politics. In a 21st Century of technology giants, the two will become increasingly intertwined.", "Forward Mesut Ozil believes he is being made the scapegoat for Arsenal's problems, according to his agent.", "Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger is at his \"lowest point\" and may leave the club this season, says his former captain Martin Keown.", "President Donald Trump has made a dig at the BBC in a sharp exchange during a heated White House press conference.", "The playful exchange between Netanyahu and Trump said a great deal, writes PJ Crowley.", "Great Britain's track star Laura Muir talks about her love for animals and what her ambitions are for 2017.", "Tottenham's Europa League hopes are dealt a blow as Gent earn a surprise 1-0 win in their last-32 first-leg meeting.", "Matt Lucas high-fives chancellor at ceremony and says comedy partner David Walliams will be fuming.", "A steward appears to spit at a player before being chased and then tackled by his team-mates after an Argentina Cup match between Central Norte and Talleres de Perico.", "The researchers recording ants' brain activity as they run.", "Relive Arsenal's Champions League hammering through the eyes of social media.", "Jen donated a kidney to a stranger to make sure her husband would receive a kidney transplant.", "Suffering a post-Valentine's crash? One museum turns the detritus of breakups into art.", "A newly unearthed essay by Winston Churchill reveals he was open to the possibility of life on other planets.", "In rare interviews, the Orel Butchers speak about their lives as Russian football hooligans.", "The long-awaited inquiry into allegations of wrongdoing by undercover police could be delayed for years amid a growing legal row with Scotland Yard over its scope.", "Iceland is the UK's favourite online supermarket, says consumer group Which? so is it now \"cool\"?", "President Trump tells journalists he is tackling American jobs being lost abroad and a \"disaster\" in the Middle East.", null, "Rumours suggest the iconic mobile from the year 2000 will return to shelves but the company has refused to comment.", "The BBC's Jonathan Beale reports from the Arctic circle, where Russia is building up its forces.", "As New York Fashion Week draws to a close, here are some highlights from the catwalk.", "Mark Clattenburg, who took charge of the Euro 2016 final, is leaving his job as a Premier League referee to work in Saudi Arabia.", "Uefa commissions a research project that will examine the links between dementia and playing football.", "She told him she \"liked computers and robots\" as she explained why she wanted to work there.", "Championship clubs agree \"in principle\" to use goalline technology from the start of next season.", "Three former British and Irish Lions captains have backed Wales' Alun Wyn Jones to lead the Lions tour to New Zealand.", "Prime Minister's Questions on the BBC's Daily Politics.", "Will a merger of Essilor and Luxottica be too big for the public good?", "As Kanye West unveils his latest fashion collection, pop star Sia urges him to stop using fur.", "A recent study found that men and woman respond differently to eating large amounts of unhealthy fats. Dr Zoe Williams goes on a high fat diet to test the research.", "Arsenal's Champions League hopes lie in tatters at the last-16 stage yet again after they suffer a first-leg battering at Bayern Munich.", "Theo Walcott scores his 100th goal for Arsenal as he doubles the Gunners' lead in their FA Cup fifth-round tie against non-league Sutton United at Gander Green Lane.", "The story behind the compiler, a remarkable innovation that made modern computing possible.", "Amy's Place is the UK's only recovery house dedicated to helping young women overcome their addictions.", "Chairs, records and toys are among the items dangling from the ceiling of St John's Church.", "Meet the London Fashion Week designers using clothes to shape how we see gender.", "A landmark race involving two driverless cars sees one of them crash and the other avoid running over an animal.", "Mercedes Formula 1 boss Toto Wolff and non-executive chairman Niki Lauda sign to stay with the team until the end of 2020.", "Meet Sutton United's team as they prepare to take on Arsenal in the fifth round of the FA Cup.", "The team of British soldiers will be the first all-women group to walk across Antarctica.", "Why machines and AI are set to transform the way we live and work.", "Forty blue plaques will be unveiled on BBC Music Day this year - and you can decide who gets one.", "Catherine Gazzoli is producing a range of organic baby food influenced by her Italian roots.", "On the front line with government forces pushing towards Mosul, the last major stronghold of so-called Islamic State in Iraq.", "Librarian Emma Johansen was running Sweden's official Twitter account when the president mentioned a security incident.", "Scientists in Boston have found a way to get every last drop of ketchup out of the bottle.", "Richard Longhurst, co-founder of Lovehoney, a sex toy business, shares his business advice.", "Profile of Unilever, the business behind brands from Marmite to Pot Noodle and Persil.", "The Kensington Palace exhibition will bring together clothing from throughout Princess Diana's life.", "Stuart Bingham holds his nerve in a tense final frame to beat Judd Trump 9-8 and win his first Welsh Open title.", "Angelina Jolie on her new film - based on the genocide in Cambodia - politics and her family.", "Footage from an airport in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, is said to show the moments before Kim Jong-nam died.", "Angelina Jolie and her family try some of Cambodia's delicacies.", "Watch as Lucas Perez gives Arsenal the lead in their FA Cup fifth-round tie against non-league Sutton United at Gander Green Lane.", "A super-slippery coating for bottles could make getting liquids out much easier, US scientists say.", "When her baby boy stopped breastfeeding, Sarah Boyle insisted on a hospital scan.", "Zlatan Ibrahimovic comes off the bench to score the winner as Manchester United are made to work hard to beat Blackburn in the FA Cup fifth round.", "The sequel to 2001's ocean series is due to be shown later this year on BBC One.", "Pep Guardiola says Man City's critics will \"kill them\" if they exit the Champions League but wants his players to embrace the pressure.", "Angelina Jolie on her new film First They Killed My Father, based on the genocide in Cambodia, and her family.", "Losing its most cherished prize will present IS with an existential challenge, says Renad Mansour.", "In a divided America, two groups at the extreme ends of the political spectrum are doing battle online, and on the streets.", "Former boxing champion Spencer Oliver describes the attack on friend and former boxer Michael Watson.", "Footage released by Syria Civil Defence shows a girl being pulled alive from rubble, apparently in Damascus amid reported air strikes.", "It's a delicious structure consisting of sponge, chocolate and orange jelly. But is a Jaffa Cake actually a biscuit? And what can it teach us about philosophy?", "The actor's role in Don Juan in Soho will see him play 'an anti-hero', says writer and director Patrick Marber.", "A forgotten and abandoned platform hidden beneath Glasgow Central Station could be given new life.", "Thousands of men wearing just loincloths gathered at the Saidaiji Kannon-in Temple, Okayama, Japan for an annual festival.", "Russian gold medallists at the biathlon world championship in Austria had to sing their national anthem after the wrong one was played.", "Badminton is one of seven sports to lose its appeal against UK Sport funding cuts for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic cycle.", "The sister of the young man who was allegedly sexually assaulted by French police, calls for justice in a BBC interview.", "A simple-yet-clever chatbot gives Dave Lee hope that this immature technology will be worth while.", "The US president calls the media \"enemies of the people\" - a phrase favoured by Stalin and Mao.", "Newcastle United move one point clear at the top of the Championship, scoring in each half to defeat Aston Villa.", "Comedian David Baddiel has made a documentary about the impact of his father's rare form of dementia.", "Migrant workers have signed up to a labour boycott to highlight the role they play in British society.", "The Iranian Foreign Minister, Javad Zarif, has called on the United States to stop threatening Iran.", "The US president invited a supporter on to the stage at his rally in Florida.", "Facebook last week doubled its bereavement leave allowance for its staff. Employees can now take up to 20 days off on full pay. Is it enough?", "Could the UK be going where it has never been before? Detailed plans to create the country's first spaceports are set to be unveiled.", "Tornado, the newest steam locomotive in Britain, pulled 12 Northern services over three days.", "Watch the FA Cup fifth round's best goals, including Rudy Gestede's acrobatic volley for Middlesbrough and a lovely finish from Blackburn's Danny Graham.", "Stories on pre-negotiation warnings from European politicians and to \"remainer\" peers make the front pages.", "Arsenal reach the FA Cup quarter-finals as goals from Lucas Perez and Theo Walcott beat non-league Sutton United.", "The financial picture for the NHS in England is worse than it looked last November.", "Billionaire owner Andrey Melnichenko is alleged to owe 15.3m euros to the shipbuilder.", "Mark Clemmit is shown around the away dressing room at Sutton United by manager Paul Doswell, which Premier League side Arsenal will be using during their FA Cup fifth-round match on Monday.", "The red phone, which has the Nazi leader's name engraved on it, was sold to an anonymous bidder.", "Vice-President Mike Pence represents the new Donald Trump administration at the Munich Security Conference.", "Lincoln City will play Arsenal in the FA Cup quarter-finals as reward for their fifth-round victory over Burnley.", "The US rocket company sends a cargo ship to resupply the International Space Station.", "England all-rounder Ben Stokes becomes the most expensive foreign player in IPL history as he is bought for £1.7m by Rising Pune Supergiants.", "A US college student \"regrets\" grading an apology letter sent to him by his ex-girlfriend and posting it on Twitter with a mark.", "Joe Burgess scores a hat-trick of tries as Wigan beat Cronulla Sharks to win a record fourth World Club Challenge.", "Tackling an industry that trades on perfection with a talent agency for disabled actors and models.", "As our arts centres and museums suffer funding cuts, several are seeking innovative ways to increase their income and footfall. But can quirky fundraisers keep our tourist attractions afloat?", "The ambulance got stuck after being called to help an an injured Aylestone St James player in Leicester.", "Drug addiction has become a major campaign issue ahead of state polls in Punjab.", "After bursting onto the political scene in 2016, \"halal snack pack\" becomes Australians' Word of the Year.", "In light of recent accusations made within cycling, Dan Roan asks whether it is more than just the sport's reputation that is on the line.", "England pick Wasps' Elliot Daly ahead of in-form Jack Nowell to face France in the Six Nations.", "The Yorkshire artist has redesigned the newspaper's logo for a one-off souvenir edition", "The papers lead on lettuce rationing in supermarkets and a lawyer being struck off for dishonesty.", "The illegal trade in chimps highlights the long, often shameful relationship between them and humans.", "Chelsea Cameron explains why she's grateful to her drug addict parents.", "A former Nigerian governor and convicted money-launderer claims UK investigators in his case were corrupt.", "Gabriel Jesus scores his first Manchester City goal as they tear West Ham apart for a comfortable victory at London Stadium.", "Time outdoors helps sleep but scientists say you could benefit at home by using more natural light.", "A British woman tells the Victoria Derbyshire programme that police in Dubai are refusing to hand over her passport so she can fly back to the UK for urgent cancer treatment.", "Buying a home can be expensive enough but some owners are facing unexpected bills to buy the freehold of their property.", "MPs argued for and against, then voted, by a majority of 384, to allow Theresa May to get Brexit negotiations under way.", "Footage is released celebrating 20 years of European crash testing.", "Trevor Bayliss believes England need to work on how they play spin bowling after their tour of India ended in a crushing defeat.", "Thai customs officials have seized their biggest ever haul of smuggled pangolin scales, after a crackdown on illegal wildlife trade.", "England's Ben Stokes could fetch millions when he enters the Indian Premier League auction, says India's Yuvraj Singh.", "Was pollution in the British capital worse than it was in the Chinese capital last week?", "Scrum-half Rhys Webb returns as Wales make five changes for their Six Nations Championship opener against Italy in Rome.", "Dan Evans will play 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov in the opening rubber of Great Britain's Davis Cup first-round tie against Canada in Ottawa.", "Police in Los Angeles carry out their biggest-ever operation to rescue sexually exploited children.", "Dramatic footage shows the unusual phenomenon as lava flows through a crack in a sea cliff.", "Readers share stories of their childhood time capsules and the items they buried.", "Workers at the O2 arena accidentally unearth the trove which has a wealth of late 90s memorabilia.", "What do we know about the new president's aesthetic tastes?", "Women in America walked in the shoes of Muslim women by wearing a hijab for World Hijab Day.", "The force says it was \"an internal communications error\" and has apologised to the owner.", "After decades of debate on the EU, MPs have finally done it - we are off.", "A 16-year old transgender pupil is suing his former school for discrimination.", "The British Antarctic Survey's Halley research station is towed 23km inland to avoid an icy fate.", "Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho says he is being judged by different rules to other Premier League bosses.", null, "Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe says he has yet to see the play inspired by JK Rowling's stories.", "Is there a magic number to how many years you should stay in one job before moving on?", "Josh Strauss and Glasgow Warriors team-mate Ryan Wilson are in the Scotland back row for the Six Nations opener at Murrayfield.", "Newcastle fan saves on FA Cup train journey but needed 56 tickets.", "England seem well set for the Six Nations, so what are the six questions facing coach Eddie Jones? Tom Fordyce reports.", "Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull tells Ben Fordham on 2GB Radio he's \"disappointed\" that details of a call between himself and President Trump were made public.", "The pop icon announces she is carrying twins with a striking post that becomes Instagram's most-liked ever.", "Eldin Jakupovic makes a string of saves as Hull frustrate Manchester United by claiming a goalless draw at Old Trafford.", "Freddy McConnell, a trans man who intends to have children in future, says it makes sense for medical staff to talk about \"pregnant people\" instead of \"expectant mothers\".", "Luke Mosson bought a flat for £150,000 but later realised that a clause in his contract meant the ground rent over the whole lease would cost more than £1.3bn.", "President Trump brushes off reports of his \"tough phone calls\" with Mexican and Australian leaders.", "England lock George Kruis is out of the Six Nations opener against France on Saturday with a knee ligament injury.", "Rex Tillerson has been sworn in as President Donald Trump’s secretary of state.", "Tim Steiner has an elaborate tattoo on his back which was designed by a famous artist and bought by an art collector. For 10 years now he has been showing it in art galleries.", "Race leader Marcel Kittel is punched by Astana rider Andriy Grivko during stage three of the Dubai Tour.", "Kris Marshall quits BBC One's Death in Paradise because it means too much time away from his family.", "Prime Minister's Questions on the BBC's Daily Politics.", "Anti-government protests take place in Bucharest, Romania.", "One of the daughters of former Christian charity head John Smyth QC says having boys around the house was a normal part of her childhood, after allegations of abuse against him emerged.", "Drake promises to refund 20,000 fans after Travis Scott fell into a hole on stage at the O2.", "In Spain's hard-up Asturias region people are resettling rural areas and using online barter trade.", "Cameroon will face Egypt in the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations final after two second-half strikes see off Ghana.", "JK Rowling mocks Twitter users who threaten to burn her books because of her anti-Trump stance.", "Conservationists say the nets are killing too many dolphins and turtles.", "NHS staff using Google's search engine triggers one of its cybersecurity defences.", "Man Utd boss Jose Mourinho walks out of his BBC interview after the draw with Hull, telling Martin Fisher: \"If you don't know football, you shouldn't have a microphone.\"", "The final Dragons' Den episode featuring Nick Jenkins and Sarah Willingham will air on 26 February.", "Beyonce and husband Jay Z say \"our family will be growing by two\", in an Instagram post.", "Huddersfield show their promotion credentials by beating 10-man Brighton, who fail to extend their Championship lead.", "Former Chelsea and England midfielder Frank Lampard retires, bringing to an end a 21-year career in the professional game.", "A talk by Trump supporter Milo Yiannopoulos is called off amid protests at the Berkeley campus.", null, "Ireland fly-half Johnny Sexton is the latest star to miss the Six Nations start, as we round up the views from around the camps.", "The papers lead on the starting gun being fired on Brexit, as MPs vote for Article 50 to be triggered.", "Manchester City's signing of Gabriel Jesus was like buying a watermelon, according to manager Pep Guardiola.", "At least three clubs may miss a self-imposed deadline to improve access for disabled fans, the Premier League says."], "section": [null, null, "Newsbeat", "Newsbeat", null, "Entertainment & Arts", null, "Business", null, null, null, "Asia", "Middle East", null, null, null, "Technology", null, "UK Politics", "Europe", null, null, "UK", null, null, null, "The Papers", "Hampshire & Isle of Wight", "Magazine", "Business", null, "London", null, "Europe", null, "Technology", "UK", null, "Middle East", null, null, null, null, null, null, "The Papers", "Hampshire & Isle of Wight", "Science & Environment", null, null, null, null, "US & Canada", "Business", null, "US & Canada", "US & Canada", null, null, null, "Health", null, null, null, null, "Entertainment & 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Gander Green Lane.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho has not ruled out the prospect of Wayne Rooney leaving the club this month.\n\nThe 31-year-old England forward, who scored his 250th United goal last month to become the club's record scorer, has been linked with a move to China in recent weeks.\n\nThe Chinese Super League's transfer window shuts next week and Mourinho was asked if the club captain would still be at Old Trafford by then.\n\n\"You have to ask him,\" Mourinho said.\n\n\"Of course I can't guarantee [he will be here]. I can't guarantee that I'm here next week, how can I guarantee that a player is here next season?\"\n\nRooney is contracted to United until 2019 and had previously said he was committed to seeing out his deal.\n\nHe has not been a first-team regular this season and has scored just five goals.\n\nHowever, Mourinho said in October that Rooney was \"going nowhere\" and reiterated on Tuesday that he did not want him to leave.\n\n\"I would never push - or try to push - a legend of this club to another destiny,\" added the Portuguese coach.\n\n\"So you have to ask him if he sees himself staying in the club for the rest of his career or if he sees himself moving.\n\n\"It is not a question for me because I am happy to have him. I don't want him to leave.\"\n\nThere is a clear sense now that time is ticking down on Rooney's Manchester United career.\n\nLess than a month after Rooney eclipsed Sir Bobby Charlton to become the club's record goalscorer, manager Jose Mourinho delivered the kind of response he came out with when he was asked about the futures of Morgan Schneiderlin and Memphis Depay during the January transfer window.\n\nSchneiderlin and Depay ended up leaving for Everton and Lyon respectively. And at 31, with 549 United appearances and 250 goals to his name, Rooney seems destined to experience the same fate.\n\nIt might not happen now. Rooney is known to be coveted by the Chinese Super League, who would offer vast sums to get the England captain to join Carlos Tevez and Oscar in the exodus east, but twice over the past few days I have been told such a move before the 28 February deadline is unlikely. The summer window in China runs from 19 June to 14 July.\n\nHowever, the end is in sight and Rooney's camp will doubtless spend the next few months exploring options.\n\nRooney has the carrot of knowing if he can remain in the England fold until next year's World Cup, he is likely to become his country's most-capped player, in addition to its record goalscorer.\n\nWhether he can do that from China is doubtful, and though former team-mate David Beckham eked out the end of his England days in Major League Soccer with LA Galaxy, it is by no means certain Gareth Southgate would offer the same opportunity to a player who has plenty of competition for his number 10 role.\n\nThis is the reality that is likely to focus minds because, four years after it seemed to be happening under Sir Alex Ferguson, it now seems a question of when, not if, Rooney leaves Old Trafford for good.\n\nMartial determined to stay at Old Trafford\n\nMeanwhile, Rooney's team-mate Anthony Martial insists he wants to stay at the club \"for as long as possible\".\n\nThe 21-year-old has struggled to recapture the form shown during his debut season at Old Trafford and was linked with a loan move to Sevilla in December.\n\n\"I love Manchester, I love the club and I love the fans,\" Martial said.\n\n\"The fans give me a lot of joy and I really enjoy having them backing me. I try to be as good as possible to make them happy, to satisfy them.\"", "London Fashion Week has traditionally only been aimed at women, but seven of the major catwalk shows this season have mixed in menswear.\n\nAdded to that, we've seen men modelling women's wear, unisex clothing brands and androgynous designs that would work on anyone.\n\nIt seems like British fashion is going through a gender revolution at the moment.\n\nNewsbeat meets the designers leading the way.\n\nIrish-born designer Jonathan Anderson started his J. W. Anderson brand as menswear in 2008, before launching his first women's collection two years later.\n\nHe designs with the idea that men can borrow clothes from women and vice versa.\n\n\"It's something that we play with each season, this idea,\" he tells Newsbeat backstage at his London Fashion Week show.\n\n\"We'll do a mac on a guy and a mac on a woman. They are the same thing, but on a man and a woman they can mean different things.\"\n\nJ. W. Anderson used androgynous looks in both his men's and women's collections\n\nAnderson is seen by many in the fashion world as a pioneer for taking this unisex approach years ago.\n\nAlthough he now presents his women's and menswear collections separately, he says he doesn't want to dictate who should wear what.\n\n\"I can give you an idea of how I see it on both a man and a woman, but I'm not going to tell you if it's for a man or a woman.\"\n\nThe artistic director of Diesel, and founder of the unisex range Nicopanda, Nicola Formichetti was also Lady Gaga's stylist for three years (yes, he was responsible for the meat dress).\n\n\"Fashion has always been about mixing gender, but now it's becoming such an issue,\" he tells Newsbeat.\n\n\"Now there are products like jeans and hoodies and military jackets that are becoming very very unisex.\"\n\nHe thinks designers have a \"duty\" to create clothes that every gender can feel comfortable in.\n\n\"We have a voice and we need to use it.\"\n\nJulien Macdonald's sequin-studded ball gowns are a favourite with some of the world's most glamorous women, including Beyonce and Gigi Hadid.\n\nSo it surprised some in the fashion world when he launched a menswear collection in 2015.\n\nAnd at this London Fashion Week, male models walked alongside women in tight-fitting sequin jackets and lycra bodysuits - looks that would traditionally be considered very feminine.\n\nHe says men are becoming more comfortable experimenting with the way they dress.\n\n\"We live in a metrosexual community,\" he tells Newsbeat.\n\n\"When you see your girlfriend going out in an amazing dress, you think, 'I want to look just as good as you,' so men do want to have fun.\n\nJulien Macdonald featured men and women together on his catwalk\n\n\"Nobody cares if you look camp or gay - you know what? Now everybody's got a mixed community of friends. It doesn't matter.\"\n\nRobert and Oliver are both menswear designers who presented their debut collections as part of the Central Saint Martins MA show at London Fashion Week.\n\nRobert Sanders, 25, uses layers of recycled fabric to create tunics, skirts and shorts that drape over the models in an androgynous way.\n\n\"I grew up dressing up in my mum's clothes, and getting negative feedback off people,\" he tells Newsbeat.\n\nOliver Thame's collection featured bold clashing prints, and tops with cut outs that revealed the torsos of his male models.\n\n\"I presented it on men, but I feel like it could've been just as well presented on women,\" says the 25-year-old.\n\n\"I think in this day and age, is there really such a thing as gender specific fashion?\"\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "Sutton United are getting ready to take on Arsenal in the fifth round of the FA Cup.\n\nThe teams will meet for the first time in their history at Gander Green Lane in front of 5,000 fans. Millions more will be tuning in to watch it on BBC One.\n\nArsenal players are paid millions but Sutton's players get £600 a week.\n\nThat means many of them have other jobs including teachers, carers, personal trainers and builders.\n\nDan Spence plays fullback for Sutton but he also works at a special needs school as a teaching assistant.\n\n\"It's completely different but it opens your eyes and it's very rewarding.\n\n\"There's a good bunch of 15 and 16-year-old boys who love football.\n\n\"Every playtime it's like we're going to do Sutton versus Leeds or Sutton versus Arsenal.\"\n\nDan says his students are fully behind his team too.\n\n\"It's a great buzz around the place - a few posters are up - they're really supporting us.\n\n\"The day after training normally you go into work and you speak to work colleagues about what you've been up to.\n\n\"To go in after playing Arsenal and telling them stories about the game... it's going to be amazing.\"\n\nDan Fitchett works in an office and sells life insurance.\n\n\"I work there full time apart from training here twice a week in the mornings.\n\n\"It is what it is and it works well with football.\"\n\nThe striker admits playing for Sutton United - and playing against a Premier League side - helps him get on well with his clients.\n\n\"I ask them if they like football - and I might mention I'm playing Arsenal - it kind of helps with my sales definitely.\n\n\"And there are quite a few Arsenal fans in the office.\n\n\"It's quite a comedown when you're back into the office after playing such big games.\"\n\nGoalkeeper Ross Worner is on to a good thing.\n\nHe frames football shirts for a living and is hoping to cash in on his club's big game against Arsenal.\n\n\"I've been framing all the boys' shirts from all the cup games.\n\n\"It's something I quite enjoy doing, being a footballer myself I had shirts I wanted framed, so I got into it.\n\n\"If I can get a few (Arsenal) shirts in, it'll help the cash flow.\n\n\"All the boys already said whatever shirt they get they want it framed, so work should be good for the next couple of weeks after the game.\"\n\nJamie Collins plays centre back for Sutton United but for three days a week he's a building supervisor.\n\n\"Sometimes I get my hands dirty and do a little bit of labouring for the lads if we're short on people.\n\n\"It's a lot different from the football days but it's a good break.\n\n\"You work one day then train the next - so it's a good mix.\n\n\"My boss has been sympathetic and has given me some days off before the game.\n\n\"He's a Tottenham fan so he's hoping we do him a favour and beat Arsenal.\"\n\nArsene Wenger gets paid £8.9m but Sutton United manager Paul Doswell manages Sutton United for free.\n\nIn fact he even took out a personal loan to pay for the club's pitch.\n\nPaul has a property business with 100 employees so he says he doesn't need another job.\n\nHe loves football that much.\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nSutton United's players will \"go down in history\" despite missing out on a place in the FA Cup quarter-finals, said manager Paul Doswell.\n\nThe National League side were beaten 2-0 by Premier League visitors Arsenal, who are 105 places above Sutton on English football's ladder.\n\nThe home side had several chances, with Adam May wasting a chance and Roarie Deacon hitting the crossbar.\n\n\"This was our cup final,\" said Doswell. \"I'm very, very proud.\"\n\nThe 50-year-old said it was \"a dream\" to watch his side play Arsenal, who will face another non-league team - Lincoln City - in the last eight.\n\n\"We were disappointed not to get a goal for the supporters here but the overriding emotion is pride,\" he added.\n\nSutton, who famously beat Coventry in the FA Cup in 1989, had overcome league sides AFC Wimbledon and Leeds United on their way to the fifth round.\n\nBut they could not get the better of an Arsenal team who had lost three of their previous four games.\n\nSutton held their own against 12-time FA Cup winners Arsenal, who are fourth in the Premier League, before Lucas Perez's 26th-minute cross-shot gave Arsene Wenger's side the lead.\n\nTheo Walcott's 100th goal for the club sealed victory at Gander Green Lane.\n\nWenger, who made seven changes to the team beaten 5-1 by Bayern Munich last week, said Sutton's performance surprised him.\n\n\"I don't really enjoy tonight because we absolutely had to do the job and it is tricky,\" he said.\n\n\"They played very well. It is basically division five and when I arrived here in England 20 years ago, in division five they were not as fit physically as they were today.\n\n\"They were organised and had a huge desire. If we were not mentally prepared, we would not have gone through.\"\n\n'Why are they not playing at a higher level?'\n\nFormer Arsenal defender Martin Keown was surprised to see Deacon, who came through the Gunners' youth system, playing at non-league level.\n\n\"You wonder, looking at Roarie Deacon, if the game has failed him,\" he said.\n\n\"He should be playing at a higher level. He has great quality with both feet and he was really unlucky with that shot that hit the bar.\"\n\nFormer England striker Alan Shearer said the Sutton players can be very proud of their performance throughout the competition.\n\n\"It has been one heck of a run,\" he said. \"There were some very, very positive performances out there.\"", "David Bowie already has a plaque but who else deserves one?\n\nRock and pop's most influential figures are to be honoured with blue plaques on BBC Music Day this year - and you can decide who gets one.\n\nOver the next week, every BBC local radio station in England and the Channel Islands is accepting nominations for a local artist (or venue) that changed the course of musical history.\n\nThe winners will be honoured with a plaque on a building where they lived or a venue where they became famous.\n\nTo be considered the nominee must be:\n\nThe candidates will be submitted to The British Plaque Trust - and the 40 recipients will be unveiled on Friday, 9 June as part of BBC Music Day.\n\nSurprisingly few pop musicians have one - with a notable exception being David Bowie, who is honoured at the location of the photoshoot for The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust in London's West End.\n\nBut who else deserves one? To get you thinking, here are five people and places that could benefit from a blue plaque.\n\nLong before he could grow that designer stubble, George Michael met Andrew Ridgeley at Bushey Meads school and pop history changed forever.\n\nBonding over a love of music, the duo initially formed a five-piece band called The Executive, who played everything from ska to Beethoven's Fur Elise.\n\nTheir friendship was vital in sustaining George through the whirlwind success of Wham! and eventually giving him the courage to go solo.\n\nEstimated to be more than 100 million years old, Peak Cavern is undoubtedly the oldest music venue in the UK.\n\nThe natural limestone cavern has hosted gigs by the likes of Richard Hawley, Mystery Jets and The Vaccines, who all benefit from the site's remarkable acoustics.\n\nFun fact: It used to be called The Devil's Arse (because of the flatulent sound caused by flood water draining from the cave) but received a more demure name in 1880, so Queen Victoria wouldn't be offended when she visited for a concert.\n\nWhile Queen were still a struggling young pop band, Freddie Mercury ran a stall in London's Kensington Market with drummer Roger Taylor.\n\nThey sold clothes and bric-a-brac, as well as a thesis Freddie had written about Jimi Hendrix while attending Ealing College.\n\nThe stall did well enough to fund the band in their early days - so much so that they kept it going after Queen released their first album.\n\nDelia Derbyshire is one of the earliest and most influential pioneers of electronic sound.\n\nWorking in a time before synthesisers, samplers and multi-track tape recorders, the musician, assisted by her engineer Dick Mills, created not only the original Dr Who theme but countless other experimental and ground-breaking recordings.\n\nShe was born in Coventry, but was evacuated to Preston, Lancashire, during World War Two. A blue plaque at either of her childhood homes would be a fitting memorial.\n\nNot the most rock'n'roll of locations, Beachy Head nonetheless deserves its place in music history.\n\nDavid Bowie filmed elements of the video for Ashes to Ashes there; and The Cure used it as the backdrop for both Just Like Heaven and Close To Me.\n\nIndustrial noise terrorists Throbbing Gristle used it in the deeply-ironic cover for their album, 20 Jazz Funk Greats; and, most famously of all, it stars in the final scene of The Who's Quadrophenia, where the young Jimmy throws his scooter over the edge of those chalky cliffs.\n\nTo make your suggestion for a musical blue plaque, you can contact your BBC local radio station via email, Twitter or Facebook; or email localmusiclegends@bbc.co.uk. You can also share suggestions on social media using #localmusiclegends.\n\nThe British Plaque Trust criteria is to commemorate innovative, influential and successful people who have died - but any genre of music is permissible, and significant locations which have played a part in our musical heritage are also eligible.\n\nThe initiative is not a vote - so the final decision on who or what the plaques commemorate, and where they are located, will not be based on the number of suggestions received.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Grime star Stormzy talks to BBC News about his music and global recognition ahead of the Brit Awards.", "Unilever is behind some of Britain's best-known brands\n\nUK-based household goods maker Unilever has rejected a takeover bid of about $143bn (£115bn), one of the biggest in corporate history, from US giant Kraft Heinz.\n\nThe deal - if it was to eventually succeed - would be the biggest acquisition of a British company on record, based on offer value.\n\nSteve Clayton, fund manager at Hargreaves Lansdown, said such a deal would create enormous cost savings.\n\n\"Putting portfolios of brands together can create huge synergies across marketing, manufacturing and distribution, even before you think about cutting the combined HQ back to size,\" he said.\n\n\"Kraft Heinz are attempting a massive push on the fast forward button, for to acquire the sheer scale of brands that Unilever represents through one-off acquisitions could take decades.\n\n\"With debt cheap and abundant right now, Kraft have spotted their opportunity.\"\n\nGlobally, it would be the second-biggest deal behind Vodafone Airtouch's takeover of Germany's Mannesmann AG for $172bn (£138bn) in 1999.\n\nUnilever announced last month that annual pre-tax profit rose to 7.47bn euro (£6.3bn) from 7.2bn euro (£6.1bn) last year, but revenues dropped 1% to 52.7bn euros (£44.7bn), while underlying sales rose by a lower-than-expected 3.7%.\n\nUnilever clashed with supermarket Tesco in October over its attempts to raise prices to compensate for the steep drop in the value of the pound.\n\nWilliam Hesketh Lever, founder of Lever Brothers, wrote down his ideas for Sunlight Soap in the 1890s.\n\nIt was \"to make cleanliness commonplace; to lessen work for women; to foster health and contribute to personal attractiveness, that life may be more enjoyable and rewarding for the people who use our products\".\n\nIn 1887, William Lever bought the site where Port Sunlight would be built, a large factory on the banks of the Mersey opposite Liverpool with a purpose-built village for its workers providing a high standard of housing, amenities and leisure facilities.\n\nLever Brothers and Dutch business Margarine Unie signed an agreement to create Unilever in 1929.\n\nKraft merged with Heinz in 2015 to create one of the US's biggest food companies.\n• None Marmite owner: 'No merit' in US takeover\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nSutton United's FA Cup fairytale turned into a \"nightmare\" with the resignation of goalkeeper Wayne Shaw on Tuesday, says manager Paul Doswell.\n\nShaw, 45, was seen to eat a pie on the bench during Monday's FA Cup loss to Arsenal, after a bookmaker offered odds of 8-1 that he would do so on camera.\n\nThe Gambling Commission and Football Association are investigating if there was a breach of betting regulations.\n\nShaw resigned from the National League side less than 24 hours after the cup tie.\n\n\"I spoke to him on the phone and he was crying. In the end we had to almost stop talking to each other because it was that type of conversation,\" added Doswell.\n\n\"We are going to be investigated, and it has turned into a bit of a nightmare.\"\n\nThe bookmaker involved tweeted that it had paid out a \"five-figure sum\" on the bet.\n• None 5 live In Short: Lawyer says pie eating should be \"treated in the same light as spot-fixing\"\n\nShaw, who first joined Sutton in 2009, said he had been aware of the betting promotion before the match but insisted the incident in which he ate the pie - which he later insisted was a pasty - was \"a bit of fun\".\n\nBBC Match of the Day presenter Gary Lineker claimed the incident showed \"football has lost its sense of humour\".\n\nBut Doswell said that while he had sympathy for Shaw, he also felt he had been \"naive\".\n\n\"He's been caught in this mad world over the last month that has enveloped us. His profile has got bigger and bigger, I think he embraced that,\" said Doswell.\n\n\"Whilst we were very much concentrating on the football, I think Wayne was almost becoming like a superstar.\n\n\"The team were magnificent against Arsenal, but to think someone's openly eating a pie behind them reflects very much away from what they did. I know Wayne regrets it, he is very, very sorry about the whole situation.\"\n\nShaw, who began his football career as a striker at Southampton in the same youth team as Alan Shearer, also had a coaching role at Sutton and carried out other jobs for the club such as sweeping the 3G pitch.\n\nIt is not the first time he has been sacked by Sutton - he was dismissed in 2013 after an altercation with Kingstonian fans, but returned to the club two years later.\n\n\"I'm devastated for him,\" added Doswell. \"This is someone who's got a family to support.\n\n\"My overriding wish is he'd have asked my advice because very clearly I'd have advised him not to do it. I wouldn't have allowed him to do it.\"", "CCTV footage from an airport in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, apparently shows the killing of Kim Jong-nam, half-brother of North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un.\n\nHe is believed to have been attacked in the airport departure hall last Monday by two women, using some form of chemical.\n\nPolice believe he was poisoned and are looking for four North Koreans.", "Angelina Jolie is in Cambodia to promote her new film First They Killed My Father, which is based on the country's genocide.\n\nYalda Hakim met up with the actress and her children to try some of Cambodia's unusual delicacies.", "A rare cloud phenomenon over Singapore has delighted people in the city-state.\n\nThe multi-coloured glow appeared in the sky on Monday in the late afternoon, lasting for about 15 minutes, and was seen across the island.\n\nMedia reports said it was likely a fire rainbow, which occurs when sunlight refracts through ice-crystal clouds.\n\nOthers have also said it could have been cloud iridescence, which happens when water droplets or crystals scatter light.\n\nFazidah Mokhtar, who works in a childcare centre, told the BBC that she spotted it around 17:10 on Monday (09:10 GMT).\n\nYou might also be interested in:\n\nFacebook bereavement leave: How long is long enough?\n\n\"It started as a small orange circle and then grew bigger and bigger till all the colours came out... It lasted for about 15 minutes and it slowly went off.\n\nShe said \"all the children in the school, some parents, and other staff were very excited and commenting that it was very, very rare to see such a beautiful and unique rainbow\".\n\nThe phenomenon prompted jokes online, with many comparing it to a Paddle Pop, a rainbow-coloured frozen dessert popular in Australia and Asia.\n\n\"The rainbow bridge is broken,\" joked one Facebook user, while another person asked: \"Is this a case of Monday Rainbows?!\"", "The battle for western Mosul is expected to be slow and difficult\n\nIraq's campaign to take back the western section of its second-largest city, Mosul, from so-called Islamic State (IS) will be Baghdad's last major showdown with the group, which, at its height, had controlled a third of the country's territory.\n\nThis will also be the toughest fight yet, as losing its most cherished prize will present IS with an existential challenge incomparable to any other loss it has suffered over the past two years.\n\nFour months ago, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced the official start of comprehensive operations to retake all of Mosul - east and west.\n\nThe timing of the announcement of the latest phase of the campaign has more to do with rallying the morale of his beleaguered forces than any significant changes in military strategy.\n\nThe fight for the east proved more difficult and time consuming than the Iraqi government had predicted.\n\nThe initial hope from the Barack Obama administration had been that Mosul would be liberated before the handover of power in Washington.\n\nIt is becoming clear that liberating all of Mosul will take several more months.\n\nAbu Bakr al-Baghdadi appeared at the Great Mosque in west Mosul in July 2014\n\nIn taking the east of Mosul, the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) suffered considerable losses. According to Pentagon insiders, the casualty rates for certain forces on the front line was as high as 50%.\n\nWhile this figure is denied by Iraqi military personnel in Baghdad, the government is concerned with attrition rates.\n\nIn battle, a winning side could be expected to suffer a much lower casualty rate. Incurring considerably more losses would heighten the risk of combat ineffectiveness.\n\nFor Prime Minister Abadi, just as important as weapons and funding is ensuring that his fighters on the frontline maintain battlefield morale and so far they have done so.\n\nTime, however, is not on his side, as a prolonged campaign could erode troop resolve.\n\nMosul is the IS heartland. It was here, in the west, that the group's leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, made his first and only public appearance, at al-Nuri mosque.\n\nWhat has become clear from the battle thus far is that IS fighters will not retreat as easily from Mosul as they did in Falluja and Ramadi.\n\nTo them, losing the city means losing a capital.\n\nEven before the group declared its caliphate, it was an underground organisation with a strong presence in western Mosul.\n\nResidents recall that its fighters began performing public executions in the old market long before June 2014, without any punitive action from the provincial council.\n\nAnother challenge for the ISF will be the risk of civilian casualties. As many as 800,000 residents could be trapped in the densely populated and narrow streets. They are staying put as the battle rages.\n\nRather than fighting in the outskirt villages, IS is looking to draw the ISF to the urban centres of the west.\n\nFor the ISF, this means having to go door-to-door to flush out IS fighters, who are hiding among the population. The battle is already being dubbed the \"war of the streets\".\n\nIS fighters are also relying on car bombs, which drive towards ISF troops and checkpoints. The jihadists would send up to 10 suicide bombers per day in the east.\n\nTo divert attention away from looming defeat, the IS leadership is looking to make a show of strength elsewhere.\n\nWhen the ISF began operations in western Mosul, IS fighters launched attacks in the east, which Iraqi forces liberated over a month ago.\n\nBy doing this, IS looks to discredit ISF victories, and challenge the idea that Iraqi government forces are truly in control there.\n\nBeyond Mosul, IS has also increased its attacks in other Iraqi cities. This includes recently liberated cities such as Falluja, but also, the capital, Baghdad.\n\nThe July 2016 bombing in Karada district, for instance, left more than 300 dead - becoming one of the largest attacks since 2003.\n\nSince the beginning of this year, IS has killed almost 100 people in bombings in Baghdad alone.\n\nAlthough challenging, short-term military successes are the easy part. The key to a sustainable victory is the political settlement.\n\nUnlike most battles raging in the Middle East, in Mosul everyone bar IS is on the same side, albeit as uneasy bedfellows in some cases.\n\nThis includes Shia and Sunni Muslims and Kurds, as well as Iranians, Americans and others.\n\nThe various anti-IS groups in Mosul are uneasy bedfellows\n\nDespite that, each party is looking to gain the most out of a victory. This contest for power may squander successes.\n\nIS emerged not only because of its military prowess, but also because a considerable portion of Iraq's Sunni Arabs felt disenfranchised by the Shia-led government in Baghdad, as well as their own Sunni leaders.\n\nAlthough many of these original supporters have since grown wary of the harsh IS rule, they will cautiously re-engage with their liberators, in hope of a better settlement.\n\nPolitical infighting is the fuel that IS needs to survive, as military power alone will not do it for them.\n\nAt the moment, though, there are no clear signs of this settlement, as Prime Minister Abadi will have to juggle powerful competing forces all vying for influence in a post-IS Iraq.\n\nRenad Mansour is an Academy Fellow at the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House. He is also a Senior Research Fellow at the Iraq Institute for Strategic Studies, and lectures on the Middle East at the London School of Economics (LSE).", "Footage released by Syria Civil Defence - also known as the White Helmets - shows a girl being pulled alive from rubble, apparently in Damascus' Tishreen neighbourhood on Sunday.\n\nActivists have reported air strikes in two other neighbourhoods, Qabun and Barzeh, over the weekend.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nIreland are aiming to play their first Test in 2018, according to Cricket Ireland chief executive Warren Deutrom.\n\nThe International Cricket Council (ICC) said earlier in February that the Irish would gain Test status this year, and that they could play their first match before then.\n\n\"There are no plans to play Tests in 2017 - we are looking towards 2018,\" Deutrom told BBC Sport.\n\n\"I don't see any reason why that can't happen. I'd be surprised if we didn't.\"\n\nThe ICC's plans come after a lengthy debate over the future of Test cricket, including how to spread the game and give each series more context.\n\nThe agreed solution is for a nine-team Test league, running over a two-year cycle - starting in 2019 - with every side playing each other once.\n\nThree more teams - probably current Test side Zimbabwe and likely newcomers Ireland and Afghanistan - would be guaranteed a schedule of matches over the same two-year period.\n\nThe ICC said it will make a decision on granting Test status to Ireland and Afghanistan at its next board meeting in April, with that likely to be ratified at the annual general meeting in June.\n\nIt is thought there would be no barrier to both sides being able to play Test cricket immediately, but the schedules of other nations would probably mean a wait is necessary.\n\nDeutrom admitted that, ideally, a first Irish Test would be at home, but that it would be difficult to turn down a \"dream\" scenario of an away match against England.\n\nEven then, finding space in England's summer would be incredibly difficult, with Pakistan and India set to tour in 2018.\n\nEngland's future programme could be linked to that of the Irish, with the ICC expressing its desire for teams that tour the country to also play at least one Test against Ireland.\n\nIreland first announced plans to gain Test status in 2012, a year after earning a famous victory over England at the 2011 World Cup.\n\nThey had already beaten Pakistan at the 2007 tournament and, in 2015, beat West Indies and Zimbabwe before narrowly failing to qualify from the group stage.\n\nIn October, Ireland's Inter-Provincial competition became the first domestic tournament outside of a Test nation to be granted first-class status.", "Sutton United have accepted the resignation of reserve goalkeeper Wayne Shaw, who is under investigation for potentially breaching betting rules.\n\nA bookmaker had offered odds of 8-1 that Shaw would eat a pie on camera. Shaw, who said he was aware of the betting promotion prior to the match, played the incident down as \"a bit of fun\".", "Uber said it would publish diversity figures in the 'coming months'\n\nOn Monday Uber boss Travis Kalanick sent an email to his employees with more information about the probe - and further plans the company has to address the issue.\n\n“It’s been a tough 24 hours,” he began, adding that the company was “hurting”.\n\nThe investigation will be lead by former US attorney general Eric Holder, who served under President Obama between 2009 and 2015, and Tammy Albarran - both partners at law firm Covington and Burling.\n\nArianna Huffington, best known for being the founder of the Huffington Post, will also help carry out the review. Ms Huffington has been on Uber’s board since April last year. Also conducting the review will be Uber’s new head of human resources, Liane Hornsey, and Angela Padilla, Uber’s associate general counsel.\n\nAfter coming into widespread criticism for never having published statistics on diversity at the company, Mr Kalanick said he would deliver figures in the \"coming months\". He said that of the employees working as engineers, product managers or data scientists, 15.1% are women - a number which he said hadn’t changed significantly in the past year.\n\n“As points of reference,” he wrote, “Facebook is at 17%, Google at 18% and Twitter at 10%.”\n\nUntil now, Uber had been standing firm on not publishing its diversity figures. Most major technology companies make public their EEO-1 - a government filing that breaks down employees by race, religion, gender and other factors.\n\nUber has not specified if it will publish its entire EEO-1, or just post select figures from the company.\n\nIn her blog post, Susan Fowler cited anecdotal figures of women leaving Uber in droves.\n\nSpeaking specifically about the site reliability engineering team, which she worked on for a year, she said that by the time she left, “out of over 150 engineers in the SRE teams, only 3% were women”. She now works at San Francisco-based payment firm Stripe.\n\nUber said it would be holding an “all hands\" meeting on Tuesday to tell its employees what its “next steps” will be.\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook.\n\nIf you are an Uber employee, you can reach Dave directly and anonymously on encrypted messaging app Signal using +1 (628) 400-7370.", "Migrant workers have signed up to a labour boycott to highlight the role they play in British society.\n\nPeers are debating the bill to pave the way for the start of Brexit.", "The claim: The government's figures on business rates are misleading because they exclude inflation and an appeals adjustment.\n\nReality Check verdict: The figures do exclude both those things, but government publications specify that they do. The government's figures are for the situation after any appeals have been completed, so they depend on how accurately it has predicted their outcome.\n\nThe government has produced tables showing how much business rates would rise or fall in the coming year, broken down by region of the country and type of business.\n\nThe overall effect of all the changes comes to zero, which means that the policy is revenue neutral.\n\nBut there is a key caveat at the bottom of the table, which is that the figures are: \"Before inflation and the adjustment to the multiplier for future appeal outcomes.\"\n\nThe inflation part is widely known. The measure of inflation used will become CPI (Consumer Price Index) instead of RPI (Retail Price Index), which will usually mean the increase is smaller, but that change will not happen until 2020. Increasing rates for RPI will add about 2% per year.\n\nBut the other part is a bit more complicated - it is the adjustment required to make sure that the changes in rates are revenue neutral even after some businesses have appealed against the rated value of their premises and won.\n\nAnalysis from the property consultants Gerald Eve suggested that the adjustment would be between four and five percentage points. They did that by working out how much business rates would change across the country to find out what adjustment would then be needed to make the policy revenue neutral again.\n\nThey add that including both the inflation and the appeals adjustment means that business rates will fall in 135 of the 326 local authorities in England, not 259 as the government claimed.\n\nThe Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) has strongly disputed suggestions that it has misled people with its figures, but has not disputed the suggestion that the appeals adjustment is between four and five percentage points.\n\nSpeaking on the Today Programme, Conservative MP Andrew Bridgen said he thought the figures provided, \"might not be giving the picture that businesses in the real world are going to get when they get their bills\".\n\nThis is certainly true. The DCLG has been clear that its figures are before inflation and the appeals adjustment.\n\nThe government's figures are for the situation after any appeals have been completed, so they depend on how accurately it has predicted their outcome.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Many Europeans eye the months ahead with foreboding. They see anti-establishment parties on the ascendancy. Angela Merkel - for so long Frau Europe - may lose power. And the financial markets are skittish over the possibility of a Marine Le Pen victory in France. Every edge up in her poll ratings sends bond yields rising.\n\nAnd yet an entirely different scenario may play out. It is quite possible that before the end of the year observers will declare that the Brexit-Trump tide has turned and that European integration has found new champions.\n\nFirst to the politics: in the Netherlands Geert Wilders has a history of under-performing at the polls. Even if he emerges as the leader of the largest party after the elections in March, he will struggle to get a foothold in government.\n\nThe contest that preoccupies Europe's political class, however, is France. The conventional wisdom is that Marine Le Pen will win the first round in the presidential elections but be substantially defeated in round two. But France is on edge, gloomy and unsure of itself.\n\nShe has expanded her lead in the polls and closed the gap on her most likely challenger in the second round, Emmanuel Macron. Still, he retains a 16% poll lead.\n\nMarine Le Pen supporters: Many believe she will win the first round of the election\n\nBut observers no longer trust the polls, and they fear the unforeseen event that could turn even more voters against governing elites.\n\nYet if Marine Le Pen loses, as seems most likely, Europe could be facing an entirely different future. Currently the candidate most likely to win in France is Mr Macron. Yes, he's a novice: a man who has never been elected to high office. He has been drawing the crowds because he has sold himself as a new politician, neither left nor right.\n\nAs the campaign gets under way, Marine Le Pen will be scathing, dismissing Mr Macron as an international banker, the epitome of the failed global elite, and the man who was Economy Minister under Francois Hollande.\n\nMr Macron has yet to define himself, and he may yet stumble. But if he made it to the Elysee Palace, Europe and France would have a pro-European president, committed to the survival of the euro and the alliance with Germany.\n\nEmmanuel Macron has faced accusations that he is part of a governing elite\n\nAt the same time, Germany has grown more restless and more open to change. Some see Angela Merkel, who is hoping for a fourth term as chancellor, as weary and burnt-out. Some of her zeal for power has gone. And many Germans will forever blame her for allowing more than a million refugees into the country.\n\nHer main political opponent, the Social Democratic Party, has a new standard bearer in Martin Schulz. In the past month, the SPD has surged 12 points, even surpassing Mrs Merkel's Christian Democratic Union.\n\nMr Schulz is a former President of the European Parliament. For a long time in German politics, he has been known as \"Mr Europe\". He has a good back-story: he's a former bookseller without a high school degree. He is a straight-talker, passionate about Europe and further integration.\n\nAngela Merkel is standing for a fourth term as Chancellor of Germany\n\nHis greatest strength is his unbridled passion to succeed, his weakness is a love of power and some of its trappings, which he demonstrated in Brussels. He also may stumble, having not yet declared his policy on refugees. And never underestimate the appeal of Angela Merkel and her safe pair of hands.\n\nBut the crowds are turning out for Mr Schulz, much as they have done for Mr Macron in France. If both men were to win, the outlook in Europe would change suddenly and dramatically.\n\nBoth are European integrationists who would look to deepen and strengthen the European project. Together, they would breathe new life into the Franco-German relationship that has always been the engine room of the EU.\n\nMartin Schulz is a former President of the European Parliament\n\nBoth, politicians from the centre-left, would loosen austerity further and favour spending on infrastructure projects to help countries such as Italy escape stagnation.\n\nThere would be little generosity from either man towards Britain as it starts to negotiate its exit from the European Union.\n\nMr Macron has said that it will be \"pretty tough\" on the UK and Mr Schulz would want to see the UK pays a price for its departure.\n\nAs this European election season begins, no-one yet knows what the Trump effect will be on Europe.\n\nWill US President Donald Trump's victory encourage voters that they can support anti-immigration candidates who want powers returned to the nation states and, in the case of France, have a vote on membership of the European Union?\n\nOr will President Trump deter voters from taking further risks?\n\nWill voters turn away from the United States - whose president has openly discussed which country would leave the EU next - and incline towards building a Europe more confident in its own values and security?\n\nThe President of the European Council, Donald Tusk, has said Europe wants the US's \"wholehearted and unequivocal support for the idea of a united Europe\".\n\nIt may not be forthcoming, and the insecurity may yet prompt some voters to back deeper European integration rather the outsiders, the insurgents, the challengers.\n\nFor Europe, the script for 2017 is a long way from being written and the outcome may yet surprise.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nArsenal avoided an FA Cup giant-killing and spared manager Arsene Wenger further pressure with a hard-fought fifth-round victory over non-league Sutton United at Gander Green Lane.\n\nWenger made seven changes from the side thrashed 5-1 at Bayern Munich in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie - and his players had enough to see off a team 105 places below them on English football's ladder.\n\nLucas Perez's cross-shot gave Arsenal the lead after 26 minutes and Theo Walcott doubled the advantage from close range 10 minutes after the break with his 100th goal for the club.\n\nVictory set up a home quarter-final with another National League side, Lincoln City, who beat Burnley on Saturday.\n\nSutton had their moments, particularly when Adam May wasted a first-half chance from keeper David Ospina's poor clearance, and Roarie Deacon's fierce 25-yard drive struck the bar in the second half.\n\nThe result may have gone against them but the hosts emerged from this tie, and this FA Cup run, with huge credit.\n• None 'Sutton players will go down in history'\n\nArsenal get the job done\n\nArsenal were on a hiding to nothing after a turbulent week in the wake of their Champions League mauling in Munich, which leaves them on the brink of elimination in the last 16 once more.\n\nThe Gunners walked out here with speculation mounting over the future of Wenger and familiar questions being asked about Arsenal's stomach for the fight when the season reaches its pressure points.\n\nTheir performance was uncertain and hardly designed to banish the criticism, although allowances must be made for a tricky artificial surface that was heavily saturated before kick-off and again at half-time.\n\nIt was simply a question of getting the job done and avoiding embarrassment. There was never going to be any credit in this for Arsenal. And on that basis this can be judged a satisfactory night.\n\nWenger's troubles were illustrated by the swarm of photographers that surrounded his dugout when he made his entrance - usually the sign of a manager under scrutiny.\n\nThe Frenchman, like his players, just needed to get out of Gander Green Lane unscathed and not fall victim to any further humiliation after the harrowing encounter in Munich's Allianz Arena.\n\nThis was not a sparkling Arsenal show but they now have what looks like an inviting path to Wembley.\n\nLincoln may have ousted Burnley, but it takes a huge leap of the imagination to see them denying Arsenal and Wenger a place in the FA Cup semi-finals.\n\nArsenal still have the chance to add to their tally of 12 FA Cup wins - and Wenger to his total of six.\n\nSutton United's FA Cup adventure may have ended at the fifth round - but the club, players and staff will have stories that will be part of their history forever.\n\nThey are struggling to make an impact in English football's fifth tier but have left an indelible mark on this year's FA Cup with their victory here against Championship giants Leeds United and this meeting with a member of the Premier League elite.\n\nInevitably, they did not possess the class to rattle Arsenal for long periods but they stuck to their task and even had moments when they gave the Gunners serious concerns in the first half, notably when May failed to take advantage of Ospina's poor clearance.\n\nAnd even when Walcott gave Arsenal a two-goal advantage, Sutton refused to go quietly, as Jamie Collins headed narrowly over and Deacon rattled the woodwork.\n\nThe fairytale was unlikely to materialise but Sutton's approach to the game, not just the team but the entire club, did them great credit.\n\nThe atmosphere was buzzing hours before kick-off, the organisation was excellent and everyone entered into the spirit of what was, for them, a huge occasion.\n\nSutton now return to the more routine business of a trip to Torquay United next weekend before welcoming Boreham Wood.\n\nIt was a shame a rather pointless pitch invasion at the end was allowed to linger, but this should be placed in context. The moment of glory may have passed but the memories will remain.\n\nWhat they said\n\nSutton manager Paul Doswell: \"The support we've had has been amazing. Everyone here is a volunteer, remember that. We're not a League Two club in non-league, we're a traditional non-league club.\n\n\"Lincoln and Sutton have done our competition very proud. Best wishes to Lincoln. Go and have your day in the sun like we have.\"\n\nArsenal boss Arsene Wenger: \"We did the job. It is very different on this kind of pitch. It was not an easy game at all. We have to give them credit because every error we made they took advantage of. They played very well.\n\n\"It is basically division five and when I arrived here 20 years ago, in division five they were not as fit physically as they were today. They were organised and had a huge desire. If we were not mentally prepared we would not have gone through.\"\n• None Walcott became the 18th player to score 100 goals in all competitions for Arsenal.\n• None Walcott has scored six times in his past three away FA Cup games for the Gunners.\n• None Arsenal have won 10 and lost none of their past 12 FA Cup matches against non-league sides.\n• None The Gunners have reached the sixth round for the fourth season in a row; a feat they last achieved in 2005 (five in succession).\n• None Arsenal have lost just one of their past 20 FA Cup games, winning 17 (D2 L1).\n• None Sutton United have won as many FA Cup games (excluding qualifiers) this season (four), as QPR have in the past 20 years.\n• None Sutton midfielder Nicky Bailey made more tackles (eight) and interceptions (six) than any other player.\n\nWhile Sutton visit Torquay in the National League on Saturday, the Gunners are not in action until 4 March, when they travel to Liverpool in the Premier League.\n• None Attempt blocked. Lucas Pérez (Arsenal) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Alexis Sánchez.\n• None Offside, Sutton United. Ross Worner tries a through ball, but Bradley Hudson-Odoi is caught offside.\n• None Offside, Arsenal. David Ospina tries a through ball, but Lucas Pérez is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (Arsenal) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Assisted by Theo Walcott following a corner.\n• None Attempt blocked. Gabriel (Arsenal) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Lucas Pérez.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Simon Downer (Sutton United) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt blocked. Bradley Hudson-Odoi (Sutton United) right footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Roarie Deacon.\n• None Attempt missed. Alexis Sánchez (Arsenal) right footed shot from the right side of the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Gabriel.\n• None Attempt saved. Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (Arsenal) right footed shot from the left side of the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Alexis Sánchez. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nCoverage: Watch live on BBC Two, Connected TV, Red Button and the BBC Sport website.\n\nLaura Muir will attempt to win 1500m and 3,000m gold at the European Indoor Championships in Serbia in March.\n\nThe 23-year-old Scot has already broken the European 3,000m, British 5,000m and British 1,000m indoor records this year.\n\nShe will be part of a Great Britain team that also includes defending 60m champion Richard Kilty.\n\nAlso competing are Andrew Pozzi, fastest in the world this year over 60m hurdles, and Katarina Johnson-Thompson.\n\nJohnson-Thompson will be looking to claim Britain's first European indoor medal for 33 years in the women's long jump, but will face competition from world indoor medallist and British champion Lorraine Ugen as well as European medallist Jazmin Sawyers.\n\nBritish Athletics performance director Neil Black said: \"I'm pleased with the blend of this team.\n\n\"With a home World Championships in London, 2017 is an even bigger year for us than 2016, so starting it off in a positive manner is essential and I am expecting to see a number of medal-winning performances in Belgrade.\"", "Grace, a recovering alcoholic, is one of 16 young women living in Amy's Place\n\nSet up in memory of the late singer Amy Winehouse, Amy's Place is the UK's only recovery house dedicated to helping young women overcome their addictions. The BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme is the first to go inside and meet the women aiming to go clean for good.\n\n\"I'm not that long sober, but I've come so far. You forget that my life was sitting in a homeless hostel planning how to kill myself,\" Grace says.\n\nThe 19-year-old is one of the first occupants of Amy's Place - a recovery house established by the Amy Winehouse Foundation.\n\nShe is a recovering alcoholic, and has been dry for just over a year. It is a marked turnaround from the life she used to lead.\n\n\"It started when I had my first drink aged eight, and by 12, I was sneaking around doing things that I shouldn't have been doing,\" she says.\n\n\"Between 13 and 14 I went into care, and that's where [the drinking] took off and I could be more sneaky about it, as I didn't have my parents around.\"\n\nGrace says she drank as a coping mechanism, but it soon became a habit.\n\nThe problem \"rocketed\" when she began living in a homeless hostel, until one incident shook her into realising the full extent of the damage being caused.\n\n\"It was in November 2015, when I took 57 antidepressants on a litre of vodka and a litre of [liqueur], and nearly died. I woke up frothing at the mouth, terrified.\n\n\"They were detoxing me in 'resus' [resuscitation area] in hospital and they told me, 'It's a waiting game now to see if your organs are failing or not.'\n\n\"It was four days of me sitting in resus hoping and praying I wasn't dying.\"\n\nWatch Jean Mackenzie's full film about Amy's Place on the Victoria Derbyshire website.\n\nGrace decided to take steps to overcome her addiction but living in a homeless hostel meant it wasn't easy.\n\n\"When your room was next to somebody who is selling drugs, you can never get well in a sense,\" she says.\n\n\"You're always stuck in the conundrum of, 'Do I go back to my old habits or do I go to a [support] meeting?'\n\n\"I was living a life of recovery in a using and drinking world.\"\n\nJane Winehouse says the house's potential to change lives is a \"wonderful thing\"\n\nIt is stories like Grace's that motivated Amy Winehouse's step-mother, Jane Winehouse, to set up the house - designed to help young women stay clean while taking their first steps without drugs and alcohol once they have left rehab.\n\n\"We met people in treatment who were scared to death of what was going to happen when they finished treatment [in rehab],\" she says.\n\n\"For a lot of them, all they could think about was, 'If I have to go back to where I was before, I'm just not going to stand a chance.'\"\n\nSet up in partnership with the housing provider Centra, Amy's Place is the only recovery house in the UK designed specifically to help women under 30.\n\nWinehouse died aged 27 in July 2011 from alcohol poisoning. She had previously struggled with drug addiction for many years and had spent time in rehab.\n\nIn the London house each of the 16 occupants gets her own flat, paid for using housing benefit. They can stay for up to two years.\n\nThere is a strict policy of no drugs, no alcohol and no overnight guests and they must agree to random drugs tests - Grace passed her latest one.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Amy Winehouse home 'has given me a future'\n\nAnother resident, 26-year-old Judith Heryka, is also working towards a more stable future, without drugs.\n\nHer main motivation is her children, aged five and seven. The catalyst for her deciding to seek help came when she was told proceedings would begin to take them into the adoption system. She says it saved her life.\n\nJudith had become hooked on crack cocaine and says she had become \"very depressed… bitterly, bitterly, bitterly, like suicidal, depressed\".\n\nAs part of the programme at Amy's Place, the women must take part in activities outside the house that can help them stay clean and prepare them for living by themselves.\n\nIt could be re-entering education, doing voluntary work or - in Judith's case - finding a passion, such as kickboxing.\n\n\"I can really zone out, do something that I love,\" she explains, while taking part in a local class.\n\nJudith says the house is \"100%\" the reason why she is managing to stay clean and the first time she has lived somewhere and felt safe.\n\nHouse manager Hannah Crystal says she is \"really excited\" to see the women progress.\n\n\"I think the girls here are going to get to a point where they're ready to move on,\" she adds. \"And we'll have new arrivals, and I think we'll keep growing from strength to strength.\"\n\nThe road to recovery, however, is not without its difficulties. Some of the women in the house have relapsed, and Grace admits she recently came close to drinking.\n\nThe house is working with Grace to help her achieve her ambitions. She hopes to become a forensic psychologist one day and at the moment she's learning woodwork with the charity the Spitalfields Crypt Trust.\n\n\"Before, [the future looked] very black, without anything I was looking forward to. Now I realise I've got a very long life ahead of me,\" she says.\n\nFor Jane Winehouse, giving the women the tools to change their lives \"is the most wonderful thing\".\n\nEspecially, as she says, the house is \"in Amy's memory\".", "A man had an extraordinary escape when a car crashed through a shop window in New York.", "Last updated on .From the section Horse Racing\n\nCheltenham Gold Cup favourite Thistlecrack has been ruled out for the rest of the season with a slight tendon tear.\n\nThe nine-year-old won his first four starts over fences, including a three-length victory over Cue Card in the King George VI Chase on Boxing Day.\n\n\"The vet scanned him this morning and it's a slight tendon tear,\" said trainer Colin Tizzard.\n\n\"We've seen it at every yard and it happens every year.\"\n\nNative River, the Hennessy Gold Cup and Welsh Grand National winner and Thistlecrack's stable-mate at Tizzard's yard, is now favourite for the Festival showpiece on 17 March.\n\nCue Card, another Tizzard-trained prospect, and 2015 Gold Cup runner-up Djakadam are also challengers.\n\nThistlecrack has won eight times in 11 starts over hurdles, but came second to Many Clouds in the Cotswold Chase at Cheltenham at the end of January.\n\nMany Clouds subsequently collapsed and died after the winning post.\n\nWhat a blow for his owners, the Tizzard Team, Tom Scudamore and the horse's fans - but also for jump racing.\n\nThistlecrack really was the new star turn, and we had come to hang our coat on him in terms of generating interest.\n\nHe is also the latest big-name for the sport's Cheltenham Festival in March to fall by the wayside - after Annie Power, Faugheen, Sprinter Sacre, Don Cossack and Coneygree - and none of the winners of the main races from 2016 will be back this time.\n\nAs for Thistlecrack, there's no reason he will not return, although the big question is when. A defence of the King George in December looks touch and go, so maybe in time for the 2018 Gold Cup.", "Children's birthday parties can be an expensive affair.\n\nIn some parts of Asia, where disposable incomes are high, families are happy to fork out a fortune. As part of our Business of Kids series, we met some top-notch party planners cashing in on the opportunity .", "A picture of Ronald Fiddler was released by the so-called Islamic State group\n\nThe Brexit Secretary David Davis has said Britain will stay open to EU immigration many years after leaving the EU, according to The Times.\n\nSpeaking in the Estonian capital, Tallin, Mr Davis is quoted as saying: \"Don't expect just because we're changing who makes the decision on the policy, the door will suddenly shut. It won't\".\n\nBrexit Secretary David Davis was speaking on a visit to eastern Europe\n\nAccording to the Guardian, the City of London has warned that the loss of banking jobs to EU countries because of Brexit could threaten British and European financial stability.\n\nInterviews with several senior bankers and business leaders are said to reveal growing certainty that there will be a wave of relocations this year.\n\nThe front of the Daily Mail carries a picture of the former Guantanamo Bay detainee from Manchester, Ronald Fiddler - also known as Abu-Zakariya al-Britani - who is believed to have carried out a suicide bombing in Mosul over the weekend.\n\nReferring to compensation he received after being released in 2004, the Mail tells readers: \"You paid him one million pounds.\"\n\nHis brother, Leon Jameson, tells the Times: \"It is him, I can tell by his smile\". He says his brother \"wasted his life\".\n\n\"UK roads are ruined\" says a headline in The Times. A leading economics consultancy has found that Britain's roads are in a worse state than those of many other developed nations - despite high fuel taxes.\n\nThe Centre for Economics and Business Research ranks UK roads 27th in the world and claims our main highways are in a worse state than those in poorer countries such as Malaysia, Namibia and Ecuador.\n\nThe lead in the i says the dream of owning a home is fading for young families. Figures apparently show that house-buying rates among the \"just about managing\" have fallen far behind their foreign counterparts.\n\nFor those with incomes slightly below the national average, Britain is placed 32nd out of 37 countries - behind Romania, Croatia and Mexico.\n\nThe paper claims the figures have brought charges that ministers are failing a whole generation of aspiring home owners. But the government says its halted a decline in home ownership, which began in 2003.\n\nA couple of the papers lead on the storm heading for Britain. The Express predicts plunging thermometers and \"chaos\". \"Batten down the hatches,\" says the Mirror, \"here comes Doris\".\n\nA picture of the Queen presenting poet Gillian Allnutt with a medal at Buckingham Palace shows an electric fire\n\nAnd the Sun wonders if Her Majesty has been trying to save on the heating bills this winter. A picture in several papers of her handing The Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry to to Gillian Allnutt at Buckingham Palace yesterday reveals the room is being heated by a portable two bar electric fire. The Mail calls the Queen \"the thriftiest royal.... bar none\".", "Jago Lawless said drivers have to adjust their parking to get in and out of their cars, which resulted in his front wheel being \"an inch, two inches over the line\"\n\nA motorist has had a fine for parking over the line of a bay overturned after he proved the spaces were \"too small\".\n\nJago Lawless, 46, was fined £80 for not parking his Hyundai i10 within a bay at Southampton Central station about a week ago.\n\nAfter receiving the ticket, the naval architect measured the space and said it was \"too small for an average-size car\".\n\nSouth West Trains said some spaces at the station would now be repainted.\n\nAccording to the British Parking Association, there is no legal minimum size for parking bays, but there is a design standard which is 15.7ft (4.8m) in length and 7.8ft (2.4m) in width.\n\n\"When I first measured the entrance into the car parking bay, it measured at about 2.4m,\" Mr Lawless said.\n\n\"But because they've angled the parking bar over, the parallel width between the lines is actually only 1.978m wide, which is too small for an average-size car.\"\n\nMr Lawless measured the space after receiving an £80 fine for not parking within the white lines\n\nMr Lawless added: \"I couldn't believe that, having parked such a small car, that I could not have parked it properly.\n\n\"Because they are at an angle, they are too small - they're far too narrow and they're not long enough.\n\n\"You have to adjust parking your car to enable you to get in and out of the car.\"\n\nSouth West Trains said the 21 angled spaces at the 182-space car park would be repainted\n\nSouth West Trains said the spaces at the car park were set up prior to any recommendations on parking bays being issued.\n\nIn a statement, it said: \"Now this issue has been raised, we will be re-marking the small number of angled spaces in this car park to increase their width.\"\n\nIt said the penalty issued to Mr Lawless had also been withdrawn.\n\nThere is no legal minimum size for parking bays, but there is a design standard which is 15.7ft (4.8m) in length and 7.8ft (2.4m) in width\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "It's a delicious structure consisting of a small sponge with a chocolate cap covering a veneer of orange jelly. It is arguably Britain's greatest invention after the steam engine and the light bulb. But is a Jaffa Cake actually a biscuit, asks David Edmonds.\n\nThis question reheats a confectionery conundrum first raised in 1991. A tax is charged on chocolate-covered biscuits, but not on cakes. The manufacturer, McVities, had always categorised them as cakes and to boost their revenue the tax authorities wanted them recategorised as biscuits.\n\nA legal case was fought in front of a brilliant adjudicator, Mr D C Potter. For McVities, this produced a sweet result. The Jaffa Cake has both cake-like qualities and biscuit-like qualities, but Mr Potter's verdict was that, on balance, a Jaffa Cake is a cake.\n\nHe examined a dozen possible criteria. There was, for example, the name. They are called Jaffa Cakes, not Jaffa Biscuits. This, Mr Potter concluded, was a trifling consideration, though he noted that Jaffa Cakes are more biscuit than cake in several ways. They are packaged like biscuits, and they are marketed like biscuits: they are usually found in the biscuit aisle in shops.\n\nOn the other hand, they have fundamental cake-esque qualities. Thus, they have ingredients of a traditional sponge cake: eggs, flour and sugar. And when Jaffa Cakes go stale they become hard, unlike biscuits, which become soft.\n\nDoes size matter? Jaffa Cakes are more biscuit-sized than cake-sized. Linked to this, cakes are often eaten with a fork, while biscuits tend to be held in the hand. To test the significance of size, I asked the winner of The Great British Bake Off 2013, Frances Quinn, to bake the most ginormous Jaffa Cake the world has ever seen - the size of a flying saucer, at 124cm in diameter, weighing in at 50kg, and containing 120 eggs and 30 litres of jelly.\n\nTim Crane, Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at Cambridge University, does not believe that this XXXXXXXXXXXL Jaffa Cake is any more cake-like than its normal-sized Jaffa Cake sibling. \"These days you see all sorts of tiny cakes for sale, some of them much smaller than Jaffa Cakes,\" he says. \"And there's nothing incoherent about a giant biscuit.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. How do you make the world's biggest Jaffa Cake?\n\nThe immediate implication of Mr Potter's ruling was financial. But Prof Crane says the question \"Cake or Biscuit?\" touches on a profound philosophical problem. \"How do our concepts relate to reality?\" Which aspects of our classification of the world come from the world itself and which come from us?\n\nThere is no record of the 20th Century philosopher, Ludwig Wittgenstein, ever tasting a Jaffa Cake, though there is evidence that he was partial towards a bun. But his ideas are relevant to the Jaffa Cake puzzle.\n\nWe are tempted to think that every concept must have a strict definition to be useable. But Wittgenstein pointed out that there are many \"family-resemblance\" concepts, as he called them. Family members can look alike without sharing a single characteristic. Some might have distinctive cheek bones, others a prominent nose, etc. Equally, some concepts can operate with overlapping similarities. Take the concept of \"game\". Some games involve a ball, some don't. Some involve teams, some don't. Some are competitive, some are not. There is no characteristic that all games have in common.\n\nAnd there is no strict definition of \"cake\" or \"biscuit\" that compels us to place the Jaffa Cake under either category.\n\nPonder the philosophy of the Jaffa Cake in the Philosopher's Arms on BBC Radio 4 at 20:00 on Monday 20 February\n\nAnother temptation is to believe that all that is at stake here is an arbitrary issue of semantics. It is, the thought goes, a mere verbal convention whether one labels a Jaffa Cake a cake or a biscuit. It has nothing to do with the real world.\n\nThe distinction between statements that are true as a matter of convention or language (\"All triangles have three sides\"), and those that make a claim about the empirical world (\"It is possible to eat 13 Jaffa Cakes in a minute\") - is a longstanding one in philosophy. But in the middle of the last century the American philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine disputed whether such a rigid distinction could be maintained - and Tim Crane agrees with him that it cannot.\n\n\"Do you know what an Umiak is?\" Tim Crane asks? \"No? Well, it's a flat-bottomed Inuit canoe. So have I told you something about the word, or have I told you something about the world? Well, I think you've learned something about both.\" And if it's true to say, \"a Jaffa Cake is a cake\" (or \"a Jaffa Cake is a biscuit\") then that also tells us something about the world, i.e. about the properties of a Jaffa Cake, as well as about the meaning of the word \"cake\".\n\nBut could Jaffa Cakes be neither cakes nor biscuits - and instead something in between?\n\nIt may be interesting to compare Jaffa Cakes with people here, even though they differ in several ways - most Jaffa Cakes have no opinion about how they should be identified, for example, and most humans are not topped by a thin but scrumptious layer of chocolate.\n\nUntil recently, people have not been free to choose their gender, and have been restricted to being described as either male or female.\n\nMore and more discoveries in science are undermining this binary mapping. It used to be thought that men were defined by their having a Y chromosome. Now we know that whether an embryo develops as a male depends upon a single gene: the SRY gene. It's possible for a person with XY chromosomes to have the appearance of a woman if they are lacking this gene. Similarly, a person with XX chromosomes can have the appearance of a male if they carry this gene.\n\nThere are many genes at play when it comes to the male versus female development. Genetics, hormones, chromosomes can all combine to complicate a complicated picture. As a result, says Dr Helen O'Neill, a geneticist at University College London, \"I think we should revise our definitions of male and female, there are many gradations in between\". In fact, for some purposes, she thinks we should get rid of the male-female distinction, for example on passports. After all, she says, we are all homo sapiens.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Is it a cake or is it a biscuit?\n\nMultifaceted expressions of identity inject a further layer of complexity. Mx Pips Bunce, who is married with two children and works for Credit Suisse as head of Global Markets Integration Components, identifies as \"gender-fluid\". Sometimes Pips wakes up choosing to express as Pippa and other times as Phil.\n\nThe world at present is set up for binary categorisation despite as many as 4% of people now identifying as non-binary, according to some studies. Two obvious and tricky areas are bathrooms and sport. Pips uses the female bathrooms as Pippa and the male ones as Phil, whereas some people who identify as non-binary or trans would rather bathrooms were intersex. The topic of which bathrooms transgender people use is highly contentious.\n\nEqually contentious are intersex athletes in sport, like the South African Olympic 800m champion, Caster Semenya, who competes as a woman. Is it possible, or desirable, to break down the binary categories in sport - to introduce new categories perhaps? The idea is not preposterous. Boxing, with its different weights - flyweight, heavyweight etc. - is one of several sports carved up into more nuanced groupings than simply male/female.\n\nBut back to the Jaffa Cake mystery. Cake or biscuit? \"Definitely cake,\" says Tim Crane, echoing the judgement of Mr Potter. This is an assertion about the world, not just about language. A Jaffa Cake, in its essence, is more cake-like than biscuit like. Its cake features are more elemental than its biscuit features.\n\nAnd with that riddle solved, the Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy shrinks the world's largest Jaffa Cake by taking a giant bite.\n\nDavid Edmonds is the producer of The Philosopher's Arms on BBC Radio 4", "Developing new drugs to fight major diseases can take years and cost billions of dollars\n\nDeveloping a drug from a promising molecule to a potential life-saver can take more than a decade and cost billions of dollars.\n\nSpeeding this process up - without compromising on safety or efficacy - would seem to be in everyone's interests.\n\nAnd cloud computing is helping to do just that.\n\n\"Cloud platforms are globally accessible and easily available,\" says Kevin Julian, managing director at Accenture Life Sciences, Accelerated R&D Services division.\n\n\"This allows for real-time collection of data from around the world, providing better access to data from inside life sciences companies, as well as from the many partners they work with in the drug development process.\"\n\nAll pharmaceutical drugs are tested on animals first before humans\n\nClinical trials - testing how a new drug works on people once you've tested it on animals - are a crucial part of this process. But they can be very complex to organise and run.\n\nThere are three main phases, starting with a small group of healthy volunteers, then widening out to larger groups who would benefit from the drug.\n\n\"A big phase three trial will cost anything from $30m-$60m (£24m-£48m) for a pharma company,\" says Steve Rosenberg, general manager of Oracle Health Sciences Global Business Unit.\n\nThese trials may be conducted over 30 to 50 countries and involve hundreds or even thousands of patients - this takes a lot of time and money.\n\nGenomics is driving the development of more targeted drugs rather than \"blockbusters\"\n\n\"Patient recruitment has always been the number one problem,\" says Mr Rosenberg.\n\nAnd as drug development targets more specific groups of people, largely thanks to the insights coming from genomics, finding the right patients for such clinical studies is becoming even harder.\n\nThis is where the cloud can help.\n\n\"With cloud and related technologies, we are now able to mine real-world data to find patient populations better, and utilise globally available technology to conduct trials in an even more distributed and inclusive manner,\" says Mr Julian.\n\nCloud and increasing digitalisation is also helping to improve the efficiency of data collection and analysis.\n\n\"Data collection used to be very inefficient, with data being written on paper forms, faxed and then entered into computers manually,\" explains Tarek Sherif, co-founder and chief executive of Medidata, a company that has developed a cloud platform for clinical trials.\n\n\"Then it had to be double-checked for errors. It could take up to a year before you could draw any conclusions from the patient data.\"\n\nThe demand for cheap medicines is often at odds with drug companies' need to make a profit\n\nDigitising the process and automating the checking process in the cloud has reduced this time to \"one to two weeks,\" says Mr Sherif.\n\nAnd cloud offers many additional advantages to pharma companies, says Mr Rosenberg.\n\n\"These days health data is coming from a wide variety of sources, like labs, wearable devices, electronic diaries, health records. Pharma companies can't necessarily handle all the data that's coming in to them.\n\n\"So cloud computing helps them do that and gives them a whole bunch of other advantages - the technology is kept up to date, you get the latest security, the latest features and so on.\"\n\nA spokesman for pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) told the BBC: \"Advances in computing and data analytics are providing new opportunities to improve the efficiency of our research and increase our understanding of a disease or a patient's response to medication.\"\n\nFinding the right patients for a clinical trial is time-consuming and costly\n\nSpeeding up the clinical trial process also cuts costs.\n\n\"We were able to save one of our clients about 30% on the cost of running a trial,\" says Mr Sherif, whose firm facilitates nearly half of all clinical trials in the world and counts 17 of the top 25 pharma companies as clients.\n\nAnd Accenture's Mr Julian says: \"We've seen overall savings of 50% - in some cases up to 75% - on the historically labour-intensive parts of the drug development process.\"\n\nOf course, not all prospective drugs work, or they're shown to work but not any better than existing drugs on the market.\n\n\"So the Holy Grail is to fail faster so you're not failing in the very final phases of drug development when you've already spent most of your money,\" says Mr Sherif.\n\nWinning regulatory approval for a drug is only half the battle. Pharma companies also have to convince health services and insurance companies that's it's worth paying for.\n\nIn the past, patients were often asked to keep written diaries of their experiences with a drug being tested, but these were \"horribly inefficient\", says Mr Sherif.\n\nSo the rise of electronic diaries and wearable devices is helping to improve the evidence a pharma company can present in defence of their latest drug.\n\nWith this is mind, Oracle is helping add \"mHealth\" capability to Accenture Life Sciences' cloud platform.\n\nAnd GSK says: \"We've been conducting clinical studies with biosensors and mobile devices for some time.\n\n\"Today's digital technology is enabling us to collect and analyse data in new ways - monitoring activity and vital signs in patients, and collecting patient feedback in real time, improving the quality of data we use in the development of new medicines.\"\n\nThe cloud is also encouraging more pharma companies to co-operate on molecule development [the building blocks of a potential drug], says Mr Rosenberg, as well as on data analysis.\n\nAnd all this anonymised patient data - historical and recent - can potentially be shared in the battle to combat disease.\n\nDiscovering new molecules that could be developed in to drugs is still very difficult\n\n\"We are seeing clients increasingly use 'virtual studies' - using external and historical data to perform advanced statistical analysis and reduce the need for complicated, costly site-based study activity,\" says Accenture's Mr Julian, citing a collaborative Alzheimer's project between some of its clients and the Coalition Against Major Disease.\n\nBut while efficiencies in the drug development process are undoubtedly being found, discovering the initial molecule is still very difficult, experts warn.\n\nCloud computing is having a big practical impact, but won't necessarily result in a flurry of \"miracle\" cures.", "Two giant railway arches have been lifted into place linking Manchester's Victoria and Piccadilly stations as part of the Ordsall Chord scheme.\n\nThe 600-tonne structure was lifted into place across the River Irwell using one of the largest cranes in Europe on Tuesday.\n\nThe scheme is part of the multi-million pound Northern Hub upgrade for rail services across the North of England.", "The proposed memorial would stand 9m high opposite the entrance to Brixton Tube station\n\nA crowdfunding campaign to erect a permanent memorial to David Bowie has been launched by a team of south London designers.\n\nThe campaign aims to raise just under £1m in the next 28 days to fund the art installation opposite Brixton Tube station.\n\nIt follows calls for various memorials to be erected to the musician, who died in January 2016.\n\nThousands of pounds was pledged within hours of the launch of the campaign.\n\nBowie's last live performance was in 2006\n\nThe proposed memorial takes its inspiration from the flash on Bowie's sixth album, Aladdin Sane, which was released in 1973.\n\nThe artists said the blue and red steel memorial - nicknamed the ZiggyZag - would be \"embedded in the Brixton pavement\" and rise to three-storeys - or 9m - high.\n\nThe Bowie mural in Brixton has become a focal point for fans since the singer's death last year\n\nThe proposed site would be five streets from Bowie's Stansfield Road birthplace and next to Jimmy C's internationally famous Aladdin Sane mural, which has become a focal point for tributes since the artist's death.\n\nSituated on Tunstall Road, opposite Brixton Tube station, it would be likely to be the first thing most visitors to Brixton would see when completed.\n\nThe artists worked with Bowie's team in London and New York.\n\nIt also has the support of Lambeth Council, which began discussing the possibility of a permanent memorial with Bowie's family last year.\n\nShe added: \"Brixton has become central to David Bowie's huge legacy, so what better place for this stunning and imaginative memorial to this locally-born legend.\"\n\nThe crowdfunding campaign hopes to raise just under £1m within 28 days in order to create the memorial\n\nThe design team behind the project, This Ain't Rock'n'Roll, previously designed the \"Brixton Pound\".\n\nThe currency, which features David Bowie on its £10 note, was launched in 2009 to support businesses in the area.", "Sutton United have accepted the resignation of reserve goalkeeper Wayne Shaw, who is under investigation for potentially breaching betting rules.\n\nThe Gambling Commission and Football Association are investigating if there was a breach of betting regulations after the 45-year-old ate a pie during Monday's FA Cup loss to Arsenal.\n\nA bookmaker had offered odds of 8-1 that Shaw would eat a pie on camera.\n\n\"What happened didn't make us look very professional,\" said boss Paul Doswell.\n\n\"It's something that we've dealt with quickly as a club,\" he told Sky News on Monday. \"Wayne himself offered his resignation to the chairman this afternoon, which has been accepted.\n\n\"It's a very sad end to what has been a very good story.\"\n\nShaw, who said he was aware of the betting promotion prior to the match, played the incident - in which he ate the pie while standing by the substitutes' bench - down as \"a bit of fun\".\n\n\"We are told we are not allowed to gamble as it is full-time professional football,\" Shaw told BBC Radio 4's World at One programme. \"In no way did I put anyone in jeopardy of that - this is not the case here, this is just a bit of fun and me being hungry.\"\n\nHowever, the Gambling Commission confirmed it was looking into whether there was any \"irregularity in the betting market and establishing whether the operator has met its licence requirement to conduct its business with integrity\".\n• None 5 live In Short: Lawyer says pie eating should be \"treated in the same light as spot-fixing\"\n\n\"It's clear in FA rules that you're not allowed to bet - and whether it was a fun bet, or whatever it was, it wasn't acceptable,\" added Doswell.\n\n\"Obviously we were very concerned with the implication that the club, myself, my assistant Ian Baird or anyone else had been involved in the decision-making.\n\n\"It's been very disappointing, there's no doubt about that. I woke up this morning to this storm of criticism.\n\n\"It's with a very heavy heart, because he was a good friend of mine, but I think the board felt they had no other choice.\"\n\nWhat happened at Sutton United might have seemed like a joke but it's clear that both the FA and the Gambling Commission are taking 'piegate' very seriously.\n\nWayne Shaw has stated that he didn't place a bet himself, but it's also clear than somebody must have done. Sun Bets used their own Twitter account to publicise that they had \"paid out a five figure sum\". The fact that Mr Shaw might have consumed a pasty rather than a pie (as he maintains) clearly was not a barrier to paying out for the betting company.\n\nAnyone in Sutton United's playing and non-playing staff is covered by the FA's rules which forbid betting on any football match. The FA also makes it clear its rules cover 'football related' bets and the passing on of any insider information.\n\nTypically any breaking of these rules results in a fine. for example in November Newcastle United midfielder Jack Colback was fined £25,000 after accepting a Football Association misconduct charge related to betting.\n\nIn information provided by The Professional Footballers Association for its members there is also a warning that breaking rules in regard to betting could be a criminal offence.\n\nThere is then the responsibility of betting companies to report any suspicious or unusual betting activity. This is the way all sports would seek to guard against a manipulation of their matches and outcomes, to prevent a collusion between players and fixers.\n\nThe gambling commission regulates the betting industry in Great Britain. In regard to the Sutton United v Arsenal match it is ''…looking into any irregularity in the betting market and establishing whether the operator has met its licence requirement to conduct its business with integrity\".\n\nThe 'novelty market' is a general trend which concerns the Gambling Commission. In June last year it sent a general letter to bookmakers warning that standards should be upheld as it was concerned novelty bets could be \"harmful to the wider perception of gambling in Great Britain\".", "The seized Sailing Yacht A is among the creme de la creme of private yachts - seen here off Denmark\n\nGibraltar has impounded a Russian billionaire's superyacht - one of the world's biggest - because the German shipbuilder says he still owes 15.3m euros (£13.3m; $16.3m) in fees.\n\nThe claim has kept Andrey Melnichenko's Sailing Yacht A stuck in Gibraltar, a British territory, since Wednesday.\n\nHis spokesman voiced confidence that the order would be lifted soon.\n\nThe Bermuda-registered vessel, built by Nobiskrug, left the Kiel shipyard in northern Germany two weeks ago.\n\nIt is 143m (469ft) long and has three masts, the main one 100m high.\n\nThe superyacht, boasting a gross tonnage of 12,600, is reported to have cost at least €400m. Nobiskrug says it has an underwater observation pod, hybrid diesel-electric propulsion and \"state-of-the-art\" navigation systems. It was designed by Philippe Starck.\n\nAccording to documents seen by Germany's NDR news, Nobiskrug is demanding an outstanding payment of €9.8m, as well as €5.5m for subcontractors and interest charges. Valla Yachts Ltd, a Bermuda company, is the yacht's registered owner.\n\nA top Gibraltar court official, Admiralty Marshal Liam Yeats, told the BBC on Monday: \"The vessel is under arrest and is currently at anchor in British Gibraltar Territorial Waters.\"\n\nA spokesman for Mr Melnichenko described it as \"a technical problem\".\n\nHe told the BBC: \"We are confident that the yacht will be handed over to the owner's project team in the coming days and this unfortunate episode will be over.\"\n\nThe wealthy Russian also owns Motor Yacht A - seen here next to HMS Belfast on the Thames\n\nMotor Yacht A was an imposing sight on the Thames last September\n\nMr Melnichenko, an industrialist with big stakes in Russia's fertiliser, coal and energy sectors, has a $13.2bn fortune, business website Forbes reports.\n\nMr Melnichenko also owns a 5,500-tonne superyacht called Motor Yacht A, which is reportedly up for sale. It was built by Germany's Blohm & Voss shipyard and launched in 2008.\n\nIt is 119m long - smaller than Sailing Yacht A - and was also designed by Philippe Starck. In September 2016 it moored alongside the old British light cruiser HMS Belfast on the River Thames, in central London.\n\nWhat happens when a ship is arrested?\n\nThe Gibraltar Port Authority says ship arrests happen when \"banks and creditors seek recompense from shipowners who find themselves unable to pay up on mortgages or loans\".\n\n\"Most arrested ships are sold in a sealed-bids auction within six to eight weeks, once the claim has been proved and judgment given.\"\n\nIn a statement on its website, it says \"we put 'ship keepers' on board - two security guards to protect the vessel and its contents.\n\n\"We provide the crew with everything, from bunkers (fuel storage compartments) so they can keep the generators going, to provisions of food and water.\"\n\nA launch is also arranged \"so that the crew, who would otherwise be stuck onboard, can have some shore leave\".", "You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "Pepper awakes. \"Hi, I am a humanoid robot, and I am 1.2m [4ft] tall. I was born at Aldebaran in Paris. You can keep on asking me questions if you want.\"\n\nMichael Szollosy, who looks at the social impact and cultural influence of robots, has just switched on the new arrival at the Sheffield Robotics centre, at the University of Sheffield.\n\nHe asks: \"What do you do, Pepper?\"\n\n\"Of course not,\" says Pepper, \"but that shouldn't keep us from chatting.\"\n\nI say indeed not, and ask what he thought of Paris.\n\n\"You can caress my head or hands for example,\" is the reply. \"Very Parisian,\" I observe, stroking the sensors atop of Pepper.\n\n\"I like it when you touch my head. Ah, miaow.\"\n\nPepper is slim white robot, with skeletal hands, a plastic body and big black eyes.\n\nMr Szollosy says: \"Human beings don't need very much to identify something as alive.\n\n\"So a couple of black dots and a line underneath and we see a face every time.\n\n\"People say, 'Oh he's smiling at me,' - his mouth doesn't move. But that's what humans bring to the equation.\n\n\"We invent these things. I say robots were invented in the imagination long before they were built in labs.\"\n\nThis project is less about developing the technology and more about examining the way we relate to it - most people working in this field are convinced Pepper and and his kind will have huge implications for all of us, changing the way we work, the way we live, even the way we relate to each other.\n\n\"I think it is going to be increasingly the case that robots do more and more of the jobs that people used to do,\" says the centre's director, Prof Tony Prescott.\n\n\"We have lots of Eastern Europeans weeding fields because nobody in the UK wants to do that. It could be automated. It's a perfect job for a robot to do.\"\n\nWe are now at a tipping point.\n\nThe advances in AI (artificial intelligence) mean robots can now do much more.\n\nBut it hasn't developed in the way people might have expected 50 years ago.\n\nA computer can do really clever stuff - beating a chess grandmaster with ease, and now winning at Go.\n\nBut a robot butler, which could make you a cup of coffee and run your bath, remains out of reach.\n\nTaking jobs, not terminating humans, may be the biggest threat posed by robots\n\nThe very idea of robots excites and scares. It is part of the reason behind this centre.\n\nAfter the development of genetically modified (GM) food, also known in the tabloids as \"Frankenstein food\", and the backlash against it, they decided some education was called for.\n\nMr Szollosy says people are frightened by the wrong things. He bemoans the fact that any story about robotics is accompanied by a picture of the Terminator.\n\n\"If artificial intelligence does want to take over the world, eradicate the human race, there are much more efficient ways of doing it,\" he says.\n\n\"Gun-wielding bipedal robots - we could beat them no problem. Daleks can't go upstairs.\n\n\"My job is to make people understand what not to fear but also explain that robots may well take 60% of the jobs in 20 years' time and that is of deep concern, if we don't restructure society to go along with that.\"\n\nProf Prescott hopes robots are part of the solution to a problem that haunts politicians.\n\n\"We have a shortage of trained carers, and it is often migrant labour,\" he says.\n\n\"Those jobs are very poorly paid.\n\n\"The quality of life for people in care is low, the quality of life for the carers is also low.\n\n\"I would like to protect the right to human contact in law, but people with dementia may need a lot of physical help and a lot of that can be provided by robots.\"\n\nMilo, with a chunky body and a mobile face under anime-style hair, is designed to mimic human expressions to help autistic children.\n\nBut some of those he manages I've never seen on a real person.\n\nMiRo is much cuter, looking somewhat like a dog, a donkey or a rabbit.\n\n\"It's designed to mimic the behaviour of animals,\" says Sheffield Robotics' senior experimental officer Dr James Law.\n\n\"For patients, particularly the elderly, particularly with Alzheimer's and dementia it is akin to pet therapy, which can have a lot of value for people who need more social interaction in their lives.\"\n\nStill MiRo is not very cuddly. Unlike Paro.\n\nI would say he's a very sophisticated furry toy seal, squeaking as you stroke his sensors, flashing big black eyes as you caress him.\n\nDr Emily Collins is interested in using such robots in children's wards, where real animals and even fur is a danger.\n\n\"I'm very interested in what mechanism is going on between a human and an animal which results in increased neuropeptide release, so they need less pain medication,\" she says.\n\n\"Being able to replicate that in paediatric wards, where you cannot have animals, would be fantastic.\n\n\"I don't see the point in a humanoid robot, apart from the fact people like the form and the shape.\n\n\"As soon as you make a robot look like a human analogue, people have expectations that the robot is going to do the same as a person, and we can't replicate that.\"\n\nMany car production lines have been automated, but what next?\n\nIt is a really interesting debate, and one that maybe one day we'll have to face. But there are far more pressing problem.\n\nIf Mr Szollosy is right and robots take 60% of the jobs by 2037, what does he think will happen?\n\n\"The jobs are going to go,\" he says.\n\n\"There is going to be greater unemployment. Maybe we need to recast our society so that becomes a good thing, not a bad thing.\"\n\nProf Prescott says: \"If people aren't able to sell their labour, then the whole market struggles because the people producing still need people to buy.\n\n\"So maybe we need to pay people to consume, maybe through some basic income.\n\n\"I think it is inevitable that we go in that direction. It's good news.\n\n\"The possibility now exists we can put over a lot of the work we don't like to robots and AIs.\"\n\nThe idea of \"the basic\" would face huge political opposition.\n\nBut it's worth noting that many who work in the field think there are few alternatives, even if there has to be an economic crisis before it's taken seriously.\n\nThis is not the same as interesting questions for the future about robot rights or consciousness - these problems are coming toward us with, well, the speed and ferocity of the Terminator.\n\nMainstream politicians are only just beginning to take notice.\n\nYou can hear Mark Mardell's report for The World This Weekend, plus a debate about what the future holds for robots and jobs, via BBC iPlayer.", "The UK's next top police officer will be chosen on Wednesday.\n\nThe final four candidates for Metropolitan Police Commissioner will face interviews with Home Secretary Amber Rudd, Mayor of London Sadiq Khan and Policing Minister Brandon Lewis.\n\nThe Commissioner is not only the head of policing in London. He or she also has a range of national responsibilities including leading on counter-terrorism, national security policing, protection of the royal family and parliamentarians and major public events.\n\nThat means the job is not just about how to deploy the 31,000 police officers across the capital - but also how to deal with the complex challenges of keeping Britain and London's streets safe.\n\nSo who are the final four candidates for one of the toughest jobs in policing anywhere in the world?\n\nCressida Dick is one of the country's most experienced and well-known chief police officers who isn't actually working as one.\n\nIn 2014 she left Scotland Yard to take up a highly sensitive and undisclosed director-general post at the Foreign Office.\n\nIf the 56-year-old is selected to be the next commissioner, it will mean for the first time that all three top policing jobs in the UK are held by women: the Met Commissioner, the head of the National Crime Agency and the president of the National Police Chief's Council.\n\nMs Dick joined the Met in 1983 after graduating from Oxford University. She first came to public prominence when she was the senior officer in charge of the operation in July 2005 that led to the mistaken killing of Jean Charles de Menezes as a suspected suicide bomber.\n\nWhen the force was later prosecuted for breaching health and safety laws, the jury in the case said they believed there was \"no personal culpability\" for then Commander Dick after listening to her evidence.\n\nIn 2009 she became the first woman to be appointed an assistant commissioner in the Metropolitan Police, becoming the national lead for counter-terrorism across the UK.\n\nHer other experience includes taking on internal reforms of Scotland Yard and being one of the two senior officers in charge of security at the London 2012 Olympic Games.\n\nSara Thornton became the first chair of the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) in 2015 when it replaced the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo).\n\nIt is the co-ordinating body for all of the police forces in England and Wales, bringing together all the chief officers to thrash out national policies on everything from investigating murders to modernising the workforce.\n\nThat means that she has been at the heart of the extremely complex challenges of changing the way police are recruited, trained and prepared for how their role is changing as crime does in the 21st century.\n\nShe joined the Metropolitan Police in 1986 after studying at Durham University and in 2000 went to neighbouring Thames Valley Police as an assistant chief constable. Seven years later she was made chief constable before becoming vice-president of the NPCC in 2011.\n\nShortly after taking over at the NPCC she warned that in the future the public should not expect to see a police officer after some burglaries.\n\nShe told the BBC that budget cuts and the changing nature of criminality meant the police had to prioritise and there had to be a conversation with the public about where limited police resources should be focused.\n\nStephen Kavanagh is the chief constable of Essex. He began his policing career with the Metropolitan Police Service in 1985 as a constable in Leyton in East London.\n\nAs a detective sergeant he worked in homicide and the then anti-terrorist branches and rose up the ranks to become area commander for North London.\n\nBefore that, he was part of the team that had to come up with the force's action plan and response to the Stephen Lawrence inquiry, which had branded the Met institutionally racist.\n\nHis other roles inside Scotland Yard have included working as a commander in counter-terrorism after the 2005 attacks on London and designing anti-corruption plans to root out crooked officers.\n\nIn 2011 he became the public face of the Metropolitan Police during the August riots that followed the shooting of Mark Duggan. As deputy assistant commissioner he also had responsibility for the politically-charged investigations into phone hacking and payments to public officials by journalists.\n\nMark Rowley is the only one of the four candidates currently working inside Scotland Yard - and the only one to have started his career with another force.\n\nAfter graduating from Cambridge, he joined West Midlands Police in 1987 and, after serving as a detective, joined the then National Criminal Intelligence Service, one of the predecessors of the National Crime Agency.\n\nWhile he was there, Mr Rowley worked on developing covert techniques to target major organised crime gangs that work across the UK and other countries.\n\nIn 2009 he was appointed chief constable of Surrey, nine years after joining the force and having been in the chair temporarily since 2008.\n\nTwo years later he was recruited to the Metropolitan Police as an assistant commissioner - the rank inside the force broadly equivalent to a chief constable outside of London.\n\nDuring his five years inside Scotland Yard he has been one of the public faces of the force. He has talked widely about terrorism threats - including the changes to counter-terrorism strategy in the wake of the Paris attacks.\n\nWhen an inquest jury concluded that Mark Duggan had been lawfully killed by firearms officers in 2011, AC Rowley was the officer who gave a statement outside the court amid a barrage of chants from the dead man's supporters.", "Scientists in the US may have found a solution to one of the classic dinner table problems - getting every drop of ketchup out of a bottle.\n\nAs the BBC's Pallab Ghosh reports, they say it is down to a non-toxic coating that makes the inside of bottles super-slippery.", "Iran-US hostility eased under President Obama but is threatening to intensify again\n\nAre the US and Iran heading for a new confrontation? After a turbulent first three weeks in which President Donald Trump described Iran as \"the world's number one terrorist state\" and put it \"on notice\", it is a question many are asking.\n\nFor Iranians with connections in the United States, these are worrying times.\n\nOf the seven majority Muslim countries named in President Trump's January travel ban (frozen pending a legal review), Iran is the one with the largest US-based diaspora, the most overseas students and the highest number of people travelling on visitor visas.\n\nAfter the ban was announced, BBC Persian received hundreds of messages from anxious Iranians whose lives have been plunged into uncertainty.\n\nThey come from all walks of life - research students, LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) refugees and grandparents on family visits - and many are worried the story is far from over.\n\n\"Last year our family applied to migrate to the US,\" wrote Bardia, a 16-year-old from the persecuted Bahai religious minority. \"Now there's a big hold-up in the process.\"\n\nBut since President Trump moved into the White House it is not just Iranians with travel plans who are feeling unsettled.\n\nAcross the country people are asking themselves if he will really deliver on his promise to \"rip up\" the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and \"triple-up\" sanctions.\n\nAnd if the war of words between Washington and Tehran continues, what will the impact be on Iran's presidential elections this May?\n\nOn the campaign trail Donald Trump dismissed the Iran nuclear deal as \"disastrous\", but Iran experts say comments by his new Secretary of Defence James Mattis are probably the best indicator of what lies ahead.\n\n\"I think it is an imperfect arms control agreement,\" Mr Mattis told a Senate committee in January. \"But when America gives her word, we have to live up to it.\"\n\nIt is possible the Trump administration could push to toughen up the deal, says Gary Samore, former Obama White House Co-ordinator for Arms Control,\n\n\"But they will quickly find out any renegotiation of the agreement will require the US to offer additional sanctions relief.\"\n\nThe Isfahan uranium conversion plant - the US has vowed to robustly police the nuclear deal\n\nMany point out the US is not the only signatory to the deal.\n\nIf Mr Trump walks away he will risk alienating the European Union, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, China and Russia, which would make enforcing any new sanctions more difficult.\n\nBut there are more subtle ways of undermining the agreement, says Nader Hashemi, of the Centre for Middle East Studies at the University of Denver.\n\n\"I suspect Trump will try to strictly enforce the nuclear deal, hoping that Iran will break the agreement and thus be blamed internationally for it.\"\n\nIran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and his hardline supporters have been relatively muted in their response to President Trump.\n\nIt has lead some to suggest it might actually suit them to have a more confrontational president in the White House.\n\nFor someone used to rallying his supporters with denunciations of the \"Great Satan\", Mr Khamenei clearly feels on familiar ground responding to tougher rhetoric from Washington.\n\n\"We appreciate Trump! Because he largely did the job for us in revealing true face of America,\" he Tweeted recently.\n\nSome hardliners actually see Mr Trump as a man they could do business with, says Mohsen Milani, an Iran specialist at the University of South Florida.\n\n\"They believe he is a practical, non-ideological businessman and a good deal-maker who would be willing to negotiate with Tehran.\"\n\nOne person for whom Mr Trump's ascendancy is less welcome is President Hassan Rouhani.\n\nHe is standing for re-election in May, and the accelerating war of words between Washington and Tehran casts a long shadow over his two biggest achievements - securing the nuclear deal and improving relations with the US.\n\nAs the election campaign gets under way Mr Rouhani's hardline opponents will seek to use the Trump administration's actions to undermine him.\n\n\"If the [travel] ban is a sign of a general line towards Iran with additional measures, then it certainly could affect the elections,\" says Trita Parsi, of the National Iranian-American Council.\n\nBut whether the hardliners will succeed is open to question.\n\nEven if the tangible benefits of the end of sanctions have yet to be widely felt in Iran, the prospect of the country returning to the international stage and opening up for business has given hope to millions of ordinary voters.\n\nIt is clear they do not want to see these achievements reversed.\n\nSince Mr Trump's travel ban thousands of young Iranians have taken to Twitter using the hashtag #LoveBeyondFlags to reach out to Americans.\n\nAnd among the traditional anti-American slogans on display at the annual rally to commemorate the Revolution in Tehran last week there were some in English with a rather different message: \"Americans are welcome and invited to Iran\".\n\nIn the months to come foreign policy concerns will also influence US-Iranian relations.\n\nBoth the US and Iran are currently supporting Iraqi forces in the crucial battle to recapture Iraq's second city of Mosul from so-called Islamic State. It is not in the interests of either side to jeopardise this.\n\nIf President Trump delivers on his pledge to mend fences with Russia that could also impact on the US relationship with Iran.\n\nTrump has warned Iran over its long-range missile tests (file photo)\n\n\"Tehran's biggest fear is that Trump will seek to move Russia away from Iran in order to open space for Russia-America co-operation in Syria and across the Middle East,\" says Alex Vatanka of the Middle East Institute.\n\nGoing forward there will be many possible flashpoints for tension between Iran and the US.\n\nIranian ballistic missile tests, more unilateral US sanctions, stand-offs between the Iranian and US navies in the Gulf, and between US-backed and Iran-backed militia forces in Iraq will all test the relationship.\n\n\"Over time the [nuclear] deal may unravel because of these,\" says Gary Samore.\n\n\"But I think it's unlikely either side will immediately abrogate the agreement. The US benefits from the constraint on Iran's nuclear programme and Iran benefits from the sanctions relief.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nBlackburn Rovers manager Owen Coyle has left the Championship side by mutual consent after eight months in charge.\n\nThe 50-year-old took over at Rovers in June 2016, but won just 11 of 37 games.\n\nBlackburn are 23rd in the table, three points from safety, in a season which has also been marred by fan protests against the club's owners, Venky's.\n\n\"The decision has been taken to give the club the best possible chance of climbing to a position of safety in the Championship,\" said a club statement.\n\nCoyle's last game was the 2-1 defeat in the FA Cup fifth round by Manchester United on Sunday.\n\nAssistant manager Sandy Stewart, first-team coach John Henry and goalkeeping coach Phil Hughes have also left Ewood Park.\n\nBlackburn's next game is away to fellow Championship strugglers Burton Albion on Friday - with Rovers winless on the road since November.\n\nThe club have said that the search for new manager will begin with \"immediate effect\".\n\nOwen Coyle's appointment was never going to be a success in the eyes of the supporters. The abuse from the travelling support directed at him in the recent draw with Rotherham was vociferous and I understand that his position was very much hanging in the balance from then on.\n\nCoyle can rightly claim that he wasn't backed in terms of budget. He was given £250,000 to spend in the summer while he recouped in excess of £10m and the January transfer window saw him frustrated that the club failed to land his list of potential targets.\n\nThe fact that Rovers haven't been higher than 20th all season is the reason behind his departure. Financially they can ill afford relegation to League One, and whoever comes in has 15 games to save them.\n\nSince the takeover of the club by Venky's in November 2010, the club are now looking to appoint a seventh permanent manager.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nBritish number three Kyle Edmund went through at the Delray Beach Open as Adrian Mannarino became the Briton's second opponent in succession to default following an angry outburst.\n\nEdmund, 22, led 6-3 5-0 15-0 when the Frenchman was penalised a game for smashing a ball out of the court.\n\nMannarino had earlier kicked a chair, and hit a ball towards a ball boy.\n\nEdmund's previous match, against Dennis Shapovalov in the Davis Cup, ended with the Canadian being defaulted.\n\nThe 17-year-old angrily smashed a ball which hit umpire Arnaud Gabas, who later required surgery to repair a fractured eye socket.\n\nEdmund, the world number 49, had lost to 60th-ranked Mannarino in straight sets at Wimbledon last year, and the Yorkshireman goes on to face American Bjorn Fratangelo or Yen-Hsun Lu of Taiwan in the second round.\n\nCanada's Milos Raonic, the world number four, is the top seed at Delray Beach and a potential quarter-final opponent for Edmund.\n\nArgentina's Juan Martin del Potro is making his first appearance of 2017 after extending his off-season following victory in the Davis Cup in November.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nNewcastle United scored a goal in each half to beat Aston Villa and go a point clear at the top of the Championship.\n\nYoan Gouffran netted the opener from four yards and another goalmouth scramble resulted in Henri Lansbury turning the ball into his own net.\n\nBut Newcastle's victory was soured by the loss of top scorer Dwight Gayle, who limped off after 33 minutes.\n\nVilla striker Scott Hogan was carried off on a stretcher late on and they are now winless in nine league matches.\n\nHogan, who cost £12m from Brentford in January, landed awkwardly after challenging for a header at a late Villa corner.\n\nGayle - the Championship's leading scorer with 20 league goals this season - appeared to suffer a recurrence of the hamstring problem which had kept him out for six matches.\n\nVilla remain six points above the relegation zone, having collected only one point in 2017, although Steve Bruce's side had more than matched the Magpies until they fell behind.\n\nIceland midfielder Birkir Bjarnason went closest for the visitors, failing to hook in Hogan's flick-on from close range and later having a shot saved by Karl Darlow.\n\nNewcastle's opening goal came soon after Gayle's departure, with Villa failing to properly clear a Matt Ritchie cross and French winger Gouffran tapping in.\n\nAfter that, the hosts took control and often looked likely to extend their lead, although the second goal which took them above Brighton in the table came in fortunate circumstances.\n\nJamaal Lascelles met Jonjo Shelvey's corner and his effort hit Lansbury, who was stationed at the near post, before ricocheting into the net.\n\nNewcastle manager Rafael Benitez told BBC Radio Newcastle: \"This is a very difficult division. Every game is tough and we were playing against a good team with very good players.\n\n\"They pressed well at the beginning and it wasn't easy for us to play how we wanted. We needed to score to open up the game, and after the second goal it was more open. We had more chances and more control of the game.\n\n\"Dwight Gayle seemed like he wasn't comfortable from the beginning and then he said he was feeling something in his hamstring. We don't know how serious it is. We have to wait.\"\n\nAston Villa manager Steve Bruce told BBC WM: \"Scott's injury compounded the night, because we obviously fear the worst.\n\n\"He's definitely turned his ankle over and we don't know how serious it is until we see X-rays and scans. The consequences of losing him are huge, but let's hope it's not as bad as what we think.\n\n\"I thought we were decent in the first half, Newcastle hadn't been near our goal, and yet we gave a poor goal away. After the restart, we've given another one away and the second one was comical.\n\n\"And the two or three opportunities we've had, we've not taken them. That's where we are at the moment.\"\n• None Attempt missed. Jonjo Shelvey (Newcastle United) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Matt Ritchie.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Scott Hogan went off injured after Aston Villa had used all subs.\n• None Delay in match Scott Hogan (Aston Villa) because of an injury.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Jonathan Kodjia (Aston Villa) because of an injury. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Irish Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, BBC Radio Ulster & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nJohnny Sexton and Rob Kearney are set to play in Ireland's Six Nations game against France on Saturday after taking a full part in training on Tuesday.\n\nSexton, 31, missed the games against Scotland and Italy with a calf strain but is now available for selection.\n\nThe Leinster fly-half is expected to be named ahead of Ulster's Paddy Jackson, who started both those matches.\n\nFull-back Kearney (biceps) and scrum-half Conor Murray (hip) also came through training in Kildare unscathed.\n\nThe fitness of the pair has been carefully managed since the 63-10 mauling of Italy in Rome on 11 February.\n\nSexton likely to be replace Jackson\n\nJackson deputised impressively for Sexton at Murrayfield and in Rome, while Munster fly-half Ian Keatley also remains in Joe Schmidt's squad despite Joey Carbery's return to fitness.\n\nSchmidt said after the Italy game that Jackson was putting Sexton under genuine pressure for the number 10 jersey, but the Leinster player is still tipped to return this weekend.\n\n\"Johnny gets picked like everyone else; he has no divine right to get picked. Will he get picked? That is a decision that has to be made,\" said coach Richie Murphy on Tuesday.\n\n\"I am not trying to create any confusion. All I am saying is that there will be a decision made on the back of how he has performed over the last two days.\n\n\"Paddy Jackson has been brilliant. We have been very lucky that while Johnny has been out Paddy has been stepping in and filling that gap really well, since probably last summer.\n\n\"He has really stepped up to the mark and he's improving all the time.\n\n\"He is still only 25 and Johnny was only getting capped for the first time at the age that Paddy is at now, so he has worked really hard with Johnny off the pitch in order to help him drive things.\n\n\"It is starting to come to a stage where there are other options there.\"\n\nIreland in the 2017 Six Nations\n\nIf full-back Kearney is not deemed ready by the time the team is announced at lunchtime on Thursday, Simon Zebo could be switched from the wing, while Connacht's Tiernan O'Halloran is another option for the number 15 shirt.\n\nMurray missed training on Friday because of a hip problem but looks to have recovered fully in time to take on the French in Dublin.\n\nJosh van der Flier's absence because of a shoulder injury is offset by Peter O'Mahony's return to the squad. Van der Flier's injury looks set to rule him out of the remainder of the tournament.\n\nMunster flanker O'Mahony missed Ireland's opening two games because of a hamstring injury.\n\nVan der Flier came on as a second-half replacement for Sean O'Brien in both the Scotland and Italy games.\n\nSchmidt is faced with the decision of whether to recall Jack McGrath at loose-head prop in place of his Leinster provincial team-mate Cian Healy, who started in Rome.\n\nCentre Mathieu Bastareaud and flanker Damien Chouly have been ruled out for France, who lost to England in their opening fixture, but then overcame Scotland.\n\nToulon's Bastareaud was drafted back into France's squad for the Dublin game but has now been ruled out by concussion after taking a blow to the head in the Top 14 match against Lyon on Saturday.\n\nChouly, a replacement in the 22-16 win over Scotland, suffered an ankle injury in France training on Monday and has been replaced in the squad by Stade Francais' Raphael Lakafia.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nSutton reserve goalkeeper Wayne Shaw is under investigation by the Football Association for potentially breaching betting rules during Monday's FA Cup loss to Arsenal.\n\nThe Gambling Commission is also investigating if there was a breach of betting regulations after Shaw ate a pie in the 83rd minute of the game.\n\nBefore Monday's game, a bookmaker offered odds of 8-1 that Shaw would eat a pie on camera during the match.\n\nHe later said it was \"a bit of fun\".\n\nShaw, 46, ate the pie while standing by the substitutes' bench.\n\nHe told BBC Radio 4's World at One programme that the pie was in fact a pasty and he ate it as he was \"light-headed\".\n\n\"We are told we are not allowed to gamble as it is full-time professional football,\" he added. \"In no way did I put anyone in jeopardy of that - this is not the case here, this is just a bit of fun and me being hungry.\"\n\nAsked whether he knew if anyone had taken up the bet, he told the Daily Mail: \"I think there were a few people. I think a few mates and a few of the fans.\"\n\nThe Gambling Commission, which licenses and regulates gambling in Britain, says it is looking into whether there was any \"irregularity in the betting market and establishing whether the operator has met its licence requirement to conduct its business with integrity\".\n\nIt warned operators in June last year about the integrity of taking bets on novelty markets.\n\n\"Integrity in sport is not a joke and we have opened an investigation to establish exactly what happened,\" said enforcement and intelligence director Richard Watson.\n\n'I don't think it shows us in the best light'\n\nSun Bets, who sponsored the club on Monday for the fifth-round tie, tweeted that it had paid out a \"five-figure sum\" on the bet.\n\nSutton manager Paul Doswell said after the game: \"I don't think it shows us in the best light.\"\n\nClub chairman Bruce Elliott told 5 live: \"I didn't know anything about it. He has got himself in the papers again and the fame obviously has gone to his head a little bit, but we will soon bring him back down to earth, don't worry about that.\"\n\nShaw said he was told about the betting promotion before the game.\n\n\"I thought I would give them a bit of banter and let's do it,\" he added. \"All the subs were on and we were 2-0 down.\n\n\"It was just a bit of banter for them. It is something to make the occasion as well and you can look back and say it was part of it and we got our ticket money back.\"\n\nA worldwide ban on betting in football was introduced in 2014 and covers everyone involved in the game, from the players and managers to the match officials and club staff.\n\nIt prevents participants covered by the ban from betting, either directly or indirectly, on any football match or competition, including the passing of \"inside information\".\n\nThe FA website defines that as \"information that you are aware of due to your position in the game and which is not publicly available\".\n\nIt adds: \"You are not allowed to pass inside information on to someone else which they use for betting.\"", "'Anna' was trafficked from Albania into the UK last year by someone pretending to be her boyfriend.", "The Prime Minister Theresa May makes several of the front pages after her surprise appearance at the Brexit debate in the House of Lords on Monday.\n\nThe Daily Express says she \"dramatically confronted peers over a plot to delay Brexit\" and the Sun says she \"stunned\" the upper house by \"staring down rebellious Lords in person\".\n\nWriting in the Daily Mail, Quentin Letts says Mrs May \"scowled, she shook her head, she scratched her knee. She was watching them and her tail was swishing\".\n\nThe House of Lords also makes The Daily Mirror front page, which says that peers are facing a new clocking-in scandal. It picks up an allegation in a BBC TV programme - that one lord signed in to claim his £300 allowance - then returned to his taxi which was waiting outside.\n\nThe paper itself reported similar claims four years ago and its scathing editorial accuses some lords of a \"scandalous abuse of public funds\", describing them as \"vermin in ermine\".\n\nSeveral papers highlight conflict within the Conservative Party over changes to business rates in England and Wales.\n\nThe Times says the Communities Secretary, Sajid Javid, is being accused of \"misleading\" his own MPs with an analysis of the revaluation he sent to them at the weekend to try to head off a backbench rebellion.\n\nThe Mail views his attempts to reassure the rebels as a \"Dodgy Business Rates Dossier\" that underestimated the rate rises faced by small firms.\n\nMost people have heard of a \"granny annexe\" for elderly relatives but the Times reports on a new phenomenon in home extensions.\n\nThe paper says so many university graduates are moving back in with their parents that there's been a surge in what architects have dubbed the \"graddy annexe\". It puts the trend down to high rents and the difficulties in saving for a deposit to get on the property ladder.\n\nThe Guardian leads with its analysis that crashing out of the EU with no trade deal would saddle British exporters with £6bn a year in extra costs.\n\nAs part of a series on the implications of Brexit, it says its work \"reveals the limited options facing UK negotiators just weeks before Brexit talks start\". The paper says the £6bn figure is what would happen if Theresa May fell back on World Trade Organisation rules and their resulting tariffs.\n\nIt suggests the implications of this Plan B \"remain poorly understood within Whitehall\".\n\nAnd a woman who claims to be using Britain's oldest carrier bag is featured in several papers including the Daily Express. It has a photo of 65-year-old Sue O'Dowd, who's a grandmother from Shropshire, proudly holding the Tesco bag which celebrates the store's 50th anniversary - in 1981.\n\nShe has kept it for 36 years, through five house moves, and now uses it to store her knitting wool.", "After a failed attempt to fly away the swan was captured\n\nThis is the moment a traffic officer chased a \"stubborn\" swan down a motorway.\n\nThe obstinate bird caused a bottleneck on the M27 in Hampshire when it swanned onto the eastbound carriageway, blocking two lanes.\n\nAfter a failed attempt to fly away, the swan was rescued and \"safely taken away\", Highways England said.\n\nSwan Lifeline said the birds can often mistake roads for rivers in wet weather.\n\nHighways England tweeted a picture of the bird holding up traffic at junction 11, near Fareham, at about 08:00 GMT.\n\nThe agency tweeted: \"Two lanes are closed on the #M27 eastbound within J11 due to a stubborn swan on the carriageway!\"\n\nThe bird blocked two lanes on the eastbound carriageway\n\nSwan Lifeline said the birds can often mistake roads for rivers in wet weather\n\nSwan Lifeline is working with the RSPCA and Hampshire Police, which sent officers to the scene.\n\nIt has advised the force to take the swan to a rescue centre near Portsmouth.\n\nManager Richard Stokes said: \"Swans think the motorway is a river when it has been raining and the tarmac is wet, which is why it was running up and down the carriageway.\"\n\nRecently, the rescue of a swan from a motorway in Gloucestershire by two police officers was likened to something out of spoof film Hot Fuzz, after they posted a selfie with the bird in their vehicle.\n\nOther animals have also caused chaos by wandering into unexpected places, including last month when a cow blocked a rail line between Southampton and Brockenhurst.\n\nIt is not just swans that can cause travel chaos - this cow blocked a rail line last month between Southampton and Brockenhurst\n• None The strangest spillages on our roads\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The BBC's Pallab Ghosh reports: The invention means the ketchup \"just glides out\"\n\nScientists in Boston have found a way to get every last drop of ketchup out of the bottle.\n\nThey have developed a coating that makes bottle interiors super slippery.\n\nThe coating can also be used to make it easier to squeeze out the contents of other containers, such as those holding toothpaste, cosmetics and even glue.\n\nThe researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) believe that their innovation could dramatically reduce waste.\n\nIt is always an effort getting that last drop of ketchup out of the bottle.\n\nEveryone has their own technique. Some karate chop the bottle, others furiously shake it and many simply bash it.\n\nBut the MIT team has developed a system that banishes all that frustration.\n\nWhen incorporated into the bottle, it enables the ketchup or any other liquid to just slide out without leaving a trace.\n\nIn its manufacture, the container must first be coated on the inside with a rough surface.\n\nA very thin layer is then placed over this. And, finally, a liquid is added that fills in any troughs to form a very slippery surface - like an oily floor.\n\nThe ketchup hovers on top and just glides out of the bottle.\n\nAccording to Prof Kripa Varanasi, who developed the slippery surface, the technology is completely safe.\n\n\"The cool thing about it is that because the coating is a composite of solid and liquid, it can be tailored to the product. So for food, we make the coating out of food-based materials and so you can actually eat it.\"\n\nThe technology's co-inventor Dr David Smith told me that it could also help reduce waste.\n\n\"With the manufacture of these sticky products there is about 200 million gallons of material each year that gets stuck to tanks and then gets washed off and thrown away. And in packages there are about 40 billion packs with material stuck in packages so the technology has the potential to significantly reduce waste.\"\n\nSome people may miss the ritual struggle with their ketchup. But like it or not when the super slippery bottle becomes available in a few years' time, meal times will be a little less tricky.\n\nIn this demonstration, the paint container on the left is untreated; on the right, the paint in the treated container slips easily off the sides to the bottom", "Eddie Mair of BBC Radio 4's PM programme announces the death from cancer of fellow Radio 4 presenter Steve Hewlett at the age of 58.\n\nHe was diagnosed last March with cancer of the oesophagus.\n\nHe was frequently interviewed by Eddie Mair during his treatment, and after he was told it was no longer effective.", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nManchester City came from behind twice to secure a crucial two-goal advantage after a classic Champions League last-16 tie against Monaco at Etihad Stadium.\n\nOn a night of fluctuating fortunes and thrilling football, Pep Guardiola's side were on the precipice in this tournament before dragging themselves back to ensure they go into the return in Monaco with a priceless lead.\n\nRaheem Sterling gave Manchester City a 26th-minute advantage after fine work by Leroy Sane but Monaco proved their threat to lead before half-time through Radamel Falcao's header and Kylian Mbappe's powerful rising drive.\n\nFalcao then saw a penalty saved by Willy Caballero just after the break before Monaco keeper Danijel Subasic's blunder gave Sergio Aguero his first goal.\n\nColombian Falcao, back to his best after failed loan spells at Manchester United and Chelsea, then lifted a brilliant chip over Caballero to put Monaco back in front - but this was the signal for City to launch an enthralling attacking salvo.\n\nAguero - who felt he was denied a first-half penalty after he tumbled under a challenge from Subasic - volleyed in another equaliser before John Stones made amends for poor defending in the build-up to Falcao's second by putting City ahead on the night with a sliding finish at the far post after 77 minutes.\n\nMan of the match Sane handed City that two-goal cushion with a simple tap-in from Aguero's pass eight minutes from time - but Monaco's vibrant attacking ambition means this tie is far from over.\n\nAguero's Manchester City future has been the subject of debate with recent arrival Gabriel Jesus appearing to find greater favour with manager Guardiola - but how can they seriously consider life without this world-class striker?\n\nCity may have been rattling at the back but Aguero was in magnificent form throughout, terrorising Monaco with his prodigious work-rate and sheer menace.\n\nAguero was denied a penalty in the first half when he was booked for diving after he was upended by Monaco keeper Subasic but he was not to be denied and was a key component of City's enthralling fightback.\n\nHe enjoyed some deserved good fortune when his shot went straight through Subasic for his first goal but he delivered a sumptuous right-foot volley to make it 3-3 and then set up Sane for the crucial fifth goal that gave City that two-goal advantage.\n\nAguero was substituted to a standing ovation and a kiss on top of the head from his manager with four minutes left - this was the night he delivered proof, as if it were needed, that he is the man City and Guardiola cannot do without.\n\nFalcao looked a lost soul in two seasons on loan from Monaco to Manchester United and Chelsea - but this was a master striker back to his best.\n\nThe Colombian marred his display with a horribly hesitant penalty that was saved by Caballero and would have put Monaco 3-1 up, but there was so much about his and the visitors' display to admire.\n\nFalcao looked nothing like the demoralised figure who made 26 league appearances for United, scoring only four goals, and who got one goal in 10 league games for Chelsea.\n\nHe pounced like the poacher supreme to head his first but his second was a work of the striker's art, dismissing Stones from his presence before having the composure and class to deliver a lofted finish that left Caballero helpless.\n\nAnd in those moments, he and Monaco delivered the message to Manchester City that this tie is not over. Monaco looked a side packed with threat and goals and they will still feel they can claw this back.\n\nMbappe has the sleek elegance of a young Thierry Henry while Bernardo Silva is a player of the highest quality. Monaco still represent a danger.\n\nManchester City deservedly celebrated at the final whistle, the moment of triumph after a demonstration of resilience and attacking verve that brought a memorable win.\n\nGuardiola, however, will not be fooled - and his agitated body language was a giveaway when it came to their defensive frailties.\n\nCaballero helped Monaco equalise with poor distribution and Mbappe's second was the result of routine long ball. Stones was too weak in the physical exchanges with Falcao for Monaco's third.\n\nAnd throughout, Nicolas Otamendi cut a nervous, uncertain figure whose weaknesses were probed relentlessly by Monaco.\n\nManchester City are in the driving seat - but they will need to make sure the back doors are firmly locked in the return leg in Monaco.\n\nWhat they said\n\nManchester City manager Pep Guardiola: \"I am so happy for the result, we are still alive. These kind of things help this club to achieve another step. We attacked in small spaces. That's why they wanted me to come here. Everybody has to be congratulated.\n\n\"We are going to fly to Monaco to score as many goals as possible. If we don't score in Monaco we will be eliminated.\"\n\nMonaco boss Leonardo Jardim: \"It was perhaps one of the most exciting games of this year's Champions League. A great game of football.\n\n\"The key to the game was the missed penalty to make it 3-1 but there's 90 minutes with us. Nothing is finished.\"\n• None Manchester City scored five goals in a Champions League game for just the second time (the other was 5-2 v CSKA Moscow in 2013, excluding qualifiers).\n• None This game is the first time eight goals have been scored in the first leg of a Champions League knockout game.\n• None Raheem Sterling has had a hand in 10 goals in his past nine Champions League starts (five goals, five assists).\n• None Kylian Mbappe is the second youngest French scorer in the Champions League, following Karim Benzema (17 years 352 days) who scored for Lyon against Rosenborg in December 2005.\n• None Falcao scored as many goals at the Etihad (two) as he managed in 15 appearances at Old Trafford for Manchester United.\n• None Fabinho assisted more goals (two) than he had in his previous 15 appearances in the Champions League (one).\n• None Sergio Aguero's first goal was Manchester City's 200th European goal (203 at the end of this game). He has scored five goals in his last three Champions League games at the Etihad.\n• None Manchester City have saved each of their past five penalties in the Champions League (two from Caballero, three from Joe Hart).\n• None Monaco are the highest scorers in the top five European leagues this season in all competitions with 111 goals.\n• None There were 10 yellow cards handed out - the most in a Champions League game this season.\n\nManchester City are not in action this weekend because Manchester United's involvement in the EFL Cup final has led to the Manchester derby being postponed, so the Blues' next game is an FA Cup fifth-round replay with Huddersfield at the Etihad Stadium on Wednesday, 1 March.\n\nMonaco, meanwhile, travel to Guingamp on Saturday looking strengthen their place at the top of Ligue 1.\n• None Attempt blocked. Fabinho (Monaco) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt saved. Falcao (Monaco) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Benjamin Mendy. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Glitz, glamour, oddballs and glitterballs: The Brits are back. The annual music awards take place on Wednesday 22 February, live from the O2 Arena – and BBC Music will be there, bringing you all the gossip from the red carpet and backstage. You can follow the action on Music News LIVE from 15:00. In the meantime, here are some of the big themes and talking points to get you prepared...\n\n1. Will it be the year of grime?\n\nSkepta performs on Later... with Jools Holland\n\nThere were calls for a Brits boycott last year, after black artists were omitted from every category (except the international ones). In response, organisers overhauled the voting system, improving the representation of both women and people from ethnic minority backgrounds amongst the judges. Perhaps as a consequence, all but one of the best British male nominees this year is from a BAME background: with Kano, Skepta, Michael Kiwanuka and Craig David pitted against David Bowie. \"This is a dream come true and the increase in diversity is a great thing,” Kiwanuka told BBC News – but Craig David said he wasn’t expecting to win. “David Bowie’s career has been so epic,” he said. “He influenced me and so many other artists. There's no competition.\" With grime entering its imperial phase, it would be remiss of the Brits not to recognise the genre. The best chance for a win comes in the best breakthrough category, where Skepta and Stormzy lead the field.\n\nSometimes in life, you just have to put a goldfish in a handbag. Or at least that’s what Clean Bandit’s Grace Chatto thought the first time she attended the Brits. And who can blame her? If you’re not at the top of the celebrity tree, “going weird” is a sure-fire way to make it into the papers the next day. This year’s red carpet walkers have some heavy competition from history. Here are some of our favourite outfits from years gone by.\n\nLabrinth turned up last year looking like a human Magic Eye picture; Lady Gaga chose “nightmare ballerina” as the theme for her 2010 outfit; and Jess Glynne helpfully let us know her favourite Quality Street is the Green Triangle.\n\nGirls Aloud made it to the 2005 Brit Awards after surviving an explosion in a Kleenex factory.\n\nAnd JLS were forced to choose their clothes blindfold in a jumble sale before attending the 2010 ceremony.\n\nWith 17 nominations and zero wins, Radiohead are the unluckiest band ever at the Brits. They were first nominated in 1994, when Creep was up for best single, losing out to Take That’s Pray. Since then, landmark albums like The Bends, OK Computer and In Rainbows have all been overlooked; while Robbie Williams has hogged 18 trophies. Eighteen! So, could this finally be Radiohead’s year? The best group category isn’t the strongest, which plays in their favour, but two of the nominees out-performed Radiohead’s A Moon Shaped Pool. That would be Little Mix, whose Glory Days was the seventh best-selling album of 2016; and The 1975, who topped the charts on both sides of the Atlantic with their breakthrough, I Like It When You Sleep, for You Are So Beautiful Yet So Unaware of It.\n\n4. Will Katy Perry throw up again?\n\nMoments after Lionel Richie handed over 2009’s best international female award, Katy Perry ran backstage and threw up in a bucket. Not because she was overwhelmed or nervous - but because she was really, really poorly. \"I'm so sick right now,\" she croaked in her acceptance speech. \"But they said I should show up to the Brits because something special might happen. \"Thank you to everyone at my record label. Obviously, I've worked pretty hard because I want to die right now.\" Katy’s back this year to give one of the night’s biggest performances. Let's hope she holds down her lunch.\n\n5. What will people do with their trophies?\n\nZaha Hadid’s bendy Brits statue is sure to draw some comments from the winners.\n\nEver since Adele brought the nation to a standstill with her performance of Someone Like You at the 2011 Brit Awards, the ceremony has been one big blubfest. While we used to get Geri Halliwell emerging from a giant pair of Styrofoam legs; or Justin Timberlake (consensually) groping Kylie Minogue, these days everyone wants to stand in a solitary spotlight, emoting their lungs out. Thankfully, this year’s performers are known for their bangers – Skepta, Little Mix, Katy Perry and Bruno Mars should keep the tempo above “induced coma” (although Bruno has set alarm bells ringing with his performance of the boudoir ballad That’s What I Like at last week’s Grammys). That means Ed Sheeran is the most likely candidate. His release, How Would You Feel (Paean) is a swoonsome love song cut from the same cloth as Thinking Out Loud, and set to chart at No.1 this Friday. We’re hoping he does Shape Of You instead.\n\n7. Could it be Rag N’ Bone Man’s big night?\n\nIt might be Rag N’ Bone Man’s first ever Brit Awards but he’s already a winner. Back in December, the singer bagged the Critics’ Choice award – which tips a new artist for success - joining the ranks of Adele, Sam Smith and Florence + The Machine. But for the first time ever, a Critics’ Choice winner is also up for Best Breakthrough Artist. The man born Rory Graham faces strong competition in that category from Skepta and Stormzy - but if he wins, he could go home with the biggest haul of the night. Only two artists are up for more awards – Little Mix have three, but will struggle in the best group category; while Skepta, as we mentioned earlier, is unlikely to win best male over David Bowie. Find out if we’re right on BBC Music News LIVE (and Radio 1 and Radio 2).", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nFormer England batsman Kevin Pietersen says Monday's auction for the Indian Premier League Twenty20 competition was \"another slap in Test cricket's face\".\n\nEngland duo Ben Stokes and Tymal Mills were bought for £1.7m and £1.4m by Rising Pune Supergiants and Royal Challengers Bangalore respectively.\n\nPace bowler Mills only plays Twenty20 cricket because of back pains.\n\n\"A T20 specialist becomes one of the current England team's richest players,\" said Pietersen.\n\nPietersen has not played an international match since he was sacked by England in 2014.\n\nHe has since become a T20 specialist and played in competitions in Australia, India, South Africa, the West Indies and in the Pakistani T20 tournament held in the UAE.\n\n\"I embraced [T20] eight years ago and it's what caused me my P45,\" said the 36-year-old on social media. \"I absolutely love how all these youngsters are now benefiting.\n\n\"I love how T20 is growing the game. I'm just saying that Tests are falling way behind at the moment. The ICC [International Cricket Council] needs to act and quick.\"\n\n'I'm struggling to put it into words'\n\nEngland players Chris Woakes, Eoin Morgan, Jason Roy and Chris Jordan were also bought in the auction, while Jos Buttler and Sam Billings were retained by their franchises.\n\nThe fee paid for 25-year-old all-rounder Stokes made him the the most expensive overseas player in IPL history.\n\n\"It's a life-changing amount of money,\" said Stokes. \"I'm struggling to put it into words.\n\n\"I hadn't thought about how much I would go for. I guess having more than one team wanting me was probably the best position to be in.\n\n\"I just wanted to get picked up and play. I haven't been able to play in the past so that was the main thing, anything else was just a bonus.\n\n\"I'm looking forward to getting out there and getting involved.\"\n• Read more: Where the IPL contract money goes (Daily Telegraph)", "Doctors from a children's hospital have helped save the life of a premature baby hippo at Cincinnati Zoo.\n\nThe ailing baby, named Fiona, had become dehydrated after refusing milk and required an urgent intravenous drip.\n\nFiona was born six weeks early to 17-year-old hippo Bibi on 24 January.\n\nAt birth she weighed 13 kg (29 lbs), which the zoo says is about half the previous lowest recorded birth weight for her species.\n\nThe normal range is 25-54 kg and at almost a month old she does not yet weigh 25 kg.\n\nZoo staff, who have been blogging about the little hippo's progress, said last week that she was teething.\n\nThe discomfort may have made her bottle feeding uncomfortable, they said.\n\nWhen she grew sick and lethargic, the local Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center stepped in to help rehydrate her.\n\n\"Preemies have very tiny and unstable veins, and even though our vet team was able to get multiple IVs placed, the veins could not sustain the IV and would blow,\" said the zoo's curator of mammals Christina Gorsuch.\n\n\"Lucky for us, we're right next door to a world-class facility with a whole department dedicated to working with difficult veins.\"\n\nStaff from Cincinnati Children's Hospital joined zoo carers to help revive Fiona\n\nTwo members of the hospital's vascular team brought ultrasound equipment to the zoo on Friday and put an IV catheter into Fiona.\n\nIt lasted just 30 minutes before her vein ruptured, but the team were able to secure a line into one of her deep leg veins.\n\nKeepers have been monitoring the IV round the clock since then.\n\n\"Five bags of fluid later, Fiona is showing signs of recovery,\" Ms Gorsuch said.\n\n\"She is still sleeping a lot but has started to take bottles again and has periods of carefully-supervised activity. The catheter is still in place.\"\n\nBaby Fiona is being cared for close to her mother Bibi and father Henry, so the family can hear and smell each other.\n\nShe made the history books even before her arrival, when scientists at the zoo captured the first ever ultrasound image of a Nile hippo foetus.\n\nThe Vascular Access Team were delighted to help the diminutive beast, whose growing pains have charmed fans online.\n\n\"Like many people, we are rooting for Fiona!\" said clinical director Sylvia Rineair.\n\nZoo staff have been bottle feeding Fiona to help her gain strength\n\nThe hippo calf is being kept near her parents so they can hear and smell each other\n\nCincinnati Zoo was in the news last year over the fatal shooting of gorilla Harambe after the animal grabbed a four-year-old boy who had fallen into his enclosure.\n\nThe shooting last May sparked angry reaction and prompted a social media backlash that saw the zoo temporarily delete its Twitter account.\n\nFiona isn't the first of Cincinnati's animal residents to get help from the local children's hospital.\n\nIn 2015, Ali the aardvark had CT and MRI scans at Cincinnati Children's after suffering from eye trouble.\n\nThe multi-talented team have also helped baby gorillas, and consulted on a polar bear pregnancy test.", "Philip Hammond is not a man known for political surprises.\n\nSpreadsheet Phil, as he probably doesn't like to be called, prefers to keep any rabbits that might be hopping around Whitehall stuffed deep in the Treasury's public spending hat.\n\nSo, anyone thinking that today's better news on the state of government's finances will lead to any Budget largesse is likely to be disappointed.\n\nThe public sector net borrowing numbers showed a surplus in January, a month when the government receives a significant proportion of its tax receipts.\n\nWith those receipts higher than expected and economic growth stronger than expected, the government earned more than it spent to the tune of £9.4bn.\n\nTaking a year to date comparison, these are the best borrowing numbers the government has achieved since the financial crisis.\n\nA little bit of that roof has been fixed, and the sun is still shining.\n\nMr Hammond is now likely to undershoot his end of year deficit target by £10bn, borrowing less over the year, around £60bn, than the Office for Budget Responsibility expected last autumn.\n\nThough it should be remembered that target was significantly loosened following the referendum result.\n\nOn the surface, a £10bn undershoot may appear good news, and is likely to lead to calls that the Treasury could loosen the public spending purse strings.\n\nThe chancellor could spread a bit of salve on that toxic issue of the day - business rate increases due in April which are leaving some firms with significantly higher bills - and still hit his deficit target.\n\nBusiness rate relief could be made more generous and transition periods extended so that any abrupt increases are put on a smoother trajectory.\n\nWhich might be good politically.\n\nAnd Mr Hammond could offer something for the National Health Service and social care.\n\nWhich might also be good politically.\n\nBut, Mr Hammond does not want to be a \"political chancellor\" in the style of one George Osborne, moving rapidly to plug political holes with Treasury gold.\n\nThose close to him are making clear, there may be some minor tweaks but there will not be major changes of direction on Budget day on 8 March.\n\nBrexit is still, in the Treasury's mind, a risk to the economy that looms large and any buffers built up now are likely to be kept back for future rainy days - if they come - rather than be spent now.\n\nAnd January's strong numbers have been flattered by the recent sale of government shares in Lloyds Bank and the fact that self-assessment receipts from individual tax returns have come in earlier this year compared to last.\n\nThe chancellor has set himself two tasks ahead of the next general election.\n\nProve that the Treasury is the nation's cautious chief financial officer, focused on \"balancing the books\" and reducing the deficit (the amount the government spends over the amount it earns) to zero.\n\nAnd second, reboot the economy by improving private sector growth with a focus on productivity and infrastructure spending.\n\nIn Mr Hammond's mind, one month's good figures do not change that sober to-do list.", "Badminton is one of seven sports to have lost appeals against UK Sport funding cuts for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic cycle.\n\nThe decision comes despite Marcus Ellis and Chris Langridge winning bronze for Great Britain in the men's doubles at the Rio 2016 Olympics.\n\nArchery, goalball, fencing, table tennis, weightlifting and wheelchair rugby will also receive no funding.\n\nHowever, powerlifting was successful in its appeal to UK Sport.\n\nIt means the sport's £1.3m funding will be managed by British Weightlifting and not the English Institute of Sport, as was the case before the 2016 Olympics.\n\nGB Badminton said it was \"staggered\" by the decision to reject its appeal.\n\nBut UK Sport chief executive Liz Nicholl said none of the seven sports had provided \"critically compelling new evidence\" that changed the assessment of their medal potential.\n\nMike Reilly, CEO of Goalball UK, said his organisation was hopeful UK Sport would find \"other ways to help us secure a clear and sustained talent pathway\" to Tokyo 2020.\n\nWheelchair rugby has been stripped of £750,000, and BBC Sport understands the Rugby Football Union (RFU) will not step in to increase support for its disability counterpart.\n\nThe RFU gives about £100,000 per year to the sport known as 'murderball', and England full-back Mike Brown headed a recent campaign to help raise funds, but there are now fears its elite team could fold.\n\n'It's going to be tough for the sport'\n\nCompared with the four-year build-up to the Rio Games, badminton is the biggest loser in cash terms, as it was given £5.7m last time.\n\nThe cut comes despite the sport hitting its medal target thanks to Ellis and Langridge winning only Britain's third Olympic badminton medal.\n\nIt is heart-wrenching - we're super devastated Gail Emms, who won an Olympic badminton silver medal in 2004\n\nGB Badminton said in a statement: \"Given the strength of evidence we were able to present to justify investment, we cannot believe UK Sport has concluded they should stand by their decision and award zero funding to our GB programme.\n\n\"We have players who are on track to win medals for the nation at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and our belief in those players remains as great as it's ever been. We will now take some time to consider our next steps.\"\n\nGail Emms, a silver medallist for Great Britain at Athens 2004, said she was \"gutted\".\n\nShe said: \"It is heart-wrenching. It was bad enough in December when the initial decision was made but now we are super devastated.\n\n\"The players out there were really pinning their hopes on this. I was such an optimist; I thought it was going to be OK. We put forward a strong case. It is going to be tough now for the sport.\"\n\nUK Sport's money has transformed Britain into an Olympic and Paralympic superpower, but its 'no-compromise' approach is under more scrutiny than ever.\n\nWith falling ticket sales hitting crucial National Lottery funding, resources are undoubtedly stretched but, for the first time, sports with real podium potential are being excluded from funding, and many are now asking whether the focus on medals has gone too far.\n\nHow have the other sports reacted?\n\nTable tennis was another sport to be disappointed, despite Britain winning a bronze medal at the 2016 World Team Championships.\n\nSara Sutcliffe, Table Tennis England chief executive, said: \"We're naturally disappointed, having made what we believe was a very strong case for a relatively small amount of funding.\n\n\"We overachieved on everything we were asked to do in the 2016 cycle, and did so without funding. We were left without funding because, effectively, the goalposts were moved. We will take time to absorb this decision before we decide on the best course of action.\"\n\nGeorgina Usher, chief executive of British Fencing, said the organisation would try to hold fundraising events to support its athletes.\n\n\"This has been an incredibly difficult period for the athletes and programme staff,\" she said.\n\n\"Our staff, coaches and athletes have worked incredibly hard to have got to the point where we are absolutely good enough to target an Olympic medal. Having to explain to them why the programme funding will be coming to an end is extremely tough.\n\n\"We will be appealing against this decision as we owe it to our athletes to pursue every avenue open to us to challenge this funding decision process.\"\n\nGoalball chief executive Reilly was more upbeat, saying: \"Though we did not fit the UK Sport criteria to move up categories, and so secure funding, we were very much encouraged by their response to our representation.\n\n\"There is certainly a sense of the board understanding the difficulties we face and an acknowledgement of our incredible success.\"\n\n'We don't take these decisions lightly' - UK Sport's reaction\n\nNicholl said: \"The sports that made representations were unable to provide any critically compelling new evidence that changed our assessment of their medal potential for Tokyo.\n\n\"Their position in our meritocratic table therefore remains unchanged and they remain in a band we cannot afford to invest in.\n\n\"This is the first time we've been unable to support every sport that has athletes with the potential to deliver medals at the next Games. We don't take these decisions lightly as we're acutely aware of the impact they have on sports, athletes and support personnel.\n\n\"To support those affected, we have put in place a comprehensive transition and support package and are working closely with these sports to help staff and athletes move out of UK Sport funding.\"\n\nWhat is the background?\n\nIn December, UK Sport announced the funding for the cycles for the Olympics and Paralympics in Tokyo in 2020.\n\nArchery, badminton, fencing, goalball, table tennis, weightlifting and wheelchair rugby appealed to UK Sport to review the decision on what they had been awarded.\n\nUK Sport says it must prioritise sports with the strongest medal potential for Tokyo and the appeal process was essentially a second opportunity for officials to demonstrate why they deserve funding.\n\nA total of £345m will be invested in 31 Olympic and Paralympic sports - £2m less than the record £347m allocated for the Rio Games.\n\nUK Sport has set Team GB a target of winning between 51 and 85 Olympic medals, and 115 to 162 Paralympic medals in 2020.\n\nUnderstandably, the headlines will be dominated by news of the seven sports - including British Weightlifting's Olympics team - who have not been able to overturn UK Sport's initial funding decisions.\n\nHowever, the victory for British Weightlifting's Paralympic programme should not be overlooked. UK Sport had planned to move control of the funding award for the disability sport set-up to the English Institute of Sport (EIS). This would not only have seen the closure of the entire GB Weightlifting programme (for Olympic and Paralympic athletes), but also potentially set a new precedent for how funding could be allocated in the future.\n\nThe EIS is essentially an extended arm of UK Sport - looking after anything from nutrition to physiotherapy and athlete lifestyle/welfare. Figures from several other Olympic and Paralympic sports have told me of their concerns about what giving EIS greater power would have meant for future funding decisions beyond Tokyo.\n\nAs it stands, those concerns will have been allayed somewhat - but it will be interesting to see whether UK Sport will continue to push in this direction and essentially seek greater control and governance of the funding it awards over each four-year-cycle.", "Lt BJ Gruber (right) went above and beyond the call of duty when he answered this appeal for help (left) from Lena Draper, 10\n\nEvery child knows when you are in trouble, you call the cops.\n\nBut it is fair to say, no police officer expects that trouble to be related to the complexities of a 10-year-old's maths homework.\n\nYet when faced with just such an issue, one brave officer in Marion, Ohio, stepped up to the mark.\n\nLena Draper decided to use Facebook to get in touch with her local police force, sending them an appeal for help at the weekend.\n\n\"I am having trouble with my homework. Could you help me?\" she asked.\n\n\"What's up?\" asked officer BJ Gruber, who told the BBC he was hoping \"for something in the realm of history\".\n\nUnfortunately for him it was maths, with the added complication of a few brackets.\n\nUndeterred, Lt Gruber threw himself into the challenge.\n\nUnfortunately, Lt Gruber's second answer was less correct\n\n\"I felt pretty confident with my answers on both questions and perhaps that worked against me with the second equation,\" Lt Gruber admitted.\n\nIndeed, more than a few people have pointed out the answer he gave to the second, more complicated question, was incorrect - but the Police Department in Marion, Ohio, are still seeing the episode as a win.\n\n\"We are nailing our goals of increasing trust, transparency & being approachable. Still a work in product on the math skills,\" the force wrote on its Twitter page after Lena's mum Molly uploaded screenshots of the conversation to Facebook.\n\nThe post has now been liked more than 2,300 times.\n\n\"We really hope that are are not flooded with homework requests... so far, so good,\" Lt Gruber said.\n\n\"We really see this not different that a child walking up to an officer on the street and asking for help. This is just a 21st Century version of that interaction. We do however encourage kids to communicate with parents, teachers, siblings and fellow students before asking us.\"\n\nAs for Lena, she knows she can't always rely on the police to help her with her homework. But she does have a backup plan.\n\n\"Well, I'd call Ghostbusters then,\" she told Inside Edition.", "At a different time, in another country, it was effectively a death sentence.\n\nBeing branded an \"enemy of the people\" by the likes of Stalin or Mao brought at best suspicion and stigma, at worst hard labour or death.\n\nNow the chilling phrase - which is at least as old as Emperor Nero, who was called \"hostis publicus\", enemy of the public, by the Senate in AD 68 - is making something of a comeback.\n\nIn November, the UK Daily Mail used its entire front page to brand three judges \"enemies of the people\" following a legal ruling on the Brexit process.\n\nThen on Friday, President Donald Trump deployed the epithet against mainstream US media outlets that he sees as hostile.\n\n\"The FAKE NEWS media (failing New York Times, NBC News, ABC, CBS, CNN) is not my enemy, it is the enemy of the American People!\" he wrote on Twitter.\n\nThe reaction was swift. \"Every president is irritated by the news media. No other president would have described the media as 'the enemy of the people'\", tweeted David Axelrod, a former adviser to President Barack Obama.\n\nGabriel Sherman, national affairs editor at New York magazine, called the phrase a \"chilling\" example of \"full-on dictator speak\".\n\nSteve Silberman, an award-winning writer and journalist, wondered whether the remark would prompt Trump supporters to shoot at journalists.\n\nAnd that might not be a far-fetched concern. Late last year, a Trump supporter opened fire in a pizza restaurant at the centre of a bizarre conspiracy theory about child abuse.\n\nThe US president's use of \"enemies of the people\" raises unavoidable echoes of some of history's most murderous dictators.\n\nUnder Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, out-of-favour artists and politicians were designated enemies and many were sent to hard labour camps or killed. Others were stigmatised and denied access to education and employment.\n\nAnd Chairman Mao, the leader of China who presided over the deaths of millions of people in a famine brought about by his Great Leap Forward, was also known to use the phrase against anyone who opposed him, with terrible consequences.\n\nThe president was widely criticised for his choice of words.\n\n\"Charming that our uneducated President manages to channel the words of Stalin and fails to hear the historical resonance of this phrase,\" tweeted Mitchell Orenstein, a professor of Russian and East European studies at the University of Pennsylvania.\n\nCarl Bernstein, a reporter who helped to bring down Richard Nixon with his reporting on the Watergate scandal, tweeted: \"The most dangerous 'enemy of the people' is presidential lying - always. Attacks on press by Donald Trump more treacherous than Nixon's.\"\n\nMr Trump is not the first US president to have an antagonistic relationship with the media - Nixon is known to have privately referred to the press as \"the enemy\" - but his latest broadside, with all its attendant historical echoes, is unprecedented.", "Stand-up comedian David Baddiel has invited cameras to film his father over the past year – to show the reality of his life living with a rare form of dementia called Pick’s disease.\n\nSymptoms include excessive swearing and inappropriate sexual behaviour, which means the comedian had to stop his children visiting their grandfather.\n\nThe Trouble With Dad is on Channel 4 on Monday 20 February at 9pm.\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "A Muslim teacher denied entry to the United States while on a school trip said he has still not been told why.\n\nJuhel Miah, 25, had flown to Reykjavik, Iceland, with the party from Llangatwg Community School in Aberdulais, Neath, before boarding an onward flight to New York on 16 February.\n\nBut before the plane took off, he was escorted off by security staff.\n\nMr Miah posted a video of him being escorted off the plane on Snapchat.", "A plane carrying five people has crashed into a Melbourne shopping complex, Australian authorities say.\n\nA retailer in the complex said the plane crashed into its rear warehouse but all staff were safe. It is believed the shopping centre was closed at the time of the incident.", "Call it overspending, underfunding or deficits, the latest news from NHS Improvement involves plenty of red ink on the books of hospitals and other trusts.\n\nAnd the picture is worse than it looked last November, which will lead to speculation that NHS finances in England are close to being out of control.\n\nAs recently as November, Jim Mackey, head of the regulator NHS Improvement, was saying that trusts in England would run up a total deficit of £580m for the full financial year.\n\nNow that has been revised up to a range of £750m to £850m. That will hardly win him many friends at the Department of Health where ministers are anxious to demonstrate that a tighter grip has been applied to the NHS purse strings.\n\nNHS Improvement is pointing the finger at higher than expected patient demand, with emergency hospital admissions 3.5% higher in the final three months of 2016 compared to the same period in 2015. The regulator had anticipated an increase of more like 2%.\n\nSocial care problems are also being blamed. NHS Improvement says there was a 28% jump in the number of \"bed days\" lost because of problems discharging medically fit patients, who had to be kept in hospital when they were medically fit to leave. Difficulties finding the right community or social care were cited as reasons for that increase.\n\nRising numbers of non-urgent operations and procedures were cancelled because of bed shortages. That hit hospital finances as trusts lost the flow of income they would normally have received for carrying out the operations.\n\nIt's easy to see why NHS England leaders and hospital chiefs have been calling for urgent action on social care. A delayed transfer is bad news for the patient stuck in the hospital bed, frustrating for the patient who has an operation postponed, and a real headache for hospital finance directors who lose income.\n\nNHS Improvement argues that more cost controls have been applied, resulting in a 24% lower bill for agency staff in December compared to 12 months earlier.\n\nPaul Briddock, of the Healthcare Financial Management Association, said staff had done a \"remarkable job in trying to keep services going while also delivering over £2bn of efficiencies\".\n\nA deficit overshoot of a few hundred million pounds should of course been seen in the context of total trust revenue of nearly £80bn and annual NHS spending in England of more than £100bn.\n\nTo get to the real picture, though, you need to take into account the £1.8bn \"sustainability fund\" run by NHS Improvement. This, in effect, is financial support for trusts who follow the regulator's plans for cost reduction. Add that to the possible year end deficit of £850m, as already stated, and you get to a total overspend of around £2.6bn which would be higher than last year.\n\nA year ago we reported the pressure being exerted from on high on trusts to ensure they did not end the year too far into the red. The Department of Health has to ensure that trust deficits are covered by surpluses elsewhere so it does not overspend the budget agreed by Parliament. The process went to the wire last year and seems set to do so again.\n\nRemember this was supposed to be the \"year of plenty\" for NHS funding with annual increases tailing off in future years.\n\nThe fact that trusts are struggling now is alarming.\n\nThe government will argue the NHS could be more efficient and make better use of its resources. Critics will say the service in England is underfunded.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nBritish Cycling has been accused of watering down the findings of an internal review in 2012 by the chief executive of UK Sport.\n\nLiz Nicholl said the governing body \"fed a very light-touch version\" to the funding agency.\n\nFormer British Cycling chief executive Peter King took anonymous statements from 40 personnel as part of a report that was never made public.\n\n\"We were given to believe that... actually we had a very light-touch version of it fed to us at UK Sport, so we had no indication of the significance of that report.\n\n\"It's only now come to light.\"\n\nSpeaking to national newspapers, Nicholl confirmed she considered it to effectively be a cover-up, adding: \"That's a complete lack of transparency and that's a relationship that is not acceptable in terms of what was shared with us as opposed to what the actual facts of that report were.\"\n\nUK Sport have faced questions over why they did not act on a report that is known to include allegations of bullying.\n\nNicholls' incendiary comments come as the country's most successful and best-funded sports governing body braces itself for the publication of another report into alleged bullying, favouritism and sexism, led by British Rowing chair Annamarie Phelps.\n\nPublication is expected in the next month.\n\nFormer British Cycling chief executive Ian Drake commissioned the King report in September 2012 but left the organisation in January, three months earlier than planned. He could not be reached for comment.\n\nUCI president Brian Cookson, who was president of British Cycling when King delivered the report in December 2012, said he would not comment until the Phelps report was published.\n\nUK Sport are currently considering whether to help fund Cookson's re-election campaign, having contributed £77,000 in 2013.\n\nKing told BBC Sport he was \"disappointed\" to hear Nicholl say she never saw his full report.\n\nIn a statement, British Cycling said: \"Contributions were made with a guarantee of anonymity, so key findings and recommendations were shared in briefings with UK Sport and the British Cycling board.\n\n\"The full report was also made available to the 2016 independent review, jointly commissioned by UK Sport and British Cycling in April last year, of the world class programme.\"\n\nThe current Phelps inquiry was jointly commissioned by UK Sport and British Cycling following allegations of sexism and bullying made by rider Jess Varnish against former technical director Shane Sutton.\n\nVarnish claimed the coach had used sexist and discriminatory language when dropping her from the Olympic programme, something he strongly denies.\n\nIn October, Sutton resigned and was found guilty of one charge of using inappropriate language by an internal review.\n\nA number of other riders and former staff members have backed Varnish's portrayal of \"a culture of fear\" within British Cycling, including former road world champion Nicole Cooke, who told a parliamentary select committee that it was a sport \"run by men, for men\".\n\nFormer performance director Sir Dave Brailsford has insisted he ran a regime that was \"not sexist but definitely medallist\".\n\n\"All those views are being taken into account through the review,\" said Nicholl.\n\n\"It's fair to say that the high-performance system here is pretty male-dominated. There aren't very many female coaches and there's an opportunity to address that in future, and to get a better balance to support athletes in a way that athletes of today want to be supported.\n\n\"Athletes have moved on and maybe the programmes haven't moved on as fast as they should have done, but what we see is an opportunity.\"\n\n'There's no excuse for not putting athletes first'\n\nThe legally sensitive nature of Phelps' report has meant it has been delayed, with fears it could be heavily redacted to protect witness confidentiality.\n\nThose who gave evidence are now being asked how much of their testimony can be revealed, while those criticised have an opportunity to respond.\n\nPublication could take another month, but on 1 March British Cycling will brief staff and riders on an \"action plan\" - effectively its response to the report and concerns over the way it operates.\n\nThis will include greater oversight of its high-performance programme, and more consideration of athlete welfare.\n\n\"There's no excuse for not addressing duty of care responsibilities to athletes,\" said Nicholls. \"There's no excuse for not putting athletes first.\n\n\"They are are the ones who'll deliver the medals and every programme should be trying to ensure they have happy and successful athletes and there probably hasn't been enough attention in sport about how they do things.\n\n\"There's a lot of focus on operational delivery, probably not enough on leadership management and communication.\"\n\nNicholl told the BBC that she would be \"clear about the actions that UK Sport and British Cycling need to take\".", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland all-rounder Ben Stokes became the Indian Premier League's most expensive foreign player when Rising Pune Supergiant bought him for £1.7m.\n\nTymal Mills went for £1.4m to Royal Challengers Bangalore, while fellow England bowler Chris Woakes was bought by Kolkata Knight Riders for £504,140.\n\nEngland one-day captain Eoin Morgan has gone to Kings XI Punjab for £240,066.\n\nInternational team-mates Jason Roy and Chris Jordan were sold to Gujarat Lions and Sunrisers Hyderabad respectively.\n• Read more: Where the IPL contract money goes (Telegraph)\n\nStokes, 25, had a base price of £240,000 (20 million rupees) but was the subject of bids from Mumbai Indians, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Delhi Daredevils and Sunrisers Hyderabad before Pune emerged successful.\n\nHis fee overtakes that of former England duo Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff, who were sold for $1.55m (£1.1m) each in 2009.\n\nStokes, Roy, 24-year-old Mills and Woakes, 27, will be playing in the eight-team Twenty20 competition - which takes place between 5 April and 21 May - for the first time.\n\n\"It's a life-changing amount of money,\" said Stokes. \"Seven times my base amount - that's mental but pretty cool to think about.\n\n\"It was hard to follow on Twitter. I wasn't sure how much a Crore [Indian unit of measurement] was - people were retweeting stuff, and it was complete carnage.\n\n\"I'm just seriously excited about getting going.\"\n\nJos Buttler was retained by Mumbai Indians and Sam Billings was kept on by Delhi Daredevils during the first round of 2017 IPL auction held in Bangalore, but batsmen Alex Hales and Jonny Bairstow went unsold.\n\n\"Great day for English cricket and a few lads in particular. Congrats boys,\" said Buttler.\n\nLeft-arm pace bowler Mills will be available for the whole tournament as he is limited to playing T20 cricket because of back pain.\n\n\"When it finished I did not know how much it was worth,\" he said. \"When I worked it out I could not believe it - it did not seem real.\n\n\"It's an amount of money that can change your life. It will for me.\"\n\nEngland's other players may not be available for the 10th edition of the competition because of international commitments as England host Ireland in one-day matches on 5 and 7 May.\n\nThey then host South Africa in a three-match ODI series, with the games scheduled to take place on 24, 27 and 29 May, before the ICC Champions Trophy starts in England on 1 June.\n\nWe've been lacking this one genre of player,\" he said. \"We have many heroes but this is the one hero that we were lacking.\n\n\"We knew he was going to be expensive. We do believe he is going to be there for the first 14 games.\"\n\nStokes helped England reach the final of the World Twenty20 in 2016, but they were beaten by the West Indies after the all-rounder was hit for four consecutive sixes in the final over by Carlos Brathwaite.\n\nThe Durham player was also part of England's winter tour of India and were beaten 4-0 in the Tests series, 2-1 in the ODIs and 2-1 in the T20 series.\n\nHe has become one of England's best performers and was named vice-captain of England's Test team after Joe Root took over as skipper from Alastair Cook earlier this month.\n\nMills is England's fastest bowler but has played only four T20 games at international level.\n\n\"We really needed bowlers, especially with Mitchell Starc not being available for this edition and, therefore, Tymal Mills was a great buy,\" said RCB chairman Amrit Thomas.\n\n\"He suits the playing conditions in Bangalore and we would have done absolutely whatever was required to get him.\"\n\nIn other notable highlights from the auction, all-rounder Mohammad Nabi became the first Afghanistan player to be bought in the IPL, with Sunrisers Hyderabad picking him up for £36,000.", "Protests took place in central London as MPs clashed over whether US President Donald Trump should be given a state visit to the UK.\n\nThe debate was triggered by two petitions - one against a state visit, which got 1.85 million signatures, and one in favour which got 311,000.\n\nA group of anti-Trump protesters gathered in Parliament Square, while similar demonstrations were organised elsewhere around the UK, including in Edinburgh, Manchester, Liverpool, Cardiff and Newcastle.", "A French soldier guarding the Louvre in Paris has shot a man who tried to attack a security patrol with a machete shouting \"Allahu Akbar\", police say.\n\nVisitors inside the museum were told to sit on the ground in a locked room as the area was put on lockdown.", "Here's an exclusive first look at David Hockney's masthead for Friday's edition of the Sun. What do you think?\n\nNewspapers are forever doing cool stunts with their front pages and mastheads.\n\nWhen he was editor of the Independent (my former parish), Simon Kelner designed several memorable front pages, often with the help of celebrities such as Bono or Tracey Emin.\n\nIn my time as editor we had the odd stunt too. They tended to be aimed at promoting charitable causes. Sometimes proceeds from the sale of the paper would go to charity.\n\nFor the Sun on Friday, this is more about boosting circulation with a souvenir edition.\n\nFor Hockney, it will help to raise awareness of his forthcoming exhibition at Tate Britain, which opens on 9 February.\n\nFor what it's worth, I think the redesigned logo is terrific. It is true to the essence of the original but takes it in a playful and childish (in the best sense of that word) direction.\n\nHockney was photographed for Friday's edition in his Los Angeles studio by Arthur Edwards, the Sun's celebrated royal photographer.\n\nIn my view, newspapers should do front page stunts much more often. They generally have a relationship with their readers that is sufficiently deep and trustful for them to get away with it - and they do have the habit of turning particular editions into souvenirs, which can help boost circulation and increase impact on our culture.\n\nIndeed the Sun's front page on the birth of Prince George was, to my mind, close to genius. Of course, editors have to decide how often is too often.", "There is universal condemnation in Friday's papers for the lawyer struck off after he was found to have acted dishonestly in bringing murder and torture claims against British Iraq War veterans.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph thinks Phil Shiner should now be investigated by the criminal authorities \"with the same vigour they showed in investigating those he falsely accused\".\n\nIt says he was \"on a crusade; a mission, it seemed, to tear apart the reputation of the British armed forces\".\n\nThe Times says he has been made a \"pariah of his profession\", and calls for proper safeguards for soldiers so they cannot in future be subjected to allegations based on \"cooked-up evidence\".\n\nThe Daily Mail agrees, saying the \"witch-hunt\" extends as far as Northern Ireland, where police are investigating more than 300 killings by the Army during the Troubles.\n\nThe paper says Mr Shiner \"is a stain on the legal establishment\".\n\nThe Guardian has discovered that there is a ban on non-urgent surgery in West Kent until the new financial year begins, in April.\n\nIt says around 1,700 people will be affected by the decision, which has been prompted by a cash crisis.\n\nThe Royal College of Surgeons tells the paper the policy will prolong patients' suffering and may even cost more in the long term as conditions worsen.\n\nThe group which commissions treatment in the area says no patients will have operations cancelled as a result of the measures.\n\nRationing of a different kind is on the front page of the Daily Mail.\n\nIt says some supermarkets have begun imposing limits on the number of vegetables customers can buy due to the shortages caused by bad weather in the Mediterranean.\n\nIceberg lettuces are being rationed in Tesco and Morrisons, which is also capping the purchase of broccoli.\n\nFor the Guardian, it is \"just the tip of the iceberg\".\n\nIt says: \"British shoppers have already been warned that shortages of courgettes, aubergines, salad and celery will continue until the spring - and they can expect to pay substantially higher prices for the stock that is available.\"\n\nThe Mirror leads with an investigation into the poaching of gorillas in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where populations have fallen by 80% in 20 years.\n\nThe paper says the animals are being shot for bush meat by militia groups and miners looking for a rare metal used in the manufacture of mobile phones and games consoles.\n\nIt is calling on the international community to act now to stop the slaughter.\n\nThe Times, meanwhile, is urging the government to bring about a housing revolution by allowing more development of the Green Belt.\n\nIt reports that a white paper on housing - due out next week - is expected to relax building height restrictions, among other measures.\n\nHowever, the paper thinks the Tories should go further - and have the stomach for a fight in its heartlands, where the Green Belt is seen as sacrosanct.\n\nStaying in the countryside, a new study about the benefits of camping is widely reported.\n\nApparently a night under canvas can help with insomnia by resetting the body's circadian rhythm, or internal clock, because campers are forced to adapt their sleeping patterns to the natural light.\n\nHowever, the Telegraph warns there is a price to be paid for new-found health: it only works if there's strictly no peeking at the mobile phone.\n\nSeveral newspapers reveal the possible secret of Donald Trump's remarkable hair.\n\nAccording to the Times, it's an issue which has fascinated Americans throughout his career. Meanwhile, the new US president's head of hair is described in the Daily Express as a \"gravity-defying bouffant\".\n\nIts mystery, though, may have been solved by his long-time doctor.\n\nDr Harold Bornstein told the New York Times that the president takes a prostate-related drug that stimulates hair growth.\n\nHe confirmed the president's hair was all real, but said it was helped to grow by a small dose of the drug finasteride, which lowers levels of prostate-specific antigen.\n\nThe doctor said: \"He has all his hair. I have all my hair.\"", "The BBC's revelations about the illegal trade in baby chimpanzees triggered an outpouring of emotion on social media about the cruelty suffered by these adorable animals\n\nAnd this raises questions about how our attitudes to our closest relations in the natural world have changed.\n\nSome people who contacted me volunteered to adopt Nemley Jr, the infant rescued from traffickers after the BBC investigation.\n\nMany expressed outrage at the wealthy buyers in China, South East Asia and the Gulf states whose demand encourages poachers to go on raids in the jungles.\n\nThere has also been a new burst of fury at celebrities posing with chimps.\n\nMore recently, Louis Tomlinson, of One Direction, was criticised for using one in a video.\n\nAnd a small number on Twitter and Facebook were so disturbed by the heart-breaking scenes in our videos that they wanted to see anyone trading endangered animals immediately locked up or even killed.\n\nWhat this represents is the latest episode in a long and often shameful relationship between chimps and humans.\n\nNemley Jr, the infant rescued from traffickers after the BBC investigation\n\nStrange though it seems, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were able to become the first humans to walk on the Moon because of a legacy of rocket development that depended on chimpanzees.\n\nAs it happens, the BBC's coverage of chimp trafficking aired on the very anniversary of the launch of Ham the Astrochimp, the first primate to reach orbit, back in January 1961.\n\nHe had been captured in the jungles of Cameroon, strapped into a Mercury rocket and blasted into an unknown still deemed too risky for people.\n\nHe survived, but other space-faring chimps had a far tougher time.\n\nEnos, the second Nasa chimp sent into space, was given tasks to perform - and, if he got them wrong, his feet would be given a small electric shock.\n\nBut the equipment malfunctioned, according to the account that emerged years later.\n\nSo even when Enos performed properly, by pulling the correct levers when prompted, he was still electrocuted 33 times in all.\n\nNone of this killed him, but his space capsule then landed off course.\n\nUS astronaut Alan Shepard with chimpanzee Ham, who preceded him in space\n\nThe truth was, chimps were deemed bright enough to stand in for people but were seen as expendable.\n\nMedical researchers also used to turn to chimps and other great apes to seek answers to fundamental questions about physiology and the brain.\n\nThat work stopped in the UK many decades ago, and in several European countries more recently, but was phased out in the US only after a major scientific report in 2011 concluded there was no benefit from it.\n\nAccording to Sir Colin Blakemore, professor of neuroscience and philosophy at the University of London and a long-time defender of the use of animals in research, discoveries in the 1950s and 60s revealed how chimp brains were \"uncannily\" like ours.\n\n\"The structures, the folds, the similarity was amazing,\" he says.\n\n\"Great apes were being used as models for humans, but the model came back to bite the researchers because of that shocking similarity\n\nThe more the brains of chimps and other great apes were seen to be like ours, the harder it became to justify conducting experiments on them, and a ban became the inevitable outcome.\n\nBritish primatologist Jane Goodall is perhaps the world's leading authority on chimpanzees\n\nProf Blakemore lists a range of useful outcomes derived from research on chimps:\n\nAnd he highlights the work on HIV - carried out under massive public pressure at the start of the Aids epidemic - as an example of an apocalyptic scenario that might conceivably justify the use of great apes in the years ahead.\n\n\"One could imagine that if the future of mankind is threatened by some terrible pathogen, then work on great apes might offer the possibility of saving the human race,\" he says.\n\nAnother long-standing - and popular - use of chimps has been for entertainment.\n\nDuring our investigation, we heard of baby chimps performing in zoos in China.\n\nThat sounds outrageous to us now, but the same happened for decades in the UK.\n\nChimpanzee tea parties were a big attraction - and they were only phased out at Twycross Zoo in the 1970s.\n\nThe zoo's chimps became famous for appearing in hugely popular TV commercials for the tea brand PG Tips.\n\nThe last of the animals to feature on air, a female known as Choppers, died last year.\n\nSharon Redrobe, the zoo's chief executive, says a change in attitudes came as zoos faced having to cope with older chimps disturbed by their experiences and as conservation became more of a priority.\n\nTwo chimpanzees at a \"tea party\" at Whipsnade Zoo in April 1937\n\n\"There's been a massive sea-change in the zoo community,\" she says.\n\n\"In the 80s, there was a wake-up call that we needed to be part of the solution not the problem.\"\n\nAnd, looking ahead, she says, celebrities \"need to get the message that chimps don't make pets and that hugging them does them real harm\".\n\nFor Will Travers, president of the Born Free Foundation, it was the growing scientific understanding of chimps - through the work of Jane Goodall and others - that turned opinion against exploiting the animals, and he gives a poignant example.\n\n\"There had been a misunderstanding that grimaces were smiles, but they were not,\" he says.\n\n\"We now know they represented fear. Enjoyment is the lips pressed together. This was a turning point.\n\n\"We've shot them into space, used them in experiments, dressed them up and pretended they're little humans, but the one thing we haven't done is the one thing they need: protection from us.\"\n\nAll eyes are now on the potential buyers of baby chimpanzees.\n\nChina, a huge market for ivory, was persuaded to introduce a ban on it last Christmas, which could help choke off demand.\n\nThe same kind of edict might help to save the chimpanzees as well.", "Beyonce will perform at this year's Grammys complete with that twin baby bump, according to her dad Mathew.\n\nIn an interview with a US TV show, he said the star sounds \"tired\" because she's been working on the performance.\n\nHe also said he was \"shocked\" to hear her pregnancy news and only found out after she made the announcement on Instagram.\n\nBut he said he'd since had a \"wonderful daughter-dad conversation\" with her.\n\nBeyonce's nominated for nine Grammys at this month's awards.\n\nShe's up for album of the year with Lemonade against Adele's 25. They're both nominated for record and song of the year too.\n\nHer pregnancy announcement is now the most popular Instagram post of all time, with more than nine million likes.\n\nShe's also released more photos from the shoot, including ones of her under water, lying on a bed of roses and sitting on an old car.\n\nAlongside the original picture of her bump, she wrote: \"We would like to share our love and happiness.\n\n\"We have been blessed two times over. We are incredibly grateful that our family will be growing by two, and we thank you for your well wishes.\"\n\nAfter working as his daughter's manager, Mathew Knowles also called the pregnancy announcement \"smart\".\n\n\"I think it was a strategy. I think there's more to come,\" he said.\n\nAdele, Bruno Mars, the Weeknd, Daft Punk and Alicia Keys are already confirmed to perform at the Grammys ceremony in LA on 12 February.\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "The Six Nations, which begins on Saturday, is set to be watched by the highest average attendance per match of any tournament in world sport.\n\nOver the next seven weeks the northern hemisphere showpiece, which features England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland, France and Italy, will see the cream of European rugby meet across five rounds, culminating in the final set of games on 18 March.\n\nScotland play Ireland in the tournament's opening match in Edinburgh at 14:25 GMT, before defending champions England host France at Twickenham at 16:50 GMT, while Wales play Italy at 14:00 on Sunday in Rome.\n\nLast year's tournament attracted an average 72,000 fans a game, leading sport's global standings above American football's NFL in second and the Fifa World Cup in third - according to statistics published by European football body Uefa.\n\nMore than a million people in total watched last season's 15 matches, with 81,916 fans packing in to see England beat Wales 25-21 at Twickenham in the best-attended game.\n\nEngland secured the 2016 title with a perfect record of five wins from their five games, earning them the Grand Slam.\n• None Alerts put you at centre of Six Nations\n• None Who will win the 2017 Six Nations?\n\nThey are the bookies' favourites to win again but an Ireland team that claimed a famous win over world champions New Zealand in Chicago in November are serious contenders to regain the title they won in 2014 and 2015.\n\nWales are without head coach Warren Gatland - who has stepped away from his role for a year to coach the British and Irish Lions tour of New Zealand in the summer - but interim replacement Rob Howley leads a team that includes the likes of barnstorming wing George North.\n\nScotland come into the tournament buoyed by the domestic success of a Glasgow Warriors side currently fourth in the Pro12 and into the last eight of the top-tier European Champions Cup.\n\nFrance and Italy are both under relatively new leadership, with Guy Noves and Conor O'Shea taking over in January and June 2016 respectively, but the former showed signs of their old form in an improved showing in the autumn Tests, while O'Shea was the mastermind behind Harlequins' 2012 Premiership title.\n\nOne of the key factors in deciding the destination of the title may be the strength in depth of each squad.\n\nHigh-profile stars such as Ireland's Johnny Sexton, Wales' Taulupe Faletau and England's Billy Vunipola will miss the start of the tournament through injury, and the physicality of the modern game means more are sure to join them on the sidelines.\n\nFor the first time bonus points will be on offer.\n\nIn addition to the four points to be gained for a win, teams can pick up a further point for scoring four or more tries or by losing by seven points or less.\n\nAnother change is that referees have been told to pay extra attention to high tackles, with more severe penalties to be handed down to players who make contact with an opponent's head, whether accidentally or recklessly.\n\nWhile the chance to clinch this season's title will spur on supporters, the tournament will also be a chance to renew age-old rivalries and add another chapter the tournament's long history of famous results.\n\nAnd in a competition that saw England captain Bill Beaumont carried shoulder-high from the pitch in 1980, David Sole's slow walk onto the Murrayfield turf in 1990, Scott Gibbs carving through the England defence at Wembley in 1999 or a fresh-faced Brian O'Driscoll's hat-trick against France in 2000, there is every prospect of new heroes being made.", "Last updated on .From the section English Rugby\n\nEngland head coach Eddie Jones has warned France to expect another \"war\" when they visit Twickenham in their Six Nations opener on Saturday.\n\nIt is the 103rd meeting between the sides, with England sealing the Grand Slam with a win in Paris last March.\n\nElliot Daly starts on the wing for the hosts, while Maro Itoje will start a Test for the first time on the flank.\n\n\"It's always a historic game, certainly there is history between France and England,\" explained Jones.\n\nThe Australian said defence coach Paul Gustard is \"into his history\" and has made Jones aware of the conflicts between England and France dating back to 1213.\n\n\"There's been 20 wars between England and France,\" he added. \"That's a lot of rivalry there. There is another one happening on Saturday.\"\n\nHowever, Jones does not believe the rivalry will affect his players' professionalism.\n\n\"I coach them to be emotionally right for the game,\" he said. \"If we need that 'let's get stuck into the French' type situation' I'll leave it to the assistant coaches to do it.\n\n\"I don't think we need that. If we need that then there's something wrong. I don't believe teams are motivated by that.\"\n\nThe former Australia and Japan boss has enjoyed 13 straight victories since taking charge of England, but is wary of complacency against a French side looking to improve on a fifth-placed finish in last year's tournament.\n\n\"It's always going to be there,\" he said. \"It's not something you can get rid of, like a fungus.\n\n\"We are going to face a side that's desperate for success. They are under pressure to play with French flair.\n\n\"It's really important that we're in the game right from the start and that's in the head. We have to front up, do the business.\"", "Sean Crawshaw was cautioned by police while still dangling from the window\n\nPolice could scarcely believe their luck when they found a bungling burglar dangling out of a bathroom window.\n\nSean Crawshaw, 47, got stranded after trying to break in to the house in Radcliffe, Bury, Greater Manchester.\n\nThe homeowner, in her 60s, found him wedged on the windowsill about 15ft (4.5m) off the ground after returning from a trip to the shops.\n\nThe long arm of the law plucked Crawshaw to safety and he has now been jailed for the botched burglary.\n\nThe burglar hurt his ear after getting wedged in the window\n\nCrawshaw, of James Street, Radcliffe was sentenced to two years and five months at Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court last month.\n\nHe had pleaded guilty to burglary with intent to steal after being caught in the bathroom window in Bank Street in December.\n\nSgt Richard Garland of Greater Manchester Police told the BBC: \"It was nice of him to hang around.\n\n\"He was actually cautioned as he was in mid-air.\n\n\"We did all have a chuckle about it later but the homeowner was actually pretty shaken up about it all.\n\n\"It's not nice having someone burgle your home and then finding them still there.\"\n\nIt took fire crews 20 minutes to rescue Crawshaw, who hurt his ear in the raid.\n\nGMP officers arrested him at the scene but not before they caught his embarrassing moment on camera.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Aman Salman's mobile barely stops ringing these days. He runs a small travel agency in Long Island, New York, catering mostly to clients of Pakistani origin.\n\nBut since last Friday, when President Trump signed his Executive Order banning travel from seven Muslim-majority countries, most of these calls have been to cancel tickets.\n\nPakistan, a Muslim-majority country, is not on Mr Trump's list. But there is huge concern and anxiety in the community that its inclusion is imminent.\n\n\"At least 95% of my Green Card holding clients, who had booked their tickets to Pakistan months in advance, have cancelled it,\" says Mr Salman.\n\nHe is also getting frantic calls from those already in Pakistan trying to get the earliest possible return dates, even if that means paying stiff charges to change tickets.\n\nMr Trump's order stops the admission of refugees from Syria indefinitely and further bans entry of all citizens from seven countries including Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen.\n\nA Customs and Border Protection statement clarifies that the current order doesn't apply to Green Card holders' entry to the United States, but there has been much confusion about the order, and reports of inconsistencies as to how it's being applied at airports.\n\nAman Salman has seen many cancellations\n\nThe visa ban for this list is in place for 90 days, but administration officials have hinted that it will be reconsidered and possibly expanded to include other countries.\n\nThe uncertainty has prompted immigration lawyers to advise their Pakistani clients to cancel their travel plans for now and for those already in Pakistan to return immediately.\n\nImmigration attorney Rafia Zakaria says Pakistani citizens who are legal permanent residents of US or hold other US non-immigrant visas must take seriously the possibility of an imminent ban on Pakistani citizens as well.\n\n\"The text of the order says that further review is taking place, and the outcome of that is not really known to anyone,\" she told the BBC.\n\nShe noted that White House spokesman Sean Spicer and White House Chief of Staff Reince Preibus have both implied that the ban could be expanded.\n\nShe says if the ban is expanded, the legal challenges will take a long time to be ironed out.\n\nKhizr Khan, a Pakistani-American lawyer attacked by Donald Trump spoke against the order in front of Congress on Thursday\n\nMr Trump presented his \"extreme vetting\" plan as a way to crack down on countries that could be a source of terrorism.\n\nAnwar Iqbal, the Washington correspondent for Pakistan's leading English newspaper, Dawn, says this has further added to the community's anxiety.\n\n\"Pakistan has been on the top of this unspecified list for years and that's a reality we can't overlook,\" says Mr Iqbal, referring to the list of countries where terrorism is a major concern.\n\nThe San Bernardino attack of 2015, allegedly carried out by a couple of Pakistani origin, has been used to justify the president's executive order.\n\nAll this has meant sleepless nights for many of Mr Salman's clients.\n\nHe says one lives in the US with his wife and daughter, but has a mother in Pakistan who is very ill.\n\n\"I saw a 45-year-old man crying. If he doesn't go and something happens to his mother, he'll never be able to forgive himself,\" says Mr Salman.\n\n\"On the other hand, if he gets stuck in Pakistan there's nobody to look after his wife and child in the US, as he is the sole breadwinner.\"\n\nThis is also the time when many Pakistanis look for highly sought-after bargains combining pilgrimages to holy sites in Saudi Arabia with a trip to home.\n\nA family is reunited in Boston's Logan Airport after the father was questioned as a result of the executive order\n\n\"An excellent deal from Saudi Airlines for $895 (£710) came up last week but there are barely any takers,\" says Mr Salman.\n\nJust about an hour's drive from his office is Brooklyn's Coney Island, home to thousands of Pakistani immigrants and aptly named Little Pakistan.\n\nThousands here were deported in the post-9/11 crackdown. Now the rumour mills are in overdrive again.\n\n\"We hear that it's going to be worse than 9/11 this time, and unlike then it will be irreversible,\" says Baza Roohi, who works as a tax consultant.\n\nThere are unsubstantiated talks of midnight raids on Pakistani-run businesses. People are scouring the internet and social media for information.\n\nMs Roohi says this is all most of her clients talk about, with even some US citizens fearing deportation.\n\n\"I know of at least one family that owns two houses, and has already put up one for sale,\" she says.\n\nThey want to make sure that if need be, they can leave in a hurry.\n\nBaza Roohi sees a high level of anxiety in her clients\n\n\"There are lots of rumours,\" a White House spokesperson admitted to the BBC. But he noted that US officials have no plans to add more countries to the ban, saying there's \"nothing imminent that I'm aware of\".\n\nAccording to the spokesperson, the countries that are currently mentioned in the Executive Order had not been sharing the kind of information US officials need in order to process travel documents of its citizens. But he believed officials in other countries - such as Afghanistan, Pakistan and Lebanon - were at this point providing the required information.\n\nIf that changes, he said, these or other countries could be added to the list.\n\nPakistan has been an important non-Nato ally for the United States in the war against terrorism, but the relationship has also been marked by mutual mistrust and acrimonious finger-pointing.\n\nThere are many in Congress now who favour putting a squeeze on Pakistan because of its alleged support to militant groups who harm US interests in the region.\n\nThere's also a feeling - expressed by the new Secretary of Defence James Mattis, during his confirmation hearing - that the US needs to stay engaged with the world's only nuclear-armed Islamic country.\n\nSome experts point to this as a sign that Pakistan may not be included in the travel ban even if the list is expanded.\n\nBut for the community in New York, that's hardly reassuring.", "CCTV images showing the aftermath of an attack by a man with a machete at the Louvre museum in Paris feature in many papers - with the Daily Telegraph saying troops had prevented a fresh terrorist incident.\n\nThe i reports that the man was shot several times in the stomach, after he allegedly attacked soldiers with a machete, shouting \"Allahu Akbar\".\n\nThe Daily Mirror reports 50 sixth formers from Surrey were held inside the museum for two hours as the authorities searched for possible bombs.\n\nThere is anger at Npower's decision to increase its energy prices by an average of more than a £100 a year for customers on its standard variable tariff.\n\nThe Daily Express describes the move as a \"kick in the teeth\" for families. \"For too long these companies have been making huge profits while punishing their customers,\" it says.\n\nThe Daily Mirror comments that such a price hike demands \"powerful action\" and calls for the \"tough regulation of companies ripping off customers\".\n\nThe Times reports on its front page that the shadow international trade secretary Barry Gardiner is receiving money from a law firm with links to the Chinese state.\n\nThe paper says the son of the law firm's founder works in the MP's office - and that the donations partly pay his salary.\n\nThere's no suggestion of impropriety, but some Labour sources have expressed \"disquiet\" to the paper.\n\nAccording to the Guardian, Jeremy Corbyn's team have \"informally explored the idea of collaborating with the Greens and Liberal Democrats\" in Stoke Central, to prevent UKIP winning the seat at the upcoming by-election.\n\nThe paper says a senior figure in the Labour leader's office has asked a go-between what it would take to persuade the other parties to \"dial down\" their campaigns - or even withdraw candidates.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph and Times both report on what the government may do to alleviate the housing crisis.\n\n\"Get building or lose planning\" is the headline on the front of the Telegraph, which says developers will be ordered to make use of planning permission quickly - or risk losing it. The paper says ministers want to discourage firms from sitting on land earmarked for new homes.\n\nAccording to the Times, local authorities will be told to target vacant properties with sharp rises in council tax, as part of a drive to bring hundreds of thousands of empty homes back into use.\n\nElsewhere, a police chief in Merseyside has spoken to the Guardian about the pressing need for communities in Liverpool to break the wall of silence around gang crime.\n\nAssistant chief constable Nikki Holland urges residents to \"stop tolerating\" gang members in their midst and \"take back control\" by talking to police.\n\nWhat is called the on-going \"veg panic\" also attracts headlines.\n\nThe Daily Mail says a growing number of supermarkets are rationing vegetables in response to crop shortages caused by adverse weather across the Mediterranean.\n\nSome stores, it reports, have even decided to block people from buying certain products online.\n\n\"Seize a salad\" is the headline in the Sun, which accuses Spanish supermarkets of \"stockpiling\" lettuces, while shelves across the UK are left bare.\n\nFor some columnists, the entire episode illustrates the lunacy of our consumer habits. \"Humans are absurd\" writes Deborah Orr in the Guardian.\n\n\"Why do we persist in flying planes full of lettuce to Britain? How can it be said to be a consumer crisis when such a piece of ridiculous foolishness goes wrong?\"\n\nFinally, the papers seem bemused by David Cameron's reappearance in the limelight - alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger.\n\nThe Sun says the former prime minister appeared in a short 10-second video posted by the actor-turned-politician on social media.\n\nThe Daily Mail says he is seen leaning into the shot and draping his arm over the star, before saying \"I'll be back\".\n\n\"Exactly what the former PM means is a mystery\" says the paper, adding he \"should probably know better than to make bold promises\" only seven months after being forced to bid \"hasta la vista to Number 10\".", "Last updated on .From the section Golf\n\nPlayers have criticised the European Tour's decision to suspend round two of the Dubai Desert Classic in Abu Dhabi.\n\nWinds reached 36mph and blew trees over at Emirates Golf Club, where play has stopped until Saturday, angering some of the 64 players to finish round two.\n\nFormer Masters champion Trevor Immelman called the halt \"ridiculous\", while Ryder Cup player Chris Wood said the decision made the event \"one sided\".\n\nTournament director Mike Stewart said the course was \"unsafe and unplayable\".\n\nStewart added: \"We had TV towers that the roofs were blown off. We had balls moving on the greens - blew into a bunker at one stage. Five trees came down.\"\n\nThere are 65 players, including George Coetzee of South Africa, who leads on nine under, and Spaniard Sergio Garcia, a shot behind, who have nine holes or more left to play of round two.\n\nEngland's Matthew Fitzpatrick (three under par), Danny Willett (one over), Ian Poulter (three under) and Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell (four under), are all yet to reach halfway in the second round.\n\nStewart still thinks the tournament will conclude on Sunday as round two will be completed on Saturday with the third round commencing later in the day from a two-tee start.\n\nHowever, a host of early starters on Friday stressed their frustrations as those set to face the gusts later in the afternoon were spared.\n\nSpain's Pablo Larrazabal - who ended five over after two rounds - said he was \"very angry\".\n\nSouth African Immelman, who is set to miss the cut at four over par, wrote on social media: \"Suspending play now is ridiculous, half the field played 36 holes in these conditions.\"\n\nMartin Kaymer of Germany, who is tied for fifth on four under, said: \"Hard to understand the difference between the morning play and now, therefore even more surprised about the decision.\"\n\nEarlier on Friday, 14-time major winner Tiger Woods withdrew from the tournament before the start of round two citing a back spasm.\n\nThe 41-year-old American, who only returned to action in December after 15 months out following two back operations, was five over after 18 holes.", "Coverage: Watch live on BBC TV, Red Button, Connected TV and online, plus follow text updates on the BBC Sport website.\n\nThe absence of Andy Murray and Milos Raonic may not prevent a dramatic weekend from unfolding in snowy Ottawa, but after the thrills of the Australian Open, the Davis Cup is struggling to make its voice heard as it returns for another year.\n\nGreat Britain start clear favourites to reach the quarter-finals for the fourth year in a row. While Dan Evans and Kyle Edmund are both ranked in the world's top 50, Canada are unable to field any singles players in the top 100. And they are not alone.\n\nThere remains a lot of affection for the 117-year-old competition around the world. Last year's Davis Cup was staged in 58 countries and featured 618 players from 124 different nations.\n\nOn a good weekend, the atmosphere is unrivalled in tennis - just ask those lucky enough to be in Glasgow, Birmingham or at the Queen's Club for recent British ties, or in Zagreb in November where Argentina won the cup for the first time over the course of three memorable days.\n\nAnd yet this week, Serbia's Novak Djokovic is the only member of the world's top 10 in action.\n\nThere is once again no Roger Federer or Stan Wawrinka for Switzerland; Rafael Nadal was a late withdrawal from the Spain team; Japan's Kei Nishikori is preferring to play ATP Tour events in Buenos Aires and Rio later in the month; and last year's runners-up, Croatia, will have to do without Marin Cilic. Their number one player for the week is Franko Skugor - their fifth-best player, according to the rankings, and outside the world's top 200.\n\nThat is not part of the plan. It is unsustainable.\n\nA package of reforms is under discussion, and will be put to the International Tennis Federation's (ITF) member nations during August's AGM in Vietnam. The problem is a lukewarm initial response from players, and an increasing lack of support from the main tours. The ATP and the WTA see the Davis Cup and the women's Fed Cup as competitors, not partners.\n\nReducing five-set matches to three is on the agenda, and likely to prove popular. However. that in itself is unlikely to encourage the top players to commit to playing up to four weeks of Davis Cup each year, given the first round currently follows the Australian Open and the semi-finals are the week after the US Open.\n\nThe ATP's interest is in maximising the strength of its tour: senior figures indicate privately the likelihood of a more confrontational approach in future. If the ITF were to attempt to schedule the Davis Cup in different weeks, they could expect to find ATP events - with ranking points and the potential for far greater financial rewards - running alongside them.\n\nThe formation of a 16-team Fed Cup World Group has also been proposed by the ITF. This would include a 'final four' event to avoid an extra week being added to the schedule, but there seems little desire within the ITF to budge from four weeks of Davis Cup tennis per year.\n\nThese weeks can be hugely valuable in raising revenue and increasing exposure in countries where tennis does not have a huge following. Pakistan, for example, have the chance to host Iran in Islamabad this week, while in Tunis, Tunisia take on Sweden.\n\nUndesirable though it is for the ITF, the number of weeks of World Group tennis will need to be reduced if the Davis Cup is going to thrive. But even that is not as easy as it sounds.\n\nAn annual World Cup style tournament - or the biennial staging of the event - would significantly reduce exposure to the competition. And the establishment of a 'final four' event may not be well received by players, given their initial hostility to the ITF's proposal for fixed host cities for the final.\n\nAndy Murray, who was elected to the ATP Player Council last year, addressed that idea during the Australian Open.\n\n\"I sat in a room with all of the guys on the player council, and nobody was for the neutral venue,\" the British world number one explained, wary of a potential lack of atmosphere in non-partisan cities. (The ITF, keen to promote the final much earlier than it currently can, points to away support in excess of 5,000 fans at each of the last three Davis Cup finals).\n\n\"There were many things discussed that could change the Davis Cup, we thought for the better,\" Murray, who inspired Great Britain to victory in the tournament in 2015, added. \"None of that's been done yet.\n\n\"I do think it needs to change. If the top players aren't playing, the event loses value.\"\n\nAnd so to this weekend. Kyle Edmund and Denis Shapovalov may yet be called upon to settle matters in a fifth and final rubber - and I am sure those in attendance will have a hugely enjoyable three days.\n\nIt is just unlikely to be a major talking point in either Canada or Britain during the Monday morning commute.", "Katie Kendrick says she was originally told her home's freehold would cost between £2,000 and £4,000\n\nWhen putting pen to paper to buy a new home, most people expect to know how much they will need to pay to own it outright. But thousands of families in England and Wales are discovering the new-build houses they bought are not all they seemed.\n\nKatie Kendrick bought her new-build home from Bellway in Ellesmere Port, Cheshire, three years ago for £214,000.\n\n\"It was supposed to be our forever home,\" she tells the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme, sitting in the living room of her four-bedroom house. \"But it's the biggest mistake I've ever made.\"\n\nKatie knew the house was leasehold - meaning she owned the property for the 150-year length of her lease agreement - but claims she was told by the sales representative that because of the long lease it was \"as good as freehold\"; a property owned outright.\n\nShe thought nothing of it, and says she was told she would be able to buy her freehold after two years, believing it would cost between £2,000 and £4,000.\n\nBut a year and a half later, she received a letter from Bellway saying her freehold had been sold to an investment company, which was now quoting £13,300 for her to buy it.\n\n\"At the moment I feel completely blind and in a corner and don't know which way to turn. There's legal action but that is very costly,\" she says.\n\nWhat Bellway has done - selling a new home as leasehold, and then selling the freehold separately to an investment company without informing the family living there - is not illegal.\n\nIn England and Wales, the \"right of first refusal\" applies to flats, but not houses. So it was not legally obliged to tell Katie it would do this.\n\nFor an investment company, buying groups of freeholds is a safe long-term investment. Receiving regular payments for ground rents - over leases that number well over 100 years - means safe, steady incomes, to fund things like pensions.\n\nThe campaign group Leasehold Knowledge Partnership estimates this business is worth up to £500m to the developers each year.\n\nThe leasehold system has existed for a long time in England and Wales, especially in blocks of flats. Many leaseholders have long leases, for example for 999 years, and experience no problems.\n\nBut the trend for new-build houses being sold as leasehold has accelerated in recent years. While not all house builders use this model, those that do argue it helps make developments financially viable.\n\nBut nowhere on Bellway's website is this system made clear to potential buyers, and Katie feels these facts were not made clear to her. She also says the solicitor - recommended to her by Bellway - made no mention of this possibility either.\n\nKatie says because she bought the house through the government's Help To Buy scheme, she felt she could trust the process.\n\nBellway has not responded to requests for comment.\n\nHomeground - the company that now manages Katie's freehold on behalf of the investment company - said in a statement it \"can usually informally negotiate a price which can often save both time and some of the professional fees\".\n\n\"In the rare event we cannot agree, the leaseholder still retains the right to turn to the statutory process, which will establish the price as well as the legal fees they have to pay.\"\n\nIt's likely thousands of homeowners could be in a similar position to Katie. Lindsay, who lives on the same estate, bought a house from developers Taylor Wimpey.\n\nThe company did ask Lindsay if she wanted to buy her freehold - for £2,600. She declined because she was on maternity leave and felt financially it was not possible.\n\nTwo years later she asked about buying it but found it was now £32,000.\n\n\"I rang them and said, 'I'd like to buy it now.' And they said, 'It's not for sale - there's a private investor who owns it. They've got a long-term interest in your property,'\" Lindsay explains.\n\n\"I turned around and said, 'I've got a long-term interest in my property. It's my family home, it's my son's inheritance, and it's not yours to just line your pockets with.'\n\n\"I feel like I've let everybody down because it wasn't right to buy it when it came. But nobody said this was a one-time offer.\n\n\"It might be legal, but it's not even questionable that it's immoral,\" she adds.\n\nWatch the Victoria Derbyshire programme on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.\n\nTaylor Wimpey said as it no longer owned the freehold to Lindsay's house, it did not set the price of the freehold or benefit from the ground rent.\n\nIt added that, since the start of this year, houses on its new developments would be sold as freehold-only, except in a small number of cases where it did not own the freehold to the land.\n\nBut other developers are still selling new-build houses as leasehold.\n\nKatie and Lindsay do have the option to negotiate with the companies who own their freeholds, but say they do not wish to go down this route. They feel the original prices should still stand.\n\nThe law does allow a leaseholder to force their freeholder to sell after two years - if both sides cannot agree a price, a tribunal will decide how much the leaseholder should pay.\n\nHowever, the leaseholder can also be liable for the legal fees of both parties, meaning further expense to people like Katie and Lindsay.\n\nA spokesman for the Department of Communities and Local Government has told the BBC \"it is unacceptable if home buyers are being exploited with unfair charges and unfavourable ground rent agreements prior to purchase.\n\n\"We are aware of this issue and will announce radical proposals to reset the housing market in our forthcoming White Paper.\"\n\nBeth Rudolf, from the Conveyancing Association, says that if the developers were not clear about the leaseholds, it may be a case of misrepresentation.\n\n\"Anyone marketing a property is covered by consumer unfair trading regulations, which means that if there is anything that would affect their decision-making process, then they should be advised of that before viewing the property,\" she says.\n\nBeth Rudolf believes developers should be clear about the leaseholds from the start\n\n\"It's too late when they move into the house to find that out, it's too late when they become legally liable to purchase it.\n\n\"It's too late really at the point when they've viewed it, because they've already fallen in love with it.\"\n\nThe fight goes on for Katie and Lindsay, who worry their homes are now \"unsellable\" while this shadow hangs over them.\n\n\"Hindsight's a wonderful thing,\" says Lindsay. \"I wouldn't have done it if I had known.\"", "Watch the best of the action as Dan Evans sees off Canada's 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov in straight sets to win his first match as Great Britain's Davis Cup number one.\n\nREAD MORE: Evans gives Britain early lead over Canada in Davis Cup", "Virtual reality is offering artists the chance to express themselves in ways that were unimaginable just a few years ago.\n\nLondon's Royal Academy's been showcasing the work of three pioneering artists.\n\nThe BBC's Karin Giannone went along to immerse herself in the creative possibilities of the future.", "Last updated on .From the section Golf\n\nTiger Woods has withdrawn from the Dubai Desert Classic before the second round, because of a back problem.\n\nThe 14-time major winner only returned to action in December after 15 months out following two back operations.\n\nWoods, 41, struggled in the first round in Dubai as he shot a five-over 77.\n\nHis agent Mark Steinberg said the American suffered a back spasm on Thursday night but was told by Woods that it was not \"the nerve pain that's kept him out for so long\".\n\nSteinberg explained: \"He feels terrible for the tournament. He wants to be here. He can move around. He can't make a full rotation on the swing.\n\n\"The fact he feels it's not the nerve pain is very encouraging for him.\n\n\"He doesn't have the strongest back in the world so it's probably easier to spasm because of the issues he's had.\"\n\nWoods had won the Dubai tournament twice before, but was 12 shots behind overnight leader Sergio Garcia after day one.\n\n\"I wasn't in pain at all. I was just trying to hit shots and I wasn't doing a very good job,\" Woods said after his opening round.\n\nWoods' first return to competitive action after his lengthy lay-off came at the Hero World Challenge - an 18-man tournament in the Bahamas - in December and he finished 15th at the PGA Tour event.\n\nAfterwards, he expressed concerns over the physical challenge of being scheduled to play four full-field tournaments over the next five weeks.\n\nHis next outing came at the PGA Tour's Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines where a first round 76 and level-par second round of 72 meant he missed the cut.\n\nThe former world number one's next two tournaments were to be the Genesis Open at Riviera from 16-19 February and the Honda Classic in Palm Beach Gardens from 23-26 February but his participation now appears in doubt.\n\nWoods, who has won 79 titles on the PGA Tour, has not won a tournament anywhere since 2013, while his title drought in the major championships dates back to 2008.\n\nMeanwhile, play in Dubai was abandoned on Friday because of high winds which blew trees over and whipped sand across the course. Round two is scheduled to restart on Saturday morning.\n\nSouth Africa's George Coetzee had completed eight holes of his second round as he moved into the lead on nine under, while Garcia was one shot behind having completed five holes.\n\nWoods' latest withdrawal is a huge setback that suggests a bleak golfing future for the 14-time major champion.\n\nThis was supposed to be the comeback that signalled the end of the 41-year-old's fitness woes but, after only three unconvincing rounds at tour level, he finds himself, once again, unable to swing a club.\n\nHe looked uncomfortable while compiling a first-round 77; he moved slowly and appeared stiff but denied he was feeling any pain.\n\n\"He looks like the oldest 41-year-old man in the history of the game,\" former PGA Tour player Brandel Chamblee told viewers of the Golf Channel.\n\nWas he wise to accept the reported £1m appearance fee to make the 17-hour flight from the west coast of the United States to the Middle East? It does not look the cleverest move right now.\n\nNext he is due to play the Genesis Open, starting on 16 February. The tournament is backed by Woods' charitable foundation and he will be desperate to play but whether he is able to will tell us an awful lot about his state of fitness.\n\nThe former world number one remains the biggest draw in golf and there will be plenty fervently hoping this is only a temporary blip.\n\nHowever, the hard evidence suggests otherwise and fears are growing for the future of what has been one of the greatest careers golf has ever seen.", "Kale is used as an alternative to iceberg lettuce in Riverford's Caesar salad\n\nSome supermarkets are rationing iceberg lettuces, with experts warning it could be the, er, tip of the iceberg.\n\nBad weather in Europe has already caused a #courgette crisis, alongside a shortage of broccoli, tomatoes, salad peppers and aubergines.\n\nWith vegetable shortages expected to continue until April, what alternatives are there for shoppers?\n\nDuring the UK's winter months of December, January and February, UK farmers produce beetroot, Brussel sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, celeriac, chicory, fennel, Jerusalem artichokes, kale, leeks, parsnips, potatoes, red cabbage, swede and turnips.\n\nWe've become a \"slightly strange group\", expecting all-year-round produce, according to Lord Haskins, the former chairman of Northern Foods, which supplies Tesco.\n\n\"Thirty years ago you'd never have worried about buying lettuce in the middle of the winter - lettuces were things that grew in the summer and you ate them in the summer - you ate cauliflowers and Brussels sprouts in the winter,\" he says.\n\nAs for courgettes, they are actually \"very, very out of season\", says organic vegetable retailer Riverford. We have just got used to supermarkets supplying them all year round.\n\nEating British produce that's in season is often cheaper, as it is produced locally - and it can be healthier too.\n\nAccording to food industry campaign group Love British Food, fruit and vegetables that are in season contain the nutrients, minerals and trace elements that our bodies need at particular times of year.\n\nApples, for example, are packed with vitamin C to boost our resistance to winter colds.\n\nBeetroot is \"terrific in soups\" says Alexia Robinson from Love British Food\n\nThe group's Alexia Robinson recommends beetroot, kale, cabbages, broccoli and traditional root vegetables for their health-giving properties.\n\nRiverford says a slaw made with cabbage, beetroot or swede will offer \"10 times more nutrients\" than an iceberg lettuce - which it says aren't known for their nutritional value.\n\nIf you are really keen on iceberg lettuces, you can probably pay a bit more for one from Peru or South Africa, says Lord Haskins.\n\nBut imported vegetables can clock up a lot of air miles before they land on your plate - making them worse for the environment.\n\nHatty Richards, from the Community Farm in Chew Magna, Somerset, says buying local is better.\n\n\"We have such a range on our doorsteps already, it's fresher, it's really good for the environment - it reduces air miles - and it supports local business which is crucial.\"\n\nLord Haskins agrees, and suggests your tastebuds may also be grateful:\n\n\"We all buy stuff from far parts. They don't taste nearly as good: strawberries at this time of year from Egypt don't taste anything like as good as a British strawberry in May, June, July.\"\n\nKale is a hardy winter leaf that can withstand frosty weather\n\nA leafy salad is nice - but there are plenty of alternative dishes to try.\n\nRiverford's Guy Watson thinks the UK's more bitter winter salad leaves and root vegetables can provide \"a far superior substitute\" which will easily make up for a lack of lettuce.\n\nVibrant winter coleslaws and cauliflower salads \"bring British veg to life\", he says, adding that one of the Riverford Field Kitchen's most popular winter dishes is a kale caesar salad.\n\nKale, which was originally used to feed cows, is a robust, hardy winder leaf that can withstand frosty weather. It can also be used in soups, stews, stir fries, gratins or just wilted with butter.\n\nMs Robinson suggests embracing winter comfort food with a \"good old fashioned winter stew with plenty of root vegetables with tender meat\".\n\nIf you're still not convinced you can do without leafy salads, try growing your own.\n\nThose who do want to eat lettuce need not despair. According to the campaign group Eat Seasonably, lettuce, rocket and other crunchy salad leaves are some of the easiest things to grow at home, all year around - on a seed tray indoors, on your window sill or in the garden.\n\nSpinach is easily grown, even in window boxes, says Ms Robinson\n\nMs Robinson says: \"As well as the cress there are many great veg that can be easily grown in window boxes such as leaf lettuce, radishes, spinach, green onions and of course a good selection of herbs.\"\n\nAnother easy win is beetroot, Eat Seasonably says, which can be grown in a big pot. Though beetroot is harvested in October, Riverford says it can last up to four months if it's kept in a cold storage.\n\n\"Carrots are not too hard to grow either,\" Riverford's Emily Muddeman said, \"Leeks, kale - you could plant just four or five stalks of kale and it will go on sprouting.\"\n\nAny budding gardeners could start with planting onions later this month - Eat Seasonably says they are \"not even slightly difficult to grow\".\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "John buried a Matchbox car and a halfpenny in his time capsule\n\nMany people around the world make time capsules with items included in them, hoping someone will find them many years later.\n\nA Blue Peter Millennium time capsule has been accidentally dug up 33 years earlier than planned. It was buried under the Millennium Dome, now the O2 Arena, in 1998 and was not supposed to be unearthed until 2050.\n\nWe asked people to share their stories and to tell us what they included in their time capsules. Here are some of the responses we received.\n\nJohn Carver, 59, buried his time capsule 51 years ago. It included many items including crayons as he thought there would not be colours in the future. He never found the capsule.\n\n\"I buried a time capsule when I was about eight. The contents included, as far as I can remember, crayons, a halfpenny and a Matchbox car.\n\n\"They were 'securely' packaged in a Marmite jar which then came with a metal lid. It was buried in the lawn of the family home, which has recently been sold, never to be seen again.\n\n\"Within a very short time the hole I had dug disappeared and I could never accurately pinpoint where it was.\n\n\"It was the family home for 56 years and over the years, I have always thought about it.\"\n\nMike Simpson and his son Thomas created a time capsule hoping that a boy from the future would find it one day and read it. The capsule included a list of Thomas's favourite things, ranging from his favourite meal to his favourite TV show, which is Doctor Who.\n\n\"Thomas was just starting to get interested in history so this was a project that helped him to understand the passage of time and consider how a house can be home to many different families over a century,\" Mike says.\n\n\"Eight years ago when Thomas was five we moved into our present home, which dates from the 1890s. Removing old plaster to add a damp course revealed some gaps between the Victorian bricks where mortar had crumbled.\n\n\"We created a letter to a little boy from the future, listing Thomas's name, school, favourite food, favourite TV show among other things.\n\nThomas pictured with his favourite items, some of which he buried in the time capsule\n\n\"We carefully folded this up and sealed it in a plastic bag with one of his school photos and a penny dated that year. This was pushed between two bricks and then plastered over.\n\n\"Hopefully decades from now someone will find a message from the past.\"\n\nAged about 10, Angus Macdonald, now 50, buried his time capsule in his parents' back garden in Singapore in 1976.\n\n\"It was a big glass jam jar, buried only about a foot down, and it contained the front page of that day's newspaper and a few other personal bits and pieces.\n\n\"I imagine it has probably been found by now and probably thrown away as junk. Or else it has broken and its contents long decomposed.\n\n\"One day, I would like to go back and see whether it is still there, but I guess it would be a bit odd to ask the current occupants of the house whether I could dig up their garden!\n\n\"I think time capsules are a great idea - but you need to do it properly, bury them in a place where they are unlikely to be discovered, set a date for opening them that is not too far away and ensure the fact of their existence is recorded somewhere, especially with family or friends.\"\n\nRay Green's staircase where he hid his time capsule\n\nRay Green placed a time capsule under his home's staircase in 1992. While altering the staircase of his then new house, he took photos of the construction work at the time, along with a picture of him and his wife and other items.\n\n\"In the capsule there are pictures of me and my wife, a copy of the Liverpool Echo, pictures of the construction and a letter I wrote explaining the work that was carried out.\n\n\"There was also a good luck message to anyone finding it and deciding to alter the staircase again, mainly because I had such a swine of a job doing it.\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Blue Peter presenters Katy Hill and Richard Bacon bury the trove in 1998\n\nA Blue Peter time capsule has been accidentally dug up by construction workers 33 years earlier than planned.\n\nThe Millennium Time Capsule was buried under the Millennium Dome, now the O2 Arena, in 1998.\n\nFilled with viewers' mementos of the time, it was not supposed to be unearthed until 2050.\n\nThe O2 has said despite being damaged, the capsule's contents are safe. The BBC said the capsule will be re-buried.\n\nA Tellytubby, Blue Peter badge and Tamagotchi were among the items buried\n\nFormer Blue Peter presenters Katy Hill and Richard Bacon buried the capsule in June 1998.\n\nA spokesperson for the BBC said: \"Although a little earlier than anticipated, we're looking forward to sharing these memories with our viewers and making new ones as we return the capsule to the earth so that it can be reopened in 2050 as originally planned.\"\n\nIn a competition, viewers had been asked to submit ideas for items they would like put inside.\n\nThe winning entries included roller blade wheels, an asthma inhaler, Tellytubby dolls, a France 1998 World Cup football, a picture of a dove to symbolise peace in Northern Ireland and a Roald Dahl book.\n\nDawn of the Dome: Fireworks light up the sky on 1 January 2000\n\nA spokesman for the O2 Arena said: \"The team at The O2 and our contractors ISG have been searching for the Blue Peter time capsule since we started construction work in 2016.\n\n\"We found it yesterday but sadly it was accidently damaged during excavations. The capsule and its contents are safely stored in our office and we've let the team at Blue Peter know.\n\n\"We're going to work with them to either repair or replace the capsule and bury it again for the future.\"\n\nThe BBC said: \"We are looking forward to sharing these memories with viewers and making new ones as we rebury the capsule until 2050.\"\n\nA Spice Girls CD was among the other items locked away in the capsule...\n\n...as was an insulin pen...\n\n...and a set of British coins, in what was a pre-£2 coin era\n\nPhotos of the Oblivion ride in Alton Towers were also preserved...\n\n....along with an asthma inhaler...\n\n...and a picture of Princess Diana, who had died a year earlier in a road accident", "After decades of debate, years of acrimony over the issue in the Conservative Party, months of brutal brinksmanship in Westminster, and hours of debate this week, MPs have just approved the very first step in the process of Britain leaving the European Union.\n\nThere are many hurdles ahead, probably thousands of hours of debate here, years of negotiations for Theresa May with our friends and rivals around the EU, as she seeks a deal - and possibly as long as a decade of administrative adjustments, as the country extricates itself from the EU.\n\nOn a wet Wednesday, the debate didn't feel epoch-making, but think for a moment about what has just happened.\n\nMPs, most of whom wanted to stay in the EU, have just agreed that we are off.\n\nThis time last year few in Westminster really thought that this would happen. The then prime minister's concern was persuading the rest of the EU to give him a better deal for the UK.\n\nHis close colleagues believed the chances of them losing, let alone the government dissolving over the referendum, were slim, if not quite zero.\n\nThen tonight, his former colleagues are rubber stamping the decision of a narrow majority of the public, that changed everything in politics here for good.\n\nThis isn't even the last vote on this bill. There are several more stages, the Lords are likely to kick up rough at the start.\n\nBut after tonight, for better or worse, few will believe that our journey to the exit door can be halted.\n\nAs government ministers have said in recent days, the moment for turning back is past.\n• None Trump and May 'committed' to Nato", "The car was parked outside Workington police station after the owner had taken ill\n\nA police force carried out a controlled explosion on a \"suspicious\" car outside a station, not realising its own officers had parked it there.\n\nA bomb squad was called after concerns about an unattended Vauxhall Corsa at Workington police station, Cumbria.\n\nRoads around the building, in Hall Brow, were sealed off and an explosion carried out at 08:00 GMT.\n\nThe force blamed \"an internal communications error\" and apologised to the owner.\n\nCumbria Police said other officers on duty were not aware colleagues had parked the car outside the station after helping its owner, who had been taken ill.\n\nThe building was evacuated, a 100m cordon put in place and the vehicle blown up.\n\nInsp Ashley Bennett said: \"We have made contact with the owner of the vehicle, explained the situation and have apologised to him.\n\n\"The officers who dealt with this morning's incident did so with public safety in mind and followed the appropriate procedures in respect to an unoccupied suspicious vehicle.\n\n\"The constabulary will review this incident and will take on board any learning.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Police officer Elizabeth Rooney felt the comments were \"misogynistic and unpresidential\"\n\nIt seems President Trump has high standards when it comes to the way his staff are dressed. Looking the part is as important as acting the part when you are in the president's circle, apparently.\n\nBut his reported requirement that his female staff \"should dress like women\" has provoked an inevitable backlash on social media.\n\nAccording to a former Trump campaign worker, quoted in a news report by Axios, the president wants the men who work for him to wear ties and the women to dress \"appropriately\".\n\nDresses are apparently preferred, but if a female staffer wears jeans, they must \"look neat and orderly\", the publication reported.\n\nThe internet responded in a powerful way, with many using the hashtag #DressLikeAWoman.\n\nElizabeth Rooney, a police officer in Worcester, Massachusetts, and army veteran, posted a photo of her in uniform.\n\nShe told the BBC: \"I'll start dressing like a woman when he starts acting like a president. I felt his remarks that women should \"dress like a woman\" are misogynistic and unpresidential.\n\n\"Each morning when I wake up, I dress myself in pride, honour, duty and freedom.\"\n\nDr Judy Melinek tweeted \"Yes I'm doing an autopsy wearing pearls.\"\n\nThe hashtag has already generated more than 130,000 tweets since early on Friday.\n\nOne of the first tweets was by @NJGirlSEliza whose army uniform selfie has been retweeted nearly 2,000 times.\n\nOthers followed suit by posting pictures of themselves in their own work attire or of other inspirational women.\n\n\"This is how you #DressLikeAWoman when there is hazardous waste\"\n\nDr Rebecca Alleyne posted a photo of herself in scrubs during surgery. She told the BBC: \"I believe in social media as a change agent and a photo is an efficient means for making a point. I've had a very positive reaction, only one or two negatives.\n\n\"I want women everywhere to be judged on their abilities, not on what they're wearing. I believe that, no matter who's issuing the dress code.\"\n\nDr Rebecca Alleyne in Los Angeles responded to Trump's alleged comment with this picture of her at work\n\nThere were some voices in favour of the more gender-appropriate approach, but the majority of comments appeared to mock the remarks, which have not been confirmed as coming from President Trump, which they perceived to be sexist.\n\nCorrection: A previous version of this article incorrectly referred to Elizabeth Rooney as being a police officer in Boston.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nSaturday's coverage: Watch live on BBC Two, Connected TV and online from 18:00, plus follow text updates on the BBC Sport website.\n\nKyle Edmund lost to an injured Vasek Pospisil as Great Britain and Canada ended day one of their Davis Cup World Group tie level at 1-1 in Ottawa.\n\nPospisil, ranked 86 places below Edmund at 133rd in the world, overcame a leg injury to level the best-of-five tie.\n\nJamie Murray and Dom Inglot are scheduled to face Daniel Nestor and Pospisil in Saturday's doubles contest.\n\nThe two nations are missing their leading players as world number one Andy Murray recuperates following the Australian Open, while Canada's world number four Milos Raonic is injured.\n\n\"We had a video from Andy last night and [captain] Leon [Smith] put it on the big screen,\" Evans said.\n\n\"I'm guessing he was watching. He said he would be. It's obviously nice he supports the team. He's a good guy to have in our corner.\"\n\nEvans successfully carried the responsibility of being Britain's number one as he converted a gulf in experience over world number 234 Shapovalov into a straight-sets victory - the Briton's first win in a live Davis Cup rubber since 2013.\n\nShapovalov gave evidence that he has a bright future, the Wimbledon junior champion hitting plenty of flashing winners behind a swinging left-handed serve, but 39 unforced errors proved too much.\n\nThe Canadian dropped serve in a nervous opening game and again to lose the set, but he threatened more in the second and it took an ace and a deft drop volley for Evans to see off the first two break points against him.\n\nThat was as close as Shapovalov would get, however, with Evans then breaking thanks to a fantastic lob and making the decisive move at 4-3 in the third set.\n\n\"I tried to get on top early,\" Evans said. \"That was the plan, to come out and silence him and not give him confidence. I did that and then rolled him from then on. I was happy with way I played.\"\n\nEdmund, ranked 47th in the world, looked a good bet to increase Britain's lead against Pospisil, who has slipped from 25th three years ago to a lowly 133rd in the world.\n\nThe Canadian, 26, was further hampered by a left leg injury which required a medical timeout as early as the fifth game, and continued to require bouts of treatment.\n\nIt was therefore all the more remarkable that Pospisil reeled off eight of nine games following the timeout with some fine serving, while Edmund produced an error-strewn performance across the net.\n\nThe fast pace of the court allowed Pospisil to keep the points short, race through his serving games and put pressure on the increasingly vulnerable Edmund serve.\n\nEdmund, 22, managed to get through to a tie-break in the third set but was outplayed once again, ending with eight double faults and 39 unforced errors.\n\n\"It was just not good enough, pretty dismal from my standards,\" the Briton said.\n\n\"Everyone can accept winning and losing but it needs to be a lot better at this level. I'm just very disappointed for myself, for the team.\n\n\"It's annoying when you have support like that and fans come out and spend money and travel and to put on a performance like that. You just really want to do well.\"\n\nCaptain Smith added: \"The most important thing is to dust it [Edmund's defeat] off but focus now on the next matches. There's a lot of tennis to be played\"\n\nThere was real composure, confidence and style in the way Evans defused the challenge of his 17-year-old opponent. Having saved the only two break points he faced midway through the second set, Evans then pounced immediately to secure the only break required to win the set.\n\nEdmund, in contrast, put in a very ragged performance against Pospisil, who has had a miserable time in singles these past 12 months. The Canadian was in excellent form, serving 19 aces and getting the very best out of the quick court laid over the ice rink here in Ottawa.\n\nMurray and Inglot have been warned: Pospisil will play again in Saturday's doubles, and his partner Daniel Nestor is a former Olympic champion, world number one and multiple Grand Slam champion (all in doubles).\n\nWorld number two Novak Djokovic is the only member of the top 10 in action and he trailed by a set and a break against Russia's Daniil Medvedev before the 20-year-old was struck down by cramp.\n\nDjokovic, playing for the first time since his shock second-round loss to Denis Istomin at the Australian Open, had earlier needed treatment to his right shoulder.\n\n\"The pain I had prevented me from playing the points as I wanted to,\" said the 12-time Grand Slam champion, who led 3-6 6-4 6-1 when Medvedev eventually retired to give Serbia a 2-0 lead.\n\n\"But it's a good victory and we are in a very good position.\"\n\nThe winners of the tie in Ottawa look set to face a trip to France in the quarter-finals, after Yannick Noah's side took a 2-0 lead over Japan in Tokyo.\n\nArgentina's Davis Cup defence could be short-lived without star man Juan Martin del Potro, as they trail 2-0 to Italy in Buenos Aires.", "Ask a blue and they will tell you Lampard is a Chelsea legend, ask a red and they will say Gerrard lives on forever in Liverpool folklore.\n\nThey were arguably two of their generation's best midfielders, the trajectories of their careers and similar playing styles meaning they were forever compared.\n\nAfter both brought an end to trophy-laden careers, BBC Sport looked to tackle the debate on who was better one last time - and gave you the chance to cast your vote.\n\nAnd the winner is...\n\n52% of voters thought that Steven Gerrard was better.\n\nThough he went on to be a Chelsea legend, Lampard's Premier League life began at West Ham, making his debut as a replacement for John Moncur in a 3-2 win over Coventry in January 1996. Gerrard arrived in the top flight two years later in Liverpool colours, which he would sport for his entire career in English football.\n\nThere are 211 reasons to place Lampard in the Stamford Bridge hall of fame, the midfielder's goals making him Chelsea's all-time top scorer, while Gerrard's contribution to the Liverpool cause was often evident via heart-on-his-sleeve performances.\n\nNeither were shy of goals or games - Lampard would go on to make 609 Premier League appearances to Gerrard's 504, scoring 177 goals to the Liverpudlian's 120.\n\nIn his most prolific season, 2009-10, Lampard scored 22 goals in 36 games as he claimed the third of three Premier League winner's medals with Chelsea. He had previously won the title in 2004-05 and 2005-06.\n\nThe closest Gerrard's Liverpool came to a league title was the season of his infamous 'slip' against Chelsea in 2013-14. That season, he weighed in with 13 goals and 13 assists from midfield.\n\nGerrard missed out on a Premier League crown, but the hometown hero guided his club to Champions League success in 2005, as well as two FA Cups, three League Cups, a Uefa Cup and a Uefa Super Cup. But it is Lampard who boasts the most silverware.\n\nHow much were they worth?\n\nFootball finance expert Rob Wilson says if you took both players in their prime and sold them in last month's transfer window, Lampard would attract a marginally higher fee.\n\nBut neither would match the world-record £89m Manchester United spent to re-sign Paul Pogba from Juventus.\n\n\"I wouldn't put them on the same level as what we have seen with Pogba, simply because of the marketability of Pogba and his association with Adidas,\" said Wilson, from Sheffield Hallam University.\n\n\"Hindsight is a perfect science. We have seen the performances they were able to generate for their respective clubs, the consistency they were able to deliver and, particularly in the case of Lampard, the goals he scored as well.\n\n\"You would be comfortably talking £50m-£60m in transfer value - Lampard would be slightly more because of the number of goals he scored from midfield.\n\n\"If we were to have seen them sold this summer or next summer, you would be talking about wage packets of £250,000 a week.\"\n\nDuring their final seasons in England, both players were included in the Sunday Times Rich List, with Gerrard's wealth in 2015 calculated at £42m, and Lampard's at £39m.\n\nWhile Lampard only once commanded a transfer fee, Chelsea signing him for £11m from West Ham in 2001, Gerrard left Anfield only when his contract expired in 2015, 18 years after signing his first professional deal.\n\nHaving first played in the same England team in 2002, Lampard and Gerrard featured 73 times together before both retired in the summer of 2014.\n\nDespite the suggestion the duo \"couldn't play together\", during that time England won 63% of their games with both in the team, and 51% without.\n\nGerrard was the more successful of the two when playing on his own, England winning 61% of 41 games, compared with 48.5% of the 33 matches with just Lampard involved.\n\nLampard made his debut a year before Gerrard's first England appearance, but it was the Liverpool man who established himself first, scoring his first international goal in the 5-1 win over Germany in 2001, and captaining his country at three major tournaments.\n\nSqueezing two of England's most glittering members of the 'golden generation' into one midfield was seen to be a problem for a string of national managers, but BBC Sport football analyst Pat Nevin believes the issue lay with the coaches rather than the players.\n\n\"The problem wasn't Gerrard or Lampard, the problem was the managers,\" said former Scotland international Nevin. \"I don't think it was that complicated what they had to do, so that was a huge disappointment.\n\n\"Playing within a system, England tended to play 4-4-2 and teams were never stretched. There were two guys who were phenomenal at going into space and finding space, but had nowhere to run.\"\n\nWho played in the better team?\n\nGerrard's performances in a Liverpool shirt sometimes led to the perception he had single-handedly dragged his team-mates towards glory, not least in the Champions League final against AC Milan in 2005 and the Reds' FA Cup triumph over West Ham a year later.\n\nLampard, meanwhile, was no doubt a great player, reaching double figures for goals in 10 successive Premier League seasons, but was his career helped by playing in world-class Chelsea teams?\n\nIn a bid to compare who played in the better side, we took the XIs that started the clubs' respective Champions League-winning finals and calculated the reported cost of each player to see how expensive the teams were to assemble.\n\nGerrard was part of the Liverpool side that came from 3-0 down at half-time to beat AC Milan on penalties in the 'Miracle of Istanbul'. That team would go on to boast 635 caps between them, with Gerrard's 114 England appearances matched by Spain's Xabi Alonso, while Norway's John Arne Riise (110) and Finland's Sami Hyypia (105) also reached their centuries.\n\nWith Liverpool's success seven years earlier than Chelsea's, it is inevitable their starting XI would be cheaper than the Blues'. But at face value the Anfield outfit built their European victory for £100m less, with the side that started in Turkey costing a combined £40.35m.\n\nChelsea's Champions League triumph also came via a penalty shootout, the Blues beating Bayern Munich on German soil. Lampard was among the scorers from the spot after Didier Drogba's late goal levelled the game in 90 minutes.\n\nLampard (106) was one of four Chelsea players to win more than 100 caps for his country, with Petr Cech (Czech Republic, 124), Ashley Cole (England, 107) and Drogba (Ivory Coast, 104) contributing to a total 784 caps for the Blues.\n\nThe cost of that side? £140.1m - and that's not including Fernando Torres (£50m) and Michael Essien (£24.4m), who were on the bench in Munich.\n\nPhil Neville, who played alongside the pair for England and against them for Manchester United and Everton, told BBC Sport they were \"always driving each other on to be better\".\n\n\"If Frank scored a goal, Stevie had to score a goal,\" he added. \"It's what great players do and you see it with how Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi compete with each other. You are inspired by the biggest challenges.\n\n\"It was a strength and a weakness of why they couldn't play together, in a way.\n\n\"I think Stevie, in his club career, maybe felt a little bit on his own at times. Maybe he looked at Frank as part of a great team, winning league titles and other cups - whereas he made Liverpool a good team by his own performances.\"\n\nAs players of such similar style and stature in the game, leaving the Premier League for the MLS only furthered the Lampard-Gerrard debate.\n\nGerrard joined LA Galaxy for the 2015-16 season, while Lampard chose New York City. Over the course of two campaigns in the MLS, Gerrard made 36 appearances to Lampard's 31.\n\nHowever, it was the former West Ham, Chelsea and Manchester City man who turned a stuttering Stateside start around to eventually make the bigger impact for his club, scoring 15 times including his 300th career goal.\n\nThey said it...\n\nLampard on Gerrard: \"There were many a night I can recall Stevie driving from midfield at Anfield and I tried to reverse that at Chelsea and be our driving force.\n\n\"There's a huge respect we both have for each other. We get on very well, particularly in our latter years. It's nice to come up against Stevie.\"\n\nGerrard on Lampard: \"When that whistle goes and for 90 minutes when we are competing against each other it is war. We fight against each other, we always have. And when it's over there is a mutual respect there.\n\n\"I'm a huge fan of Frank. He's a phenomenal goalscorer from midfield. I play in the same position myself so I understand how difficult that is.\"\n\nFollowing some fantastic battles on the field, will Gerrard and Lampard renew their rivalry in the technical area?\n\nGerrard is set to begin his coaching career at Anfield, where the Liverpool legend will work with the club's youth teams.\n\nHe was linked with the manager's job at League One side MK Dons last year but said the opportunity had come \"too soon\" for him.\n\nLampard, meanwhile, has said he will study for his coaching qualifications with the Football Association - meaning they could yet line up in opposing dugouts.", "\"Having tuberculosis in the brain is so painful. Sometimes I just wish I could cut off my head and put it to one side.\"\n\nJohnny Islam, 29, is from Leyton in east London. Although having TB in the brain is rare, the disease itself is not.\n\nOnce deadly in the Victorian era - when it was known as the white plague - it is often assumed that tuberculosis has long since been eradicated.\n\nBut there are so many cases in London that the city is known as the TB capital of Western Europe.\n\nHaving the disease has changed Johnny's life. It could cause long-term damage, or even kill him.\n\n\"I'm scared to go outside, I'm scared to do things on my own because I can blackout at any time.\n\n\"It can spread to any brain cells, it can damage your memory, and I forget things all the time.\n\n\"Everyone is going to die one day. This disease could kill me, anything can happen.\"\n\nThe most recent data on infection rates show parts of London still have higher rates of TB than in some developing countries, such as Iraq, Libya and even Yemen.\n\nIt is a bacterial infection, which mainly affects the lungs, but can target any part of the body. It is curable in most cases.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Tracking tuberculosis on the streets of London\n\nTB in the lungs is spread through inhaling tiny droplets containing the bacteria, from the coughs or sneezes of someone infected with it.\n\nJohnny's condition is rare and complex, and he's been taking a combination of 12 antibiotic tablets for more than a year.\n\nHe's involved in video observed treatment - which involves him recording himself taking his medicine on a smartphone, and then sending the recording on a secure server to his health care workers, so they know he's sticking to the treatment.\n\nThe first-ever trial of this method was carried out by University College London, in collaboration with University College London Hospitals. It saw patients recording themselves taking their medication daily using a dedicated smartphone.\n\nThey then employ a custom app allowing secure upload to an NHS-approved server, for remote viewing by a trained observer.\n\nThe trial's been described as a potential game-changer in the fight against tuberculosis in the UK.\n\nThe preliminary results show more than 80% of patients completed the treatment using the technology, which paves the way for it to be used in the most complicated cases, such as Johnny's.\n\nMillions have been invested to try to eliminate TB as a public health problem.\n\nThere were 5,758 new cases of active TB in the UK, in 2015 - and almost 40% of those were in London.\n\nRecently there's been a fall in overall cases, but those involving the most at risk and difficult to treat, such as people who are homeless, abusing drugs or in prison, are rising.\n\nFinding active cases is the first challenge - the next is getting them to stick to the long treatment, which involves a minimum of six months on a combination of antibiotics.\n\nPatients often stop midway, which can cause a relapse and strains of the bacteria to become resistant to drugs.\n\nExperts hope the video-observed treatment might help with this.\n\nDr Alistair Story was involved in the video trial and said that if it \"works for TB, it works for other conditions\".\n\n\"With the emergence of drug-resistant strains of bacteria, we think this has an important role to play to prevent the spread of the disease.\"\n\nJohnny is now nearing the end of his treatment.\n\n\"I have so many side-effects from all the medicines I'm taking. I've been losing my hair, and my left leg stops working sometimes.\n\n\"It's been difficult to stick to the treatment, but I hope it's worked and I can finally be TB free.\"\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Beyonce has posted the photos with text referring to Osun, an African deity of water, love and fertility\n\nBeyonce has shared further images from an elaborate photoshoot to celebrate becoming pregnant with twins.\n\nThey show the superstar swimming under water, reclining on a bed of roses and sitting naked on a floral throne.\n\nThey have been posted on her website alongside poetic text about motherhood and ancient figures of female strength.\n\nVenus, the Roman goddess of love, Egyptian queen Nefertiti and West African deity Osun are all mentioned and seem to have inspired some images.\n\nBlue Ivy appears with her mum in a number of photos\n\nOne verse about motherhood refers to \"black Venus\", and in some of the pictures, Beyonce herself is reclining in the style of a classical goddess.\n\nIn another picture, she stands naked, cradling her belly with one hand and a breast with the other, next to the sculpted head of an Egyptian ruler.\n\nThis picture of Beyonce on top of a red car probably has a deeper meaning too\n\nShe cradles belly and breast again in another portrait, this time wearing a Statue of Liberty-style crown.\n\nHer five-year-old daughter Blue Ivy also appears, while one image sees her atop a flower-filled red car.\n\nSwells and stretches to protect her\n\nChild, mother has one foot in this world\n\nThe verses and photos follow an announcement on Instagram on Wednesday, in which she and husband Jay Z said: \"We would like to share our love and happiness.\n\n\"We have been blessed two times over. We are incredibly grateful that our family will be growing by two, and we thank you for your well wishes.\"\n\nThe post has been liked 8.3 million times at the time of writing.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A ferry port assistant from Greenock says he is \"a bit shaken up\" after winning more than £4m from Saturday night's National Lottery draw.\n\nJames Couper, 46, first found out that he had won during his lunch break at work the following day when a colleague read out the winning numbers.\n\nHis winning numbers were five, 21, 23, 34, 43 and 45.\n\nMr Couper is still deciding what to do with his winnings, but has promised his children Rachel, 20, and Daniel, 16, a trip to Walt Disney World in Florida.", "Some supermarkets are rationing the amount of iceberg lettuce and broccoli customers can buy - blaming poor growing conditions in southern Europe for a shortage in UK stores.", "The British Antarctic Survey's Halley research station has been towed 23km across the Brunt Ice Shelf.", "Bob Stanley (left) lets his love of pop shine through in Saint Etienne, who turn 27 this year\n\nEvery time a rock star dies (and, let's face it, it's happened a lot recently) a few trusted books get grabbed off the BBC bookshelves for a hastily-written obituary.\n\nThey include classic tomes like the Guinness Book of Hit Singles and Colin Larkin's peerless Encyclopaedia of Popular Music, but they've been joined recently by Bob Stanley's Yeah Yeah Yeah.\n\nPacked with anecdotes and insights (he describes Berlin-era David Bowie as \"a silent movie ghost\"), it reflects pop through the prism of the charts, rejecting the \"rockist\" perspective of most reference books.\n\n\"A film isn't necessarily more enjoyable if it's based on a true story,\" Stanley explains. \"Likewise, a song isn't necessarily any better or any more heartfelt, or convincing, because it was written by the singer.\"\n\nAlthough Yeah Yeah Yeah ends in 2000, Stanley had already come up with chapter headings for the next instalment, including the fantastic \"Oops I Did It Again and Again\", about the Swedish hit factory behind Britney Spears, Taylor Swift and Justin Timberlake.\n\nSo it's a surprise to discover his next book won't deal with grime, crunk or EDM - but big bands, ragtime and jazz.\n\nCalled Too Darn Hot: The Story of Popular Music, it's an attempt to make sense of the 50-year period between the advent of recorded music and the birth of rock and roll.\n\n\"It's the classic case of, 'if you can't find the book you want to read, write it yourself,'\" explains Stanley.\n\n\"There are plenty of books on jazz or the great American songbook - but some of those genres have forceful advocates, who see their music as the music of the era and completely ignore Broadway or Hollywood musicals. So I really want to tie it all together\".\n\nBing Crosby revolutionised the sound of recorded music, thanks to his unique microphone technique\n\nLast time around, Stanley was immersed in the music he was describing. He started his career at the NME and Melody Maker, before forming his own group, Saint Etienne, as the physical embodiment of his pop obsession - mixing 60s girl group harmonies with elements of folk, house, dub and northern soul.\n\nHis knowledge of pop's pre-history is altogether more sketchy.\n\n\"I'm really starting from a position of knowing nothing about the music, except for the standards which everyone knows,\" he says. \" But learning things as I'm going is fascinating and terrific.\"\n\nHe recently discovered how Bing Crosby's intimate, laid-back delivery on songs like White Christmas was only made possible by the advent of electric microphones (previously, singers like Al Jolson were vaudeville \"belters\", screaming down the rafters in order to be heard).\n\n\"Nobody could have recorded a voice that soft before the late 20s,\" says Stanley. \"And then in the late 30s, he [Crosby] funded the Ampex tape company, gave them thousands of pounds, and made the first pre-recorded radio broadcast.\n\n\"He said it was because he got fed up of going into the studio every day and wanted to play golf. But he speeded along recording technology.\"\n\nStanley's research has received a boost from the British Library, who have awarded him a £20,000 grant and a year's residency at the Eccles Centre - which houses the library's collection of American journals, newspapers and sound recordings.\n\n\"It means I'll have access to a lot more material in Britain than I thought,\" says the writer, \"from early music magazines with amazing names like 'Talking Machine News' to wax cylinder [recordings] and people's diaries.\"\n\nThe advent of jazz torpedoed the careers of music hall stars like George Robey\n\nThe book's only in the early stages, but he's already uncovered a few surprising themes... including the fact that Britain was the dominant force in pop at the start of the 20th Century.\n\n\"America at that point just didn't have the confidence or belief in its own music,\" he says, referencing the story of Jerome Kern, who wrote standards like Smoke Gets In Your Eyes and A Fine Romance.\n\n\"As a young songwriter, he came over to England and went to see the music halls. Then he went back to America and passed himself off as English because that was the only way he could get his songs on Broadway,\" Stanley says.\n\n\"That changed very quickly once jazz came in. There are lots of [British] songs about how ragtime is a joke - 'my wife ragged herself to death' - but music hall got hit really badly by ragtime and jazz.\n\n\"As soon as it has the confidence, America becomes so brash, and everyone is cowed by it that it feels like Britain's doing a lame imitation of America until the Beatles.\"\n\nTechnology also plays a huge role in the story - particularly with the advent of radio in the 1920s.\n\n\"It's hard to conceive how it would have felt, if you were working on a farm in Iowa, to be able to hear a live broadcast of a big band from a ballroom in New York.\n\n\"That obviously affected what music people wanted to listen to, how it was recorded, how it was broadcast.\n\nThe sound quality of early records lacked the depth and clarity of modern vinyl - as actress Gloria Swanson apparently discovered\n\n\"Something else I wasn't aware of was that record players, like in the 1990s, were consigned to the attic. The quality on radio was so much better than on the 78s [the precursor to vinyl records], which always sounded like a man shouting into a tube.\n\n\"It was only in the late 20s and early 30s, when the recording technology improved that people started getting 78s out again.\"\n\nStanley's home in North London is littered with record players - a vintage Dansette and a 1948 gramophone join his sleek, modern turntable amidst the neatly filed vinyl and scattered baby toys of his new son, Len.\n\nHe says he intends to listen to the songs he writes about in their original format, whether it be wax cylinder or shellac discs \"because they would have been recorded to be played on that format.\n\n\"It's like The Who's singles in the 1960s. They were made to be played on a Dansette and that's why they sound thin and strange on a CD.\n\n\"So what I want to get across is what it was like to live through that period and how people were listening to music, and what they were listening to.\"\n\nWriting the book will have to be slotted in around his other commitments, including a film about the jazz musician Basil Kirchin for Hull City of Culture and a brand new Saint Etienne album, which is due in June.\n\nSaint Etienne are due to tour later this year\n\nCalled Home Counties, it reflects the band's experiences of growing up in Surrey and Berkshire.\n\nThe songs tackle everything from the Enfield Poltergeist (a notorious hoax that made the national press in the 1970s) to the rail drivers' union Aslef, as well as \"teenage parties and deceased pets\".\n\nStanley says he may miss a few of Saint Etienne's concerts as he finishes Too Darn Hot - grimacing he recalls flying the 1,000-page manuscript for his previous book on a tour of eastern Europe.\n\n\"I want to get this one done faster than the last, because that was five years,\" he says. \"I've got the structure sorted out, and I'm looking forward to talking to collectors.\n\n\"It's just a question of not wanting to go too far down the rabbit hole.\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Newcastle United manager Rafael Benitez has reassured supporters he will remain at St James' Park to maintain the bid for an immediate Premier League return.\n\nThe Magpies boss was frustrated after Wednesday's 2-2 draw with QPR and the lack of January additions to the squad for the second half of the season.\n\nIt was reported that the Spaniard's future was uncertain at Newcastle, who are second in the Championship.\n\n\"I will not leave, I will not quit,\" Benitez told BBC Newcastle.\n\n\"I want to get promoted with this team and to do well. I will put all my effort into that. I say thank you to the fans, I will continue giving everything to ensure the players, staff and fans are pushing in the same direction.\"\n\nNewcastle have been short of cover over the past two months because of injuries to Dwight Gayle, Aleksandar Mitrovic, Isaac Hayden and Vurnon Anita, the absence of players at the African Cup of Nations, plus the suspension of Jonjo Shelvey earlier in the season.\n\nBenitez was keen to bring in extra depth to a squad which was strengthened in the summer with the arrival of Gayle, DeAndre Yedlin and Matt Ritchie.\n\nBids were made to bring Crystal Palace winger Andros Townsend back to Tyneside, but those were rejected.\n\n\"The window has finished, we have to concentrate on the future,\" Benitez said. \"We have a group of players who did very well in the first part of the season and we have to have confidence they will do well in the second part of the season.\"\n\nBenitez was named Newcastle manager in March 2016 following the sacking of Steve McClaren. But the former Liverpool, Chelsea, Real Madrid, Inter Milan and Valencia boss was unable to prevent their relegation from the top flight last term.\n\nNewcastle remain on course for promotion from the Championship with 59 points from 28 games, only one point behind leaders Brighton.\n\n\"The club, the city and the fans, we have made the same mistake in the past,\" Benitez added. \"Everyone was blaming each other and we lost the focus.\n\n\"We have to stick together and have a target which is promotion and a target to achieve. Afterwards we can analyse the mistakes or what we have done well.\"", "The former prime minister and Mr Schwarzeneggar appeared in a video on the ex-California governor's Snapchat page.", "For seven years, part of Edward Evans's sternum was missing - the bone would normally have protected his lungs and heart.\n\nA single blow to his chest could have killed him.\n\nNow Edward, from the Midlands, has become the first person in the UK to get a 3D-printed titanium replacement.\n\nHis story was featured on Trust Me I'm A Doctor on BBC Two - @BBCTrustMe on Twitter\n\nJoin the conversation - find BBC Stories on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nThe World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) says it still has \"full confidence\" in a report into Russian doping despite \"discrepancies\" in the supporting evidence.\n\nThe report claimed more than 1,000 Russians benefitted from a state-sponsored doping programme.\n\nIt heightened calls for the country to be banned from hosting major events.\n\nBut Wada's legal team has written to sports' international federations to inform them of \"certain discrepancies\".\n\nThe independent study, by lawyer Richard McLaren, said the doping was across 30 sports from 2011 to 2015.\n\nWhen the report was unveiled in December, investigators also published a searchable database of their evidence.\n• None Russian doping - how we got here\n• None Life on the run for Russian whistleblower\n\nIn the letter, sent last month and obtained by BBC Sport, Wada's lawyers said: \"It has come to our attention that there are, on occasion, certain discrepancies within the evidentiary summaries of athletes that potentially benefited from sample manipulation and the evidence available on the evidence disclosure package website made available by Professor McLaren.\"\n\nIt continued: \"Due to a technical malfunction, Wada has been made aware that certain athlete code references have been misattributed by the team - e.g. we have seen situations where an athlete code reference was attributed to a certain athlete in sport X while it should have been attributed to another athlete in sport Y.\"\n\nIn December, McLaren described the evidence in his 144-page report as \"immutable and conclusive\", adding to pressure on the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to ban the country from major competitions. Some 1,666 pieces of proof, including emails, documents and forensic analysis of doping samples, were published.\n\nThe findings corroborated much of an initial report last year which investigated claims of elaborate sample manipulation made by Grigory Rodchenkov, a former director of Russia's national anti-doping laboratory in Moscow.\n\nMcLaren did not identify athletes who have yet to be punished - referring instead to unique sets of numbers - but made the information available to the IOC and sports federations so they pursue individual cases, and decide on sanctions.\n\nAny issues with the evidence could lead to concerns that some legal cases may be challenged by Russian athletes or authorities. Last month, 22 Russian biathletes, who had been suspected of doping following the publication of the second McLaren report, were cleared of any suspicion by the International Biathlon Union.\n\nHowever, in a statement, Wada told the BBC: \"The purpose of the recent correspondence was to provide clarification regarding minor logistical discrepancies that were picked up and brought to our attention. These discrepancies - which related to typos regarding names and sample numbers and a technical malfunction with the evidence disclosure package website - were swiftly resolved. As of today, Wada is unaware of any outstanding issues.\n\n\"Wada's legal team continues to work with the international federations, assisting them with analysing and interpreting the report and extensive evidence available so that doping cases can be managed in a harmonized manner.\n\n\"Wada retains full confidence in the evidence-based findings brought forward by Professor McLaren's investigation.\"", "Ciaran Maxwell was set upon and beaten unconscious as a teenager in Larne\n\nA Royal Marine Commando from Northern Ireland has pleaded guilty to preparing acts of terrorism linked to dissident republicanism. Ciaran Maxwell's case raises alarming questions of how he was able to penetrate the ranks of an elite British military unit and smuggle out arms.\n\nIn the early hours of a morning back in June 2002, Maxwell, then 16, was walking from his home in Larne towards the Seacourt estate, which sits on a hill overlooking the port. What happened next left the Catholic teenager \"angry and traumatised\", according to someone in the nationalist community who knew him.\n\nMaxwell was struck by a bottle, fell to the ground and was set upon and beaten unconscious by a gang of loyalists armed with golf clubs and iron bars.\n\nThe unprovoked attack featured in the republican newspaper An Phoblacht, which claimed that an Army patrol arrived at the scene but did not intervene.\n\nThat cannot be substantiated, though amid escalating tension in the town, soldiers were back on the streets to support the police who dealt with nearly 300 sectarian incidents between April 2001 and March 2004.\n\nA security source we spoke to recalled shootings, houses being burnt out and regular beatings.\n\nThis was the environment in which Maxwell - described as a \"quiet republican\" - became an adult.\n\nSeveral residents in his home town said the mental scars of his beating never fully healed, leaving a vulnerability that others would later exploit.\n\nThe failure of police to prosecute anyone for the assault may also have caused him bitterness.\n\nEight years later the adventure-loving, physically fit Maxwell began the gruelling 32-week training to become a Royal Marine, writing online: \"Pain is temporary, the Green Beret is forever.\"\n\nIn May 2011 his mother expressed her pride ahead of attending his passing out parade in England.\n\nBut all was not as it seemed. One of the men who completed training with Maxwell, and does not want to be identified, told the BBC: \"He was a strange character, very reserved, didn't join in with the banter.\"\n\nHe described him as \"shifty\" and unwilling to form close relationships with others in the unit.\n\nBefore he had even completed his training, court papers show that Maxwell began \"assisting another to commit an act of terrorism\" although it is not clear which individual or group he was working with.\n\nHe was not the only young man from Larne being drawn into the orbit of dissident republicanism.\n\nA friend from the Seacourt estate was jailed in 2014 after pleading guilty to possession of explosives with intent to endanger life. Niall Lehd had buried chemicals, a pipe bomb and a deactivated submachine gun in blue barrels in a field.\n\nBy 2016, despite having become a father, Maxwell had begun burying his own blue barrels full of explosive ingredients during visits to see family in Larne.\n\nSome of the ammunition discovered\n\nIn a country park, he stockpiled chemicals which he bought online, timer units and improvised detonators. Even more alarmingly, in a remote forest he hid a handgun, ammunition, pipe bombs and Claymore anti-personnel mines he had stolen from the British military.\n\nHis behaviour was becoming increasingly reckless as he built more hides in the woods near his home in Devon where he also stashed cannabis he planned to sell in Larne.\n\nIn his work locker were bank card details stolen from fellow Marines to carry out fraud and handwritten notes on tactics used by terrorist groups.\n\nBut his plans unravelled when police uncovered the hides in Northern Ireland in one of the most significant arms finds of recent years.\n\nDetectives traced the serial numbers on the mines across the Irish Sea to 40 Commando, the Royal Marine unit based near Taunton where Ciaran Maxwell had been quietly building a career. They also found his DNA on some of the material found in the woods.\n\nMaxwell had endured so much to get the green beret only to trade it for terrorism. Was his a long-planned infiltration or was he dragged back by others to a past he thought he had escaped?\n\nIn his hometown few are willing to talk on the record about his case. Larne is much calmer these days but the occasional street mural and flag hint at the continuing presence of loyalist paramilitary groups such as the Ulster Volunteer Force and the Ulster Defence Association.\n\nThere are concerns that dissident republicans are becoming more active in parts of Northern Ireland. Last month a police officer was shot and injured in north Belfast.\n\nAlthough Maxwell had links to dissident republicans, it is not known how extensive they were. A security source told the BBC that he was \"operating as a bit of a lone wolf.\"\n\nSammy Wilson, Democratic Unionist MP for East Antrim, said: \"There has always been a dissident group which has been operating around Larne engaged in firebombing, that kind of activity, and it's been known that they have been trying to move into the area and recruit.\"\n\nMr Wilson is concerned that Ciaran Maxwell was able to sneak munitions out of his base and evade detection for so long.\n\nHe said: \"Where it is clear that someone is vulnerable either to coercion or may well have sympathies to aid and abet terrorist groups because of their background, perhaps we should give special attention to them when they come back to their own community.\"\n\nThe BBC asked the Ministry of Defence about its security vetting procedures for Royal Marines but received no response.\n\nThe criminal case against Ciaran Maxwell was overwhelming, paving the way for today's guilty plea.\n\nWhat is much less clear is exactly why he turned to terrorism, although his actions offer a stark reminder of the dark forces that still threaten stability in Northern Ireland.", "Eddie Jones' England appear to have minimal problems: reigning Six Nations champions, 14 wins on the spin, a summer spent whitewashing Wallabies, an autumn of being tested and pulling through every time.\n\nAnd yet. As they prepare to get their title defence under way against France this Saturday, Jones has been in typically restless mood - decrying his players' global standing, downplaying the team's decorated past year, and being as likely to appear satisfied as he is to tarmac Twickenham.\n\nThese are the six key questions the old schemer knows he has to answer:\n• None Daly and Launchbury in for England\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\n1. How does he combat complacency?\n\nEngland haven't lost at home to France in the Six Nations for 12 years. They have won four of their past five meetings with Wales. Scotland last won at Twickenham when Margaret Thatcher was in her first term as prime minister; Italy, even buoyed by the charisma and drive of Conor O'Shea, have a record against the men in white of played 22, lost 22.\n\nAll of which might lead England supporters to think this championship will all come down to the final match in Dublin, and all of which means Jones - 13 matches in charge, 13 wins - is making sure his players do not fall into the same trap.\n\n\"Nothing in our team is permanent,\" he has said of his 100% men.\n\n\"No-one owns the jersey; no-one owns their position in the team. It's something you borrow, and something you've got to cherish.\"\n\nIt is why he has claimed that his squad doesn't yet contain a single player good enough to make a world XV, no matter how many caps, Premiership trophies, European Cups or French scalps there might be among the 34 names. It is why he has quoted Sir Alex Ferguson, who said that he only managed two world-class players in his 27 years at Manchester United.\n\nNo matter that Ferguson actually said there were four (Eric Cantona, Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs and Cristiano Ronaldo). It is the headline rather than the small print that matters in Jones' message. No-one is safe. Everyone can do better.\n\n2: How does he improve leadership in the team?\n\nEveryone can do better, including a captain who, less than a year ago, became only the second man in 19 years to lead England to a Grand Slam.\n\nDylan Hartley's successes in the role have bought him only the slightest insurance. With his six-week ban for an illegal tackle on Leinster's Sean O'Brien having only expired last week, he is seriously short of match time but has retained the armband for the Six Nations.\n\nBeyond the championship, there are no guarantees. There is the pressure at hooker from the consistently excellent Jamie George, Tommy Taylor and Luke Cowan-Dickie, and there are Jones' repeated hints that his captain for the games leading up to the next World Cup may not be a 33-year-old.\n\nJones has talked of \"leadership density\" - of having eight or nine generals throughout the ranks, as the World Cup-winning side of 2003 could boast, and he may already have earmarked the man most likely to lead them all, Owen Farrell.\n\nOne of Jones' first acts as head coach was to promote Farrell from the ranks to vice-captain, a move in keeping with his decision, when in charge at Saracens, to give him a debut against Llanelli just 11 days after his 17th birthday. A greater promotion yet may come early again.\n\nIn other words: stick or twist? You might think only the bravest or most cocksure of coaches would change a winning team. The Six Nations does not tend to reward the experimental or the untested.\n\nBut what if those wins were not enough? What if the stated long-term aim of winning the World Cup in Japan in 2019 outranks this oldest of tournaments?\n\nAnd so suddenly there are dilemmas everywhere. Does Jones move Farrell inside to 10, breaking up his partnership with George Ford to create fresh options at centre, or does he look at the continued injury problems of Manu Tuilagi and the international inexperience of Ben Teo'o and keep old friends together?\n\nMike Brown will be 34 by the time of that World Cup. Isn't Anthony Watson his natural successor at full-back, particularly bearing in mind the surfeit of options on the wing? Yet Brown is rock-solid under the high ball, beats a man every time he attacks with ball in hand and brings the grunt and aggression that Jones so appreciates in his charges.\n\nIs this the time to let the outstanding Maro Itoje run free in the back row, leaving the second row in the combative and athletic hands of Courtney Lawes, George Kruis and Joe Launchbury? Or does the sensible coach let his superman fly where he has excelled so far in his brief international career?\n\nJames Haskell, like Brown, will be 34 by 2019 - so there is the question as to should he return to the flanks whenever fit. Jones must also consider if it realistic to expect another 30-something, Chris Robshaw, to remain a first choice when his spell out with a shoulder problem ends this spring.\n\nEngland's head coach knows that to win the World Cup, he needs more than one world-class side. He may need more than two; unless injury rates dramatically and unexpectedly drop, he requires both cover and a fitting replacement for that cover, as his current problems at loosehead prop illustrate.\n\n4. How does he manage expectation?\n\nEngland expects, as another successful captain of the ship once remarked. Jones' team have set high standards over the past 12 months, beating every major rugby nation bar the one they did not meet, New Zealand.\n\nSo will supporters giddy on that long unbeaten stretch feel disappointed if England fail to win a second successive Grand Slam? If they lose to Ireland yet win the Six Nations title, is that no longer enough, despite the fact it would have been very welcome during the run of four successive second-place finishes for which they had to settle from 2012 to 2015?\n\nAnd what if that remarkable run goes on? If England win every one of their matches in this Six Nations, they will break New Zealand's all-time record for most consecutive Test victories. English teams and those who cheer them have not generally reacted well to sustained success; England's cricket team won only one of their next four Test series having attained the world number one ranking in 2011, while the rugby team's World Cup and Grand Slam triumph of 2003 was followed by a third place in the 2004 Six Nations, a fourth in 2005 and another fourth in 2006.\n\nIt may be a happy problem for Jones to have, when so little was expected for so long, when the past two World Cups have seen the team fall apart and the head coach sacked. But a problem it may be, now the bar has been raised.\n\n5. How does he improve England's attacking game?\n\nJones made no secret his first Six Nations campaign was about tightening the defence. England had, after all, shipped 33 points in Australia's last match at Twickenham, 28 in their last home game against Wales, and 35 on France's previous Six Nations visit. Jones also wanted to buttress a set-piece that had gone from traditional strength to Achilles heel during that World Cup disaster of 2015.\n\nThat England scored five fewer tries in the tournament last year than they had in coming second in 2015 mattered less than the bigger Slam scenario. Now, in his second, Jones wants to revitalise the offensive element of his team's make-up in the same way.\n\nThere has been the appointment of Rory Teague as full-time skills coach, but Jones understands that more developments must follow - perhaps a different balance of personnel in the backs, maybe a more expansive gameplan, almost certainly a ruthlessness when chances do appear.\n\nThe theory is unarguable. The reality - in what are likely to be cold, wet conditions, in the most ferociously competitive tournament in world rugby, when every other nation and all their support are looking forward to knocking England off their throne - may be several degrees harder.\n\n6. How does he deal with defeat?\n\nIt will come at some stage, perhaps in Cardiff, where England have won only twice in the Six Nations in a decade, or Dublin, where they have been victorious in the tournament just once in 14 years. It may come on tour in Argentina, while Jones' best players will be absent as they join up with the British and Irish Lions in New Zealand. It may happen beyond that still, should the Jones magic continue to cast its spell.\n\nWhen it does, how will his side react? Will it feel worse to players and supporters because of the long unbeaten run that preceded it, and will its manner deflate some of the good feeling which Jones has created since his appointment?\n\nBecause the end is not the end. Maybe a truly world-class team never countenances defeat, but a truly world-class team also develops from one - from the lessons that reverse has taught, from the weaknesses it exposes, from the players who fall short.\n\nAs Jones said last month: \"If we lose a few battles on the way, it will help us win the war.\"\n\nJones and England have been like a married couple who have enjoyed the most extraordinary start to their relationship. When the first fight happens, when the first door slams, will it strengthen the bond between them, or will they forever be looking back to when it all seemed so special, so untarnished?", "Last updated on .From the section England\n\nFormer Watford and Coventry boss Aidy Boothroyd has been confirmed as manager of the England Under-21 team.\n\nThe Under-20 boss replaces Gareth Southgate, who vacated the role to become England manager after the departure of Sam Allardyce.\n\nBoothroyd, 45, took charge for the U21 side's final two Euro 2017 qualifiers and secured qualification for this summer's finals in Poland.\n\n\"I've been at the FA three years; this is the logical next step,\" he said.\n\n\"I believe I am here on merit because I've worked in all four divisions and I've got an understanding of speaking to a League Two manager or a Premier League manager and the problems they have.\"\n\nBoothroyd was in charge of Watford for three seasons from 2005, initially saving the club from relegation to the third tier before leading them to the top flight in 2006.\n\nThe Vicarage Road side finished bottom of the Premier League the following season, then failed to make an immediate return, losing in the play-off semi-finals.\n\nBoothroyd left the following season and had a nine-month spell at Colchester and an 11-month stint at Coventry before taking charge at Northampton in 2011.\n\nThe side were bottom of League Two at the time and Boothroyd guided them to safety, and the play-offs the next season, before being sacked in 2013 with the club once again last in the fourth tier.\n\n\"You can get stuck in a job and I was very much on a hamster's wheel in my previous jobs,\" he told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"But this has reinvigorated me. I've watched games I could only have dreamed of, met people, been to World Cups and I feel like I've grown massively in the last three years.\"", "We have asked four wise old heads what they expect to happen over the next seven weeks in the Six Nations.\n\nJeremy Guscott, Jonathan Davies, Keith Wood and Andy Nicol have 191 Test caps - including 13 for the British and Irish Lions - between them.\n\nThey will be on your televisions and radios analysing all the action from the 2017 tournament - but we've nabbed them first to find out who they expect to win, and plenty more besides.\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n• None Sign up for our new rugby news alerts\n• None Matt Dawson scored 12 - can you beat him on our rugby quiz?\n\nHow do you expect your team to get on?\n\nFormer England centre Jeremy Guscott: England are the reigning Grand Slam champions and have won 13 out of 13 under Eddie Jones, but being realistic they haven't taken teams apart with amazing attack. It's been very much brutal defence that's been giving them the edge and improved fitness. They may need to produce more than that this year.\n\nEx-Wales fly-half Jonathan Davies: Wales will have to perform better defensively - and more importantly offensively - if they are to be contenders this year. They also need to have more variety in their game.\n\nKeith Wood, former Ireland hooker: Ireland are looking very good at the moment. The coaching seems to be a little more flexible than it has been and the team seem more comfortable, with the current gameplan suiting the expanded squad.\n\nFormer Scotland scrum-half Andy Nicol: Scotland are in pretty good shape - they are definitely improving, with a well-balanced team and good coaching. There is confidence throughout the squad after a positive autumn, as well as Glasgow qualifying for the knockout stage in Europe. My target for them is three wins.\n\nWho will win the title?\n\nJG: It's between England and Ireland. England have three home games (and I expect them to win all three), which gives them a slight advantage, but that is countered with having to play Ireland away. Ireland are playing at a tempo and intensity that the rest of the Six Nations haven't reached yet, and I expect them to win the championship.\n\nJD: It's got to be Ireland. However, I don't expect them to win the Grand Slam (winning all five of their matches), so bonus points - introduced this year - will be important.\n\nKW: I expect Ireland to win. It is the right cycle of games for them, their confidence is high and the provinces are doing well in Europe. They also have a small injury list - notwithstanding Johnny Sexton's absence from the opening weekend - and more strength in depth than before.\n\nAN: England and Ireland start as favourites, with not much between them. They meet in the last game in Dublin with home advantage being crucial and probably the difference between the two. The style that England play and their ability to score more tries and points make them my favourites to win the Six Nations on points difference - or bonus points - but with no Grand Slam.\n\nHow will the Six Nations finish?\n\nWhat new rule will have the biggest effect?\n\nThere are two main changes this year - stricter rules on high tackles and the introduction of bonus points.\n\nThe former means anyone making contact with the head of an opposition player, either recklessly or accidentally, will be punished more severely.\n\nThe introduction of bonus points brings the Six Nations in line with other competitions around the world and means sides scoring four tries, or losing by less than seven points, will earn bonus points.\n\nJG: The new rules on high tackles will have the biggest effect. Without doubt players will be going to the bin for high tackles and that will have a bearing on results for sure.\n\nJD: The new high tackle ruling and the way each referee interprets each incident.\n\nKW: High tackle rule. The margin between a correct tackle and a high hit is too small.\n\nAN: The new high tackle law could see more yellow cards, which could influence games. I'm not sure bonus points will come in to it - certainly not in first few games.\n\nWho do you think will be the key player?\n\nAN: England's Owen Farrell. Tactician, kicker, intense, brave, winner - there's five words I'd use to describe him.\n\nJD: I pick Farrell too - he is key to England's game management.\n\nKW: Ireland scrum-half Conor Murray - he leads by deed and composure.\n\nShould the Six Nations have promotion and relegation?\n\nThe Six Nations began as a four-team competition - the Home Nations Championship - in 1883 before adding first France and then Italy - the latter in 2000.\n\nThe growth of rugby union over the past decade has seen Georgia, in particular, and a resurgent Romania become competitive at the highest level, but unable to move up from the second-tier Rugby Europe Championship because there is no promotion and relegation.\n\nThe second tier nations have called for the chance of admission to the Six Nations but the chances of that happening in the \"Short to medium term\" are unlikely, according to the tournament's boss John Feehan.\n\nAN: I am not in favour of straight relegation from the Six Nations but I am in favour of a play-off between the bottom team in the Six Nations and the top nation in the Rugby Europe Championship. Georgia have earned the right to have a shot at making the top level having won the Nations Cup (the Rugby Europe Championship) in eight of the past nine years.\n\nJG: I'm not sold on relegation yet. It may come in the future, but I've not heard enough compelling evidence to make a change yet.\n\nJD: I think the bottom team in the Six Nations should take part in a two-game play-off against the top candidate.\n\nKW: No, but we need to see these teams - the likes of Georgia, Romania and Russia - play tier-one teams more often.", "A booklet published by the British Medical Association suggests that its staff should use the phrase \"pregnant people\" instead of \"expectant mothers\" in order to show sensitivity towards intersex men and trans men who get pregnant. The BBC's Siobhann Tighe spoke to one trans man for his view on the BMA's guidance.\n\nIt's impossible to get figures about how many trans men in the UK want to be pregnant, or go through pregnancy. The handful of gender identity clinics in the UK won't give out statistics, although one consultant psychiatrist says the figure is \"tiny\".\n\nOnly one transgender man in the UK, Hayden Cross, has spoken publicly about his pregnancy. Cross had hoped to freeze his eggs before completing his transition, but when the National Health Service refused to pay he decided to get pregnant with donor sperm and temporarily put gender reassignment surgery on hold.\n\nI spoke to another trans man, Freddy McConnell, who has thought about what he might do if and when he wants his own children.\n\nHe's not ready to start a family yet, but if and when the time comes, he says carrying the baby will certainly be an option. He identifies as a gay man and has a partner who describes themselves as non-binary.\n\n\"That means that they don't identify as a male or a female - but they are on the masculine side of the spectrum,\" Freddy says.\n\nFreddy, 30, made the physical transition from female to male four years ago with the help of testosterone. Even now he gets testosterone injections once every 12 weeks. He also had an operation performed in the States which removed his breasts and gave him a male, contoured chest.\n\nBut crucially he didn't have \"lower\" (genital) surgery, and that means that he has some options when it comes to having a family.\n\n\"I've always wanted kids and a family and I've thought about this a lot,\" he says.\n\n\"When trans men wants to have kids and they're on testosterone, they have to come off it. Then you'd have to wait for your menstruation cycle to kick in, and hopefully you'll be able to conceive. If you don't, it may be because you have a pre-existing fertility issue.\"\n\nBut stopping your testosterone is risky for a trans man because it could lead to gender dysphoria - described by the Terence Higgins Trust as an intense feeling of sadness, low mood and uncertainty.\n\nOften this is what causes a person to transition in the first place, and for Freddy, it's a real concern.\n\n\"A lot of the changes that testosterone makes to your body are permanent. So, if you came off testosterone your voice wouldn't become high again and you wouldn't lose your facial hair,\" Freddy says.\n\n\"But the things that can change back once your system is running on oestrogen again is your fat distribution and muscle growth, and that could cause dysphoria and be challenging.\n\n\"If I was going to carry a baby that would worry me, because I really like the physical changes that testosterone has given me.\n\n\"It makes life a lot easier for me to be 'read' as male all the time, and I worry about losing that and the security it gives me in my identity.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nFreddy acknowledges that there aren't many people like him in the UK.\n\n\"The trans community is small, the trans male community is smaller and then the number of trans men who've had babies is vanishingly small,\" he says.\n\nThis means that social media sites, particularly from America or Canada, are particularly useful when it comes to getting information, providing support and sharing feelings.\n\n\"People who've been through this experience talk about feeling worried, and they're frightened that they'll be judged,\" says Freddy.\n\n\"And so they look to the community itself for information. That's where you know that people won't talk in a way that's disrespectful and won't be shocked, and they'll use inclusive language.\"\n\nSo when it comes to the BMA advice about referring to \"pregnant people\" instead of \"expectant mothers\" Freddy feels it's uncontroversial and factually correct.\n\n\"What they're saying in this document is: 'If you're talking to a trans man or an intersex man about being pregnant, don't call him an expectant mother.'\n\n\"If you call me that, it's incorrect and it's going to make me feel like you're not talking about me, you don't see me, you don't get where I'm coming from and I wonder where it is going to leave me as a patient under your care. It signals rigidity and closed-mindedness.\n\n\"But it's really important to say we're not interested in redefining motherhood, or taking away that word. We're just trying to be seen.\"\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter\n• None The transgender family where the father gave birth", "It has been three long years in the making, but today it seems as if we have a resolution to the closure of Tube ticket offices.\n\nBoth have moved on to greater things but the hangover of that announcement has lasted until today.\n\nIt was one of the most radical changes in Tube history and 953 jobs were earmarked for closure.\n\nThe bosses tried to sweeten the pill on that day by announcing the Night Tube, but it was the job losses the unions really hated.\n\nFrom that day, there have been countless strikes, pickets, demonstrations, offers and counter offers over the issue of job cuts and safety.\n\nBut under the Tory mayor, Boris Johnson, the unions had given up striking as they were making very little headway.\n\nThe ticket offices shut in 2015 and the unions managed to get the number of lost staff down to 838.\n\nIn the mayoral election last year, the unions reinvigorated their campaign against the cuts and when Labour's Sadiq Khan took power he promised a review of the ticket office closures - carried out by London TravelWatch.\n\nCountless strikes, pickets and demonstrations have been held in the last three years\n\nIt found staff were not visible enough (but didn't comment on specific numbers) and it did not say ticket offices should be re-opened.\n\nHowever, crucially for the first time LU admitted they were short of staff.\n\nThat was the turning point and then it became a question of numbers.\n\nThe RMT and TSSA unions walked out on 9 January much to the annoyance of the new mayor whose promise of \"zero strikes\" evaporated.\n\nThis week that number rose - according to LU - to 325 with at least 200 of them being full-time.\n\nOn top of that 325 will be taken on as part of annual recruitment to match those leaving their jobs on the Tube. (The unions say 300 or so jobs are lost a year through retirement etc and there are already 70 unfilled posts.)\n\nSo, who can claim this as a victory?\n\nCertainly the unions are delighted. They have got more staff but it is some way short of the 838 laid off.\n\nLU said getting rid of 838 staff would save £50m a year. That saving will be reduced and now there is inevitably the question of affordability.\n\nTransport for London (TfL) is having to make big changes and big savings and there are job losses being made elsewhere.\n\nConservative London Assembly member Keith Prince says: \"Sadiq Khan has caved in and bought off the RMT by spending tens of millions of pounds on unnecessary jobs.\"\n\nBy recruiting in one area, bigger cuts will have to be made elsewhere. This though was a political and operational priority.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Luke Mosson bought a flat for £150,000, but later realised that a clause in his contract meant the ground rent over the whole lease would cost more than £1.3bn.\n\nHe is now negotiating with his landlord to be released from that clause.\n\nWatch the full report on leasehold contracts here.\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Last updated on .From the section Horse Racing\n\nA new rule in France allowing horses with female jockeys to carry less weight has been labelled \"unfair\", \"offensive\" and \"patronising\".\n\nGoverning body France Galop will allow 2kg (4.4lbs) less in the saddle to encourage use of female riders.\n\nGroup One-winning jockey Hayley Turner wants \"more subtle\" help, adding: \"It seems a bit unfair on the lads.\"\n\nThe British Horseracing Authority noted the move \"with great interest\" but has \"currently no plans\" to do the same.\n\nJean-Pierre Colombu, vice president of France Galop, said the rule change provided a \"real opportunity\" for female riders.\n\nThere are 53 female and 354 male professional jockeys in Britain.\n\nAround 90% of races in France will be subject to the rule change, though listed and group races will be exempt.\n\nApprentice and conditional jockeys in the UK are given a weight allowance, which in theory combats their inexperience by reducing the burden on a horse.\n\nBut leading male jockey Adam Kirby believes a 2kg reduction for women would be too much.\n\nKirby said: \"It's ridiculous, isn't it? 4lbs is two lengths. I appreciate women might not be as strong as boys, but riding in races is not about strength, it's about positioning, rhythm and things like that.\"\n\nIn 94 years of the British flat racing Champion Apprentice title, only three female riders in Turner, Amy Ryan and Josephine Gordon - in 2016 - have won the honour.\n\nGordon, who turned professional in November and has eight wins this season, believes there will be a female champion jockey in the next 15 years.\n\nShe said: \"I think an allowance would give a lot more females more opportunities to get rides at lower weights, but personally, I find it a bit offensive.\n\n\"Last year I had a claim and was competing against the male apprentices and I won it fair and square.\"\n\nJane Elliott, who has four wins from her last eight rides, described the French move as \"a bit patronising\".\n\n\"If you did get a 4lb allowance, I'd be expecting to get five rides a day in handicaps,\" she said. \"It's such a big amount of weight to be giving jockeys.\"\n\nTurner, who became the first woman to ride 100 winners in a calendar year in 2008, added: \"I very much doubt it will happen in the UK. I'd be disappointed if it did, to be honest.\"\n\nThe BHA intends to speak to French authorities and the Professional Jockeys Association (PJA) before deciding if it should \"consult more widely across our sport\".\n\nThe governing body claims as many women have graduated as apprentices as men in recent years.\n\nThe PJA said it was \"unaware\" the rule change was coming in France, adding: \"The feedback we've had is that it isn't something the majority of our female members would want.\n\n\"There are plenty of female riders out there who are at least as good as their peers, and we have no doubt that such a weight allowance would put them at a significant advantage and increase their opportunities.\n\n\"Whether it is the right thing to do or is necessary is another matter, but it is important we canvass the views of our members, which we will do.\"\n\nBut jump jockey Lucy Alexander, the first female to become champion conditional in 2012-13, said she would \"welcome\" the change, adding: \"The BHA should look at it.\"", "Can virtual software be as effective as virtual superheroes?\n\nIn the Disney Pixar animation The Incredibles, the daughter in the family of superheroes, Violet, has a particular superpower.\n\nShe can create a protective force field around herself - an impenetrable bubble. She can also make herself invisible.\n\nBusinesses trying to ward off millions of dangerous cyber-attacks in an increasingly connected world probably wish they had the same superpower.\n\nWell, perhaps now, they do.\n\nA cybersecurity firm called Bromium reckons its technology can protect laptop and desktop users in large organisations against malware hidden in email attachments and compromised websites.\n\nIt does this through a process called micro-virtualisation.\n\nEvery time you open a document or visit a website, Bromium creates a mini protected virtual environment for each task - like a series of Violet's bubbles.\n\nEven if you've clicked on an email link containing a virus, there's nowhere for that malware to go because it is isolated within its bubble. It cannot infect the rest of the machine or penetrate the corporate network.\n\nViolet's forcefield can protect anyone inside from attack. Can software do the same thing?\n\nBromium co-founder and president Ian Pratt, who sold his first company XenSource to Citrix for $500m (£398m) in 2007, says it has taken his firm six years to perfect the product.\n\n\"This is by far the hardest thing I've done by miles,\" he tells the BBC.\n\nOne helpful development was when the big computer chip designers, such as Intel and Arm, began producing chips that had virtualisation capability built in to them.\n\n\"We've created a billion virtual machines since we started - no bad stuff has ever escaped from one of them,\" says Mr Pratt.\n\nThe technology has proved popular with intelligence services and other government agencies, he says.\n\nBromium co-founder Simon Crosby says trying to detect the bad guy \"always fails\"\n\n\"The US intelligence services tend to compartmentalise data from secret sources using separate banks of computers. Now, using virtualisation, they can keep secret data separate and secure virtually on one computer,\" he says.\n\nOne computer can have 50 virtual machines (VMs) running at the same time without much loss in performance speed, he says, although a typical user will have five to 10 running concurrently.\n\nIt is this ability to create VMs instantly without much drain on the computer processor's resources that is one of the product's main advantages, he believes.\n\nAt the World Economic Forum's recent Davos summit, a cybersecurity roundtable discussion revealed that the biggest banks can now expect up to two billion cyber-attacks a year; retailers, a mere 200 million.\n\nAnd recent research from IT consultancy Capgemini finds that only 21% of financial service organisations are \"highly confident\" they could detect a data breach.\n\nUnfortunately, despite all the latest firewalls and antivirus software, it is we humans who are the weakest link in any organisation's security defences.\n\nDespite all the warnings, we still click on email links and attachments, download software to enable us to watch that cute kitten video, and visit websites we probably shouldn't - even while at work.\n\nVirtualisation is one defence against such attacks.\n\nHow many of us have visited websites we shouldn't have, even at work?\n\nProf Giovanni Vigna is a director of the University of California in Santa Barbara's cybersecurity centre and co-founder of malware detection company, Lastline.\n\nHe says: \"Virtualisation is a very effective way of containing the effects of an attack because it isolates the bad stuff, and that's awesome,\" he says.\n\nBut it is not a \"silver bullet\", he warns.\n\n\"It won't prevent users from giving away sensitive security data in targeted spear phishing attacks,\" he says.\n\nThis is where staff are hoodwinked into giving away security details because hackers have collated enough personal details to make an email or document look entirely official and convincing.\n\nThis type of manipulation - called social engineering - is still \"very effective\", says Prof Vigna. \"It's difficult to protect against human stupidity.\"\n\nBromium's Ian Pratt accepts that this is a limitation of virtualisation, but he maintains: \"In 80% of cases hackers are gaining access to enterprise networks through staff clicking on dodgy links.\n\n\"Our system limits the damage that can be caused. We're trying to make these attacks far more expensive to execute.\"\n\nTraditional anti-virus (AV) software works by identifying malware signatures and adding them to the huge database. Once a known signature has been detected it can then quarantine and delete the suspect program.\n\nThe problem with this approach, however, is that it's reactive and does nothing to prevent previously unknown attacks made by new forms of malware, many of which can evolve within an infected system and evade the AV software.\n\nOne cybersecurity firm trying to tackle this issue is Invincea, which describes its X product as \"machine learning next-generation antivirus\".\n\nIt aims to detect and stop malware without relying on signatures. It learns how suspect programs look and behave when compared to legitimate programs and other known forms of malware. And if a suspect file exceeds a risk threshold it is quarantined or deleted.\n\nThe deluxe version of Invincea's product also ensures that all links and attachments are opened in a virtual isolated environment - its own version of Violet's bubble.\n\n\"Invincea is a major competitor to Bromium,\" says Prof Vigna. \"The advantage is that it works on CPUs [central processing units] that don't support micro-virtualisation, so it can be used in organisations with older computers.\"\n\nMicrosoft has also been exploring the benefits of virtualisation. Its next major Windows 10 update will enable users to run the Edge browser within a protected virtual machine environment.\n\nProf Alan Woodward from the University of Surrey's computer science department thinks the tech giant could go further.\n\n\"Virtualisation is a neat idea,\" he says. \"Lots of people are taking it very seriously. My personal suspicion is that someone like Microsoft may well try to build it into their operating system [OS] directly.\"\n\nAlthough we have much better malware detection systems these days, we - \"the squidgy bit in the chair\", as Prof Woodward calls us - remain the most vulnerable point in this cybersecurity warfare.\n\nCan we develop a version of Violet's bubble to protect us from ourselves?", "Ozzy Osbourne reflects on his fame and how reality TV affected his life as Black Sabbath prepare to perform their final gig.", "Isabella Lovin's photo posted on Facebook is being compared to an image of President Trump\n\nSweden's deputy PM is causing a stir after posting an image appearing to parody Donald Trump's signing of an anti-abortion executive order.\n\nIsabella Lovin, who is also the country's climate minister, published a photo that shows her signing a new law surrounded by female colleagues.\n\nThe image has drawn comparisons with Mr Trump's photo in which no women were present.\n\nWithin hours the post was shared and liked thousands of times on Facebook.\n\n\"Wonderful Picture! Hope you sent it to the man on the other side of the ocean,\" writes one user.\n\n\"Make the Planet Great Again!\" writes another.\n\nFacebook user Kimini Delfos said in a post that such an image should not spark the reaction that it has, suggesting that people \"calm down\".\n\n\"Why is it so difficult to see a picture with just women and not difficult to see a picture with only men?\" she questioned.\n\nMeanwhile, users of the social media site Twitter have praised what is being described as Ms Lovin's \"dig\" at the US president.\n\n\"Love how the Swedish Deputy PM is taking a dig at Donald Trump in her publicity photo for passing climate change law,\" writes user Ian Sinkins.\n\nAnother, Mikaela Hildebrand, writes: \"@IsabellaLovin signs new the Swedish climate law & issues funniest #Trumbburn foto! Epic!\"\n\nThe comparisons are being made to a photo last month of Mr Trump signing an executive order to ban federal money going to international groups which perform or provide information on abortions.\n\nThe image of Mr Trump signing the document surrounded by male colleagues was ridiculed on social media.\n\nOn Friday, while signing Sweden's new climate law, Ms Lovin urged European countries to take a leading role in tackling climate change as \"the US is not there any more to lead\".\n\nThe new law sets long-term goals for greenhouse gas reductions and will be legally binding for future administrations.\n\nMs Lovin said Sweden wanted to set an example at a time when \"climate sceptics [are] really gaining power in the world again\".\n\nMr Trump, who has previously called climate change a hoax, has raised speculation that he might pull the US out of the Paris Agreement, which aims to tackle greenhouse gas emissions and limit the increase in global temperatures.\n\nThe Swedish government, which claims to be \"the first feminist government in the world\", has also issued a statement affirming that gender equality is \"central\" to its priorities.\n\n\"Gender equality is also part of the solution to society's challenges and a matter of course in a modern welfare state - for justice and economic development,\" the statement reads.", "Police in Paris say a soldier has shot and wounded a man with a knife outside the Louvre museum.", "The woman who ran The Willow Tea Rooms on Sauchiehall Street for more than 30 years has won a legal battle to keep its name.\n\nAnne Mulhern had opposed an attempt by the Willow Tea Rooms Trust to trademark the name, which is associated with designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh.\n\nThe UK Intellectual Property Office (UK IPO) told BBC Scotland that her challenge had been successful.\n\nThe Tea Rooms Trust has 28 days to appeal against the ruling.\n\nThe Sauchiehall Street building and interiors were designed by Mackintosh and built in 1903 for Kate Cranston, who ran a number of tea rooms.\n\nMs Mulhern, 60, transformed the Tea Rooms back to their original use in 1983 after the building had been used as a retail unit.\n\nHowever, she did not own the building and it was acquired by the Willow Tea Rooms Trust in 2014.\n\nThe trust recently closed the building for a £10m two-year refurbishment.\n\nThe interior of the Willow Tea Rooms will be recreated at the Watt Brothers department store\n\nTwo waitresses in the Room de Luxe\n\nMeanwhile, Ms Mulhern, who also operates the Willow Tea Rooms on Buchanan Street, has moved her Sauchiehall Street operation to the third floor of the Watt Bros department store.\n\nThe UK IPO said a 73-page ruling on the trademark dispute would be published next week.\n\nIt said Ms Mulhearn's opposition to the Willow Tea Rooms Trust's trademark application had been successful because she had a similar existing trademark.\n\nShe also had a \"reputation among a known class of people\" - meaning that tourists and locals had used her tea rooms for many years.\n\nThe Willow Tea Rooms Trust has 28 days to appeal against the ruling. If it does not the trademark will be formally refused.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nDubai Tour leader Marcel Kittel says he will not accept an apology after Ukrainian rider Andriy Grivko punched him on the third stage of the race.\n\nGrivko has been disqualified from the race and his Astana team apologised to Kittel and his Quick Step Floors team.\n\nGerman sprinter Kittel posted a picture on Twitter with blood on his face, and wrote: \"I won't accept an apology. That has nothing to do with cycling.\n\n\"What Grivko did is a shame for our beautiful sport.\"\n\nThe incident happened early on the 200km stage from Dubai to Al Aqah.\n\n\"When we passed a construction site, the sand began blowing and as soon as we went into the crosswinds we were fighting for position, which is always stressful, and Andriy Grivko punched me,\" Kittel said on his team's website.\n\n\"I get that riding in the crosswinds is always tense, but it gives him no right to act like that. He could have hurt my eye.\n\n\"In the finale, my mind wasn't 100% on the sprint, but I am happy I have no big injuries and I kept the lead.\"\n\nGrivko later posted a statement on his Facebook page, in which he claimed Kittel had first pushed both himself and team-mate Dmitriy Gruzdev.\n\nHe said that created \"a very tense and dangerous situation that could cause not only my fall, but a big crash in the peloton.\"\n\nGrivko, who also accused Kittel of spitting at him, added: \"I responded with aggressive action to aggressive action from the other side.\n\n\"Perhaps I got emotional and it has nothing to do with cycling, but in extreme situations, when exists a question of safety, it is difficult to stay calm.\"\n\nKittel had won the opening two stages but finished outside the top 10 on day three, as John Degenkolb of Trek-Segafredo took stage honours.\n\nMark Cavendish (Dimension Data) also finished outside the top 10 in an untidy sprint finish, with Aqua Blue Sport's Adam Blythe the best-placed Briton in ninth place after his team-mate Mark Christian spent most of the day in the break.\n\nKittel retained the overall race lead by eight seconds from Dylan Groenewegen of Team Lotto NL-Jumbo.", "Since Beyonce announced she and husband Jay Z are expecting twins, social media has been abuzz with theories about the deeper meaning behind the record-breaking Instagram photo.\n\nWhy is she wearing a veil? Why is she kneeling? Why so many flowers?\n\nArmchair art critics have been keen to offer up their own explanations.\n\n\"So perhaps Beyonce's having a girl & a boy, hence the pink bra & blue panties?\" suggested @nicbamford on Twitter.\n\n\"She's SURROUNDED by beautiful flowers. This is her connection with life and earth. She's energised by nature\" said @TheHelenOfTrill\n\n‏\"Pretty blatant Virgin Mary and pagan fertility imagery going on in Beyonce's pregnancy announcement\" added @MildlyAmused.\n\nOthers were more confused than enlightened by the picture's composition.\n\nLisa McCray tweeted: \"Friend. Do you legit not have stretch marks? How?\"\n\nKatie Leigh cut to the chase: \"I cannot be the only one who thinks Beyonce's maternity pictures are extremely weird.\"\n\nMeanwhile, the traditional press served up a more intellectual analysis of the photo.\n\nJay Z and Beyonce already have a daughter, Blue Ivy\n\nThe Guardian chose to interpret it on a purely artistic level, pointing out its resemblance to \"late 15th century Flemish portraiture, when it was popular to depict a subject from a three-quarter angle, often in front of a landscape, and with hands clasped in front\".\n\nThe background flowers, it said, are derived from \"rococo influences\" as is the photo's \"overall celebration of love and pleasure\".\n\nVanity Fair described the photo as \"high-concept\", mirroring famous historical paintings of \"women of cultural importance,\" including Queen Elizabeth I.\n\nAustralian online pop hub Junkee hired art historian Kate Roberts to appraise the photo, comparing it to works by the great masters of the past, including Raphael, Botticelli, Reubens and Warhol.\n\nMeanwhile, the tabloids searched for proof that Beyonce is a member of the Illuminati - the shadowy secret society believed by conspiracy theorists to be the mastermind behind global events.\n\n\"Beyonce is supposedly positioned in a pyramid shape - a key symbol for the Illuminati,\" said The Sun.\n\n\"Theories say the presence of a pyramid or triangle represents the top down command structure of the world.\"\n\nElle magazine suggested Beyonce's lack of clothing was a response to rumours from 2011 when she was pregnant with now five-year-old daughter Blue Ivy.\n\nIt was alleged after an appearance on an Australian talk show that Beyonce's bump was fake. By stripping down to fully exposing her bump in 2017, there can be no doubt that this pregnancy is the real deal.\n\nWhatever the deeper meaning behind Beyonce's pregnancy announcement, it has got the world talking.\n\nHad she simply posted a shot of an ultrasound or two blue lines on a home pregnancy test kit, it perhaps wouldn't have become today's top headline.\n\nSo much of the news in 2017 has revolved around political turmoil and shifting global dynamics.\n\nBeyonce's abstract and slightly surreal photo has provided some welcome relief, with social media users from across the spectrum briefly uniting under one sentiment - congratulations! Perhaps that is its real intention.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The Church of England has admitted it failed \"terribly\", after claims of physical abuse by a former colleague of the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby were not reported to police for over 30 years.\n\nChannel 4 News alleges 22 boys were beaten by former Christian charity head, John Smyth QC, in the 1970s.\n\nOne of his daughters told the BBC that having boys around the house was a normal part of her childhood, though she never saw any abuse.\n\nHer interview has been voiced by an actor to protect her identity.", "Music, poetry and wine-drinking at the court of 17th Century Persian ruler Shah Abbas\n\nUntil the Islamic revolution, Iran had a tradition of wine-making which stretched back centuries. It centred on the ancient city of Shiraz - but is there a connection between the place and the wine of the same name now produced and drunk across the world?\n\n\"I remember my father bringing in the grapes and putting them in a big clay vat,\" says California-based wine-maker Darioush Khaledi, recalling his childhood in pre-revolutionary Iran.\n\n\"I would climb on top and smell and enjoy the wine.\"\n\nDarioush's family was from Shiraz, a fabled city in south-western Iran, whose name was once synonymous with viticulture and the poetry and culture of wine.\n\nHe remembers happy evenings when the family would gather, sipping wine from clay cups, and reciting lines from the 14th Century Persian poet Hafez.\n\n\"It wasn't just about drinking wine,\" he says. \"It was an adventure.\"\n\nThe world Darioush remembers came to an end in 1979 when Iran's new Islamic rulers banned alcohol.\n\nThey shut down wineries, ripped up commercial vineyards and consigned to history a culture stretching back thousands of years.\n\nDoes this ancient jar hold the key to the provenance of Shiraz?\n\nAn ancient clay jar has pride of place at the University of Pennsylvania museum in Philadelphia in the US.\n\nIt was one of six discovered by a team of American archaeologists at a site in the Zagros mountains in northern Iran in 1968.\n\nThe jars date back to the Neolithic period more than 7,000 years ago, and provide the first scientific proof of the ancient nature of Iranian wine production.\n\nChemical analysis on one of them revealed that a dark stain at the bottom was actually wine residue.\n\n\"This is the oldest chemically-identified wine jar in the world,\" says Prof Patrick McGovern.\n\nThe first evidence of grape cultivation in Shiraz came around 2,500 BC, when vines were brought down from the mountains to the plains of south-west Iran, the professor says.\n\nBy the 14th Century, Shiraz wine was immortalised in the poetry of Hafez, whose tomb in the city is still venerated today.\n\n\"Last night, the wise tavern master deciphered the enigma,\" he wrote. \"Gazing at the lines traced in the cup of wine, he unravelled our awaiting fate.\"\n\nThe wine-pourer or \"saghi\" had a special role in the ritual of Persian royal banquets\n\nIn the 1680s, a French diamond merchant, Jean Chardin, travelled to Persia to the court of Shah Abbas.\n\nHe attended elaborate banquets and recorded the first European account of what Shiraz wine actually tasted like.\n\n\"It was a very specific red,\" says French historian and Chardin expert Francis Richards. \"It was a wine with good conservation because generally the local wines very quickly turned to vinegar.\"\n\nBut is there a connection between the \"dark red wine that smells like musk\" immortalised by Hafez, and the Shiraz wine drunk across the world today?\n\nThe first stop in my research is one of France's most famous vineyards in the Rhone valley in the south and home to the Syrah vine.\n\nAccording to local legend, the Hermitage vineyard was founded by a 13th Century knight called Gaspard de Sterimberg, who brought back a Persian vine from the Crusades.\n\nSyrah grapes at the world famous Hermitage vineyard in southern France\n\nThe names Syrah and Shiraz are often used interchangeably. Could Syrah be a corruption of Shiraz and prove a Persian connection?\n\nThe definitive answer came in 1998 when DNA testing was carried out on the local vines to pinpoint their origin.\n\n\"Some people think it comes from Persians and others from Sicily where you have Syracuse city,\" says grape geneticist Jose Vouillamoz. \"But today we know all of that is wrong.\n\n\"Testing was done by two different labs,\" he continues. \"And it was really a surprise to find out that Syrah is a natural spontaneous crossing between two local vines from this area.\"\n\nSo wherever the name came from, it seems there is no genetic connection between Syrah grapes and the wines of ancient Shiraz.\n\nBut the trail does not end there.\n\nJames Busby, seen as the father of the Australian wine industry\n\nOutside of France, the biggest producer of Syrah in the world is Australia and the wine is always called Shiraz.\n\nThis can be traced back to a Scot called James Busby who exported Syrah vines from the Hermitage to Australia in the 19th Century.\n\nHis first consignment of vines was labelled \"scyras\" which many thought was a misspelling of Syrah.\n\nBut when I re-read his journal, I came across a line which proved he knew about the Hermitage Persian vine legend.\n\n\"According to the tradition of the neighbourhood,\" he wrote. \"The plant - scyras - was originally brought from Shiraz in Persia.\"\n\nAt that time European wine-makers sometimes imported wine from Persia to add sweetness and body.\n\nSo perhaps Busby hoped the ancient name Shiraz would add some Persian mystique and flavour to his New World wine-making endeavour.\n\nThe United States imported Syrah vines in the 1970s and the wine is always marketed under the Syrah name - with one notable exception.\n\nDarioush Khaledi, a son of Shiraz, is the proud owner of a 120-acre vineyard in California's Napa Valley producing what he insists on calling Shiraz wine.\n\n\"My French friends say Shiraz/Syrah comes from the Rhone and [has] a 500-year-old history,\" he says. \"But if you open an atlas of the world there's only one place in the whole world called Shiraz and it has a 7,000-year-old history of wine growing.\"\n\nPersian-style columns at the entrance to the Darioush winery in Napa Valley\n\nHe highlights his Iranian heritage in the vineyard. The entrance to the main building is lined with Persian-style columns reminiscent of the ancient city of Persepolis.\n\nThe day we visit, his marketing manager Dan de Polo is holding a wine tasting for a group of Chinese buyers.\n\n\"What's great about Shiraz is that it's always been a very soulful wine,\" he tells them.\n\nSoulfulness, spirit and poetry - words that come up time and again when talking about Shiraz wine.\n\nAnd for Darioush, and for me, I think that is what matters most.\n\nIt is not about the DNA of the grapes, it is about the link Shiraz offers us to the spirit of our faraway homeland and the romance of its fabled wine.", "It's the weekly news quiz - have you been paying attention to what's been going on in the world over the past seven days?\n\nIf you missed last week's quiz, try it here\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Our bathrooms are filled with shampoo bottles, toilet rolls and cleaning products which could easily be put into our recycling bins when finished with.\n\nYet research shows our green intentions are washed away as soon as we step near a toilet.\n\nNow a business group has come up with an idea for how to combat this problem - two bathroom bins.\n\nThe Circular Economy Taskforce, who were brought together by Prince Charles's Business in the Community environment charity, says it could boost recycling.\n\nSo should two bins really sit alongside your stack of loo roll in the bathroom?\n\nWhy should people have two bins in their bathrooms?\n\n\"It's trying to address the problem that people are less likely to recycle packaging for things we use in our bathrooms than for things we use in other rooms of the house,\" says Jonny Hazell, senior policy adviser for environmental think tank Green Alliance.\n\nThe Recycle Now campaign points to its statistics, which show that while 90% of packaging is recycled in our kitchens, only 50% is being recycled in the bathroom.\n\n\"Often homes have one central recycling bin located in the kitchen, so when in the shower or washing your face it can be tricky to remember to transfer it to that bin,\" it says.\n\n\"This is why having a recycling bin or bag in the bathroom might be useful, if there is space.\"\n\nBusiness in the Community says two bins could make it easier to separate out the plastics that can be recycled.\n\n\"But it doesn't have to be a bin, it could be as simple as a bag on the door handle that you bring down to the kitchen every week,\" it added.\n\nWhere has this idea come from?\n\nWhile recycling has grown from 12% to 45% in the UK over the last decade, campaigners say the bathroom is an area that needs more focus.\n\nThe Circular Economy Taskforce came up with the idea as part of its work looking at practical collaborative ways to boost recycling and re-use rates.\n\n\"The bathroom is one of the areas that has come up time and time again in the group as somewhere where both business and consumers can make a difference to help us all reduce our impact on the environment,\" says Business in the Community.\n\n\"Thinking about how different types of bins could boost recycling in the bathroom is just one example of a potential simple solution that could have a big impact.\"\n\nWhy are people failing to recycle their bathroom products?\n\nCampaigners believes it comes down not just to where a recycling bin is located but also to confusion over what can be recycled.\n\nRecycle Now says: \"There can also be confusion about what can or can't be recycled with bathroom products.\n\n\"For example many people don't realise that bleach bottles can be easily recycled - simply make sure it's empty and put the lid back on.\n\n\"Recycling just one bleach bottle saves enough energy to power a street light for 6.5 hours, so the value quickly adds up.\"\n\nResearch from the University of Exeter also found that people who threw away waste in the bathroom saw it as being \"dirty\" and were less likely to recycle it.\n\nGoing through your bathroom bin to separate out what can and can't be recycled can seem off-putting,\" says Business in the Community.\n\nIt added: \"There is also a lot of confusion around what can be recycled in the bathroom, for example many consumers are confused by aerosols.\"\n\nHow much recyclable waste comes from a bathroom?\n\nPlastic shampoo, conditioner and shower gel bottles, plastic moisturiser bottles (such as for hand cream and body lotion), glass face cream pots (plus the cardboard packaging they come in), perfume and aftershave bottles, aerosols for deodorant, air freshener and shaving foam, bleach and bathroom cleaner bottles, toothpaste boxes and toilet roll tubes.\n\nIs a lack of recycling in bathrooms a real problem?\n\nEvery little helps, is the message from environmental and recycling groups.\n\n\"In general, the less we recycle, the more water and energy we need to use to produce the materials we use in our daily lives,\" said Mr Hazell.\n\nRecycle Now says recycling reduces the amount we are sending to landfill and makes use of resources already available rather than making them from scratch.\n\n\"Ultimately this means reduced levels of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere which contribute to climate change,\" it added.\n\n\"For instance it takes 75% less energy to make a plastic shampoo bottle from recycled plastic compared with using virgin materials.\"\n\nCan two bins have a meaningful impact on recycling overall?\n\n\"Ensuring you recycle in the bathroom can make a big difference,\" says Recycle Now.\n\n\"It would save £135,000 in landfill costs if every UK household threw their next empty shampoo bottles into the recycling bin.\n\n\"On top of this, if everyone recycled one more toilet roll tube it would save enough cardboard inner tubes from landfill to go round the M25 38 times.\"\n\nBut what if you don't have the space for two bins?\n\nThere are other options. Hang a reusable bag on the bathroom door so you can transfer your recyclable items straight into the recycling bin. Or opt for a bin with split compartments which can be used to separate recyclable and non-recyclable items.\n• None Are you rubbish at recycling?\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nSaido Berahino served an eight-week suspension before leaving West Brom, Stoke City boss Mark Hughes has said.\n\nHis comments follow newspaper reports the striker was banned after failing an out-of-competition drugs test.\n\nHughes said the 23-year-old, who joined the Potters for £12m in January, was banned for a \"Football Association disciplinary matter\".\n\nThe Welshman said he saw no reason for Berahino not to face his former club at the Hawthorns on Saturday.\n\nHughes, 53, said the forward had \"issues at his previous club for 18 months\", adding: \"We were aware of that before we signed him.\n\n\"As with all players, we did our research on him before we signed him, but that didn't change our thinking at all.\n\n\"In terms of more detail, you would probably need to refer back to his former club, West Brom. We are pleased with what he is producing and he is looking forward to the game tomorrow.\n\n\"Why wouldn't I play him?\" added Hughes. \"He is in line to be involved.\"\n\nWest Brom boss Tony Pulis confirmed Berahino served a ban, but would not comment on why.\n\n\"He didn't play for me because he wasn't fit enough,\" added Pulis. \"This football club looked after Saido very well while he was here. The club looks after all the players.\n\n\"Saido was one of the main reasons this club stayed in the Premier League two seasons ago. In his own mind he wanted to move.\"\n\nThe FA does not comment on its social drugs policy regulations.", "A goat has predicted the winner of Sunday's Six Nations rugby match between Italy and Wales.\n\nLilian, who lives at Cefn Mably Farm Park, near Cardiff, uses two buckets to select her favourite side.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nFormer England batsman Kevin Pietersen says he will not be entering this year's Indian Premier League auction.\n\nPietersen was released by Rising Pune Supergiants in December after injury restricted him to only four games for them in the Twenty20 series last year.\n\n\"My winter has been too busy with all my travel and I don't want to spend April/May away too,\" he tweeted.\n\nThis winter, the 36-year-old has played in South Africa's T20 Challenge and Australia's T20 Big Bash League.\n\nHe is also to play a second season with Quetta Gladiators in the Pakistan Super League in February and March.\n\nThis year's IPL auction will take place in Bangalore on Monday, 20 February.\n\nPietersen played in the IPL for Royal Challengers Bangalore in 2009 and 2010, and Delhi Daredevils in 2012 and 2014.\n\nMewnwhile, Pietersen has been fined 5,000 Australian dollars (£3,000) for his on-air comments criticising an umpiring decision while playing for the Melbourne Stars during a Big Bash League semi-final.\n\nPietersen was wearing a microphone when he criticised an umpire's decision to turn down a caught behind appeal against Perth Scorchers batsman Sam Whiteman on 24 January.\n\n\"That was a shocker, an absolute shocker,\" Pietersen was heard saying while fielding during the Scorchers' run chase.\n\nAfter the match, Whiteman admitted he had hit the ball, while umpire Shawn Craig conceded he had made an error.\n\nPietersen has 48 hours to decide whether to appeal and have the issue heard by a Cricket Australia code of conduct commissioner.", "The world is getting its first look at Donald Trump the Diplomat. He looks a lot like Donald Trump the Candidate, Donald Trump the Businessman and Donald Trump the Reality Television Host.\n\nHe's brash. He has a temper. He's willing to say impolite things. He can be bullying or ingratiating, depending on his own internal calculations.\n\nSuch attributes made him must-see television on The Apprentice. It helped him land blockbuster real-estate deals in boom times and stay one step ahead of financial collapse when business went bad.\n\nIt's an open question whether it will be effective as a way to assert national authority on the world stage. There's no doubt, however, that it represents a sharp break from how US presidents have conducted themselves in the past, with carefully managed foreign interactions that seldom deviate from a prearranged script.\n\nPerhaps it's better to say that what the world is getting is its first look at Donald Trump the Un-Diplomat.\n\nMultiple media accounts on Wednesday described Mr Trump's recent phone conversations with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, based on reports from senior government officials and leaked transcripts of the communications.\n\nThe president told Australia's leader that an agreement the Obama administration had negotiated to admit entry of more than a thousand refugees currently detained in Australia was \"the worst deal ever\" and described his conversation with Mr Turnbull as the \"worst call by far\" among those he had conducted with world leaders that day.\n\nAustralian PM Malcom Turnbull says his conversation with Donald Trump was candid and frank\n\nThe discussion, scheduled for an hour, ended after about 25 minutes.\n\nIn his call with Mr Nieto, Mr Trump reportedly said Mexico \"had not done a good job\" knocking out its \"bad hombres\". An Associated Press article reported that Mr Trump had threatened to send US troops into Mexico, but other media outlets were unable to confirm this or said the remark was made in jest.\n\nIn both episodes, Mr Trump reportedly took time to boast about the size of his inauguration crowd - a recurring theme in his public remarks since becoming president.\n\nAccounts of the conversations differ dramatically from the official White House readouts, which paint a sterile picture of leaders embracing the \"enduring strength and closeness\" of their nation's relationships and discussing common interests.\n\nAccording to CNN reporter Jim Acosta, however, the reality is far different, as a source told him Mr Trump's conversations \"are turning faces white\" in the White House.\n\nA subsequent tweet by Mr Trump condemning the Australian refugee agreement seemed to confirm that the Turnbull conversation was more contentious than the original readout would indicate.\n\nThe morning after the reporting double-whammy - further evidence that this administration already leaks more than a Swiss-cheese boat - Mr Trump addressed the swirling controversy.\n\n\"When you hear about the tough phone calls I'm having, don't worry about it,\" he said, his New York accent a touch thicker than usual. \"They're tough. We have to be tough. It's time we're going to be a little tough, folks. We're taken advantage of by every nation in the world, virtually. It's not going to happen anymore\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nIt's the kind of in-your-face attitude that Mr Trump's supporters have long said they admired and wanted in the White House, although it has left much of the traditional foreign policy establishment stumbling to the fainting couches.\n\n\"This kind of behaviour generates a deep uncertainty on the part of other countries about whether they can trust America - and trust in America is the foundation on which much of the current world order is structured,\" writes Vox's Zach Beauchamp. \"If Trump continues to behave this erratically, the consequences could be, well, unpredictable - and that's scary.\"\n\nMr Trump's foreign interactions haven't been all tough talk, however. A few weeks after his surprise election, Mr Trump spoke with Pakistani Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif and, according to that nation's readout of the conversation, the then-president-elect was effusive in his praise.\n\nDonald Trump's negotiating strategy is outlined in The Art of the Deal\n\n\"President Trump said Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif you have a very good reputation,\" the release read. \"Your country is amazing with tremendous opportunities. Pakistanis are one of the most intelligent people. I am ready and willing to play any role that you want me to play to address and find solutions to the outstanding problems.\"\n\nIn his 1987 book, The Art of the Deal, Mr Trump explained what he saw as the keys to good negotiating. One of them was to be nice, but \"fight back hard\" if you think you're being treated unfairly.\n\nAnother is to never show weakness.\n\n\"The worst thing you can possibly do in a deal is seem desperate to make it,\" he writes. \"That makes the other guy smell blood, and you're dead.\"\n\nDonald Trump the Un-Diplomat seems to be putting those maxims to use early and often in his global interactions - no matter who is on the other end of the line.", "A former Royal Canadian Mint employee has been sentenced to 30 months in prison for stealing gold coins by concealing them in his rectum.\n\nThe 35-year-old, who was found guilty last November, was caught after he had successfully sold 17 of the gold pieces through Ottawa Gold Buyers.\n\nPassing sentence on Thursday, he ruled that Lawrence should serve another 30 months in prison if he fails to pay the penalty within three years of his release.\n\nLawrence worked at the Royal Canadian Mint from 2008 until 2015\n\nInvestigators found vaseline and latex gloves in the mint employee's locker.\n\nJudge Doody said these items \"could have been used to facilitate insertion of gold items inside his rectum\", reports the Toronto Star.\n\nThe 17 laundered pucks weighed as much as 264g apiece and were sold for sums up to $7,300 each between 2014 and 2015.\n\nLawrence was convicted of conveying gold out of the mint, breach of trust by a public official and possession of property obtained by crime.\n\nHe used the money to buy a boat in Florida and build a house in Jamaica, the court heard.\n\nLawrence's job was to purify gold and he occasionally worked alone in an area not covered by security cameras.\n\nHe worked at the mint from 2008 to 2015.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Judge Gorsuch spoke of his \"most solemn assignment\"\n\nPresident Trump's Supreme Court pick, Judge Neil Gorsuch, is the youngest such nominee in a quarter of a century.\n\nThe 49-year-old Colorado native, whose legal pedigree includes Harvard and Oxford, would succeed the late Justice Antonin Scalia if confirmed.\n\nHe is favoured by many conservatives who consider him to espouse a similarly strict interpretation of law as Scalia.\n\nJudge Gorsuch was first nominated to the 10th US Circuit Court of Appeals by former President George W Bush in 2006.\n\nJudge Gorsuch began his law career clerking for Supreme Court Justices Byron White and Anthony Kennedy, the latter of whom he could now serve alongside.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. President Donald Trump: \"Was that a surprise? Was it?\"\n\nHe worked in a private law practice in Washington for a decade and served as the principal deputy assistant associate attorney general at the Justice Department under the Bush administration.\n\nJudge Gorsuch graduated from Columbia University and Harvard Law School, where former President Barack Obama was a classmate, and earned a doctorate in legal philosophy at Oxford University.\n\nPerhaps it was during his time in England that he accumulated what his former law partner, Mark Hansen, has said was \"an inexhaustible store\" of Winston Churchill quotes.\n\nJudge Gorsuch - who reportedly likes to fly-fish and hunt - lives in Boulder with his wife Louise and two daughters, where he is also an adjunct law professor at the University of Colorado.\n\nIf confirmed by the Senate, he would become the only Protestant on the current bench. The other justices are Jewish and Catholic.\n\nHis family is well-connected in Republican establishment politics.\n\nHis mother, Anne Gorsuch Burford, was the first female director of the Environmental Protection Agency during the Reagan administration.\n\nHe is known for his clear and concise writing style, navigating the most complex legal issues as deftly as the double-black diamond slopes on which he is reputedly an expert skier in the snow-capped mountain state he calls home.\n\nHe argued against euthanasia in his 2006 book The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia.\n\n\"All human beings are intrinsically valuable and the intentional taking of human life by private persons is always wrong,\" he wrote.\n\nIn a 2005 article in the National Review, Judge Gorsuch argued that \"American liberals have become addicted to the courtroom\".\n\nHe said they keep \"relying on judges and lawyers rather than elected leaders and the ballot box, as the primary means of effecting their social agenda\".\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The Supreme Court has been without a full bench for almost a full year.\n\nJudge Gorsuch has never ruled on abortion, and he is not expected to call into question high-profile rulings on that issue or gay marriage.\n\nHis conservative outlook cements Mr Trump's campaign promise to nominate a judge \"in the mould\" of Justice Scalia, restoring the nine-seat high court's 5-4 conservative majority.\n\nMuch like the late Scalia, the Ivy-League educated judge is known to support textualism, or the interpretation of law according to its plain text.\n\nHe also maintains a strict interpretation of the US Constitution, or how it was originally understood by the Founding Fathers.\n\nWhile sitting on the bench of the 10th Circuit, Judge Gorsuch sided with groups that successfully challenged the Obama administration's requirements for employers to provide health insurance that includes contraception in the Hobby Lobby Stores v Sebelius case.\n\nJustice Scalia (front row, second from left) was one of five justices that made up the conservative majority on the court\n\nJudge Gorsuch has also expressed concern about \"executive overreach\", a criticism that was often directed at the Obama administration's use of presidential orders to overcome congressional gridlock.\n\nHe has sharply questioned a landmark Supreme Court ruling determining that courts should defer to government agencies when it comes to interpretations of ambiguous federal laws.\n\nConservatives blame the 1984 decision involving the Chevron oil company for handing too much power to the regulatory state.\n\nIn an August 2016 concurring opinion, Judge Gorsuch wrote that \"executive bureaucracies [were being allowed] to swallow huge amounts of core judicial and legislative power and concentrate federal power in a way that seems more than a little difficult to square with the Constitution of the framers' design\".\n\nIn a 2013 case, he upheld a lower court's ruling that a police officer was protected under qualified-immunity law after he used a stun gun on a 22-year-old student, who died from the incident.", "Competitors have been taking part in the Wind Games 2017.\n\nMore than 80 teams and 200 flyers from around the world met in Spain for the event.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nWest Brom boss Tony Pulis says he does not \"give a damn\" about Saido Berahino's future because the Stoke City striker is no longer his problem.\n\nPotters boss Mark Hughes confirmed Berahino, who joined the Potters in January, had served an eight-week suspension when he was at West Brom.\n\nHis comments follow newspaper reports Berahino was banned after failing an out-of-competition drugs test.\n\n\"Anything Stoke asked for, we told them the truth,\" Pulis told BBC WM Sport.\n\n\"We never picked him again because his fitness levels, mental levels, were never what we wanted.\n\n\"This club has been absolutely fantastic towards Saido. The way it's protected him, the way it's looked after him. He should be really, really grateful.\"\n\nThe 23-year-old is set to return to the Hawthorns with Stoke in the Premier League on Saturday.\n\nAsked whether Hughes was the man to help Berahino, Pulis said: \"Personally, I don't give a damn now.\n\n\"I've spent two and a half years at this club and he's not my problem anymore. I wish him all the best.\"\n\nPulis would not comment on the nature of the ban because it was a \"personal issue\", but he said Berahino never returned to the form he produced before West Brom rejected a bid from Tottenham for the striker in August 2015.\n\n\"Saido was very good the first six months I was at this club,\" said the Welshman. \"He didn't go to Tottenham, and from that point on it's been a real struggle in every way, shape and form.\"\n\nBBC Sport contacted Berahino's representative for comment, but has received no reply. The FA does not comment on its social drugs policy regulations.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Footage from the BFI shows the journey of a Ford Model T car driving down Ben Nevis in 1911\n\nArtists have been sought to create a life-size bronze replica of a Ford Model T car that was driven to the summit of Ben Nevis in 1911.\n\nHenry Alexander Jr, the son of Scotland's first Ford dealer, drove the Model T up and then down the mountain.\n\nThe publicity stunt was to show that the mass produced American car was superior to hand-crafted British ones.\n\nHighland Council has sought a contractor to develop, cast and install the sculpture in Fort William.\n\nThe replica is to be installed in the town's Cameron Square.\n\nThe footage from more than 100 years ago is in the care of BFI’s Britain on Film collection\n\nFootage from the BFI’s Britain on Film collection shows the Model T on its descent of Ben Nevis\n\nIn a notice inviting bids for the work, Highland Council said that up to £89,000 was available for the contract.\n\nA group called The Ben Bronze Model T has been promoting the idea of the statue in Fort William, the nearest town to Ben Nevis.\n\nIn 2011, a team of about 60 volunteers carried a dismantled replica of a Model T Ford car up and then back down from the summit of Ben Nevis.\n\nThe attempt, made in strong winds, hail and snow, was successfully completed.\n\nA mock up of the planned sculpture\n\nVolunteers carried wheels, seats and the chassis. Other parts of the car were put into 40 bags weighing 10 pounds (4kg) each.\n\nAfter being reassembled on the summit the car was again dismantled for the descent.\n\nParts of the that replica car would be available to artists as templates for the sculpture, Highland Council said.\n\nFootage of the original drive on Ben Nevis was thought to have been lost, before being found.\n\nThe film, which is in the care of the British Film Institute, shows a peat bank being dynamited to make the journey a bit smoother for the Model T.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho says certain members of his squad need to realise the importance of winning.\n\nUnited are unbeaten in 14 Premier League games but have drawn their past three and been sixth in the table after each round of matches since 6 November.\n\n\"Playing to win, having the responsibility to win, and coping with the pressure of winning is something that has to belong to your natural habitat,\" said Mourinho.\n\n\"For some guys, it doesn't.\"\n\nSix players in the Old Trafford club's first-team squad have not won a domestic league title or major international tournament - Luke Shaw, Matteo Darmian, Jesse Lingard, Ander Herrera, Anthony Martial and Marcus Rashford.\n\nMourinho did not name any individuals but, speaking before Sunday's trip to champions Leicester (16:00 GMT kick-off), he said his squad contains players who \"need time to go out of a comfort or a protected zone where they don't think the aim is to win\".\n\nMeanwhile, midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger has been added to United's Europa League squad after being left out for the group stages.\n\nThe 32-year-old former Germany captain will now be available for the last-32 tie against Saint-Etienne later this month.\n\nHaving signed four players last summer, United did not buy anyone during the January transfer window - but Mourinho has identified the men he wants in the summer.\n\nIn recent seasons, United have become embroiled in negotiations with Real Madrid defender Sergio Ramos and forward Gareth Bale, and midfielder Cesc Fabregas when he was at Barcelona, but the Mourinho says he will not chase \"impossible\" transfers.\n\n\"I know what I want and I am very realistic,\" said the Portuguese. \"I know what are the impossible targets and I don't like my club to participate in them.\n\n\"It is a waste of time. It is a gift to the agents to help them improve their situation.\"\n\nGiven they have been in sixth place since early November, there is a real possibility that United will fail to qualify for the Champions League for a second successive year.\n\nThat would cost them more than £20m in sponsorship income due to a clause in their £750m, 10-year deal with Adidas, but is unlikely to impact on their ability to attract top-class players because of Mourinho's reputation and the club's ability to pay top salaries.\n\nMourinho's priorities will be to bring in at least one \"game-changing forward\" and bolster his defence significantly.\n\nAtletico Madrid forward Antoine Griezmann has been heavily linked, although United officials have played down a story from France that personal terms with the 25-year-old have already been agreed.\n\nA formal move for Benfica's Victor Lindelof is anticipated after United ruled out a January move for the 22-year-old Sweden defender due to his near £40m buyout clause.\n\nMonaco defensive midfielder Tiemoue Bakayoko is also of interest to Mourinho, with England winger Ashley Young and Schweinsteiger top of the list of likely departures.", "Why film maker Matt Callanan has hidden £10 notes around Cardiff for others to spend.", "A US-based human rights campaigner has apologised for mistakenly accusing BBC Newsnight presenter Emily Maitlis of running an alleged CIA torture site.\n\nKenneth Roth, director of Human Rights Watch, tweeted a picture of her, saying President Trump \"chose [a] woman who ran CIA black site for torture\".\n\nMr Roth had meant to tweet a picture of Gina Haspel, named as CIA deputy director by Mr Trump on Thursday.\n\nMaitlis replied: \"Erm. This is me.\" Mr Roth then deleted the tweet.\n\nMr Trump's appointment of Ms Haspel was met with claims from human rights groups that she played a role in secret \"black site\" prisons run by CIA officers and contractors.\n\nMs Haspel, who joined the CIA in 1985, ran a prison in Thailand where terror suspects were waterboarded.\n\nSo-called black sites were secret overseas locations where the CIA carried out interrogation techniques. They were closed by the former US President Barack Obama.\n\nNewsnight's Emily Maitlis said she was \"pretty sure\" she had never run a CIA black site for torture\n\nChristopher Anders, deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Washington office, told the New York Times he was \"gravely concerned\" about Ms Haspel's appointment.\n\nAnnouncing the decision, CIA director Mike Pompeo said Ms Haspel was \"an exemplary intelligence officer\" with an \"uncanny ability to get things done and to inspire those around her\".\n\nBut the BBC's Maitlis said she was \"pretty sure\" she herself had never run a CIA black site for torture.\n\nA spokesman for Human Rights Watch, Andrew Stroehlein, said he had \"no idea\" how the mix-up had occurred.\n\nHe added: \"BBC interviews can be tough but not to that level. Seriously: Very sorry. Ken will pick this up in US time.\"\n\nMr Roth tweeted that he was \"sorry\" for posting the wrong picture.\n\nBut this was not enough for some critics, with one tweeting: \"Are you going to apologise to her?\" and another posting: \"'Sorry'? That's all you got? Try little harder Ken!\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. \"I remember... looking at Roger Dodds with his big bunch of keys, locking the door, and that was horrifying\", one victim said\n\nPredatory sex offender Roger Dodds was left free to abuse his victims by Sheffield City Council despite bosses having known about his offending for years, BBC News has found.\n\nDodds, who was jailed earlier for 16 years after pleading guilty to four counts of indecent assault, was allowed to operate as an employee of the council \"without sufficient challenge, accountability or consequences\", a council-commissioned report found.\n\nCouncil officials not only knew about his behaviour, but also failed to report his activities to police and gave him early retirement with an enhanced pension.\n\nKenny Dale, who was abused by Dodds in the early 1990s and has waived his right to anonymity, said: \"I was the victim of a horrible man and the council are to blame for that.\"\n\nSheffield City Council said it \"accepted responsibility\" and was \"deeply sorry\" Dodds had been allowed to commit these offences while in its employment.\n\nDodds abused at least one man while heading up the council's Grants and Awards Department\n\nDodds, now 81, was employed in 1975 to head the council's Grants and Awards Department.\n\nThe unit was responsible for providing financial support to students attending college or university. However, Dodds used his position to sexually abuse young men, typically in their late teens.\n\nOne victim, who did not want to be named, said he was assaulted during their very first meeting.\n\nHe told the BBC: \"Dodds was asking me things about my studies, and, very gradually, his left hand started to feel its way into my right jeans pocket. When that started to happen, I just became frozen and unable to move.\"\n\nAccording to former colleagues, Dodds was part of a club that operated within the council swapping hardcore pornographic magazines in internal envelopes and screening adult films in a basement room.\n\nHe was first investigated by Sheffield City Council in the early 1980s after a series of allegations were made against him.\n\nThe complaints gave one employee the courage to tell managers about the abuse he had been subjected to.\n\nRichard Rowe said he grew to fear turning up for work as a result of his abuse at the hands of Dodds\n\nRichard Rowe, who has also waived his legal right to anonymity, said he was subjected to \"terrifying\" assaults over an 18-month period.\n\nHowever, he said when he told bosses what was happening, he was told to stay quiet.\n\n\"They asked for specifics and I gave them as much details as I could bring myself to voice. But they knew, they knew exactly,\" he said.\n\n\"At the end of the interview it was, 'there is nothing more to tell us, so go back to the office and you do not speak about this inside or outside the building'. I clearly remember that warning.\"\n\nFollowing the investigation, Dodds was moved to a position working with schools.\n\nAn investigation carried out for Sheffield City Council, and seen by the BBC, said he was given \"substantial unregulated and unsupervised access to schools\".\n\nThe report continues that \"there appears to have been no disciplinary consequences to his behaviour at the time\".\n\nNor was his transfer a chastening experience for Dodds.\n\nKenny Dale said he blamed the council for failing to stop Dodds\n\nMr Dale began working at the council in the early 1990s and, despite warnings from colleagues, applied for a post working alongside Dodds.\n\n\"Everyone told me not to go for it,\" he said, \"[but] I didn't think that kind of behaviour would be allowed\".\n\nHe said Dodds began touching him inappropriately almost immediately and continued to do so despite his objections and the lack of challenge from managers.\n\nAnother investigation by the local authority was launched and in 1993 Roger Dodds left the council.\n\nHowever, despite Mr Dale's insistence Dodds should not be given a payoff, he was given an early retirement package that included an enhanced pension.\n\nMr Dale said he blames the council for the abuse he suffered.\n\n\"The council are so responsible, more responsible than he was,\" he said.\n\nRoger Dodds was the subject of two internal investigations while working for Sheffield City Council\n\nFollowing the second internal investigation officials concluded a criminal investigation should have been launched.\n\nIn 2008, one of Dodds' victims went to South Yorkshire Police with his allegations.\n\nHowever, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) decided not to prosecute at the time - a CPS spokesman said its files did not contain details on why that decision was taken.\n\nDodds was eventually charged in 2016 after another complainant came forward in 2014.\n\nThe police investigation prompted the council to commission consultants to investigate how it had handled Dodds.\n\nThe 2008 review concluded: \"It was clearly wrong that Dodds should receive early retirement. He was not subject to any official sanction by the council for his alleged behaviour.\"\n\nThe 28-page dossier also revealed repeated failures by the council, describing the authority's action as clearly unacceptable not just by present-day standards but by the policies and legislation in place at the time.\n\nIt conceded the council did not know how many other victims there might be.\n\nIts conclusion was damning, stating: \"The actions of Roger Dodds have caused enormous distress to his victims, and the city council has been complicit in allowing Dodds to operate apparently without sufficient challenge, accountability or consequences.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nHuddersfield showed their promotion credentials with an impressive home win over Brighton, who missed the chance to extend their Championship lead.\n\nThe Seagulls remain one point ahead of second-placed Newcastle.\n\nTommy Smith's angled shot put the hosts in front before Tomer Hemed rounded the goalkeeper to equalise.\n\nNahki Wells fired into the top corner and Elias Kachunga nodded in to make it 3-1 before half-time, and Lewis Dunk's red card added to Brighton's misery.\n\nCentre-back Dunk was sent off for a second yellow card midway through the second half for a lunging challenge on Izzy Brown, having been booked in the first period for a foul on the same player.\n\nThe Terriers' seventh win in nine league matches keeps them fifth, but they are now just two points behind fourth-placed Leeds, who they play at home on Sunday.\n\nBrighton, knocked out of the FA Cup by non-league Lincoln five days earlier, were uncharacteristically poor in defence and conceded three goals in a league match for the first time in almost 12 months.\n\nThe outstanding Rajiv van La Parra had already hit the post before full-back Smith's attempted cross landed back at his feet, and his subsequent shot flew in at the near post.\n\nHemed pounced on a poor back header from Huddersfield's Aaron Mooy to level, but that proved to be the only clear chance they created in the entire 90 minutes.\n\nWells' excellent finish from just inside the box was his 100th goal in English football, and it was the former Bradford forward's shot which goalkeeper David Stockdale palmed into the air for Kachunga to head in Huddersfield's third from close range.\n\nAfter Dunk's dismissal, the fifth of his career, there was still time for Australian midfielder Mooy to strike the upright from long range and Stockdale to tip over a powerful attempt from substitute Kasey Palmer.\n\n\"It was a good one, maybe one of the best this season. We scored three goals and had chances for more, and conceded a sloppy goal which was easy to avoid, but it was very good.\n\n\"We are fresh and still very hungry and greedy, even when we are humble and we know we're playing against the best team in the division.\n\n\"We gave ourselves no limits, we try our best and today our best was very good.\"\n\n\"Every now and again you get a real bad one, and that was a real bad one.\n\n\"We were nowhere near the levels you need to play any game in this division, never mind one as good as Huddersfield, and on their own ground too.\n\n\"If we put in another performance like this at Brentford on Sunday, we will lose again. We need to be far better.\n\n\"Lewis Dunk has played the ball but he was already on a yellow and he's given the referee a decision to make. It's another one for him and something he has to learn from. We are going to miss him. It's a blow.\"\n• None Attempt saved. Joe Lolley (Huddersfield Town) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Collin Quaner.\n• None Attempt missed. Kasey Palmer (Huddersfield Town) right footed shot from outside the box is too high from a direct free kick.\n• None Attempt saved. Kasey Palmer (Huddersfield Town) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Elias Kachunga.\n• None Offside, Huddersfield Town. Aaron Mooy tries a through ball, but Nahki Wells is caught offside.\n• None Aaron Mooy (Huddersfield Town) hits the left post with a right footed shot from outside the box. Assisted by Elias Kachunga.\n• None Oliver Norwood (Brighton and Hove Albion) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt saved. Kasey Palmer (Huddersfield Town) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Elias Kachunga. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Former Chelsea and England midfielder Frank Lampard has retired, bringing to an end a 21-year professional career.\n\nThe 38-year-old, who spent last year with New York City in Major League Soccer in the US, announced his decision on social media on Thursday.\n\n\"Whilst I have received a number of exciting offers to continue playing, at 38 I feel now is the time to begin the next chapter in my life,\" said Lampard.\n\n\"I'm grateful to the Football Association for the opportunity to study for my coaching qualifications and I look forward to pursuing the off-field opportunities that this decision opens.\"\n\nHe won 11 major trophies, including three Premier League titles and the Champions League in 2012. Lampard also won four FA Cups, two League Cups and the Europa League.\n• None Lampard v Gerrard - who was better? Read the stats and cast your vote\n• None Listen: Lampard will go to the very top of management - Redknapp\n• None Only Ryan Giggs (632) and Gareth Barry (615) have made more Premier League appearances than Lampard (609).\n• None His total of 177 goals is the Premier League's fourth highest behind Alan Shearer, Wayne Rooney and Andy Cole.\n• None He has scored more goals from outside the box than any other Premier League player (41).\n• None Lampard scored against a record 39 different teams in the Premier League.\n• None No England player has scored as many penalties as Lampard (nine), excluding shootouts.\n\nFrank Lampard's legendary status and standing as one of the greatest players of the modern era is cemented by statistics.\n\nWhen he left Chelsea in the summer of 2014, he was the club's record goalscorer with 211 goals from 649 appearances - a truly remarkable return for a consummate professional plying his trade in midfield.\n\nLampard was central to the most successful spell in Chelsea's history as he and they completed a clean sweep of trophies at home and abroad, a haul that reflected his stellar contribution.\n\nHe was the model of consistency, respected and admired by team-mates and opponents alike.\n\nLike his great contemporary Steven Gerrard he struggled to transfer club successes to his England career, but he was still a fine performer on the international stage.\n\nLampard's next step looks certain to be into coaching - and with the knowledge gained over a lifetime from his father Frank Sr as well as working with managers such as Jose Mourinho, Carlo Ancelotti and Guus Hiddink, few would bet against him adding to his successes in this phase of his career.\n\nLampard joined Chelsea from boyhood club West Ham for a fee of £11m in 2001.\n\nHis club-record 211 goals helped the Blues win the Champions League, three Premier Leagues, four FA Cups, two League Cups, the Europa League and a Community Shield.\n\nHe played a pivotal role as Jose Mourinho's side delivered Chelsea's first top-flight championship in half a century, scoring 13 goals including both in the title-winning 2-0 victory at Bolton in April 2005.\n\nHe added 16 league goals the following season as Chelsea retained their title, finishing runner-up to Barcelona forward Ronaldinho in both the Ballon d'Or and Fifa World Player of the Year awards.\n\nLampard scored 10 or more Premier League goals in 10 successive seasons for Chelsea, reaching 22 as he collected a third Premier League winner's medal in 2009-10.\n\nChampions League success finally followed in 2011-12 as Lampard captained the side to a penalty shootout win over Bayern Munich in the absence of the suspended John Terry.\n\n\"He was definitely a world-class player for a long period of time,\" said BBC football analyst and former Chelsea winger Pat Nevin. \"I don't think we rate him as highly as we should do.\n\n\"He is kind of remembered just for scoring goals. That he was phenomenal at. There are very few people on the planet who can score that number of goals from midfield.\n\n\"He was a better all-round footballer than he was given credit for. When he was moved further back at the end of his career for Chelsea, he realised that his passing, short and long, was exceptional.\"\n\nLampard played a key role in bringing success back to Stamford Bridge, but he was unable to help replicate that trophy-laden touch with the national side.\n\nHe made his England debut against Belgium in 1999, going on to win the same amount of caps as Sir Bobby Charlton, but missed out on a place in both the Euro 2000 and World Cup 2002 squads.\n\nLampard scored three times as England reached the Euro 2004 quarter-finals, and finding a way to fit him and Steven Gerrard into the same midfield was seen as the solution to the national side's problems.\n\nThe pair formed the core of what was tagged England's 'golden generation', but both missed a penalty in a World Cup quarter-final shootout defeat by Portugal in 2006 and England failed to qualify for the Euros two years later.\n\nA last-16 exit followed against Germany in the 2010 World Cup and Lampard missed Euro 2012 through injury, before playing his final major tournament for England in Brazil in 2014, when England went out in the group stage.\n\n\"From an England point of view he was pretty spectacular,\" added Nevin. \"There were times when he got a lot of stick. He still got all those caps and still scored a whole bunch of goals.\"\n\nLampard began his career at West Ham, making his debut in January 1996 having progressed through the club's youth system. But the presence at the club of his dad Frank Lampard Sr, and uncle Harry Redknapp as manager, meant the teenager was singled out for criticism.\n\nLampard even claimed in his autobiography that some Hammers fans cheered when he broke his leg during a game against Aston Villa.\n\nLater he would face a frosty reception when he controversially arrived at Manchester City after agreeing to join New York City - the MLS franchise set up by the Premier League club and the New York Yankees baseball team - in 2014.\n\nLampard refused to celebrate when he scored against Chelsea, and while his performances in Manchester saw his deal at Etihad Stadium extended, it prompted an angry reaction in New York.\n\nLampard finally made his MLS debut in August 2015, but critics were underwhelmed by his performances and, after returning from an injury this season, he was jeered by his own fans and described as \"the worst signing in MLS history\".\n\nBut he rediscovered his scoring touch and the city celebrated Frank Lampard Day in September after he scored his 300th career goal. He went on to reach double figures in the MLS before announcing his time at New York had come to an end.\n\n\"It was an incredible career when you consider he was written off right at the start and told he might not go that far,\" said former Scotland international Nevin.\n\nNevin, a key member of the Chelsea side that won promotion from English football's second tier in 1984, says Lampard is capable of doing anything he wants to in the game.\n\n\"He's a hugely intelligent guy,\" said Nevin. \"He could actually go into an area where he could be running part of a club. If he wants to go down that route he is perfectly capable.\n\n\"Looking at his capabilities, anything within the game is possible for him, be it coaching, be it managing, be it working with the FA.\n\n\"I hope the game doesn't lose him, but I don't think it will. I think he loves the game too much.\"\n\nMatch of the Day presenter and former England international Gary Lineker recently went to New York to speak to Lampard about his future.\n\n\"Lampard says he is very keen on getting into coaching, which is not a path too many English players of his calibre have taken recently when their playing days ended,\" said Lineker.\n\n\"Part of that is down to them having other options. Punditry is one of them and I am sure he would be very good at it - there would be plenty of people trying to get him to work for them.\n\n\"But it would be nice to see someone like Lampard go into the coaching game, with his intelligence and passion and especially because he wants to test himself as a manager.\"\n\nFormer Chelsea midfielder and assistant manager Ray Wilkins told BBC Radio 5 live: \"Frank's been exceptional and ranks among best that have ever played for Chelsea with his goals, his creativity, his work ethic. He's everything anyone wants as a coach or manager.\n\n\"I would love him to go [and manage] a Premier League side and not anywhere else. He knows what the Premier League is all about. Go in where you know - he knows top-quality international footballers. Give him the opportunity to do his stuff.\"", "Is your freezer jam-packed full of mysterious foods from a time long-forgotten? Maybe your freezer is a stop on the way to the bin for all kinds of odds and ends you don't know what to do with. With a few simple tricks, you can eliminate waste and save money on food.\n\n1. Save your leftovers by flat-packing them in bags that stack easily.\n\n2. Make using up leftovers easier by writing the expiry date on the bags, not the day you froze it. Most cooked foods keep for 3 months. You'll find it easier to grab something that needs using up quickly, without doing the math.\n\n3. Save leftover stock, coconut milk, chilli, ginger in ice cube trays to make an instant soup, straight from the freezer. Just add straight-to-wok noodles, coriander and any other vegetables you fancy.\n\n4. Flash-freeze loose items like sliced bananas, berries, sliced chillies or ginger if you want to use a little at a time. Place the food on a baking tray and freeze before transferring to a sealable freezer bag. Then you can use as much or as little as you need.\n\n5. Know how long you should keep meat and fish to avoid the straight-to-bin syndrome:", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nAs the start of the Six Nations nears, the respective coaches spent as much time talking about who wouldn't feature in the opening weekend as would.\n\nThe duration of Ireland fly-half Johnny Sexton's absence was a theme for coach Joe Schmidt, while England counterpart Eddie Jones' - sporting a shiner of his own - updated the media on his host of walking wounded.\n\nScotland's Vern Cotter rued the absence of props WP Nel and Alasdair Dickinson, while Wales' Rob Howley is without first-choice forwards Luke Charteris and Taulupe Faletau.\n• None Get rugby news as it happens by signing up for our new alerts\n• None BBC coverage of the 2017 Six Nations\n• None Matt Dawson scored 12 - can you beat him on our rugby quiz?\n\nSexton will miss Saturday's meeting with Scotland with a tight calf, but Schmidt raised the prospect that the 63-cap Leinster fly-half could also miss Ireland's second match against Italy on 11 February.\n\n\"Realistically, Johnny is an outside chance for Italy. He's probably played about 82 minutes in the last eight test matches,\" said Schmidt.\n\n\"In the three Six Nations I have been involved in, Johnny has dominated the number 10 position so we're still hopeful that he can come back in and do that for us.\"\n\nPaddy Jackson, who deputised for Sexton in Ireland's autumn Test win over Australia, has been given another chance to stake his claim, while flanker Sean O'Brien is fit again at openside.\n\nBefore taking on the England role, Jones had suggested that flanker Chris Robshaw was short of international class.\n\nBut, with Robshaw out for the tournament with a shoulder injury, Jones admits Maro Itoje, who has been switched to six from the second row, has a tough task to match up to the Harlequin in the opening match against France.\n\n\"Itoje has got big shoes to fill,\" said Jones. \"Chris Robshaw has been one of our integral players with his work-rate but Maro has trained well in that position and we believe he can make a really good fist of it.\n\nProp Joe Marler, meanwhile, has claimed that drinking two pints of milk a day is behind his rapid recovery from a leg fracture that was expected to rule him out of the team's first two fixtures.\n\n\"Your mum always says milk is really good for you and you don't really believe it until you need it because you've got a broken leg, so I just drank loads of it,\" he said.\n\n\"I drank two pints a day and it's something I'll keep doing because it's really tasty.\"\n\nCotter is keen to keep his Scotland players' feet on the ground after winning four out of five of their matches since last year's Six Nations and coming within a point of Australia in their solitary defeat.\n\n\"Can we win the whole thing? I think the trap is every year that Scotland get talked up,\" said the New Zealander.\n\n\"We are realistic. We know which teams are ranked ahead of us, we know what the rugby hierarchy is at the moment. It's up to us to change that.\"\n\nHooker Fraser Brown will make only his fourth start ahead of 102-cap Ross Ford and Cotter says that the Glasgow man's defensive skills swung selection.\n\n\"Fraser is very good defensively and close around ruck time. We know Ireland go to one-pass or two-pass plays and we need to be robust around that area.\"\n\nWebb returns as Wales make five changes\n\nWith Wales' opening match followed six days later by defending champions England's visit to Cardiff, interim head coach Howley has put his side through two full-contact training matches to get them match ready.\n\nWelshman Nigel Owens, who took charge of the 2015 World Cup final, officiated the 50-minute, 15-a-side matches and Howley believes the approach has worked.\n\n\"There has been a lot of energy and enthusiasm over the past two weeks, and we are excited going into Sunday,\" he said.\n\nWales XV to face the Azzurri have collected a total of 677 caps and Howley believes that experience is crucial.\n\n\"The side that's been selected has about a 70% winning ratio in the Six Nations. They know what winning looks and smells like in the Six Nations,\" he said.\n\nFrance coach Guy Noves will give 22-year-old Bordeaux scrum-half Baptiste Serin his Six Nations debut and only third start in the team against England on Saturday.\n\n\"We're convinced we can count on him in the future but we want to try him out in a difficult situation.\" said Noves.\n\n\"If we trust him, he has to show his qualities in the toughest situations. To only play in the lesser matches, that doesn't seem smart to me.\"\n\nMaxime Machenaud drops to the bench despite starting in each of France's three autumn Tests.\n\nFormer Harlequins head coach Conor O'Shea, who took charge in June, wants his Italy side to build on their first-ever win over South Africa in November.\n\nItaly have not beaten Wales since a 23-20 success in Rome in 2007.\n\n\"We want a great, great performance this weekend to make everyone understand that we are on the right track,\" said O'Shea.\n\n\"It is possible to change our history. Sport is very strange and can very quickly change.\"", "Nurdles may sound cute and often look beautiful but the small plastic pellets are a sinister presence on three-quarters of beaches in the UK.\n\nVolunteer nurdle hunters on the Great Winter Nurdle Hunt searched their local shorelines in early February and the survey has found that 73% of 279 shorelines contain the plastics.\n\nIn one 100m-stretch of beach in Cornwall, beachcombers found 127,500 of the lentil-sized pellets - but that is just a fraction of the 53 billion nurdles that are estimated to escape into the UK environment each year.\n\nThe microplastics pose a significant threat to fish and animals that ingest the plastic.\n\nExperts warn that nurdles can soak up chemical pollutants from their surroundings and then release the toxins into the animals that eat them.\n\nAfter the BBC reported the story some nurdle hunters have been getting in touch to explain why they do what they do.\n\nSarah Marshall, a 49-year-old former speech and language therapist, started collecting nurdles two years ago and says she is now addicted to finding the pellets.\n\n\"They look like tiny eggs, some are bigger than others, some are thicker, and they are all different colours,\" she says.\n\n\"They congregate on the tide line and I often use my hands to pick them up - whenever I go to the beach, I cannot help but pick them up.\n\n\"I even found some in Martinique. My daughter says 'mum let's go look for nurdles' - it's like a competition between us,\" she adds.\n\nChristine Hyland, Naomi Hyland and Sarah Marshall at Compton beach on the Isle of Wight\n\nThe threat posed by nurdles to wildlife and the marine ecosystem is the main motivation for Sarah to spend her time picking them up from beaches.\n\nShe normally throws away the collected nurdles but she has also sent samples to the International Pellet Watch who analyse nurdles for the presence of toxic chemicals.\n\nSarah Marshall has been collecting nurdles from beaches in the Isle of Wight for two years\n\nJay Lowein, who is 59 and runs a business, is a recent recruit to the Great Nurdle Hunt.\n\nShe went on her first hunt in Shanklin on the Isle of Wight in February and explained that she used tweezers to pick up the pellets.\n\nTogether with a friend, she collected over 1500 nurdles in one hour.\n\nNurdles on Shanklin beach in the Isle of Wight\n\n\"I'd never even seen them but when I went on the nurdle hunt, I was really shocked at how many there are,\" says Jay.\n\n\"I collect them because I think it's horrible that there is all this plastic floating around.\n\n\"I want to do my bit - I don't want to eat fish that has ingested plastic pellets\", she explains.\n\nDaniel Moore, a 29-year-old PhD student in Durham, found these nurdles at James Bay in March 2015.\n\nNurdles found by Daniel Moore on a beach hunt at James Bay in Millport, Cumbrae\n\nMaranda, a self-employed embroider, took part in her first nurdle hunt this year in the freezing Scottish rain by her house at Dunnet Sands at Britain's most northerly point.\n\n\"I go beachcombing every day - but on this hunt I collected 355 nurdles in 45 minutes,\" she explains.\n\n\"It is back-breaking work - my hands get cold from the freezing water and my specs are always falling down.\n\n\"I do it because I care about the environment - I want to do a bit of good for the world when I'm out there,\" she adds.\n\nA close up of nurdles collected from a beach in Caithness in January\n\nMaranda, who is 44, uses some of the refuse for craft, including twine to make pictures, and she recycles the plastic rubbish she finds.\n\nNurdles are not the only plastic material occupying beaches in the UK.\n\nEmily Cunningham, a 26-year-old marine biologist in Durham, found plastic ribbon and latex from 101 balloons on a beach in Anglesey.\n\nShe believes that they are the remains of balloons sent into the air on mass balloon releases.\n\nEmily collects nurdles almost weekly, whenever she visits the beach, and says that often she finds more plastic than seaweed on Britain's beaches.\n\nRibbon and latex from 101 balloons found by Rhosneigr on the west coast of Anglesey\n\nTina Triggs, who is 44 and works in a supermarket, found 66 plastic cotton buds on a beach in February at Barmouth in north Wales.\n• None The beaches where Lego keeps washing up", "Watch as the second run of the men's Giant Slalom at the Alpine Ski World Championships in St Moritz is delayed after a military air display plane clipped a cable, causing a camera to drop onto the course.\n\nWATCH MORE: Near misses & epic fails at world team slalom\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Think fake news is a new phenomenon? Think again. Dr David Clarke from Sheffield Hallam University looks at a 100-year-old story that fooled the world.\n\nFake news, false stories that masquerade as real news are not new.\n\nIn the spring of 1917 some of Britain's most influential newspapers published a gruesome story that has been called \"the master hoax\" - and I think we finally have proof about where it came from.\n\nBritain was at the time trying to bring China into the war on the Allied side.\n\nIn February a story appeared in the English-language North China Daily News that claimed the Kaiser's forces were \"extracting glycerine out of dead soldiers\".\n\nRumours about processing dead bodies had been in circulation since 1915 but had not been presented as facts by any official source.\n\nThat changed in April when the Times and the Daily Mail published accounts from anonymous sources who claimed to have visited the Kadaververwertungsanstalt, or corpse-utilisation factory.\n\nThe Times ran the story under the headline Germans and their Dead, attributing the claim to two sources - a Belgian newspaper published in England and a story that originally appeared in a German newspaper, Berliner Lokal-Anzeiger on 10 April.\n\nThat German account by reporter Kal Rosner described an unpleasant smell \"as if lime was being burnt\" as he passed the corpse factory.\n\nRosner used the word \"kadaver\", which referred to the bodies of animals - horses and mules - not human bodies.\n\nLater, The Times carried a longer article quoting from an unnamed Belgian source who described in grim detail how the corpses were processed.\n\nA cartoon published soon afterwards by Punch presented the ghoulish story with the caption \"cannon fodder - and after\".\n\nThe German government protested loudly against these \"loathsome and ridiculous\" claims.\n\nBut their protests were drowned out by public expressions of horror from the Chinese ambassador. China declared war against Germany on 14 August 1917.\n\nHowever, until now no one has been able to discover conclusive proof that would settle the mystery of who created the story - and who authorised its transformation from a false rumour to officially-sanctioned \"fact\". I believe we now can.\n\nIt was in 1925 that Sir Austen Chamberlain admitted, in a Commons statement, there was \"never any foundation\" for what he called \"this false report\".\n\nIn the same year the Conservative MP John Charteris - who served as head of intelligence - reportedly admitted, while on a lecture tour of the US, that he had fabricated the story.\n\nThe New York Times revealed how Charteris said he had transposed captions from one of two photographs found on captured German soldiers. One showed a train taking dead horses to be rendered, the other showed a train taking dead soldiers for burial.\n\nThe photo of the horses had the word \"cadaver\" written upon it and Charteris reportedly said he \"had the caption transposed to the picture showing the German dead, and had the photograph sent to a Chinese newspaper in Shanghai\".\n\nOn his return to Britain, Charteris denied making the remarks. Since that time, no one has been able to discover the photographs or any clear documentary evidence that would prove the intelligence services connived with the press to promote the corpse factory lie.\n\nCuttings from the Times, Daily Mail and Daily Express reporting the \"corpse factory\"\n\nBut I have found what I believe to be one of the photographs mentioned by Charteris in a collection of Foreign Office files at The National Archives.\n\nThe black and white image, dated 17 September 1917, clearly shows bodies of German soldiers, tied in bundles, resting on a train behind the front line just as Charteris had described in 1925.\n\nThe covering letter, from a military intelligence officer at Whitehall, is addressed to the government's Director of Information, Lt Col John Buchan, author of The 39 Steps. The letter from MI7, the military's propaganda unit, offers the War Office \"a photograph of Kadavers, forwarded by General Charteris for propaganda purposes\".\n\nIn 1917 MI7 employed 13 officers and 25 paid writers, some whom moonlighted as \"special correspondents\" for national newspapers. One of their most talented agents was Major Hugh Pollard who combined his work in the propaganda department with the role of special correspondent for the Daily Express.\n\nAfter the war Pollard confessed his role in spreading the corpse factory lie to his cousin, Ivor Montague.\n\nWriting in 1970, Montague recalled \"we laughed at his cleverness when he told us how his department had launched the account of the German corpse factories and of how the Hun was using the myriads of trench-war casualties for making soap and margarine.\"\n\nBut lies have consequences. During the 1930s the corpse factory lie was used by the Nazis as proof of British lies during the Great War.\n\nHistorians Joachim Neander and Randal Marlin remind us how these false stories \"encouraged later disbelief when early reports circulated about the Holocaust under Hitler\".", "Scientists are calling for more people to donate their brains to research to help find cures for mental and psychological disorders.", "A stiff upper lip, a pot of tea and a nice orderly queue. So far, so British. But the great British pastime of standing in line may not be as simple as it seems.\n\nAccording to academics if you want to truly master the art of the queue, you need to follow the rules.\n\nIt's all about the power of six, professors say.\n\nPeople will wait for six minutes in a queue before giving up and are unlikely to join a line of more than six people, researchers at the University College London found.\n\nSix is also the magic number when it comes to spacing - gaps of fewer than six inches between people can spark anxiety or stress.\n\nBut the biggest faux pas of all is the push-in; queue jump at your peril.\n\nThe report's author, Adrian Furnham, Professor of Psychology at UCL, said the public nature of queuing means that queue jumping sparks a \"huge sense of injustice\" among those in line.\n\nHe pointed to previous research by Dutch psychologist Geert Hofstede, which claimed: \"The British believe that inequalities between people should be minimized, and everyone should have the autonomy to pursue goals with equal opportunity.\"\n\nThe UCL study was based on a review of academic literature on queuing at banks, cash points and supermarkets.\n\nOther queue no-nos include striking up a conversation while queuing and standing on the wrong side of escalators - though this was mainly a complaint of Londoners who feel tourists \"misuse\" the Underground.\n\nThe report found the most confusing rule for foreigners could be the practice of one person offering their place in the queue to another.\n\nProfessor Furnham said: \"The British have a well-established culture of queuing and a very specific type of queue conduct, one that has been known to confuse many a foreign visitor.\n\n\"In a time when Britain is changing rapidly, and the ways in which we queue are shifting, the psychology behind British queuing is more important than ever - it is one of the keys to unlocking British culture.\"\n• None Is forming an orderly queue really the British way?", "Award winning author Jeanette Winterson has been speaking to the BBC about having to close her deli in Spitalfields because of rising rates.\n\nHer business rates will rise from £21,500 to £54,000 in April.", "Schools have been warning the prime minister that the sums for school budgets do not add up\n\nAfter the NHS and social care, is the next funding crisis going to be in England's schools?\n\nLike a snowball getting bigger as it rolls downhill, momentum is gathering around the warnings of school leaders about impending cash problems.\n\nHead teachers have said a lack of cash might force them to cut school hours.\n\nMinisters were forced by a Parliamentary question to reveal that more than half of academies lacked enough income to cover their expenditure.\n\nAnd school governors - the embodiment of local civic worthies - have threatened to go on strike for the first time, rather than sign off such underfunded budgets.\n\nPetitions and protest letters have been sent to MPs about cuts to jobs and school services - and warning letters from head teachers will have been sent home to alert parents.\n\nGrammar school head teachers have gone a step further and warned that parents might to have to pay to make up the shortfall.\n\nSchool leaders see themselves rather like look-outs on the Titanic shouting out that there's a great big iceberg ahead - backed by the National Audit Office's finding that schools face 8% real-term spending cuts, worth £3bn, by 2020.\n\nThe spending watchdog says costs for schools are outstripping the budgets allocated by the government.\n\nThe spending watchdog says schools will have to find £3bn in budget cuts\n\nThe missing piece in this debate has been any real sign of movement from the government - other than to keep repeating that school funding is at record levels.\n\nBut plenty will be going on behind the scenes, and there is no shortage of \"insiders\" with views on what's happening.\n\nIt's claimed that ministers can't sign a birthday card without getting clearance from 10 Downing Street.\n\nSo education ministers are unable to give any indication of funding changes, in part because a consultation is still taking place and more particularly because it isn't in their gift to decide.\n\nBut there are options thought to be under discussion.\n\nThe government has announced a new formula for allocating funding to schools, responding to years of complaints about regional inequalities.\n\nBut a number of Conservative MPs in rural and suburban areas have been energetically lobbying that this slicing up of the cake is still too much in favour of the inner cities.\n\nIf the formula was shifted around a little, such as putting less emphasis on deprivation, it could shift funding from London and the big cities towards the shires.\n\nThis would not have much electoral cost for the Conservatives as their support is not in these inner-city areas.\n\nBut it would be a big call in terms of political purpose to cut funding from areas of deprivation.\n\nAnother approach would be to start including pupil premium money - targeted at deprived children - into the general funding equation.\n\nThis really would mark the formal detonation of the last pillars of the Cameron and coalition era, for which the pupil premium was a moral touchstone.\n\nThere are other more creative possibilities.\n\nIt was revealed that of the money earmarked for the ill-fated plan turn all schools into academies, £384m had been taken back by the Treasury.\n\nHeads have protested to MPs at the decisions they face in making cuts\n\nThis £384m has been claimed as being enough to make sure that there are no losers in the funding formula shake-up.\n\nIf this cash could be \"rediscovered\" in a virtual shoebox in the Treasury, it could come back into play, getting the government off a funding hook - without actually having to find new money.\n\nThe apprenticeship levy, about to be introduced, has also been seen as a potential pot of money. The Institute for Fiscal Studies says by 2019-20 it will be raising £2.8bn from employers - but only £640m is set to be spent on apprenticeships.\n\nThe Department for Education has so far not been able to explain where the rest of this money might be heading.\n\nOf course, another option is that the government refuses to move and schools have to operate within their budgets.\n\nWhat would this mean in practice?\n\nTo take a real-life example shown to the BBC, what happens when a secondary school faces a shortfall of £350,000.\n\nThe only way to make such savings is to cut staff - heads and governing bodies will be making such tough decisions.\n\nWhich subject should they stop teaching? Which teachers should they make redundant? Should they get rid of counsellors for mental health problems? Should they merge classes? And who gets to lose out on the quality of their education?\n\nThere has always been a well-developed moaning culture in education, but there is no escaping the outrage among school leaders about the lack of political response to funding worries.\n\nThey were even more livid when they found that the government had found money to expand grammar schools - and have written angry letters asking which services they should cut in their own schools.\n\nThey see ministers and MPs rather like untrustworthy children who won't take responsibility for their decisions.\n\nThere is also brinkmanship on both sides. Will schools really send home children because of a lack of cash?\n\nAnd the government will worry that if they crack over schools, it would start a feeding frenzy of other demands on public spending.\n\nA Department for Education spokesman said that school funding is already at its highest level - more than £40bn for 2016-17.\n\nAnd the department says that it has grasped the nettle of introducing a long overdue national funding formula.\n\n\"Significant protections have also been built into the formula so that no school will face a reduction of more than more than 1.5% per pupil per year or 3% per pupil overall.\n\n\"But we recognise that schools are facing cost pressures, which is why we will continue to provide support to help them use their funding in cost effective ways, including improving the way they buy goods and services, so‎ they get the best possible value.\"", "Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho says he has learned from \"throwing away\" FA Cup games in the past and will not make that mistake at Blackburn Rovers in the fifth round on Sunday.\n\nIn 2005, Mourinho's Chelsea went out to Newcastle in the same week as wins in the League Cup final over Liverpool and Champions League against Barcelona.\n\n\"I gambled too much, I focused too much on Barcelona and Liverpool,\" he said.\n\n\"It was good because we beat Barcelona and we won the final against Liverpool, but the feeling I threw it away was not good, so I don't throw it away.\n\n\"If I lose, I lose because the opponent was better or because we didn't play well, but I'm not going to throw it away.\"\n• None Watch two games on the BBC this weekend - full coverage details\n\nThe Portuguese faces a similarly busy schedule this time around, with the Europa League last-32 second leg against Saint-Etienne to come on Wednesday and the EFL Cup final against Southampton a week on Sunday.\n\n\"I'm going to Blackburn with that respect,\" he added. \"I go serious.\n\n\"I am going to change a few players, but am going with a good team because I respect the competition a lot and Manchester United demands that you go serious to every game.\"\n\nThere have already been several upsets in this year's competition, with Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool the highest-placed Premier League side to get knocked out when they lost to second-tier Wolves in the fourth round.\n\nMourinho, who arrived at Chelsea for the first time before the 2004-05 season, says foreign managers may not understand the culture of the FA Cup like their English counterparts.\n\n\"In my case, I had immediately the first time that situation at Newcastle, so for me that was a lesson,\" added the United boss, whose only success in the FA Cup came in 2006-07 during his first spell at Stamford Bridge.\n\n\"With Chelsea, we lost against a League One team [Bradford in 2015], but I never threw it away, we lost because we lost.\n\n\"Normally it is because of attitude because you think it is easy and it is not easy.\n\n\"The lower-league teams, they are getting better and better and sometimes we have to give some rest to some players, other times we need to give some players football.\n\n\"We try to go serious. I like Wembley, I like the FA Cup, so I have to try to get the second one.\"", "The claim: More businesses will win than lose as a result of business rates revaluation.\n\nReality Check verdict: More businesses will see their bills fall than will see their rates rise.\n\nOn 1 April 2017, the amount that businesses have to pay in rates will change to reflect a revaluation of premises that has been carried out by the government.\n\nThe changes will be relatively large because it has been seven years since the last one. The government has now said that it will have revaluations at least every three years.\n\nThere have been loud complaints from business owners who will have to pay more, but on the Today Programme, Chief Secretary to the Treasury, David Gauke, said: \"Across the country as a whole, far more businesses are benefiting from these changes than are losing out.\"\n\nMr Gauke is only talking about England because, while there are also revaluation processes underway in Scotland and Wales (Northern Ireland did it in 2015), he has no power over them.\n\nBusiness rates are a tax on non-residential property such as pubs, restaurants, warehouses, factories, shops and offices, but not farms or places of worship.\n\nThe amount they pay is based on how much annual rent could be charged on the premises, which is known as the rateable value.\n\nThere have been objections, from some business groups, to changes in the regime for appealing against the rateable value attached to particular premises.\n\nOn average, all areas are seeing their rates fall, except London, where bills will rise an average 11% this year.\n\nIn the 2016 Budget, the government said it would spend £6.7bn on reducing business rates by 2020-21.\n\nAmong the changes, premises with a rateable value of £12,000 or less do not have to pay any rates at all - they previously had to pay 50%.\n\nThe government says that covers about 600,000 businesses.\n\nThe proportion of business rates that must be paid increases gradually, between a rateable value of £12,000 and £15,000, affecting another 50,000 businesses.\n\nThere will also be an increase in the amount businesses can earn before they go from the standard rate to the higher rate.\n\nThe government has also changed the measure of inflation that it uses to increase rates every year - it has switched from the retail prices index (RPI) to the consumer prices index (CPI), which will usually mean smaller increases for businesses.\n\nAnd it has introduced transitional arrangements to protect businesses from seeing their rates increasing too much straight away.\n\nIn order to fund this, it has also prevented businesses' rates from falling more than a certain amount.\n\nThe Department for Communities and Local Government says that 520,000 ratepayers will see their bills increase as a result of the revaluation, while 920,000 will see their bills fall and 420,000 will see no change.\n\nThe government says that the revaluation will not earn it any extra money.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Dick Bruna (above) was still writing Miffy stories in his old age\n\nThe Dutch creator of Miffy the cartoon rabbit has died aged 89, his publishers have announced.\n\nWriter and illustrator Dick Bruna died peacefully in his sleep on Thursday night in the Dutch city of Utrecht.\n\nHe created the much loved character in 1955 as a story to entertain his young son. More than 80 million Miffy books have been sold globally.\n\nOver the years, Bruna wrote more than 100 books but Miffy was by far his most popular and enduring character.\n\nAt first, he was uncertain whether the rabbit was a boy or a girl, but settled the matter by putting her in a dress for the sixth book, Miffy's Birthday, in 1970.\n\nMourners gathered outside the Nijntje Museum, or Miffy Museum, in Utrecht as news of Mr Bruna's death spread\n\nMiffy's success was in part due to the simplicity of Dick Bruna's design\n\nBruna's characters were adored by adults and children alike\n\nDick Bruna was all about doing more with less. Economy of line was the key behind the much loved Miffy character.\n\nThrough only a few simple shapes, heavy graphic lines and primary colours, Bruna was able to capture and convey a huge amount of personality and character.\n\nMiffy delights adults and children alike and we hope that her innocent and loving personality will continue to resonate - she is such a great example of the universal language of illustration.\n\nIn the Netherlands, she is called Nijntje (\"little rabbit\" as a Dutch toddler might say it). It was her first English translator, Olive Jones, who christened her Miffy.\n\nBruna was still writing Miffy stories in his old age and his books have been translated into more than 50 languages.\n\nDutch publisher Marja Kerkhof told the AP news agency that he used \"very clear pictures, almost like a pictogram\".\n\nShe said his illustrations were often best characterised by what he left out, allowing him \"to go to the essence of things\" while simultaneously using \"very strong powerful primary colours\".\n\n\"Even today if you see it in a store you would think, 'hey this looks different to a lot of other things out there',\" she said. \"There is no clutter, it's all very clear.\"\n\nStories about Miffy are enjoyed by children all over the world\n• None Miffy books to be updated in UK\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "After Arsenal's humiliating 5-1 defeat by Bayern Munich in the Champions League, there have been fresh questions about manager Arsene Wenger's future.\n\nBut with a new contract offer remaining on the table, what is the situation around their manager of almost 21 years?\n\nBBC sports news reporter David Ornstein addresses some of the biggest questions facing the club.\n\nArsenal, a post Christmas wobble and a probable Champions League last-16 exit. We've been here before. Is it any different this time?\n\nFor Arsenal, 2016-17 is turning into a carbon copy of the past six seasons - and even resembles the four before that.\n\nThe difference now is that it could genuinely spell the end for Arsene Wenger. Wednesday's defeat has badly stung the 67-year-old Frenchman and senior figures at the club, while the anger, pain and disillusionment among supporters is stronger than ever.\n\nThough the Gunners are not yet out of Europe, remain in the FA Cup and are fourth in the Premier League, it seems a growing majority of the fanbase believes Wenger should leave when his contract expires in the summer.\n\nNeither the Arsenal board nor Wenger have ever been swayed by such opinion, but for the first time in his tenure I think there will be serious doubt on both sides about whether he should continue.\n\nShould we read anything into so many former players, previously so loyal, saying they feel Wenger is coming to the end?\n\nGiven how well the likes of Ian Wright, Martin Keown and Lee Dixon know Wenger, their views should not be discarded. These are prominent and respected past squad members who, over the years, have tended to support the Frenchman and do still see him behind closed doors.\n\nBut, equally, views are not facts and these ex-players do not actually know what is going to happen.\n\nWenger has a very small circle of people he trusts and it is understood even they are in the dark over his intentions because, put simply, he is yet to make a decision.\n• None I will be managing next season, here or elsewhere - Wenger\n\nInside the club, what is thought to be the feeling of both the squad and officials on all the speculation?\n\nThe message from Arsenal is 'business as usual' before Monday's FA Cup trip to Sutton United, which suddenly carries even greater importance.\n\nHowever, there can be no hiding from the sense of deja vu, and those I spoke to on Thursday sounded both depressed by what they had witnessed in Munich and sick of the negativity engulfing the club again.\n\nI hear of confusion among players and staff as to what is going on - there is no clear plan on or off the pitch - and certain individuals have sought information on Wenger's future to no avail.\n\nSome around the club think he will stay; others are adamant he is finished. Meanwhile, reports of angry post-match scenes in the dressing room will only add to what has become a tense and unhealthy environment.\n\nWith Wenger having a contract extension offer on the table, to what extent does he remain the master of his own future? Who else is key and what will be the key factors in any decision?\n\nAs the most successful and longest-serving manager in Arsenal history, Wenger will have the biggest say. However, it will not be the only say.\n\nHe and the board have enough respect for one other to hold mature discussions over whether signing a new contract is in the best interests of the club. In that sense, it will be a mutual decision.\n\nThe board comprises chairman Sir Chips Keswick, chief executive Ivan Gazidis and directors Ken Friar, Lord Harris of Peckham, Stan Kroenke and his son, Josh.\n\nAll will have a stance, the most important being that of owner Kroenke Sr. He is said to be in favour of Wenger staying on, so if the manager is to leave it will likely have to be his own call.\n\nWenger assesses his position at the end of each campaign, so the next three months will be pivotal. Other possible considerations include his desire, Arsenal's realistic prospects, the atmosphere inside and outside the club, and the state of any succession plans.\n• None Decision on Wenger future at end of season\n\nOzil is already on record as saying Wenger is important to his future at the club. How important is Wenger to keeping some of the other star players?\n\nIn Wenger's earlier years, many players joined Arsenal specifically to work under the Frenchman. They were fiercely loyal to him and if his future was in doubt then so was theirs. They openly spoke about it and, to this day, many credit him for their rise.\n\nThat pulling power has endured to an extent, yet for various reasons related to Wenger, Arsenal and the transfer market, it is not as strong.\n\nOzil praised his manager but did not say the 67-year-old was key to his future, more that he wanted to know who would be in charge as he ponders a new contract himself.\n\nI can't think of any other current player who has even mentioned Wenger when discussing their future.\n\nArsenal are confident they are now big enough to attract and retain players without needing to rely on the lure of Wenger.\n• None Ozil 'thinks he is being made scapegoat'\n\nThree Premier League titles, six FA Cups and never finishing outside the top four in 21 years. That's quite a legacy. How much of a concern is the prospect of the unknown quantity of a post-Wenger era?\n\nThis must be a huge worry to Arsenal. Wenger has transformed the club into a major global power on and off the pitch, keeping them competitive in top-level domestic and European competition, with a new stadium built along the way.\n\nIt is an astonishing achievement - but such is the position that Wenger has put Arsenal in, especially financially, it is clear the board fear how they would fare without him.\n\nIf not, and they were serious about winning the Premier League and Champions League, surely with only three FA Cups to show for the past 12 years they would have given somebody else a go?\n\nThe reality is there is no guarantee the next manager will do better than Wenger and that is presumably why Arsenal have retained his services for so long.\n\nHave we any indication what succession planning has been done and the sort of names or manager types Arsenal have in mind?\n\nGazidis used to joke about a drawer in his office containing contingency plans in the event of Wenger leaving, which he hoped would stay locked for many years. However, now that is a realistic prospect, it would be remiss of Gazidis not to have updated his files.\n\nIt has been reported that Borussia Dortmund coach Thomas Tuchel leads a four-man shortlist. The other three candidates are said to be Juventus boss Massimiliano Allegri, Bayer Leverkusen's Roger Schmidt and Monaco manager Leonardo Jardim.\n\nAnd finally, next up are Sutton United, Liverpool and Bayern Munich. How key are those three games to this situation?\n\nFor Arsenal, losing to Sutton does not bear thinking about. It would rank as one of greatest upsets of all time and is surely no way for Wenger to go out.\n\nThe Gunners are obviously clear favourites, but after the events of Munich the pressure will be even higher.\n\nLiverpool away is huge for both sides in their quest for a top-four finish. Defeat, against a rival managed by Jurgen Klopp, who Arsenal have been linked with in the past, would further ratchet up the scrutiny surrounding Wenger's position.\n\nThe return leg against Bayern has echoes of Arsenal's tie against AC Milan in 2012, when they lost the first leg 3-0 and therefore needed four unanswered goals to progress.\n\nThey almost did it, but this Bayern side are far superior to that Milan team and they should confirm Arsenal's exit in what may be Wenger's final European game as the club's manager.", "Last updated on .From the section Snooker\n\nWorld number four Judd Trump edged into the Welsh Open semi-finals after Barry Hawkins missed match-ball in the deciding frame in Cardiff on Friday.\n\nTrump beat his fellow Englishman 5-4 and goes on to face Scotland's 77th-ranked Scott Donaldson, who beat Zhou Yuelong of China 5-0.\n\nHawkins had fought back from 3-1 down to lead 4-3, before Trump clinched the last two frames for victory.\n\nStuart Bingham will face Robert Milkins in Saturday's other semi-final.\n\nWorld number two Bingham was 4-0 up on fellow Englishman Stuart Carrington in their quarter-final before the latter won three consecutive frames.\n\nHowever, Bingham recovered to clinch the match 5-3 and will play Milkins on Saturday evening after the world number 32 saw off Kurt Maflin 5-2.\n\nHawkins, leading by 24 points in the deciding frame, missed match-ball yellow against Trump that would have secured a semi-final spot.\n\nTrump continues the hunt for his first Welsh Open crown and second ranking title of the season, having won the European Masters in October.\n\n\"I am still in a bit of shock because I thought it was all over when I left him the yellow,\" he said. \"He seemed to hit it well, but somehow it stayed out.\n\n\"Sometimes you play well and lose and today I didn't play very well and managed to get through. There is a lot of skill in snooker, but you need a bit of luck.\"\n\nDonaldson, 22, who will play Trump in Saturday afternoon's semi-final, had never previously been beyond the last 16 of a ranking event.\n\nHe is already guaranteed £20,000 - the biggest pay day of his career.\n\n\"I have been playing a lot of TV matches recently and I think that helped me,\" said the Scot, who turned pro in 2012.\n\n\"I have been pleased for about a year now with my game, I can't pinpoint why, maybe it's confidence.\n\n\"I will go back to the hotel and calm myself down and get ready for the next match.\"\n\nSign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nSaracens suffered a second straight Premiership defeat but fit-again prop Mako Vunipola staked a claim to rejoin England as he played 70 minutes of their loss at an inspired Gloucester.\n\nVunipola, returning after nine weeks out, proved his fitness in a game won by Richard Hibbard's late try.\n\nIt was level at 23-23 after tries from Sarries' Schalk Brits and Will Fraser plus Gloucester' Tom Marshall and Jeremy Thrush.\n\nA Billy Twelvetrees penalty seven minutes from the end had edged Gloucester ahead for the third time in the enthralling top-flight battle before the hosts' third try denied Saracens a losing bonus point.\n\nSarries, who lost back-to-back first-team games for the first time since May 2015, missed the chance to close the gap on leaders Wasps at the top.\n\nThings had looked ominous for Gloucester - who have lost just once at home in all competitions since October - when Saracens crossed early on through South Africa hooker Brits after clever play from Richard Wigglesworth.\n\nBut David Humphreys' side settled into a bruising game and eventually earned themselves a three-point half-time lead thanks to Marshall's try and Billy Burns' accurate boot.\n\nAfter the break, lock Thrush collected a loose Saracens pass to extend the hosts' lead with only his second try for the club, before Alex Lozowski's penalty cut the deficit for Sarries.\n\nA gripping game was then interrupted by a worrying injury to Gloucester fly-half Burns, who went down after a try-saving tackle in the corner and received lengthy treatment before being taken off on a stretcher with an oxygen mask, with the medical staff taking care not to move the 22-year-old.\n\nSaracens then drew level when Will Fraser crossed after a driving maul from a line-out and Lozowski converted to make it 23-23, and the visitors looked set for a late comeback.\n\nBut then, after Twelvetrees had kicked Gloucester back in front from the tee, David Halaifonua broke quickly and almost crossed in the corner before the match-clinching try finally came from the resulting line-out, as Hibbard's strength saw him over.\n\n\"We had a terrible game last week and we asked for a reaction. It was all about us this week.\n\n\"The scrum was a big positive for us tonight. It was something we worked on this week. Now we need to build on this win and push on.\n\n\"It is a massive win. They are the champions. We can really take positives from this game and go to Wasps confident.\"\n\n\"We're disappointed that we couldn't get something from the game. We were not as composed as we normally are in our half.\n\n\"We had an open mind as to how Mako Vunipola was going to go and he felt pretty good. He did well.\n\n\"I'm assuming he's going to play against Italy now in some form.\"\n\nFor the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Facebook could be fined in Germany, if it refuses to remove stories which are proved false\n\nI have been in Dortmund and Berlin this week, investigating how Germany is leading the fightback against fake news.\n\nThere have been some high-profile cases here. Breitbart reported that a mob attacked Germany's oldest church, St Reinold's Church in Dortmund. The website has subsequently published a lengthy defence of its original article, together with an admission that it is not in fact the oldest church in Germany.\n\nI visited the church and spoke at length to locals, including a pastor who works in the city (and was named in the Breitbart report), and a local refugee support worker. They were unanimous in the view that the Breitbart report misrepresented true events in service of an anti-Islamist agenda that was divisive and unjust.\n\nIn Berlin, I spoke to Anas Modamani, a 19-year-old Syrian who enjoys taking selfies. So much so that three weeks after turning up in the German capital, having come from the outskirts of Damascus via a boat trip, Turkey, Greece and Macedonia, he took a selfie with Angela Merkel, who was visiting his hostel. It promptly went viral, together with the false claim that he was a terrorist. He is now suing Facebook.\n\nGermany's political class wants to take action. Lars Klingbeil, a fast-rising star of the Social Democratic Party who is a close associate of Martin Schulz, told me his plan to tackle fake news. Perhaps Damian Collins, the Tory chairman of Parliament's culture select committee here, who has launched an inquiry into fake news, could pick up some ideas.\n\nAnas Modamani's selfie with Angela Merkel led to him being falsely accused of being a terrorist\n\nFacebook now employs independent fact-checkers here. Correctiv is a smart outfit whose employees are mostly young. Correctiv monitors suspicious stories, looking at how much they are being liked and shared.\n\nIf the headline looks suspicious, or it appears on a website known to be dubious, the Correctiv team will contact the original sources for the story, to verify if it's true or not. They then mark it true or false, and send a message to all German users of the social media platform, indicating its rectitude or otherwise.\n\nThey don't accept money from Facebook, because they want to retain total editorial independence. But they too are a sign of how, outside of America, Germany is leading the fight against fake news.\n\nBased on my conversations here, there are several reasons why Germany has got ahead of the curve on this important issue.\n\nFirst, Mrs Merkel's refugee policy is hugely controversial, and has galvanised that part of the political spectrum that, thus far, has shown the greatest propensity for creating fake news internationally: the nationalist far-right. It turns out letting in a huge number of refugees is a good way to mobilise purveyors of fake news.\n\nSecond, because of Germany's 20th Century history, there is a hyper-sensitivity about the rise of that far-right. The success of Alternative for Germany, a nationalist party, and the ever-present but low-level threat from neo-Nazi groups make many Germans determined to act fast.\n\nThird, the traditional media sector here is very different to those of Britain and America. The most influential newspapers are staid rather than raucous; the cable news channels are more BBC or CNN than Fox News, and talk radio has nothing like the oomph that is generated by the likes of Rush Limbaugh or, now on LBC, Nigel Farage.\n\nGermany's most influential newspapers are considered to be staid\n\nGermany's conventional media market has created an opening for fake news, which of its very nature is salacious and exciting.\n\nFourth, there have been several high-profile cases. The Modamani case is perhaps the most notorious. Groups like the Resistance of German Patriots have been happy to spread nationalist propaganda, with a limited regard for facts.\n\nFifth, my sense is that Germany retains a strong belief in the competence and capability of government. If there is a social problem, goes this thinking, perhaps it is capable of a political solution, by virtue of smart regulation.\n\nThat was the impression Mr Klingbeil gave, but the belief that fake news should be combated by regulation is not restricted to social democrats: Mrs Merkel's Christian Democrats are also putting pressure on Facebook to make it easier for users to flag suspicious content and delete posts, while those targeted by fake news would be given a right of reply.\n\nSixth, there are local and national elections coming. Fearing a repeat of America's recent experience, where fake stories went viral and may have influenced some voters, Germany believes prevention is better than cure. And Facebook, damaged by the fallout from fake news about Donald Trump, appears to agree.\n\nFake news is not a problem that is going to disappear soon; nor is it one that any journalist can ignore, or be neutral toward. It behoves all of us in this trade - at least those of us who retain a belief that truth is possible and necessary - to wish Germany success in this fight.\n\nYou can watch my report on the News at Ten on BBC One tonight.", "It's the weekly news quiz - have you been paying attention to what's been going on in the world over the past seven days?\n\nIf you missed last week's quiz, try it here\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "If Jenny ever gets married, there will be no dad walking her down the aisle and, if she gets her way, no mention of him on her marriage certificate either.\n\nThis is because, according to the twenty-something professional, the man who sexually abused her for 18 months from the age of seven \"lost any right to be called my father\".\n\nDespite his horrific betrayal of the relationship between father and daughter, the current law gives the option for only his name and occupation to be recorded on her future marriage certificate - but not that of her mother \"who has been mum and dad all wrapped up in one\".\n\nThis system, of recording only the names of the father of the bride and groom on the certificate, dates back to the early years of Queen Victoria's reign.\n\nWhile either party can ask for a line to be put through that box if they have never known their father or been brought up by a step-father, it's an inequality many people like Jenny feel should be addressed.\n\nIt is also an issue that has provoked anger among MPs from all parties, who have spent several years attempting to bring about a change in the law to allow both parents to have their names and occupations recorded.\n\nTheir campaign was given a boost when a petition on Change.org, calling for mothers' names to be added to marriage certificates, collected 70,600 signatures in January 2014. The petition said \"marriage should not be seen as a business transaction between the father of the bride and the father of the groom\".\n\nFormer Prime Minister David Cameron said later that year that he would address this \"inequality in marriage\", adding that the exclusion of mothers' names from marriage registers in England and Wales did \"not reflect modern Britain\".\n\nMr Cameron was gone from Downing Street before any action was taken and it now seems that Conservative MP Edward Argar's Registration of Marriage Bill is the most likely vehicle to overturn the law.\n\nHis bill, which would update the Marriage Act of 1949, would move the solely paper-based system to a central electronic register online, which would allow the mother's name to be included.\n\nIt would also bring England and Wales into line with the rest of the UK. In Scotland and Northern Ireland, couples are asked to give the names of both parents on marriage documentation. The same applies for those entering a civil partnership.\n\nSimilar attempts by Labour and Conservative MPs to change the law fell in 2015 after failing to get ministers' support. Labour frontbencher Christina Rees' private member's bill focused on the narrow point about putting the mother on the certificate. Former Conservative cabinet minister Dame Caroline Spelman's bill wanted marriages listed in a single electronic register instead of in marriage register books.\n\nFormer home office minister Richard Harrington said at the time \"a combination\" of the two bills \"could deal with things quickly\".\n\nUnlike his predecessors', Mr Argar's bill - which is more like Dame Caroline's attempt - has succeeded in getting government backing because it will create a more secure system for keeping marriage records.\n\n\"The whole point of this bill is the mothers and fathers of the bride and groom will be registered,\" said the Charnwood MP. \"In the great scheme of things it's a minor change, but it's symbolically very important for a large number of people who want a recognition of the role their mother played in their upbringing.\"\n\nMr Argar hopes for a change in the law by the summer\n\nHe added: \"It will also give victims of abuse, children of single mothers or errant fathers, the choice over whether to include their mother's names and not their father's.\n\n\"You will see virtually no outward change in the form of the marriage ceremony, just in the manner that things are recorded. By moving to an online schedule system, we can easily amend the paper documentation - and it's more secure because it doesn't rely on the old parish register that is at risk of theft from the village church.\n\n\"The church is supportive of the move, and over time it will save the taxpayer millions of pounds in administrative costs.\"\n\nThe bill is set to return to the Commons for its detailed committee stage after the half-term recess, and Mr Argar is hopeful it will receive Royal Assent - and so become law - by the summer.\n\nA spokesman for the Home Office said it wanted to see mothers' names recorded on marriage certificates \"as soon as possible\".\n\nFor Jenny, whose name has been changed to protect her identity, the law change cannot come soon enough.\n\n\"My dad's a rapist and he abused me and my sisters, so I never want any reference to him appearing on anything about my future,\" she said. \"He has no right to that - he lost that right many years ago.\n\n\"I was only seven when the attacks started, and my siblings were much younger. It ended after I told my mother when I was eight and a half.\n\n\"I've tried to block out what he did to me.\n\n\"I have a partner and I'm sure we will get married eventually, but I don't want my father involved in any way. I'd only want my mum's name on the marriage certificate because as far as I'm concerned she's done everything for us.\"", "28 January: President Trump (left) speaks to Vladimir Putin on the White House phone\n\nFor several months, the pro-Kremlin media had nothing but praise for Donald Trump.\n\nDuring the US election campaign, Russian state TV bulletins and pro-government newspapers portrayed him as some kind of David taking on the Goliath of a \"corrupt… Russia-hating\" Washington elite. They welcomed his calls for warmer US-Russian relations. They played down some of his more outlandish comments.\n\nIt was almost as if a US presidential candidate, and subsequently a new US president, had become the golden boy of Russian politics. In January he even received more mentions in the Russian media than President Vladimir Putin.\n\nOn Friday, Russia's most popular tabloid, Komsomolskaya Pravda, accused President Trump of making \"contradictory\" statements about Nato.\n\nThe paper points out: \"(During the election campaign) Trump had called the Alliance obsolete and useless. Less than two months have passed since he moved into the Oval Office and he's already expressed full support for Nato.\n\n\"As the saying goes, you need to be drunk to understand the true position of America's president.\"\n\nFriday's edition of the Russian government paper, Rossiyskaya Gazeta, notes: \"Recently the White House has been making many contradictory and incompatible statements about the foreign policy direction of Trump's team, including issues that affect Russia's interests.\"\n\nReporting Thursday's meeting in Bonn between Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and the new US Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson, the paper emphasises \"it was obvious how tense and, at the same time, confused Tillerson looked\".\n\nUS Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (left) and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met in Bonn on Thursday\n\nAnd with President Trump under sustained pressure back home over alleged links to Russia, the business daily Vedomosti doubts he will have \"flexibility… in talks with Russia.\n\n\"Every step he takes, particularly any concessions, will be examined under a microscope. It's even hard to believe now that there ever was a window of opportunity (to improve relations) that made it seem worth raising our glasses and toasting Trump's victory.\"\n\nIn recent days there has been noticeably less Trump on Russian TV.\n\nThe resignation of the president's national security adviser Michael Flynn on Tuesday may have made headlines around the world. But it was not mentioned in Russian state TV's 45-minute evening news bulletin. That is extraordinary, considering that Russia was central to the story.\n\nDecember 2015: Gen Flynn (left) sits next to President Putin at a dinner in Moscow\n\nThere are reports that state television has been instructed to scale back its coverage of the US president. The Kremlin has dismissed these as \"rumours\".\n\n\"I was told by someone closely connected to one of Russia's main state TV companies that such instructions exist and were issued in the wake of Flynn's departure,\" says Konstantin Eggert, a political commentator for the independent channel TV Rain.\n\n\"As far as I know, the idea is not so much to present him in a negative light, but to scale down coverage of the United States in general. Inevitably I think there's going to be a scaling down of positive coverage of Trump, too. The Kremlin's idea is to reduce expectations from this much-anticipated detente between Moscow and Washington.\"\n\n\"Everything's a muddle in the White House\", says Moskovsky Komsomolets\n\nPresident Putin's spokesman told the BBC reports of Kremlin meddling were \"absolute rubbish\" and \"fake news\".\n\n\"TV channels and the Russian media have total independence to decide their own editorial policy,\" Dmitry Peskov told me.\n\nI asked him whether he thought it was odd that Russian TV channels appeared to have reduced their coverage of Mr Trump.\n\n\"To be honest, we don't study so closely the proportions in which different stories are reported,\" he replied.\n\nLast November one Russian official admitted to me having celebrated Mr Trump's victory - with a cigar and bottle of champagne.\n\nSo why has the champagne gone flat?\n\nJudging by the angry reaction of senior Russian politicians, Moscow was disappointed by Michael Flynn's departure. The Trump adviser had championed closer US-Russian ties.\n\nThen came White House comments about Crimea, making clear that President Trump expects Russia to return the annexed peninsula to Ukraine.\n\nTo Russia it seemed a sudden 180-degree turn. During the election campaign Donald Trump had told ABC television: \"The people of Crimea, from what I've heard, would rather be with Russia than where they were.\"\n\nAnd on Thursday senior members of the Trump administration sounded less than enthusiastic about the idea of a rapprochement with Moscow.\n\nUS Defence Secretary James Mattis said Washington was \"not in a position right now to co-operate on the military level… Russia's aggressive actions have violated international law and are destabilising.\"\n\nUS Secretary of State Rex Tillerson indicated that America \"will consider working with Russia\". That is hardly a ringing endorsement.\n\nYet Donald Trump has made it clear he still believes a better relationship with Vladimir Putin and Russia is good for America. Could he once again becoming the American darling of the Russian media?\n\nThat will partly depend on whether the two presidents can strike up a good relationship when they eventually meet.\n\nBut it depends, too, on how much pressure President Trump will be under by then, over his team's alleged Russian connections.", "Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has spoken to the BBC about how people are withdrawing from the \"connected world\".\n\nIn the interview, accompanied by a 5,500-word letter about the future of Facebook, he considers the failures of globalisation.\n\nIt can't quite be called regret, but the entrepreneur is certainly looking back with mixed feelings.\n\nAnd he's not the only tech inventor to question their creation. Here are five of the most surprising.\n\nSir Tim Berners Lee, the man behind the world wide web, was asked back in 2009 what he'd do differently if he had a second chance.\n\nWe've all probably got things we'd love change about the internet, but his answer was a lot more minimal.\n\nHe said he'd get rid of the of the \"//\" after \"http:\" at the start of web addresses. That's it.\n\nThe double-slash was commonplace in programming back in the day but doesn't really do anything.\n\nSir Tim argues we could have saved countless hours of effort, and countless trees from making paper, if he'd just left it out.\n\nWe probably should have put a trigger warning on this\n\nAs short-lived mobile game crazes go, Flappy Bird was up there with the best of them (*cough* Pokemon Go *cough).\n\nIf you never played it, the idea was to guide a poorly-animated bird through some poorly animated pipes.\n\nThe extremely simple, but extremely frustrating app was downloaded 50 million times.\n\nAt the height of its popularity in 2013, its Vietnamese creator Dong Nguyen was reportedly earning $50,000 (£30,450) a day from advertising.\n\nBut he apparently couldn't take the number of people writing to him saying the game was ruining their lives.\n\nOkay, so maybe this one is less surprising. In 2014, a man called Ethan Zuckerman wrote an essay called The Internet's Original Sin.\n\nIn it he explains that back in 1990s he \"wrote the code to launch [a new] window and run an ad in it\".\n\nIn other words - he invented the pop-up.\n\n\"I'm sorry. Our intentions were good,\" he goes on. We don't think sorry is quite going to cut it, Ethan.\n\nThink of professor Scott Fahlman as the great grandfather of the emoji.\n\nAt 11:44am on 19 September 1982, while working at a university in the US, he sent this mass email:\n\n\"I propose the following character sequence for joke markers: :-) Read it sideways.\"\n\nIt's the first known use of a smiley and it was designed to make it easier to distinguish between serious and silly messages.\n\nBut Professor Fahlam isn't such a joker when it comes to the little yellow faces that his invention spawned.\n\n\"I think [emojis] are ugly,\" he told The Independent in 2013.\n\n\"They ruin the challenge of trying to come up with a clever way to express emotions using standard keyboard characters.\"\n\nA few years on, it seems almost unbelievable that there was once a world-wide movement to ban the font Comic Sans.\n\nIt makes you wonder why people in 2010 didn't have better things to do with their time.\n\nStill, the inventor of the \"world's most-hated font\" has admitted he too has reservations about what he created.\n\nVincent Connare came up with it in the early 1990s, while trying to make a short-lived computer dog called Microsoft Bob more exciting.\n\nUnsurprisingly, the concept of a dog giving out PC tips quickly died a death.\n\nComic Sans, though, lived on to be hated to this day.\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. \"My own darling boy\" - a greeting in one of the letters\n\nWhile on military training during World War Two, Gilbert Bradley was in love. He exchanged hundreds of letters with his sweetheart - who merely signed with the initial \"G\". But more than 70 years later, it was discovered that G stood for Gordon, and Gilbert had been in love with a man.\n\nAt the time, not only was homosexuality illegal, but those in the armed forces could be shot for having gay sex.\n\nThe letters, which emerged after Mr Bradley's death in 2008, are therefore unusual and shed an important light on homosexual relationships during the war.\n\nWhat do we know about this forbidden love affair?\n\n... I lie awake all night waiting for the postman in the early morning, and then when he does not bring anything from you I just exist, a mass of nerves...\n\nInformation gleaned from the letters indicate Mr Bradley was a reluctant soldier. He did not want to be in the Army, and even pretended to have epilepsy to avoid it.\n\nHis ruse did not work, though, and in 1939 he was stationed at Park Hall Camp in Oswestry, Shropshire, to train as an anti-aircraft gunner.\n\nHe was already in love with Gordon Bowsher. The pair had met on a houseboat holiday in Devon in 1938 when Mr Bowsher was in a relationship with Mr Bradley's nephew.\n\nMr Bowsher was from a well-to-do family. His father ran a shipping company, and the Bowshers also owned tea plantations.\n\nWhen war broke out a year later he trained as an infantryman and was stationed at locations across the country.\n\nThere is nothing more than I desire in life but to have you with me constantly...\n\n...I can see or I imagine I can see, what your mother and father's reaction would be... the rest of the world have no conception of what our love is - they do not know that it is love...\n\nBut life as a homosexual in the 1940s was incredibly difficult. Gay activity was a court-martial offence, jail sentences for so-called \"gross indecency\" were common, and much of society strongly disapproved of same-sex relationships.\n\nIt was not until the Sexual Offences Act 1967 that consenting men aged 21 and over were legally allowed to have gay relationships - and being openly gay in the armed services was not allowed until 2000.\n\nThe letters, which emerged after Mr Bradley's death in 2008, are rare because most homosexual couples would get rid of anything so incriminating, says gay rights activist Peter Roscoe.\n\nIn one letter Mr Bowsher urges his lover to \"do one thing for me in deadly seriousness. I want all my letters destroyed. Please darling do this for me. Til then and forever I worship you.\"\n\nMr Roscoe says the letters are inspiring in their positivity.\n\n\"There is a gay history and it isn't always negative and tearful,\" he says. \"So many stories are about arrests - Oscar Wilde, Reading Gaol and all those awful, awful stories.\n\n\"But despite all the awful circumstances, gay men and lesbians managed to rise above it all and have fascinating and good lives despite everything.\"\n\nFor years I had it drummed into me that no love could last for life...\n\nI want you darling seriously to delve into your own mind, and to look for once in to the future.\n\nImagine the time when the war is over and we are living together... would it not be better to live on from now on the memory of our life together when it was at its most golden pitch.\n\nBut was this a love story with a happy ending?\n\nProbably not. At one point, Mr Bradley was sent to Scotland on a mission to defend the Forth Bridge. He met and fell in love with two other men. Rather surprisingly, he wrote and told Mr Bowsher all about his romances north of the border. Perhaps even more surprisingly, Mr Bowsher took it all in his stride, writing that he \"understood why they fell in love with you. After all, so did I\".\n\nAlthough the couple wrote throughout the war, the letters stopped in 1945.\n\nHowever, both went on to enjoy interesting lives.\n\nMr Bowsher moved to California and became a well-known horse trainer. In a strange twist, he employed Sirhan Sirhan, who would go on to be convicted of assassinating Robert Kennedy.\n\nMr Bradley was briefly entangled with the MP Sir Paul Latham, who was imprisoned in 1941 following a court martial for \"improper conduct\" with three gunners and a civilian. Sir Paul was exposed after some \"indiscreet letters\" were discovered.\n\nMr Bradley moved to Brighton and died in 2008. A house clearance company found the letters and sold them to a dealer specialising in military mail.\n\nThe letters were finally bought by Oswestry Town Museum, when curator Mark Hignett was searching on eBay for items connected with the town.\n\nHe bought just three at first, and says the content led him to believe a fond girlfriend or fiancé was the sender. There were queries about bed sheets, living conditions - and their dreams for their future life together.\n\nGilbert Bradley was stationed at Park Hall Camp in Oswestry in 1939\n\nWhen he spotted there were more for sale, he snapped them up too - and on transcribing the letters for a display in the museum, Mr Hignett and his colleagues discovered the truth. The \"girlfriend\" was a boyfriend.\n\nThe revelation piqued Mr Hignett's interest - he describes his experience as being similar to reading a book and finding the last page ripped out: \"I just had to keep buying the letters to find out what happened next.\"\n\nAlthough he's spent \"thousands of pounds\" on the collection of more than 600 letters, he believes in terms of historical worth the correspondence is \"invaluable\".\n\n\"Such letters are extremely rare because they were incriminating - gay men faced years in prison with or without hard labour,\" he says. \"There was even the possibility that gay soldiers could have been shot.\"\n\nWork on a book is already under way at the museum, where the letters will also go on display.\n\nPerhaps most poignantly, one of the letters contains the lines:\n\n\"Wouldn't it be wonderful if all our letters could be published in the future in a more enlightened time. Then all the world could see how in love we are.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "When a pop star gives out their autograph, it's largely so that fans can prove they met them. But what if the act of writing your name on endless scraps of paper, photographs, CD cases and body parts actually reveals more about the kind of person behind the pen than they had originally bargained for?\n\nBrigitte Applegarth MBIG (DIP) is a qualified professional graphologist with the British Institute of Graphologists. She gives lectures nationally on how handwriting analysis gives an enlightening insight into human development, behaviours and reactions. Just for fun, we asked her to examine eight pop star autographs (and a small selection of their writing), to give her personal opinion about what their handwritten words might reveal. Quite a bit, as it turns out...\n\n3rd party content may contain ads - see our FAQs for more info\n\n\"Katy Perry has a designer's mind. She has a strong, stylish imagination, and a sophisticated sense of aesthetics. Her signature is very cleverly designed - there's a heart shape which incorporates or replaces Perry, the loop in the bottom of the 'K', the little cartoon face and eyes, demonstrating her humour. I'd say if she wasn't doing music she'd be designing or presenting, something creative and visual. She writes very fast, suggesting she's a quick thinker. \"Some of her signature is quite phallic; if you look there appear to be lots of body parts, suggesting she aims for a broad appeal. She has a very smooth and even downstroke, the mark of someone who knows what they want, focusses and then goes for it. \"I've looked at a few of her signatures, and hers have changed each time, which suggests a desire for reinvention. She used to underline her signature, suggesting that she needed to feel important and appreciated, but she doesn't do that any more. There are lots of curves going one way and another in the upper and lower zones, which suggests that dancing and rhythm and movement are essential to her.\" [WATCH] Highlights of Katy Perry at Radio 1's Big Weekend in Glasgow, 2014\n\n3rd party content may contain ads - see our FAQs for more info\n\n\"Adele has the most graphologically mature handwriting of this group. It's quite spiky for a woman, and the spikes indicate an observant, analytical and critical mind. Her downward strokes suggest someone who is motivated to provide for their need for security, home, money. The strokes also trail off, suggestive of someone who can let the odd pointed comment slip out. Few curves show she can be very business-minded. \"She uses quite thin strokes with sharp pressure; this is someone who keeps their energies specifically for what they need to do and not much else. Curvy connections demonstrate that she's good at charming people. \"Signing with a small 'a' is the kind of thing someone would do if they had felt second class. This is a great motivator, or they want to lower their status in order not to overwhelm her audience. Otherwise her writing shows huge confidence in her abilities. There's no shyness in her handwriting - it's very natural and traditional, no faking. The baseline curves and staggers a little, suggesting she can get bored easily, or get tired. She bucks herself up, but soldiers on to the end. Some of her signatures have a full stop at the end. That indicates that she likes to finish with a final, 'And that's all you're getting. There you are. That's me. Next.' It also indicates that she is someone who likes to have the last word.\"\n\n3rd party content may contain ads - see our FAQs for more info\n\n\"Ed's signature is simply a large squiggle, and he's clearly used to doing thousands of them. The interesting thing is that he starts from the bottom of the 'E', which is not where most people start a capital 'E'. The style of the capital 'E' is one that shows a love of culture and classical things, and individualism. His mind deconstructs things down to their basic level in order to build them up again. He thinks outside the box. The signature doesn't seem like much, but the way he does it says a lot about him. He does things in his own way. \"His handwriting has wide spaces, so he needs space around him and can't be rushed. He's quite a relaxed guy. The curves and roundedness show a sensitive gentle personality who is comfortable with friends and family. Loops show his emotion, creativity and imagination. Wide letter spacing shows he doesn't always relate to people on a friendly basis right away, but he is very sensitive and able to register much sensory input, such as noise, heat, vibration, atmosphere and people's emotions. \"His writing has a left slant, the hallmark of someone who is an independent thinker, and a tendency towards an introverted personally. His writing is quite controlled and paced. This is someone who likes or is able to work on his own.\" [LISTEN] Ed Sheeran reveals he wants to be the biggest pop star in the world\n\n3rd party content may contain ads - see our FAQs for more info\n\n\"Taylor Swift is another star who likes her privacy. A signature or autograph is how the writer wants to appear to the reader; it doesn't always reveal the whole personality. The big round loops are like a speech bubble of thoughts and suggest someone who aims for harmony in her relations. That's what she wants people to see that she desires. It's about imagination. \"Her signature is narrow, but her writing has a slightly left slant, suggesting she is usually reserved but anxious about her image. The curves are emotional. Her name ends with a 'T', but she ends hers with a downstroke. This suggests that she takes her emotions down to the root, past the baseline. The letter has an arched baseline, which suggests she gets bored quickly, although spacing shows me she is usually thoughtful enough to take the time. She writes with an even letter height, she's emotionally stable and considerate and patient. \"Her 'T' is unusually crossed with the big circle, which is a hallmark of imagination. In today's emoji world, it's easy to put hearts and kisses in text messages, but in handwriting it's hard to work out if it is to be fashionable, or is it someone's own design? At any rate it's a symbol of affection, and in her case is genuine - she's thoughtful, and wants people to think well of her.\" [LISTEN] Everything you need to know about the Taylor Swift and Zayn duet\n\n3rd party content may contain ads - see our FAQs for more info\n\n\"His signature is right slanted, narrow and on a steeply rising baseline. Justin appears to be enthusiastic, upbeat, while seeking approval at the time of writing. He likes to be polished and wants to perfect his work. That said, this handwriting signature appears to lose impetus and pressure half way through 'Justin' until the end of 'Bieber'. This suggests uncertainty about his identity and his family expectations at that time. \"In his short written passage, the baseline shows that he finds it quite difficult staying on an even line. I call this a baseline of legality, also emotion. \"It's very evident that he was (and is) still developing his sense of self. The mixed slant is a sign of erratic thoughts, judgement, and ambivalence. The pen pressure is blotchy, and his word spacing is wide. He's on an emotional rollercoaster, so things affect him sharply. He is very sensitive, and he's working out how his feelings affect his actions.\" [LISTEN] Justin Bieber talks to Grimmy on the Radio 1 Breakfast Show, 2015\n\n3rd party content may contain ads - see our FAQs for more info\n\n\"People who choose felt tip deliberately for personal notes tend to like the quality things of life - no fakery, nothing cheap or nasty. The pen is like an artist's brush stroke, sensual and lush. Beyoncé will apply this to everything; food and clothes, and her choice of people. Her signature is underlined, so she is someone who likes to feel important and respected. The squiggle is a light-hearted entertaining sign, but when she crosses through her name, that can show a negative reaction to her hard work, suggesting she's somehow cancelling or doubting her previous efforts. \"She's thoughtful, passive and quite delicate when dealing with others. I wouldn't expect her to be tactless. There's good spacing between her words, which suggests she thinks about things carefully. She wants to relate to people. The writing is very family-oriented; she's someone who likes to be in a family or a club and enjoys living day-to-day. The arcade connectives in her writing suggest she is very protective and motherly, although perhaps that can be inhibiting for her artistic nature.\"\n\n3rd party content may contain ads - see our FAQs for more info\n\n\"Drake's signature is almost illegible, the hallmark of somebody who wants privacy despite being a performer. It does show, however, that he has a lack of clarity or connection with his surname, as though he is skipping over it somehow, maybe because he wants his achievements to be recognised as his own. \"He has a strong, stylish capital 'A', and where it loops back on itself is a sign of stubbornness, thoroughness, and one who stops, looks back on their past in order to make use of that knowledge now; the past being his mother, in this case. It's also worth noting that people who circle their 'I' dots want love and attention. \"His has a smooth curvy signature, a sign of gentleness, not hardness. He's stylish and artistic. Loops show imagination and creativity, and that's all his signature is, really. Sometimes he feels a lack of control in that creative urge, and his artistry lies in how he can learn to master it. His writing on the baseline slopes up; he is someone very upbeat and hopeful.\" [LISTEN] Who doesn't know Drake's One Dance?\n\n3rd party content may contain ads - see our FAQs for more info\n\n\"There are large spaces in Calvin's writing, suggesting someone who sometimes feels quite isolated, and likes to take his time. He's a quick thinker, though; his letters are spiky, which also suggests someone who doesn't like to show emotion. He's not full of ego. His signature doesn’t tell me much; it's more like a cypher. Some people are more into symbols, and this is a guy who'd look for a short cut even in his signature, because it's quicker if you don't have to be legible. \"But his words are legible. He wants privacy and doesn't mind if people don't get him. At the same time he wants the information to be clear. He’s not a 'do you know who I am?' type at all. He's determined and strong with an even stroke. That said, there's a neglectful side to his handwriting; he doesn't complete all his letters well, which usually suggest someone who is more interested in other people than himself, and doesn't show his emotional side with a loud display. \"His writing is a bit messy, but that's common for someone who is creative, and can get his emotions and ambitions out and fulfill them quickly. Wavy lines show he has a good sense of humour - he draws faces and hats into his signatures.\" [LISTEN] Why Calvin Harris prefers to keep his mouth shut", "Once doted on by his father, Kim Jong-nam had a long fall from grace as a man\n\nOn Monday, the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was killed in Malaysia. The BBC's Karishma Vaswani in Kuala Lumpur dissects a week of mystery and intrigue.\n\nIt's been almost a week since the mysterious death of a Korean man at Kuala Lumpur airport and there are still no real answers.\n\nInitially, Malaysia refused to identify the dead man as Kim Jong-nam, saying just that the passport he had on him was under the name Kim Chol.\n\nThis despite South Korea's insistence that it was indeed him, killed on the orders of North Korea's brutal regime.\n\nMalaysia finally confirmed for the first time on Wednesday that the dead man was indeed the half-brother of the North Korean leader.\n\nZahid Hamidi, Malaysia's deputy prime minister, told reporters: \"I think he carries two different identities. Probably this [passport] is an undercover document.\"\n\nMalaysia's cautious handling of this case has been evident from the start. The police have been sparing with their details, with official statements about arrests coming hours after they've already been widely reported.\n\nKim Jong-nam had openly criticised North Korea and called for it to open up\n\nThere have also been conflicting and often contradictory accounts from different divisions of the police - national and district - adding more confusion to the story.\n\nBut here's what we do know: three people have been arrested so far. Two women are amongst them.\n\nPolice say one is Indonesian while the other was carrying a Vietnamese passport.\n\nA third suspect - a Malaysian man police say is the boyfriend of the Indonesian - has also been detained.\n\nPolice have detained the suspects for seven days for further questioning.\n\nOne suspect wore a shirt with \"LOL\" - \"laugh out loud\" - written on it\n\nStill, nothing is known about how closely connected they are to the death of Kim Jong-nam, nor indeed why and exactly how he died.\n\nMalaysian police have told me that the two women were both identified from CCTV camera footage captured at the scene of the alleged crime.\n\nI went to the airport terminal where the attack happened to see for myself how it might be possible to get away with murder in broad daylight.\n\nThe facts in this case are murky to say the least. But based on police reports, this is what appears to have happened.\n\nOn Monday, Kim Jong-nam was about to board a flight. He is thought to have arrived in Kuala Lumpur on 6 February and was on his way back to Macau, where it is believed he lived.\n\nBut while he was at the airport, some police reports say at least one woman is thought to have accosted him, and covered his face with a cloth doused in some sort of burning or poisonous chemical.\n\nHe then went to the information counter and is thought to have asked for help. Subsequently it appears he was taken to the medical clinic in the airport from where he was sent to hospital, dying en route.\n\nAll eyes are now on the forensic department of the hospital analysing Mr Kim's body\n\nBut when I spoke to staff at the airport who may have witnessed what happened, no-one was willing to talk to me. At least two people said they had been told by police and their bosses not to speak to the media or divulge any details of what happened.\n\nSo there's a lot we still don't know.\n\nWhat kind of chemical was used in the apparent poisoning? How exactly did he die? The post-mortem examination of his body has been completed, but details have yet to be released to the public.\n\nWe also don't know what he was doing in Malaysia, although we understand that he did come here fairly frequently.\n\nI tried to track some of Kim Jong-nam's old haunts in Kuala Lumpur, which led me to a Korean restaurant in the centre of town. At the restaurant, the mainly Bangladeshi and Burmese staff had no idea who Kim Jong-nam was.\n\nBut the owner of the restaurant is Korean, and he did speak to me. He refused to meet me in person though, choosing to speak to me on the phone. He also didn't want to be filmed or named because he was afraid of being linked to Mr Kim.\n\nBut he said Mr Kim was a regular customer at his restaurant, and that he would bring bodyguards with him.\n\nIn halting English, he told me Mr Kim often spoke to him and told him he feared for his life.\n\n\"Scared, yes,\" he told me. \"He was sure scared, because Kim Jong-un planned to kill him since so far five years.\"\n\nThe case has attracted intense interest in South Korea\n\nNorth Korea hasn't said anything about the death and it's highly unlikely it ever will.\n\nAll we have heard about what Pyongyang wants is from Malaysian officials, who have said they will turn the body over if a formal written request is made.\n\nInstead, the focus in Pyongyang this week has been on the 75th anniversary celebrations of the current leader's father, Kim Jong-il.\n\nIn North Korea's secretive regime, unanswered questions are a way of life.", "\"The next time you plan to cross a border, leave your phone at home.\"\n\nThat is the rather startling advice in a blogpost that is being widely shared right now.\n\nIts author, Quincy Larson, is a software engineer, who has previously written about the importance of protecting personal data. He now fears that data could be at risk every time you cross a border.\n\nHis concerns were sparked by the story of Sidd Bikkannavar, an American-born Nasa engineer, who flew home from a trip to Chile last month. On arrival in Houston, he was detained by the border police and, by his own account, put under great pressure to hand over the passcode to his smartphone, despite the fact that the device had been issued to him by Nasa.\n\nEventually, Bikkannavar did hand over both the phone and the passcode. It was taken away for 30 minutes and then returned, and he was free to go.\n\nLarson sees this as a very dangerous precedent: \"What we're seeing now is that anyone can be grabbed on their way through customs and forced to hand over the full contents of their digital life.\"\n\nWe also know that the new homeland security secretary, John Kelly, has talked of requiring visa applicants to hand over passwords to their social media accounts - though whether that could apply at the border too is not clear.\n\nHow much private data is on your smartphone?\n\nAnd on Thursday, a new Republican congressman took to Twitter to announce proudly that he had introduced his first bill - to require the review of visa applicants' social media.\n\nLarson predicts that a policy where travellers are asked to download the contents of their phones will soon become commonplace, not just in the United States but around the world.\n\nHence his advice to leave your mobile phone and laptop at home and rent devices when you get to your destination.\n\nWhich seems a little extreme. I can't imagine being separated from my smartphone on a flight - and I'm sure many others feel the same. So I decided to seek some advice from the UK Foreign Office and the US embassy in London.\n\nWas there a danger that I would be forced by border officials to unlock my phone or hand over my social media passwords?\n\nThe Foreign Office told me their travel advice did not cover this subject because they had not received any calls about it. But they did suggest that if I happened to be trapped in immigration at JFK airport with a border agent demanding my passcode, I could call the British embassy and arrange a lawyer.\n\nAs for the American embassy, well I called before lunchtime on Thursday and got a perfectly pleasant response. They would need to speak to Washington and would get back to me later about the matter of my smartphone and my Facebook and Twitter accounts.\n\nAs I write, it's Friday morning and I've heard nothing. Perhaps Washington has other matters on its mind. So perhaps I'd better take what I believe is known as a \"burner\" phone the next time I fly across the Atlantic.\n\nForty-eight hours after my first enquiry, I have now received a response to my questions from the US embassy in London. Here it is:\n\n\"All international travellers arriving to the US are subject to US Customs & Border Protection inspection. This inspection may include electronic devices such as computers, disks, drives, tapes, mobile phones and other communication devices, cameras, music and other media players and any other electronic or digital devices. Keeping America safe and enforcing our nation's laws in an increasingly digital world depends on our ability to lawfully examine all materials entering the US.\n\n\"US Customs & Border Protection realises the importance of international travel to the US economy and we strive to process arriving travellers as efficiently and securely as possible while ensuring compliance with laws and regulations governing the international arrival process.\"\n• None US court: iPhone codes must be revealed", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nArsenal midfielder Mesut Ozil believes he is being made the scapegoat for the club's problems, says his agent.\n\nOzil, 28, was criticised again after Arsenal suffered a 5-1 defeat at Bayern Munich in Wednesday's Champions League last-16 first leg.\n\n\"But Mesut feels people are not focusing on his performance; they are using him as a scapegoat for the team after bad results.\"\n\nOzil joined Arsenal from Real Madrid in 2013 for a club-record £42.4m, and came with a reputation as one of the game's leading playmakers.\n\nBut his displays have often been questioned and the Germany international has come under increased scrutiny in recent weeks.\n• None I will be managing next season, here or elsewhere - Wenger\n• None 21 years and out? Key questions for Arsenal and Wenger\n\n'Was he the reason Arsenal conceded five?'\n\nAgainst Bayern, the 20 passes that Ozil completed was the same amount as home goalkeeper Manuel Neuer.\n\n\"Bayern had 74% possession,\" said Sogut, who is Ozil's lawyer and representative. \"How can someone in the No.10 position create chances if you don't have the ball?\n\n\"In these games people usually target a player who cost a lot of money and earns a lot of money - that is Mesut. But he can't be always be the scapegoat. That's not fair.\n\n\"Football is a team sport and Arsenal are not performing well as a team. Eleven players were on the pitch but Mesut was singled out for criticism. Was he the reason that Arsenal conceded five goals?\n\n\"It started before the match, throughout the week leading up to the game. People started discussing: 'Should he play? Should he be dropped?'.\n\n\"It was as if everyone knew Arsenal would not make it through and we needed a scapegoat. This is not right. You win as a team and you lose as a team.\"\n\n'People say he has poor body language but that's how he is'\n\nOzil has scored 29 goals in 146 Arsenal appearances and last season created more chances in a single campaign (137) than any other player in Premier League history.\n\nIn January, the German was named as his country's player of year for a fifth time in six years, having helped them to the semi-finals of Euro 2016 and World Cup glory two years earlier. But many have accused him of underperforming when it matters most.\n\n\"I don't agree that Mesut has not had an impact on big matches,\" Sogut said.\n\n\"What about the win at home to Chelsea this season and Manchester United the year before? What about the games for Germany against Italy and France at Euro 2016?\n\n\"People are always saying Mesut is not fighting or tackling, that he has poor body language, but that is how he is.\n\n\"Believe me, he is desperate to succeed. If it doesn't work, he shows his anger and expressions. Was his body language an issue when Arsenal were playing well?\n\n\"He is not someone who runs around aimlessly and tackles just so everyone thinks he is fighting. If it doesn't make sense to run somewhere he will keep that power for the next run.\"\n\nRecent defeats by Watford and Chelsea saw Arsenal lose ground in the Premier League title race and they currently sit in fourth place, 10 points behind leaders Chelsea.\n\nThey face a trip to non-league Sutton United in the FA Cup on Monday.\n\nOzil is out of contract in 2018 and there has been no breakthrough on talks over a new deal, but Sogut insisted his player is fully focused.\n\n\"I don't think the criticism has affected his performance or his mental state,\" the agent added.\n\n\"Mesut is committed to the club. There is no doubt that he will perform at 100%, with total professionalism and commitment as long as he plays for Arsenal. Nothing will change that.\n\n\"He is sorry to the fans, and he's sorry that he and his team-mates couldn't give the fans a better result in Munich.\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nToday totally typified the unexpected and unpredictable nature of covering the 45th president of the United States.\n\nI was at home, working on a book I am trying to finish when there was a flash on the TV: Donald Trump to hold unscheduled news conference in an hour's time.\n\nI legged it down to the White House, and on a cold Washington morning waited outside the East Wing for 45 minutes until the Secret Service let us in.\n\nI knew if I was to get a question in I would need to be near the front.\n\nFor half an hour the president berated us.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nNever had there been a more dishonest group of people.\n\nWe were out of control. Wild. Feral. Not to be trusted.\n\nAnd then it was questions.\n\nHe called various journalists he knew.\n\nThen I managed to catch his eye.\n\nAnd this is what followed:\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nMe: Could I just ask you, thank you very much, Mr President. The trouble...\n\nPresident Trump: Where are you from?\n\nMe: That's a good line. Impartial, free and fair.\n\nPresident Trump: Just like CNN right?\n\nMe: On the travel ban - we could banter back and forth. On the travel ban would you accept that that was a good example of the smooth running of government...\n\nPresident Trump: Yeah, I do. I do. Let me tell you about this government...\n\nMe: Were there any mistakes...\n\nPresident Trump: Wait. Wait. I know who you are. Just wait. Let me tell you about the travel ban. We had a very smooth rollout of the travel ban. But we had a bad court. Got a bad decision...\n\nIt was quite the most extraordinary news conference I have attended.\n\nAs I say, everything about reporting on this presidency is unexpected and unpredictable.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Where do Donald Trump supporters get their news from?\n\nHe is angry at times, proud of what he's achieving, furious that he's not getting the recognition he feels he deserves, obsessed by the polls, obsessed by the size of his crowd.\n\nAnd here's my one curious takeaway.\n\nThe media that he professes to hate and despise he seems to spend an awful lot of time watching.\n\nYou wonder, when does he find time to govern?", "Comedian Romina Puma who has muscular dystrophy and uses a wheelchair, asks whether she should mention her disability when online dating.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nTottenham Hotspur will win the Premier League within the next four years, says former manager Harry Redknapp.\n\nSpurs made the Champions League for the first time during Redknapp's four-year tenure at the club, reaching the quarter-finals in 2011.\n\nThe 69-year-old says he would not swap manager Mauricio Pochettino's starting XI for any other side in the division.\n\n\"They have been fantastic under Pochettino,\" Redknapp told BBC Radio 5 live's Friday Football Social.\n\n\"I have absolutely loved the way they have played - their football, the pace of the full-backs.\n\n\"Tottenham will go on and win the Premier League in the next three or four years.\"\n\nSpurs sit third in the Premier League, 10 points behind leaders Chelsea, but lost to Liverpool on Saturday and at Gent in the first leg of their Europa League last-32 tie on Thursday.\n\nThey have not won the title since 1961 and finished third last year after looking like champions Leicester's main challengers for long periods.\n\nBut Tottenham expect to have a new 61,000-seater stadium completed in time for the 2018-19 season, which Redknapp, who left the club in 2012, believes will play a big part in any future success.\n\n\"They've not been up there with the big spenders,\" he added. \"Now with the new stadium the crowds are going to nearly double.\n\n\"The man who owns the club, Joe Lewis, is up there with the richest men in the world. So there's certainly no shortage of money.\n\n\"Maybe they do run out of steam, maybe he [Pochettino] hasn't been able to rotate and could do with another three or four top players to give him the strength in depth.\n\n\"If you said to me 'go and manage any team you want', I would take Tottenham's best XI.\"", "Mark Clemmit is shown around the away dressing room at Sutton United by manager Paul Doswell, which Premier League side Arsenal will be using during their FA Cup fifth-round match on Monday.\n\nWatch live coverage of Sutton v Arsenal, Monday 20 February, 19:30 GMT on BBC One and the BBC Sport website.", "Arsene Wenger says he will definitely be managing next season, whether at Arsenal \"or somewhere else\".\n\nWenger, 67, was speaking at the end of one of the most turbulent weeks of his two-decade tenure as Gunners boss.\n\nAfter Wednesday's 5-1 Champions League defeat by Bayern Munich, several ex-players said they believed his time in charge was coming to an end.\n\nThe Frenchman's contract expires at the end of this season and he said he would decide on a new deal in March or April.\n\n\"No matter what happens I will manage for another season. Whether it's here or somewhere else, that is for sure,\" Wenger said on Friday.\n\n\"If I said March or April it is because I didn't know. I do not want to come back on that.\n\n\"I am used to the criticism. I think in life it's important to do what you think is right and all the rest is judgement. I am in a public job and I have to accept that, but I have to behave with my values.\"\n• None 21 years and out? Key questions for Arsenal and Wenger\n\nWenger, who has been in charge of Arsenal since 1996, said: \"We let everyone judge and criticise, we have to deal with that. We have to bounce back, that is what life is about.\n\n\"Even if I go, Arsenal will not win every single game in the future. It is not like before I arrived Arsenal had won five times in the European Cup.\n\n\"What is important is that the club makes the right decision for the future. I care about this club and its future and it is very important the club is in safe hands.\n\n\"The main emotion is everyone has a big disappointment. We have to regroup and refocus on the next game, and to take care of the consequences a disappointing result can have on everyone's spirit.\n\n\"We have to focus on the real problems and they are the way we play football, not my future.\n\n\"It is always important not to look for wrong excuses in life.\"\n\nArsenal have not won the Premier League since 2004, with FA Cups in 2005, 2014 and 2015 the only major silverware Wenger has secured since.\n\nHowever, he has consistently qualified for the lucrative Champions League and the club has continued to grow financially, despite the pressures of building a new stadium.\n\nThe Gunners reached the knockout stage of Europe's elite club competition for a 14th year in a row this season, but the last-16 first-leg thrashing at German champions Bayern leaves them with little hope of progressing.\n\nThe performance, coupled with earlier damaging league defeats by Chelsea and Watford, prompted several former Arsenal players - some of whom played under Wenger - to suggest his time was up.\n\nFormer Gunners captain Martin Keown described the defeat as Wenger's \"lowest point\", while ex-defender Lee Dixon said: \"This team is getting no response from him. I've never seen him like that.\"\n\nIn the Premier League, they are 10 points adrift of leaders Chelsea. After the Blues beat them 3-1 on 4 February, ex-England defender Danny Mills said Arsenal \"have settled for fourth again\".\n\nEarlier, former striker Ian Wright, who scored 185 goals for the club between 1991 and 1998, said he believed Wenger's time as Arsenal boss was \"coming to the end\", although the Frenchman later denied giving any indication of his future plans.\n\nMeanwhile, Wenger also said defender and captain Laurent Koscielny will have a scan on the injury he suffered against Bayern.\n\nThe France international was replaced by Gabriel after limping off just after half-time, and within seven minutes Arsenal conceded twice to go 3-1 down.\n\nThe Gunners travel to National League Sutton United in the FA Cup fifth round on Monday (19:55 GMT kick-off). The match is live on BBC One.\n• None How to follow the FA Cup fifth round on the BBC", "Fake news writers are producing strange, static videos that appear designed to boost pro-Donald Trump Facebook groups.\n\nIt was billed as the city of fake news. After the election of Donald Trump, journalists descended on Veles in Macedonia, which hosted a disproportionate number of fake news websites.\n\nNow it appears that people in Veles have developed a new tactic to try to make their Facebook posts go viral and thus raise the popularity of false stories.\n\nSeveral are using Facebook's live broadcasting tool to produce long, silent clips. The posts typically ask questions about President Trump or former President Obama and ask users to click \"like\", \"angry\", \"haha\" or another Facebook reaction button in order to register their preferences.\n\nFor instance, one of these video polls asked: \"Who is the best president in our country America?\". The video itself showed still pictures of Trump, Obama and former President George W Bush, along with a running tally of the \"votes\".\n\nBBC Trending found that video, and others made by people from Veles, in pro-Donald Trump Facebook groups.\n\nHere's a sample of what the videos look like:\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThe key to understanding what's going on here is the mechanism by which the posts solicit reactions. Making users click \"like\" or another reaction button to vote in the \"poll\" affects the Facebook algorithm and would tend to increase the chances that the video is seen by other people.\n\nBut the producers of the videos may be slightly behind trend. In December, Facebook responded to users who complained that looping or static videos weren't very interesting.\n\n\"Given this feedback, we're now taking steps to reduce the visibility of Live streams that consist entirely of graphics with voting,\" the company said. \"If you post a Live video with graphics-only polls, it may not show up as high in people's News Feeds.\"\n\nThe poll videos look like they are gauging opinion, although given that they are being posted in pro-Trump Facebook groups, the outcomes would seem to be foregone conclusions. At the same time, most of the time the content of the videos isn't faked or misrepresentative, like it has been in some more notorious cases. One Facebook Live video posted in October 2016, for instance, pretended to be a broadcast from the International Space Station.\n\nBut by driving traffic to the posts in pro-Trump groups, the videos might also aid the spread of fake news stories. In fact, the videos often sit side-by-side with stories that are false or have deeply misleading headlines. For instance, this story, a hoax about university students threatening to cut off their genitals if Trump carries out his plans to build the US-Mexico boarder wall, was debunked by the urban legends website Snopes and others. Clicking on the link to the story leads not to the text of the news story, but rather to a page of advertising:\n\nIn some cases, the video polls have a false premise at their heart. One example:\n\nThe post contains another falsehood as well: \"You need to SHARE this LIVE post before you React.\" Although you don't have to share any Facebook post before you react to it, claiming that you do might trick some people into doing both - thus giving the video a further boost according to the network's algorithm.\n\nSeveral of the people sharing the polls declare Veles connections in their Facebook profiles.\n\nA report by Buzzfeed, the news outlet that initially identified the Veles cluster, said that before the US election, the most popular false news stories were shared on Facebook more times than the most popular stories from mainstream media outlets.\n\nFacebook and other social networks have since started to put in place a number of measures to combat the spread of false stories, and there have also been a host of independent initiatives to try to tackle the problem.\n\nAs for the fake news writers of Veles, it appears they're motivated more by profit than politics.\n\n\"Teenagers in our city don't care how Americans vote,\" one fake news writer in the city told the BBC in December. \"They are only satisfied that they make money and can buy expensive clothes and drinks!\"\n\nBBC Trending tried to contact some of the people in Veles sharing the videos, but none responded.\n\nThe \"poll\" videos also aren't limited to Macedonians or pro-Trump groups. They appear in non-political contexts, and Trending has also seen them in groups supporting Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, a populist leader whose online machine was a key factor in his election victory in 2016.\n\nThis online poll asks if respondents have more trust in Duterte or a rival Filipino politician, Antonio Trillanes. It was posted in a pro-Duterte group\n\nNext story: How the Oscars became high season for film piracy\n\nAhead of the 89th Academy Awards, it's peak time for those seeking to rip off Hollywood's work - with one anonymous hacking outfit largely to blame.READ MORE\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "Last updated on .From the section Horse Racing\n\nGuy Disney made history by becoming the first amputee jockey to win at a professional racecourse in Britain.\n\nThe 34-year-old former soldier, who rides with a prosthetic leg, guided Rathlin Rose to victory in the Royal Artillery Gold Cup at Sandown.\n\nCaptain Disney lost his lower right leg when his vehicle was hit by a grenade while serving in Afghanistan in 2009.\n\nDisney, who came third in the race on Ballyallia Man in 2015, said: \"To ride a winner here is very, very special.\"\n\nThe David Pipe-trained Rathlin Rose was the 13-8 favourite and came through to claim the extended three-mile contest by four and a half lengths from Ardkilly Witness.\n\nThe annual meeting at Sandown is more than 150 years old and restricted to horses owned or leased by those who are serving or have served in the Royal Artillery.\n\n\"I've been phenomenally lucky,\" Disney said. \"I've been amazingly well looked after - people have had it far worse than I have. Some don't make it back.\n\n\"It was quite frustrating when there was a lot of fuss for finishing third in 2015 - anyone who is in this wants to win it. It's just nice to go a few places better now.\"\n\nPipe, who trains Rathlin Rose at Pond House stables in Somerset, said: \"It's fantastic. He's inspirational to everyone. It puts things into context.\n\n\"I didn't appreciate how big a thing it is. Guy was very excited about it. He was speechless afterwards and just said 'thank you'.\"\n\nAll the stories of service personnel who fight to rebuild their lives after suffering life-changing injuries act as inspiration, none more so than Guy Disney's.\n\nHe had been a winning point-to-point jockey before the Afghan incident, and applied for a riding licence afterwards, but the authorities were not at all keen.\n\nThere then followed a lot of the proverbial blood, sweat and tears to get one before Disney's efforts were finally rewarded in late 2014.\n\nThe emotion of this occasion was high, and it was impossible not to be touched on hearing him speak of there being \"a lot of things to think about, like the lads who aren't here\".", "Peruvian artist and photographer Christian Fuchs is obsessed with his illustrious ancestors and spends months painstakingly recreating portraits of them, posing for them himself whether the ancestors were men or women.\n\nIt's an unusual way to get close to your forefathers, but it works for Christian Fuchs.\n\nThe walls of his elegant apartment overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Lima's bohemian Barranco district are covered with paintings of his aristocratic European and Latin American ancestors.\n\nBut if you look closer, you soon realise that many of the portraits are, in fact, photographs of the 37-year-old himself, dressed up as his relatives.\n\nIt all started when Fuchs was 10 years old.\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-great-grandfather led a distinguished military career and participated in the Peruvian war of independence\n\nHis mother was diagnosed with schizophrenia and admitted to a psychiatric hospital, where she died five years later. His father left the family, remarried and disappeared.\n\nFuchs and his brother and sister were brought up by their paternal grandparents.\n\n\"I grew up with portraits and objects that had been in my family for up to five generations,\" he explains.\n\n\"As a child I looked at the portraits and played with them. If I didn't know the names of the characters, I invented them. I remember watching them for hours and feeling that they were watching me back. Sometimes I would talk to them, and eventually that led to my reinterpretations of them.\"\n\nFuchs's grandmother, Catalina del Carmen Silva Schilling, played a very important part in all of this. Born in Chile of German ancestors, she too was brought up by her grandparents.\n\n\"She would tell me stories about our relatives from Chile and Germany, and I learned to look at things through her eyes,\" Fuchs says.\n\n\"It was magical. She told me about relatives like my granny's great-grandmother, Marie Schencke, who also came from Germany. Her family brought electricity to the Chilean town, Osorno.\"\n\nYears later Fuchs went to university to study law, but after a few months working as a lawyer he quit to become an artist and found himself once again gazing at the portraits.\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-great-grandmother, Luise Friederike Charlotte Eleonora Chee, was his first recreation\n\n\"I was looking at one of the family portraits from 1830 of Eleanora, my grandmother's great-great-grandmother\" he says.\n\n\"I began to think, 'Considering we share the same genes, could I actually look like her?' That afternoon I went to the hairdresser and got them to put my hair up in ringlets. I thought it was a cool idea for a new project.\"\n\nThe process of reinterpreting his ancestors can take many months.\n\nFuchs reads their letters and talks to relatives about them. He takes photos of their portraits to a local tailor who tries to imitate the garments - some of which date back to the 18th Century - as faithfully as possible, and to a jeweller who creates replicas of the jewellery.\n\nDressing up as a woman can be especially problematic Fuchs says, and not only because he finds the corsets very uncomfortable.\n\n\"It's complicated because I have to wax,\" he says, \"and I have tons of hair.\"\n\nIt took Fuchs's great-great-grandfather Carl Schilling three months to sail from Germany to Chile. He lived there until his death in 1923 aged 93\n\nMaking up his face can also take between three and five hours, depending on the character.\n\nFuchs says that his most difficult project was recreating \"the family's patriarch\" Carl Schilling, his grandmother's great-grandfather, who arrived in Chile as a 19-year-old in 1850, on a boat full of German immigrants.\n\n\"He went down south to work as an estate manager for an aristocratic family called Buschmann and ended up marrying their daughter, Johanna,\" says Fuchs.\n\n\"Carl was a real character. He learned the native language so he could talk to the indigenous Mapuche people, and he was one of the founders of the German school in Osorno - one of the oldest German schools in the world.\"\n\nTo become his great-great-great-grandfather Fuchs had to grow a beard. It was slow work - taking more than a year - and when it was finally long enough to be dyed white he had a severe allergic reaction to the chemicals.\n\nBut Fuchs says that he knew the transformation had been a success when on a trip to the bank he was asked if he wanted to join the special queue for elderly people.\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-great-grandmother Dona Natividad Martinez de Pinillos Cacho y Lavalle. Her brother-in-law was President of Peru, Luis Jose de Orbegoso\n\nAlthough the finished works look very much like paintings they are, in fact, digital photographs taken under very bright lighting, which makes Fuchs's made-up skin appear very pale, almost like porcelain.\n\nThe photographs are then printed on matt, cotton paper and, as a final touch, Fuchs displays them in frames which are appropriate to the period in which the person he is recreating lived.\n\nHe exhibits and sells his recreations to art collectors around the world, but for him the project is primarily a means to help him connect with his past.\n\n\"At first my family thought I was strange,\" Fuchs says, \"but now they really like the pieces and want to find out more about their relatives.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. See how Fuchs is able to transform himself into his ancestors\n\nFuchs is currently working on transforming himself into his great-great-great-great-great-great-aunt, Dorothea Viehmann, who was born in Kassel, Germany, in 1755.\n\nThe daughter of an innkeeper, she heard many tales from the guests at her father's tavern. The Priest of the Huguenot church introduced Viehmann to the Brothers Grimm, and with that her work as a muse began.\n\nMost of Viehmann's tales were subsequently published in the second volume of the Brothers Grimm Fairy Tales.\n\nTo achieve a good likeness, make-up artist Juan Diego Peschiera painstakingly applies layer upon layer of liquid latex to Fuchs's face.\n\n\"The eyes are the most difficult part of the face to do,\" he explains.\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-grandfather Eulogio Elespuru y Martinez de Pinillos lived in Paris for many years\n\n\"Wrinkles go in different directions, so we have to make the latex go in different directions to create that effect. If we do it in just one layer it looks fake, so we need to build up lots of different layers. At first I apply alcohol-based make-up and then the liquid latex, it's translucent and you can see all the different capillaries under the skin.\"\n\nFuchs has recreated 11 ancestral portraits so far and has many more in mind, including Queen Elizabeth I, Mary Queen of Scots, and William Shakespeare. Fuchs believes they are all distantly related to him and plans to confirm that using a genetic genealogy website.\n\nBut there is one very special person he would particularly like to transform himself into, his grandmother, Catalina del Carmen.\n\nCarmen, who was like a mother to Fuchs, died just after Christmas and he is still grieving.\n\n\"It will be really hard to do her justice,\" he says, \"she was so pretty and had a much smaller nose than me, but I definitely want to try.\"\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-aunt Benjamina was friends with many famous poets and authors, including novelist and diplomat Alberto Blest Gana\n\nAll images courtesy of Christian Fuchs unless otherwise indicated\n\nListen to Christian Fuchs speaking to Outlook on the BBC World Service\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Liam Kelly: Leyton Orient captain banned for six games for ball boy 'shove' Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLiam Kelly (left) joined Orient from Oldham Athletic for an undisclosed fee last summer Leyton Orient captain Liam Kelly has been banned for six games by the Football Association for pushing over a ball boy in Tuesday's win at Plymouth. Argyle reported the midfielder, 27, to the FA after the incident in the 86th minute of the game. It was not seen by the match officials at the time, but was caught on video. Kelly denied the violent conduct charge but the FA found him guilty and ruled that the standard three-match ban was \"clearly insufficient\".", "Anna LeBaron's father, Ervil, was the leader of a polygamous cult responsible for more than 20 murders. The killings continued even after his death thanks to a hit list he had left behind. Here Anna speaks for the first time about how she escaped from the cult - and her hope to \"redeem\" the LeBaron name.\n\n\"We were taught to live in awe of him as God's prophet, as the one true prophet on Earth.\"\n\nThere is a note of incredulity in Anna LeBaron's voice as she describes her childhood. She speaks slowly and deliberately, as though she can hardly believe it herself.\n\n\"We were taught that we were celestial children, having been born from the prophet Ervil LeBaron. And we believed it. Even though we were treated so poorly we still believed we were celestial children.\"\n\nAnna says she can count on the fingers of one hand the number of times she was in the same room as her father. Yet the power Ervil LeBaron had over his followers, which included his 13 wives and more than 50 children, was absolute.\n\n\"He used fear to manipulate and control people,\" she says. \"We were absolutely afraid of not doing what we were told. And we didn't have a voice.\"\n\nAnna has found her voice now. At 48, she shows no outward sign of the traumatised childhood she vividly describes in her new memoir The Polygamist's Daughter.\n\nAnna LeBaron was born in Mexico in what she would later learn was a cult hideout. Separated at an early age from her mother, Ervil's fourth wife Anna-Mae Marston, she grew up on the run from the law.\n\nShuttled from one overcrowded safe house to the next, she slept on filthy foam mattresses and scavenged for food in dustbins with the other cult children and Ervil's \"sister wives\".\n\n\"We were taught that we were being persecuted because we were God's chosen people and that the world outside didn't understand us,\" she says.\n\n\"That was how they used to explain all the moving in the middle of the night and staying ahead of the law.\"\n\nAnna LeBaron in her early teens with brother Eddie - before she ran away\n\nThe children were used as unpaid labour in the domestic appliance repair shops that were the cult's main source of income - forced to scrub grease and grime from rusty ovens and refrigerators for 12 hours a day during school holidays.\n\n\"I watched siblings of mine receive horrific beatings for any type of attitude,\" Anna recalls. \"And these are young kids. They're kids. How much work can you really get out of a 10-year-old, or an 11-year-old, really? You can get work out of them if you are beating them.\"\n\nThe children were not cut-off entirely from the outside world. They were allowed to go to school, though they were not allowed to talk about what happened at home, and were \"taught to lie\" Anna says.\n\nThe girls were the lowest of the low in the cult's pecking order.\n\n\"It was a patriarchy, for sure. And the young girls were groomed to become wives of polygamist men that already had wives. We were groomed to accept that and to know that that's where we were headed, when we became of marriageable age.\"\n\nMarriageable age, in the LeBaron family, was 15, she says. \"So when I escaped at age 13 I escaped by the skin of my teeth!\"\n\nAnna did not know it at the time but her father - a powerful, charismatic figure, who at 6ft 4in towered over most of his disciples - was wanted by the FBI and the Mexican police for a string of murders on both sides of the border.\n\nHe rarely got involved in the violence himself but ordered his followers to kill anyone - including one of his own wives and two of his children - who challenged his position as God's representative on Earth or who threatened to leave the cult and complain to the authorities.\n\nHis followers believed he was receiving his instructions directly from God, having inherited the mantle of prophet from his father Alma Dayer LeBaron.\n\n\"When you are so convinced that someone is right, that you are willing to do anything - and even if you disagree, if you are so afraid to voice that disagreement and you just go and do it - that's the ultimate control,\" Anna says. \"And he had that. People did what he said. To their own detriment.\"\n\nBut Ervil did not have a monopoly on divine revelations. Three of his brothers had, at one time or another, claimed to be God's sole representative on Earth.\n\nErvil had initially been a follower of his older brother Joel but the pair clashed over Ervil's money-making schemes, including a plan to transform Los Molinos, the modest Mexican settlement where the sect's 200 or so followers had set up home, into a beach resort.\n\nJoel kicked Ervil out of his Church of the Firstborn of the Fullness of Time in 1970. So Ervil started his own sect, the Church of the Lamb of God, and set about eliminating his rivals - starting, in 1972, with Joel.\n\nUsing the long-abandoned Mormon doctrine of \"blood atonement\" which sanctions the killing of sinners to cleanse them of evil, Ervil could claim he was doing his ever-growing list of victims a favour by allowing them to enter Heaven.\n\nGod would reveal to Ervil the next victim and he would hand-pick a team of disciples to carry out the hit. The murder plots grew increasingly sophisticated, involving wigs and theatrical make-up, and back-up squads in case the initial plan failed. Refusing to follow Ervil's command was not an option.\n\n\"People defied it and many of them paid for that with their lives. And it wasn't until after he died that it kind of started to break up and that power was lost,\" says Anna.\n\n\"However, even from the grave, he was able to control people and their actions and that is just mind-blowing - that from the grave he was able to do that.\"\n\nAnna Mae Marston looking happy with some of her children\n\nErvil had managed to evade justice in the Mexican courts over the murder of Joel and a deadly commando-style raid on Los Molinos, where the population were stubbornly refusing to accept him as their new prophet.\n\nHe was eventually captured by Mexican police and handed over to the FBI in 1979, in circumstances that have never been fully explained. He was later jailed for life for orchestrating the murder of Rulon C Allred, the leader of a polygamous sect in Utah who had rejected Ervil's demands for money and recognition.\n\nErvil died in Utah State Prison in 1981, after suffering a seizure. But his reign of terror was far from over.\n\nA bloody battle for the succession ensued, with Ervil's chief henchman, Dan Jordan, making an early play for the mantle of prophet - a terrifying prospect for Anna, who had suffered under the tyrannical regime in his Denver repair shop.\n\nAnna was now was living in Houston with her mother, half-sister Lillian and Lillian's husband, Mark Chynoweth, who also ran an appliance store.\n\nLillian and Mark had been among the most fanatical of Ervil LeBaron's followers but after he was jailed they began to drift away from the cult, joining a Christian church and rejecting his polygamous creed.\n\nWhen Dan Jordan arrived in Houston to order Anna and her mother to return to Denver with him, the 13-year-old Anna rebelled.\n\n\"I could not believe that my mother had been talked back into going back to Denver when we were experiencing a life in Houston that was the most normal I had ever experienced.,\" she says. \"We had lived in the same house for about a year - the longest I had ever lived anywhere - and we were eating food that was purchased in grocery stores. And we were paid to work. We could save up money.\"\n\nShe realised that this might be the best chance she would get to take control of her life.\n\n\"It was now or never. And the feelings that I had inside, that bitterness and the injustices that we had experienced, left me with a very strong feeling about not wanting to go back.\"\n\nShe could not have escaped without the help of Lillian, who hid her away in a motel room until her mother had returned to Denver with Jordan.\n\nAnna describes Lillian and Mark as the \"heroes\" of her story, for taking her in and giving her a chance to change the trajectory of her life.\n\nBut their life together would not last. What they didn't know was that in prison Ervil had drawn up a hit list of 50 people he regarded as traitors, buried away in a final, rambling theological tract - The Book of the New Covenants - and that Mark's name was on it.\n\nAfter Dan Jordan was murdered in an apparent \"blood atonement\", Mark revealed that he and Jordan had been among a group of followers who had refused to carry out Ervil's orders to bust him out of prison \"guns blazing\" and so there was a good chance he would be targeted next.\n\nThe 38-year-old refused to go into hiding. He opted instead to turn his suburban home into a fortress, but it wasn't enough.\n\nAt 4pm on 27 June 1988, he was shot numerous times as he sat in his office chair at Reliance Appliances.\n\nAt almost exactly the same time, Mark's brother Duane, owner of another Houston repair shop, was shot dead, along with his eight-year-old daughter Jennifer.\n\nAnd 200 miles away in Irving, Texas, another of Ervil's former disciples, Eddie Marston - Anna's half-brother - was gunned down next to his pick-up truck within five minutes of the first three killings.\n\nThe Four O'Clock murders, as they became known, shocked America. Someone - most likely one of Ervil LeBaron's sons - was working their way through his hit list. The murders took place on the 144th anniversary of the death of Joseph Smith, the founder of the Mormon church.\n\nAnna did her best to comfort Lillian and her six children, while dealing with her own fears.\n\n\"I don't think I was a personal target, however, I knew that if something happened, and I happened to be in the way, that I could also be killed. So it was a very frightening time. We were under police protection and it was just scary.\"\n\nMark Chynoweth had been the closest thing to a father figure in Anna's life, and she is close to tears as she talks about his death. As a teenager, she read about cult atrocities he had taken part in but insists that was not the man she knew.\n\n\"Mark was a kind man. He was generous. And I don't believe for one minute that had he grown up in a normal family setting that he would have done any of the things that he was accused of, on his own.\n\n\"He was kind and loving. He was a good father to his children and losing him was very difficult, under the circumstances that we lost him.\"\n\nIn 1997, Anna's half-brother Aaron LeBaron, who had emerged from the succession battles as the One Mighty and Strong prophet, was sentenced to 45 years in prison for orchestrating the Four O'Clock murders. Four other cult members were also jailed for their part in the killings.\n\nBy this point, Anna had made a decisive break from what remained of the cult, finding the strength to go away to college and attempt to build an independent life.\n\nShe married David, her childhood sweetheart from Houston, who had joined the Marine Corps, and they started a family.\n\nShe was determined to break free from polygamy, which she believes leads women to \"numb\" their emotions.\n\n\"I don't believe it's a natural relationship,\" she says. \"Most women will struggle, having to share their husband or their significant other.\"\n\nIt is not a view shared by her mother, with whom she remains in contact, and who stayed loyal to Ervil to the bitter end.\n\n\"My Mom still believes in the practice of polygamy as taught by [Mormon founder] Joseph Smith and still lives in a group that practises that, so that is a little bit difficult to process - how that can be something she sticks with even after all the devastation and the damage that it caused to her own children.\"\n\nJacqueline Tarsa LeBaron was the final cult member to be jailed over the Four O'Clock murders\n\nAnna battled depression after the death of Lillian Chynoweth, who committed suicide following her husband's murder in 1998.\n\nAt first she coped with the trauma of losing so many loved ones by pretending it had happened to someone else. It would take years of painful therapy for her to finally \"acknowledge that these experiences are part of my past\".\n\nShe now believes her father suffered from some form of mental illness for most of his adult life.\n\n\"It is sad to me that he was experiencing these things and not able to reach out and get the help he needed. But, of course, when you are the prophet, how much help do you actually think you'll need?\"\n\nErvil's madness, if that's what it was, cast a long shadow over Anna and her siblings.\n\nThe book was only closed on the Four O'Clock Murders in 2011, when after 20 years on the run Jacqueline Tarsa LeBaron became the sixth former cult member to be jailed for taking part in the plot.\n\nBut Anna is convinced that the blood-letting is now, finally, at an end.\n\n\"I have five grown children and if me telling my story was to put me in any danger, or anybody that I loved and cared about, I would never have done this at all. I believe that is 100% in the past and there is no danger at all for me.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Anna LeBaron on how she escaped her father's polygamous cult\n\nShe hopes that by telling her story, in The Polygamist's Daughter, she can \"help restore relationships in our family, instead of continuing to bring more separation and more fear\".\n\nIn one passage, she describes a reunion with her half-brother Robert, who shot dead Duane Chynoweth and his eight-year-old daughter. Robert, who was just 17 at the time of the killings, received a reduced sentence for testifying against other family members.\n\n\"As I embraced my long-lost brother,\" she writes, \"the emotion I had held inside for years came out in floods of tears.\"\n\nAnd despite everything, Anna says she is \"very proud\" of her family.\n\n\"Even people that were involved in some of the most horrific things that happened have gone on to become caring, kind, loving, productive members of society, that just want good in the world,\" she says.\n\nShe hopes that the book's publication will help to \"redeem the LeBaron name,\" which remains one of the most infamous in American criminal history.\n\nBut it is also an attempt to reassert her own identity, for so long suppressed by the cult and her father's malevolent legacy.\n\n\"Even though that life could have crushed who I am, in my spirit, in my soul, that has not been the last story,\" she says.\n\n\"So I kind of get to have the final word here, in saying, 'This is who I am.'\"\n\nThe Polygamist's Daughter, by Anna Le Baron with Leslie Wilson, is published on 21 March\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "The troops were taking part in a training operation in Tallinn\n\nThe Ministry of Defence (MoD) provided British soldiers with a guide to strip clubs in the Estonian capital, a freedom of information request to the department has revealed.\n\nThe advice featured in a booklet titled \"Tallinn guide for friendly forces\", given to troops taking part in a Nato Steadfast Javelin training operation.\n\nThe operation took place in May 2015.\n\nThe MoD would not comment on the guide but said advice on \"staying safe\" was routinely given to troops while abroad.\n\nThe BBC requested copies of various documents concerning the operation, also known as Exercise Hedgehog.\n\nIn its response, the department provided the guide, which includes a section detailing three strip clubs in Tallinn.\n\nLasso Baar was said to be a \"big strip bar with one of the prettiest dancers\" and Soho was identified as the \"biggest strip club in Estonia\". X Club was billed as \"the most professional strip club with various elements\".\n\nThe guide also gave British troops further advice on what to expect at Estonian strip clubs.\n\nThose visiting strip clubs were advised to \"use cash\"\n\nTroops were informed that \"all strip clubs offer private rooms for individual dances\", and that \"the average level of rolling tips to girls is 5 to 20 euros\". They were also advised \"to use cash in such places\".\n\nAsked if it was appropriate for the government to provide such material, a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Defence said: \"As you would expect, we routinely provide guidance to our people about staying safe while on deployment.\"\n\nThe department would not comment on who had produced the guide, how it had been distributed to troops, or whether it would be issued to troops serving in Estonia in future.\n\nThe guide included other nightlife tips, such as pubs Mad Murphy's and Hell Hunt, or visiting the city's historic Old Town for a dash of Baltic culture.\n\nIt also offered a warning on public drinking, saying that to avoid a police fine, \"when you want to drink spirits in the street it is wise to cover the bottles\".\n\nAnd it includes gift ideas for British troops. It suggests a visit to a shop called Bonbon Lingerie as a good place to pick up something special for wives and girlfriends. In terms of a bottle of something to bring home, it suggests Vana Tallinn or Old Tallinn liquor, of which the guide says, \"Finns just love it and some of them use it as a sleeping pill.\"\n\nA spokesperson for the Estonian embassy in London said the Estonian government had not produced the guide.\n\n\"According to the information received from the Estonian Defence Forces this is not an official document produced by or for the Government of Estonia.\"\n\nOperation Steadfast Javelin was a major Nato training exercise, in which 13,000 troops and reserves defended positions against a simulated attack by land and air.\n• None The rise and fall of lap dancing", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nZlatan Ibrahimovic scored his first hat-trick for Manchester United and the 17th of his career in a Europa League win over Saint-Etienne at Old Trafford.\n\nIbrahimovic's deflected free-kick wrong-footed goalkeeper Stephane Ruffier and dribbled over the line for the opener, and he tapped home from close range after good work from Marcus Rashford, as well as adding a late penalty - his 23rd goal of the season.\n\nSaint-Etienne caused United problems on the break in the first 45 minutes, particularly with Romain Hamouma's pace, while Henri Saivet and Nolan Roux both clipped efforts narrowly off target.\n\nRuffier's double save denied Juan Mata, Anthony Martial forced the visiting goalkeeper into sharp saves and Paul Pogba headed against the crossbar from close range.\n\nThe two sides meet for the second leg on Wednesday, 22 February (kick-off 17:00 GMT).\n\nThere were question marks over the signing of veteran striker Ibrahimovic on a free transfer from Paris St-Germain in the summer, but the former Sweden international has responded by taking his tally to 23 for the season.\n\nThe 35-year-old former Juventus, Barcelona and AC Milan man has now netted 17 career hat-tricks. It was his first since joining United, his second in European competition and his third against Saint-Etienne.\n\n\"Every time I have played against Saint-Etienne, with hard work there has been a couple of goals,\" Ibrahimovic said after the game. \"I have scored a couple of goals tonight and hopefully I can do the same next week.\"\n\nThe Ligue 1 side will be pleased to see the back of Ibrahimovic when he retires having scored 17 times against them during his career.\n\nIbrahimovic has 11 titles and three domestic cups to his name, but a major European trophy remains missing from his illustrious CV.\n\nLike Ibrahimovic, United have never won this competition, but the result keeps alive their hopes of a cup treble this season. They face Blackburn in the FA Cup fifth round on Sunday and Southampton in the EFL Cup final the following week.\n\nIn his first season at Old Trafford, Jose Mourinho's side are just two points off a Champions League spot in the league, but triumph in the Europa League would give them an automatic passage through to Europe's elite club competition.\n\nAgainst Saint-Etienne, the Red Devils tested Ruffier on numerous occasions but he was left floundering for the first goal, while his parry into the danger area allowed the second.\n\nOn the other hand, the Ligue 1 side carved United's backline open with ease at times, with defender Eric Bailly looking particularly suspect, but they failed to work goalkeeper Sergio Romero into a single save with their 14 shots.\n\nThe world's most expensive player, Paul Pogba, was up against his brother Florentin, who was signed by the French side for 500,000 euros in 2012.\n\nMother Yeo and third brother Mathias watched from the stands as the two shared a warm embrace before kick-off, with the elder sibling Florentin sporting a number 19 on one side of his head and his brother's six on the other.\n\n\"It is something very magical, it does not happen every day and I really enjoyed playing against my brother,\" said the United player.\n\nFrance international Paul showed why the club spent £89m to sign him from Juventus in the summer with a dominant midfield performance in which he controlled the tempo of the match.\n\nHowever, on one occasion he inadvertently gave the ball away to Florentin, whose burst forward eventually saw the ball reach Saivet, but the on-loan Newcastle man could not find the target with his shot.\n\nFlorentin's rising drive in the first half almost saw him nick an away goal for his side, while Paul wasted good chances in the second period, the best of which came as he headed against the woodwork when unmarked.\n\nThe Saint-Etienne defender's evening ended early as he hobbled off with an injury with 12 minutes remaining.\n\nWhile his side ran out comfortable winners in the end, Mourinho was not happy with the start his side made, and accused his players of lacking focus.\n\n\"In the first half, we played so bad, and we managed to finish it winning 1-0 when we don't deserve,\" he said.\n\n\"It was down to lack of concentration. I had the feeling immediately in the dressing room - too noisy, too funny, too relaxed. Then my assistants had the feeling in the warm-up, with some of the guys not really focused on getting the right adrenaline in their bodies.\n\n\"So, lack of concentration. And when you don't have it, it's difficult to recover it. So the first half was hard. We were lucky to be winning 1-0. I am not happy with it. I always think we have to play every game with the same attitude.\"\n\nHe said the second half was a \"different story\" and brushed off suggestions the players lacked focus because they were playing in the less-heralded Europa League than the premier European competition, the Champions League: \"We don't play Champions League, so if that is the case I would prefer to play in the Europa League than be at home watching TV. So I think with the players it is the same.\"\n\nUnited watertight at the back - the stats\n• None Zlatan Ibrahimovic has had a hand in 18 goals in 17 appearances at Old Trafford this season (12 goals, six assists).\n• None Jose Mourinho has kept five consecutive clean sheets as a manager for the first time since November 2011 when he was Real Madrid boss.\n• None Goalkeeper Sergio Romero has kept six consecutive clean sheets for United and hasn't conceded a goal since an Alex Revell penalty for Northampton in September 2016.\n• None The Red Devils have won three consecutive European games without conceding a goal for the first time since November 2010 under Sir Alex Ferguson.\n• None Despite not registering their first shot until the 30th minute, Saint-Etienne had 11 shots in the first half, the most by an opponent at Old Trafford in the first half of a match since Athletic Bilbao had 13 in March 2013.\n\nManchester United striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic told BT Sport: \"We created good chances. It was important to get a good win at home and we bring it with us in the second leg. It was a good game but I think we can do better.\n\n\"We are winning but in a short time everything can change. It's important to keep getting the wins we need. Everything can change but we're happy at the moment.\n\n\"This is the decisive moment for the season. We are still in all four competitions. The fifth we already won [the Community Shield].\"\n\nManchester United travel to Blackburn Rovers in the FA Cup on Sunday (kick-off 16:15 GMT), while Saint-Etienne face Montpellier in Ligue 1 on the same day (kick-off 16:00 GMT).\n• None Attempt missed. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left from a direct free kick.\n• None Offside, St Etienne. Kevin Malcuit tries a through ball, but Nolan Roux is caught offside.\n• None Goal! Manchester United 3, St Etienne 0. Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United) converts the penalty with a right footed shot to the bottom left corner.\n• None Penalty conceded by Kévin Théophile-Catherine (St Etienne) after a foul in the penalty area.\n• None Kevin Malcuit (St Etienne) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Attempt blocked. Henri Saivet (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt blocked. Henri Saivet (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt blocked. Jesse Lingard (Manchester United) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Paul Pogba with a cross. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "The furore over a rise in business rates continues to make front-page headlines in the newspapers.\n\nThe Daily Mail says the minister in charge of business rates, Sajid Javid, has \"come under fire\" for staying on holiday amid the uproar.\n\nActually, he's on page four of the Daily Telegraph. In a commentary piece, Mr Javid says average bills will fall by as much as 11% outside London.\n\nThe Telegraph also carries a warning that the chancellor must back down from the \"looming nightmare\" of higher rates in his Budget, or risk a revolt in the Conservative heartlands.\n\nThe Guardian leads on Donald Trump denying his presidency is in a \"state of chaos\".\n\nThe paper says Mr Trump's first solo news conference since taking office turned into a \"sprawling and pugnacious\" defence of his first four weeks in the White House, and a \"bitter denunciation\" of the press.\n\nThe Times says Amazon and Apple are profiting from an anti-vaccination documentary directed by the \"discredited former doctor\", Andrew Wakefield.\n\nHe claimed a link between the MMR vaccine and autism, but was later struck off.\n\nThe paper says scientists and autism campaigners want the video removed from commercial websites.\n\nScience writer Simon Singh tells the paper that the video could cause people harm, and that companies which screen it are putting profit above public health.\n\nThe Daily Mirror says a new report reveals that the social care crisis \"caused by Tory austerity\" has been linked to an extra 30,000 deaths in 2015 - most of them elderly patients.\n\nThe paper says the study - which is published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine - is the first time that a direct link has been drawn between cuts in services and a surge in deaths.\n\nOne researcher from Oxford University tells the paper: \"We've looked at every possible cause we can imagine, and cuts are the only explanation.\"\n\nThe Department of Health disputes the findings, saying there is \"significant variation\" each year in reported excess deaths.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph has details of how scientists hope to bring the woolly mammoth - or something close to it - back from extinction.\n\nThey've created a genetic blueprint using material from a carcass preserved in the Arctic permafrost.\n\nA team at Harvard University plans to splice mammoth genes with elephant DNA to create a hybrid embryo, with mammoth features.\n\n\"We may not be able to visit the past,\" says the paper's editorial, \"but that won't stop people trying to bring it to us.\"", "In a heated exchange between Newsnight's Evan Davis and an aide to President Trump, both the presenter and the BBC were accused of \"fake news\".\n\nFirst broadcast on Thursday 16 February - watch the full interview here", "The BBC's Johny Cassidy began to lose his eyesight when he was in his teens\n\nAcross the world up to 1.2 billion people live with some sort of disability, it is estimated. That's equivalent to the population of China.\n\nIn the UK, it is thought that some seven million people of working age have a disability, which all adds up to an awful lot of spending power.\n\nLatest figures from the UK's Department of Work and Pensions estimate that this spending power, the so-called \"purple pound\", is worth £249bn to the economy.\n\nSo what should businesses be doing to try to get a share of this money?\n\nThat's what we'll be asking during Disability Works week from the BBC's business and economics unit.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The power of the \"purple pound\" explained\n\nWe'll be looking at how businesses work with people with disabilities and how disabled people have made business work for them.\n\nI gradually began to lose my eyesight when I was in my teens so I understand the difficulties for disabled people getting into work. I've been a producer in the BBC's business and economics unit for nearly nine years.\n\nI'm keen to address the stereotype of disabled people that we all too often see in the media. For every one of the superheroes climbing mountains or the wheelchair marathon runners, there are dozens of people quietly getting on with running their own business.\n\nThere are also likely to be a lot of disabled people watching the news who miss out on seeing people like themselves reflected in bulletins. I'm hoping that this week will go some way to addressing that.\n\nJacob Anthony has ataxic cerebral palsy - he's set up his own bakery but it's not been easy\n\nWe'll be talking to disabled men and woman who have decided to start their own businesses, from the Welsh baker just at the start of his journey into entrepreneurship, right the way through to the Christmas tree farmer who's been selling trees for over 20 years.\n\nMany big businesses realise that by simply listening to and understanding the needs of their disabled customers, a rich new revenue stream can be opened up.\n\nIt is not about charity, though. It makes hard business sense to address the needs of this demographic.\n\nDiversity in a workforce has long been said to be beneficial to a company. The need to reflect your customer base within the workforce brings empathy and understanding, and far from being a hindrance to a business, this diversity can bring a strength.\n\nWe'll look at the UK fragrance house that has teamed up with a college for the blind in Mumbai in India in order to train people to become perfumers and the South African business that is training disabled welders.\n\nRavi Vanniyar's company uses blind people like himself to check the smell of raw materials that go into making perfumes\n\nThe whole idea is to show that with a little bit of adaptation and understanding, disabled people can and do add to the economy.\n\nThe interesting thing though is that these difficulties are more often than not the catalyst that enables people to start their own business, and we will also try to offer some advice to disabled people who are thinking of doing so.\n\nThis is often a preferred route for many people as running your own business offers the flexibility that a nine-to-five job might not give you.\n\nThe bigger difficulty for many is the barriers that other people put in the way.\n\nAdvances in access technology have taken away many of these physical barriers, but there's still a lot to be done to take away the social ones.", "TV comedy star Matt Lucas has been awarded an honorary degree by his former university.\n\nThe actor studied Theatre, Film and Television at Bristol University in 1993 but did not complete the course.\n\nHe took a year long sabbatical to join television show Shooting Stars and did not return.\n\nAfter high-fiving the chancellor, he said comedy partner David Walliams, also a university alumnus, would be fuming.\n\nDavid Walliams and Matt Lucas created characters such as Charles Gray and Vicky Pollard for Little Britain\n\nHe and Walliams later wrote comedy sketch show Little Britain which became a huge hit.\n\nAfter being awarded the honorary degree, Lucas high-fived university chancellor Sir Paul Nurse.\n\nMatt Lucas described himself as a \"charlatan\" who had left Bristol University before completing his course\n\nHe said: \"I stand here before you in receipt of this great tribute. You fools.\"\n\nHe said he quickly realised he had enrolled on a \"serious course\" but while other students found and challenged themselves, he just \"walked up and down nearby Whiteladies Road with a cough\".\n\n\"I was also just generally useless at university life. I had few friends and rarely left my room, unless it was to go and cook something in the kitchen.\n\n\"Today, you bring the entire university honours system into question by celebrating a charlatan who left university a year early in 1995, when most of this year's graduates were still in nappies, so that he could indeed wear a romper suit of his own, appear in a Cadbury Creme Egg advert and then do a sketch show with his friend,\" he said.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Somalia has not had enough rain for three years. The country's landscape has become littered with dead animals and there are warnings of a full-blown famine by June.", "At the 2016 European Championships, violent clashes between Russian and English supporters in Marseille put the spotlight on Russian hooliganism.\n\nRussian hooligans injured over 100 English supporters, beating two into a coma.\n\nIt has raised serious concerns ahead of Russia hosting the 2018 World Cup.\n\nIn rare interviews with members of the Orel Butchers - who violently attacked English fans in Marseille - a world is revealed where brutal violence has become a mark of honour.\n\nWatch the full programme Russia's Hooligan Army, BBC 2, on iPlayer, first broadcast Thursday 16th February\n\nJoin the conversation - find BBC Stories on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Retired teacher Tony Lloyd started collecting magnets in 1987. About 600 were given to him by his pupils\n\nTony Lloyd's compulsion for collecting fridge magnets has seen him amass up to 5,000 mementoes in his home.\n\nThe retired teacher started collecting them in 1987 while on a exchange trip to Australia and now they dominate three rooms in his house.\n\nHis passion was even passed on to his students, who would bring back magnets from holidays for him.\n\nThe 64-year-old from Cardiff says he can remember the story behind each one and which pupil gave each magnet.\n\nMr Lloyd, a father of two from Rhiwbina, reckons his collection was bolstered by about 600 thanks to the pupils' efforts.\n\nHe used to display the magnets on the walls of his primary school in Cowbridge.\n\nThe collection contains magnets from at least 100 countries but Mr Lloyd could not find one in Mozambique\n\n\"I've a primary school teacher's mind and for most of them I remember the child who gave it to me and the story behind it,\" he says.\n\n\"Parents would say the [purpose] of the holidays was finding a magnet for Mr Lloyd. I had that story half a dozen times, whether it was the Greek islands or New York.\"\n\nAnd when he was presented with the gift?\n\n\"I always treated every magnet as if I was enthralled by it.\n\n\"It wasn't the magnet but the thought behind it. Those kids remembered and bothered and that's priceless and shows mutual respect.\"\n\nTony Lloyd quickly ran out of space on his fridge\n\nHe was inspired to start the collection when he saw the fridge of an Australian couple who had picked up magnets during a year's travel around their country.\n\nMr Lloyd was able to cover his fridge after spending a year in Australia on his exchange trip. Most of his magnets are now displayed on steel panels.\n\n\"I wouldn't buy anything cheap or tacky like animals dressed up or boiled eggs.\n\n\"In Windsor and London they have teddies dressed as kings and queens. It's an abomination,\" he jokes.\n\nMr Lloyd was given a special collection by a stranger he met when travelling in the US\n\nOn one occasion 30 were given to him in an unexpected way.\n\n\"I met a guy on the way from Detroit to New York and he told me his wife had recently died.\n\n\"We got talking about my magnets and he said his wife had had quite a collection.\"\n\nSix months later a package arrived in the post, the postage costing $17 (at today's rates £13.60), he says.\n\n\"He wanted the magnets to go somewhere special. She had collected Broadway shows - Jersey Boys and Chicago.\n\n\"He said 'You've obviously got a passion'. I felt very touched by that.\"\n\nAsked why he does it he says \"It's a typical male compulsive disorder. I collect full-size flags as well.\"\n\nAnd what do his friends make of it? \"They think it's slightly eccentric. It's a talking point.\"\n\nThe world record for the largest collection of fridge magnets is held by Louise J Greenfarb from Las Vegas.\n\nShe has 35,000 non-duplicated fridge magnets that she has been collecting since the 1970s, according to Guinness World Records.\n\nMr Lloyd, who is retired, teaches English as a foreign language and is a tour guide, and does not expect he will ever match that achievement.\n\nBut his next trip abroad will take him to his 101st international destination, the Maldives. He racked up his 100th, Cuba, last year.\n\nAnd there are no prizes for guessing what he will bring home.", "Camila Morrone, Laura Love, Harley Viera-Newtorn and Emily Ratajkowski at the Michael Kors show\n\nNew York Fashion Week came to an end on Wednesday, marking the end of seven days of extremely good looking people wearing clothes we can't afford.\n\nNYFW is held twice a year - February and September - and this one focused on autumn/winter collections.\n\nWe'll leave aside the fact that Wednesday is nobody's idea of the end of the week and focus on some of the highlights instead.\n\nIn 2014, 30-year-old convicted felon Jeremy Meeks was arrested during a gun sweep in California. But then something unusual happened.\n\nHis mugshot went viral after it was posted on the Stockton Police Department's Facebook page.\n\nIt received more than 15,000 likes and several users left comments like \"hottest convict ever\" and \"Is it illegal to be that sexy?\"\n\nThe blue-eyed bandit, as some fans branded him, was quickly snapped up by a modelling agent and his Instagram account now has 834,000 followers.\n\nPhilip Plein must have been one of those who had his head turned, as Meeks has now popped up on the catwalk of the designer's autumn/winter collection.\n\nThe way things are at the moment, it would be much more groundbreaking if someone in the public eye didn't try to make a political statement.\n\nNonetheless, there were politics aplenty at NYFW, perhaps most notably on the runway for the Mara Hoffman collection.\n\nThe designer's show kicked off with opening remarks by the national co-chairs of the Women's March on Washington (pictured above).\n\nThe Women's March was an international protest against US president Donald Trump which took place last month.\n\nDesigners Public School also kitted out their models with hats reading \"Make America New York\" - a reference to President Trump's Make America Great Again campaign slogan.\n\nModels were also seen wearing shirts with slogans such as \"The Future is Female\" and \"We Will Not be Silenced\".\n\nIt's unusual for fashion to dip its toes into the world of politics, but it seems even the most high-profile designers are keen to have their say on President Trump and his policies.\n\nAshley Graham for Michael Kors and Candice Huffine for Prabal Gurung\n\nThis was not the first time that plus-sized models appeared at New York Fashion Week, but it may well be the most significant.\n\nPreviously, designers have included plus-size models, very often in frumpy outfits, to gain publicity for their show.\n\nThis time around, however, models like Ashley Graham (for Michael Kors) and Candice Huffine (for Prabal Gurang) were styled in a similar way to the other models.\n\nOr he might've done. We don't know, as he didn't allow any photographers into his Yeezy Season 5 runway show.\n\nFor all we knew he might have unveiled a new range of \"Taylor Swift Rules\" T-shirts.\n\nAll we had to go on from the show were some grainy photos and shaky mobile phone footage from those who flouted the photography rules.\n\nHowever, all of the designs have now been posted online, making the camera ban somewhat pointless.\n\nOne thing we do know is Kanye refused to walk the runway at the end of his show, as is customary for the designer.\n\nIt seems that's about as controversial as it got.\n\nNo recorded hip-hop or dance music for Michael Kors's show, oh no. He brought an orchestra.\n\nThis is a seriously classy touch.\n\nIndonesian Muslim designer Anniesa Hasibuan has made the hijab her trademark over the last two seasons.\n\nThis week, she built it into the outfits on display at her NY Fashion Week show, styling it with flowing gowns.\n\nAll of the models in Hasibuan's autumn/winter 2017 collection were seen with grey hijabs, signalling that such sightings on the catwalk could become more common.\n\nInterviewed backstage, the designer said her dream would be to dress Kate Middleton, adding that she admires the Duchess of Cambridge for \"her elegance\".\n\nRead more: When hijabs dazzled the New York catwalk\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "President Donald Trump has launched a defence of his administration in a White House news conference lasting over an hour.\n\nHe denounced the press, and said his team was running like “a fine-tuned machine”.", "The NHS has apologised to a Devon woman who was asked the wrong questions when she dialled the non-emergency service NHS 111.\n\nMichelle Perryman rang for help saying she felt violently ill but said she was frustrated by the service which asked about 40 questions over a 10 minute call.\n\nThe non-emergency service call handler repeatedly tells Mrs Perryman: \"The computer is asking the questions.\"\n\nSouth West Ambulance, which lost the service in 2016 after a damning report, said the the call handler selected the wrong \"pathway\".\n\nRead more on this story here and click here for more stories from around Devon and Cornwall.", "More than 100 people have been killed across Pakistan since Sunday in a series of deadly militant attacks\n\nAs Pakistan picks up the pieces from Thursday evening's devastating bomb attack at the 800-year-old shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, the country's managers are looking for scapegoats abroad.\n\nAnd the military has openly taken charge of the proceedings, relegating pretentions of political propriety to the background.\n\nSoon after the bombing, army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa vowed that \"each drop of [the] nation's blood shall be avenged, and avenged immediately\".\n\nThere would be \"no more restraint for anyone\", he said.\n\nThe object of his remark was clear an hour later when the military announced that Pakistan had closed its border with Afghanistan to all traffic, including pedestrians.\n\nOn Friday morning, Afghan embassy officials were summoned to the army's headquarters in Rawalpindi. They were handed a list of 76 \"terrorists\" said to be hiding in their country, with the demand that they be arrested and handed over to Pakistan, the military says.\n\nThe fiery reaction came after a series of deadly militant attacks in five days from Sunday killed more than 100 people across Pakistan, including civilians, the police and soldiers.\n\nThis is the worst spell of violence since 2014, when Pakistan launched an operation to eliminate militant sanctuaries in its north-western tribal region.\n\nThe numerous militant attacks this week have raised questions about the authorities' security strategy\n\nViolence decreased considerably as a result, with Pakistani leaders claiming the militants had been defeated. But this week, that sense of security has been blown away.\n\nThe latest surge in attacks comes amid reports of the reunification of some powerful factions of the Pakistani Taliban. Some of them have links with the Afghanistan-Pakistan chapter of the so-called Islamic State, which itself emerged from a former faction of the Pakistani Taliban.\n\nMost of these groups have hideouts in border areas of Afghanistan, where they relocated after Pakistan launched its anti-militant operations.\n\nPakistan now accuses Afghanistan of tolerating these sanctuaries. It also blames India for funding these groups.\n\nOfficials say India and Afghanistan want to hurt Pakistan economically and undermine China's plans to build a multi-billion dollar \"economic corridor\" through the country.\n\nAt least 80 people were killed in the Sufi shrine attack on Thursday in Sehwan, Sindh province\n\nBut many in Pakistan and elsewhere don't buy that argument. They believe that militancy in Pakistan is actually tied to the country's own covert wars that sustain the economy of its security establishment.\n\nIn Kashmir, for example, the BBC has seen militants living and operating out of camps located close to army deployments. Each camp is placed under the charge of an official from what locals describe as the \"launching wing\" of the intelligence service.\n\nIn Balochistan, which has been under de-facto military control for nearly a decade, state agencies have allegedly been promoting Islamist militants to counter an armed separatist insurgency by secular ethnic Baloch activists.\n\nLast year the regional police compiled a report on militant sanctuaries across several parts of Balochistan, but an operation recommended by the police in those areas was never launched.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Amateur footage from inside the shrine shows people fleeing the scene\n\nLikewise, the world knows about the safe havens which the Afghan Taliban continue to enjoy in the Quetta region and elsewhere in Balochistan province, as well as in some parts of the tribal region in the north-west, from where they continue to launch raids inside Afghanistan.\n\nMany observers believe that the Pakistani military uses militant proxies to advance its wars in Afghanistan and Kashmir, and takes advantage of the domestic security situation to control political decision making.\n\nThis is important, they say, if the military is to sustain a vast business, industrial and real estate empire which they believe enjoys unfair competitive advantages, state patronage and tax holidays.\n\nBut with such a cocktail of militant networks in the border region, many find it hard to buy the Pakistani line that India and Afghanistan are to blame.\n\nAll militants on the ground - from disputed Kashmir to Quetta and Afghanistan - come from the same stock. They are the second-generation standard bearers of an armed Islamist movement that was formed on Pakistani soil during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1980s.\n\nThey may have regional affiliations or partisan loyalties, but all have been raised under the influence of Wahhabi Islam and its various ideological offshoots, imported here by Arab warriors who came to help liberate Afghanistan.\n\nAs such, they are capable of forming complex group-alliances and cross-border linkages with each other. And they are all united in considering Shia Muslims and Sunni adherents of native Sufi Islam as misguided and heretical.\n\nThis may also partly answer the riddle as to how these groups manage to survive and operate even though they do not command popular support in any part of Afghanistan or Pakistan.", "When I first read Mark Zuckerberg's 5,500-word letter to the Facebook community, I was struck by two things.\n\nHow far it ranged - over subjects as diverse as globalisation, the people who feel left behind, our spiritual and communitarian well-being - as well as the rather more obvious social media issues of fake news, polarisation and sensationalism.\n\nAnd secondly, that this letter could be described very fairly as a manifesto.\n\nIt is not just a statement of where Facebook as a business is going. It is also a statement of the type of world Facebook believes it can help create.\n\nAs such, it is political (although carefully crafted to contain no direct reference to the new US president).\n\nAnd when I interviewed Mr Zuckerberg, the same sense of political purpose was clear. And the same care not to reference Donald Trump.\n\nOf course, many will find talk of \"connectedness\", \"community\" and \"bringing people together\" very easy to dismiss.\n\nHere is a very rich man running a very powerful - and often controversial - company, who, one assumes, might find it hard to relate to the ordinary concerns of the ex-steel workers of Monessen, Pennsylvania, or the former pottery workers of Stoke in the west Midlands.\n\nBut in an era of technology giants like Facebook which have so much \"reach\" - 28.5m users in Britain alone - the rebuttal is simple.\n\nBetter that Mark Zuckerberg is public about his vision for his company - agree or disagree with that as you like - than the alternative of corporate silence.\n\nIn my interview with him, I did push on taxes paid (or not) and privacy violations. Mr Zuckerberg answered that he wanted Facebook to be a \"good corporate citizen\".\n\nAnd on fake news it is clear that Facebook, and other technology giants, have been ill-prepared for the type of editorial controls necessary in an era when millions of people receive their news via their chosen \"filter bubble\" with little mediation.\n\nFacebook, Google and others have a central philosophy - act quickly to launch new products and then \"iterate\" if there is a problem.\n\nThat has led to mistakes, which Mr Zuckerberg does admit to.\n\nThis is a century when the most powerful are not simply the elected leaders or dictators of the world, but are the corporate leaders who can do so much to influence - and control - what billions of people experience every day.\n\nSpeaking publicly about how they view that role is, for many, better than the alternative.\n\nWe can then at least test his company, this global behemoth, against the standards Mr Zuckerberg has set himself.\n\nDoes the Facebook founder want to be a politician? Particularly given that he sounds so much like one - and I mean that in the broadest sense, not pejoratively.\n\nNot yet, certainly. And maybe not ever.\n\nAs the head of a company with 1.86 billion active users a month, he is probably well aware that he has plenty of power already.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester City boss Pep Guardiola says forward Gabriel Jesus may not play again this season after breaking a metatarsal bone in his foot.\n\nJesus, 19, had surgery in Barcelona on Thursday after being taken off after 15 minutes of Monday's 2-0 Premier League win at Bournemouth.\n\n\"He comes back at the end of the season or next season. People say between two and three months,\" said Guardiola.\n\nThe Brazil international completed a £27m move from Palmeiras in January.\n\nMichael Owen (2006): Fifth metatarsal - predicted six to eight weeks; returned after 17 weeks Wayne Rooney (2004): Fifth metatarsal - predicted eight weeks; returned after 14 weeks David Beckham (2002): Second metatarsal - predicted six weeks; returned after seven weeks\n\nMetatarsals are the five long bones in the forefoot which connect the ankle bones to those of the toes.\n\nThe first is linked to the big toe and the fifth, on the outer foot, links to the little toe.\n\nTogether, the five metatarsals act as a unit to help share the load of the body, and they move position to cope with uneven ground.\n\nInjuries usually occur as a result of a direct blow to the foot, a twisting injury or over-use.\n\nMedical experts recommend rest with no exercise and sport for four to eight weeks.\n\nThe patient might be asked to wear walking boots or stiff-soled shoes to protect the injury while it heals.\n\nIf the cause is over-use, then treatment can vary hugely. Training habits, equipment used and athletic technique should all be investigated.\n\nIt all depends on the damage and which metatarsal bone is involved. It is impossible to put a timescale on recovery from a stress injury.\n\nWith an impact fracture, after the plaster and protective boot is not needed (usually after four to six weeks), it will be a case of exercise and increasing weight-bearing activities.\n\nIce packs, strapping and even the use of oxygen tents can be used to assist recovery.\n\nFull return to action can be anything from another four weeks and upwards - depending on the extent of initial damage. Young bones heal quicker.", "President Donald Trump has made a dig at the BBC in a sharp exchange during a heated White House press conference.\n\n\"Here's another beauty,\" said Mr Trump after asking BBC North America editor Jon Sopel which organisation he represented.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nA playful exchange between President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu actually said a great deal about the dim prospects of a successful negotiation with the Palestinians under current circumstances.\n\n\"I think we're going to make a deal,\" President Trump said on Tuesday as he rolled out the red carpet for Mr Netanyahu at the White House.\n\nThe contrast in the tone of the US-Israeli relationship was tangible given the well-documented tension between Mr Netanyahu and Mr Trump's predecessor, Barack Obama.\n\n\"It might be a bigger and better deal than people in this room even understand. That's a possibility,\" Mr Trump added. \"So let's see what we do.\"\n\n\"Let's try,\" responded Mr Netanyahu. When Mr Trump chided him for not sounding sufficiently optimistic, the prime minister quipped, \"That's the 'art of the deal'.\"\n\nActually, it's the reality of the Middle East peace process, a hall of mirrors with a grim regional reality, a host of historical grievances, and zero-sum politics that make the odds of a meaningful negotiation remote, much less an actual agreement.\n\nUS President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, here next to wives Melania and Sara\n\nNotwithstanding the obvious chemistry between Mr Trump and Mr Netanyahu - and a longstanding personal connection between Mr Netanyahu and Mr Trump's designated Middle East envoy and son-in-law, Jared Kushner - there is no chemistry between the Israeli leader and his Palestinian counterpart, President Mahmoud Abbas.\n\n\"As with any successful negotiation, both sides will have to make compromises,\" Mr Trump observed correctly.\n\nHowever, the parties themselves are farther apart on the substance of the process - the borders of a Palestinian state, Israeli security arrangements within a Palestinian state, the right of return for Palestinian refugees and the status of Jerusalem - than they were at the end of the Clinton administration.\n\nBoth the Bush and Obama administrations expended considerable effort to close existing gaps and achieve at least a framework agreement that would set the stage for a final deal. Neither was successful. Obstacles were less about substance than politics.\n\nThe centre of Israeli politics has moved markedly to the right; the left that embraced the essential bargain of the Oslo process, land for peace, has receded.\n\nThe existing Israeli governing coalition is not wired to make concessions. In fact, it is pushing Mr Netanyahu to increase the settlement presence in the West Bank while accelerating construction in East Jerusalem.\n\nAn Israeli soldier stands inside a guarding booth in the Gush Etzion Israeli settlement block in the occupied West Bank\n\nIn 2009, the Obama administration demanded a freeze to all settlement activity. Israel reluctantly agreed, although some growth continued within settlements Israel would keep in any final deal.\n\nRather than accelerate negotiations, settlements became a bone of contention within them. When the 10-month settlement moratorium ended, so did direct negotiations.\n\nSecretary of State John Kerry tried to achieve a framework agreement during Mr Obama's second term, but his one-year effort fell short.\n\nIn a parting shot at Israel, when a resolution came before the UN Security Council declaring settlement activity to be an impediment to peace, the Obama administration abstained.\n\nPresident Trump criticised the \"unfair and one-sided\" treatment of Israel at the UN, a gesture Mr Netanyahu welcomed.\n\nDays before the meeting, the Trump White House cautioned the Israeli government that expansion of settlements beyond their existing borders was not helpful.\n\nMr Netanyahu may moderate the current pace of settlement activity but he is not going to stop it. The Palestinians will continue to see settlement activity as a fundamental problem.\n\nA woman in the US during a \"Muslim and Jewish Solidarity\" protest. Mr Netanyahu is nicknamed \"Bibi\"\n\nThe Palestinians are deeply divided. In 2006, Hamas won an unexpected majority of seats in the Palestinian legislature over Mr Abbas' Fatah Party. The Palestinians have lacked political unity ever since.\n\nToday, Hamas, not the Palestinian Authority, is the de facto government in Gaza. Full elections have not been held in more than a decade.\n\nThe bottom line is that both sides prefer the status quo to making the politically painful concessions that a negotiation would require.\n\nBoth Mr Trump and Mr Netanyahu hope to pursue an \"outside-in\" strategy, building on shared regional concern regarding Iran and radical extremists including the Islamic State group to create momentum to solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.\n\nWhile reasonable in theory - Mr Netanyahu spoke of partnership with Arab states in opposition to Iran - co-operation at the governmental level does not necessarily translate to popular support. For many in the region, the plight of the Palestinians continues to resonate.\n\nGiven the limited prospects confronting a two-state solution - progress that likely requires different leaders and mandates on both sides - President Trump made a small, but significant adjustment in US policy, expressing a willingness to support a one-state solution if both parties agree.\n\nBut the two sides have very different visions of what a one-state solution looks like.\n\nA Palestinian man watches a joint press conference in the West Bank city of Hebron\n\nA key Netanyahu prerequisite for any deal is preservation of Israel as a Jewish state.\n\nOn the other hand, in any agreement, Palestinians would insist on citizenship, voting rights and a government of and for the people - all of them. This could redefine Israel's identity.\n\nPresident Trump may see his one-state acknowledgement as the opening gambit in a lengthy negotiation.\n\nBut a one-state solution potentially presents Israel with an existential choice. It can be a Jewish state or a democracy, but not both.\n\nThat is a choice the United States has never wanted Israel to confront since the answer could have grave implications for the US-Israeli relationship.\n\nPJ Crowley is a former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State and now a Professor of Practice at The George Washington University and author of Red Line: American Foreign Policy in a Time of Fractured Politics and Failing States.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nTottenham's Europa League hopes have been dealt a blow after Jeremy Perbet's goal gave Gent a surprise victory in their last-32 first-leg meeting.\n\nFrench striker Perbet controlled and slotted into the corner from Danijel Milicevic's pull-back on the hour.\n\nA strong Spurs line-up were poor for most of the evening, although Harry Kane clipped the post after half-time.\n\nGent, eighth in the Belgian league, almost added a second as Milicevic's shot was tipped on to the post.\n\nThe second leg is at Wembley on Thursday, 23 February.\n\nGent's 20,000-capacity stadium, the Ghelamco Arena, is host to a Michelin-starred restaurant, but there was little to feast on for Tottenham, who turned in a strangely listless performance.\n\nMauricio Pochettino had spoken before the match about how keen his players were to put behind them a poor display in losing 2-0 at Liverpool in the Premier League on Saturday.\n\nWith that in mind, Pochettino selected a very strong side - with only two changes to the team beaten at Anfield.\n\nDele Alli skimmed an early shot wide from just outside the penalty area after good build-up involving Harry Winks and Ben Davies, but that was as good as it got in the opening half.\n\nPochettino's decision to move midfielder Moussa Sissoko out to the left at half-time led to a lively spell from the visitors, during which Kane clipped the post.\n\nBut Sissoko looked increasingly lost, and the Tottenham head coach was prompted into more tactical tweaks in an attempt to find an equaliser.\n\nNothing worked - and Tottenham's frustration was summed up as Alli picked up a needless yellow card for dissent.\n\nThe Gent fans were singing \"we're going to Wembley\" during the second half, in anticipation of next week's second leg at England's national stadium.\n\nThey may have more reason than Tottenham to look forward to their big night in north London.\n\nSpurs stumbled at their temporary European home in this season's Champions League - failing to qualify from their group after losing at home to Monaco and Bayer Leverkusen.\n\nHaving gone into the match in Belgium as second-favourites to win the Europa League, behind only Manchester United, Pochettino's team now need a good Wembley performance just to stay in the competition.\n\nThe Spurs boss will be hoping that Kane is fit for that match, having picked up an injury in the second half. Pochettino indicated that the forward may not be risked when Spurs visit Fulham in the FA Cup on Sunday.\n\n\"We need to assess Harry Kane, he got a knock on his knee,\" Pochettino said.\n\n\"We need to refresh the team. In the end, it is Tottenham that will play Fulham on Sunday, it's not about the name of the player.\"\n\nGent boss Hein Vanhaezebrouck - celebrating his 53rd birthday - caused something of a surprise with his team selection, making five changes and leaving his 15-goal top scorer Kalifa Coulibaly on the bench.\n\nIt suggested that Vanhaezebrouck was prioritising a top-six Belgian league place - and qualification for the domestic championship play-offs - above European progress.\n\nYet his decision to select the 32-year-old journeyman Perbet in attack paid off handsomely.\n\nEven before Gent took the lead, the players selected were full of energy, pressing Tottenham into mistakes and enjoying plenty of possession.\n\nThey created decent openings; centre-back Samuel Gigot shanked an effort wide from the edge of the penalty area, while Toby Alderweireld had to block a shot from midfielder Kenny Saief, who made an adventurous run from the left after a poor Kyle Walker pass.\n\nBetter chances came after half-time, with Milicevic slicing wide as Spurs switched off at a throw-in moments before Perbet's goal, and unmarked centre-back Stefan Mitrovic spurning an opportunity to make it 2-0 as he headed over from a corner.\n\nTottenham defender Eric Dier told BT Sport: \"We did show more aggression than Saturday against Liverpool. I don't think we created enough chances to win.\n\n\"In the first half, they were the better of the two sides but after half-time we were better until the goal. It stopped us in our tracks. We could not get going again. They sat back and we could not get the away goal.\n\n\"When you go a goal down, you want to give everything to get back into the game. Maybe we were erratic at times and could have been a bit calmer and waited for our chance. That is something for us to work on.\n\n\"I don't see why we cannot turn it around. This team gave everything against us, we did that but lacked a bit of quality. At home we will be better.\"\n\nTottenham head coach Mauricio Pochettino told BT Sport: \"I am disappointed yes because we had a lot of opportunities before we conceded, but the tie is open.\n\n\"It's true that maybe it was not a good performance but we need to understand that it's always difficult to play in the Europa League.\n\n\"We need to find a way to go to Wembley and win the game and go to the next round.\"\n• None This was the seventh consecutive first leg of a knockout match that Tottenham have failed to win in the Europa League (drawing three, losing four).\n• None Tottenham have never won a European match in Belgium (two draws, three defeats).\n• None Spurs have lost back-to-back matches in the Europa League for the first time since November 2011.\n• None Jeremy Perbet's goal was Gent's first shot on target in the match in the 59th minute.\n• None Perbet has scored in two of his last three home Europa League appearances for Gent.\n• None Spurs have now scored only one goal in their last four games in all competitions, having scored 12 in the four prior to this run.\n• None Of the last eight matches in which Tottenham have failed to score, four have been in European games.\n\nBefore next Thursday's second leg at Wembley, Tottenham visit Fulham in the fifth round of the FA Cup on Sunday, when Gent travel to fellow mid-table side Standard Liege in the Belgian league.\n• None Attempt missed. Christian Eriksen (Tottenham Hotspur) left footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Kyle Walker.\n• None Offside, Tottenham Hotspur. Dele Alli tries a through ball, but Son Heung-Min is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Christian Eriksen (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Victor Wanyama. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nScotland number eight Josh Strauss has been ruled out of the rest of the Six Nations campaign through injury.\n\nIt represents a second injury blow for the Scots after captain Greig Laidlaw was also ruled out of the remainder of the championship.\n\nStrauss, 30, suffered a kidney injury during the 22-16 defeat by France.\n\nStrauss will now return to Glasgow Warriors for further care and a review of the injury will be scheduled in approximately six weeks' time.\n\n\"After completing the [French] match, he was scanned in Paris,\" said Scottish Rugby. \"Both the scan, and the player, were reviewed back in Scotland, where the full extent of the injury was confirmed.\"\n\nGloucester scrum-half Laidlaw left the Stade de France on crutches on Sunday following an ankle injury. Scottish Rugby confirmed the 58-time capped player sustained ligament damage.\n\nLaidlaw was replaced by Glasgow's Ali Price in Paris. John Barclay, who took over as captain, also departed with a head knock before half-time, only for his replacement John Hardie to suffer the same fate early in the second half.", "Is this cool? Yes, it's ICE COLD\n\nWhat thoughts do the store Iceland conjure up? Luxury goods, lobsters for £6 and award-winning mince pies, considered better than Fortnum and Mason or Selfridges?\n\nOr rows of freezing aisles stalked by former girl band members in track suits, and your mum, who can't be found elsewhere, because she has, of course, gone to Iceland?\n\nFor a frozen goods specialist that's been around since 1970 and now has 900 stores, its image is remarkably fluid.\n\nBut for customers today, it is seen as having excellent customer service.\n\nThe consumer group Which? asked 7,000 people to rate the leading chains and they voted Iceland best for online - for the second year running.\n\nRespondents considered categories such as quality, value for money, service from delivery drivers, how easy it was to find products, and whether shoppers would recommend the retailer to a friend - and Iceland scored tops.\n\nRetail analysts have also got the Iceland message.\n\n\"You could have seen it as a bit of a dinosaur,\" says Paul Martin, head of retail at consultancy KPMG.\n\nBut now, he is remarkably impressed at how Iceland's management team have updated a business that was \"not seen as cool\".\n\nAnd it's not just the online service he admires. \"They have improved the look and feel of stores, there's a new website, [and] they focused more on the healthy side of frozen. You can also now buy fresh food - something that just didn't exist in the past,\" he says.\n\nBack in the 1970s, frozen food was hip. A chest freezer - the size you could put a body into - was the smart TV of its day. Not everyone had one, but if you could, you did.\n\nBejam was the go-to High Street supplier, and they even provided the freezer. Iceland bought the chain out in 1989.\n\nIt has ticked along outside the big league since then, changing ownership - neatly, actually owned by an Icelandic company at one time - but its core remains frozen food.\n\nBut frozen food hasn't been cutting it these days with the upper echelons of society. Style arbiter Peter York, who has advised many luxury firms and enjoys the high life himself, has always thought it's not quite his thing.\n\n\"I see frozen Christmas treats full of sugar. I don't see [Iceland] as having things that won't make you as big as a pig. The imagery of Iceland is the Atomic Kitten woman [Kerry Katona, who fronted its TV ads in 2008].\n\n\"I fear it wouldn't meet my metropolitan liberal elite needs.\"\n\nBut, given its popularity, even he would be willing to explore its range, as long as he didn't have to walk too far: \"I'd be in like Flynn if there was one near me. 'Dear Iceland, send us one - we the people of Pimlico want an Iceland.'\"\n\nI explained that its popularity was in fact for online shopping, and therefore he needn't extend his morning walk.\n\nPeter York's food assistant won't even have to push one of these... customers scored Iceland highest for its online delivery\n\n\"Oh,\" he says. \"I'm going to make the person who does my food ordering have a look.\"\n\nPerhaps it should not be a surprise that it scores so highly on home delivery. It started doing this in 1999 - way before its rivals got serious.\n\nNot a lot of people know that. And that could be why, says KMPG's Paul Martin, it scores highly. \"[Because it's not as popular as the Big Four supermarkets], it's easier to book a delivery slot.\"\n\nBut he has praise for both the design of the website and the \"very friendly\" drivers.\n\nIceland's joint managing director, Nick Canning, promises there will be more to notice the chain for in future. \"It feels like people are finally opening up their eyes to the quality we deliver, and we have much more innovation planned for the year ahead, so please stay tuned - Iceland's customers won't be disappointed.\"", "Mount Cook, the highest peak of New Zealand - and Zealandia\n\nYou think you know your seven continents? Think again, as there's a new contender hoping to join that club.\n\nSay hello to Zealandia, a huge landmass almost entirely submerged in the southwest Pacific.\n\nIt's not a complete stranger, you might have heard of its highest mountains, the only bits showing above water: New Zealand.\n\nScientists say it qualifies as a continent and have now made a renewed push for it to be recognised as such.\n\nIn a paper published in the Geological Society of America's Journal, researchers explain that Zealandia measures five million sq km (1.9m sq miles) which is about two thirds of neighbouring Australia.\n\nSome 94% of that area is underwater with only a few islands and three major landmasses sticking out above the surface: New Zealand's North and South Islands and New Caledonia.\n\nYou might think being above water is crucial to making the cut as a continent, but the researchers looked at a different set of criteria, all of which are met by the new kid in town.\n\nNew Zealand as captured from space by astronaut Tim Peake\n\nThe main author of the article, New Zealand geologist Nick Mortimer, said scientists have been researching data to make the case for Zealandia for more than two decades.\n\n\"The scientific value of classifying Zealandia as a continent is much more than just an extra name on a list,\" the researchers explained.\n\n\"That a continent can be so submerged yet unfragmented\" makes it useful for \"exploring the cohesion and breakup of continental crust\".\n\nSo how then to get Zealandia into the canon of continents? Should text books authors get nervous again? After all, just a few years ago, Pluto got kicked off the list of planets, changing what had been taught in schools for decades.\n\nThere is in fact no scientific body that formally recognises continents. So it could only change over time if future research accepts Zealandia on par with the rest so that eventually we might be learning about eight, not seven, continents.", "The dress pictured safely back at the family home in East Lothian\n\nA 150-year-old antique wedding dress that was lost after a dry cleaners went bust has been given back to its family.\n\nTess Newall, 29, of Morham, East Lothian, had worn the dress - belonging to her great-great grandmother - when she got married in June last year.\n\nHowever, after it was booked in to be cleaned by Kleen Cleaners in St Mary Street, Edinburgh, it went missing.\n\nMrs Newall's father, Patrick Gammell, confirmed to the BBC that the dress had now been returned.\n\nIt was handed back to the family on Monday by two officials from the sequestrators dealing with Kleen Cleaners financial affairs.\n\nMr Gammell said he and his wife were \"petrified\" to let it out of their sight again.\n\nThe 61-year-old, who is the Vice Lord-Lieutenant of East Lothian, told BBC Scotland's news website: \"We are thrilled finally to have my wife's family's wedding dress back safely in our hands.\n\n\"This has been in no small part due to the media interest in which the BBC helped considerably, for which we are very grateful.\"\n\nHe added: \"We are petrified to let it out of our sight now and I think my wife, Sally, is going to try to clean it herself instead of sending it somewhere again.\"\n\nAfter the BBC highlighted the dress's disappearance, it was found \"in a crumpled heap\" at the closed shop.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nMrs Newall, who married Alfred Newall, 30, in East Lothian, said she was \"absolutely over the moon\" at the discovery.\n\nThe dress was sent to be dry cleaned in September and the shop shut in October.\n\nThe business is now being dealt with under Scottish bankruptcy law in a process known as sequestration.\n\nAn AiB spokeswoman said: \"Accountant in Bankruptcy (AiB) was appointed as trustee in this case.\n\n\"Wylie & Bisset were allocated the case in October 2016 to administer on AiB's behalf and handled the closure of the Kleen Cleaners dry cleaning business in Edinburgh.\n\n\"In a bankruptcy, the whole estate of the debtor vests with the trustee, with specific exceptions laid down in law.\n\n\"When business is involved in a bankruptcy, it is normal practice to immediately close down the trading premises and investigate and identify assets of the bankruptcy.\"\n\nShe said in these circumstances attempts are made to notify customers of the bankruptcy and return any items that belong to them.\n\nShe added: \"At the commencement of a bankruptcy, a bankrupt individual will complete a questionnaire to disclose assets, income, creditors and other information.\n\n\"This will be used as a starting point for the trustee to establish the value of the estate and the extent of liabilities. The trustee will not seek to realise assets unless satisfied he is entitled to do so.\n\n\"AiB has been advised of the issues surrounding this particular case and while it is our policy not to comment on individual cases, we can confirm this issue has now been concluded satisfactorily.\"\n\nTess Newall on her wedding day in her great-great grandmother's dress\n\nTess and Alfred Newall on their wedding day\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "About 20 miles west of Glasgow lies a modern ruin. St Peter's Seminary was built only 50 years ago, yet by the 1990s it was derelict. However, plans to breathe new life into the building are now close to being realised.\n\nThe concrete ghost is hidden in woods on the north side of the River Clyde - the shell of an ambitious 1960s modernist building which the Catholic Church had planned to use to train 100 novice priests.\n\nBut the seminary - at the back of a golf course on the edge of the village of Cardross - was built in changing times. The Church would soon shift away from training priests in seclusion, instead placing them in the community.\n\nThe inauguration ceremony was held on St Andrew's Day 1966.\n\nAt the ceremony, the Archbishop of Glasgow James Scanlan commented on the \"unique edifice… of such architectural distinction as to merit the highest praise from the most qualified judges\".\n\nBut by the 2000s, the same space would be in ruins.\n\nThe post-war years saw the break-up of many of the traditionally Catholic areas in Glasgow - as sections of the old inner city were demolished and people moved into new high-rise homes or out to new towns like East Kilbride or Cumbernauld.\n\nIn this photo taken in the mid-60s, newly-built 20-storey flats in the Gorbals area of Glasgow overlook St Francis Church and Friary.\n\nThe Catholic Church embarked on an ambitious building project to serve these new communities - using architects Gillespie, Kidd and Coia (GKC).\n\nGKC was also asked to build a new St Peter's Seminary near Cardross - to replace the old St Peter's College in Bearsden, which was destroyed by fire in the 1940s.\n\nThe architectural drawing above, of the new St Peter's south elevation, includes Kilmahew House - the 19th Century mansion which had been used as a temporary seminary since the late 1940s.\n\nThe trainee priests were to have \"cells\" in the main block - directly above the chapel - as shown in this section drawing from 1961.\n\nThe first sod on the site was cut in 1960.\n\nArchitects John Cowell (left) and Isi Metzstein (right) - with project manager Stan Blair in the centre - celebrate here with pints of Guinness at the \"topping out\" ceremony in 1965.\n\nTucked away on a wooded hilltop, St Peter's was removed from the outside world.\n\nThe entrance to the main block was across a bridge spanning a shallow pool.\n\nThe architecture was celebrated at this early stage, and the project won a Royal Institute of British Architects Bronze Regional Award in 1967.\n\nThe granite altar in the sanctuary was the heart of the seminary complex.\n\nDespite the sharp contrast between Kilmahew House and the St Peter's extension, the old mansion was an integral part of the college.\n\nWith the break up of traditional Catholic communities in the West of Scotland, and the increasing secularisation of society, St Peter's was never used to full capacity.\n\nIt was designed to hold 100 residents, but the highest number of students living there at any one time was 56.\n\nThis under population only exacerbated a series of maintenance problems on the site.\n\nInefficient heating, poor sound insulation and water leaks made life difficult for the trainee priests - but it did not stop them from enjoying a game of football.\n\nIn November 1979, only 13 years after it opened, the Archdiocese of Glasgow decided to close St Peter's because of the dwindling number of trainee priests, the maintenance issues and financial constraints.\n\nThe building was used as a drug rehabilitation centre for four years in the 1980s, but then fell into a state of disrepair.\n\nArchitectural interest remained though, and in 1992 Historic Scotland granted St Peter's Category A listed status.\n\nTwo years later, the adjoining Kilmahew House was gutted by fire and had to be demolished. Only the footprint of the mansion was left behind.\n\nWith no secure plans for the future, the site continued to deteriorate.\n\nWhat the priests left behind, the graffiti artists claimed as their own.\n\nSince the seminary's closure, numerous ideas have been submitted for repurposing St Peter's.\n\nOne ambitious plan - scuppered by the recession which followed the financial crash in 2008 - would have seen the modernist structure turned into a swimming pool and health spa.\n\nNow arts charity NVA is working towards turning the site into a dramatic space for public art, performance and debate.\n\nThe idea is to consolidate the ruin into a new design - with only partial restoration. A master plan was submitted in 2011.\n\nWith significant help from the Heritage Lottery Fund and Creative Scotland, NVA has reached its £7m funding target - and later this year work is expected to start on returning the site to a usable space.\n\nA big clean-up last year removed lots of the detritus.\n\nThe sanctuary and altar area could be turned into a performance space like this.\n\nBut the public has already been given a chance to see the ruin of St Peter's in a new light.\n\nIn Spring 2016, NVA created a journey in light and sound through the concrete. Called Hinterland, the event was sold out.\n\nSt Peter's made a dramatic architectural statement when it was built, but its first incarnation as a seminary was short-lived.\n\nIt is hoped this 21st Century rebirth by NVA, bringing the structure back into productive use, will prove more enduring.\n\nHistoric Environment Scotland, in partnership with NVA and Glasgow School of Art, has published a more detailed history of the site - St Peter's, Cardross: Birth, Death and Renewal by Diane M Watters.", "Believing you will win when all around see a match that's slipping away. Coming back for more when all game you have been turned over and picked off. Finding precision in the critical moment, having been imprecise in so much of what has gone before.\n\nEngland, despite the late larceny in Cardiff that has extended their victory roll to 16 games and counting, are far from perfect. There are flaws and weaknesses there, but the abiding memory from this white-hot battle on a frozen winter's night will be of strength: of character, in depth, of conviction.\n\nWales thought they had done enough. For 76 minutes they had, playing with a pace and ferocity that stirred memories of the massacre of Stuart Lancaster's innocents here four years ago. The massed ranks of their support were singing them home.\n\nAnd then it turned, ostensibly on one tired clearing kick from Jonathan Davies, but really on so much more.\n\nGood teams go close and see the logic in their defeat. They vow to go away and learn the lessons. They accept that sometimes it is just not their day.\n\nThis England team don't appear to countenance defeat at all. They refuse to let the pressure of being close cloud their thinking. They keep winning that ugly way.\n• None Howley delighted until last five minutes\n• None 5 live In Short: England's backs 'more talented than Wilkinson era'\n\nGeorge Ford, fielding Davies' kick 40 metres out with England 16-14 down, might have gambled on a speculative drop-goal.\n\nOwen Farrell, taking his pass at pace and with only one man outside him, might have twitched at the memory of the interception a few minutes earlier, or gone safely into contact to set up field position.\n\nElliot Daly, running on instead to another fast, sweetly timed pass, might have cut inside or allowed himself to be swallowed up by the onrushing arms of Alex Cuthbert.\n\nFour minutes to go, everything hanging on that one moment, and they made it happen. If it was cruel on Wales, better than they have been in many a marooned year, it characterised the essence of what this England team has become.\n\nEddie Jones always thinks his side will win, no matter what mess they find themselves in. Rob Howley always looks worried that his Wales team will lose.\n\nThat belief has permeated through the ranks. Maro Itoje doesn't dwell on the possibility of defeat, not least because in his brief career it has been such an unfamiliar experience to him.\n\nJames Haskell's ego makes him relish coming off the bench to help turn games around. Farrell, hit so late and hard by Ross Moriarty early in the second half that he was left dry-retching, sucked it in, grinned and came back to produce the contest's pivotal pass and kick.\n\nHowley is a nice man and a dedicated coach who, as a player, could do things few other scrum-halves could. His record as Wales' caretaker boss while Warren Gatland is away is statistically solid - seven wins in his past 10 matches - and has touched occasional heights: a record-breaking win over South Africa last autumn, that unprecedented 30-3 hammering of England in 2013.\n\nBut whereas Jones comes across as a general with both tactical mastery and troops who are genuinely frightened of him, Howley is more the well-meaning supply teacher whose optimistic lesson plans fail to survive the streetwise and disruptive elements inherent in every classroom.\n\nIt is the difference too between the England of Jones and that of his predecessor Lancaster, another honourable, hard-working man who saw crunch matches slip from his grasp in each of his four Six Nations campaigns.\n\nIt happened at Twickenham in 2012, when Scott Williams' brilliant solo burglary and escape sent Wales away towards a third Grand Slam in eight years and left England stalled in second.\n\nIt happened in Paris in 2014, when Gael Fickou's late acceleration inside Alex Goode snatched a victory at the death to spell another second place.\n\nAnd it happened, most famously of all, at Twickenham in that tumultuous World Cup group showdown 18 months ago, when an England team 10 points ahead, with half an hour to go, let a Welsh side with a scrum-half on the wing, a wing at centre and a patched-up fly-half at full-back fight back to steal away a three-point win that will be sung about until the Severn runs dry.\n\nJones, reptilian grin and all, does not care who likes him or what others think of his team, as Howley often appears to do and Lancaster once did.\n\nAnd he is becoming defined by these wins when all is nip and tuck and maybe not: here in Cardiff, when his inexperienced back row shipped eight turnovers to their opponents, when the usually unflustered Jonathan Joseph was throwing passes into touch, when only Daly's muscular speed had denied the excellent Dan Biggar a breakaway try; against France a week ago, when three opposition players all made more than 125m with ball in hand; when a red card for Daly meant 75 minutes against Argentina last autumn with 14 men.\n\nThe power of the bench\n\nJones spoke afterwards of his team having used up all their get-out-of-jail cards. It was an admission that he expects better and will drill his charges until it comes.\n\nIt was also a reflection of a bench that he calls his finishers but may be better described as his emergency services.\n\nNormally the sight of a skipper being hauled off uninjured after 46 minutes would be a cause for crisis. Not when Jones can send on Jamie George for Dylan Hartley.\n\nHaskell, bullish in mind and body, deserves better than the bench but repeatedly makes such an impact from it that he may suffer the unusual misfortune of playing himself out of the starting XV.\n\nBen Te'o, Danny Care, Kyle Sinckler; the names and minutes played may change from game to game, but the influence seldom does.\n\nIn the second row, Joe Launchbury: not a first choice, not with Itoje and George Kruis in town, but 20 tackles on Saturday night in a defence that kept Wales within range.\n\nAnd so England rumble on, to play an Italian team who have never beaten them, to another home fixture after that against a Scotland side who are winless at Twickenham in 34 years.\n\nNo-one in the camp is talking yet about Grand Slams, but precedent suggests the trip to Ireland in five weeks time might be precisely for that.\n\nWales will take heart from their performance, if little comfort from helping produce a match that gripped from the start and carried all watching along to the end.\n\nThey might wonder how this one got away, look back with regret at those first-half penalties not aimed at the posts or the period of second-half dominance that featured wonderful possession and territory but nothing on the board to show for it.\n\nEngland? There will be no regrets, not when they keep marching forward, not when they keep finding a way.", "Adele called a halt to her performance as she paid tribute to George Michael at the Grammys.\n\nThe star was performing a sombre version of Fastlove in honour of the star, who died on Christmas Day, but went badly off-key as she went into the first chorus.\n\n\"I can't mess this up for him,\" she said, fighting back tears. \"I'm sorry for swearing. Can we start again?\"", "Several papers concern themselves with matters of crime and punishment, as Justice Secretary Liz Truss prepares to deliver a speech rejecting calls for cuts in the number of people in prison.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph reports that Ms Truss will say it would be dangerous to public safety if the number of inmates went down, simply to meet a target.\n\nThe paper describes the forthcoming speech as a \"rebuke\" to Labour, which had called for the prison population to be reduced by half.\n\nThe Daily Express praises the justice secretary's approach, calling it a \"forceful riposte\" to Labour's \"softly, softly\" attitude.\n\nWhile the Express acknowledges that rehabilitation is vital, it says Ms Truss's assertion that \"public protection is paramount\" cannot be said often enough.\n\nAn editorial in the Times, though, cautions that prisons in England and Wales are \"full to bursting\" and will breed more violence and criminality if ministers fail to tackle overcrowding.\n\nThe paper urges the justice secretary to revisit sentencing guidelines, which are \"keeping too many people inside for too long\", as the only way to repair what it calls a broken system.\n\nWriting in the i, commentator Ian Birrell challenges politicians to \"defy the media\" and adopt some radical new approaches.\n\nHe argues that tougher sentencing is rarely the answer.\n\nWhen it comes to knife crime, for example, he says the threat of prison does not deter \"scared or silly people from carrying these weapons, just as prohibition of drugs fuels gangsterism\".\n\n\"What a waste!\" proclaims the front of the Daily Mail.\n\nThe paper accuses government ministers and officials of a series of blunders that have cost the public £5.5bn in two years.\n\nThe Mail has analysed the accounts of Whitehall's 20 departments.\n\nIt says the biggest money waster was the Ministry of Defence, which wrote off almost £2bn - including £11m on two RAF drones that crashed during testing.\n\nAnother £1m went on x-ray equipment which was intended to screen passengers for TB at two airports but was then scrapped after a change in policy.\n\nThe paper laments a combination of \"blunder, muddle and incompetence\", and describes such \"arrant waste\" as an insult to taxpayers.\n\nThe Sun reports how a man it calls an \"Albanian murderer\" was deported from the UK but managed to sneak back in under the noses of the \"bungling\" Border Force.\n\nIt says the \"violent criminal\" was kicked out of the UK in 2009 when he was found to have escaped from prison in Albania.\n\nHe is pictured apparently running a car wash business in Leicestershire.\n\nThe paper's leader column says the case \"beggars belief\", and exposes how vulnerable Britain's borders are.\n\nWhile variety may be the spice of life, the Times reports that bland uniformity is more the order of the day for millions of us when it comes to lunch.\n\nA survey suggests that more than three-quarters of office workers have eaten the same midday meal for the past nine months.\n\nMore than seven in ten of the unimaginative diners said eating the same thing was \"easy\".\n\nIn the most extreme example, one respondent reported eating a ham sandwich and a piece of fruit every day since they started work 20 years ago.", "In the least surprising move since England last needed a new Test captain, England have appointed Joe Root as the successor to Alastair Cook.\n\nLike Cook before him, Root has been promoted from vice-captain, an elevation such a formality that the anointing of another leader would have come as a seismic shock.\n\nBut an expected coronation does not guarantee that the crown will sit right, especially when Root is such an inexperienced skipper.\n\nWhy is he the man for the job? What type of leader might he be? And how will it affect his batting?\n\nNo ordinary Joe - why he is the right man...\n\nRoot has long been tipped for the top job. As a 13-year-old playing club cricket for Sheffield Collegiate he was nicknamed 'FEC', for 'future England captain', a title once bestowed on Michael Atherton with similar accuracy.\n\nSince he made his debut at the age of 21 in December 2012, no batsman on the planet has made more than Root's 4,594 Test runs and only India's Virat Kohli has a better tally in all international cricket. He is perhaps the most complete three-format player that England have ever produced.\n\nThe English way is to push the batting totem towards leadership - it was the same with Atherton, Michael Vaughan, Kevin Pietersen and Cook, with varying degrees of success.\n\nNow it is Root's turn. Although his leadership experience amounts to only four first-class matches, the tiny glimpses offered when he has briefly deputised for Cook hint towards an enthusiasm and dynamism for the job.\n\nAt 26, he is a year older than Atherton when he took charge, but a year younger than Cook was. With 53 Tests to his name, he has 22 more than Vaughan when he was named skipper in 2003.\n\n\"He's the obvious candidate,\" said England pace bowler James Anderson. \"The decision is a big one because he's our best player, so you obviously don't want that to be affected.\n\n\"He is fairly quiet but he has got that fire in his belly. He's a really impressive young man.\n\n\"Root gets into situations, one-on-ones, with people. He speaks a lot of sense when he does speak and he's a really impressive young man.\"\n\n...or is he?\n\nRoot hasn't quite been named captain by default, but it's not far off. Ben Stokes, Stuart Broad and Jos Buttler were all consulted after Cook's resignation, but it always seemed incredibly unlikely that any would beat Root to the job.\n\nStill, there is the suggestion that Root's carefree, jovial approach might not be best suited to leadership.\n\n\"Root is the outstanding candidate, but you wouldn't want it to be a case of making your best player captain, only for it to backfire on you later,\" said former England off-spinner Graeme Swann.\n\n\"I'm still not convinced Root is the right man for the job. I want him to concentrate on being the best player we have ever had, rather than having his talent curbed by the pressures of captaincy.\n\n\"He has tried to be more sensible later, but part of his cheeky chappy persona makes him the player he is, and I don't want to see that taken away.\"\n\nAnd although Cook proclaimed Root to be \"ready\" for the captaincy during the tour of India, it was Root himself who said that he needs to \"start growing up a bit\" after an angry reaction to a dismissal in the fifth Test in Chennai.\n\nFatherhood should help, a first-born son having arrived on 7 January, but if it is a different Root who leads England out against South Africa at Lord's on 6 July, will he have the same success that brought him to the captaincy?\n\n\"It's hard to say how ready I am,\" said Root in January.\n\n\"I've got quite a lot experience in Test cricket now, but it's one of these things where you have to learn on the job.\n\n\"Being a dad you don't know what to do, you just have to go with it and see how it goes. I imagine being captain would be very similar.\"\n\nWhat type of captain will he be?\n\nIt is a downside of central contracts that England players have little or no opportunity to learn captaincy in the county game.\n\nArguably, another related negative is that a player can only ever be schooled by the limited number of captains he has played under.\n\nRoot, for example, has never played a Test under anyone other than Cook, while Cook's style of leadership was heavily influenced by predecessor Andrew Strauss.\n\nWith just those four first-class matches under his belt, Root is one of the most inexperienced captains ever appointed by England - at least Cook had benefited from 18 months in charge of the one-day side.\n\nRoot's style of leadership is therefore something of a mystery. The perception is that he will be more adventurous than Cook - but so is popping to the corner shop in your slippers instead of your shoes.\n\n\"Joe will know what he would like to improve or what he would like to do differently,\" said former England captain Vaughan. \"When all the speculation over Cook's future began, he will have gone home at night and thought 'what if I do get the job?'\n\n\"But you're never too sure how you're going to be as a person until you get it. You can think you're going to be X or Y, but you can't be 100% sure.\"\n\nOf the four times Root has led in the first-class game, one match was in charge of England Lions, with the other three as Yorkshire skipper.\n\nIn each of Root's matches as Tykes captain, fast bowler Ryan Sidebottom was part of the Yorkshire team.\n\n\"I get changed next to him and he can be a scruffy little git, but when it comes to cricket knowledge he's very clued up and knows everything about the game,\" said Sidebottom.\n\n\"If you look at the way he bats, he's got all the shots. He works hard on innovation, so I think he will be a creative captain.\n\n\"When he plays, he takes the game to the opposition. The English way can be quite conservative; I'm sure he'll change that for the better.\"\n\nHow will it affect his batting?\n\nIt is incredibly English to fret over how taking on the responsibility of captaincy might affect the new leader's batting (they are almost always batsmen, after all).\n\nHowever, of the seven men with the most Tests as England captain, only one - Vaughan - has an average significantly worse as captain than when in the ranks.\n\nThe batting records of Cook, Strauss and Nasser Hussain are similar whether captain or not, while Atherton, Peter May and Graham Gooch saw their runs increase with responsibility, the latter two dramatically so.\n\nIt is not just English leaders with lengthy tenures who have seen a spike in their scoring.\n\nOf Root, India's Kohli, Australia's Steve Smith and New Zealand's Kane Williamson - widely regarded as the four finest batsmen on the planet right now - the Englishman is the last of the quartet to take over as his nation's Test captain.\n\nEach has seen an improvement in his batting average, Williamson by a small amount, Kohli and Smith by more than 20 runs each.\n\nRealistically, though, England would probably settle for Root's record to hold steady.\n\nHis batting average of 52.80 is the highest by any England player to have played at least 20 innings since 1968. Any improvement on that would be pretty remarkable.\n\nWhat about the one-day captaincy?\n\nThe status quo of Cook leading the Test side and Eoin Morgan taking charge of the one-day and Twenty20 outfits worked well for England because neither was a threat to the other. Both were miles away from getting into the teams they did not lead.\n\nThree-format man Root's elevation to lead the Test side poses a problem for the England and Wales Cricket Board.\n\nDo they leave Morgan, who has presided over an incredible improvement in England's one-day cricket and guided them to the World Twenty20 final, in charge, or give Root three sets of reins?\n\nThose in favour of change will say there are very few examples of a Test captain playing for too long under a different limited-overs skipper, while any dip in results or form could increase pressure on Morgan.\n\nHowever, director of cricket Strauss' crusade to bring limited-overs success to the England side has seen greater and greater separation between the red-ball and the white-ball teams. One skipper for all could be seen as a return to a uniform approach that had largely been abandoned.\n\nAnd the relentless scheduling of international cricket more than justifies two skippers, particularly if resting Root from the shorter formats helps him cope with the mental and physical demands of Test leadership.\n\nConsider the winter schedule of 2017-18. The five Ashes Tests that begin at the end of November are followed by an ODI series against Australia, which rolls into a T20 tri-series also involving New Zealand. After that, England play five more ODIs and two Tests against the Kiwis, which might not conclude until the end of March.\n\nA player involved in all parts of that tour could be on the other side of the world for five months or more. Even two captains might not be enough.\n\nHow long might Root be captain for?\n\nOf the seven skippers with the most Tests, discounting any time as a stand-in, only May's reign spanned more than five years - and that ended in 1961.\n\nOf the longest-serving skippers since the late 1980s, Gooch managed five years, Atherton four, Hussain four, Vaughan five (with an enforced 18-month break because of a knee injury), Strauss four and Cook just over four.\n\nFrom the seven longest serving of all-time, Cook has taken charge of most matches thanks to the Test-hungry nature of the ECB's scheduling department.\n\nThat Root's tenure begins with five Test-free months is an anomaly, but one that will soon be compensated for. Over the succeeding 14 months or so, England will cram in 21 Tests.\n\nIf we take July to be the proper start to Root's reign and assume that the fickle mistresses of form, fitness and results allow him to be in charge for four and a half years, then his spell as skipper could end with the 2021-22 Ashes in Australia.\n\nBy then, he could have been at the helm for more than 60 Tests - an England record - and, at his current rate of scoring, will have become the second Englishman to reach 10,000 runs.\n\nHe will have just turned 31, so will still feasibly have half a decade of Test batting left in him, much like Cook does now.\n\nAt the point, a 25-year-old Haseeb Hameed could be the next unsurprising candidate to be given the keys to the kingdom.", "Violence has broken out at a protest in Paris in support of a young black man who was allegedly assaulted by police.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nNew England Test captain Joe Root is ideally suited to the role, says former skipper Michael Vaughan.\n\nRoot, 26, takes over from Alastair Cook despite having led in only four first-class matches - three for Yorkshire and one for England Lions.\n\n\"People who say he's not quite ready are talking nonsense. He's driven and got the right attitude,\" ex-Yorkshire batsman Vaughan told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\nRoot, who has played 53 Tests, will not properly take over until the first Test against South Africa in July, with England only playing limited-over cricket for the first half of 2017.\n\nHis four matches as captain in first-class cricket have produced mixed results.\n\nIn April 2014, his Yorkshire side conceded 472 in the fourth innings to lose to Middlesex, but later that year he skippered them to a victory over Nottinghamshire that sealed the County Championship.\n\n'Root has to take risks' - Boycott\n\nFormer Yorkshire and England captain Geoffrey Boycott said fans will be looking for Root \"to take a risk now and again\" and the nature of Test cricket means the new captain will occasionally \"have to make things happen\".\n\n\"Everything that has ever been thrown at Joe, every time he's moved upwards in his career, he's handled it,\" Boycott told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"If not straight away, then he's quickly got to it because he's got an acute cricket brain.\"\n\nBoycott, who led England in four Tests in 1978, said he hoped to see Root move back down the order to bat at four, to give him more time to cope with the added interview demands of the captaincy.\n\nThe 76-year-old added that being a Yorkshireman will stand Root in good stead as captain, because \"we're good at it\".\n\n'He looked like the Milky Bar kid' - Gale\n\nYorkshire director of cricket Martyn Moxon described Root as \"a born leader\".\n\n\"He has always studied the game and different tactics throughout his career,\" said Moxon.\n\n\"It's not something that he is going to have to learn before his first Test. I'm sure he will do a good job.\"\n\nRoot is a \"fantastic role model\" and vastly experienced for a player in his mid-20s, said Yorkshire coach Andrew Gale, who captained Root at the county.\n\n\"Whatever level he has stepped up to, it hasn't taken him long to adapt and he has learned very quickly. I would say that I have actually learned more from him,\" added Gale.\n\n\"You learn on the job. I think we will see a different style of cricket with Joe in charge. He's a bit of tinkerman and not afraid to think outside the box.\"\n\nRoot made his England debut in 2012 and since then has scored more Test runs than any other batsman in the world.\n\nThe right-hander, a product of the Yorkshire youth set-up, was made England vice-captain in 2015 and steps up to lead after Cook resigned last week.\n\n\"I remember him as a 13-year-old, saying to the batting coach that he wanted to know what he needed to do to play for England,\" added Gale. \"That's a big statement for a 13-year-old.\n\n\"He made his one-day debut for Yorkshire against Essex in 2009. He was a little lad who looked like the Milky Bar Kid and couldn't hit the ball off the square. He's never been overawed and that will stand him in good stead.\"\n\nRoot's appointment sees him join Australia's Steve Smith, India's Virat Kohli and New Zealander Kane Williamson as captain of his country.\n\nThe quartet, widely regarded as the four finest batsman in the world, occupy the top four spots in the International Cricket Council's batting rankings.\n\n\"It's exciting for cricket, for all of us who are supporters of the game, seeing four wonderful batsmen ply their trade and now lead their countries,\" said former Yorkshire coach Jason Gillespie.\n\nThe Australian told the BBC World Service: \"It reminds me a little bit of when we had four wonderful all-rounders - Ian Botham, Richard Hadlee, Kapil Dev and Imran Khan.\n\n\"Now we have four high-class batsmen who are absolutely brilliant and happen to be captain of their country. It's very exciting.\"\n\nRoot's father Matt said he was \"incredibly proud\" and insisted his son would not get carried away with the appointment.\n\n\"He's taken it in his stride. He won't get ahead of himself. His feet are firmly on the ground,\" he said.\n\n\"People say his form might dip but I absolutely think he can do the job. He's got a great team to manage.\"", "Actor Alec Baldwin's impression on Saturday Night Live of Donald Trump tricked a national newspaper into thinking he was the real thing.\n\nEl Nacional in the Dominican Republic has now apologised for accidentally publishing a still of Alec Baldwin, captioned as the US president, next to Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu.\n\nThe image accompanied an article about Israeli settlements.\n\nThe paper has said sorry to readers and \"anyone affected\".\n\nThe picture was sent to the newspaper along with information about Saturday Night Live, the long-running US satirical programme.\n\nNo-one spotted the mistake, says El Nacional.\n\nSaturday Night Live is not Mr Trump's favourite TV programme. He says Baldwin's frequent impressions of him \"stink\".\n\n\"Not funny, cast is terrible, always a complete hit job. Really bad television!\" he once tweeted.\n\nJust to make it clear...the apology", "A 51-year-old man was winched down 80ft to the floor of Worcester Cathedral after being pulled upside down when his foot was caught by a bell rope.\n\nHe fractured a bone in his back but is still able to walk.\n\nMark Regan is the ringing master at the cathedral and tells BBC Radio 4's Today bell ringing can be like a \"contact sport\" and is all based on maths.", "An unlikely sole English goalscorer, Burnley find home comforts again and is this the end of the Big Sam bounce?\n\nBBC Sport takes a look at the quirkiest and more interesting statistics from the weekend.\n\nNot Kane. Not Vardy. But who?\n\nWith Gareth Southgate set to name his squad for next month's friendly against Germany soon, the England manager may have been an alarmed observer this weekend, as one after another, English strikers failed to find the net.\n\nHarry Kane started but barely threatened. Marcus Rashford and Danny Welbeck were reduced to cameo appearances. Wayne Rooney and Daniel Sturridge were unused substitutes. And wildcard possibilities like Andy Carroll or Jermain Defoe were injured and off-form respectively.\n\nNot even the likes of Dele Alli, Adam Lallana or Theo Walcott got on the scoresheet, meaning no English player had scored this weekend before Sunday's late game between Swansea and Leicester.\n\nBut it wasn't Foxes striker Jamie Vardy who finally broke the duck, as Swans centre-back Alfie Mawson produced a stunning volley to become the only English goalscorer in all nine of this weekend's fixtures.\n\nThough perhaps Mawson, 23, should not be considered an unlikely scorer, having struck three times in his past six Premier League games, of which Swansea have won four.\n\nIndeed, no defender has scored more Premier League goals in 2017 than Mawson, with Chelsea' Marcos Alonso also scoring three times.\n\nMawson is not the only symbol of Swansea's improvement under boss Paul Clement, as they possess - by one measure - the best midfielder in the Premier League this season.\n\nAfter his pass set up Martin Olsson for Swansea's second against Leicester, Gylfi Sigurdsson has now been directly involved in 16 goals this season, more than any other midfielder, in an even split of eight goals and eight assists.\n\nThe Iceland international has scored three goals and assisted three others in Swansea's six games since Clement's appointment on 2 January, putting him ahead of perhaps more lauded names on the list.\n\nLiverpool duo Sadio Mane and Lallana are close behind with 15 and 14 respectively, while the talents of Spurs pair Alli and Christian Eriksen, Chelsea's Eden Hazard and Manchester City's Kevin de Bruyne are all tied on 13.\n\nIn victory over Watford at Old Trafford on Saturday, Manchester United became the first team to win 2,000 points in the Premier League.\n\nIt's no surprise the Red Devils got there first, given they have won 13 out of the 24 total Premier League titles to date but here is how they did it...\n\nIt is no shock either that the top six are the only six clubs to have played in every Premier League season so far but Arsenal, in second for many years, may want to be wary of Chelsea bearing down on them before long.\n\nManchester United have a fairly lengthy wait until they try for win 600, with Jose Mourinho's side not back in Premier League action until 4 March against Bournemouth.\n\nHome is where the points are\n\nMost sides tend to prefer their home comforts - a vocal crowd, a familiar pitch, that ideal spot in the dressing room - but Burnley are taking that preference to remarkable levels at Turf Moor this season.\n\nA battling draw with runaway leaders Chelsea on Sunday is the 29th point Sean Dyche's side have claimed at home this campaign, as many as Arsenal have taken at the Emirates, and putting them fourth in the Premier League home table.\n\nTheir home form has seen 12th-placed Burnley punch above their weight and all but secure their Premier League status, 10 points clear of the relegation zone.\n\nEvery yin must have its yang though and Burnley's away record is in startling contrast to their home form, having taken only one point in 11 games so far before a run of four consecutive matches on the road.\n\nTravel sickness is a large factor in Leicester's alarming decline too - Sunday's defeat to Swansea meaning they are still yet to win away this season, with only three draws in 13 away games.\n\nIndeed, at the moment the Foxes do not look like picking up another point anywhere in 2017 as they are now the first reigning top-flight champions to fail to score in six consecutive league matches, having gone over 10 hours without a goal.\n\nNo side in the top four tiers has won fewer points than Claudio Ranieri's side this calendar year - a draw against Middlesbrough in January giving the Foxes a solitary point, level with Aston Villa, Coventry City and Leyton Orient.\n\nYet if there is to be solace for Leicester it is probable that, like Burnley, it will come at home.\n\nBoth Leicester and Burnley are currently two of only six sides in Premier League history to have won more than 80% of their total points at home in a single season.\n\nOn current trend, with a remarkable 96.7% of points (29 out of 30) at Turf Moor this season, Burnley could be set to smash their 2009-10 record of 86.7% (26 out of 30). Fortunately for Dyche, his team have already equalled that 2009-10 side's final tally of 30 points.\n\nDespite arriving at the Riverside with a free-scoring Romelu Lukaku and on a fine run, Everton's match with Middlesbrough was perhaps destined to end in a goalless draw.\n\nBoro have easily the meanest defence of the current bottom six, having conceded only 27 goals in 25 games - the same amount as seventh-placed Everton - despite being only two points above the relegation zone.\n\nIf Aitor Karanka's side keep conceding at the rate of 1.08 goals per game, they will end the season with 41 goals against their name - and should they fail to beat the drop that would be comfortably the fewest number of goals conceded by a relegated Premier League side.\n\nThat is of course only half the story with Middlesbrough, as they are also the most miserly team in attack this season, with only 19 goals.\n\nAt a rate of 0.76 goals per game, they are on course to finish the campaign with just 29 goals - but there is precedent for staying up with such a sterile strike force.\n\nIn the 1996-97 season, Leeds United finished 11th, six points clear of relegation, despite scoring 28 goals in 38 games.\n\nAn ageing Ian Rush failed to fire after signing from Liverpool, while Brian Deane and Lee Sharpe were top scorers with just five strikes.\n\nYet manager George Graham's defensive nous saw them cough up just 38 goals (six fewer than champions Manchester United) as they eased to safety. Can Karanka do the same?\n\nThe end of the Big Sam bounce\n\nIn finance, the 'dead cat bounce' is a small, short-lived recovery as the price of a stock declines.\n\nFootball has its own theory - the new manager bounce, where a team's form improves after hiring a new boss and Sam Allardyce was once one of its finest proponents.\n\nThough just as the dead cat bounce gives way to further decline, perhaps we've seen the peak of Big Sam's survival skills.\n\nDefeat to Stoke on Saturday means Allardyce's side have taken just four points from eight Premier League games since he replaced the sacked Alan Pardew.\n\nAllardyce has previously always won more than a point per game in his first eight in charge when taking over a Premier League side mid-season, in spells with Newcastle United, Blackburn Rovers and Sunderland.\n\nWhether or not his typical dead cat bounce is simply delayed, 19th-placed Palace find themselves in a relegation dogfight.", "Being kawaii - or cute - is a huge part of being a good Japanese girl.\n\nFor decades Hello Kitty was Japan's ambassador of cute, but now an angry red panda is channelling the frustrations of ordinary working women.", "More than 180,000 people in northern California have been told to evacuate after two overflow channels at the US's tallest dam were found to be damaged.\n\nThe 770ft (230m) high Oroville Dam is not itself at risk of collapsing, but its emergency spillway was close to caving in, officials said.\n\nThe excess water has now stopped flowing.", "Thousands of people protested in the Romanian capital of Bucharest on Sunday night.\n\nCrowds gathered outside government offices in the latest of two weeks of protests.", "At least 39% of players who played in the English Football League last season were not drugs tested by UK Anti-Doping (Ukad), according to official figures.\n\nUkad, which carries out testing on behalf of the Football Association, took 1,204 samples from 1,989 players to appear in the EFL in 2015-16.\n\nFrom 550 players to play in the Premier League, 799 samples were taken. There were no tests in the National League.\n\nThese figures do not account for players being tested more than once.\n\nThat means one player being tested five times would account for five samples, while some samples may have been taken from players who were registered with clubs but did not make a first-team appearance.\n\nThe figures, released under the Freedom of Information Act, show only 36 samples were taken from 169 players to appear in Women's Super League One - the top flight of domestic women's football in England - meaning at least 78% of players were not tested.\n\nThe Football Association said that \"like any sport\" it prioritised its anti-doping programme \"at the elite end\".\n\nIt added: \"This applies not just to staggering downwards the number of tests per competition but also in terms of focusing attention around those players playing the most number of first-team minutes.\n\n\"In addition, the anti-doping programme is research and intelligence-led, meaning any player the FA believes presents a particular doping risk will be targeted.\"\n\nA spokesperson for Ukad told BBC Sport: \"Like all sports, we create and deliver a testing programme for football which places resources where they are most effective in order to target where we believe the greatest risk of doping lies.\n\n\"But anti-doping programmes are no longer focused solely on testing and test numbers. There are 10 anti-doping rule violations under the World Anti-Doping (Wada) code, of which the presence of a prohibited substance in a sample is just one.\"\n\nHow do the numbers stack up?\n\nWhile there were more samples obtained than players who appeared in the Premier League during 2015-16, the ratio of samples to players tested across the three divisions making up the EFL was far lower:\n• None In the Championship, 540 samples were taken from 689 players to make a minimum of one appearance last season, meaning at least 21% were not tested.\n• None In League One, 347 samples were taken from 742 players to make an appearance, meaning at least 53% of players were not tested.\n• None In League Two, 317 samples were taken from 749 players to make an appearance, meaning at least 57% of players were not tested.\n\nThese figures do not include samples collected from under-18 and under-21 squads or from national squads, while any players or teams competing in European competition are also subject to Uefa's anti-doping programmes.\n\nAccording to Ukad, which says every anti-doping rule violation is listed on its website, Brentford midfielder Alan Judge was the only player in England and Wales tested on behalf of the FA to breach doping regulations during the 2015-16 season - an offence for which he was reprimanded.\n\nThe samples taken by Ukad, the only organisation that drug tests on behalf of the FA, are tested for both performance-enhancing and recreational drugs. The FA says there were three failed tests by unnamed players for recreational drugs last season.\n\nUkad, which carries out testing across more than 50 Olympic, Paralympic, Commonwealth and professional sports, says \"it is incumbent on us as a publicly funded body to use our resources as effectively as possible across these sports and to target the right people at the right time\".\n\nBut it also said the FA is \"one of a small number of national governing bodies which supplements the testing programme allocated by Ukad\" - and stressed the scale and breadth of testing within English football has \"grown year on year\".\n\n\"No other national governing body in the UK dedicates as much resource to prevent doping in its sport,\" the FA said, adding it operated \"one of the most comprehensive national anti-doping testing programmes in the world.\n\n\"The programme is flexible in order to be able to respond to any emerging doping risk and adaptable to meet the demands of the growing game, with more tests already scheduled for this 2016-17 season and a further increase, again, in 2017-18.\"\n\nThe Press Association reported last Friday that the FA intends to double the number of tests carried out in 2017-18 compared to 2015-16, at a cost of almost £2m.\n\nHow do other major leagues in Europe compare?\n\nDuring 2015-16, fewer samples were collected from players in the top two tiers of men's football in Germany - which each contain 18 teams - than in the top two tiers in England collectively, according to the German anti-doping agency (Nada).\n\nHowever, more samples were collected per player in the German second division than in the English Championship, as there were 209 fewer players in Bundesliga Two.\n\nIn total, Nada obtained 1,110 samples from players in the top two leagues in Germany last season, and carried out additional tests on German national team players and around relegation matches.\n\nIn Spain, since the country's anti-doping body was declared non-compliant by Wada in March 2016, there has been an absence of drugs testing.\n\nThe most recent published results in Italy show the country's national anti-doping organisation carried out 3,309 tests across the whole Italian Football Federation in 2014, resulting in one adverse analytical finding and 65 atypical findings.\n\nIn March 2016, a BBC Sport investigation found only eight drugs tests had been conducted in Scottish football between April and December 2015, with 20 further tests in the first three months of 2016.\n\nThat prompted the Scottish Football Association to announce it had \"already made plans to enhance the provision of testing from next season and will do so from its own funds\".\n\nWhat are other sports doing?\n\nIn rugby union, BBC Radio 5 live's Chris Jones reported on 26 January that \"only about one third of Premiership players were tested during the 2015-16 season as part of the Rugby Football Union's anti-doping programme\".\n\nGolfer Rory McIlroy and tennis player Andy Murray called for improvements to the drug-testing regimes in their respective sports last year, with McIlroy even suggesting he could \"get away with\" doping at the time.\n\nA report by Wada on the anti-doping methods employed at the Rio 2016 Olympics found that of the 11,470 athletes, 4,125 (36%) had no record of any testing in 2016, of whom 1,913 were competing in 10 \"higher-risk sports\".\n\nToni Minichiello, the former coach of Olympic and world heptathlon gold medallist Jessica Ennis-Hill, said in January \"football isn't testing to the same level as athletics\".\n\n'Fans need total confidence in the competition'\n\nIn 2015-16, the Championship was the fourth-best attended football league in Europe, even outperforming Italy's Serie A in attracting a total of 9.7 million fans at an average of 17,583 per match.\n\nThe combined average attendance across the whole EFL was 9,933 per match, with the cheapest matchday ticket last season the £10 charged by Derby County, according to the BBC's 2015 Price of Football study.\n\n\"Like fans of other sports they need total confidence in the fairness of the competitions they watch week in, week out,\" said Malcolm Clarke, chair of the Football Supporters' Federation and the only fan representative on the FA Council.\n\n\"It is vital the game does not jeopardise this vibrant support by allowing the integrity of its competitions to be called into question.\"\n\n'There should be testing in the National League'\n\nAttendances in the National League exceeded one million in the 2015-16 season, with Tranmere Rovers averaging crowds of more than 5,200 for their home games.\n\nThe cheapest matchday ticket in the division was £13.50, at Southport, according the BBC's 2015 Price of Football survey.\n\n\"I am a bit surprised that there were no drugs tests at all [in the National League],\" Forest Green Rovers chairman Dale Vince told BBC Sport.\n\n\"It is a professional league. There are very few part-time clubs in our league these days.\n\n\"Drugs in sport is a real issue and if testing is happening in the top four leagues in English football I don't see why it shouldn't be in the fifth league as well.\"", "Matt Barrie was trying to help his mother set up a website\n\nIt was doing a favour for his mother that gave entrepreneur Matt Barrie the idea for setting up a business that is now worth more than A$400m ($300m; £243m).\n\nHis company and website Freelancer has a simple concept - it connects people who have work they need doing with others who compete to do the task by submitting the fee they would charge.\n\nFounded just eight years ago in Sydney, today the website has more than 22.5 million users around the world, both freelance workers and those seeking their services.\n\nJobs advertised on Freelancer include everything from help with building a mobile phone app, to writing a company report, designing a tattoo, and help with gaining publicity for something.\n\nUS space agency Nasa has even used the website since 2015, allowing people to bid to help design items for the International Space Station, including a new robotic arm.\n\nIt is a pretty good success story for a 43-year-old who admits that when he came up with the idea for Freelancer he was \"a broken man\".\n\nIn 2006 Mr Barrie had walked out of his first start-up - a Sydney-based firm called Sensory Networks that made computer chips for security equipment. He was not feeling good.\n\nSite users submit photos from around the world - this one is from Maccu Pichu in Peru\n\n\"People used the product but everything was wrong with how we sold it,\" he says.\n\nDespite a blaze of publicity and the support of venture capitalists (VCs), the marketing proved too tough, and the company was struggling. So Mr Barrie quit.\n\n\"You feel you have let your VCs down, the board, your friends that you hired, your family,\" he says.\n\nSensory Networks went on to survive without Mr Barrie, and was eventually bought by chip giant Intel in 2013 for $20m, but he says that back in 2006 he \"really felt like a failure\".\n\nAfter a few months of \"decompressing\", Mr Barrie was beginning to think about his next move when the 2007 global financial crisis swept in.\n\n\"The whole world was collapsing. Businesses weren't getting funded anymore. I thought, 'what am I going to do with myself?'\" he recalls.\n\nHe decided to take advantage of the enforced downtime to build a website for his mother, a wholesale art and craft supplier.\n\nHe wanted to include a directory of the stores she supplied, thinking it might encourage others to want to be included. The first Excel spreadsheet had 1,000 rows.\n\nFaced with that, Mr Barrie decided to outsource the data entry side of things to local kids. But even offering A$2,000 overall, nobody came running.\n\n\"I looked around, asked a few people, and they'd say, 'oh it's boring.' I'd reply, 'I know it's boring! That's why I want you to do it.'\"\n\nMatt Barrie broke the bell when the company floated in 2013\n\nAfter four months Mr Barrie started searching online in desperation for cheap data entry, and stumbled upon a site based in Sweden called Getafreelancer.\n\n\"It was the ugliest site you have ever seen in your life. I eventually figured out how to post a job,\" he says.\n\n\"I went to get lunch, and came back to 74 emails from people saying you're offering A$2,000, I'll do it for A$1,000, A$500 and so on… I thought it was a scam.\"\n\nHe eventually hired a team in India who did the job in three days for A$100.\n\n\"I thought was incredible, a whole army of people out there, many from emerging markets. I looked at all the projects on the website. It was like an ebay for jobs. I thought wow.\n\nMatt's colleagues had fun when he was on the cover of Australian business magazine BRW\n\nMr Barrie was so impressed by the concept that he decided to set up his own version.\n\nThe VCs who had flocked to his first start-up were far more cautious this time round, and banks were unwilling to loan to a web-based business with no physical, recoverable assets in the event of failure.\n\nIn the end a friend who had sold his own firm stumped up the money, and Mr Barrie first secured workers via Getafreelancer, before then buying that business.\n\nFreelancer, whose entire operation is cloud-based using Amazon Web Services, has since gone on to buy up 18 other rival sites. Its directly employed workforce now totals 570 people.\n\nSites like Freelancer have faced criticism for driving down prices for professionals trying to sell their services, but Mr Barrie counters that the company has had a huge, positive impact on millions of people in developing countries.\n\n\"You can be somewhere where your average wage is A$2 a day,\" he says.\n\nMatt Barrie says he is a workaholic\n\n\"You can make your month's salary in a few days. It's the ultimate meritocracy. It's up to you to figure out what you want to do.\"\n\nAnd it is also not necessarily the lowest bidder who wins the job - Freelancer says that 47% of the projects on its site are awarded to \"the median bidder or higher\".\n\nEntrepreneur Emma Sinclair, co-founder of human resources software business Enterprise Jungle, says firms are increasingly looking to hire non-staff to complete projects rather than carry out the work in-house.\n\n\"Nearly 35% of today's total workforce is comprised of non-employee workers and this is set to continue to grow,\" she says\n\n\"Sites like Freelancer are therefore very well-placed to service both the growing on-demand labour force looking for work, as well as the corporates who are hiring them.\n\n\"It is an invaluable marketplace for talent, with an all-important rating system to weed out the poor or unreliable performers.\"\n\nOn a day-to-day basis Mr Barrie is, by his own admission, a workaholic.\n\n\"I live this, I breathe it. I get up in the morning and start work. I'm often in the office until 10pm.\n\n\"I've had several offers to sell - one formal. I had a good think, and said I couldn't think of doing anything else.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Women are banned from driving in Saudi Arabia\n\nAsk about change in Saudi Arabia.\n\nThe reply used to be: it will come, in its own way and in its own time, in the conservative kingdom.\n\nIt was another way of saying it would take a long time - and might never happen.\n\nBut, in Saudi Arabia now, talk of change is measured in months.\n\n\"I made a bet with a male colleague that the ban on women driving would end in the first six months of this year, and he said it would happen in the second half,\" a successful Saudi businesswoman says to me over lunch in the capital, Riyadh.\n\n\"But now I think it will happen early next year, and apply only to women over 40,\" she adds.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThat's a prediction you hear in Riyadh's royal circles too. Some even say younger women will be allowed to drive before too long.\n\nChange on every front is still slow and cautious in a culture where ultra-conservative religious authorities wield great influence, and many Saudis want to hold on to their old ways of living.\n\nBut an accelerating pace is largely being forced on Saudi rulers and society by a dramatic change in fortune for the world's biggest oil producer.\n\nThe crash in world prices for Saudi Arabia's black gold halved its revenues a few years ago and now shapes the hard choices and changes it must make in many parts of life here.\n\n\"It's been a one engine jet for decades,\" is how John Sfakianakis of the Gulf Research Center explains a country that depends on oil and gas for 90% of its income.\n\n\"Now it needs multiple engines.\"\n\nEnter a new master plan, grandly titled Vision 2030, which was unveiled with great fanfare last year.\n\nIt's stamped with the imprimatur of the 31-year-old Deputy Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman, who crafted the ambitious blueprint with a cast of highly paid foreign consultants.\n\nThe deputy crown prince and those around him know that someday oil wells will run dry and, even before that, most people will be driving electric cars.\n\n\"It's absolutely necessary to get to Vision 2030 and our objectives,\" says the country's powerful Oil Minister Khalid al-Falih.\n\nThe former CEO of the state oil giant, Aramco, the world's biggest oil company, Mr al-Falih even has the need to diversify written into his new title. He's the minister of energy, industry and mineral resources.\n\n\"Whether we get there in 2030, whether we get some of them in 2025, some of them in 2030, some of them in 2035, we'll see,\" he explains in a nod to a master plan with demanding benchmarks for every ministry.\n\nSaudi editor and writer Khaled Maeena points to a new accountability starting to emerge.\n\n\"Everybody is on the go, ministers bureaucrats and all, looking over their shoulders not to make mistakes,\" he says.\n\nThose at the top, he adds, must \"lead by example\".\n\nTwo third's of Saudi Arabia's population is aged below 30\n\nSalaries and lavish perks have been slashed in government jobs. The private sector is expected to provide one of the big engines for growth. It's still not up to speed.\n\n\"We're not hiring now,\" asserts a Saudi business executive who oversees a vast conglomerate of companies. \"And we're not selling to the government unless we're sure we'll get paid for our goods.\"\n\n\"Vision 2030 is unlikely to reach its destination in 2030,\" a sceptical Saudi statistician replies when I ask for his view. Like most Saudis who criticise, he asks not to use his name.\n\n\"But at least there is a vision, and this time there are practicalities about how to achieve it,\" he adds, in a reference to previous schemes which never went anywhere.\n\n\"This is la la land,\" was the even more scathing assessment of another consultant. \"Is there a bureaucracy able to implement it and a readiness at the top to change their own lives?\"\n\nMany of Saudi Arabia's young are educated abroad\n\nThe young deputy crown prince driving this plan, who is seen as the favourite son of 81-year-old King Salman, knows there's another clock fuelling pressure for change.\n\nTwo-thirds of Saudis are his age or younger.\n\nHundreds of thousands of them, men and women, were educated at the best western universities thanks to a generous scholarship programme started by the former King Abdullah.\n\nNow they're back, looking for work but also ways to spend their weekends in an austere culture where even cinemas are banned,\n\nUnder the rules, men can only sit with women if they are dining with their female relatives, or \"families\" as that section is known.\n\nBut even since my last visit about a year ago, small but significant steps are visible.\n\nGone from the streets of the capital are the notorious religious police, the Mutawa, who used to roam in a mission to \"prevent vice and promote virtue\" and were often accused of zealously abusing their powers. The deputy crown prince is credited with sorting this out.\n\nMany Saudis are excited at the prospect of more entertainment events\n\nWealthy Riyadh residents speak excitedly of newly opened restaurants where seating arrangements are less strict and music blares loudly.\n\n\"We need to see women drivers and cinemas here,\" insists Waleed al-Saedan when we meet at one of the few public places where the speed of life truly picks up.\n\n\"Dune bashing\" in the desert provides one of the few legal thrills as Saudis rev the engines of sand buggies and SUVs to careen down the soft slopes of sand.\n\nDune bashing is a popular sport in parts of the Middle East\n\nAs is so often the case here, it's usually a men-only adventure.\n\nBut a new General Entertainment Authority is on the case. Despite its stern title, the people who run it are on a mission to bring some fun to Saudi lives, albeit within limits. No one is suggesting drinking and dancing.\n\n\"My mission is to make people happy,\" asserts the authority's chairman Ahmed al-Khatib, whose own serious demeanour is quickly brightened by a smile.\n\nA calendar of some 80 events ranging from art festivals to light shows and live music concerts is carefully prepared and implemented to avoid any backlash which could put the whole project at risk.\n\nHuge crowds turned out for a rare concert in January\n\n\"We will definitely provide things for the more open people and we will provide activities and things for the more conservative people,\" Mr al-Khatib explains, choosing his words carefully.\n\nOpening up more social freedoms isn't just about providing more fun.\n\n\"Seventy billion riyals are being spent by Saudis on holidays abroad,\" laments a Saudi tour operator who is trying to tempt Saudis to spend more of their time and money at home instead of fleeing to the bright lights of Dubai or London.\n\nWomen are being encouraged to take part in Vision 2030\n\nMore profound changes like political reform, tackling a questionable human rights record, or easing a web of restrictions on women's lives aren't on the agenda.\n\nAnd at the same time as happiness is on the agenda, so is pain.\n\nThis is a country where people have always lived with cheap petrol, without taxes, and free water and electricity.\n\nSaudi Arabia will have to diversify its revenue streams in the coming years\n\nNow subsidies are being cut and a sales tax introduced. A new \"Citizen's Account\" will help lighten the burden for poorer families, but Saudis are having to juggle their own finances now.\n\n\"Saudis have taken too much for granted for too long,\" insists Nadia al-Hazza, an engineer who used to work in the oil and gas sector who is now helping to get women involved in Vision 2030.\n\nShe starts her presentations with a famous mantra from former US President John F Kennedy: \"Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.\"\n\nSo now Saudis are also being asked to do more, and faster, than they've ever been used to.\n\n\"We're like a turtle on wheels,\" says political observer Hassan Yassin. \"We're moving in a faster way to try to meet local demands and 21st Century obligations.\"", "Chance the Rapper's Coloring Book has become the first streaming-only album to win a Grammy.\n\nIt made music history at the ceremony in Los Angeles, winning best rap album.\n\nThe unsigned 23-year-old, whose real name is Chancelor Bennett, also won best new artist and best rap performance for No Problem.\n\n\"This is for every indie artist, everybody who has been doing this mixtape stuff for a long time,\" he said.\n\nWarning: Third party content may contain ads\n\nIt's a huge rise for the artist, who's gone from releasing his first mixtape to Grammy-winner in five years.\n\n\"I didn't think I was going to get this one so I don't have cool stuff to say,\" he said after picking up best rap album.\n\nChance the Rapper's following, from both fans and labels, has been growing since the release of his first mixtape, 10 Day, in 2012.\n\nWarning: Third party content may contain ads\n\nAlthough Coloring Book had the buzz of a major label style release, it appeared exclusively on Apple Music after only a week's notice.\n\nChance has turned down several contract offers and is still unsigned.\n\nChance the Rapper performed a medley of songs from Coloring Book at the Grammys\n\nThe Chicago-born rapper has never sold a single album, opting instead to make money through touring, carefully selected advert appearances and merchandise.\n\nChance often refers to his plans to stay independent in his music.\n\nThe hook on No Problem, which was up for best rap performance, takes a shot at labels that \"try to stop me\" and on Blessings he says; \"I don't make songs for free, I make 'em for freedom\".\n\nColoring Book references \"Aunt Beyonce\" and features appearances from his \"big brother\" Kanye West, Lil Wayne, Justin Beiber and 2 Chainz.\n\nIt also showcases a string of up and coming Chicago-based musicians.\n\nChance the Rapper thanked his manager Pat Corcoran (left) and friend and musician and friend Peter Cottontale (right)\n\nDuring his acceptance speech for best new artist he said: \"I want to thank God for putting Pete [musician and member of Chance's music collective The Social Experiment Peter Cottontale] and Pat [Corcoran, his manager] in my life. They've have carried me from 2012.\n\n\"I know I talk about my independence a lot. I know people think being independent means you do it by yourself.\n\n\"But independence means freedom, I do it with these folks right here.\"\n\nThis sense of inclusion, combined with a social media presence which floats between \"daddy days\" with his daughter Kinsley and a transparent view of life as an independent artist, has helped fans maintain a sense that they're backing an underdog.\n\n(l-r) Musicians Nate Foxx, Peter Cottontale, Nico Segal, Greg Landfair Jr, AKA The Social Experiment, and his manager Pat Corcoran have always been a part of Chance the Rapper's career\n\nChance's approach has allowed him to keep an air of relatability and borderline vulnerability, concepts which have are all to easily lost by some of his peers through another picture of a private jet on Instagram. And he's made the most of it.\n\nIn May 2016 he showed an awareness of having the attention of the industry by tweeting a link to a petition asking Grammy judges to allow free music to be eligible for nomination.\n\nOnce they agreed, he followed it up with an advert in Billboard magazine in an effort to appeal to Grammy judges.\n\nChance was the first unsigned artist to perform on the popular US sketch show Saturday Night Live and recently became the first artist to release a music video through Facebook Live with the launch of Same Drugs.\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "President Donald Trump has welcomed Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to the White House.\n\nThe leaders are expected to discuss economic links and women in the workforce.", "Also up for best actress was Emily Blunt (left), for her role in The Girl on a Train, and Meryl Streep, nominated in the same category for Florence Foster Jenkins. Completing the trio is Andrew Garfield, who was nominated for best leading actor for his role in Hacksaw Ridge.", "Women who breastfeed their toddlers say they are either branded \"hippy earth mothers\" or seen as \"weird and disgusting\".\n\nMany have applauded model Tamara Ecclestone for braving the backlash to post a photograph of herself breastfeeding her daughter, who is nearly three.\n\nThe NHS says most women in the UK wish they could breastfeed for longer than they do, yet only one in 200 mothers do so past their baby's first birthday.\n\nHere, five mothers who carried on breastfeeding share their stories.\n\nRebekah Ellis, 32, from Cambridge, breastfeeds both her six-month-old son and her daughter, who is three and a half.\n\nShe says: \"The reaction from the NHS has been supportive, albeit surprised. The midwives who attended my son's birth at home said 'Good for you,' when my husband explained.\n\n\"Most people don't know that I am still feeding my daughter. I know that I would get a negative reaction from the vast majority. Even nursing past a year old is often seen as weird, disgusting - despite the WHO [World Health Organisation] recommendation [that children should be breastfed until the age of two or older].\n\n\"When I nurse my son out in public (my daughter hasn't wanted milk during the day since the age of 18 months), I use a cover. This is more for me than for the benefit of others.\n\n\"People still look uncomfortable though, even when they can't see anything.\"\n\nKelly Lane, 38, from Redditch in Worcestershire, breastfed her daughter, now nine, and her son, now seven, until the age of two and a half.\n\nShe says her confidence took a knock after a friend's husband criticised her, telling her it was \"pointless\" - but she carried on because she could see the health benefits for her children.\n\nShe says: \"You do have to be dedicated to do it but I was happy to give that up for what was only a very short period of my life.\n\n\"The one quite hard thing is having a meal. I personally felt too uncomfortable to breastfeed in public and would use breast-feeding rooms or the toilet.\n\n\"But breastfeeding in toilets is horrendous - they're not hygienic, there's not enough space and you're conscious you are taking up space for someone who might be queuing.\n\n\"Both my children did not like having blankets thrown over them when feeding, as they like to look at Mummy and be talked to and, to be honest, rightly so. A child shouldn't be covered up when it's being nursed.\n\n\"I feel so sad that society is so negative and disgusted that a mother would be feeding her child the way nature intended in public, than actually congratulating her for doing a great thing.\n\n\"It's ok though for women to be up on billboards everywhere flashing every body part possible! The hypocrisy is astonishing!\"\n\nRebecca Alexander, 34, from Liverpool, still breastfeeds her son who will be three in April. She says she loves Tamara Ecclestone's \"continued support and promotion of breastfeeding\".\n\nShe told the BBC: \"I struggled feeding my elder daughter for more than three weeks first time around because of the lack of knowledge and support. Breastfeeding should be visible in our society. It's how we learn; by seeing others do it.\n\n\"I set out on this journey [with my son] thinking I would breastfeed till two years and then pump until four.\n\n\"When he has had big changes such as starting nursery, with a new childminder and me returning to work, breastfeeding has been his source of comfort and a way to reconnect after being apart all day.\n\n\"How anyone can see it as sexual completely shocks me, and I think it says more about our society, and the view of women than anything else.\"\n\nSarah Johnson, who breastfeeds her two-year-old son twice a day, says: \"I think it is a benefit for his health and also a nice bonding moment for us both, especially as I work away part of the week.\n\n\"I have decided to continue until he is ready to stop, but I am coming under pressure from family members to stop - grandparents - who say he is 'no longer a baby'.\n\n\"I tell them about the WHO guidelines for breastfeeding until two and beyond, but I guess in our Western culture you are seen as a hippy earth mother or odd if you still breastfeed a toddler - shame as in other parts of the world it is totally normal.\n\n\"When did something natural become unnatural? I don't judge mothers who choose to bottle feed, so would not liked to be judged either.\n\n\"Although the pictures [of Tamara Ecclestone] are rather posed, I commend her for posting them.\"\n\nSue Burgess, 57, from Oxford, breastfed her daughter until she was two and a half, and while she says she cannot understand why anyone would describe it as disgusting, she admits she only did it in public \"a handful of times\" as she found it \"embarrassing\".\n\nAlthough her daughter is now 16, Sue still cringes when she thinks about the \"worst time\" feeding her in a village square in Italy and feeling \"exposed\" as a solemn church procession took place close by.\n\n\"My daughter started to say 'A boo! A boo! A BOO!!!' at ever-increasing volumes, which was her way of asking for a breastfeed. I complied unwillingly.\"\n\nSue adds: \"Nonetheless, if other people feel the strength to take such experiences in their stride, I can only admire them.\"", "The claim: Pensioners are on average £20 a week better off than working-age people.\n\nReality Check verdict: The calculation made by the Resolution Foundation is for household income after housing costs. Before housing costs are taken into account, working-age households still have higher incomes than pensioner households.\n\nNews that pensioner households are now better off than working-age families was widely reported on Monday.\n\nThere have been reports for some time that incomes for pensioners have been growing faster than those for working-age people, largely as a result of pensions being protected by the triple-lock, while many working-age benefits have been frozen.\n\nThe triple-lock guarantees that pensions rise by the same as average earnings, the consumer price index, or 2.5%, whichever is the highest.\n\nBut the report from the Resolution Foundation was the first suggestion that the retired had actually overtaken the working-age group.\n\nThe figures referred to the \"typical pensioner household\", by which it meant the median, which is the household for which half of pensioner households have higher income and half of them have lower incomes.\n\nIn this case, a pensioner household is one in which at least one member is of pension age or older (65 for men, 64 for women) whether or not that person is working. There can also be working people in a pensioner household.\n\nBut the important factor that has been mentioned little in the coverage is that the measure of income that the Resolution Foundation is using is one for income after housing costs have been paid.\n\nThis chart from the Resolution Foundation gives income after housing costs for the median pensioner and working household as well as a richer one and a poorer one.\n\nTaking income after housing costs makes a huge difference because pensioner households are more likely to own their own homes and to have relatively small or paid-off mortgages.\n\nThe report says, for example, that 70% of the silent generation (born 1926-45) own their homes outright, while just over 40% of the baby boomers (1946-65) own theirs, with another 30% still having mortgages to pay.\n\nThe median income for both working-age and pensioner households is just over £20,000 a year, so housing costs would make a big difference.\n\nAlso, the figures do not take account of people in care homes, which would be expected to increase housing costs for those of pension age.\n\nThe Resolution Foundation confirms in the report that before housing costs are paid, the median working-age household still has a higher income than the median pensioner household.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nPremier League champions Leicester were plunged deeper into relegation trouble as they were beaten by Swansea, whose vital victory gave their own hopes of survival an enormous lift.\n\nAfter a cagey start, Alfie Mawson's thumping volley and an incisive team goal finished by Martin Olsson gave the hosts a commanding 2-0 half-time lead.\n\nLeicester offered more resistance in the second half - substitute Islam Slimani was denied by a fine save by Lukasz Fabianski - but fell to a fifth successive defeat, increasing the pressure on manager Claudio Ranieri.\n\nThe Foxes, who are just one point above the relegation zone, are the only side in the top four English divisions without a league goal in 2017.\n\nThey are also the first reigning champions to lose five consecutive top flight matches since Chelsea in March 1956 and now find themselves embroiled in a congested relegation battle in which the bottom six teams are separated by just five points.\n\nWinless in the Premier League in 2017 and without a goal in their previous five league outings, Leicester entered this fixture in apparent freefall.\n\nGoalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel described their faltering title defence as \"embarrassing\" after last Sunday's 3-0 home defeat by Manchester United, while Wednesday's FA Cup replay win over Derby was preceded by a dreaded vote of confidence from the club's board for manager Ranieri.\n\nThe Italian cut a forlorn figure on the touchline at the Liberty Stadium, standing motionless as he watched his side surrender two goals in a potentially defining eight-minute spell at the end of the first half.\n\nThere was little Schmeichel could do to stop Mawson's brilliant swerving volley, but the goalkeeper was at fault for Swansea's second.\n\nAttempting to launch a counter-attack, the Dane's throw landed at the feet of Swans midfielder Tom Carroll, who started a slick one-touch passing move which involved Fernando Llorente and Gylfi Sigurdsson and ended with Olsson, whose firm strike Schmeichel should have saved.\n\nAs impressive as the goal was from a Swansea perspective, it was indicative of Leicester's porous defence - a far cry from the solid backline which formed the foundation for their improbable title success last season.\n\nDespite starting the day a place below their opponents, Swansea's resurgence under new head coach Paul Clement was in striking contrast to Leicester's decline.\n\nThe Swans had won three of their five league games since Clement's appointment on 2 January, lifting them off the foot of the table and out of the bottom three to earn the former Derby boss the Premier League manager of the month award.\n\nThat accolade is meant to carry something of a curse - with managers often losing their next game after receiving the award - but Clement avoided such a jinx as he oversaw a polished performance.\n\nSwansea are far more organised defensively than they were under predecessor Bob Bradley, with the defence and midfield now structured and disciplined with and without the ball.\n\nThe home side's energetic pressing gave Leicester no time to settle, and their two brilliant goals gave them a firm foothold in the game they never looked like losing.\n\nA fourth win from six league games under Clement means Swansea climb up to 15th place, four points clear of the bottom three and with renewed hope of avoiding relegation.\n\nSwansea City boss Paul Clement: \"We have had a really good start and I'm very pleased with the players. We totally deserved that victory.\n\n\"The goal before half-time put us in strong position, we were solid all of the game. We had a couple of moments around 60/61 minutes where Leicester threatened but otherwise we were good.\"\n\nLeicester City boss Claudio Ranieri: \"Unbelievable. We started well. We wanted to make a good result against another team near the relegation zone. We make something good but the first shot on goal they score and then the second again. From there it was very difficult to get back.\n\n\"Our mind is on the Premier League. The FA Cup and Champions League is something different. We want to play well and be safe in the Premier League. Our main target is to be safe in the Premier League.\"\n\nWhen will Leicester score again? - The stats\n• None Leicester are the first reigning top-flight champions to fail to score in six consecutive league matches.\n• None The Foxes have gone over 10 hours without scoring in the Premier League, 610 minutes.\n• None No team in the top four tiers has won fewer points in 2017 than Leicester (one, level with Aston Villa, Coventry and Leyton Orient).\n• None Gylfi Sigurdsson has been involved in eight goals in his last eight home Premier League games (three goals, five assists).\n• None No defender has scored more Premier League goals in 2017 than Alfie Mawson (three, level with Marcos Alonso).\n• None Leicester have kept just two clean sheets in their last 18 Premier League games.\n\nBy the time Leicester City start their next Premier League game, they could be bottom of the table. The Foxes host Liverpool on Monday, 27 February (20:00 GMT) - with all three teams below them in action before then.\n\nSwansea's next game is a trip to leaders Chelsea in the Premier League on Saturday, 25 February (15:00 GMT).\n• None Attempt missed. Leroy Fer (Swansea City) left footed shot from more than 40 yards on the right wing is high and wide to the right.\n• None Attempt missed. Gylfi Sigurdsson (Swansea City) left footed shot from the centre of the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Martin Olsson with a cross.\n• None Attempt missed. Jamie Vardy (Leicester City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Islam Slimani. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Nearly 190,000 people in Northern California have been told to evacuate their homes after the tallest dam in America was weakened by heavy rainfall.\n\nOfficials say part of the Oroville Dam could collapse at any moment.\n\nIt is the first time the lake has experienced such an emergency in its near fifty year history.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nJoe Root has been named as England's new Test captain.\n\nThe Yorkshire batsman, 26, succeeds Alastair Cook, who resigned last week after more than four years in charge.\n\n\"It is a huge honour to be given the Test captaincy,\" said Root, who will be the 80th man to lead the country in the longest form of the game. \"I feel privileged, humbled and very excited.\"\n\nRoot steps up from vice-captain, with Durham all-rounder Ben Stokes, 25, filling the role as his deputy.\n\n\"The senior guys in the changing room play a very influential role and, whilst there's a natural progression for me, it's a huge support to know that they are there to help and advise,\" added Root.\n\n\"We have a very good group of players and I'm looking forward to leading them out in the summer, building on Alastair's achievements and making the most of our talents in the years ahead.\"\n\nNo batsman has scored more than Root's 4,594 runs since he made his Test debut in December 2012.\n\nIn the same time period, only India captain Virat Kohli has scored more runs than Root in all forms of international cricket.\n\n\"Joe is the right man to be our next Test captain and I'm thrilled that he has accepted the role,\" said England director of cricket Andrew Strauss.\n\n\"He is universally respected by his team mates, passionate about driving the Test team forward and extremely excited about the prospect of leading his country.\"\n• None Is Root the right man for England?\n\nCook resigned on 6 February after a record 59 Tests at the helm.\n\nBefore the tour of India at the end of last year, the 32-year-old opener said he was looking forward to not being captain.\n\nAs England moved towards a 4-0 series defeat, Cook increased speculation over his future by saying he was questioning his position.\n\nAfter he resigned, he confirmed he would like to continue at the top of the order, with England director of cricket Andrew Strauss leading the process to appoint a successor.\n\nRoot, Stokes, pace bowler Stuart Broad and one-day vice-captain Jos Buttler were all consulted.\n\nBut Root was always seen as the clear favourite and was offered the job over the weekend.\n\nWith England concentrating on limited-overs cricket for the first part of 2017, Root will not properly pick up the reins for almost five months, with the next Test not until July.\n\nHowever, after the visits of South Africa and West Indies, he will lead England to Australia for the defence of the Ashes.\n\nRoot takes the job with very little captaincy experience - he has only ever skippered in four first-class matches.\n\nHowever, he likened taking over as leader to becoming a father, a baby son having arrived in January.\n\n\"Being a dad, you don't really know what to do until you have to go with it,\" he told the BBC before Cook's resignation.\n\n\"I imagine being captain would be very similar. Until you're in that position I don't think you know.\n\n\"I've got quite a lot experience in Test cricket now, but it's one of these things you have to learn on the job.\"\n\nFor Stokes, the elevation to vice-captain is further confirmation of his importance to the England side after an occasionally turbulent start to his international career.\n\nIn 2013, he was sent home from the England Lions tour of Australia for disciplinary reasons after he and pace bowler Matt Coles were found to have ignored the management's instructions over preparation and recovery.\n\nThough he was part of the England squad for the 2013-14 Ashes, scoring a maiden Test century, he missed the 2014 World Twenty20 with a broken hand sustained when punching a locker on a tour of the West Indies.\n\nA spell of drifting in and out of the England team followed, including missing the 2015 World Cup, but he returned to hit the fastest Test century at Lord's - 101 from 85 balls against New Zealand - before smashing England's fastest Test double century against South Africa in January 2016.\n\n\"He has real presence and influence within the team environment that serve as a great source of support for Joe,\" said Strauss. \"I have no doubts that the responsibility will also help Ben to continue his rapid rise as a world-class all-rounder.\"", "Declan Collier, head of London City Airport, shares the business advice he wishes he had been given when he started out.\n\nShhh! Get all the #CEOSecrets on our website here and watch this video explaining the series.\n\nTo keep up to date with the CEO Secrets series and go behind the scenes, follow series producer Dougal Shaw on Twitter and Facebook.", "A ferry crashed into a pier on the Isle of Man as the captain tried to dock in strong winds.\n\nServices from Douglas to the UK have been disrupted after the Ben-my-Chree, which sailed from Heysham, Lancashire, struck the pier on Sunday.\n\nThe Isle of Man Steam-Packet Company confirmed no passengers or crew were injured.", "Sacked Sale Sharks winger Tom Arscott has been found guilty of passing on confidential team information to Bristol by the Rugby Football Union.\n\nThe 29-year-old met with his brother, Bristol back Luke, at their team hotel the night before Bristol's 24-23 Premiership win at Sale on 1 January.\n\nThe RFU investigation found Bristol were aware of some of Sale's defensive tactics but there was \"no evidence to demonstrate\" a change in strategy.\n\nIn addition, Arscott - who was suspended by Sale on 4 January and sacked 16 days later after an internal investigation - will be required to undertake a relevant World Rugby education module.\n\nThe RFU interviewed 25 people from both clubs after it was alleged Arscott breached regulation 17, which relates to anti-corruption and betting.\n\nHe was cleared of breaching that law as there was no evidence of betting or fixing, but the details that were passed were \"inside information\" relating to regulation 17.2.\n\nBristol boss Mark Tainton insisted \"nothing of any sporting value\" had been passed on to his coaches when it was claimed initially that Arscott had provided them with confidential details.\n\nThe RFU stated that two Bristol coaches were aware of Sale's proposed defensive structure and line-out details, but it was found that they \"did not fail to comply with the relevant reporting requirements in relation to the inside information that the club received\".\n\nNeither Tom nor Luke Arscott entered the field during the match.\n\nRFU head of discipline Gerard McEvilly said: \"In determining what action should be taken following the investigation, we have taken into account that Tom Arscott has already paid a heavy price for his conduct in having been dismissed from his employment by Sale Sharks.\n\n\"These issues have arisen because of the inappropriate sharing of information while players were socialising in the same hotel before the match.\n\n\"Therefore, the RFU is strongly recommending to both clubs that all their players are reminded of their contractual and ethical obligations to their employing clubs and of the problems that may arise should confidential/inside information be passed between individuals.\"\n\nArscott, who has played for Bristol, Plymouth, Worcester and London Welsh, has responded to the decision by saying he wants to start playing again.\n\n\"I wish to state that although I am disappointed with the outcome, I would now like to draw a line under this episode,\" he said in statement from the Rugby Players Association.\n\n\"This has been an extremely difficult period for me, my family and friends and I would like to thank all those who have supported me. I look forward to resuming my playing career as soon as possible.\n\n\"I will not be making any further statement on the matter.\"", "Lucy had to have surgery at the craniofacial unit to have her skull shortened\n\nEvery year, more than a thousand children with facial abnormalities are treated at the Oxford Children's Hospital's pioneering craniofacial unit. The work carried out by the world-class team is quite simply life-changing.\n\n\"When you've got an odd-shaped head, children are probably more ruthless and cruel,\" says Tom Bowran, whose baby daughter Lucy is being treated at the unit at John Radcliffe Hospital.\n\n\"The name-calling, the possibility you'll miss out on something, the bullying even to a late age... that was something I was so keen that Lucy avoided. I wanted her to have as good a quality of life as any parent would.\"\n\nTom is watching Lucy go through a similar experience to the one he had as a child.\n\nLucy was seven weeks old when Tom and his wife Hanna, who are from Cambridge, were told she had sagittal synostosis.\n\nThe top plates on her skull had fused, stopping it from growing properly, and she had to be referred to the specialist department.\n\n\"I was absolutely terrified,\" Hanna says. \"The fact that her dad had something similar and that was his worst fear, that Lucy would end up with anything like that.\n\n\"The hospital squeezed us in straight away and they've been absolutely brilliant... they've been holding her hands every step of the way.\"\n\nTom Bowran, pictured with wife Hanna, had a similar condition to his daughter as a child\n\nDavid Johnson is head of the unit and a consultant plastic surgeon.\n\nHis department sees about 1,200 patients each year and carries out up to 100 complex procedures in that time, making it one of the busiest units of its kind in the world.\n\n\"Lucy's skull has not been able to grow very well from side to side, and has been forced to grow in a long and narrow fashion,\" he explains.\n\n\"The operation was to shorten her skull by taking the bone off the front and the bone off the back... reshaping that bone and fixing it back in position again.\"\n\nHanna says knowing the surgery had gone to plan \"was the best feeling in the world\".\n\nAs a result Lucy lost the \"big forehead... the funny shape at the back, and she looks completely different\".\n\n\"More importantly it's given her brain the room to grow that it needs.\"\n\n\"Yesterday was possibly the longest seven hours of my life waiting for her to come through the operation,\" Tom says.\n\n\"Just knowing what she was going through and the potential risks that had been spelt out.\n\n\"It was a big relief seeing the reassuring faces and Mr Johnson with his smiley face telling us he was delighted with the progress.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nStaff are used to designing new operations from scratch to solve challenging cases\n\nMore than 25 people work on Mr Johnson's team and they are used to solving challenging cases, some affecting only one child in tens of thousands.\n\nTheir expertise is valued by the Department of Health, and the unit receives specific funding because of its designation as of one of the NHS's \"highly specialised services\".\n\nAnthony Carter, father of two-year-old Brianne, remembers when his family first met the elite team.\n\n\"There were 10 people including Mr Johnson in there and it was so scary,\" says Mr Carter, who is from Wiltshire.\n\n\"It then hit us how serious it was. Then we went through each individual person, and they each explained, and we were a bit more at ease.\"\n\nThe first task for doctors was to repair Brianne's cleft lip\n\nThen in June 2016 she had an operation to reconstruct her skull\n\n\"We have to look at doing unique and novel things for individuals,\" Mr Johnson explains.\n\n\"There are many examples where I've been doing things for the very first time, and a lot of conditions where we're having to think on our feet and almost design new operations from scratch.\n\n\"That in a way is one of the most challenging things of my job, but also one of the most rewarding.\"\n\nBrianne has an extremely rare condition called cranio-fronto-nasal dysplasia. She was born with a flatness on one side of her forehead, a cleft lip and palate, and a complex craniofacial cleft, leaving her with a gap in the bones forming in her face. She's the only child in the UK with this set of issues.\n\n\"All the scans are quite strange to see... the work and detail that has gone into piecing the jigsaw puzzle of her head,\" Anthony says.\n\nMr Johnson describes the complex eight-hour procedure as akin to \"robbing Peter to pay Paul\".\n\n\"I created a new forehead based on a piece of bone on the top of her skull, and her old forehead has been cut up into little pieces and placed back where the new forehead's come from.\"\n\nIt has bought Brianne time, but she will still require a serious procedure when she is about 10 years old, to move her eye sockets closer together.\n\nUnfortunately, the day after Brianne returned home she fell off a sofa on to her head. She had a seizure, and had to be flown to hospital by air ambulance.\n\nIt is a reminder why so many families that use the unit - and who often stay there for extended periods - take things one day at a time.\n\nCT scans are used to solve the \"jigsaw puzzle\" of irregularly-shaped skulls\n\nBut Stephanie says her daughter, who has since recovered from her fall, loves visiting the unit, which takes pride in its welcoming atmosphere.\n\n\"She gets so excited when we pull in, it's like we're taking her to a theme park.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Could Jeremy Corbyn be replaced as Labour leader? And if so when?\n\nThose whispered questions have been echoing between Labour MPs and party apparatchiks at Westminster for weeks, for months. But today the guessing game has risen to a new pitch.\n\nIn BBC interviews, we have been given answers of a sort by two of the most prominent members of the shadow cabinet.\n\nYes, the Labour leader could be replaced. And the change could take place at the next election, \"if and when\" Mr Corbyn decides he has had enough.\n\nThis time, the helpful guidance was not contained in any unattributed, anonymous briefing from a \"senior MP\" or \"party source\", who may or may not be keen to hasten Mr Corbyn on his way. They were the words of the party's newly appointed election co-ordinator in the shadow cabinet, Ian Lavery.\n\nIn an interview with me for BBC Radio 5 live's Pienaar's Politics, I asked Mr Lavery if a report in the Sunday Times newspaper was true - that the party had conducted focus group research to gauge the potential appeal of two shadow cabinet colleagues, Rebecca Long-Bailey and Angela Raynor, as potential future leadership candidates.\n\nHis denial was as emphatic as it was unsurprising. It was, he said, \"political poppycock.\"\n\nIan Lavery said Labour had \"plenty\" of future leaders to choose from\n\n\"I think they are fantastic candidates. We have got lots of quality in the Labour Party and it's not just the two who have been mentioned,\" he added.\n\nMore interesting was what he said next. \"There's plenty of leaders to pick from, if and when Jeremy decides, of his own volition, that it's not for him at the election.\"\n\nHe concluded, again helpfully: \"That isn't the case at this point in time.\"\n\nSo, in the space of one brief moment, the man now appointed to guide Labour through what could become a torrid series of electoral tests has volunteered that, in his judgement, Mr Corbyn may conceivably decide to pass on the leadership \"at the election\". And that there had been no such decision on Mr Corbyn's part \"at this point in time\".\n\nAll of which can only crank up the volume of whispered speculation.\n\nAgainst this background, the verdict of Tom Watson, Labour's deputy Labour leader, in his interview with Andrew Marr, perhaps becomes a little more intriguing. He told Marr the party \"has got the leadership settled for this Parliament\".\n\nAs for the mood in the party, much depends on the coming Parliamentary by-elections in the once supposedly \"safe\" constituencies of Stoke-on-Trent Central and Copeland in Cumbria.\n\nThe new election co-ordinator, who replaced Jon Trickett amid a certain unease at the state of Labour's readiness for the fights ahead, was upbeat. Upbeat, at least up to a point.\n\n\"If you look at them separately, they are both relatively positive at this moment in time, despite what he polls might say, despite what individuals might say,\" he said.\n\nIt was not the most ringingly confident assessment I can remember from an election strategist.\n\nIf Labour loses one or both of these seats, expect the present simmering unease in the party to approach boiling point once again.", "Organisers say they want people to come to the festival to enjoy the racing\n\nCheltenham Festival racegoers will be restricted to buying four alcoholic drinks at a time in a bid to crack down on anti-social antics.\n\nTwo footballers apologised after being photographed apparently urinating into a glass at last year's festival, where women were seen baring their breasts.\n\nChief executive Ian Renton said: \"It's to ensure that drinking is not the rationale for people coming racing.\"\n\nThe measure is also to be imposed at the Jockey Club's other racecourses.\n\nIt comes in first at Cheltenham, where the festival takes place next month, but will be in place at Epsom, which stages the Derby, and Aintree, where the Grand National is held.\n\n\"It's an improvement on things we are already doing,\" Mr Renton said.\n\n\"Aintree has already got the ball rolling, with their Ladies' Day, they've already taken steps to improve the way that is perceived.\n\n\"We want them to come to racing and enjoy the sport and not have those people coming who will be a nuisance to other racegoers,\" added Mr Renton.\n\nAs well as the four-drink limit, corporate complimentary bars will close earlier and water points will be made available in every public bar.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Bushfires ravaging the Australian state of New South Wales (NSW) have largely destroyed a tiny hamlet.\n\nMore than 80 fires - including 20 uncontained - were still burning on Monday following record temperatures.", "Canadian Donna Penner was relaxed at the prospect of abdominal surgery - until she woke up just before the surgeon made his first incision. She describes how she survived the excruciating pain of being operated on while awake.\n\nIn 2008, I was booked in for an exploratory laparoscopy at a hospital in my home province of Manitoba in Canada. I was 44 and I had been experiencing heavy bleeding during my periods.\n\nI'd had a general anaesthetic before and I knew I was supposed to have one for this procedure. I'd never had a problem with them, but when we got to the hospital I found myself feeling quite anxious.\n\nDuring a laparoscopy, the surgeon makes incisions into your abdomen through which they will push instruments so they can take a look around. You have three or four small incisions instead of one big one.\n\nThe operation started off well. They moved me on to the operating table and started to do all the normal things that they do - hooking me up to all the monitors and prepping me.\n\nThe anaesthesiologist gave me something in an intravenous drip and then he put a mask on my face and said, \"Take a deep breath.\" So I did, and drifted off to sleep like I was supposed to.\n\nWhen I woke up I could still hear the sounds in the operating room. I could hear the staff banging and clanging and the machines going - the monitors and that kind of thing. I thought, \"Oh good, it's over, it's done.\"\n\nI was lying there feeling a little medicated, but at the same time I was also alert and enjoying that lazy feeling of waking up and feeling completely relaxed.\n\nThat changed a few seconds later when I heard the surgeon speak.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. When Donna Penner woke she thought the operation must be over\n\nThey were moving around and doing their things and then all of a sudden I heard him say, \"Scalpel please.\" I just froze. I thought, \"What did I just hear?\"\n\nThere was nothing I could do. I had been given a paralytic, which is a common thing they do when work on the abdomen because it relaxes the abdominal muscles so they don't resist as much when you're cutting through them.\n\nUnfortunately the general anaesthetic hadn't worked, but the paralytic had.\n\nI panicked. I thought this cannot be happening. So I waited for a few seconds, but then I felt him make the first incision. I don't have words to describe the pain - it was horrific.\n\nI could not open my eyes. The first thing that I tried to do was to sit up, but I couldn't move. It felt like somebody was sitting on me, weighing me down.\n\nSource: The Royal College of Anaesthetists/Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland\n\nI wanted to say something, I wanted to move, but I couldn't. I was so paralysed I couldn't even make the tears to cry.\n\nAt that point, I could hear my heart-rate on the monitor. It kept going up higher and higher.\n\nI was in a state of sheer terror. I could hear them working on me, I could hear them talking. I felt the surgeon make those incisions and push those instruments through my abdomen.\n\nI felt him moving my organs around as he explored. I heard him say things like, \"Look at her appendix, it's really nice and pink, colon looks good, ovary looks good.\"\n\nI managed to twitch my foot three times to show I was awake. But each time, someone put their hand on it to still it, without verbally acknowledging I had moved.\n\nThe operation lasted for about an hour-and-a-half.\n\nTo top it all off, because I was paralysed, they had intubated me - put me on a breathing machine - and set the ventilator to breathe seven times a minute. Even though my heart rate was up at 148 beats per minute, that's all I got - those seven breaths a minute. I was suffocating. It felt as though my lungs were on fire.\n\nThere was a point when I thought they had finished operating and they were starting to do their final things. That's when I noticed I was able to move my tongue.\n\nI realised that the paralytic was wearing off. I thought, \"I'm going to play with the breathing tube that's still in my throat.\" So I started wiggling it with my tongue to get their attention.\n\nAnd it worked. I did catch the attention of the anaesthesiologist. But I guess he must have thought I was coming out of the paralytic more than I was because he took the tube and pulled it out of my throat.\n\nI lay there thinking, \"Now I'm really in trouble.\" I'd already said mental goodbyes to my family because I didn't think I was going to pull through. Now I couldn't breathe.\n\nI could hear the nurse yelling at me. She was on one side saying, \"Breathe Donna, breathe.\" But there was nothing I could do.\n\nAs she was continuously telling me to breathe, the most amazing thing happened. I had an out-of-body experience and left my body.\n\nI'm of Christian faith and I can't say I went to heaven, but I wasn't on Earth either. I knew I was somewhere else. It was quiet. The sounds of the operating room were in the background, I could still hear them. But it sounded as though they were very, very far away.\n\nThe fear was gone, the pain was gone. I felt warm, I felt comforted and I felt safe. And instinctively I knew I was not alone. There was a presence with me. I always say that was God with me because there was absolutely no doubt in my mind that he was there beside me. And then I heard a voice saying, \"Whatever happens, you're going to be OK.\"\n\nAt that point I knew that if I lived or died, it would be just fine. I had been praying throughout the whole thing to keep my mind occupied, singing to myself and thinking of my husband and my children. But when this presence was with me, I thought, \"Please let me die because I can't do this any more.\"\n\nBut just as quickly as I went there, I was back. In the time it takes to snap your fingers I was back in my body in the operating room again. I could still hear them working on me and the nurses yelling, \"Breathe Donna.\"\n\nAll of a sudden the anaesthesiologist said, \"Bag her!\" They put a mask on my face and used a manual resuscitator to force air into my lungs.\n\nAs soon as they did, the burning sensation I'd had in my lungs left. It was huge relief. I started to breathe again. At that point, the anaesthesiologist gave me something to counteract the paralytic. It didn't take long before I was able to start talking.\n\nLater, as I recovered from the ordeal, the surgeon came into my room, grabbed my hand with both of his and said, \"I understand there were some problems, Mrs Penner.\"\n\nI said to him, \"I was awake, I felt you cutting me.\" His eyes filled with tears as he grabbed on to my hands and said, \"I am so sorry.\"\n\nI started telling him the different things that I had heard him say - the comments he had made about my appendix and my internal organs. He kept saying, \"Yes I said that, I said that.\"\n\nI said, \"Have you noticed that I have not asked you what the diagnosis was?'\" And he looked at me for a moment and said, \"You already know, don't you?\" And I said, \"Yes I do,\" and I told him what my diagnosis was.\n\nIt's now nine years since I woke up during surgery. I have since pursued a legal claim against the hospital which was resolved.\n\nImmediately after the operation I was referred to a therapist because I was so traumatised. I didn't even have a clue what day of the week it was on my first appointment. I was pretty messed up. It definitely takes its toll on a person.\n\nBut talking about it has helped. After time, I was able to tell my story.\n\nI have done a lot of research into anaesthesia awareness. I contacted the University of Manitoba's anaesthesiology department and have spoken to the residents a couple of times now. They are usually horrified by my story. There are usually quite a few who have tears in their eyes when I'm speaking to them.\n\nMy story is not to lay blame or to point fingers. I want people to understand that this thing can happen and does happen. I want to raise awareness, and help something good come out of this awful experience.\n\nListen to Donna Penner speaking to Outlook on the BBC World Service\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The woman using blockchain technology to prove where food comes from\n\nJessi Baker thanks her mother for the inspiration to start her company, Provenance.\n\nSet up just a few years ago, Provenance says it is lighting a fire under the retail world.\n\nThe company is based on an app that allows retailers and customers to see where a product comes from, from its origins to its point of sale.\n\n\"Behind every product is a complex chain of people and places and that's a really important part of why people buy things,\" Ms Baker explains.\n\n\"Provenance is all about making that information transparent to shoppers but also to businesses all along the supply chain.\"\n\nJessi Baker with her mother Jenny who inspired her business\n\nBut it began with her mother Jenny.\n\n\"She raised me, my brother and sister, to care about what we eat and buy, but also helped us understand from an early age where things come from.\n\n\"For a long time, I think most of our meals came from under one mile from our home in Wiltshire, vegetables from the garden and animal products from our neighbour's farm.\"\n\nWhile training to be a manufacturing engineer, Ms Baker visited dozens of supply chains to see how different products were sourced and created. But the breakthrough came in 2013, when she was studying for a PhD in computer science and started to look into the emerging blockchain technology.\n\n\"You can think of a blockchain,\" Ms Baker says, \"as a shared data system that everyone can use in order to be able to trust information. What it's allowed us to do is to have a shared system of record that nobody can tamper with and everybody can see.\"\n\nProvenance uses this technology to log and store every stage of a supply chain in a way that anyone can access.\n\nProvenance has staff in four countries around the world\n\nNow the company, which started as a part-time interest while Ms Baker was studying, has become a full-time business. She has put her PhD on hold, as she's busy running a company with 10 staff based in four countries: the UK, the US, France and Germany.\n\n\"We have no physical things apart from our laptops,\" Ms Baker points out. \"So we can move the team wherever we want to around the world.\"\n\nThe company started out working with small brands and, in July 2016, signed its first commercial client, the UK's fifth largest food and grocery retailer, the Co-op. Provenance is now helping the Co-op track fresh products through its supply chains.\n\nCustomers can check the supply chain of a product on their phones in a shop using Provenance\n\n\"We've attracted lots of pioneering food and drinks businesses,\" Ms Baker says.\n\n\"It's as much about reassuring businesses that they are selling things that are correct and trustworthy as it is about consumers being able to understand that as well.\"\n\nProvenance is built to tackle fraudulent claims about the ethical sourcing of products such as fish\n\nProvenance's first victory for sourcing ethical products came with a humble fish.\n\nIn early 2016 in Indonesia, Provenance tracked the first fish on the blockchain.\n\nWorking with a non-governmental organisation to certify a socially sustainable catch of fish, the company in effect created a digital passport for the fish.\n\nProvenance has now set up partnerships with tagging, DNA scanning and digital imaging companies to strengthen the connections between physical products and their digitised claims.\n\nAs well as fish, Provenance now tracks other foods, such as eggs and dairy. It says that lots of products, not just food, can be tracked and sourced in this way.\n\nChris Haley of Nesta says that blockchain technology is still immature\n\nBut Ms Baker admits that there are still some issues with the scaling up of the technology.\n\n\"We're on the bleeding edge of a new technology and occasionally having to wait for it to get developed a bit more in order to be able to develop on top of it,\" she says.\n\nAnother problem is the reputation of blockchains.\n\n\"The main challenge for Provenance is that it's being built upon a technology that is relatively immature,\" says Chris Haley, an analyst from innovation specialist, Nesta.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Karishma Vaswani takes a look at blockchain and explains how it works\n\n\"There are still some risks that are unclear, but we're beginning to see blockchains being used in really quite a wide variety of applications. It is potentially a much simpler way of transacting.\" he says.\n\n\"We are disruptive and we're trying to disrupt the industry for good.\" she says.\n\n\"The ultimate goal of Provenance is that one day it will be impossible to buy a product that compromises your health and morals. Businesses that have very opaque supply chains and are not taking active steps to make them transparent should really fear us.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. A heavy metal-loving panda full of rage is a new character Japanese working women can identify with\n\nBeing kawaii - or cute - is a huge part of being a good Japanese girl, but what happens when you finally grow up? For decades Hello Kitty was Japan's ambassador of cute, but now an angry red panda is channelling the frustrations of ordinary working women.\n\nIn Japan, girls are taught etiquette from a young age and often much more strictly than boys. It's not just about your appearance, but also how you behave.\n\nThe Japanese firm most closely associated with kawaii products, Sanrio, understands this all too well.\n\nIt can take credit for the global phenomenon that is Hello Kitty, the well-mannered kitten which Sanrio claims is actually a British schoolgirl, despite being seen as perhaps the most quintessentially Japanese thing ever. She even appears in educational videos to teach children about manners.\n\nBut recently the company has introduced a character with a somewhat different approach to life.\n\nAggressive Retsuko - or Aggretsuko - is a 25-year-old red panda who works a mundane office job.\n\nAggretsuko is far from the cute Hello Kitty stereotype Sanrio is also responsible for\n\nHer appearance is cute, but when she gets angry at her boss or colleagues her face transforms until it becomes a made-up mask somewhat reminiscent of American glam metal band Kiss.\n\n\"I'll quit one day anyway!!! This is not my fate!!!\" she screams inside, as her boss piles up more paperwork on her desk.\n\nAfter work, she goes to karaoke alone and sings metal songs with lyrics complaining about her day.\n\n\"She reminds me of myself when I was 25,\" said Reika Kataoka who is now a stay-at-home mother. \"I used to spew venom like that at work.\"\n\n\"Japanese girls suffer from a social structure where we are supposed to act properly,\" a cross-dressing singer who goes by the stage name Charlie Shikazaki and works as a researcher by day, told the BBC.\n\n\"But many of us have two sides. They might look cute on the outside but can be aggressive inside. Sanrio shows this kind of girls quite well with Aggretsuko,\" she explained.\n\nIn a society which puts a lot of value on politeness, you don't often see people expressing raw emotions in public and the Japanese language doesn't have equivalents to the everyday profanities you might hear muttered at work in English.\n\nShe spends much of her time on the edge of rage\n\nSo how was Aggretsuko created? It was in fact through a popular vote of characters submitted by Sanrio staff and others. The theme was \"salaryman\" or office workers. It clearly struck a chord.\n\nSanrio says the designer, who goes by the name of Yeti, wants to remain anonymous. But through the company's corporate communications department, the designer said: \"I observed office workers who are at the centre of Japan's corporate culture and I could hear their heartfelt screams.\"\n\n\"Japan's working environment often becomes an issue and I think there are many people who are enduring a lot of stress,\" Yeti added.\n\nIt is a subject being debated in Japan at the moment as just last month, the chairman of Japan's top advertising agency Dentsu resigned to take responsibility for the death of a 24-year-old employee. Matsuri Takahashi who took her own life on Christmas Day in 2015, after complaining about excessive working hours.\n\nHer death is part of a phenomenon known as karoshi, or \"death from overwork\", which was first recognised 30 years ago.\n\nWhen we asked Japanese women what their Aggretsuko moment is, their most uncute habits, they were certainly forthcoming.\n\nSinger Charlie Shikazaki says she got tired of the pressure to seem feminine\n\nMs Shikazaki said it was the pressure to look cute and behave appropriately that drove her to start singing in a band dressed as a man one year ago. It was \"to express my feelings and emotions\".\n\n\"Because I used to teach at universities, the reaction from my former students has been overwhelming - like 'what on earth happened?',\" she said.\n\n\"I sing in both London and Tokyo but I find that people in London accept me without any hesitation.\"\n\n\"But in Japan, I don't really expect them to understand so I haven't told many people who I used to work with,\" she added.\n\nAggretsuko drowns her sorrows with beer and heavy metal - most unladylike\n\nFor communications specialist Momo Ohmura, it is about what she eats and drinks. \"People say what I order at restaurants isn't cute,\" she said. \"I like things like dried fish and inner organs like chicken liver. I also love Japanese sake - even more than champagne!\"\n\nKawaii ladies are allowed to drink in Japanese society, but being able to drink more than men is not something you'd show off to your boyfriend.\n\nMany Aggretsuko fans were surprised to find out that she was created by Sanrio.\n\nBut she is not their first unconventional character.\n\nGudetama or \"lazy egg\" was born in 2013 and suffers from crippling depression, spewing cold one-liners that reflect the dark realities of life.\n\nThe character was seen as reflective of the younger generation's diminishing self-esteem and growing unhappiness.\n\nThe character is occasionally cheerful, and even recently found love\n\n\"I always thought Sanrio's target audience was children but I wonder if they are targeting millennial or older people,\" said Ms Kataoka.\n\nAhead of Valentine's Day, Aggretsuko appears to have fallen in love. In her weekly programme on broadcaster TBS, for once, she didn't get angry for an entire episode.\n\nWhile it is adorable to watch her being just cute, her many fans hope she will continue to vent her darker feelings even after finding the love of her life.\n\nThis appears to be what more working women in Japan want licence to do.", "A bell-ringer is recovering after being dropped in what's been described as a \"freak accident\" at Worcester Cathedral.\n\nThe ringing master at the cathedral, Mark Regan, gave a vivid account to BBC Hereford and Worcester of the moment Ian Bowman was flipped upside down.\n\nMr Bowman was lowered 80ft (24m) through a trap door in the cathedral by a specialist rescue unit.\n\nThe accident happened during Evensong on Saturday when the bell-ringing rope caught Mr Bowman's heel.\n\nHe's now back home in Devon and able to walk despite fracturing a bone in his back.", "Beyonce's famous fans tell us why she is the Queen.", "Luca Aerni of Switzerland win's the men's combined downhill and slalom by 0.01 seconds at the Alpine World Ski Championships, despite being in last place after the downhill leg.\n\nFollow the Alpine World Ski Championships across the BBC from 7 February - 19 February.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "The latest strandings are among the worst New Zealand has recorded\n\nEach year locals from Golden Bay at the top of New Zealand's South Island know to expect a whale beaching at a narrow strip of sand curving into the Cook Strait, known as Farewell Spit. Ben Collins looks at what makes the area so deadly.\n\nEach year, according to the conservation group Project Jonah, around 300 dolphins and whales become stranded in New Zealand.\n\nMany of these incidents occur at Farewell Spit, a thin arc of sand at the top of the South Island which separates a shallow bay from the open ocean.\n\nLast week, more than 400 pilot whales became stranded on this 5km-long (three mile-long) stretch and, while some were saved by conservation officials and volunteers in a desperate rescue effort, most died.\n\nFarewell Spit curves around the top of New Zealand's South Island\n\nThe beachings occur in the summer months, according to Gary Riordan, who is 62 and has lived in the area for most of his life.\n\n\"It pretty much happens every year,\" says Mr Riordan, who runs a beachside camp ground not far from where they often become stranded.\n\n\"There's a lot of theories out there as to why it happens, but at the end of the day I think there's four or five hotspots where they strand [in New Zealand], and the one thing they all have in common is shallow water.\"\n\n\"As far as often goes: It's pretty much seasonal, always around January or February. It's something that the locals expect every year about this time.\"\n\nSome of the stranded whales were saved, but most died\n\nJoanna Wheaton, who also lives in the area, said she was pleasantly surprised there wasn't a mass stranding in 2016.\n\n\"Farewell Spit is a unique natural trap for them,\" she says.\n\nIn February 2015 about 200 pilot whales - which, despite their name, are actually members of the dolphin family - beached not far from the cafe where she works. At least half of them died.\n\n\"It's always the same species, pilot whales, and the same extreme tide situation on the inner beach,\" she says.\n\nDr Rochelle Constantine, a marine biologist at the University of Auckland, also says the shallow water around Farewell Spit is what causes the whales to beach.\n\n\"Farewell Spit, geographically, is quite an interesting place,\" she says. \"It spans around in a broad arc. On either side is large bay and the open ocean.\n\nVolunteers and officials worked to help save as many whales as possible\n\n\"There's a series of really large sand banks all through there in the bay, and it just gradually becomes more and more shallow,\" Dr Constantine says.\n\nBecause the water becomes shallower gradually, the whales may not be able to detect the change using echo-location, in the same way they would a sudden rise in gradient, she says.\n\n\"They can echo-locate, but it's [a problem with] the signal that they get bounced back. It's a combination of this gentle gradient and the soft sand. They probably aren't detecting that they are swimming into more and more shallow water.\"\n\nBy the time they do realise, it's often too late. The tide has already begun to run out.\n\nFarewell Spit is especially deadly as it sits, like a hook, right in the pilot whales' path.\n\nAbout 200 stranded whales were able to get back to sea with the help of a high tide\n\n\"They can swim straight into Golden Bay and the embrace of the Farewell Spit. It's just geographically a very tricky spot,\" Dr Constantine says.\n\nWhile the shallow water and its effect on echolocation is the most likely reason the animals become stranded at Farewell Spit, Dr Constantine says pilot whales also have strong social bonds, and this could explain why such large numbers become stuck, or return once rescuers re-float them.\n\n\"I have attended a fair few strandings and what is highlighted is how variable they all are,\" she says.\n\n\"We do know that because they are quite strongly socially-bonded, they will hang out with each other, but to be honest, every stranding is different. Sometimes they just muck up and don't get the right cues, and other times its because they are strongly bonded to [stranded] individuals in the group.\"\n\n\"We think there's some confusion going on in each stranding, but finding a reason is often difficult,\" she says.\n\nThe dead whales have been marked with an \"X\"\n\nScientists don't know for sure why they regularly beach in January or February, though Dr Constantine said it could be because of feeding patterns and changes in ocean temperature which see more whales passing through the Cook Strait at that time of year.\n\n\"These are quite hard things to measure as scientists, because the reality is we don't often see pilot whales in this area until they are about to strand. They are not really coastal.\"\n\n\"We really don't know much about the movements of pilot whales in New Zealand. It could be simply they are not around at other times of the year.\"\n\nAccording to the New Zealand Department of Conservation, the largest recorded stranding was an estimated 1,000 pilot whales on the Chatham Islands, another stranding hotspot, in 1918.", "An undercover BBC investigation has revealed Tesco customers are being overcharged on multi-buy promotions.\n\nA reporter for BBC Inside Out West Midlands, who secretly filmed inside 50 Tesco stores around the country, found discounted prices were not applied at 33 of them.\n\nMoney-off promotions were marked on the shelf, but the full cost of individual items was charged at the tills because the offers were out of date.\n\nTesco said it would be double checking price labels at all its stores as a result of the investigation. The company runs more than 3,500 stores across the UK.\n\nA spokesperson said: \"We are disappointed that errors occurred and will be working with the stores involved to reinforce our responsibilities to our customers.\"\n\nThe full investigation can be seen on BBC Inside Out in most English regions at 19:30 GMT on BBC1 on Monday 13 February and for 30 days after on the BBC iPlayer", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThe big story at the 59th Grammy awards was Adele's victory over Beyonce in the best album category.\n\nMost observers had expected Beyonce's Lemonade - a politically-charged opus that tackles themes of gender and black identity - to race home with the prize.\n\nBut Adele swooped in and stole it from under her nose, making her very much the Donald Trump of pop.\n\nBut what were the other big (and small) themes from the night? Here's a rundown.\n\nShe lost all eight of the awards she was nominated for, but this picture of Rihanna with a hip flask tells us she didn't care.\n\nBritish star James Corden took over as Grammys host from rapper LL Cool J, and the difference couldn't have been more apparent.\n\nWhile LL was always affable, he didn't do much beyond delivering his links.\n\nJames, in contrast, began the night by pretending to fall down a staircase (\"this is a disaster!\") before launching into a rap about the gathered celebrities:\n\n\"This room is insane, It's filled with 'Oh, Gods!' / Some of the faces like Madame Tussauds.\n\n\"Beyonce performing, the queen is here, dummy! / Slay the whole stage with twins in her tummy.\"\n\nLater on, he performed an impromptu carpool karaoke (from inside a cardboard cut-out) with Neil Diamond, Jennifer Lopez and Jason Derulo singing a version of Sweet Caroline.\n\nAnd he lived every child's worst nightmare when he found dad Malcolm canoodling with model Heidi Klum in the audience.\n\n\"Dad, what are you doing with Heidi Klum?\" he exclaimed.\n\n\"Well, your mom and I have an understanding and I used my free pass tonight,\" replied Corden Senior.\n\nPolitics was always expected to play a role in the ceremony, but it wasn't until Busta Rhymes took to the stage that things got serious.\n\n\"I'm not feeling the political climate right now,\" he growled. \"I just want to thank President Agent Orange for perpetuating all of the evil that you've been perpetuating throughout the United States.\n\n\"I just want to thank President Agent Orange for your unsuccessful attempt at the Muslim ban. We've come together. We, the people.\"\n\nHe then launched into We The People - a collaboration with A Tribe Called Quest that rejects the politics of division.\n\nSurrounded by dancers in headscarves, the musicians brought their thunderous performance to a close with a chant of \"resist, resist, resist\".\n\nIt wasn't the only political moment in the ceremony, but it was the most incendiary.\n\nEarlier Katy Perry, an ardent Hillary Clinton supporter, danced in a white pant suit and wore a \"persist\" arm band.\n\nPresumably this alluded to Elizabeth Warren's persistence in Congress this week, where she attempted to read a 30-year-old letter by Martin Luther King Jr's widow, criticising President Trump's nominee for attorney general.\n\nThe president of the Recording Academy, Neil Portnow, also called on the President not to cut arts funding, saying Americans are \"constantly reminded about the things that divide us\".\n\n\"What we need so desperately are more reminders of all that binds us together,\" he continued.\n\nUS singer Joy Villa, however, bucked the trend by whipping off a white gown to reveal a pro-Trump dress.\n\nRock band Twenty One Pilots went trouser-less for their first ever acceptance speech.\n\nAfter winning best group performance for their hit song Stressed Out, singer Tyler Joseph and drummer Josh Dun stood up, dropped their trousers and walked to the podium in their underwear.\n\n\"This story, it starts in Columbus, Ohio, it was a few years ago and it was before Josh and I were able to make money playing music,\" explained Tyler.\n\n\"I called him up and I said, 'Hey Josh, want to come over to my rental house and watch the Grammys?' As we were watching, we noticed every single one of us was in our underwear.\n\n\"Seriously, Josh said to me... he turned to me and he said, 'If we ever go to the Grammys, if we ever win a Grammy, we should receive it just like this.'\"\n\nWhile a heavily pregnant Beyonce was on stage killing it in an epic, nine-minute performance celebrating motherhood, Jay Z was on the front row looking after their five-year-old daughter, Blue Ivy.\n\nThe father-daughter duo were beaming with pride throughout and gave Queen Bey a standing ovation.\n\nJay Z's next album - For God's Sake Will You Go to Sleep, Game of Thrones Starts in Five Minutes* - is due for release in October.\n\nAdele might have needed a do-over on her tribute to George Michael, but her sombre rendition of Fastlove (arranged by Batman composer Hans Zimmer, we understand) was a mournful masterpiece.\n\nBruno Mars went the other direction, vamping up a cover of Prince's Let's Go Crazy to such an extent he seemed possessed by the spirit of the Minneapolis marvel.\n\nAnd The Time - Prince's arch-rivals in Purple Rain - showed us how songs the star cast off, such as their hit Jungle Love, could bring a moderately-sized house down.\n\nThose weren't the only stars we lost in 2016 of course, and the memorial montage would have brought a lump to any music fan's throat.\n\nIf that wasn't enough, John Legend and Cynthia Erivo's tender cover of The Beach Boys' God Only Knows -which soundtracked the segment - would have finished you off.\n\nIt's hard to believe it, but in his lifetime David Bowie only won two Grammys: best music video in 1985 for Jazzin' For Blue Jean and a lifetime achievement award in 2006.\n\nThat historical anomaly was corrected last night when the star won all five of the categories he was nominated for, including best alternative album for Blackstar and best rock song for its title track.\n\nRecording engineer Kevin Killen, who worked with Bowie on the album, expressed his relief backstage.\n\n\"It's kind of startling it's taken that long for an artist who's been so magnificent throughout his whole career,\" he said.\n\nMusician Donny McCaslin, who played on Blackstar, said it was \"unfortunate\" Bowie had not been nominated for the main prize, album of the year.\n\n\"Speaking artistically, it was clear he should have been nominated in one if not more of the major categories,\" he said.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Claudio Ranieri says he may have been too loyal to his Leicester players as their Premier League title defence has descended into a relegation battle.\n\nThey are one point above the drop zone after Sunday's 2-0 defeat at Swansea.\n\nFoxes boss Ranieri, who was given a vote of confidence by the club's board last week, is now considering changes.\n\n\"It is difficult when you achieve something so good you want to give them one chance, two chances, three chances. Maybe now, it is too much,\" he said.\n\n\"It is something I can change because in this way it is not possible to continue.\n\n\"I always question myself but I always say: 'Come on, we can do something good.'\"\n\nHaving confounded the odds to win a remarkable Premier League title last season, Leicester have been in startling decline this year.\n\nThe Foxes are the only side in the top four English divisions without a league goal in 2017 and, with defeat at Swansea, they became the first reigning champions to lose five consecutive top flight matches since Chelsea in 1956.\n\nLeicester's decline is embodied by striker Jamie Vardy and midfielder Riyad Mahrez, both of whom are shadows of the players who were so pivotal to the club's title success.\n\nLast season Vardy scored 24 goals, but has just five so far this campaign, while Mahrez scored 17 goals and made 10 assists, compared to three goals and three assists this year.\n\nDespite their current failings, Ranieri has stuck with the vast majority of the players who starred for Leicester last season - and believes they are capable of transforming their fortunes.\n\n\"Every time I speak to the players and the players speak to me we are always confident we can change the situation,\" the 65-year-old Italian added.\n\n\"But now there are a few matches in front of us so we have to find a solution very, very soon. There are two matches in front of us, one in the FA Cup and one in the Champions League but our mind is on the Premier League.\n\n\"I think the strength of the man is to have the right balance. Not to be so high when you win; not to be so down when you lose. You can remember what we did last season but you need to stay with your feet on the ground and say we have to react together.\"\n\nLeicester have a two-week break from their Premier League struggles as they turn attentions to the FA Cup and Champions League.\n\nRanieri takes his team to League One side Millwall in next weekend's fifth-round tie, before a trip to Spanish title hopefuls Sevilla in the Champions League last 16 on 22 February.\n\nThe Foxes could be bottom of the league by the time they host Liverpool on Monday, 27 February.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester City moved up to second in the Premier League with a hard-fought victory over Bournemouth at Vitality Stadium.\n\nHaving started on the bench again, City striker Sergio Aguero appeared after just 14 minutes following an injury to Gabriel Jesus.\n\nBut it was Raheem Sterling who grabbed the opener from close range on the half-hour mark, having been denied by a brilliant Artur Boruc save two minutes before.\n\nThe hosts thought they had replied immediately, but Joshua King's strike was ruled out after he was adjudged to have pulled John Stones' shirt in the build-up.\n\nHarry Arter's curling shot stretched City goalkeeper Willy Caballero into a fine save, before Tyrone Mings put City's second into his own net under pressure from Aguero.\n\nLeroy Sane rattled the bar late on, as City extended their unbeaten run to five games in all competitions.\n\nPep Guardiola's side jumped three places in the table to emerge as Chelsea's closest challengers, eight points behind the leaders, who dropped points at Burnley on Sunday.\n\nCity face at Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on 5 April. They will take inspiration from their title-winning team of 2011-12 when they clawed back the same deficit on rivals Manchester United - on that occasion with just six games remaining.\n\nThis time they have 13 games in which to do it as former Barcelona and Bayern Munich boss Guardiola looks to win a top-flight domestic title for the seventh time in the past eight seasons.\n\nThe Spaniard's pacy wingers were the difference on this occasion, as Sane's fleet-footedness set up Sterling for his sixth league goal of the season, before the England forward showed superb trickery to beat a defender and force Mings into a costly mistake, after pressure from Aguero.\n\nThe Argentine, who failed to start for the third consecutive game, was sent on after Jesus turned his ankle in the opening minutes.\n\nAnalysis - 'The gap is too big'\n\n\"I don't think City can catch Chelsea. It's too big a gap with Chelsea performing as they have done, but it was a comfortable performance - they are brilliant going forward.\n\n\"I thought John Stones was outstanding and David Silva majestic. Since being thrashed 4-0 by Everton in January they have responded superbly. Things are coming together for City at the right time.\"\n\nEddie Howe's men have big problems. They have not won a game in 2017, extending their winless run in all competitions to seven games.\n\nTheir main worry is in defence, having conceded at least two goals in each of their last 10 games, yet at the other end they tested Caballero just once in this game.\n\nTo make matters worse, the Cherries have picked up just one win from their last nine games and had midfielder Jack Wilshere and defender Simon Francis go off injured in the first half.\n\nIn their second ever season in the top-flight, Bournemouth are 14th in the table, six points above the relegation zone. With Swansea and Hull showing improvement, the south coast side could get dragged into a fight for survival should their poor form continue.\n\n'The right result with a thousand million passes'\n\nBournemouth boss Eddie Howe: \"City were very good. For an away team that was a very controlled performance. Our lads gave absolutely everything, I can't ask any more of them.\n\n\"We need to get our bounce back - that's only going to come from a win, but I think today was a positive step.\"\n\nManchester City boss Pep Guardiola, speaking to BBC Sport: \"We made a real performance. I am so pleased with how we did and especially the last 10-15 minutes, we did the right way to make the result with a thousand million passes. It is important to score goals, we are in deficit but it is OK.\"\n\nManchester City travel to Huddersfield in the fifth round of the FA Cup on Saturday (kick-off 15:00 GMT), while Bournemouth do not play again until 25 February when they go to West Brom (kick-off 15:00 GMT).\n• None Raheem Sterling has scored five Premier League goals against Bournemouth, the most he has against a single opponent.\n• None Sterling has equalled his Premier League goal tally from last season for City (six in 23 this season compared to six in 31 last season).\n• None Sterling has won 24 of 25 Premier League games in which he has scored, only losing against West Ham in September 2014.\n• None Pep Guardiola has won all six league games he has managed on a Monday, with an aggregate score of 20-1.\n• None By contrast, Bournemouth have lost all four of their Premier League games contested on a Monday, without scoring a single goal.\n• None Bournemouth have lost all four of their Premier League games against City, scoring once and conceding 15 goals.\n• None The Cherries took until the 67th minute to register their first shot on target in the game.\n• None Only Leicester (one) have collected fewer Premier League points in 2017 than Bournemouth (two).\n• None Attempt missed. Leroy Sané (Manchester City) right footed shot from the right side of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Kevin De Bruyne with a through ball.\n• None Offside, Manchester City. Nolito tries a through ball, but David Silva is caught offside.\n• None Offside, Manchester City. Aleksandar Kolarov tries a through ball, but David Silva is caught offside.\n• None Attempt saved. Aleksandar Kolarov (Manchester City) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Fernandinho.\n• None Leroy Sané (Manchester City) hits the bar with a left footed shot from a difficult angle on the left.\n• None Attempt missed. Fernandinho (Manchester City) header from the right side of the six yard box is too high. Assisted by David Silva with a cross following a set piece situation. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nTwo parents fighting legal battles for custody of their children paid thousands of pounds to a company providing \"McKenzie friends\" - people with no legal training who assist in court. But they were badly let down.\n\nRupinder Randhawa had been feeling \"very low\" after her solicitor told her it was hopeless to pursue a court battle for custody of her children.\n\nThe mother-of-four had wanted to fight the adoption of her youngest two children, instigated by social services.\n\n\"I was not in a great space,\" she told the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme, \"but I was still willing to fight for my children.\"\n\nThen, she came across David Bright, who ran The Parent's Voice London, a service that provided McKenzie friends.\n\nBright told Ms Randhawa he had \"never lost a case\" and charged her £480 a month, plus additional one-off charges, to work on her case as a McKenzie friend.\n\nShe subsequently lost her case and is no longer fighting the adoption of her children.\n\nAfter this, Bright asked Ms Randhawa for an additional £6,000 to pay for a book to be published about her case, which he said would help her win her children back.\n\nShe paid him, but no book was ever published.\n\n\"I felt like I'd been conned,\" she said. \"I felt my whole world came crashing around me, because there was no hope in getting my children back.\"\n\nBright was a director of The Parents' Voice, and both he and fellow director Claire Mann were jailed last year for perverting the course of justice in a case separate to Ms Randhawa's.\n\nBright denies any wrongdoing, and says he and The Parents' Voice \"helped hundreds of families\".\n\nClaire Mann and David Bright acted as directors for The Parents' Voice\n\nWhen families break up and there is a dispute over the custody of children it can end up in the family court.\n\nBut since changes to legal aid in 2013, it is more difficult for parents to get funding to help with their costs in these cases - which is why some are turning to McKenzie friends as a cheaper alternative.\n\nThere is presently no regulation of these services.\n\nStephen - not his real name - came across the The Parents' Voice after his marriage broke down and his ex-wife took custody of their children.\n\nHe said Bright initially \"just sang to my ears\".\n\n\"He told me exactly what I wanted to hear,\" Stephen said.\n\n\"He asked me if I wanted custody. He asked me how much I wanted to see the kids.\"\n\nBut, he said, Bright took more than £12,000 from him, by charging him twice and for work he did not do.\n\nRichard Miller is concerned that some McKenzie friends advertise themselves as lawyers\n\nBoth Stephen and Ms Randhawa won county court judgements against David Bright and The Parents' Voice, for more than £10,000 each for work that was not carried out.\n\nThere have also been several other successful claims against the company.\n\nJenny Lewington worked for The Parents' Voice as a McKenzie friend before stopping in a dispute over payment.\n\nShe was also disturbed by some of David Bright's working practices.\n\n\"I'd gone to the hearing with a mother who was trying to appeal an adoption and [David Bright] had submitted the wrong form to apply for the appeal,\" she said.\n\nMrs Lewington said he had then told her he \"did it to try and delay matters\".\n\nUltimately the mother lost her case, and Mrs Lewington felt The Parents' Voice had given her false hope that she could win.\n\nSenior judges have been considering making changes to the way paid-for McKenzie friends operate.\n\nAmong proposals in a consultation last year was the introduction of a code of practice.\n\nThe Law Society, which represents solicitors, has called for a ban on McKenzie friends being able to recover costs in court cases, to underline the fact that they are different to solicitors or barristers.\n\nRichard Miller, from the Law Society, said: \"One of our concerns about the rise in paid-for McKenzie friends is that a lot of these people are effectively acting as lawyers and advertising themselves as lawyers.\n\n\"But they do not have legal training and legal qualifications, and they do not have the duties to the court that a qualified lawyer does.\"\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "It's amazing to think that just 10 years ago, flat-rate digital music streaming services were a mere gleam in the eye of industry executives.\n\nIt was as recently as September 2007 that Rick Rubin, then co-head of Columbia Records, put forward the idea as a way of combating online music piracy and file-sharing.\n\n\"You'd pay, say, $19.95 a month, and the music will come from anywhere you'd like,\" he told the New York Times.\n\n\"In this new world, there will be a virtual library that will be accessible from your car, from your cell phone, from your computer, from your television.\"\n\nAs it turned out, he was essentially describing Spotify, which launched just over a year later.\n\nHe even got the price right. In those heady days, when the pound was a lot stronger, $19.95 was equivalent to £10, which, give or take a penny, is the monthly cost of Spotify Premium in the UK today.\n\nBut Spotify is yet to make a profit, while plans to float the firm on the stock market have reportedly been delayed, raising a big question mark over its business model.\n\nOf course, Spotify isn't the only streaming platform out there. Others have joined it over the past decade, including Apple Music, Amazon Prime Music and Deezer, as well as high-resolution music services Tidal and Qobuz.\n\nBut Spotify is seen as the leader, with more than 100 million users, 40 million of them paid-up subscribers to its Premium tier.\n\nSpotify's Daniel Ek is now the music industry's most powerful player, says Billboard\n\nThe Swedish firm is now a major player in 60 countries, including the world's biggest music market, the US, where streaming accounted for 51% of music consumption last year.\n\nReflecting the huge impact that Spotify has had, its chief executive, Daniel Ek, has just topped US music industry magazine Billboard's latest Power 100 list of the biggest movers and shakers in the business.\n\n\"For the first time since [former file-sharing service] Napster decimated music sales, the recorded music industry is showing signs of growth, and that reversal of fortune is largely due to one man,\" Billboard said in its citation.\n\nThe magazine also hailed Spotify as \"the place fans discover music as well as consume it\", pointing to its promoted playlists, including its Discover Weekly service.\n\nHowever, the clock is ticking for Spotify as it hatches its plans to go public.\n\nThe firm originally planned to float this year, but according to the TechCrunch website, this could now be delayed until 2018.\n\nThere are various issues behind this move, not least of which is that Spotify needs to conclude new long-term licensing deals with the big three record companies - Universal, Sony and Warner - to avoid the risk of suddenly losing major chunks of its content.\n\nIt's thought that Spotify currently pays 55% of its revenue to record labels in royalties, with additional money going to music publishers.\n\nIn the interest of finally becoming a profitable company, it would like to lower that percentage, but this is unlikely to go down well with artists, who argue that the royalties they receive from streaming are unfairly low as it is.\n\nBut if it waits too long before floating, it could face a serious cash crisis.\n\nIn March last year, the firm raised $1bn from investors at an interest rate of 5% a year, plus a discount of 20% on shares once the initial public offering (IPO) of shares takes place.\n\nIs Spotify now too big to fail?\n\nHowever, under the terms of the agreement, the interest rate goes up by one percentage point and the discount by 2.5 percentage points every six months until the IPO happens.\n\nSo as time goes on, Spotify must pay ever larger sums to its creditors just to settle the interest on its loan, while the amount of money it can raise from its IPO is trimmed by an ever greater amount.\n\nUnless Mr Ek can get the better of this brutal arithmetic, the future looks tough for Spotify.\n\nBut at the same time, as Billboard says, \"the entire music business now has an interest in its success\".\n\n\"If it's not already too big to fail, it's headed in that direction quickly,\" concludes the magazine.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nBanned cyclist Lance Armstrong has lost his bid to block a $100m (£79m) lawsuit by the US government.\n\nThe suit alleges that Armstrong defrauded the government by cheating while riding for the publicly funded US Postal Service team.\n\nIt was filed by Armstrong's former team-mate Floyd Landis before being joined by the government in 2013.\n\nA federal judge refused to block the lawsuit on Monday, which clears the way for the case to go to trial.\n\nArmstrong was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and banned for life in August 2012.\n\nThe 45-year-old won the seven titles between 1999 and 2005. The US Postal Service sponsored the team between 1996 and 2004.\n\nArmstrong admitted to using drugs in all seven of his Tour wins in January 2013 while Landis was stripped of his 2006 Tour de France title for failing a doping test.", "In April 2015, the 31-year-old from Mugnano, on the outskirts of Naples, sent a series of sex videos to five people via WhatsApp.\n\nThe recipients included her boyfriend Sergio Di Palo, with whom she had an unstable relationship.\n\nThe videos showed her performing sex acts with a number of unidentified men.", "I ask the Dutch ruling party's Europe spokesman what the election next month is about. \"Identity,\" he replies without hesitation.\n\nI try to ask his leader, the Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, about their strategy.\n\nNear the Dutch Parliament in The Hague, a small crowd gathers in the snow and begins a countdown for Mr Rutte. \"Tien, negen, acht\" - ten, nine, eight - they chant before he unveils the statue of Johan Rudolph Thorbecke, a 19th-Century statesman, hero to Rutte's Liberal party, the VVD.\n\nThe rather delightful mixture of old-fashioned marble for the statesman himself and burnished steel, portraying his modern equivalent, complete with a woman in a short skirt perched on his desk, is the work of Tom Pucke, an English sculptor who's lived here for 20 years.\n\nHe tells me his Thorbecke gazes into the future with worry. \"You see in his face a sort of concern, in his expression, maybe he's concerned about the way things are going.\"\n\nThe prime minister may well feel the same. Another countdown is well under way, to the election on 15 March, and Mr Rutte is becoming decidedly less liberal in reaction to the man leading the opinion polls.\n\nLong before there was Donald Trump, another populist politician with an exotic hairstyle was already making waves. Platinum blonde Geert Wilders was once banned from Britain.\n\nNow he's on course, according to most polls, to head the largest group of MPs in the Dutch Parliament. He wants to ban the Koran and close the country's Mosques.\n\nSo one slogan you won't find Mr Rutte using is \"It's the economy, stupid.\"\n\nDutch PM Mark Rutte says immigrants who \"refuse to adapt\" should \"behave normally or leave\"\n\nHe has devised a plan to ensure he isn't the first continental leader to drown in the new populist tide, joining Hillary Clinton and David Cameron bobbing in the waves. He has issued a very hard-line open letter.\n\nIt begins \"there is something wrong with our country.\" He continues to appeal to \"the silent majority,\" saying Dutch freedoms have been abused, women in short skirts and gay people have been abused. He tells those immigrants who he says \"refuse to adapt\" to \"behave normally or leave.\"\n\nWhen I try to talk to him at the unveiling his spokeswoman butts in: \"This is not the moment.\"\n\nSo I asked his party's Europe spokesman MP, Anne Mulder, what the election is about.\n\n\"Identity,\" he replies. \"What makes the Netherlands the Netherlands. I think it is globalisation, people travelling all around the world, people losing their jobs, so that's why people need some security.\n\n\"People are looking for identity, our shared feelings, acting normal. It is not only Islam, but if people leave their wife at home, if there's not equality between men and women....\"\n\nI say some people might think this was dancing to Geert Wilders' tune. \"Some people might say so,\" he answers, expressionless.\n\nSo has his party been pushed to the right ? He hesitates. \"We have been having discussions in the party. Ten years ago I start in this city council - telling people, \"Act normal.\"\n\nWilders will launch his campaign next week in Spijkenisse, a suburb on the end of the Rotterdam tube line.\n\nSo I go to the community centre there. A group of women are executing a rather slow line dance to gently exercise the limbs. Keeping moving is on their minds, not the election. But when I mention politics, just one name is on all their lips.\n\n\"I am going to vote for Wilders. He's direct. Straight. We shouldn't take in so many people with the Islamic religion.\"\n\nAs they dance to a tune about a beautiful lady from South Texas, some of the views are very similar to those I've heard in the States recently. \"I think we have to close the borders and have less foreigners. People here are getting poorer, kids going without breakfast, no clothes.\"\n\nThere's a paradox too - Wilders is valued for speaking out - but not all supporters want him to lead their country. \"He dares to say things as they are, about the foreigners. They are not good to women, there's the crime, all the murders, they rob shops with guns.\n\n\"Even though I'm voting for him, he can't be prime minister. But we need him to show the truth about Holland.\"\n\nMarianne Vorthoren from Spior, Rotterdam's Islamic umbrella organisation, says the atmosphere has changed.\n\n\"Many Muslims feel 'are we still part of this society?' It's not just that some people say these things, [like calling for a ban on the Koran] but that about 20% of the voters support this. That is shocking. We don't feel safe any more.\"\n\nI ask her about the prime minister's comments that people should leave if they can't \"act normal.\" Fair enough, surely ?\n\n\"Who do you define with 'we' and 'us' and 'our values'? There are lots of groups - some in Parliament, Christian orthodox groups - who don't agree with equal rights for homosexuals. Now we don't say to them 'get out!'\"\n\nDespite these concerns, Wilders' party seems likely to do very well in the election.\n\nThe diffidence I found in the community centre could play either way. People seem to say that they want Wilders around to speak his mind, but not to become their country's leader.\n\nBoth Germany and France will hold major elections in 2017\n\nThat might put people off voting for his party or, my guess, suggest that he's a safe protest vote. Unintentionally the political mainstream cements this appeal, by firmly rejecting him as a possible coalition partner.\n\nWilders has zero chance of becoming prime minister - according to the current prime minister - because the other parties simply won't do a deal with him.\n\nI asked political editor of the right-wing Daily Standard blog Tim Engelbart how that would go down.\n\n\"A government would have to be formed with four or five parties. It would be an extremely unstable, unpopular government, featuring all kinds of parties from left to right with very little in common beyond the desire to keep Wilders out.\n\n\"It would anger Wilders voters, who are worried about security, their country, and who will be told: 'We're going to ignore you, regardless of the results.' Their faith in the Dutch political system won't improve.\"\n\nIt could be a script from the populist playbook - the people's will rejected, the people's choice excluded by a colluding elite. It would suggest betrayal wasn't a myth but a reality.\n\nA lot hangs on several European elections this year. The vote next month in the Netherlands will be followed by even more critical elections in France and Germany.\n\nBut the Netherlands suggests some choices have already been made.\n\nThe 'politics of identity' mean many centrist politicians aren't hesitating at the crossroads, contemplatively chewing their fingers. Many who were once happy to occupy the centre lane have forked to the right and are zooming down the autobahn in emulation of their more popular opponents. The question is not the direction of travel - but how far it goes.\n\nIn the Netherlands, the revolution of the far-right has been brewing for a long time. We'll find out if they are near to taking power on 16 March. But you needn't wait until then to find out how Wilders has done. In one sense he has already won.", "Two Test matches of ferocious intensity and one well short of that.\n\nAfter England and Wales served up a thriller that justified the build-up in Cardiff - capped off with a dramatic late match-winning score from the visitors' Elliot Daly - France out-muscled a spirited Scotland in Paris on Sunday.\n\nSaturday's first fixture - Ireland's 63-10 steam-rollering of Italy - was the sort of confidence-booster that Joe Schmidt's side needed after an opening-weekend defeat by Scotland, but far sterner tests will follow.\n\nWith a fortnight's break before the next round, there is plenty to ponder. And it is still all up for grabs.\n• None Watch the latest highlights and videos from the Six Nations\n• None England have no more get-out-of-jail-free cards - Jones\n\nEngland are very powerful and confident\n\nEngland's win over Wales was a very tight game of fine margins, and it was the visitors' perfect execution of the chance they were given to win the match that proved to be the difference.\n\nWhen Jonathan Davies kicked into the backfield in the last four minutes at the Principality Stadium, England were able to impose themselves enough to create an opportunity and were then clear-headed enough to take it.\n\nThis is a very powerful, confident, internally competitive 23-man England squad.\n\nIndividually Joe Launchbury and Courtney Lawes were mammoth in the second row, expending huge amounts of energy. Nathan Hughes racked up some huge numbers, with the most metres gained (75), carries (22) and defenders beaten (three) of any England player.\n\nElliot Daly showed himself to be a complete footballer. He showed the gas of a winger to round Alex Cuthbert for the crucial score, but he also has the vision of a very good full-back, the touch of a very good fly-half and added to which he can also kick penalties from his own half.\n\nIt is powerful thing to be part of a team that has got that winning habit. You are familiar with your team-mates, but training becomes very high level. There is no sympathy for mistakes that slow up the progress of the project and you go onto the field believing that you will find a way to win.\n\nEngland are going to lose at some point and head coach Eddie Jones is right to say there are only so many times that they are going to come through these tight scrapes - but for the moment that confidence the players have is getting them over the line.\n\nJones may decide to use the Italy game to try some new starting combinations to see if the replacements can be as influential from the beginning of matches. Dylan Hartley was off the pace to my eye , but in modern rugby so much will depend on the condition of the players.\n\nCompared with the game at Twickenham last year, where Wales made a host of errors and gave England a 16-point lead at half-time, this was a markedly better performance.\n\nWales could have easily won this year's match and when they play with that amount of energy they are a real threat to the top four in world rugby.\n\nSome people questioned coach Rob Howley's decision to withdraw number eight Ross Moriarty after 52 minutes. The Gloucester man had had a blast up until then, a real physical presence with some immense hits in defence.\n\nBut it may have been that that impact was a result of him emptying the tanks in the time he was on the pitch, knowing he was going to be taken off soon after half-time. It is not a given that had he stayed on he would have been able to maintain that pace.\n\nThe balance of the Wales back row was good with Moriarty everywhere, blind-side flanker Sam Warburton doing the heavy-duty carrying and tackling and open-side Justin Tipuric fetching, disrupting and supporting in space.\n\nThey were more mobile than their England counterparts and were a big part of Wales securing seven turnovers to England's three.\n\nThere were a few mistakes and a few opportunities that went begging, but England's pressure and instinctive quality in those split-seconds perhaps forced that. The influence of an opposition as good as England cannot be discounted.\n\nScotland were not inventive enough\n\nConsidering they were outgunned in terms of bulk by an enormous France side, the challenge for Scotland was to manoeuvre their opponents around the pitch enough that they tired them out.\n\nWith eight pairs of fresh legs on the bench at French coach Guy Noves' disposal, that was always going to be difficult.\n\nScotland were capable of doing so, the problem was they could not muster the intensity for long enough periods.\n\nIt was not physical intensity they lacked. Instead, they had to be dynamic and inventive, and constantly remould their attacking shape to keep France guessing.\n\nFrance knew that was going to be Vern Cotter's gameplan and the hosts were motivated enough to deny them space and momentum.\n\nStuart Hogg and Tim Swinson's tries were well worked, but there were not enough moments where they got around the outside or in behind France.\n\nAt times it seemed like Scotland had only 14 players on the field. Apart from their two tries, they rarely wobbled this French side.\n\nFrance are brittle mentally in pressure situations, but Scotland did not cause them enough anxiety to see if they would crack again.\n\nScotland could have won the game - but they will not take much solace from that. That has been the story for too many seasons in recent times and they are supposed to have moved on from that.\n\nThe losing bonus point was something to take from a very tricky away trip though, especially considering how tight the standings are.\n\nCJ Stander became the first Irishman to score a Six Nations hat-trick in 15 years, but the way he exploited the space and Italy's weak tackling did not reveal anything new.\n\nWe already knew from his performances in the autumn that he is a very impressive player who will batter his way through a brick wall with ball in hand.\n\nFor me, he is untouchable as the best number six in world rugby.\n\nIreland's intensity dropped for a 22-minute spell early in the second half between Stander scoring their fifth try and replacement Craig Gilroy crossing for their sixth, but Joe Schmidt's side kicked back with a strong finish.\n\nYou have to put this performance in perspective, though.\n\nIt was against a side who have spluttered badly over the past three halves of rugby that they have played.\n\nCoach Conor O'Shea and his assistants Mike Catt and Brendan Venter - who were all together at London Irish in the mid 2000s - are trying to change Italy's culture alongside their style of play.\n\nThat is a major upheaval and, at the moment, they looked just off the pace.\n\nThis is my second-round selection of a Lions XV based on the form shown over the weekend.\n• None Get all the latest Six Nations news by adding", "HTC Vive has been outselling the Oculus Rift\n\nI first tried the Oculus Rift virtual reality headset in the corner of a drab conference room in Las Vegas. I was convinced within seconds - despite feeling a little dizzy - that the device, held together by duct tape and hope, was destined for big things.\n\nA year or so later, I met the same company, Oculus VR, in a (slightly) fancier room at the E3 gaming event in Los Angeles. \"Hold this,\" I said, abruptly thrusting an audio cable into the hands of a young man who I thought was helping out - but was in fact the company's chief executive, Palmer Luckey. Again, I was blown away by the technology.\n\nThe next time I'd meet Luckey he'd be many, many millions of dollars richer, and Oculus would be a Facebook-owned company. But despite that very real marker of success, our topic of conversation each time we met remained the same: How are you going to convince people it's worth it? And isn't it going to be way too expensive?\n\n\"It isn't,\" he said the last time I asked him - but he's wrong.\n\nAt around $600 (plus a powerful PC) to get started, it is too expensive.\n\nBut money isn't the problem. The price of the technology will come down, and I'm still convinced virtual reality can be a success - but will it be Facebook's success? The company's strategy in this blossoming market is under question.\n\nThis week we learned that demo stations set up in Best Buy - the huge US technology retail chain - are being rolled back due to poor foot traffic.\n\nFacebook has described the move as a \"seasonal\" change, but suffice it to say, if they were shifting units they'd still be there. Instead, 200 of the 500 stations across the US are being shut down.\n\nIt's a potentially troubling moment for the company. Those who back virtual reality - myself included - always subscribed to the view that the key to selling them would be to get people to try it out. Once you've been in VR, we all assumed, you'd be hooked, and your wallet would follow soon after.\n\nGoogle's Daydream VR system could be a threat to Facebook's budget VR success\n\nBut that doesn't seem to have been the case. For whatever reason, too few people were bothering to even try the demo, let alone buy the product. There are a few theories for this, but the most likely, in my mind, was suggested by NPR's Molly Wood. The problem, she observed recently, might be the \"pink-eye factor”.\n\nShe said: \"It could be as simple as - and I have said this a million times - not wanting to go into a store and put something on your face that has been on a bunch of other people's faces.\"\n\nBut that wouldn't explain why the Oculus Rift is apparently performing poorly against its closest rival.\n\nAt the high-end of the virtual reality market, Oculus is up against HTC's Vive, an extremely capable device which has the involvement of Valve, the revered games publisher.\n\nUnofficial data (which I'm using as the companies themselves haven't shared sales figures with us) suggest that the Vive, despite being more expensive, is trouncing Oculus. Games research firm SuperData estimated that 420,000 Vive headsets were sold in 2016, compared to 250,000 sales for the Oculus Rift.\n\nThe lower end of the market is far more positive for Facebook. The Samsung Gear VR runs the Oculus VR experience, and that is by far and away the most popular device for VR on the market today, according to SuperData. But the hardware is all Samsung's and, for the most part, the headset itself (a simple plastic frame with lenses) has been given away with many smartphones.\n\nThe hope that the Gear VR might act as a kind of gateway drug into pricier VR experiences has yet to come to fruition.\n\nOr maybe it has, just not for Oculus: the middle ground in VR is Sony's PlayStation VR, $399 and works with the PlayStation 4. It's more powerful than the Gear VR, but less powerful than the high-end headsets. But here's where Facebook should be worried - it seems to be good enough for most gamers.\n\nAnd it's \"good enough\" that makes Facebook's strategy all the more precarious. Who is the Oculus Rift for, exactly? Super serious gamers are gravitating to the HTC Vive. Moderately serious gamers are happy with PlayStation VR. And at the budget end, the Gear VR, while popular now, faces a clear and present threat from Daydream, Google's new VR ecosystem which is far more open.\n\nWhile Gear VR insists you have a Samsung smartphone, Daydream is designed to eventually work with any sufficiently powerful Android device (and it wouldn't be too tricky to make it work with Apple's iOS, either).\n\nThis compatibility comes at a price, mind - the Daydream View headset is far less comfortable, in my experience, than the Gear VR. But it's comfortable enough, and the little handheld controller provides a far more intuitive way of navigating the VR world than tapping blindly at the side of your head, a la Gear VR.\n\nSo what are the next steps if Facebook is to get on top of this? I'd ask Palmer Luckey, but he's hard to reach at the moment - hidden away from public view after controversy surrounding his support of Donald Trump which involved funding a hateful trolling group.\n\nHe still works at the company, but Facebook and Oculus have repeatedly refused to tell me what his job actually is. (Palmer, if you're reading... my Twitter direct messages are open!)\n\nThe only public appearance he has made since that debacle has been to turn up in court where Facebook (unsuccessfully) defended against claims Oculus illegally used intellectual property belonging to games publisher Zenimax in the early days. A $500m bill for damages awaits, unless Facebook can win on appeal.\n\nIn a recent earnings call, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who is still incredibly enthusiastic about VR and what it means for his network's future, called for patience from his investors. \"It's not going to be really profitable for a while,\" he said.\n\nHe's never claimed otherwise, it has to be said. VR appears on Facebook's 10-year strategy, a slow burner with potentially big rewards.\n\nBut falling behind now would be a serious blow, which is why Zuckerberg has brought in Hugo Barra, a man most recently at Chinese firm Xiaomi, but before that, a major name at Google. He'll be in charge of Facebook's efforts in virtual reality from here on in.\n\nIn Barra, Oculus gains both a visionary and a safe pair of hands. He having worked on Android, today's most popular smartphone platform.\n\nAt Xiaomi, his role was to help the company expand globally - and while the company didn't, as some had expected, break into the US under Barra's watch, it did cement a reputation as making good quality devices.\n\nHe hasn't started his new role at Facebook just yet - he'll be at the company in a month or so, apparently excited to be back in California after a few years away.\n\nWhen he starts his first day - I feel those two questions I've been asking Palmer Luckey still stand: Isn't it still too expensive? And more importantly - how are you going to convince people it's worth it?\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook", "Kate and her Nanny Chat's wedding photos more than 60 years apart\n\nSocial media was captivated by a 150-year-old wedding dress that had been lost after a dry cleaners went bust.\n\nTess Newall, who had worn her great-great grandmother's dress at her wedding in June, posted a plea on Facebook to help find it, which was shared more than 300,000 times.\n\nLuckily her dress was found but what is the appeal for brides of choosing a dress once worn by a relative? Three women explained why they had ditched trawling the bridal shops for the perfect dress in favour of a borrowed gown.\n\nKate Ridgway, from Stockport, made the decision to wear her grandmother's wedding dress in 2014.\n\n\"I remember it from when I was a child,\" said the 27-year-old. \"I always knew nan had kept it and I tried it on for dressing up, but back then I thought it was a horrid lacy thing.\"\n\nHowever, when she got engaged to her now-husband Stu, Joan Chatfield, known as \"Nanny Chat\", asked if she would like to wear it on her big day.\n\n\"I was heavily pregnant at the time, so I couldn't try it on,\" said Kate. \"But she had always wanted me to wear it.\"\n\nThen, three days after Kate's eldest son was born, her nan passed away.\n\nWhen she travelled down to Sussex for the funeral, her mother handed her the box with the vintage wedding dress from 1951, and everything fell into place.\n\n\"When I tried it on, it fitted perfectly,\" she said. \"I had it cleaned but I didn't have to do anything else to it.\n\n\"I had tried on brand new wedding dresses and I had fallen in love with one, but this felt different and so special.\n\n\"It meant so much to us as a family for me to wear it and, as you can imagine, it made for a very emotional day.\"\n\nEmily Clark's dress was first worn by her mother Marilyn\n\nLondon-based digital designer Emily Clark also hopes to start a tradition of her own by using her mother's frock for her wedding this October.\n\nThe 33-year-old said her mother's dress, which was first worn in 1980, had played a big part in her childhood.\n\n\"I used to dress in my mum's wedding dress from the age of five or six to - if I'm truthful - until I was 15.\n\n\"It's one of a kind, it's a dress you wouldn't be able to find now and you wouldn't be able to replicate.\"\n\nThe dress was bought by her grandfather, who died last year. She said the dress would act as a way of commemorating him at her wedding to fiance Andrew Stewart.\n\nEmily and Andrew are due to get married in October\n\nThe dress is currently being altered, and when she heard that Mrs Newall's had gone missing at the dry cleaners she says she \"did panic\".\n\nShe added: \"I just think it's wonderful that they've had it returned.\"\n\nFor Rachel Cohen, from Edinburgh, the discovery of her grandmother's dress in the loft spurred on the idea to go retro.\n\n\"I knew there were dresses up there amongst a lot of random stuff,\" she said.\n\n\"I even found one dress which much have been from a previous generation, but it just couldn't have been worn.\"\n\nHowever, the one Granny Marie Waterston wore in the 1930s was in superb condition and perfect for Rachel's special day.\n\nMarie Waterston in the 1930s (L) and Rachel Cohen in 2009 (R)\n\n\"I had never been the type of person to dream of a big white dress, so when I found it, packed away all neat and tidy in a box, I had the idea to wear it,\" she said.\n\n\"I had to cut the sleeves off as she had such tiny hands, but otherwise it was the same.\"\n\nHaving her grandmother's dress meant a lot to Rachel when she married in 2009.\n\n\"My mother died when I was young and I looked after my grandmother when she was old, so we had a close relationship,\" said Rachel.\n\n\"It was special to have her dress there, even when she couldn't be.\"\n\nWhile those three brides opted for the personal touch with their dresses, they join growing numbers of people choosing vintage items more generally.\n\nLouise Croft, ethical fashion blogger at PaupertoPrincess.com - who will be wearing a 1940s gown for her wedding later this year - said going vintage had many benefits, from following fashion cycles to stopping garments ending up in landfills.\n\nShe said the growth of online sharing had also led to brides wanting to stand out even more, and going down the classic route often means the dress is one of a kind.\n\n\"It feels like giving a precious piece of history a moment in the limelight rather than it being in a museum or attic,\" added Louise.\n\n\"Of course, you always wonder what tales and secrets it holds and if it's from a family member then you are lucky enough to also have all these answers.\"\n\nSome brides choose to customise a handed down dress\n\nKat Williams, editor of Rock 'n Roll Bride, said although dresses have been passed down for many years, a lot more people were putting their own touches to them.\n\n\"We had one woman in the magazine who wore her grandmother's dress and customised it all to make it more modern,\" she said. \"She shortened it, added a big petticoat and made it more fitted.\n\n\"It looked great but offered that little bit of family history too.\n\n\"Even if you buy a dress from a vintage shop, it means you won't see lots of other brides wearing the same thing and a bride wants to feel unique.\"", "A tribunal found courier Maggie Dewhurst should be classed as a worker\n\nWhat is the so-called \"gig\" economy, a phrase increasingly in use, and seemingly so in connection with employment disputes?\n\nAccording to one definition, it is \"a labour market characterised by the prevalence of short-term contracts or freelance work, as opposed to permanent jobs\".\n\nAnd - taking opposing partisan viewpoints - it is either a working environment that offers flexibility with regard to employment hours, or... it is a form of exploitation with very little workplace protection.\n\nThe latest attempt to bring a degree of legal clarity to the employment status of people in the gig economy has been playing out in the Court of Appeal.\n\nA London firm, Pimlico Plumbers, on Friday lost its appeal against a previous ruling that said one of its long-serving plumbers was a worker - entitled to basic rights, including holiday pay - rather than an independent contractor.\n\nLike other cases of a similar nature, such as those involving Uber and Deliveroo, the outcome will now be closely scrutinised for what it means regarding the workplace rights of the millions of people employed in the gig economy in the UK.\n\nIn the gig economy, instead of a regular wage, workers get paid for the \"gigs\" they do, such as a food delivery or a car journey.\n\nIn the UK it's estimated that five million people are employed in this type of capacity.\n\nProponents of the gig economy claim that people can benefit from flexible hours, with control over how much time they can work as they juggle other priorities in their lives.\n\nWorkers in the gig economy may be delivering meals\n\nIn addition, the flexible nature often offers benefits to employers, as they only pay when the work is available, and don't incur staff costs when the demand is not there.\n\nMeanwhile, workers in the gig economy are classed as independent contractors.\n\nThat means they have no protection against unfair dismissal, no right to redundancy payments, and no right to receive the national minimum wage, paid holiday or sickness pay.\n\nIt is these aspects that are proving contentious.\n\nIn the past few months two tribunal hearings have gone against employers looking to classify staff as independent contractors.\n\nLast October Uber drivers in the UK won the right to be classed as workers rather than independent contractors.\n\nThe ruling by a London employment tribunal meant drivers for the ride-hailing app would be entitled to holiday pay, paid rest breaks and the national minimum wage.\n\nUber is appealing against the tribunal finding against it\n\nThe GMB union described the decision as a \"monumental victory\" for some 40,000 drivers in England and Wales. In December, Uber launched an appeal against the ruling that it had acted unlawfully.\n\nAnd in January this year, a tribunal found that Maggie Dewhurst, a courier with logistics firm City Sprint, should be classed as a worker rather than independent contractor, entitling her to basic rights.\n\nAnd, also towards the end of last year, a group of food takeaway couriers working for Deliveroo said they were taking legal steps in the UK to gain union recognition and workers' rights.\n\nOne difference worth noting is that workers in the gig economy differ slightly from those on zero-hours contracts.\n\nThose are the - also controversial - arrangements used by companies such as Sports Direct, JD Wetherspoons and Cineworld.\n\nLike workers in the gig economy, zero-hours contractors - or casual contractors - don't get guaranteed hours or much job security from their employer.\n\nChancellor Philip Hammond is looking for effective ways to tax workers\n\nBut people on zero-hours contracts are seen as employees in some sense, as they are entitled to holiday pay. But, like those in the gig economy, they are not entitled to sick pay.\n\nMeanwhile, the Department for Business is holding an inquiry into a range of working practices - including the gig economy.\n\nThe department says it wants to ensure its employment rules are up to date to reflect \"new ways of working\".\n\nThe status of gig economy workers is of importance to the government, as last November's Autumn Statement showed for the first time how it is cutting into the government's tax take.\n\nThe Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimated that in 2020-21 it will cost the Treasury £3.5bn.\n\nChancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond said then he would look to find more effective ways to tax workers in the UK's current shifting labour environment.\n\nFor more on the gig economy listen to In The Balance: Precarious Future on BBC World Service at 09:30 GMT on Saturday, 11 February.", "The Canadian prime minister has said he will not \"lecture\" the US president over his controversial immigration ban.\n\nJournalists quizzed the two leaders over their opposing stances on refugees, after bilateral talks at the White House.\n\nAsked if he believed President Trump's ban had merit on national security grounds, Justin Trudeau replied: \"The last thing Canadians expect is for me to come down and lecture another country on how they choose to govern themselves.\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nAn undercover investigation by Panorama has revealed the reality of life behind bars in the crisis-hit prison system. From prisoner officers who say they've lost control to some inmates regularly taking drugs, undercover reporter Joe Fenton explains what it's like to work on the prison front line.\n\nPrison custody officer Joe Fenton, Her Majesty's Prison Northumberland - this was my life for two months as an undercover reporter for the BBC's Panorama programme.\n\nHMP Northumberland is a prison with a problem. Many problems in fact. And within hours of being in the job, I was to see astonishing examples of this.\n\nOn my very first day, I was taken into a room with some of the other new recruits where we were shown a table covered in drugs. It was a massive find by prison staff - 2.5kg of a drug called spice - a much stronger, cheaper, synthetic alternative to cannabis.\n\nSpice is now one of the most popular illegal drugs used in prison. Prisoners told officers this find had barely scratched the surface.\n\nIn my first week, I was responsible for escorting 70 prisoners but in reality, it felt like they were escorting me. I didn't really know where I was going and I just followed the prisoners, opening the gates for them.\n\nIt didn't take too long to realise that the inmates were, in effect, running this prison. I saw prisoners stumbling around drunk, others who were high on drugs and some struggling to cope with addiction.\n\nOn a standard 10-hour shift, the demands from prisoners were endless.\n\nThe work didn't stop from the moment we got there to the moment we left. You just can't work five or six days solid there - it ruins you and you don't feel like a person any more, you just exist.\n\nThe prison officers were all drained and with the constant demands from prisoners, I felt like I was working in a very busy hotel with a lot of angry guests.\n\nI've seen staff at their wits' ends and staff who are struggling to cope.\n\nNurses attend to a prisoner who has taken the drug spice\n\nThere were drugs everywhere in HMP Northumberland and I found myself walking through clouds of smoke, some of which were from prisoners smoking spice.\n\nSpice affected prisoners in different ways. Some would look a bit blurry-eyed. One reacted by moving his forearms around uncontrollably, his eyes completely vacant and his face expressionless.\n\nOfficers called the nurses for this particular prisoner but they weren't called for every inmate who reacted badly to spice. It happens too often.\n\nThe time officers had least control was during the couple of hours in the evening when prisoners were allowed to socialise - they could go into each other's rooms, close the door and even lock it from the inside, although we could then unlock it again.\n\nOften I would be alone on a landing and it wouldn't have been safe for me to challenge them by myself. I often felt that there was nothing I could really do if I suspected prisoners were about to deal or take drugs.\n\nSome officers told me they often don't confront prisoners because they are not confident backup will arrive if they are attacked.\n\nPrison officers have the power to challenge prisoners but the prisoners had lookouts and warning codes so they were often one step ahead. This enabled them to hide their drugs, put out their cigarettes or throw their mobile phone under the pillow.\n\nThose few extra seconds were all they needed.\n\nAs in all walks of life you'll get people who can cope by themselves and those who need a little bit of help. It's the same in prison.\n\nI met one vulnerable prisoner who was being bullied - we're calling him John in order to disguise his identity.\n\nOn one occasion, I witnessed him totally off his head while other prisoners watched, laughing - I suspect they had spiked his cigarettes with spice. He told me he'd previously had buckets of water thrown over him and had been burnt with cigarettes.\n\nIt would be great if staff were there to look after these prisoners every step of the way but I felt there just weren't enough officers to protect people like John all the time.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. BBC Panorama spent two months inside one of the country's biggest prisons\n\nPrison officers repeatedly told me they had lost control of the prison. I saw officers worried about their safety and losing confidence.\n\nI witnessed one officer convulsing on the floor because he had inadvertently inhaled spice while patrolling a landing.\n\nIt was hard to see this happening to a colleague, someone whose company I enjoyed. But this is what prison officers have to deal with and it wasn't an isolated incident.\n\nSources have told us that at least three members of staff at this prison needed hospital treatment for inhaling spice smoke in the last seven months.\n\nAnd the drugs continue to flow in - prison officers told me that that's because of lapses in security.\n\nWhile working on one house block at HMP Northumberland, staff found black clothing, balaclavas and wire-cutting tools.\n\nI witnessed doors where the alarms weren't working and a hole in an internal security fence which would have allowed prisoners to collect drugs thrown in from the outside.\n\nI have a lot of sympathy for the prison officers I met while working at HMP Northumberland - there are many good people there trying to do a difficult job with limited resources.\n\nPrisoners are in prison for a reason and prisons must exist to both punish and rehabilitate. But from my experience, I didn't see much of either.\n\nWatch Panorama Behind Bars: Prison Undercover on Monday 13 February at 20:30 GMT on BBC One. Or catch up on iPlayer.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nAntonio Conte says he does not like Jose Mourinho's \"joking\" after the Manchester United boss said Premier League leaders Chelsea cannot be caught because they are a \"defensive team\".\n\nConte's side are 10 points clear at the top after Sunday's 1-1 draw at Burnley.\n\nMourinho, known for trying to engage in mind games with his rivals, said his former team will not slip up because they win with \"counter attacks\".\n\n\"He's playing,\" said Conte, who is in his first season as Chelsea manager.\n\n\"I have the experience to understand this.\"\n\nMourinho was speaking after Manchester United beat Watford 2-0 on Saturday to extend their unbeaten run to 16 games. They are sixth in the table, 12 points behind Chelsea.\n\nArsenal boss Arsene Wenger has previously accused Mourinho of playing mind games, as did Sir Alex Ferguson when he was at Manchester United and Mourinho was in charge at Stamford Bridge.\n\nHowever, Conte said: \"I don't like to reply about the other coaches.\"\n\nChelsea are firmly on course for a second Premier League title in three seasons but endured one of their toughest games of the season at Burnley.\n\nThe Clarets have the third-best home record in the top flight, with 29 of their 30 points coming at Turf Moor.\n\nThey restricted Chelsea to just two shots on target on Sunday - none in the second half - and could have won the game but for a superb Thibaut Courtois save from Matt Lowton.\n\n\"The pitch is small and this is better for the team that has to defend and play this long ball,\" said Conte.\n\n\"You have less pitch to cover and then there is a good atmosphere with the supporters and I think it's good.\n\n\"We found a team that thought to disrupt our football, to play this long ball and to fight the second ball.\"\n\nWe've been here before?\n\nMourinho has often engaged in psychological battles with his rivals.\n\nWhen he was Chelsea boss in 2014, he ruled the Blues out of a title battle with Manchester City and also challenged then City boss Manuel Pellegrini over his spending. Pellegrini chose to ignore his counterpart's comments.\n\nThe Portuguese also accused Wenger of being a \"specialist in failure\" that same year and then claimed the Arsenal manager was \"not a rival\" when Chelsea were on course for the 2014-15 Premier League title.", "Up to 1,000 coloured drones flew through the sky in Guangzhou, southern China.", "A number of Lego creatures including this dragonfly have already been created for the map\n\nA Lego-mad couple renowned for creating giant Christmas decorations are using their love of the plastic bricks to raise funds for a wildlife project.\n\nMike Addis and Catherine Weightman will use 500,000 bricks to create a 10m (32ft) 3D \"map\" of Cambridgeshire wetland the Great Fen, complete with Lego \"native species\".\n\nThe land is part of a long-term Wildlife Trust conservation project.\n\nMore than 100 people have paid to help build Lego creatures to go on the map.\n\nThe Great Fen is a 50-year project to create a huge wetland between Peterborough and Huntingdon.\n\nThe creatures, like this Lego longhorn beetle and froghopper, are about 10cm in length\n\nManaged by the Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire, it is one of the largest restoration projects of its type in Europe.\n\nWorking with organisations including Natural England and the Environment Agency, they aim to transform the land and conserve its wildlife.\n\nIn the future, the Great Fen will include a fully-equipped visitor centre\n\nIt will, of course, include toilet facilities which have already been created in Lego\n\nEventually the Great Fen should cover 3,700 hectares (9,140 acres). About 55% of that land has been acquired so far.\n\nThe idea for a fundraising and awareness-raising giant Lego model came about as Ms Weightman works for Natural England and colleagues were aware of her love of Lego creations.\n\nThe 10m (32ft) x 5m (16.5ft) map base will be created on about 14 tables in the visitor centre at Hinchingbrooke Country Park from Sunday.\n\nCatherine Weightman with a few of the many boxes of Lego which will be used to make the map\n\nA Lego cardinal beetle is one of many which will be put on the map\n\nMs Weightman and Mr Addis have already made a few creatures such as dragonflies and spiders to populate the map, as well as buildings including a proposed visitor centre for Great Fen, complete with Lego public toilets.\n\nA number of sold-out sessions later in the week will see members of the public build their own creatures which will be added to the base.\n\nJo Dixon, from the Wildlife Trust, said: \"We aren't too particular, and if the odd dinosaur or alien turns up, we'll add it to the map anyway.\"\n\nA map showing the eventual extent of the Great fen - land in green has already been acquired\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Full-back Stuart Hogg believes Scotland \"chucked away\" a first victory in Paris for 18 years as their Six Nations hopes were jolted by a 22-16 loss to France.\n\nThe visitors twice led after tries by Hogg - his fifth in three Tests - and Tim Swinson, early in the second half.\n\nBut with several injuries to contend with, they had to settle for a bonus point after beating Ireland first up.\n\n\"France had a massive forward pack and really brought it to us. I think we chucked it away at the end,\" Hogg said.\n\n\"Our errors cost us throughout the game. We got ourselves in a good position after the first try, but we didn't look after the ball, we didn't respect it enough and ultimately that cost us.\n\n\"It wasn't the result we were looking for. Our next job now is Wales in a couple of weeks and we have to get ourselves back on the horse.\"\n\nFrance threatened to overwhelm Scotland with their power and offloading game at times, but could only manage one try, via Gael Fickou in the first half, although Remi Lamerat's effort was ruled out by the television match official.\n\n\"It was a physical encounter,\" noted Scotland head coach Vern Cotter. \"Quite a few times we came off second best.\n\n\"I thought the boys stuck in really well defensively and defended our line well.\n\n\"At critical times perhaps we weren't accurate enough and we will look at that before the next game.\"\n\nThe Scots lost captain Greig Laidlaw to injury after 25 minutes, with Glasgow's Ali Price coming on for only his second cap.\n\nJohn Barclay, who took over as captain, also departed with a head knock before half-time, only for his replacement John Hardie to suffer the same fate just a minute into the second half.\n\nProps Allan Dell and Zander Fagerson also went off under the attentions of team doctor James Robson before the hour, with hooker Fraser Brown forced off with 15 minutes left. Centre Alex Dunbar departed for a head injury assessment before returning to the field.\n\n\"Greig has a big part to play as captain and half-back, but Ali played well when he came on and the guys behind adapted well,\" Cotter added. \"These things do happen and we had trained for it.\n\n\"John Barclay and John Hardie both had head injury assessments so we will have to wait and see how they come through the return-to-play protocols. John Barclay hurt his shoulder as well. There are other bumps and bruises but we are hoping everyone will be all right for the next one.\"\n\nCotter played down the effect of Finn Russell's bizarre missed conversion after Swinson's try put Scotland 16-13 ahead, when the fly-half appeared rushed into taking it after the late arrival of a kicking tee.\n\n\"I will have to look at that,\" Cotter added. \"It was only two points and it didn't really matter. At the end it was a six-point game. These things happen.\n\n\"We are happy to come away with one point but we would certainly have liked to come away with more.\"", "M-Pesa now has about 20 million users in Kenya\n\nWhen 53 police officers in Afghanistan checked their phones in 2009, they felt sure there had been some mistake.\n\nThey knew they were part of a pilot project to see if public sector salaries could be paid via a new mobile money service called M-Paisa.\n\nBut had they somehow overlooked the detail that their participation brought a pay rise?\n\nOr had someone mistyped the amount to send them?\n\nThe message said their salary was significantly larger than usual.\n\nIn fact, the amount was what they should have been getting all along.\n\nBut previously, they received their salaries in cash, passed down from the ministry via their superior officers.\n\nSomewhere along the line, about 30% of their pay had been skimmed off.\n\nIndeed, the ministry soon realised that one in 10 police officers whose salaries they had been dutifully paying did not exist.\n\nThe police officers were delighted to be getting their full salary.\n\nTheir commanders were less cheerful about losing their cut.\n\n50 Things That Made the Modern Economy highlights the inventions, ideas and innovations that helped create the economic world.\n\nAfghanistan is one of a number of developing countries whose economies are currently being reshaped by mobile money - the ability to send payments by text message.\n\nThe ubiquitous kiosks that sell prepaid mobile airtime effectively function like bank branches: you deposit cash, and the agent sends you an SMS adding that amount to your balance.\n\nOr you send the agent an SMS, and she gives you cash.\n\nAnd you can text some of your balance to anyone else.\n\nIt is an invention with roots in many places.\n\nBut it first took off in Kenya, and that story starts with a presentation made at the World Summit for Sustainable Development in Johannesburg in 2002 by Vodafone's Nick Hughes.\n\nHis topic was how to encourage large corporations to allocate research funding to ideas that looked risky but might help poor countries' development.\n\nIn the audience was an official for the United Kingdom's Department for International Development.\n\nDfID had money to invest in a \"challenge fund\" to improve access to financial services.\n\nDfID had noticed the customers of African mobile networks were transferring prepaid airtime to each other as a sort of quasi-currency.\n\nSo the man from DFID had a proposition.\n\nDfID would chip in £1m, provided Vodafone committed the same.\n\nThat got the attention of Mr Hughes's bosses.\n\nBut his initial idea was not about tackling corruption in the public sector.\n\nIt was about something much more limited - microfinance, a hot topic in international development at the time.\n\nHundreds of millions of would-be entrepreneurs were too poor for the banking system to bother lending them money.\n\nIf only they could borrow a small amount - enough to buy a cow, or sewing machine, or motorbike - they could start their own business.\n\nMr Hughes wanted to explore microfinance clients repaying their loans via SMS.\n\nMobile phones allowed Africans to work around their often woefully inadequate landline networks\n\nBy 2005, Mr Hughes's colleague Susie Lonie was in Kenya with Safaricom, a mobile network part-owned by Vodafone.\n\nShe recalls conducting one training session in a sweltering tin shed, and the incomprehension of microfinance clients.\n\nBefore she could explain M-Pesa, she had to explain how mobile phones worked.\n\nBut once people started using the service, it soon became clear they were using it for much more than repaying microfinance loans.\n\nOne woman in the pilot project texted some money to her husband after he was robbed, so he could catch the bus home.\n\nOthers said they had used M-Pesa to avoid being robbed, depositing money before a journey and withdrawing it on arrival.\n\nBusinesses deposited money overnight rather than keeping it in a safe.\n\nPeople paid each other for services.\n\nAnd workers in the city used M-Pesa to send money to relatives back home: much safer than the previous option, entrusting the bus driver with an envelope of cash.\n\nM-Pesa transactions now account for almost half of Kenya's GDP\n\nMs Lonie realised they were on to something big.\n\nJust eight months after its launch, a million Kenyans had signed up to M-Pesa.\n\nToday, there are about 20 million users.\n\nWithin two years, M-Pesa transfers amounted to 10% of Kenya's gross domestic product (GDP) - now it accounts for nearly half.\n\nSoon, there were 100 times as many M-Pesa kiosks in Kenya as cash machines.\n\nM-Pesa is a textbook \"leapfrog\" technology: where an invention takes hold because the alternatives are poorly developed.\n\nMobile phones allowed Africans to leapfrog their often woefully inadequate landline networks.\n\nM-Pesa exposed their banking systems, typically too inefficient to turn a profit from serving the low-income majority.\n\nIf you are plugged into the financial system, it is easy to take for granted that paying your utility bill does not require wasting hours trekking to an office and standing in a queue, or that you have a safer place to accumulate savings than under the mattress.\n\nAbout two billion people are still outside the system, though the number is falling fast - driven largely by mobile money.\n\nMost of the poorest Kenyans - those earning under $1.25 (£0.99) a day - signed up to M-Pesa within a few years.\n\nBy 2014, mobile money was in 60% of developing-country markets.\n\nSome, such as Afghanistan, have embraced it quickly - but it has not even reached some others.\n\nNor do most developed-country customers have the option of sending money by SMS, even though it is simpler than a banking app.\n\nWhy did M-Pesa take off in Kenya?\n\nOne big reason was the relaxed approach of the banking and telecoms regulators.\n\nAccording to one study, what rural Kenyan households most like about M-Pesa is the convenience for family members sending money home.\n\nBut two more benefits could be even more profound.\n\nThe first was discovered by those Afghan police officers - tackling corruption.\n\nIn Kenya, similarly, drivers soon realised that the police officers who pulled them over would not take bribes in M-Pesa: it would be linked to their phone number, and could be used as evidence.\n\nEstimates suggest that Kenya's matatus - public transportation minibuses - lose a third of their revenue to theft and extortion.\n\nIn response, Kenya's government announced an ambitious plan to make mobile money mandatory on matatus - after all, if the driver has no cash, he cannot be asked for bribes.\n\nBut many matatu drivers have resisted.\n\nCash transactions facilitate not only corruption, but also tax evasion.\n\nWhen income is traceable, it is also taxable.\n\nThat is the other big promise of mobile money: broadening the tax base, by formalising the grey economy.\n\nFrom corrupt police commanders to tax-dodging taxi drivers, mobile money could lead to a profound cultural change.", "'It was like every other game, just with 50,000 more people'\n\nDan Whelan became the first Irish-born player to play in the NFL in 38 years last weekend as he helped Green Bay Packers beat the Chicago Bears.", "The town of Loveland, Colorado, in the lap of the white-tipped Rocky Mountains, is smitten with Valentine's Day, writes Andy Jones. Ask nicely and they'll even send you a card.\n\nIn the Loveland postal room, the thump-thump sound of ink stamp on pad serves as a drum beat to the crooning swoon of a barbershop quartet.\n\nThe singing foursome, suited in crisp pink and white, are cooing the melody of Let Me Be Your Sweetheart as a chorus of pensioners sift through piles of pink mail.\n\nFor two weeks every year, Loveland volunteers stamp and redecorate hundreds of thousands of letters from all corners of the globe, so that lovers can present the objects of their desires with letters postmarked in the land of love.\n\nThe missives come from as far away as China and the UK, and are forwarded to all kinds of famous addresses.\n\nPresident Obama received one at the White House, Hugh Hefner has them posted to his girls at the Playboy Mansion. Even TV star Oprah Winfrey is a fan.\n\nLocal businesses feed breakfast to the volunteers. An Elvis lookalike comes in to sing to them, and the stampers - like silver-haired Valentine's elves - busy away in the workshop, karaoke-ing along to toe-tapping bluegrass classics.\n\nAmong all the free pie and coffee, the head of the re-mailing programme, Mindy McCloughan, gushes: \"It's just like being at your grandma's house.\"\n\nThe Loveland re-mailing programme was born some 70 years ago, when a postmaster called Mr Ivers, a devoted philatelist, began re-addressing all mail \"From The Sweetheart City.\"\n\nCupid's bow now sends some 300,000 pieces of mail in Loveland's direction, each one them to be stamped with a unique poem, always a step up from the tired old \"Roses are Red, violets are blue.\"\n\nFrom the Sweetheart City in a land of love,\n\nWarm Thoughts of you are sent above.\n\nOn Wings they fly from land to sea,\n\nSearching and finding the one to be.\n\nAny broken hearts had better leave town for the week - Loveland's Valentines motto is: \"Go heart or go home.\"\n\nOn its neat, square boulevards, corner stores play slushy music, cake shops bake everything pink and even hardware stores try to add a little romance to the drills and saws.\n\nThere's a race to buy the best spot - some are sold off three months in advance - with the best pitches being those visible to all locals and drivers along the expressway to Estes Park.\n\nYou can almost picture a bitter sweetheart furious that her sign is three streets too far to the left.\n\nLocals Nicole and Dominic Yost, who have been together for 13 years, always buy each other a heart. It's a treasure hunt finding them.\n\nNicole's says: \"Dominic, you will always have my heart.\" In return, her husband's manfully boasts: \"Nicole, I love you more than bacon.\"\n\nIt's OK, she says - just like everyone in this part of America, where ranchers still herd cattle, meat is a big deal for Dominic.\n\nOn Valentine's night itself, as in every city, the occasion is an excuse to get drunk or get kissing. Couples queue up for Loveland Aleworks' specially brewed pink beer, or at Grimm Brothers for its sell-out Bleeding Heart brews.\n\nAn ice festival adds a macho tone - tattooed sculptors chainsaw naked ladies or Chinese Koi carp designs on to ice blocks. Rock bands crash out tunes to audiences perched on hay bales.\n\nBut the best seats in the house are in the postal room. The Loveland Chamber of Commerce even has a \"stamp camp\" so postal volunteers can learn the necessary wrist action to transfer ink to envelope.\n\nThere's a 70-person waiting list to take part and couples sit side-by-side stamping away, sealing far-off loves forever in ink.\n\nI'm told the only way most volunteers give up their seats in the postal room scheme is when a coffin carries them out of there. Till death us do part - a lot like love itself, then.\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "After a near death experience in 2013 when Co-op Bank nearly went bust, it has been limping along ever since.\n\nIt was kept alive back then when lenders wrote off their debts in return for a stake in the bank, in a so-called debt for equity swap, but it has been unable to earn itself back to health.\n\nIt had been operating without the recommended shock absorbing capital for some time, the Bank of England told the BBC last week. This morning, the Bank welcomed Co-op bank's announcement.\n\nWhen a bank has too little capital it only has three realistic options.\n\nThe first is to earn your way out of trouble. Retain any earnings you make to bolster the rainy-day kitty. In this super-low interest rate environment we have seen since 2008, all banks have found it very difficult to make a margin between what they pay their borrowers and charge their lenders.\n\nIn fact, this year the Co-op is expected to make a loss - after any earnings have been more than offset by the costs of sorting out old problems.\n\nThe second is to get your owners to put in extra money. Those owners include the Co-op Group who own 20%, a group of former lenders, plus a few hedge funds.\n\nAlthough Co-op Group has not ruled out putting in extra money, it's a questionable use of funds for all of them, given that the bank is finding it hard to make a return for that investment for the reasons mentioned in option one.\n\nThe third is to find someone else well placed to add four million customers to an existing business - one which is not so bedevilled by legacy issues and might be able to find some economies of scale.\n\nThis list is not a long one but one name does suggest itself. The TSB, which was carved out of Lloyds to satisfy competition concerns over the scale of the Lloyds/HBOS merger.\n\nWith 600 branches, it lacks the scale to compete against the Big Five and it has a very strong capital position with no legacy issues.\n\nWhether the bank would want to take on the problems of Co-op is questionable but it terms of brand (both have a local and ethical flavour to them) it might work.\n\nThe TSB is currently focused on completing a complicated IT separation from Lloyds, but the BBC understands that at the right price it might consider it,\n\nDetermining the right price will be hard as the amount of capital any buyer needs to sink into the Co-op is very far from clear.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nSwansea City winger Nathan Dyer has been ruled out for the rest of the season with a ruptured Achilles tendon.\n\nThe 29-year-old limped off after just seven minutes of the 2-0 win over Leicester City on Sunday.\n\nA Premier League winner while on loan at Leicester last season, Dyer will have surgery in due course.\n\nThe former Southampton player has featured in five games since Paul Clement was appointed Swans manager last month.\n\n\"The initial prognosis is it doesn't look good,\" Clement said.\n\nSwansea are also without fellow wingers Jefferson Montero (torn hamstring) and Mo Barrow, who is on loan at Leeds United.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The trees were planted on the pitch at Logie Durno\n\nA council has apologised after trees were planted on a football pitch.\n\nThe trees appeared at the pitch at Logie Durno in Aberdeenshire, sparking social media reaction.\n\nAberdeenshire Council was contacted, and the local authority said the intention was to turn over part of the area for \"biodiversity\" - but talks would now be held with the community.\n\nA spokeswoman said: \"It would seem that we were barking up the wrong tree with plans for this site.\"\n\nThe spokeswoman said of the site: \"Anecdotally it was rarely used. However it is clear now that the community were not engaged with this plan.\n\n\"As such, we are going back to first principles with them so they can help us decide what this area should be used for.\n\n\"There are full pitches immediately next to this area for community leisure use and the trees will remain on this site until we can come to an agreement with residents.\n\n\"We are sorry for any inconvenience this has caused.\"\n\nOn social media, people had been quick to poke fun at the situation.\n\nOne person wrote: \"Are they playing tree a side?\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Not many teams have tested Chelsea's three-man defence this season, but Burnley showed there is a way to get at Antonio Conte's side.\n\nThe Clarets were extremely clever in Sunday's 1-1 draw, especially in the way they targeted Chelsea's left flank, which is far less disciplined defensively than their right side.\n\nEden Hazard always wanders inside from the left - far more than Pedro does when he starts on the right - which is what happened at Turf Moor.\n\nThat leaves Chelsea's left wing-back Marcus Alonso to advance up the pitch and give them an option wide on that flank.\n\nBut, with Hazard often on the opposite side of the pitch, Alonso is sometimes left isolated when the Blues lose possession.\n\nAlonso is also not as strong as their right wing-back Victor Moses when it comes to getting back to help his centre-halves. I look at him and think he is more of a left winger.\n\nTouches in the first half v Burnley\n\nIt is a weak spot because it leaves space to exploit if teams can get the ball into that channel behind Alonso, but you usually have to do it quickly.\n\nBurnley managed it early on by playing long balls up to Andre Gray that forced Gary Cahill and David Luiz to come out wide, out of their comfort zone.\n\nThe Clarets had more success in the second half when Ashley Barnes intercepted a Chelsea header down that flank, with Alonso further up the pitch, and Hazard over on the right.\n\nCahill should have done better with his challenge on Barnes inside the Burnley half, and Luiz should have cut out the cross after Barnes had burst forward - but the ball still found Gray, who missed an excellent chance to put his side ahead.\n\nBurnley got their tactics exactly right on Sunday. Their attitude was spot-on too.\n\nTheir game plan, and the way they executed it, was an example of how the right system and attitude gives you a chance when you are facing a side with more technical quality.\n\nChelsea are always well organised under Conte as well, of course, but they struggled to control the game because of Burnley's approach.\n\nThe Blues' goal at Turf Moor was typical of the clinical counter-attacking play that has helped take Conte's side to the top of the table.\n\nBut the speed of Burnley's own transition from defence to attack meant they created chances that way too, especially in the first half.\n\nSean Dyche's side played a lot of long balls right from the start of the game, but they did not just lump the ball forward for the sake of it. Those passes had a purpose.\n\nIt meant they bypassed midfield - an area where Dyche knew his side would be over-powered - and got the ball to Burnley's two strikers as quickly as possible.\n\nBurnley were attacking very well for a lot of the game but those long balls were also a defensive tactic. They stretched the play.\n\nInstead of Chelsea winning back possession in midfield and launching attacks from there, which is what they wanted to do, they had to come at them from much further back.\n\nThat made it harder, especially against a team that does as much running as Burnley. The Clarets had more time to recover and get numbers back to hassle them outside their own area.\n\nFrom Burnley's point of view, most of the second half was more about digging in and working hard defensively, rather than asking more questions of Chelsea.\n\nBut Dyche's side did well at that too. They were extremely well organised and were very difficult to break down. Their 4-4-2 formation sometimes became a six-man defence.\n\nChelsea had lots of the ball in the second half, but they did not find much space or create lots of chances and, after the break, it was significant that Burnley goalkeeper Tom Heaton did not have to make a save.\n\nThe Clarets have an incredible home record this season and, although they were beaten by Arsenal and Manchester City, they caused them plenty of problems too.\n\nDyche's side have to work very hard for every point they pick up but they got their reward for it this time - and they fully deserved their draw.\n\nI think it was a good result for Chelsea too, because they could have lost. They did not play particularly well, but they still picked up a point, and they still have a very healthy lead at the top of the table.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nScotland's search for a first win in Paris since 1999 goes on after France emerged victorious from a tense Six Nations contest at the Stade de France.\n\nStuart Hogg's 16th Test try gave the Scots an early lead but Gael Fickou's try put France 13-5 clear before two Finn Russell penalties made it 13-11.\n\nTim Swinson's try regained the lead for the injury-hit visitors before Camille Lopez's third penalty tied it at 16-16.\n\nRemi Lamerat had a try ruled out before two late Lopez kicks sealed victory.\n\nScotland salvaged a bonus point despite suffering a host of injuries, with captain Greig Laidlaw, flanker John Barclay, his replacement John Hardie and hooker Fraser Brown all trooping off.\n\nThey must now regroup for the visit of Wales on 25 February (14:25 GMT), while France head to Dublin to face Ireland on the same day (16:50 GMT).\n\nThis was a surreal Test, a day when Scotland's scrum was routinely demolished - it gave France six penalties and a free-kick - and when the visitors lost one captain, Laidlaw, to injury, lost his deputy, Barclay, then lost Barclay's replacement Hardie.\n\nThe Scots dropped like flies and yet they hung on gamely. They lived off scraps and yet were still banging away at the death hoping against hope for an opening that never came.\n\nIt all began with a Lopez penalty quickly cancelled out by a Hogg try when Huw Jones drew in Lopez and off-loaded to the full-back, who fixed Baptiste Serin and went over in the corner. Laidlaw's conversion hit the crossbar and stayed out.\n\nLopez put the French back in the lead at the end of the first quarter and it was then that Laidlaw went off, a cruel blow for Scotland, a setback that was only added to when Fickou scored on the half-hour.\n\nIt had been coming. France had threatened and had wasted some opportunities beforehand, but when the Toulouse centre went in under Hogg's tackle there was no stopping him.\n\nThe conversion was added and the gap stretched to eight points. Credit Scotland. Tommy Seymour won the restart and the Scots forced a penalty, which Russell put over.\n\nThen he banged over another one just before the break. Quite how they were only two points down was a mystery.\n\nThe second injury blow had landed by then, the stand-in captain, Barclay, exiting with a head knock.\n\nHardie came on and went off again within minutes of the second half beginning. Another head knock. Poor Hardie. The man has suffered badly with concussions in his career.\n\nRemarkably, Scotland brushed off that upset and hit the front again a few minutes later. A brilliant offload from Russell released the razor-sharp Seymour up the right touchline, chipping and chasing and getting the benefit of a kindly bounce in his tussle with Scott Spedding.\n\nSeymour found Swinson steaming downfield on his lonesome and no sooner had he come on the field for Hardie, he scored.\n\nEven more remarkably, Russell missed the conversion from almost touching distance of the posts. The kicking tee took too long to reach him and when it did he lost composure, with someone - believed to be Scotland resource coach Nathan Hines - urging him to 'Take it, take it'.\n\nThe ball was placed unsteadily on its mark, then flopped over as Russell was about to kick it. His effort had a dead duck quality, going under the posts instead of over.\n\nScotland had precious little ball after that. The French took control and those scrum horrors carried on. The visitors were clinging on from a long way out.\n\nLopez made it 16-16 with the boot and as Scotland became ragged under pressure, and started making some poor decisions, the fly-half steered them home. Two more penalties - in the 71st and 76th minutes - gave France their win.\n\nOn a monstrously testing day, Scotland contented themselves with a losing bonus point. In the circumstances, it was an achievement.\n\nScotland head coach Vern Cotter: \"It was a physical encounter. Quite a few times we came off second best.\n\n\"The boys stuck in defensively and defended our line well. But a couple of times maybe we weren't accurate enough.\"\n\nOn Finn Russell's missed conversion: \"It was only two points and it didn't really matter. At the end it was a six-point game.\"\n\nFrance full-back Scott Spedding: \"It was a scrappy affair and we made a lot of mistakes in the first half. We couldn't get our game-plan into place.\n\n\"But we desperately needed a win. We are disappointed with our performance but happy with the win.\"\n\nWhat did the pundit make of it?\n\nFormer Scotland international Andy Nicol: \"There was a lot of good stuff from Scotland. They were up against a huge French pack, there was some really courageous defence, but ultimately they lost the game.\n\n\"This is where Scotland are at the moment, they have the confidence and ability to win these tight games now. They didn't today, but it will come.\"\n\nReplacements: 16-Christopher Tolofua (for Guirado, 79), 17-Rabah Slimani (for Atonio, 46) 18-Xavier Chiocci (for Baille, 59), 19-Julian Le Devedec (for Maestri, 59), 20-Damien Chouly (for Goujon, 60), 21-Maxime Machenaud (for Serin, 56), 22-Jean-Marc Doussain, 23-Yoann Huget (for Vakatawa, 53)\n\nReplacements: 16-Ross Ford (for Brown, 66), 17-Gordon Reid (for Dell, 44), 18-Simon Berghan (for Fagerson, 59), 19-Tim Swinson (for Hardie, 41), 20-John Hardie (for Barclay, 37), 21-Alistair Price (for Laidlaw, 25), 22-Duncan Weir (for Russell, 75), 23-Mark Bennett (for Dunbar, 57-61).", "The BBC has obtained a more localised breakdown of votes from nearly half of the local authorities which counted EU referendum ballots last June.\n\nThis information provides much greater depth and detail in explaining the pattern of how the UK voted. The key findings are:\n\nA statistical analysis of the data obtained for over a thousand individual local government wards confirms how the strength of the local Leave vote was strongly associated with lower educational qualifications.\n\nWards where the population had fewer qualifications tended to have a higher Leave vote, as shown in the chart. If the proportion of the local electorate with a degree or similar qualification was one percentage point lower, then on average the leave vote was higher by nearly one percentage point.\n\nUsing ward-level data means we can compare voting figures in this way to the local demographic information collected in the 2011 census. Of the main census statistics, this is the one with the greatest association with how people voted.\n\nIn statistical terms the level of educational qualifications explains about two-thirds of the variation in the results between different wards.\n\nThe correlation is strong, whether based on assessing graduate and equivalent qualifications or lower-level ones.\n\nThis ward-by-ward analysis covers 1,070 individual wards in England and Wales whose boundaries had not changed since the 2011 census, about one in nine of the UK's wards. We had very little ward-level data from Scotland, and none from Northern Ireland.\n\nIt should be noted, however, that many ward counts also included some postal votes from across the counting area, and therefore some variation between wards will have been masked by the random allocation of postal votes for counting. This makes the results less accurate geographically, but we can still use the information to explore broad national and local patterns.\n\nAdding age as a second factor significantly helps to further explain voting patterns. Older populations were more likely to vote Leave. Education and age combined account for nearly 80% of the voting variation between wards.\n\nEthnicity is a smaller factor, but one which also contributed to the results. Adding that in means that now 83% of the variation in the vote between wards is explained. White populations were generally more pro-Leave, and ethnic minorities less so. However, there were some interesting differences between London and elsewhere.\n\nThe ethnic dimension is particularly interesting when examining the outliers on the graph that compares the Leave vote to levels of education.\n\nSome wards in Birmingham illustrate the pattern of ethnic minority populations being more likely to support Remain.\n\nThere are numerous wards towards the bottom left of the graph where electorates with lower educational qualifications nevertheless produced low Leave and high Remain votes. This is where the link between low qualifications and Leave voting breaks down.\n\nIt turns out that these exceptional wards have high ethnic minority populations, particularly in Birmingham and Haringey in north London.\n\nIn contrast, there are virtually no dramatic outliers on the other side of the line, where comparatively highly educated populations voted Leave. Only one point on the graph stands out - this is Osterley and Spring Grove in Hounslow, west London, a mainly ethnic minority ward which had a Leave vote of 63%. While this figure does include some postal votes, they are not nearly enough to explain away this unusual outcome.\n\nIn fact, in Ealing and Hounslow, west London boroughs with many voters of Asian origin, the ethnic correlation was in the other direction to the national picture: a higher number of Asian voters was associated with a higher Leave vote.\n\nThis powerful link to educational attainment could stem from the lower qualified tending to feel less confident about their prospects and ability to compete for work in a competitive globalised economy with high levels of migration.\n\nOn the other hand some commentators see it as primarily reflecting a \"culture war\" or \"values conflict\", rather than issues of economics and inequality. Research shows that non-graduates tend to take less liberal positions than graduates on a range of social issues from immigration and multi-culturalism to the death penalty.\n\nThe former campaign director of Vote Leave, Dominic Cummings, argues that the better educated are more prone to holding irrational political opinions because they are more driven by fashion and a group mentality.\n\nOf course this assessment does not imply that Leave voters were almost all poorly educated and old, and Remain voters well educated and young. The Leave side obviously attracted support from many middle class professionals, graduates and younger people. Otherwise it couldn't have won.\n\nWhile there was undoubtedly a lot of voting which cut across these criteria, the point of this analysis is to explore how different social groups most probably voted - and it is clear that education, age and ethnicity were crucial influences.\n\nAfter these three key factors are taken into account, adding in further demographic measures from the census does little to increase the explanation of UK-wide voting patterns.\n\nHowever, this does not reflect the distinctively more pro-Remain voting in Scotland, since we are short of Scottish data at this geographical level. It is clear as well that in a few specific locations high student numbers were also very relevant.\n\nTo a certain extent, using the level of educational qualifications as a measure combines both class and age factors, with working class and older adults both tending to be less well qualified.\n\nBut the association between education and the voting results is stronger than the association between social or occupational class and the results. This is still true after taking the age of the local population into account.\n\nThis suggests that voters with lower qualifications were more likely to back Leave than the better qualified, even when they were in the same social or occupational class.\n\nThe existence of a significant connection between Leave voting and lower educational qualifications had already been suggested by analysis of the published referendum results from the official counting areas.\n\nThe data we have obtained strengthens this conclusion, because voting patterns can now be compared to social statistics from the 2011 census at a much more detailed geographical level than by the earlier studies.\n\nThe BBC analysis is also consistent with opinion polling (for example, from Lord Ashcroft, Ipsos Mori and YouGov) that tried to identify the characteristics of Leave and Remain voters.\n\nThe data we have collected can be used to illustrate the sort of places where the Leave and Remain camps did particularly well: it is hard to imagine a more glaring social contrast than that between the deprived, poorly educated housing estates of Brambles and Thorntree in Middlesbrough, and the privileged elite colleges of Market ward in central Cambridge.\n\nIt is important to bear in mind, however, that most of the voting figures mentioned below also include some postal votes, so they should be treated as approximate rather than precise. It is also important to note that the examples are limited to the places for which we were able to obtain localised information, which was only a minority of areas. The rest of the country may well contain even starker instances.\n\nOf the 1,283 individual wards for which we have data, the highest Leave vote was 82.5% in Brambles and Thorntree, a section of east Middlesbrough with many social problems. Ward boundaries have changed since the 2011 census, but in that survey the Thorntree part of the area had the lowest proportion of people with a degree or similar qualification of anywhere in England and Wales, at only 5%. And according to Middlesbrough council, the figure for the current Brambles and Thorntree ward is even lower, at just 4%.\n\nSecond highest was 80.3% in Waterlees Village, a poor locality within Wisbech, Cambridgeshire. This area has seen a major influx of East European migrants who have been doing low-paid work in nearby food processing factories and farms, with tensions between them and British residents.\n\nOther wards with available data which had the strongest Leave votes were congregated in Middlesbrough, Canvey Island in Essex, Skegness in coastal Lincolnshire, and Havering in east London.\n\nThe highest Remain vote was 87.8% in Market ward in central Cambridge, an area with numerous colleges and a high student population, in a city which was strongly pro-Remain.\n\nThis was followed by Ashley ward (85.6%) in central Bristol, a district featuring ethnic diversity, gentrification and alternative culture.\n\nNext highest was Northumberland Park (85.0%) in Haringey, north London, which has a substantial black population.\n\nOther wards with available data which had the strongest Remain votes were generally located in Cambridge, Bristol and the multi-ethnic London boroughs of Haringey and Lambeth.\n\nThe count for Ashburton in Croydon, south London, split 50-50 exactly, with both Leave and Remain getting 3,885 votes, but that did include some postal ballots.\n\nAs for being nearest to the overall result, the combined count of Tulketh and University, neighbouring wards near the centre of Preston, was 51.92% for leave, very close to the UK wide figure of 51.89%. The individual ward of Barnwood in Gloucester had Leave at 51.94%. Both figures however contain some postal votes.\n\nGiven that a few councils provided even more detailed data down to the level of polling districts, it is possible to identify some very small localities that were nicely representative of the national picture.\n\nThe 527 voters in the neighbouring districts of Kirk Langley and Mackworth in Amber Valley in Derbyshire, whose two ballot boxes were counted together, produced a leave proportion of 51.99%. And this figure is not contaminated by any postal votes.\n\nSo journalists (or anyone else for that matter) who seek a microcosm of the UK should perhaps visit the Mundy Arms pub in Mackworth, the location for that district's polling station.\n\nSimilarly, the 427 voters in the combined neighbouring polling districts of Chiddingstone Hoath and Hever Four Elms to the south of Sevenoaks in Kent delivered a leave vote of 51.6% (again, without any postal votes).\n\nThe data obtained points to 269 areas of various sizes (wards, clusters of wards or constituencies) which had a different Leave/Remain outcome compared to the official counting area of which they were part.\n\nThis consists of 150 areas which backed Remain but were part of Leave-voting counting areas; and 119 in the other direction.\n\nThe detailed information therefore gives us an understanding of how the electorate voted which is more variegated than the officially published results.\n\nScotland voted to Remain - but some wards backed Leave, analysis shows\n\nEvery one of Scotland's 32 counting areas came down on the Remain side. Yet, despite the fact that most Scottish councils did not give us much detailed information, we can nevertheless identify a few smaller parts of the country which actually backed Leave.\n\nA cluster of six wards in the Banff and Buchan area in north Aberdeenshire had a strong Leave majority of 61%. There is much local discontent within the fishing industry of this coastal district about the EU's common fisheries policy.\n\nAn Taobh Siar agus Nis, a ward at the northern end of the Isle of Lewis in Na h-Eileanan an Iar (Western Isles), also voted Leave, if very narrowly.\n\nAnd at a smaller geographical level, in Shetland the 567 voters in the combined polling districts of Whalsay and South Unst had an extremely high Leave vote of 81%. The island of Whalsay is a fishing community, where EU rules have been controversial and in 2012 numerous skippers were heavily fined for major breaches of fishing quotas.\n\nEaling and Hounslow are neighbouring multi-ethnic boroughs in the west of London with large Asian populations, where - in contrast to the national picture - non-white ethnicity was associated with voting Leave, particularly in Ealing. Both boroughs shared a varied internal pattern of prosperous largely white areas voting strongly Remain, poorer largely white areas preferring Leave, and the Asian areas tending to be more evenly split.\n\nEaling voted 60% Remain, with Southfield ward hitting 76%, but in contrast the Southall wards which are over 90% ethnic minority were close to 50-50.\n\nIn Hounslow the richer wards in Chiswick in the east of the area voted heavily Remain (73%), but the poorer largely white wards at the opposite western end in Feltham and Bedfont voted Leave (64-66%). Osterley and Spring Grove was also 63% Leave, the highest Leave vote in any individual ward in the UK with a non-white majority for which we have data.\n\nThe south London borough of Bromley narrowly voted Remain. Those parts which did not do so by a significant margin were the Cray Valley wards, largely poor white working class areas; and Biggin Hill and Darwin wards, locations to the south which contain more open countryside and lie outside the built-up commuter belt.\n\nIn Croydon in south London, places which voted Leave by substantial amounts were New Addington and Fieldway, neighbouring wards with large council estates.\n\nBeyond the areas with the strongest backing for Leave and Remain, examining the detailed breakdown of votes in various places gives greater insight into the pattern of support for the two sides - as can be seen from the following examples.\n\nIn several places (for example, Birmingham, Bristol, Nottingham, Portsmouth) there was a strong contrast between the Leave-voting populations of large, rundown, predominantly white, housing estates in the urban periphery, versus Remain-voting populations in inner city areas with large numbers of ethnic minorities and sometimes students.\n\nBirmingham had several wards with large Remain votes, although the city as a whole narrowly voted Leave. These pro-Remain wards tended to be the more highly educated, better off localities, or minority ethnic areas which strongly backed Remain despite low levels of educational qualifications. I have written about this before.\n\nIn Blackburn with Darwen, Bastwell ward had the highest Remain vote at 65%, compared to only 44% in the area as a whole. This ward has an ethnic minority proportion of over 90%. Other Blackburn wards which voted Remain were also ones with high minority populations.\n\nBradford voted to Leave (54%), but the area included some starkly contrasting places which went over 60% Remain: the prosperous, genteel, spa town of Ilkley, and strongly ethnic minority wards in the city, such as Manningham and Toller.\n\nBristol voted strongly Remain on the whole (62%), but there were some striking exceptions, particularly the large, deprived, mainly white estates to the south of the city. Hartcliffe and Withywood backed Leave at 67%. Similar neighbouring wards (Hengrove and Whitchurch Park, Filwood, Bishopsworth and Stockwood) also voted Leave, as did the more industrial area of Avonmouth and Lawrence Weston to the north west of the city.\n\nAs a county Cornwall voted to Leave. But one of its six parliamentary constituencies, Truro and Falmouth, voted 53% to Remain, possibly linked to a significant student population.\n\nIn Lincoln, which voted 57% to Leave, Carholme ward stands out as very different - it voted 63% to Remain. This ward includes Lincoln University, and 43% of the residents are students\n\nMiddlesbrough voted 65% to Leave. As already noted, it had several wards with extremely high leave votes of over 75%. But one ward, Linthorpe, voted very narrowly to Remain - a comparatively well-to-do inner suburb which includes an art college; and another ward, Central, which contains Teesside University, nearly did.\n\nMole Valley in Surrey exhibited a dramatic contrast between two neighbouring districts with very different demographics and housing. The highest Remain vote was in the very prosperous location of Dorking South, which voted 63% Remain, but the neighbouring ward of Holmwoods, dominated by large estates on the edge of the town of Dorking, voted 57% Leave, the area's highest Leave vote.\n\nNottingham voted narrowly to Leave, but the inner city ward of Radford and Park voted 68% Remain. This has both a comparatively high proportion of ethnic minorities and considerable numbers of students from two nearby universities. There was a lot of variation within the area. Bulwell - a market town to the north of the city with many social problems - voted 69% Leave\n\nThere was also a high Leave vote in the housing estate locations of the Clifton wards in the south of Nottingham.\n\nOldham voted to Leave at 61%, but Werneth, the city ward with the highest ethnic minority population, voted Remain (57%). Other wards with high minority populations also voted Remain.\n\nThe central wards in Oxford had high Remain votes\n\nIn Oxford the cluster of polling districts which included Blackbird Leys and other deprived estates on the southern edge of the city voted to Leave at 51%. In contrast the central areas containing colleges, university buildings and student accommodation voted to Remain at over 80%.\n\nPlymouth voted 60% Leave, but Drake ward which includes the university had the city's highest Remain vote at 56%.\n\nPortsmouth was another place with wide variation. Paulsgrove ward, with its large estate on the edge of the city, had the highest Leave vote at 70%, whereas at the other end of the spectrum Central Southsea, an inner city ward and student area, voted 57% Remain.\n\nRochdale voted 60% Leave. The place which bucked this trend by voting 59% Remain, Milkstone and Deeplish, was the most predominantly ethnic minority ward. Central Rochdale had the second highest Remain vote and is the other ward that is mainly not white.\n\nWalsall voted strongly Leave (68%). The only ward which voted Remain, Paddock, is both a comparatively prosperous and multi-ethnic locality.\n\nA few councils released their data at remarkably localised levels, down even to individual polling districts (ie ballot boxes) in the case of Blackburn with Darwen and Bracknell Forest, or clusters of two/three/four districts, in the case of Amber Valley, Brentwood, Sevenoaks, Shetland, South Oxfordshire, and Tewkesbury.\n\nThis provides very local and specific data, in some cases just for neighbourhoods of hundreds of voters.\n\nAt its most detailed this reveals that the 110 people who cast their votes in the ballot box at St. Alban's Primary School in central Blackburn split 56-52 in favour of Remain, with two spoilt papers.\n\nIt also discloses stark contrasts in some neighbouring locations. The 953 people who voted at Little Harwood community centre in north Blackburn had a Leave vote of only 31%, while the 336 electors who voted in the neighbouring ballot box at Roe Lee Park primary school produced a Leave percentage over twice as high, at 64%.\n\nThe very detailed data we obtained also provides some rare evidence on the views of postal compared to non-postal voters. Campaign strategists have often deliberated on whether the two groups vote differently and should be given separate targeted messages.\n\nMost places mixed boxes of postal and non-postal votes for counting, so generally it's not possible to draw comparative conclusions. However there were a few exceptions which recorded them separately, or included a very small number of non-postal votes with the postals.\n\nThese figures indicate that postal voters were narrowly less likely to back Leave than voters in polling stations. Data covering five counting areas with about 260,000 votes shows that in these places the roughly one in five electors who voted by post backed Leave at 55.4%, one percentage point lower than the local non-postal support for Leave of 56.4%.\n\nThe counting areas involved are Amber Valley, East Cambridgeshire, Gwynedd, Hyndburn and North Warwickshire.\n\nSince the referendum the BBC has been trying to get the most detailed, localised voting data we could from each of the counting areas. This was a major data collection exercise carried out by my colleague George Greenwood.\n\nWe managed to obtain voting figures broken down into smaller geographical units for 178 of the 399 referendum counting areas (380 councils in England, Wales and Scotland, with a separate tally in Gibraltar, while in Northern Ireland results were issued for the 18 constituencies).\n\nThis varied between data for individual local government wards, wards grouped into clusters, and constituency level data. In a few cases the results supplied were even more localised than ward level. Overall the extra data covers a wide range of different areas and kinds of councils across the UK.\n\nElectoral returning officers are not covered by the Freedom of Information Act, so releasing the information was up to the discretion of councils. While some were very willing, in other cases it required a lot of persistence and persuasion.\n\nSome councils could not supply any detailed data because they mixed all ballot boxes prior to counting; some did possess more local figures but simply refused to disclose them to us. Others did provide data, but the combinations in which ballot boxes were mixed before counting were too complex to fit ward boundaries neatly.\n\nA few places such as Birmingham released their ward by ward data following the referendum on their own initiative, but in most cases the information had to be obtained by us requesting it directly, and sometimes repeatedly, from the authority.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLeicester City have given their \"unwavering support\" to manager Claudio Ranieri despite the reigning Premier League champions being just one point above the relegation zone.\n\nThe Italian had been under pressure after a run of just two wins in their last 15 Premier League games.\n\nHowever, the Foxes said in a statement that \"the entire club is and will remain united behind its manager\".\n\n\"This is not a crisis,\" Ranieri said following the club's backing.\n\n\"When you aren't winning you lose confidence, it is normal.\"\n\nLeicester play Derby County at home in an FA Cup fourth round replay on Wednesday and club chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha will be flying in from Thailand for the game - but also to give a public show of support to Ranieri.\n• None 'Change the manager, it's the only thing to do' - Listen as Leicester fan lets loose on 606\n\nLeicester are 16th and are without a league win in 2017.\n\nFoxes goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel called the club's title defence \"embarrassing\" after Sunday's 3-0 defeat at home to Manchester United.\n\nLeicester acknowledged that \"recent form needs to improve\", but said Ranieri would be given the opportunity to turn things around.\n\n\"The unprecedented success achieved in recent seasons has been based firmly on stability, togetherness and determination to overcome the greatest of challenges,\" the club said.\n\nLeicester's last two seasons after 24 games\n\nRanieri guided Leicester to the Premier League title last season despite the Foxes being 5,000-1 shots.\n\nThey won the league by 10 points but face becoming the first defending champions to be relegated since 1938, after winning just five league games so far this season.\n\nRecent reports suggested Ranieri had lost the support of his players, with the 65-year-old's squad tinkering and supposed ban on chicken burgers angering some of the Leicester squad.\n\nHowever, Ranieri denied any unrest and said he has \"a fantastic relationship\" with his squad.\n\n\"The dressing room is fantastic,\" he said.\n\n\"Never have I seen a chicken burger, only deep fried chicken. It's fantastic.\n\n\"The dressing room is fantastic. We try to do our best, but this season everything is wrong.\"\n\nLeicester host Derby County in an FA Cup fourth-round replay at King Power Stadium on Wednesday and it is live on BBC One and online (19:30 GMT)\n\n\"Claudio was upbeat and thoroughly charming as he showed no signs of pressure during his news conference this afternoon.\n\n\"Leicester City are struggling in the Premier League and haven't scored a goal in the competition since 31 December, but you wouldn't know it from speaking to him today.\n\n\"He suggested the club's statement was for us in the media rather than for him - but what it does show is that the club are prepared to be patient with him.\n\n\"Nigel Pearson initially struggled in his first season in the top-flight but the club backed him and he led them to the 'greatest escape'.\n\n\"Here's my concern, though. There was real evidence of fight then but I'm not so sure that steeliness and determination is as prevalent now. I fear for the club this season, but they do have the capability to stay up. I hope they go out there and prove themselves once again.\n\n\"Kasper Schmeichel has come out with some strong words and the rest of the players could do well to heed his advice.\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThere is growing concern about the impact of automation on employment - or in crude terms - the threat that robots will eat our jobs.\n\nBut if you want to see how important robotics and artificial intelligence can be to a business Ocado is a good place to start.\n\n\"Without it we simply couldn't do what we do at this scale,\" the online retailer's chief technology officer Paul Clarke told me. With margins in the supermarket business wafer thin, continually bearing down on costs and waste has been vital.\n\nAt its Hatfield distribution centre I got a glimpse of how far the process of automating the sorting of thousands of grocery orders has come. For now, you will struggle to spot a robot - unless you count a machine that inserts plastic shopping bags into crates - but software is doing a very complex job of sending the right goods in the right crates to the right human pickers.\n\nRoboticists at Ocado are working on a robotic hand, gentle enough to pick up fruit\n\n\"This warehouse is crammed with machine learning and algorithms that are controlling all manner of operations that are invisible to the human eye,\" Mr Clarke explains.\n\nBut in one corner of the warehouse is the robotics lab where the next stage of automating Ocado is under way. A group of some of the smartest robotic engineers from across Europe are at work on their latest project which could replace human pickers one day. It's a robotic hand sensitive enough to pick up a piece of fruit without damaging it.\n\n\"The overall challenge is to develop robotic systems that can pick and pack the full range of items,\" explains head of robotics Alex Harvey.\n\nThe robot warehouse contains crates containing various goods which the robots select\n\nThe robot hand won't be ready to start work for a while but at Ocado's newest warehouse in Andover, Hampshire, a robotics project that the company believes is unequalled in its sophistication has already been deployed. Swarms of robots move across a grid, collaborating with each other to collect groceries stored beneath them and then bring them to a human picker.\n\nShowing me some video of the warehouse, Paul Clarke explains the technical challenge: \"Controlling thousands of robots in real time has required not only building a very sophisticated AI-based air traffic control system but also we've had to evolve a new communications systems to talk to all those robots 10 times a second.\"\n\nBut seeing all those swarming robots with not a human in sight sparks an obvious thought - what about the impact on jobs?\n\nOcado says despite the onward march of automation its workforce has continued to grow. \"We have no choice both as a company and as UK PLC but to invest in this technology,\" says Mr Clarke.\"We are a net employer of 12,000 people, none of whom would have a job at all if it weren't for our use of automation because this has been our differentiator as a business.\"\n\nEconomists disagree on the scale of the threat to employment. An Oxford study which predicted that more than 40% of occupations could be threatened by automation over the next two decades is now seen by many as far too pessimistic.\n\nWill human jobs change as robots take on some of the roles we currently fill?\n\nThat is certainly the view of Laura Gardiner, of the Resolution Foundation, who points out that jobs are becoming more multi-faceted, so that even if one task is taken by a robot, there will still be others left for the humans.\n\nBut she does accept that for certain categories of worker life may get harder: \"It is right to be concerned about specific occupations - secretarial work, processing jobs in factories - moderately skilled jobs which used to pay quite well.\"\n\nWhat is clear is that in an evolving job market, some skills will become redundant, while others will be in higher demand. And the best advice? Train as a robotics engineer.", "A group of commuters raided their bags and pockets to clean racist graffiti from a New York subway car.\n\nGregory Locke was one of them, and spoke to BBC World Have Your Say.", "Alastair Cook had become \"drained\" as England Test captain, says England's director of cricket Andrew Strauss.\n\nCook stepped down on Monday after a record 59 matches in charge.\n\n\"He was getting drained by the relentlessness of being England captain,\" Strauss told the BBC's sports editor Dan Roan.\n\nStrauss added that vice-captain Joe Root would be a strong candidate to take over but refused \"to rule anyone in or out of the role\".\n\nCook is England's highest run-scorer in Test cricket with 11,057, while his 140 Test appearances and 30 centuries are also national records.\n\nBut the Essex batsman had been considering his future as captain after his side suffered a 4-0 Test series defeat in India last year.\n\nAnd Strauss said the 32-year-old had taken time to come to his decision.\n\n\"We know it has been a tough winter and it was an obvious time for him to step back and reflect and consider and have thoughts about what was right for the team moving forwards,\" he said.\n\n\"In my conversations with him in January it became clear that Alastair felt a huge amount of energy, drive and determination was needed to drive the team forward over the next 12 months.\n\n\"You are the only one who knows how much gas you have left in the tank and how much the many demands of being England captain are taking out of you.\n\n\"He feels it is time for new blood, new impetus and fresh thinking and allow someone else to take over and do that.\"\n\nStrauss said he did not attempt to make Cook change his mind, and explained: \"Once it became obvious how clear his thinking was, it was his decision to make. It would have been wrong to persuade him otherwise.\"\n\nIs the appointment of Root a foregone conclusion?\n\nThe Yorkshire batsman, who was appointed England vice-captain before the 2015 Ashes Series is seen as the favourite for the job.\n\nBut Strauss, while praising his qualities, says that there is a process to go through before Cook's successor is announced.\n\nEngland's next Test series will be against South Africa with the first game of the four-match series due to start at Lord's on 6 July.\n\nAfter that, they will host the West Indies in three Tests in August and September before travelling to Australia for the Ashes in November.\n\n\"Joe has leadership experience and is a phenomenal cricketer and an influential figure in the dressing room, and there is no reason why he wouldn't be a strong candidate,\" said Strauss.\n\n\"But I don't want to rule anyone out or in at this stage.\n\n\"There are conversations that need to take place, both between myself and the selectors and the coach, but also among some of the senior players to make sure I understand how best to take the team forward so that when we announce the captain he is the right man for the job.\"\n\nCook's first job after taking over from Strauss in 2012 was to manage the return of batsman Kevin Pietersen, who had been left out of the England side over allegations he had sent derogatory text messages about Strauss to members of the South Africa team.\n\nBut Cook also played an influential role in the decision to end Pietersen's international career in February 2014 when he was part of a three-man panel who met the batsman to tell him of their decision.\n\nWhen asked if that incident could overshadow Cook's legacy as captain, Strauss said: \"I think the fact he was able to get through that episode at a very tough time for him and others and come out the other side and keep scoring runs and winning matches and keep a degree of sanity at a difficult time speaks volumes for him.\"\n\nThe most difficult time for Cook as England captain was in 2014, which began with the Ashes whitewash down under, moved on to the Kevin Pietersen saga and was followed by a home series defeat by Sri Lanka.\n\nHis 2013 Ashes win as skipper is a highlight of his reign. So too, the triumph in South Africa in 2015-16 and the historic win in India in 2012.\n\nCook's winning percentage of 40.67 is only the fourth best of the six captains to have led England in more than 40 Tests. It has been an up-and-down ride.\n\nThe extended period of time taken to mull over his future shows that Cook has made the right decision for him. He will be incredibly comfortable with what lies ahead. That is likely to be scoring many more runs for England.", "Philip Hammond knows all about the government's attempts to \"get the public finances in order\" following the financial crisis of 2008.\n\nHe was the man, as shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, credited by many for the tough detail of the austerity plan laid before voters in the run up to the 2010 election.\n\nGeorge Osborne was the architect, Mr Hammond the foreman, ensuring there was a plan that might actually have a chance of working, public sector cut by public sector cut.\n\nNow Mr Hammond is the man in charge of the public finances - his dream government job and, a relatively rare occurrence for the resident of Number 11, said authoritatively to be the high water mark of his ambitions.\n\nWhatever his relations with the Prime Minister, and they are better than often reported, the fact that he doesn't want to move his sofas next door is a useful salve to any scratchiness between Downing Street's most important neighbours.\n\nMr Hammond expected to take a \"steady-as-she-goes\" approach to his first Budget\n\nToday sees the publication of the Institute for Fiscal Studies' (IFS) annual Green Budget, its analysis of Mr Hammond's room for manoeuvre as he prepares for the real Budget, on 8 March.\n\nThere is one clear message.\n\nIf you thought the era of cuts is over, think again.\n\nDay-to-day spending, officially known rather more prosaically as the Resource Departmental Expenditure Limit (which excludes investment spending), is set to fall by 4% over the next three years.\n\nThe IFS says that a \"particularly sharp cut\" has been loaded onto the last year of the parliament, 2019-20, never a particularly comfortable time for a government to be squeezing the public sector pips even more aggressively.\n\nAlongside that, the IFS says the overall tax burden is set to rise as a proportion of national income to the highest level since 1986.\n\nThat is not a function of actual tax rises - taxes for many millions of people have fallen as income tax thresholds have risen - but a function of a relatively high tax take throughout an era of pretty stagnant growth.\n\nWill Mr Hammond change course on 8 March, and further loosen the government's austerity strictures as he did in the Autumn Statement last year - pushing the deficit reduction target into the conveniently indistinct long grass of \"during the next parliament\"?\n\nThe government has, after all, promised an economy that works for all.\n\nI am told not - and that Mr Hammond is approaching his first Budget as a \"steady-as-she-goes affair\" with no major yanks on the national rudder, particularly given the economy's robust performance since the Brexit referendum.\n\nIt has been pointed out to me that, just ahead of the triggering of Article 50 - the official mechanism for leaving the European Union - the last thing Britain needs is a reset of fiscal policy.\n\nIn 2010, the Conservatives were elected as the party that would bring public income and public expenditure into balance.\n\nMr Hammond still cleaves to that view. \"He is a Conservative,\" as one official close to him says.\n\nGeorge Osborne's economic approach is alive and well.\n\nYes, there are criticisms by some economists that there is no need to run a country like a household budget where pennies in and pennies out matter - governments are able to borrow at very cheap rates on the international markets and put that money to economically valuable use.\n\nYes, there are criticisms that debt costs as a percentage of national income are low by historic standards and so the room for manoeuvre is rather greater than the national debt headline figures suggest.\n\nBut those close to Mr Hammond argue that, OK, borrowing may be cheap now but servicing Britain's £1.7 trillion debt is still expensive, costing around £34bn a year, or 4.6% of all government spending.\n\nCut out the deficit and start dealing with the debt and those costs can be brought down.\n\nCertainly, since the referendum, the cost of government debt has increased as rising inflation risk pushes up yields - the interest rate on government bonds issued to investors.\n\nMr Hammond is briefing the Cabinet for the first time this week on the broad parameters of next month's Budget.\n\nHe will talk about Britain's historic productivity problem and how to solve it, he will talk about skills, he will talk about research and development support and he will talk about infrastructure spending.\n\nSupporting the private economy is his priority, not reversing public sector cuts.\n\nMr Hammond will also say that the new world of work - the gig economy - is affecting the way the Treasury has to approach complicated issues such as tax receipts as the number of self-employed - who tend to pay a lower proportion of their income to the state - grows.\n\nA lot of it will be rhetoric at this stage.\n\nFor Mr Hammond wants to keep his powder dry.\n\nDry for the bigger fiscal event of the year, the autumn Budget (as we should now call it) in November or December.\n\nAs he said last year, he only wants one major tax and spend \"moment\" a year.\n\nAnd it's not going to be next month.", "The \"seven-day NHS\" was a key pledge of former Prime Minister David Cameron, and has been taken on by Theresa May.\n\nHer government envisages people having access to local GPs seven days a week. It also wants patients to receive the same level of urgent and emergency care in hospitals in England at weekends, as on Mondays to Fridays.\n\nBut is this feasible?\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "I am so proud to have known Joost van der Westhuizen well, having battled against him so many times on the field and then socialised off it.\n\nHe is one of those guys that whoever met him, at any stage of his life, they will remember it and recount to their children or grandchildren that they were in his presence.\n\nHis eyes lit up the room, particularly when he was poorly with Motor Neurone Disease, as it was his way of saying that he'll never give up. Joost's actions put a lot of things into context.\n\nHe was a very lively character. He knew how to party and knew how to celebrate. Saying that, he was very respectful in defeat as well as victory.\n\nAt the end of each game we would swap shirts, however I wasn't rushing to the home dressing room when we won the second Test in South Africa with the Lions in 1997.\n\nThen again I didn't need to. Joost knew how poignant this match was and that I would want to keep my shirt, so he strolled into our changing room amidst a rendition of Wonderwall and gave me his. A tradition I tried to replicate for the rest of my career.\n\nIn fact, I had the chance to return the favour for his 50th cap when we played South Africa in December 1998.\n\nAfter the game we would always meet up, have a chat and socialise. In the clubhouse or in town later on. For whatever reason we had a connection.\n\nWhen I found out he was poorly, I naturally tried to support him. People from all different sports around the world did, too.\n\nThe last time I saw him was at the end of 2015, when he came to London and hosted a charity dinner for the J9 Foundation. Justin Rose donated items, Liz Hurley and Shane Warne were in attendance.\n\nGoodness only knows how many international rugby players were there. I sat next to Joost and his brother Peter, who has barely spent a moment from his side since he was confined to a wheelchair.\n\nJoost couldn't speak too clearly but understood every word spoken to him. As he muttered his answers, and Peter interpreted, Joost's eyes were bright blue with enthusiasm and energy for the stories we were recounting.\n\nI remember zoning out from the potential awkwardness of having to ask him to repeat what he had said as I could hear every word crystal clearly from how his expressive face altered and eyes widened. His smile as wide as his stride that devastated every opponent.\n\nJoost was one of the new breed of rugby players, not just a scrum-half.\n\nTraditionally the position had been about kicking and passing from behind the forward pack. He tried playing the game at a very different pace, playing in different positions on the pitch - no one had really done that before.\n\nHe was playing for South Africa in what would be an iconic era for the country, not just the sport.\n\nAs one of the poster boys, he gave a huge amount to his country and his sport and millions of people in South Africa.\n\nHe was absolutely one of the lynchpins of the 1995 World Cup-winning side, up there with captain Francois Pienaar. Who can forget those telling tackles on the giant Jonah Lomu in the final.\n\nI first watched him when Joost scored a try against England in 1995 at the front of a line-out, sprinting and side-stepping in front of the east stand.\n\nIt was the most ridiculous score. Only ever dreamt about by school children on a lunchtime break. Not at Twickenham versus England.\n\nAnd to think that I was threatening to get into the England side the next week and make my debut. Little did I know that I'd face this great seven times in my career for England and the Lions. What a total privilege.\n\nHe was one of those guys that, when you were working on the opposition, he was always top of the 'danger men' list that you would plan how to negate. No exaggeration. Every time!\n\nIt's not very often as a scrum-half that you have to actually go head-to-head against your opposite number because you're playing behind the first line of defence.\n\nBut I had to expect that he was going to make a break or break through a tackle every time. So I would never give anyone else the responsibility of marking him.\n\nJoel Stransky loved playing outside him as Joost created so much more time for his backs. You had to watch him like a hawk, therefore nobody could fly out of the line in defence. A secret weapon that I've only ever seen once in another player - Wales' Rob Howley.\n\nEvery player knew that when Joost was around the fringes he would be a threat.\n\nEvery move he made, every part of his brilliant armoury we had to understand because he was so lethal.\n\nEveryone knew if they could get the upper-hand on Joost then they could get the better of the team.\n\nWith his size and speed he was capable of doing things other scrum-halves could not do. He had a presence of mind and fleet of foot. You couldn't really try to emulate him. With his kicks over the top and breaking through tackles - he had it all, or so we thought.\n\nGiven the debilitating illness that was always going to take Joost from us so early, JVD was always so philosophical about life. Making the most of every moment. Accepting regrets and moving on to a better mental state.\n\nI will always be in awe of what he's done for the awareness of MND. A brave battler to the end, a stare to intimidate and a smile to embrace.\n\nI'm now going to climb into the loft, find his shirt in an old kitbag and place it on a chair next to me. I wish I had a Castle Lager to toast him as I know it'll be on the front of his jersey, but a fine single unique malt whisky will serve as the perfect toast.", "Over the last three decades, governments of various stripes have promised radical change to solve England's housing crisis and today's White Paper is no exception.\n\nThe problem is that so many of the initiatives and ideas sold to the country as ground-breaking prove to be business as usual.\n\nSo the Communities Secretary Sajid Javid went out of his way to sound no-nonsense and tough today. He accused some English councils of \"fudging\" the numbers on housing need in their area and warned them that he was not going to allow that to happen anymore.\n\nBut the response to the government's proposals has been decidedly mixed.\n\nLabour's shadow housing minister John Healey described them as \"feeble beyond belief\".\n\n\"Re-treading old ground\" was how the National Association of Commercial Finance Brokers described the White Paper. \"Kicking the can down the road,\" one big investment fund said.\n\nThe chief executive of the housebuilder Inland Homes, Stephen Wicks, bemoaned the failure to relax rules on green belt development.\n\n\"Brownfield in itself can't possibly sustain the long-term housing requirements of the UK,\" he said. \"It can go an awful long way but there needs to be a relaxation of some green belt to enable us to deliver the numbers that we are required to do.\"\n\nThe White Paper does include measures to encourage developers, housing associations and councils to build more affordable homes more quickly, both to rent and to buy.\n\nBut this government seems to speak with two voices on housing: the communities department wants to shift the balance of power firmly towards new development in places people want to live, but Number 10 and some influential Tory backbenchers are sympathetic to the passionate concerns of those who wish to protect the countryside and particularly the green belt.\n\nThe real question that lies behind all the rhetoric and policy bullet-points is whether the balance of power between development and local opposition has fundamentally changed.\n\nMinisters now accept England needs 250,000 new homes every year, they have described the housing market as \"broken\" and they agree that radical change is the only way to mend it.\n\nBut many have yet to be convinced that this White Paper amounts to a \"realistic plan\" to achieve that.", "Watch Cleveland Cavaliers star LeBron James score a \"jaw-dropping\" three-pointer in the last second to force overtime against the Washington Wizards, with his side going on to win 140-135.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "\"Speaker silences Trump\", is the i's front page headline, while the Times says ministers are questioning whether John Bercow's decision to oppose President Trump addressing Parliament breached impartiality rules.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph says those close to the Commons speaker believe he's only required to be politically neutral on domestic issues.\n\nBut a ministerial source tells the paper Mr Bercow's intervention has \"ramifications\" for the \"special relationship\" with the United States.\n\nIn an editorial, the paper says: \"The contents of Mr Bercow's near-hysterical rant about President Donald Trump's planned state visit to Britain are unacceptable.\n\n\"So too is the fact that Mr Bercow has grossly exceeded his authority seemingly believing himself entitled to wade deep into British foreign policy by dint of his office and his bottomless self-importance.\"\n\nThe Sun labels Mr Bercow an \"egomaniac\", saying he will have \"lapped up the applause from Labour yesterday as he denounced Donald Trump\".\n\n\"Indeed John Bercow will bask in the adulation from the president's haters everywhere. That was the point,\" it says.\n\nThe Guardian describes the intervention as \"extraordinary\" and it reports that a senior figure in the government has accused Mr Bercow of \"grandstanding\".\n\nHowever, the paper offers a different verdict on Mr Bercow in its comment pages, saying his stance on President Trump was not a \"party political\" point.\n\nIt was \"a defence of the everyday decencies that underlie democracy\", the paper says.\n\nThe Daily Mail's front page lead is that part of the UK's foreign aid budget is being offered to help improve care for the elderly in China.\n\nThe money would come from the £1.3bn Prosperity Fund.\n\nThe government insists it will be used to help poor people in middle income countries, as well as build post-Brexit trading partnerships.\n\nHowever, the Mail says the idea of sending money to China - one of the richest states in the world - \"sticks horribly in the craw\".\n\nThe paper believes foreign aid must be brought home to help pensioners who deserve decent care.\n\nIt highlights the case of 89-year-old Iris Sibley, who was kept on a hospital ward in Bristol for six months before a care home was found for her.\n\n\"Iris and millions like her paid taxes during their working lives expecting decent care in retirement. They deserve nothing less. Now foreign aid must be brought home to Britain to do precisely that,\" the paper's comment says.\n\nThe Times understands the energy efficiency ratings of televisions, fridges and dishwashers are to be retested \"in an echo of the Volkswagen-emissions scandal\".\n\n\"TV makers kept consumers in dark about running costs,\" it says.\n\nAccording to the paper, there are claims that cheating by manufacturers is costing consumers almost £10bn a year in higher electricity bills.\n\nThe paper says Samsung and LG face allegations that technology helped their products to perform better in energy efficiency tests than in the home.\n\nThe companies deny this but the European Environmental Bureau has commissioned a British laboratory to examine the claims.\n\nThe Financial Times leads on the fall of French bond prices to their lowest level in 18 months because of fears about the presidential election.\n\nThe paper reports the markets are concerned a political scandal engulfing Francois Fillon and his family could bolster the chances of victory for the far-right leader, Marine Le Pen.\n\nThe FT says traders have been on edge after failing to predict Brexit and President Trump's victory - and that investors are steeling themselves for more jolts.\n\nMany of the papers continue to report on the leaking of emails between the former England football captain David Beckham and his public relations team.\n\nA spokesman has said the emails about his charity work and his response to not receiving a knighthood have been doctored and are deliberately inaccurate.\n\nAccording to the Daily Mirror, a cyber security firm has been called in to try to find the \"mastermind\" behind the theft from servers in Portugal. Contact has been made with British police, it says.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph reports that Beckham is frustrated by the lack of progress being made and he fears further damaging material may become public.\n\nThe Sun says the story is in the public interest because the suggestion that the rich and famous can negotiate their way to an award is another \"nail in the coffin for the honours system\".", "Many children now spend more time online than watching TV\n\nLike many parents, I am the unofficial IT manager in my house. And, like many IT managers, my users are never happy with the service they get.\n\nThe complaints have got louder over the past few months as I have tried to manage how much time two of them (my teenage children) spend online and to restrict what they see.\n\nA patchwork of different technologies help me do this. It includes:\n\nIt works, after a fashion, but I know it has holes and that is why I also use a lot of sneakernet.\n\nThis involves me walking around the house, kicking my kids off the game console, tablet, phone or TV (delete as appropriate) they are using when they should be doing homework, cleaning out the rabbit or getting ready for school.\n\nResearch suggests I'm not alone in using tech to oversee online time - both to limit it and to help them stay safe.\n\nAbout 44% of parents use apps to oversee online activity, 39% check browser histories and 37% put controls on the router, suggests statistics gathered by security company Symantec.\n\nI use all three of those and want to use more. And it looked like technology was going to get even more useful as electronics companies released products with comprehensive parental controls onboard.\n\nTalking to children about their online habits can help limit cyber-bullying\n\nIt's perhaps no surprise that parents are keen to turn to technology to help manage time online, says Nick Shaw, European general manager at security company Norton, because it's one area where they struggle to find help.\n\n\"When people have a parenting problem with their children, they might go to their own parents for advice,\" he says, \"but this is the one area where your parents are not as clued up as you are.\"\n\nAnd, he says, children are even more clued up and easily capable of running rings around their parents.\n\n\"A lot of parents are very naive about this,\" he says.\n\nEven I got complacent because none of the tech I had put in place was sending me alerts. I thought it was all working fine and my children were browsing and gaming in an impenetrable bubble of safety.\n\nSlowly I found out that by fiddling with system clocks, using safe mode and putting home PCs into sleep states, my two teenagers could avoid most of the locks and blocks.\n\nMy schoolboy error, says Mr Shaw, was to let the hardware do the heavy lifting.\n\n\"Technology is going to help you,\" he says, \"but it's not going to get away from the fact that you should be having more conversations about this with your kids.\"\n\nThe parental controls of Norton's futuristic looking Core router are controlled via a smartphone\n\nWhat I should be doing, he says, is helping them to understand why the controls are needed.\n\nExplaining the reasons, he says, can help to defuse some of the objections.\n\nIt is fair to say that my children and I have had some of these conversations. But they have been more of the \"play-less-games-and-do-more-maths\" type rather than the \"anti-virus-stops-your-YouTube-account-being-stolen\" sort.\n\nTony Anscombe, security evangelist at anti-virus company Avast, says talking to children about safe ways to use the web is better than just imposing restrictions.\n\n\"Sure,\" he says, \"set some rules about how they should use it, but you should also educate your kids about basic security principles.\n\n\"A lot of parents just do not have the conversation, talking to them about what is acceptable and what is not.\"\n\nThis should cover not sharing passwords and thinking before they share personal data such as contact information, images and videos.\n\nNaivety puts many children at risk, he says, and it is worth reminding them about what can be done with that information and who might want it.\n\nOfcom suggests UK parents are doing more to protect their children online, but threats remain (stock photo)\n\nIt might not just fall into the hands of cyber-thieves, he says, it might also expose them to cyber-bullying or just be inappropriate to share.\n\nWarnings about the hidden features in popular apps are worth passing on, he says, as they often seek to scoop up more information than they really need.\n\n\"The biggest and most important thing that parents can do is run the apps their children do,\" he says.\n\nThis will help parents understand what information children might share and uncover any hidden features the apps possess.\n\nSome, he says, look innocuous but are designed to help children conceal what they are doing.\n\n\"Gadgets are only half the story, if that,\" says Dr Sonia Livingstone, from the London School of Economics, who studies how children use the internet, as part of her work with the long-running EU Kids Online project.\n\nCompanies should concentrate on doing less selling and more on designing services that do not need the protections they peddle, she says.\n\nIn addition, she says, parents should encourage children to do the right thing by doing it themselves, rather than just by dictating terms.\n\nIt's about respect too, she says, helping children make good decisions instead of arbitrarily imposing rules.\n\nIf they can see the benefits of the rules, they are more likely to follow them.\n\n\"I am not very keen on the idea that parents have lots of control over their children,\" she says. \"Children have rights too.\"", "Research commissioned by Newsround has found that 10-12 year-olds feel worried and pressured about looking good in the photos they share on social media.\n\nThe majority take at least four selfies before choosing one to share, and three quarters say they edit photos before posting them.", "Radio 4's Steve Hewlett has married his partner in hospital after being told his cancer treatment could not continue.\n\nThe Media Show presenter has been documenting his progress on air since being diagnosed last year.\n\nSpeaking to PM's Eddie Mair on Monday, he said his consultant had helped arrange the quickie wedding after telling him he had \"weeks, possibly months\" to live.\n\nYou can listen to the full interview here", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nJoe Root is the \"obvious candidate\" to be named as England Test captain - but the role must not affect his batting, says pace bowler James Anderson.\n\nBatsman Root is the favourite to take over from Alastair Cook, who stepped down on Monday after a record 59 Tests.\n\nThe Yorkshire player had been Test vice-captain to Cook since May 2015.\n\n\"Root is fairly quiet but he has got that fire in his belly. He's a really impressive young man,\" Anderson told The Tuffers and Vaughan Cricket Show.\n\nShould he be named captain aged 26, Root would be a year younger than Cook was when he took on the Test role on a full-time basis in August 2012.\n\nNo batsman has scored more Test runs than Root's 4,594 since he made his debut on 13 December 2012, and only India captain Virat Kohli (8,536) has scored more runs than Root's 8,469 in all three forms of international cricket.\n\nAnderson, England's leading Test wicket-taker, has played under five full-time Test captains since making his debut in May 2003.\n\nThe 34-year-old has served Nasser Hussain, Michael Vaughan, Kevin Pietersen, Andrew Strauss and Cook, as well as Andrew Flintoff who deputised for several Tests in 2006 and 2007.\n\n\"Root gets into situations, one-on-ones, with people. He speaks a lot of sense when he does speak and he's a really impressive young man,\" explained Anderson.\n\n\"He's the obvious candidate. The decision is a big one because he's our best player, so you obviously don't want that to be affected.\"\n\nWhile they do not play another Test until July, England then play seven home Test matches - against South Africa and West Indies - in three months, before travelling to Australia in November for the Ashes.\n\nRoot scored 1,477 Test runs in 2016, making centuries against South Africa, Pakistan and India, as well as scoring 796 runs in one-day internationals and 297 in Twenty20 internationals.\n\n\"He loves cricket. It's very rare you see a player that's had the success he's had and he's not like that,\" Anderson said.\n\n\"In the brief period Alastair Cook's been off the field - for bathroom breaks - Root's been in there making changes. He's been good.\n\n\"It can be a difficult situation for a vice-captain when the captain goes off, you're in charge and myself and Stuart [Broad] might not make it that easy to go up and talk tactics. However he's done that and he's been good.\"\n\nAre there any other candidates?\n\nRoot has led Yorkshire four times in the County Championship, taking charge when the county secured the 2014 County Championship title after then-captain Andrew Gale was suspended.\n\nHe was also the on-field captain when Middlesex, led by Australian batsman Chris Rogers, made a record 472-3 to beat Yorkshire by seven wickets in the same year.\n\nAll-rounder Ben Stokes, who was vice-captain on the recent limited-overs tour of Bangladesh which regular ODI skipper Eoin Morgan missed, was described as a \"natural leader\" by his Durham skipper Paul Collingwood.\n\n\"Ben has got a natural draw to him and he would be an excellent vice-captain for Root,\" former England limited-overs captain Collingwood said on the Tuffers and Vaughan show.\n\n\"The captain will have leaders underneath him that he knows he can go to - I think Ben Stokes would be the perfect man for that.\"\n\nFast bowler Stuart Broad has also been mooted - he captained the Twenty20 side between 2011 and 2014 - and Anderson said: \"I wouldn't be against a fast bowler but one issue could be fitness.\n\n\"Bowlers get injured a lot more so are they going to play every game? The international schedule is hectic so it can be difficult.\"\n\nWicketkeeper Jos Buttler, who led the one-day side in Bangladesh in Morgan's absence and remains the official limited-overs vice-captain, has also been suggested as a possible candidate.\n\nHowever, the Lancashire player's Test place is not guaranteed given current keeper Jonny Bairstow's good form - although Buttler played as a specialist batsman in the last three Tests of the recent India series.\n\n'You don't need any captaincy experience'\n\nEx-England spinner Graeme Swann told BBC Radio 5 live he felt the pressure of potential Test captaincy was already affecting Root's batting.\n\n\"I think we should leave Joe Root to be the best batsman this country has ever produced, which he would be without the burden of being the captain,\" he said.\n\nHowever, Kohli, along with Australia's Steve Smith and New Zealand's Kane Williamson, have each raised their games since becoming captains of their respective countries.\n\nSmith and Kohli are the two top-ranked Test batsmen, while Williamson is one of 13 men to have scored a Test century against all of the other nine Test-playing nations.\n\n\"It's very English to assume the captaincy will affect him. The other three have got captaincy of their country and gone to a different level with it,\" said ex-England skipper Michael Vaughan, who came through the same Sheffield Collegiate club side and Yorkshire academy ranks which produced Root, and has been a long-term mentor to the young right-hander.\n\n\"I don't think there's an issue with him captaining, he's too good a player. I think he'd be a good one.\n\n\"To captain any team you have to be loving the game, love the difficult moments and prove people wrong. He is that kind of character.\"\n\nEngland and Yorkshire batsman Gary Ballance, who was named captain of the county in December 2016, said that his team-mate Root's inexperience was not an issue in him assuming the captaincy.\n\nThe pair lived together in 2011 during their early years in the Yorkshire first team and Ballance took Root's place when he was dropped for the final Test of England's Ashes whitewash in Australia in 2013-14.\n\n\"I think both of us have probably matured a bit more as cricketers and people. He's ready as a leader now in that England changing room,\" Ballance told BBC World Service's Stumped programme.\n\n\"I think Rooty's a natural born leader. He's done it from a young age. People follow him.\n\n\"He speaks well, he's got a great cricket brain. I don't think inexperience is too much of a problem. He'll be ready if he gets the opportunity.\"", "The claim: The NHS could recover between £200m and £500m annually from foreign patients if a system of charging them in advance for non-emergency care worked perfectly.\n\nReality Check verdict: The NHS recovered £358m in 2016-17 and £500m is the government's target for 2017-18. The NHS may struggle to meet that target, but it is not unreasonable to suggest that amount could be recouped by a perfect system.\n\nNHS hospitals in England now have to charge patients from overseas up front for non-emergency care if they are not entitled to free treatment.\n\nDr Mark Porter, from the British Medical Association, told BBC Radio 5 live in February 2017 that the amount that could be recovered if the charging system worked perfectly was between £200m and £500m a year.\n\nHe went on to say that was not very much money in the context of NHS spending and deficits, bearing in mind that the NHS budget in England was £116.4bn in 2015-16.\n\nA report - based on 2013 figures - estimates that treating all visitors and migrants in England (not only in hospitals) costs the NHS about £2bn, although it warns there is considerable uncertainty about that figure.\n\nThat includes treating tourists who become ill while on holiday and longer-term migrants who have paid surcharges on their visas to be entitled to NHS care.\n\nNot all of that £2bn could be recovered. Treatment in A&E, for example, is free for everyone up to the point when a patient is either admitted to hospital or given an outpatient appointment.\n\nThe government does recoup some of the £2bn, although not as much as it would like. It has a target to recoup £500m of the cost of treating overseas visitors by 2017-18.\n\nIt has made considerable progress towards that goal, increasing the amount recouped from £97m in 2013-14 to £358m in 2016-17.\n\nA big proportion of that increase, £210m of it, has come from a health surcharge that must be paid by most students and temporary migrants from outside the European Economic Area (EEA) applying for visas to come to the UK for more than six months.\n\nPatients from inside the EEA with EHIC cards are generally treated free, with the government applying to their home countries to cover the cost.\n\nThose from elsewhere in the world who are not covered by the health surcharge will be charged for the cost of their treatment. Trusts are now allowed to charge 150% of the cost of treatment to patients from outside the EEA.\n\nThe NHS has not been particularly good at recouping the costs in the past because trusts have not been good at identifying which patients should be charged for their treatment and it is difficult to collect money from patients living outside the EEA once they have returned home.\n\nThe authorities have also not been particularly good at recouping the costs of treating people from EEA countries.\n\nThis report from the National Audit Office from October 2016 said that on current trends the NHS would not manage to recover £500m a year by 2017-18, although that was before the announcement of the change to the rules so that non-urgent care must be paid for upfront.\n\nThe NAO estimated that trusts only manage to recover about half of the amount they invoiced overseas patients.\n\nThe Department of Health estimated that in 2012-13 the potentially recoverable amount was £367m, but it excluded from that figure the estimated cost of between £100m and £300m for a combination of people who had travelled to England purely to receive urgent treatment and regular visitors who are described as \"taking advantage\" of the system by registering for GP services and other NHS services to which they are not entitled.\n\nAll of these figures are estimates. Looking at the bottom end of the range, £200m is too low a figure as it is considerably less than is currently being collected. At the top end, £500m is the government's target - it is not unreasonable to suggest that amount could be collected by a perfect system.\n\nThis article was originally published on 6 February 2017 and updated on 23 October 2017 with the 2016-17 figures for the amount recouped. Dr Mark Porter ended his term as chair of the BMA in June 2017.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "IAAF president Lord Coe insists he did not mislead an MPs' inquiry over what he knew about the state-sponsored doping program in Russia.\n\nREAD MORE: Russia to remain suspended for World Athletics Championships\n\nWATCH MORE: Coe knew more than he let on - MP Collins", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nFormer South Africa captain Joost van der Westhuizen has died aged 45, six years after he was diagnosed with the debilitating motor neurone disease.\n\nVan der Westhuizen won the World Cup with the Springboks in 1995.\n\nRegarded as one of the finest scrum-halves in history, he won 89 international caps between 1993 and 2003, scoring 38 tries.\n\nHe captained the Springboks for four years, including at the 1999 World Cup, before his retirement in 2003.\n\nVan der Westhuizen was admitted to hospital in Johannesburg on Saturday, when he was said to be in a \"critical condition\".\n• None In his own words: 'It's been a rollercoaster from day one'\n\n\"Joost will be remembered as one of the greatest Springboks - not only of his generation, but of all time,\" said South Africa Rugby president Mark Alexander.\n\n\"He also became an inspiration and hero to many fellow sufferers of this terrible disease as well as to those unaffected.\n\n\"We all marvelled at his bravery, his fortitude and his uncomplaining acceptance of this terrible burden.\"\n\nVan der Westhuizen made his Springboks debut the year after the team were readmitted to international rugby and was their record try-scorer until Bryan Habana surpassed him in 2011.\n\nHe will be best remembered for his major role in the Springboks lifting the World Cup on home soil, beating New Zealand in the final.\n\nAfter winning the Tri-Nations Championship in 1998, he was named captain for the 1999 World Cup - at which South Africa finished third - before retiring after defeat by New Zealand in the quarter-finals of the 2003 tournament.\n\nAt the time of his retirement, his 89 Tests made him the most-capped South African of all time, though five players have since won more caps.\n\nAfter being diagnosed with MND, a rare condition that progressively damages parts of the nervous system and impacts on important muscle activity such as walking, speaking and breathing, he set up the J9 Foundation, which provides support and care to people with the disease.\n\n'He was the best I played against'\n\nWales interim coach Rob Howley said he was \"devastated\" by his fellow former scrum-half's death.\n\n\"He was a fantastic rugby player and for me was the best nine I played against,\" Howley said.\n\n\"He was a world-class nine who was respected throughout the rugby world.\n\n\"I have been fortunate enough to play against him and enjoy his company off the pitch and it is tragic he has passed so young.\"\n\nEngland coach Eddie Jones, who coached against Van der Westhuizen during his time in Super Rugby, also paid his tribute.\n\n\"He was an absolutely outstanding player, a very good long-passer with a great kicking game, a terrific defender and a guy who really influenced the players,\" he told BBC Sport.\n\n\"Having coached against him when he played for the Bulls, they were a completely different team with him playing and he will be sorely missed.\n\n\"You had to be very tight around the ruck when you played against him because he was a great sniper. He was such a big guy who had good pace and was difficult to defend against.\n\n\"It is so sad to hear of his death. You feel for his family and supporters of South African rugby.\"\n\n'It became an iconic moment'\n\nFormer South Africa captain Jean de Villiers says Van der Westhuizen will be remembered as one of the best to play for the Springboks.\n\n\"What he achieved on the rugby field was unbelievable,\" he told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\nDe Villiers remembers Van der Westhuizen's tackle on New Zealand great Jonah Lomu, who died at the age of 40 in November 2015, in the 1995 World Cup final as an \"iconic moment in the game\".\n\n\"The sad thing is that neither of them are with us any more,\" he added.\n\n\"Joost's tackle on Jonah that day - a front on tackle on the guy that was destroying every team in the world. Here comes a scrum-half, someone who is not meant to put in tackles like that, and tackles him front on.\n\n\"The team as a whole got so much inspiration from him for doing that. For us as a country it became an iconic day and it changed the way that we were viewed forever.\"\n\nDe Villiers says Van der Westhuizen's contribution to raising awareness of motor neuron disease will be remembered as much as his rugby achievements.\n\n\"He never gave up,\" he said. \"He gained so much respect in the latter part of his life, even though he was so successful on the rugby field as well.\"\n\nFormer South African captain Corne Krige added: \"If you wanted an X factor in your team - he was that guy.\n\n\"He was the ultimate modern day scrum-half - first of the bigger scrum-halves in the world. It's tragic for his family and for his kids and for everyone involved.\"\n\nJoost van der Westhuizen made an impact on the sport in two ways.\n\nThe first was as a magnificent scrum-half - one of the all-time greats - who won 89 caps and scored 38 tries and was the man who stopped Jonah Lomu in his tracks in the 1995 World Cup final, which the Springboks went on to win.\n\nThe other part was as a great inspiration - a man who gamely and bravely fought motor neurone disease for six years, who set up his foundation and inspired so many people along the way.\n\nHe was a great figure on and off the rugby field.", "Leaked emails claim to show David Beckham complaining that he never received a knighthood.\n\nGiving and receiving gongs can be a fraught business - how well do you remember these other people who refused, returned or were stripped of honours and awards?\n\nIf you missed last week's 7 day quiz, try it here\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "The claim: The green belt is safe from an increase in development.\n\nReality Check verdict: The rules for developing green belt previously said that it was allowed only in exceptional circumstances. The government has now specified what would count as exceptional circumstances. It is not clear whether the new rules will be more or less strict than just letting councils decide what counted as exceptional circumstances.\n\nThe government has described the housing market as broken, promised more affordable homes and said it would help people to buy and rent.\n\nA big question in discussions of increasing the supply of homes is whether planning regulations will be changed to make it easier to build on green belt land.\n\nGreen belts were introduced after World War Two to stop cities from sprawling and countryside being spoilt. About 13% of England is now covered.\n\nThis covers scenic sites open to the public, such as the Chiltern Hills and North Downs, but it also covers a lot of land that has limited public access and may not be particularly beautiful.\n\nIn the House of Commons, Communities Secretary Sajid Javid said: \"In 2015, we promised the British people that the green belt was safe in our hands and that is still the case.\"\n\nThere has been little variation in the amount of green belt land since 1997, although data is not available for every year.\n\nThe Housing White Paper says the current planning regulations allow building on the green belt only \"in exceptional circumstances\" but that there is no detail given of what would amount to exceptional circumstances.\n\nThe government has now specified that before allowing development on green belt land, councils would need to rule out options including:\n\nThe White Paper also says that councils allowing the boundaries of green belt land to be changed would have to make up for it by improving other bits of green belt.\n\nIt also asks for suggestions of other things councils should take into account before doing so.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. \"I just think it's got massive amounts of potential,\" says Isabel Ettedgui\n\n\"I know I've got to do this. It must be a sickness!\" says Isabel Ettedgui, laughing.\n\nIt is June 2016, in Mayfair in central London, and she is standing in the middle of a building site. An early 18th Century house is being renovated, ready to be the home of Mrs Ettedgui's latest venture.\n\nShe is attempting to relaunch a venerable luxury brand: Connolly, a name famous for its leather for over a century.\n\n\"I've known this brand for 30-odd years - I still really believe in it. It's got massive amounts of potential,\" she says.\n\nStarting any kind of enterprise is challenging, with many businesses failing within their first few years, and relaunching one can be just as hard.\n\n\"Reviving a brand that's been silent for a number of years is very difficult indeed,\" says consultant and author Peter York.\n\nPeople actually like to see the owner in a luxury brand store, says Isabel Ettedgui\n\nSo what's the best way to go about it?\n\nHeritage is one factor that certainly seems to be on Mrs Ettedgui's side.\n\nLook at the websites of many luxury names, and it is clear that history and tradition are some of the factors that brands are most keen to stress. These are attributes that Connolly has in abundance.\n\nThe firm, which was family-run for much of its history, began producing leather in the late 19th Century. It soon won favour with a huge range of clients.\n\nW Heath Robinson was commissioned to produce illustrations to mark Connolly's 50th anniversary\n\nIts leather could be found on the seats of many luxury car marques (including Rolls-Royce), at the Houses of Parliament, on ocean liners such as the Queen Mary, and on supersonic plane Concorde.\n\n\"You haven't lived until you have sat your naked butt on Connolly leather,\" actress Joan Collins is reported to have said.\n\nIn the 1920s, the company asked W Heath Robinson to produce some illustrations to mark its 50th anniversary.\n\nThe artist, well-known for his drawings of outlandish devices, was astonished by what he found at the factory in Wimbledon. \"I can't improve on that, Mr Connolly,\" was his response to one of the firm's remarkable leather-measuring machines.\n\nDecades later, after doing some corporate identity work for the firm, Ms Ettedgui helped the enterprise with a move into retail.\n\n\"I just thought, 'this is fantastic…they don't realise what they've got,'\" she remembers.\n\nIsabel Ettedgui credits her husband Joseph, famous for building the eponymous fashion chain, for showing her the potential of Connolly\n\nThe first store opened in 1995, in a mews close to the Lanesborough Hotel in London. Several years later, Mrs Ettedgui's husband Joseph was offered the retail arm of the business, because the Connolly family had decided to concentrate on the motor trade.\n\nJoseph Ettedgui had extensive experience of fashion retailing, having built up the Joseph chain of high-end fashion stores, which had branches across the UK. He and Isabel nurtured the retail side of Connolly, opening a bigger store in Conduit Street in Mayfair.\n\n\"Joseph brought in clothes,\" Mrs Ettedgui recalls. \"It taught me that Connolly wasn't just a brand of briefcases, it had potential to be a fashion brand as well.\"\n\nBut in the 2000s, Connolly faltered. The family's leather finishing business experienced an unsuccessful expansion into the US. And in 2010, Joseph Ettedgui died.\n\n\"After Joe died, I kept renewing these trademarks and thinking what am I going to do?\" says Mrs Ettedgui. She decided to put everything on hold.\n\nConnolly was well-known for making the leather seats for many luxury cars, including Ferrari\n\nA few years later, she began to get the enterprise going once more. She licensed Jonathan Connolly (a fourth generation member of the family) to start producing leather again, while she began to look for a suitable retail location.\n\nHer search led her to a Georgian house just off London's Savile Row. \"It was a little freehold building, which is really rare, and I decided to sell my flat, put everything I could into it and try and launch it without any external backers,\" she says.\n\nThe house includes several floors of retail space, plus an apartment where Mrs Ettedgui now lives.\n\nThe new Connolly shop opened in late 2016\n\nFor her, this is an essential part of the story. \"There's a desperate need for a different narrative in luxury,\" she says.\n\n\"Too many brands are being run in silos by men in suits - what people actually like is to see the owner.\n\n\"It's like when you go to a restaurant and the chef [appears] - it's such a joy, you feel connected.\"\n\nAs well as emphasising a personal touch, Mrs Ettedgui has broadened the range of items on sale. In addition to leather goods and clothes, there will be furniture too. \"Beautiful objects, beautiful clothes, well-designed pieces of furniture - it just goes together,\" she says.\n\nReviving a brand, as Mrs Ettedgui is attempting to do, is a tricky thing to pull off.\n\nThe shop stocks clothing and furniture as well as leather goods\n\n\"The things to think about are: how to explain what happened, because people are suspicious of a relaunch. [You need to] say very clearly what it is you're about and reconcile that with the previous back story,\" says Mr York.\n\nMrs Ettedgui is conscious of the challenges she faces - but she is cautiously optimistic. After a hectic period of building and renovation, and working around the clock to get everything ready, the store opened in late 2016.\n\nSoon afterwards, a customer came in and showed Mrs Ettedgui a Connolly wallet that he had bought 20 years ago. \"He was really happy that we were back,\" she says.\n\nTo succeed, she believes, \"you need a dream - you need an obsession really. And you need to believe in something that means you can't not do it.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "No modern president has been so analysed. Other leaders don't know him and can't read him. He leaves a trail, but it is strewn with contradictions. He craves popularity but revels in being demonised. He trusts his gut instincts and embraces unpredictability as a virtue.\n\nDiplomats, foreign leaders, business chiefs are all trying to decipher what drives the 45th president.\n\nDonald Trump's first two weeks have been about power, about asserting it, about the noise of power, about taking a wrecking ball to the establishment and leaving it wrong-footed and uncertain.\n\nNo president before him has been so ready with threats against foreign powers, old allies, major corporations, and Washington's public servants.\n\nAt conferences, seminars, at diplomatic functions, in foreign ministries, I have encountered the same whispered and not so hidden question: what do these erratic actions tell us about the mind of Donald Trump?\"\n\nSome say he can't survive or that he will over-reach himself. Others are waiting for him to self-destruct, but there is clear calculation behind these early heady days of being the most powerful man in the world.\n\nDespite the protests, many Americans support the president on migration\n\nFirst, Donald Trump is doing in office what he promised he would do, on the campaign trail.\n\nAt more than 15 campaign stops, I heard him vow to:\n\nHis claims were dismissed as campaign braggadocio, but he would bracket most of his promises with the words \"believe me\". He is now delivering.\n\nSecondly, President Trump is looking after his core supporters; all those voters in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and North Carolina who delivered him the White House.\n\nWhile demonstrators gather in cities and at airports, protesting at his banning refugees and citizens from seven mainly Muslim countries from entering the States, the polls indicate that in middle America he has the support of nearly one in two Americans: 49% agreed with the policy.\n\nAll the outrage about the policy being discriminatory, that it is incoherent, that it will prove a recruiting sergeant for extremists, that such a policy - if it had been in place - would have prevented none of the recent terrorists attacks, make little impression on Mr Trump's inner circle.\n\nMr Trump knows his people, and he tweets his messages to them, direct and simple, as they were during the campaign.\n\n\"This travel ban is not about religion,\" he tweets, \"this is about terror and keeping our country safe.\"\n\nSome who voted for him may have misgivings, but most of them, so far, don't.\n\nThey like his confrontational style. Offending Washington's elite is a badge of his authenticity.\n\nEarly battles with judges and state department officials are evidence that he is \"draining the swamp\" as promised.\n\nWhen a federal judge halted the travel ban, the president tweeted: \"The opinion of this so-called judge… is ridiculous and will be overturned.\"\n\nWhile his critics accused him of showing a lack of respect for the Constitution, Donald Trump reminded his audience that many \"bad and dangerous people\" could be \"pouring\" into the country.\n\nMr Trump has criticised those who halted his new migration policy\n\nThe dizzying array of announcements and executive orders form part of a strategic plan.\n\nNever mind that some of the policies are incomplete. That is to miss the point.\n\nThe strategy is to demonstrate over the first 100 days of his presidency that he is a \"high-energy\" leader, shaking up the old order.\n\nHe is lucky to have inherited a strong economy, but he has promised much more.\n\nThe bonfire of regulations, the slashing of corporate and personal taxes, the pump-priming investments in infrastructure are all intended to lift growth levels above 3%.\n\nIf he achieves that, many Americans will stick with him.\n\nSocial media, as it did during the campaign, enables him to talk directly to those who packed his rallies.\n\nThe conventional wisdom was that he would not be tweeter-in-chief when he got to the White House.\n\nBut Mr Trump knows that every tweet becomes a news story and so enables him to manage the news agenda.\n\nThe mainstream media is still struggling to find a convincing riposte to a president who bypasses them to deliver his messages.\n\nHe declares he's in a \"running war\" with the press.\n\nHis chief strategist labels the media the \"opposition party\".\n\nAgain Mr Trump understands that if he denounces the media as \"dishonest\", it weakens its ability to hold him to account.\n\nThe state of the US economy will be a key indicator of President Trump's achievements\n\nThey point to his personal flaws: the need to be loved, to be popular, to make every issue about himself, the thin-skinned retorts, the savaging of those who disagree and the demonising of the press.\n\nAll are weaknesses that over time may damage and perhaps undo him.\n\nHis strategy is not just to change America but for him to dominate the public space.\n\nOthers search for the ideology that will underpin his presidency.\n\nFor Donald Trump, his guiding slogan will be \"America first.\"\n\nIt will be his defence against all attacks. If that means challenging the international order, or tearing up old trade agreements or upsetting the global elite, so be it.\n\nIn these early days, it is impossible to know how much of a revolutionary Donald Trump will be and how much ideology will inform his decision-making.\n\nHis chief strategist, Stephen Bannon is, on the other hand, deeply ideological.\n\nHe seeks a new political order, where sovereignty returns to nation states, where the West confronts the \"hateful ideology\" of radical Islam.\n\nIn the immediate future, President Trump is likely to continue with his confrontational style, believing it is popular with his core supporters.\n\nMany tests lie ahead. Not least is whether his policies will be followed through.\n\nWas the announcement about the wall with Mexico intended as a headline or is Mr Trump determined to build it with Mexican money?\n\nWill he really impose an import tax?\n\nWill he risk a trade and currency war with China?\n\nWill he move the American embassy in Israel to Jerusalem?\n\nWill he encourage anti-establishment parties in Europe?\n\nThe questions are many, and the answers few.\n\nTo those who have openly doubted the president's sanity in these churning, bruising opening days, a clear strategy emerges.\n\nThe president and his close advisers will pay scant attention to the outcry from their opponents.\n\nBut they will nurture those who gave him his majority in the electoral college and might again.\n\nIn two years, and by the time of the mid-term elections, the American public will deliver an initial verdict on Trumpism.\n\nMost importantly the Republican Party will be deciding whether it stays loyal to Mr Trump or whether it allows doubts and reservations to seep in, making Congress the obstacle to his presidency.", "The New York Times has referred to President Trump wearing a bathrobe and his press secretary Sean Spicer has come out to refute that, calling it 'fake news'.\n\nSocial media, meanwhile, has been flooded with photos of a younger Mr Trump clad in a robe.", "Amnesty International says as many as 13,000 people, most of them civilian opposition supporters, have been executed in secret at a prison in Syria.", "For the Times, MPs have been given a \"concession\" after they were promised the chance to vote on Theresa May's deal with EU negotiators six months before the UK leaves the EU.\n\nThe paper says Number 10 was \"forced into the move to avoid defeat\" at the hands of Labour and Tory rebels.\n\nBefore the government's move to head off a rebellion, there were 20 Conservative MPs who were ready to defy Downing Street and vote against the government on Article 50 amendments, the paper says.\n\nAccording to the Guardian, however, the prime minister successfully \"faced down a Conservative rebellion over Brexit\".\n\nA potential Tory rebellion was \"virtually cancelled out\" by six pro-Brexit Labour MPs who voted with the government, it says.\n\nThe government remains relatively confident the Brexit bill will pass its third and final Commons reading on Wednesday without changes, before heading to the Lords, the paper adds.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph warns the European Union is facing a new Greek debt crisis.\n\nIt claims the state of the government finances in Greece could destabilise the whole eurozone, and quotes the International Monetary Fund as saying a new bailout is needed.\n\nThe paper notes that the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, is unwilling to send funds directly to Athens as she faces a tough re-election battle in the autumn.\n\nIt predicts the Greek debt problems will come to the fore as soon as July, when the country is due to repay around 7bn euros to its creditors.\n\nThe Guardian considers the government's white paper on the housing market in England and concludes it does nothing to confront what it calls the country's \"housing crisis\".\n\nThe paper says the government is not addressing the obsession of buyers in extending themselves to own a home.\n\nIt says there needs to be an honest admission that there is no chance of building the extra 250,000 new homes a year that the government says are required.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph reflects on the news that the Institute for Fiscal Studies thinks tax rises and cuts to public services are set to continue well into the next decade.\n\nIn an editorial, the paper says the British state has regressed 30 years, threatening to reverse the direction of travel Margaret Thatcher struggled so hard to establish.\n\nIt says that while it is admirable that the government wants to reduce the deficit, taxes have risen for seven years in a row - and another way of raising cash would be by reducing our foreign aid budget.\n\nThe Times says teachers are using police-style body cameras to record misbehaving pupils.\n\nThe paper says at least two comprehensives in England - both with a history of unruly pupils - are using the cameras to tackle \"constant low level disruption\".\n\nThe Information Commissioner's Office - which regulates privacy issues - said that schools were free to use the technique as a \"self-reflection\" tool for students.\n\nIn its editorial, the Times says that Commons Speaker John Bercow over-reached his office when he tried to pre-emptively bar US President Donald Trump from addressing Parliament.\n\nThe paper says that while the speaker is entitled to his personal opinions, his comments smell of hypocrisy - having already invited the presidents of China, Kuwait and Indonesia to address MPs and peers.\n\nIt says that while Mr Bercow has done a reasonable job as speaker, his desire for personal publicity has \"blighted his record\".\n\nIn his column in the Daily Mail, Quentin Letts says Mr Bercow's criticism of the president is all the more surprising given the fact that he is a \"mini\" Trump himself.\n\nHe says Mr Bercow is as greedy for attention as the president and has the same inflated self-regard.\n\nThe Guardian though says Mr Bercow did not over-reach his powers.\n\nThe paper says he was right to intervene because, if Britain is truly pro-American, it cannot want Mr Trump's presidency to succeed.\n\nIt says the president's temperament does not tolerate \"democratic restraint\" and he wants his whim enacted as law.\n\nThey are the photos that show former US President Barack Obama \"as you've never seen him before\", according to the Sun.\n\nThe photographs show Mr Obama learning to kitesurf while on holiday at Sir Richard Branson's luxurious Necker Island in the Caribbean.\n\nThe \"worries of the White House are clearly far from Obama's mind\", says the Daily Mail.\n\nThe Guardian says US presidents \"don't get to have very much fun\", however, \"whatever Barack Obama might be missing about the Oval Office, those restrictions don't appear to be one of them\".\n\n\"Branson challenged the ex-president to learn how to kiteboard before Branson himself could learn to foilboard, another young watersport that resembles water skiing.\n\n\"According to Branson's post, it was a challenge Obama easily won,\" the paper says.", "Former US President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle last visited the Republic of Ireland in 2011\n\nFormer US President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle are to be granted the Freedom of the City of Dublin.\n\nDublin City councillors voted to award the honour in recognition of Mr Obama's \"moderating and progressive\" influence on the world stage.\n\nThey also acknowledged Mrs Obama's work for the education of girls around the world and on behalf of refugees.\n\nLord Mayor Cllr Brendan Carr confirmed the couple had indicated through contacts their happiness to accept.\n\nA meeting will be held with US Embassy officials within days and a visit could be organised by the end of the year, he added.\n\nHe also said the couple saw it as an opportunity for another visit. President Obama and his wife visited the Republic of Ireland in 2011 as part of a tour of Europe.\n\nDuring their stay, the Obamas went to Moneygall, a small village in County Offaly which was home to one of President Obama's ancestors who emigrated to the US in 1850.\n\nThe motion to grant the honour was carried by 30 votes in favour with 23 against.\n\nCllr Carr, who proposed the motion, told councillors there was precedent for a couple receiving the honour as it was granted to the Crown Prince and Princess of Japan in 1985 for their diplomatic activities.\n\nHe said Mr Obama had regretted some US actions in the Middle East and the honour was not a \"canonisation\" of the couple.\n\nOther international figures to receive the honour include former US President Bill Clinton, former South African President Nelson Mandela and Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One Wales, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nWales flanker Sam Warburton says Six Nations rivals England are justifiably regarded as being the equal of world champions New Zealand.\n\nEddie Jones' side will arrive in Cardiff seeking a 16th successive win, three away from a world record.\n\nThe All Blacks and South Africa share the tier-one nations' 18-match winning run record.\n\n\"England are deservedly tagged as the best team in the northern hemisphere,\" said Warburton.\n\n\"It's a fair judgement to compare them to the All Blacks right now - that's how good they are.\n\n\"It is going to take a huge game out of us to get a win, and it will be one of the biggest games of the championship for sure.\"\n\nWhy everyone wants to beat England\n\nWarburton also explained the reasons he believes fire up every opponent England meet in the Six Nations.\n\nThe ex-Wales captain insists it is down to England's recent successful record.\n\n\"Chatting to [different countries'] players, that's how they feel, they really prioritise that and everyone just wants to beat England,\" he said.\n\n\"That's due to the success in the past and the success they're going through now. It's always a big scalp.\"\n• None Never miss a Six Nations story with BBC alerts\n\nInternational rugby began with Scotland and England meeting in 1879.\n\nFour years later the Home Nations tournament began with Wales and Ireland taking on England and Scotland.\n\nSince then, the Celtic nations have traditionally revelled in their rivalries with England.\n\nEngland are unbeaten under Jones, who succeeded Stuart Lancaster after their group-stage exit from the 2015 World Cup.\n\nWales contributed to England's downfall in the tournament they hosted with a win at Twickenham, but lost twice to them in 2016.\n\n\"If you're Wales, the biggest game you play in in the Six Nations is England,\" said Warburton.\n\n\"If you're Scotland, it's England. If you're Ireland, it's England. Or if you're France or Italy, it's England,\" said Warburton, whose father was born in England.\n\n\"We know as players that's the one game the fans look forward to most and you sense that in the build-up. It's a huge occasion for everyone in Wales.\n\n\"But for me, I always cherish any win against any opposition in the Six Nations and in the last three years [since Wales' 2013 title win] I've realised how difficult it is to win a championship.\"\n\nCardiff Blues' Warburton predicts selection headaches if Bath number eight Taulupe Faletau has recovered from a knee injury for Saturday's match.\n\nGloucester's Ross Moriarty played at eight in the opening victory in Italy and could rival Warburton for the blind-side flanker's role if Faletau is risked for a starting place.\n\n\"The back-row competition is so fierce at the minute, I don't want to put pressure on him, but Toby [Faletau], when he's playing well, is one of the best players in the world. I think he's fantastic,\" Warburton added.\n\n\"If he did come back I'm sure there would be a few selection headaches in the back-row because Ross and Justin [Tipuric] went extremely well against Italy.\"", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "As the 'last Concorde' made its final journey, we look back at the iconic plane's history.\n\nIt will be the centrepiece of the £16m Bristol Aerospace Centre, which has been built around a listed WW1 hangar.", "There is a simple way to make a job more attractive. Attach more money to it.\n\nBut, of course, that is not really an option for GPs. Average pay - for those that run practices as partners at least - is already in the six figures so there would be an outcry if pay started going up dramatically when the rest of the public sector is being squeezed.\n\nInstead, the government in England is trying to tinker around the edges - offering doctors more training opportunities, making it easier to return to the profession after a break and promoting flexible working.\n\nThere is even the prospect of a \"golden hello\" for new doctors willing to work in the most deprived areas.\n\nBut the big question is whether this will be enough.\n\nGeneral practice - for a variety of reasons - is not as attractive as it once was. The NHS is in the process of increasing the number of training places to boost numbers.\n\nHowever, over one in 10 went unfilled last year. Coupled to that a recent BMA survey showed the pressures on the profession were prompting large numbers to think about escaping.\n\nThe poll of 15,000 doctors found a third were thinking of retiring in the next five years and one in 10 was considering moving abroad.\n\nIf this comes true, it will make it very difficult for the government to achieve its desire to boost the workforce by 5,000 doctors, which in turn will make it difficult to secure the seven-day service ministers are aiming for.\n\nBut in all this debate it is easy to forget the obvious question. Do we really need GPs available seven days a week?\n\nIt is something British Medical Association GP leader Dr Chaand Nagpaul raised this morning when he suggested the government would be better focussing its attention on \"supporting practices during the day\".\n\nThe government, however, is adamant there is a need. But from whom? The biggest users of general practice are the elderly and very young.\n• 1 in 3 considering retirement in next five years\n• 13% of GP training places went unfilled last year\n\nThe average patient sees their doctor six times a year, for the over 75s this tops 20 while for the under-fives it is approaching 15 visits.\n\nNeither of these groups tend to have trouble being free to see a doctor during normal hours.\n\nIt is why those that have tried seven-day opening tend to report that demand is very low, particularly on Sundays (although there does seem to be some appetite for late evening opening and Saturday morning clinics but these were already offered in many places before ministers started pushing for this initiative).\n\nInstead, seven-day opening for GPs seems to be more focussed at tackling what is perhaps the Achilles heel of the NHS: Where to go when you need immediate care that does not necessarily need the attention A&E.\n\nEstimates suggest as many as four in 10 A&E visits could be dealt with elsewhere. But with the jury still out on the 111 non-emergency phone line and many still suspicious about GP out-of-hours providers, the government seems to be turning to general practice to help it out.\n\nBut is there a risk the government is using a sledgehammer to crack a nut - albeit a tough nut?\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nNorwich missed the chance to climb into the Championship's top six after Omar Bogle's second-half double earned struggling Wigan a point.\n\nNelson Oliveira's looping header from Alex Pritchard's set-piece had given Norwich a deserved first-half lead.\n\nBut Bogle's near-post header from a corner and cleanly struck free-kick put the hosts ahead as they battled back.\n\nMitchell Dijks then nodded level from a Norwich corner and both sides searched for a late winner that would not come.\n\nWigan remain 23rd, five points below 21st-placed Burton with a game in hand, while Norwich stay seventh but move to within two points of sixth-placed Sheffield Wednesday.\n• None Relive Wigan's 2-2 draw with Norwich as it happened\n\nThe Canaries had put the ball in the net on 25 minutes when Russell Martin headed in on the rebound after a Jonny Howson effort bounced off the woodwork, but the linesman's flag was already raised for offside.\n\nHowever, not long after the visitors - bidding for a fourth straight win - did take the lead as Oliveira netted his eighth league goal of the season.\n\nAfter the break, Wigan sprung to life and former Grimsby striker Bogle's quickfire brace on his first start for the Latics turned the game around.\n\nBut Dijks' header soon had the visitors back on level terms to deny Wigan a seventh league win of the season.\n\nThe hosts, who had failed to scored in nine of their past 12 home league games, could have won it late on but Norwich keeper John Ruddy saved well from Jake Buxton.\n\nWigan Athletic boss Warren Joyce: \"I'm disappointed we did not end up winning the game, because I felt we deserved the three points.\n\n\"I was happy with the whole team - the effort, the commitment, the work-rate, the desire.\n\n\"We were good value to have taken the lead, and it's disappointing not to see it through.\"\n\nNorwich City boss Alex Neil: \"We were the better side in the first half and we controlled the game - we should have been more than 1-0 up.\n\n\"The frustration for me is that the goal that Russell Martin scored was onside, having watched it back.\n\n\"We were frustrated tonight as a group. We feel we should have won it. We made it difficult for ourselves.\"\n• None Attempt missed. Nélson Oliveira (Norwich City) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the left. Assisted by Cameron Jerome.\n• None Sam Morsy (Wigan Athletic) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt missed. Nélson Oliveira (Norwich City) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high from a direct free kick.\n• None Attempt saved. Jake Buxton (Wigan Athletic) right footed shot from very close range is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Callum Connolly with a headed pass. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "A 15-year-old boy is closing in on being the tallest teenager in the world.\n\nBrandon Marshall, who is 6ft 11.5ins (2.12m) tall, hopes to become a professional basketball player.\n\nBut he says his height comes with issues, like having to sleep diagonally across king size bed.\n\nHis mother Lynne Quelch said buying clothes for her son as \"horrific\".\n\nBrandon, from Bury St Edmunds, in Suffolk, is not expected to stop growing just yet and could equal or overtake the current Guinness World Record holder Kevin Bradford, 18, from the US, who stands at 7ft 1ins.\n\nThe tallest man in the world is Sultan Kosen, 34, of Turkey, who is 8ft 3ins (2.51m).", "Last updated on .From the section Horse Racing\n\nFreddy Tylicki says he has no regrets about becoming a jockey despite a fall last year that left him paralysed from the waist down.\n\nTylicki was injured in a four-horse pile-up at Kempton on 31 October.\n\nSpeaking to the BBC's 5 live Daily, he says he was born to be a jockey and \"wouldn't regret it one day\".\n\nThe 30-year-old, who has not watched a replay of his fall, said \"things were sometimes very difficult\" but he was focused on staying positive.\n\n'There's always someone worse than you'\n\nTylicki's life changed forever at what should have been a mundane Monday meeting at Kempton Park in Surrey.\n\nHe fell heavily from his mount, Nellie Dean, when appearing to clip heels with leader and eventual winner Madame Butterfly as the field rounded the home turn.\n\n\"A few of my colleagues have watched the fall - I haven't myself,\" he said. \"They were saying I'm actually very lucky to be here.\n\n\"There's no point for me to watch it. I was there, that's enough. I do remember everything. Unfortunately that's racing in a way.\"\n\nTylicki spent a fortnight in intensive care and left hospital in late December to continue his rehabilitation at the London Spinal Cord Unit, with support from the Injured Jockeys' Fund.\n\n\"When you're in hospital things are very, very tough. You move on to rehab then and you get to learn these new skills and new ways of doing everything,\" he said.\n\nThe change cannot be overstated - from riding thoroughbreds at 30mph to life in a wheelchair. Tylicki is philosophical.\n\n\"You are having to accept things in a different way, which can trouble you. You've got good days and bad days, but at the moment I'm taking every day as it comes. For me that's the best way to handle the situation,\" he added.\n\n\"There's always someone worse than you. You've just got to do the best you can out of the situation. Staying positive is the main thing. It can be hard sometimes and easier other days. You've just got to learn how to deal with it.\"\n\nTylicki broke 18 ribs in the fall, but most significant of all was the T7 paralysis, which meant he no longer had movement in the lower half of his body.\n\n\"The first time I woke up after the operation - I was lying in bed and I knew I couldn't feel anything. That's when I knew I was in trouble,\" he said.\n\n\"Shortly after that, the doctor filled me in on what happened - the injuries I'd received. I just had to get cracking from then on.\"\n\nThe support I've been getting is tremendous and unbelievable\n\nExercises and physiotherapy now form part of his daily routine. Being shown how to dress himself, make his bed, go swimming and drive a car are all part of his rehabilitation.\n\n\"Each individual here has a timetable and you'll be kept busy until 5 o'clock,\" he said.\n\n\"You get to learn an awful lot. Having had a certain level of fitness before has helped me massively in some ways.\n\n\"I'm living my life day to day. The immune system is very low and infections can happen easily, but I'm concentrating on my rehab and physio.\"\n\nHe has been reading a lot, with a book on gambler Barney Curley - a present from trainer Jamie Osborne - next on his list.\n\nTylicki was born in Germany, the son of three-time German champion jockey Andrzej.\n\n\"I was born to do it. My father was a very, very good jockey and from a very young age I decided to go down that route,\" he said.\n\n\"I saw the ups and downs and the toughness of the job but from around 12 years of age I knew I was going to be a jockey.\"\n\nTylicki Jr was champion apprentice in Britain in 2009 and his career was on an upward curve, winning the Group One Prix de l'Opera race on Speedy Boarding at Chantilly in France just a few weeks before his Kempton fall.\n\n\"I had some very good years and some lovely winners, especially last year winning the Prix de l'Opera was definitely the icing on the cake,\" he said.\n\nThe risks and rewards of riding\n\nTylicki said racing had given him \"a tremendous way of life\" and he was aware of the dangers despite falls being relatively rare in Flat racing.\n\n\"I think if you ask any Flat jockey they'd agree the jump jockeys are much braver than us Flat lads - one in every 10 rides is a fall. They're much, much tougher,\" he said.\n\n\"On the Flat you're going at great speed so when you do get a fall it's always 'how bad it is?' and this time I didn't get away with it.\n\n\"Accidents do happen in racing. It's a risky sport and you're aware of it as a jockey, but you don't think about it. Things can happen.\n\n\"When you've won on a few horses that absolutely took off with you - there's nothing better than that. I'm glad I've experienced that.\"\n\n'The support I've been getting is tremendous'\n\nA GoFundMe page to raise money to help Tylicki's recovery, set up by At The Races television presenter Matt Chapman, collected more than £330,000.\n\nHe has been visited by a variety of jockeys and trainers, and received widespread support on social media from racing fans.\n\n\"The racing community is little compared to everything else in the world but there's some fantastic people in it - the support I've been getting is tremendous and unbelievable,\" he said.\n\n\"I don't quite know how to thank everyone. It's been absolutely amazing.\"\n\nTylicki's sister Madeleine won her first race as a trainer three weeks after her brother's accident.\n\n\"It really was just pretty amazing,\" he said. \"I was listening to it on my phone in bed and when the horse crossed the line I Facetimed her. Davy Russell, who rode the horse, answered the phone to me and said: 'This one's for you Freddy.'\n\n\"It was a fantastic feeling for the whole family but especially Madeleine and her partner Andrew.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Scotland\n\nAs Laura Muir eyes another British and perhaps even a world record later this month, she believes Scottish athletics is in a stronger position than at any time she can recall.\n\nMuir, Callum Hawkins and Andrew Butchart all hit the headlines at the weekend with landmark runs.\n\n\"We've had world-class athletes before but I don't think that many at one time,\" she told BBC Scotland.\n\n\"We've got so many all competing at the top level of athletics.\"\n\nWith Dame Kelly Holmes' British indoor 1,000m record next in her sights, Muir leads a strong Scottish pack towards this summer's World Championships, which will be held in London.\n\n\"When I was younger I was aware of Eilidh [Child] and Lee [McConnell] and obviously Liz [McColgan] and Yvonne [Murray] a while ago,\" added the the 23-year-old.\n\n\"I saw a tweet that we had so many world leads as well, just from Scottish athletes so it's great.\n\n\"We're in a really good place just now and I just hope youngsters can look up to us and we'll see even more in the future.\"\n\nHaving just beaten the European 3,000m indoor record, she could take two more records down in her next outing at the British Indoor Grand Prix in Birmingham on 18 February.\n\nHolmes' best UK time over 1,000m, set in 2004, is only two seconds outside Maria Mutola's world record.\n\n\"I never thought when I was younger that I'd be in the position to be going for a world record, so it's an exciting opportunity,\" she added.\n\n\"It's going to be a great atmosphere, a great crowd, it's a fast track so everything's going for me to get it, I'm in great shape and it's just a matter of what happens on the day really.\"\n\nFind out about how to get into running with our special guide.\n\nEverything Muir does just now is gearing up for the World Championships, but she also views the European Indoors in Belgrade next month as a chance to achieve another personal first.\n\n\"The Olympics and World Championships are always going to be the big competitions where you've got everybody from throughout the world but at the Europeans you've always got a lot of competition as well, there's a lot of fast girls in Europe,\" she said.\n\n\"It's a good middle-ground as it were, it's a great championship and I'm just hoping I can go there and win my first senior medals.\"", "Since Theresa May's team moved into Downing Street last July, pretty much all of her predecessor's advisers were given their marching orders.\n\nSo who is in her new team?\n\nAs part of the Daily Politics series Westminster Village, reporter Mark Lobel takes a look inside that famous door.\n\nFor rights reasons, this film is not available outside the UK.\n\nMore: Follow @daily_politics on Twitter and like us on Facebook and watch a recent clip and watch full programmes on iPlayer", "Dr Cope believes new ways of working have been a success\n\nA GP practice in Plymouth has reduced the time it takes to get a routine appointment with a doctor from three-to-four weeks to under seven days.\n\nThe Beacon Medical Group cares for more than 30,000 patients and was formed in 2014 after three practices merged.\n\nDr Jonathan Cope, GP and managing partner at Plympton Health Centre, one of the Beacon practices which has 10 doctors, says, at present, there are 30 unfilled GP posts in Plymouth.\n\nThree years ago, his practice was unable to recruit the equivalent of one-and-a-half full-time GPs.\n\n\"We made a conscious decision to look elsewhere, to work differently. So we decided to looks at what skills clinical pharmacists, paramedic practitioners and nurse practitioners could offer. We converted that budget to two-and-a-half full-time equivalents.\"\n\nPatients registered at Plympton who feel they need same-day care from their family doctor call the reception team at the surgery.\n\nDepending on the problem, they will then be called back by an advanced paramedic, pharmacist, nurse practitioner - or a doctor.\n\nBeacon Medical Group has started to offer new services\n\nDr Cope said: \"Because of the extra capacity, we have freed up the GPs' time. So we are offering more appointments for routine problems, and the waiting times are now shorter.\"\n\nThe advanced paramedic practitioner, Simon Robinson, responds to any emergency medical problems in the practice, as well as doing, on average, four home visits a day.\n\nHe says he is often called out to see the more complex cases and his daily schedule allows him to spend more time than the GPs with patients. Simon was keen to point out that if he does have any queries he just has to knock on the GPs' door.\n\nProf Helen Stokes-Lampard, chair of the Royal College of GPs, said while paramedics are highly valued and trusted, they have different skills and training.\n\n\"GPs are highly trained to take into account the physical, psychological and social factor - this unique skill set cannot be replaced by another healthcare professional, however well meaning the intention is.\n\n\"We do not have enough GPs in the NHS - and actually we don't have enough paramedics either. This transference of workload pressures from one area of the health service to another is not going to benefit our patients in the long term.\"\n\nIn an effort to understand the pressures on the Beacon Medical Group, the 100 most frequent attendees were analysed.\n\nDr Cope expected the list to be dominated by frail, elderly patients but instead the typical patient was a 37-year-old woman, often with mental health problems, multiple prescriptions and referrals to hospital.\n\nFrom March, a psychiatrist will do a weekly clinic from the surgery for these patients and provide additional training on mental health care to staff.\n\nIt is part of a parallel drive to offer specialised new services more commonly found in a hospital setting.\n\nDr Helen Frow, a GP with a special interest in dermatology, has provided care to patients registered to the group in the last two years. \"Onward referrals to the hospital have reduced by 85%,\" she said.\n\nThe model of working with between 30,000 to 50,000 patients in a multi-specialty community provider model is known as a Primary Care Home.\n\nThere were 14 other sites working to this structure across England in the last year.\n\nThe National Association of Primary Care is working closely with NHS England to explore how they can continue to expand working in this way.\n\nA BMA spokesperson said: \"Many GP practices are increasingly becoming hubs where nurses and other professionals work together to deliver services to patients.\n\n\"However, while this is encouraging, England is suffering from a drastic and worsening shortage of GPs that is damaging patient care and restricting the number of appointments on offer to the public.\n\n\"The government needs to address this workforce crisis urgently.\"\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.", "Alastair Cook says playing under another England captain will \"not be an issue\" following his resignation as skipper on Monday.\n\n\"I hope I can help the next captain with whatever he needs and drive England forward,\" Cook told BBC Sport.\n\n\"I can't see, for me, it being an issue being led by someone else. I hope I can be part of it and I'm really looking forward to the next stage.\"\n\nCook took over the England captaincy in 2012 and oversaw series victories in India and South Africa, as well as Ashes victories in 2013 and 2015.\n\nHowever his tenure also saw a 5-0 Ashes whitewash in Australia in 2013-14, as well as a 4-0 series defeat in India last year.\n\nHe is England's top run scorer in Test cricket with 11,057 runs and 30 centuries.\n\n\"It's a job you need to do at 100% and be committed to everything and I had to be really honest with myself,\" Cook added.\n\n\"I couldn't do that anymore. It's not a job you can do at 95%. I'm sad to walk away but it's the right time to do it.\"\n\nCook's last game in charge saw England slip to an innings-and-75-run defeat against India, the culmination of a run of six defeats in their past eight Tests.\n\nThe Essex batsman, who was left visibly upset by the final day's collapse, said after the game that he would consider his future as captain.\n\n\"That was kind of maybe the final nail in the coffin. When I left India, I was pretty sure I wouldn't captain England again,\" Cook said.\n\n\"Admitting that isn't the easiest thing to do, certainly not with my character, but it's the right decision for me and the right decision for the team.\n\n\"It's such an honour to be England captain and all the bits that go with it. Everything I have been involved with, 59 games as captain, I've absolutely loved. Giving that away was very hard.\"\n\nNext captain should take outside advice\n\nVice-captain Joe Root is the favourite to take over the Test captaincy, having led Yorkshire several times in the County Championship.\n\nThe 26-year-old, who represents England across all three formats, has scored 4,594 runs at an average of 52.80 since making his debut in 2012.\n\nEngland face Test series in the summer against South Africa and the West Indies, before travelling to Australia in November for the Ashes.\n\n\"The one thing I learnt throughout my career as captain is that you need those people outside, looking in, to help you,\" Cook said.\n\n\"My first couple of years I was pretty stubborn that this is the way I should do it, and I didn't take that much advice outside of England.\n\n\"Actually there's a lot of very good people who watch a lot of cricket, probably more than all of the guys who are playing, who can offer advice. Finding people you trust that way is vitally important and they can help you.\"\n\nCook has a win percentage of 40.67 as captain, the fourth best of the six captains to have led England in more than 40 Tests.\n\nAs captain he managed the return - and subsequent ending - of batsman Kevin Pietersen's international career in 2014, a year which saw England lose a Test series against Sri Lanka from the penultimate delivery in Headingley and collapse to a 95-run defeat by India at Lord's.\n\nCook described himself as being \"pretty much at rock bottom\" following the Lord's defeat, but he received a warm ovation from the crowd in Southampton during England's next Test, where he made 95.\n\n\"When you're really doubting yourself, to walk out there on that first day was really special for me. It was almost spine-tingling,\" he said.\n\n\"It surprised me, to have that warmth of reception. A lot of people walked up to me in the street, saying I was the right man to drive it forward.\"\n\nCook added that he felt the decision to end Pietersen's England career should have been handled better, and that he did not want the saga to define his captaincy.\n\n\"I was part of the decision-making process but I don't have the power, or didn't have the power, to decide who played for England. I was just asked my opinion about it,\" he said.\n\n\"However I felt at one time I was a bit of a lightning rod for it. That was a hard six months.\n\n\"I wouldn't want my captaincy to be talked about just because of that. I don't think it's fair on myself or on the teams.\"\n\n'Cook has plenty of scoring to do' - analysis\n\nCook has plenty of years left in him and plenty of scoring to do, so I would like to say keep going, keep scoring the runs because he is a run machine.\n\nHe is definitely one of the best captains England has ever produced. When the pressure is on, he has the ability to stay calm.\n\nHe is probably the toughest cricketer England have ever produced and probably the most mentally tough.\n\nI don't think there will be any issues with Cook playing under a new captain. [Cook and Root] are good friends and they get on well.\n\nWithout the burden of having to do all the press, the meetings, the thinking on the pitch, you might find Cook goes on and breaks many records with the bat.\n\nListen to The Tuffers and Vaughan Show on BBC Radio 5 live, Tuesday, 19:30 GMT.", "Sgt David Evans has offered to buy Ivy and cover the cost of replacing her\n\nMore than 15,000 people have signed a petition to allow a police dog to retire with her handler.\n\nSgt David Evans, from Shropshire, is \"heartbroken\" at the prospect of not being able to keep four-year-old Ivy when he retires, his daughter said.\n\nShe set up an online petition to gather support for her father, who is stepping down in April after 34 years' service.\n\nThe chief constable has \"made a direct offer\" to speak to Sgt Evans. Police dogs normally retire about age eight.\n\nSgt Evans, 59, has been told he will have to pass the animal - a Malinois cross German Shepherd - on to another handler to continue working, the family said.\n\nThe petition calling for Ivy to be allowed to retire with her handler has been signed by people from as far afield as Canada and New Zealand\n\nWest Mercia Police's chief constable has offered to speak to the officer personally about Ivy's future\n\nThe petition has been signed by people from as far afield as Canada and New Zealand. Daughter Jennie said the response was \"incredible\".\n\nShe said Sgt Evans, of Market Drayton, had offered to buy Ivy and cover the cost of replacing her.\n\nMs Evans said: \"Dad sacrificed many family moments with the support of his wife to enable him to undergo months of training with his police dogs.\n\n\"West Mercia need to show they appreciate these efforts and do not treat dogs as dispensable equipment that can be 'handed down' to other people.\"\n\nWest Mercia Police said Chief Constable Anthony Bangham \"recognises the unique bond between an officer and his dog and has made a direct offer to speak to the officer personally about this\".\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A bright meteor streaked across skies over US Midwestern states early on Monday morning.\n\nHundreds of witnesses reported seeing the glowing object, which was visible in seven US states and Ontario, Canada, according to the American Meteor Society.\n\nThe fireball was also reportedly accompanied by a sonic boom that rattled homes in the area.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The village where Muslims and gays are unwelcome\n\nA village in Hungary has banned the wearing of Muslim dress and the call to prayer. By leading what it calls \"the war against Muslim culture\", it hopes to attract other Christian Europeans who object to multiculturalism in their own countries.\n\n\"We primarily welcome people from western Europe - people who wouldn't like to live in a multicultural society,\" Laszlo Toroczkai tells the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme. \"We wouldn't like to attract Muslims to the village.\"\n\nMr Toroczkai is mayor of Asotthalom, a remote village in the southern Hungarian plains, situated around two hours from the capital Budapest.\n\n\"It's very important for the village to preserve its traditions. If large numbers of Muslims arrived here, they would not be able to integrate into the Christian community.\n\n\"We can see large Muslim communities in western Europe that haven't been able to integrate - and we don't want to have the same experience here,\" he says. \"I'd like Europe to belong to Europeans, Asia to belong to Asians and Africa to belong to Africans. Simple as that.\"\n\nThe village of Asotthalom is close to the Hungary-Serbia border\n\nThe refugee crisis has contributed to a rise in anti-immigrant sentiment across large parts of Europe and Hungary is no exception.\n\nAt the height of the migrant crisis, as many as 10,000 people crossed the border - just minutes from Asotthalom - from Serbia into Hungary each day.\n\nThe mayor has capitalised on the anxiety about such an influx and introduced by-laws of questionable legality.\n\nThe new local legislation bans the wearing of Muslim dress like the hijab and the call to prayer and also outlaws public displays of affection by gay people. Changes are also being brought in to prevent the building of mosques, despite there being only two Muslims living there currently.\n\nMany lawyers think the laws contravene the Hungarian constitution and, as part of a general review of new local legislation, the government will rule on them in mid-February.\n\nEniko Undreiner says she felt fearful last year, as migrants crossed the nearby border into Hungary\n\nThe laws, however, have support among many members of the community.\n\nOne resident, Eniko Undreiner, said it was \"really scary\" to see \"masses of migrants walking through the village\" last year as they crossed into the country.\n\n\"I spend a lot of time at home alone with my young kids - yes, there were times when I was scared,\" she says.\n\nThe two Muslims living in the village did not want to speak to the BBC for fear of attracting attention to themselves.\n\nHowever, one member of the village said they were \"fully integrated\" within the community.\n\n\"They don't provoke anyone. They don't wear the niqab, they don't harass people... I know them personally. We get on just fine.\"\n\nMigrants enter Hungary in October 2016, at the height of the migrant crisis\n\nThe mayor hopes the village can be at the forefront of what he calls \"the war against Muslim culture\".\n\nHe has employed round-the-clock border patrols, which he thinks will attract white Europeans to live there.\n\nThe Knights Templar International has been advertising homes in Asotthalom on its Facebook page.\n\nIts members include Nick Griffin, former leader of the British National Party, and the party's former treasurer Jim Dowson.\n\n\"I have been contacted by Jim Dowson,\" Mr Toroczkai explains. \"He came to Asotthalom a few times as a private individual, just to have a look. Nick Griffin also came with him.\"\n\nMr Griffin has previously described Hungary as \"a place to get away from the hell that is about to break loose in western Europe\".\n\n\"When it all goes terribly wrong in the West, more will move to Hungary and Hungary needs those people.\"\n\nWe have asked Knights Templar International and Nick Griffin for an interview, but neither responded.\n\nMayor Laszlo Toroczkai says Muslims \"would not be able to integrate\" into the village's Christian community\n\nMr Toroczkai says he would be happy to welcome people from England.\n\nAsked if he is trying to establish a white supremacist village, Mr Toroczkai replies: \"I didn't use the word white. But because we are a white, European, Christian population, we want to stay [like] this.\n\n\"If we were black we'd want to stay a black village.\n\n\"But this is a fact and we want to preserve this fact.\"\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "\"When was the last time you thought of taking your partner for a nice weekend in Frankfurt?\".\n\nThat was one of the more memorable lines of a heavy sales pitch from politicians and business leaders from Paris. A raiding party touched down in London this morning determined to cart off billions in business and tens of thousands of jobs to the French capital in the weeks and months ahead.\n\nValerie Pecresse - President of the region including Paris and its environs, and a former budget minister under Nicolas Sarkozy - led the party, and told a group of senior finance executives from heavyweights such as Blackrock, Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse why Paris was the natural choice for any business they moved out of London.\n\nTo be fair to Mme Pecresse, the brochure she presented had more to it than Paris being très agréable. She described the competition for London business as fierce and came armed accordingly.\n\nA 28% top rate of income tax for expat executives for a period of eight years (recently extended from five). That compares to a top rate of 45% in the UK.\n\nCommercial rents one-third the price of London - with millions of square feet currently unoccupied.\n\nA deep pool of talent - a lot of which, she joked, is currently in London.\n\nTwo international schools and a plan for two more near the business areas of Paris.\n\nSome companies in the City of London have already said staff may have to move abroad\n\nFour of the six biggest continental European banks are French and based in Paris.\n\nThe brochure was glossy and the tone was friendly - apart from the odd sideswipe at arch rival Frankfurt. But there were two issues the political and business leaders from across La Manche struggled with.\n\nBankers I spoke to afterwards said that one big turn off remains how difficult it is to fire people in France. That really matters for banks. As their staff are so well paid, when business slumps they need to reduce their biggest cost - people - quickly. Working in finance is profitable but it can be brutal.\n\nThe other issue was politics.\n\nThe delegation arrived on the same day as the man who thought he would be president, Francois Fillon, was fighting for his political life after paying his wife over half a million euros for work she may or may not have done.\n\nEconomic nationalism, the political wind that many say secured Brexit and the Trump presidency, is packing a punch in France with Marine Le Pen promising French jobs for French workers. Tax breaks for rich expats and looser employment protection sit uneasily with those priorities.\n\nThe future of the UK's relationship with the EU is maddeningly vague to most business leaders, but if it's political uncertainty you don't like - why would you ever pick France?\n\nMadame Pecresse and her entourage insisted that the political uncertainty would be gone after the elections on 7 May. She said she was convinced that whoever was in charge, \"HE\"(sic) would be pro-business.\n\nThe same folks who told us Donald Trump couldn't win and that Brexit would never happen agree with her.\n\nOne member of the raiding party told us why the pundits were right about France. Jean-Louis Missika, the Deputy Mayor of Paris for economic development, told the BBC that \"because France has embraced globalisation with more care for our workers, the backlash will be less severe\".\n\nThe Parisian ambition is to tempt 10,000 direct employees and further 20,000 indirect employees to Paris. When bankers move, they tend to take law, accounting, office management, sandwich making and dry cleaning jobs with them.\n\nThose are pretty modest ambitions when you consider over a million people work in financial services in the UK - a third of them in London. Modest, but perhaps realistic. The good news for Paris is that they are already 10% of the way there.\n\nHSBC has already said it will move 1,000 jobs to Paris.\n\nIt seems unlikely they will be the only newcomers to succumb to its charms.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Barack Obama is on holiday learning to kitesurf with Richard Branson\n\nWhether after four years or eight, all US presidents must eventually confront the question: What happens when I leave the Oval Office?\n\nFor Barack Obama, the answer was a five-star Caribbean holiday - and a seemingly endless grin.\n\nThe former commander in chief has been pictured beaming on a beach in a backwards cap, flanked by an equally cheery Michelle.\n\nThe venue for this masterclass in chilling? Moskito island in the British Virgin Islands, owned by British billionaire Sir Richard Branson.\n\nSir Richard posted pictures on his blog of Mr Obama learning to kite-surf, and engaging in a play-fight with the businessman.\n\nBarack Obama has been enjoying his newfound freedom on Sir Richard Branson's private island\n\nThe airline mogul said he invited the Obamas \"for a complete break\" on his private island after they left the White House.\n\nNot every president wants a sunshine stay after the West Wing doors swing shut, however.\n\nSo which leaders picked elephant hunting, marrying a relative, and a sideline in oil painting...?\n\nWhen the 43rd president left office in January 2009, he ditched Washington for a quiet life between a house in Dallas, Texas, and his 1,500-acre Prairie Chapel Ranch.\n\nKeen to enjoy his retirement, the sexagenarian took weekly painting lessons. His subjects included Russian President Vladimir Putin, Tony Blair, and the Dalai Lama - as well as his pets.\n\nHis inspiration was his great hero Sir Winston Churchill, who turned to art in his forties as a refuge from the tumult of politics.\n\n\"When I get to heaven I mean to spend a considerable portion of my first million years in painting, and so get to the bottom of the subject,\" the wartime leader reportedly said.\n\nMr Bush was less patient, telling his art teacher: \"There is a Rembrandt trapped in this body. And your job is to find it.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. George W Bush said he could only paint these portraits because he got know the leaders so intimately\n\nDespite being nicknamed 'Teddy' and famously refusing to shoot a bear, the 26th president took a year-long African hunting trip with his son, Kermit, in 1909.\n\nThe duo were accompanied by more than 200 porters, and scientists from the Smithsonian Institution.\n\nThey made their way round Africa dispatching over 11,000 animals - including elephants, rhinos, hippos, snakes, zebra, and monkeys among others - before shipping the carcasses home for scientific study.\n\nAnother exotic trip followed for Mr Roosevelt (and Kermit) in late 1913, when they joined Brazil's most famous explorer Candido Rondon to chart the course of the River of Doubt.\n\nThe 760km (472 mile) stretch was ultimately renamed Roosevelt River in his honour.\n\nTheodore Roosevelt visited Africa and South America when his presidency was over\n\nThe aforementioned Teddy Roosevelt had no time for Benjamin Harrison, president from 1889-93, branding him \"a cold-blooded, narrow-minded, prejudiced, obstinate, timid old psalm-singing Indianapolis politician\".\n\nBut none of that stopped the 23rd president from wedding a woman 25 years his junior, who also happened to be his niece by marriage.\n\nMr Harrison's first wife, Caroline, had died of tuberculosis in 1892.\n\nWhen he wed Mary Dimmick four years later, his two adult children refused to attend the ceremony.\n\nBenjamin Harrison, the 23rd US president, married his widowed niece\n\nAmerica's first president lived only two years after leaving the job - and spent them making whiskey.\n\nIn 1799, the year of his death, his distillery in Mount Vernon, Virginia, produced nearly 11,000 gallons - making it the largest in the US at the time.\n\nAlso a livestock farmer, the founding father used leftovers from the whiskey-making to fatten his pigs.\n\nAs for the distillery - it's still going, selling its golden product to tourists at the Mount Vernon Estate and museum.\n\nThe distillery at Mount Vernon is still churning out single malts", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nRussia will miss this summer's World Championships after athletics' governing body voted to extend their suspension from international competition for state-sponsored doping.\n\nHowever, some Russians may be able to compete under a neutral banner, if they can satisfy testing criteria.\n\nRussia was suspended by the IAAF in November 2015, meaning athletes missed the Rio Olympics last year.\n\nThe country is now not expected to be fully reinstated until November.\n\nLondon will host the World Championships between 4-13 August.\n\nThe decision to extend Russia's suspension came at an IAAF Council meeting in Monaco on Monday.\n\nIndependent chairman of the IAAF Taskforce, Rune Andersen, told the council that the Russian Track and Field Federation (Rusaf) was unlikely to be reinstated until the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) declared the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (Rusada) code-compliant, probably in November.\n\nHowever, the taskforce said concerns still exist about drug-testing procedures in Russia.\n\nMore than 1,000 Russian athletes were part of a state-sponsored doping programme between 2011 and 2015, according to the McLaren report, commissioned by Wada and published in December.\n\nAthletes who can follow strict IAAF criteria and show they are clean may be allowed to compete - but not under a Russian flag. The IAAF said so far this year, 35 Russians had applied to compete as neutrals.\n\nAt the meeting, IAAF president Lord Coe also said that all nationality switches by athletes would be frozen.\n\nHe said the current rules were \"no longer fit for purpose\" and new proposals would be written up.\n\nAndersen said that there is still limited testing of Russian track and field at a national level and there continued to be \"troubling incidents\", although the situation is improving.\n\nHowever, he said that in January 2017:\n• None Five athletes had withdrawn from a national competition after hearing that drug testing would be taking place;\n• None Bottles being shipped to foreign laboratories for testing were opened and screened in at least one case;\n• None Russian authorities have refused to release samples that have been screened in Moscow so the IAAF can test them further;\n• None Testers are still being denied access to 'closed cities' - military facilities where some athletes train.\n\n\"Our priority is to return clean athletes to competition but we must all have confidence in the process,\" said Briton Coe.\n\n\"Clean Russian athletes have been badly let down by their national system. We must ensure they are protected and that those safeguards give confidence to the rest of the world that there is a level playing field of competition when Russians return.\"\n\nHow can Russia compete again?\n\nThe IAAF has put together a \"roadmap\" that Russia must follow before athletes can once again take part in international competition. It includes:\n• None Russia providing an \"appropriate official response\" addressing points raised in the McLaren report;\n• None Drug testing being \"carried out without any further adverse incidents or difficulties\";\n• None Rusada being reinstated as \"a truly autonomous, independent and properly resourced national anti-doping organisation\".\n\nAthletes are now banned from changing nationalities following a proposal by Coe, who said athletics was \"vulnerable\" to the practice.\n\n\"It has become abundantly clear with regular multiple transfers of athletes, especially from Africa, that the present rules are no longer fit for purpose,\" he said.\n\nThe IAAF Council was told African talent was effectively being put up for sale to different nations.\n\nHamad Kalkaba Malboum, Africa area group representative on the IAAF Council, said: \"The present situation is wrong. What we have is a wholesale market for African talent open to the highest bidder.\n\n\"Lots of the individual athletes concerned, many of whom are transferred at a young age, do not understand that they are forfeiting their nationality.\"\n\nAt December's European Cross Country Championships, the top two finishers in both the senior men's and women's races were Kenya-born athletes representing Turkey.", "The US president's spokesman has caused a bit of a Twitter storm by claiming Mr Trump does not own a bathrobe.\n\nWhite House Press Secretary Sean Spicer accused the New York Times of printing inaccuracies, specifically referring to him watching TV in his bathrobe, saying the paper owed President Trump an apology.\n\nThe president has tweeted his annoyance at what he calls poor reporting: \"The failing @nytimes was forced to apologise to its subscribers for the poor reporting it did on my election win. Now they are worse!\"\n\nUnsurprisingly, people have taken to social media to contradict Mr Spicer's bathrobe comment with various hashtags popping up, including #BathRobeGate.\n\nSome have even been delving into the presidential bathrobe archives to produce gems such as this from Avi Bueno.\n\nHe tweeted a photo of Ronald Reagan in a robe, with the caption: 'Weird to see @seanspicer and @realDonaldTrump getting all defensive about a #bathrobe when their hero wasn't shy about it.\"\n\nAnd historian Michael Beschloss tweeted a picture of President Lyndon B Johnson sitting in a robe with advisers on Air Force One in 1966.\n\nJohn Aravosis, editor of @AMERICAblog, was quick to post three photos of Donald Trump wearing a bathrobe, which had featured in a November Daily Mail article about a trove of Trump memorabilia being found in a US thrift shop.\n\nConsidering the Trump Organisation lists 37 properties, including 15 hotels, on its website, many posters are assuming that a bathrobe or two may have been worn in the Trump household.\n\nVarious robes bearing the Trump brand have been posted on social media, including this picture of American actor Mike Rowe.\n\nHe tweeted a photo in August 2016 of a bathrobe autographed by Mr Trump, along with a video in which Mike says he wore the robe \"briefly\".\n\nThere were a few robe-wearing alternatives, such as Evie the Cat, the UK Cabinet Office feline who posted this about the 10 Downing Street cat, Larry.\n\nAnd with a clever bit of editing, some have posted gifs of the president holding up a drawing of a bathrobe.\n\nEven @TrumpBathrobe, a twitter account set up in 2015 and inactive since September 2016, has reawakened amidst this robing furore.\n\nSimilar posts are appearing on Facebook under #bathrobegate, although not everyone is impressed:", "David Hockney has told the BBC he's \"not that good, but not that terrible either\", as the Tate Britain puts on the biggest ever retrospective of the artist's work.\n\nHe spoke to the BBC's arts editor Will Gompertz.", "Among Grassani's subjects were a large group of Central Americans, walking hundreds of miles from homes in Guatemala and Honduras to the US:\n\n“They were very strong at the beginning, walking like crazy. I spent four days with them – day by day you could see them getting tired because they had no food, nothing with them.”", "Albert Morton is looking for someone to carry out the mole catching when he retires\n\nAn experienced mole catcher is looking for an apprentice willing to take up the traditional trade so he can retire.\n\nAlbert Morton, 69, from Sowerby Bridge, West Yorkshire, started his business in 1963 and is one of the few remaining mole catchers in the area.\n\nMr Morton said: \"I'd much prefer to get somebody and teach them how to do it, so it carries on.\"\n\nHe said the mechanical spring traps he used were the most humane way of killing the moles.\n\nMr Morton, who works in the areas around Halifax, Sowerby Bridge and Hebden Bridge in Calderdale, said the job would suit someone who liked fresh air.\n\nHe said mole catching was \"just one of those old country crafts and I don't want it to die out\".\n\n\"If there was any suffering or cruelty I wouldn't do it.\"\n\nHe has more than 300 customers ranging from farmers to golf course owners.\n\nMr Morton said the job would suit people who like fresh air\n\n\"This year it has gone manic but now I'm getting near to my sell-by-date\", he said\n\nHe started to learn the trade in the 1960s when Mr Morton's father suggested he should help the then mole catcher who was looking to pass his skills on.\n\nMole hills are caused as the mole, which spends most of its time underground, burrows towards the surface and can cause damage to grassed areas.\n\nThey are particularly prevalent in damp conditions as worms come to the surface and are followed by the moles looking to feed on them.\n\nCorrection 10 February: This story originally said Mr Morton was the last mole catcher in the area, which is now not believed to be the case.", "Alastair Cook never had it easy. He's had the toughest ride of all recent England captains.\n\nAs England's highest Test run-scorer he has always been admired for his batting, but there have always been questions, particularly over his tactics, during his 59-match reign as skipper, which he ended on Monday.\n\nIn a funny way, the constant criticism forced him to improve, to reflect on the things he had not done well and to try new things. I put this to him once and he laughed it off, but I still disagree.\n\nHe has been stubborn - an excellent quality for an opening batsman, not always ideal in a captain - and largely cautious, which is hardly surprising considering his mentor was predecessor Andrew Strauss, another skipper that favoured the attritional approach.\n\nThe most difficult time for Cook was in 2014, which began with the Ashes whitewash down under, moved on to the Kevin Pietersen saga and was followed by a home series defeat by Sri Lanka.\n\nHe found a measure of redemption in the subsequent victory over the touring India side, but the year still ended with him being sacked as one-day captain.\n\nTo this day, he thinks that was the wrong decision, but he is in a minority. He was no longer worth his place in the side and he had to go. It also may have aided England's bid to regain the Ashes in 2015, which few at the time gave them much hope of doing. That success, to go with Cook's 2013 Ashes win as skipper is a highlight of his reign. So too, the triumph in South Africa in 2015-16 and the historic win in India in 2012, England's first there in 27 years. Time will prove what a good result that was - England are miles away from doing it again.\n\nBut there were also the disappointments. As well as the thumping in Australia and the loss to Sri Lanka, there was a defeat by India at Lord's on a made-to-order green seamer and a 1-1 draw away to a poor West Indies team.\n\nCook's winning percentage of 40.67 is only the fourth best of the six captains to have led England in more than 40 Tests. The two skippers with a worse record, Michael Atherton and Nasser Hussain, did not have the world-class talents of Pietersen, Graeme Swann, James Anderson and Stuart Broad, or the emerging Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Jonny Bairstow at their disposal. It has been an up-and-down ride.\n\nWill Cook be defined by the way in which Pietersen's international career was ended? The two men will inevitably always be linked, but that would be to ignore the fact that Cook welcomed Pietersen back into the England side when many captains in his position could have quite easily taken the opposite stance.\n\nWhen Cook took over in 2012, Pietersen was in exile for his part in text messages sent to the South Africa team about former skipper Strauss. Cook oversaw Pietersen's 'reintegration' and the star batsman responded, playing a pivotal role in that triumph in India.\n\nBut, as we now know, the relationship deteriorated on the fateful tour of Australia a year later, with Cook eventually having a hand in Pietersen's international career being ended.\n\nSome will say that there was nothing that Cook could have done, others will think that the captain should have seen those problems approaching and done more to manage them.\n\nWhat is unarguable is that the vitriol that Cook faced on social media from certain individuals in the aftermath of the Pietersen affair was nasty, personal and uncalled for.\n\nViews were expressed, most of them by people who do not know Cook. Lots of them were depressing.\n\nIndeed, it could be said that he was the first man to serve as England captain in a world that has been fully gripped by social media - though Cook himself has no interest in putting his views out online or anywhere else.\n\nAt the time, I thought he was getting some very rough treatment over the Pietersen issue and I was happy to say so publicly. Maybe because he saw me as an ally, we have always had a very good working relationship during his time as captain.\n\nI have interviewed him well in excess of 100 times and can say that he is not a natural speaker. He sees media responsibilities as something to be endured rather than enjoyed.\n\nThere have been times when we have agreed, others when we have disagreed and when I have criticised him. The task of being honest about a player, but fair enough that they will still speak when you put a microphone under their nose, is a tightrope a sports journalist must walk.\n\nWe have also had our moments of fun.\n\nJust on this last tour of India, I was cajoled into having a pedicure by an Indian barber. Who should walk in, but Cook, complete with camera. He took great delight in showing the photo to everyone he could find, as well as making sure he got it out to the world. I let him enjoy that one.\n\nAnd so he departs. For Cook, the nature of the end of his tenure as captain very much reflects the type of man he is.\n\nThere was no chucking it all in at the end of the fifth Test against India, a shambles in Chennai. That's not his style. Like his batting, he was patient, he weighed it all up and considered his options. He went back to his farm and away from cricket, he no doubt had many conversations with his wife Alice. They really are a team and it was Alice who talked Cook out of stepping down in 2014.\n\nThis, though, is different. The extended period of time taken to mull over his future shows that Cook has made the right decision for him.\n\nHe will be incredibly comfortable with what lies ahead. That is likely to be scoring many more runs for England.", "A fare dodger who attacked a rail ticket inspector has been jailed for 15 weeks.\n\nBritish Transport Police has released video of Elliot Nash ranting at a female train worker before kicking and lashing out at her colleague on a London Midland service.\n\nThe 32-year-old, from Northfield, Birmingham, verbally abused three members of rail staff and threatened to knock them out while travelling between Bournville and Northfield in November.\n\nFootage from one ticket officer's body-worn camera shows Nash repeatedly swearing and taking a running kick at a staff member in the train's aisle.\n\nPolice identified Nash from the footage, arresting him at his home just two hours later.\n\nHe was later charged with assault and two public order offences. He pleaded guilty at Birmingham Magistrates' Court.\n\nPC Nicola Mallaber said: \"As the footage shows, his attitude is completely unacceptable and there was absolutely no need for this to have escalated into violence - all for the sake of a £2.20 fare.\"", "Donald Trump is, by sheer force of character, destroying the mainstream media as we know it.\n\nHis relentless barrage of abuse, not least about \"fake news\", has fatally undermined the trust of the American people in their traditional sources of news; and by denying the Washington press corps access to his administration, he has neutralised a key weapon in the armoury of political journalism.\n\nMeanwhile, his use of social media, talk radio and favoured alt-right websites has allowed him to communicate directly to voters, rendering journalists an irrelevant distraction.\n\nAnd the Spicer Doctrine - the belief held by the White House press secretary that it is the job of government to hold media to account and not just the other way round - poses a mortal threat to the trade we call reporting.\n\nAny combination of the above paragraphs could appear, without much contention, in almost every appraisal of Trump's relationship with the media that I have read in the past year.\n\nThat it has limited basis in reality, and indeed is contradicted by the vast bulk of available evidence, has been no impediment to its ubiquity.\n\nIn fact, contrary to the prevailing orthodoxy, Donald Trump is not the man who will kill the mainstream media. He is the man who could save it.\n\nMichael Loccisano/Getty Images for The New York Ti Mark Thompson, of the New York Times Company, has seen revenues rise\n\nTogether with Dominic Hurst, a brilliant producer, I have been looking at Mr Trump's relationship with the media for Radio 4's PM programme. The evidence is emphatic: Trump has given many news organisations the sustainable commercial future they so desperately crave.\n\nThe New York Times, one of Mr Trump's favourite voodoo dolls, which he has repeatedly admonished on Twitter and in rallies, is doing very well out of the new president. In the three weeks after his election, it sold 132,000 digital subscriptions - a tenfold increase.\n\nThat's a lot of revenue with which to fund serious journalism. I spoke to Mark Thompson, the paper's chief executive and a former director general of the BBC.\n\nHe told me that the president's actions and words \"are causing hundreds of thousands of Americans who've never paid for news before to pay for it for the first time\".\n\nAnd he added: \"It's not a political point, it's purely a commercial point: the Trump era seems to be a very good era for quality journalism.\"\n\nCNN, the other organisation that Mr Trump has repeatedly labelled as fake news, also has plenty to thank the president for. Thanks to him, 2016 was CNN's most watched year.\n\nAs for news websites like BuzzFeed News, the Guardian, Mail Online, the Independent and others, Trump has generated phenomenal traffic - which in turn boosts revenues.\n\nTwo points about Mr Trump's benefit to the mainstream media strike me. The first is that it applies to different platforms and different business models.\n\n2016 brought more viewers than ever to CNN\n\nThe New York Times is a newspaper and website with a semi-permeable paywall - the so-called free premium, or freemium model. The Independent has a low cost base and is funded by a huge range of advertising revenue streams. CNN is a cable news network. All are thriving just now.\n\nSecond, Mr Trump has doubtless fortified the differences between the commercial and editorial departments of outlets such as these three. Take the New York Times.\n\nColumnists and leader writers on that gloriously high-minded body, the editorial board, are writing about how awful Mr Trump is, a threat to the republic, an American Putin, these are the end days, and so forth.\n\nMeanwhile, Mark Thompson is rubbing his hands with glee - not necessarily at the policies of the president, but at the ambient glow of his bottom line.\n\nThroughout my journalistic career, there have been serious questions about how journalism is funded.\n\nThere is no one or easy answer to that. But based on the evidence above, a very good answer has two words - \"Donald\", and \"Trump\". This brash reality TV star has caused no end of discomfort for the mainstream media.\n\nBut perhaps what should really make them squirm in their lofty op-ed conferences is the fact that he is doing more than any other modern politician to help them pay their mortgages and feed their families.\n\nListen to my piece on PM, BBC Radio 4 at 17:00 GMT on Monday, 6 February or later via BBC iPlayer.", "Last updated on .From the section Disability Sport\n\nSeven-time Paralympic swimming champion Sascha Kindred has announced his retirement after a 23-year international career.\n\nThe 39-year-old has been one of the leading figures in the sport since he made his international debut in 1994.\n\nLast year, he won gold in the SM6 200m individual medley at the Rio Paralympics - his sixth Games.\n\n\"The physical and mental demands to be an elite athlete are becoming too much,\" he admitted.\n\nKindred, who has cerebral palsy which affects the right side of his body, had his funding cut after Rio when he was left off the British Swimming 2017 podium programme.\n\nBut he later won an appeal and had it reinstated.\n\n\"Knowing when to stop a career is a very hard decision to make especially when it's part of your life, but stopping with Paralympic gold and a world record is very pleasing,\" he said.\n\n\"From learning to swim at 11 and making my major championship debut at 16 at the inaugural World Championships in Malta, I never dreamt of being an international swimmer for more than two decades.\n\n\"I have witnessed Para-sport going from strength to strength and enjoyed being a part of that growth representing GB.\n\n\"Finishing with 62 major championship medals and being Paralympic champion seven times is something I'm very proud of.\"\n\nNational performance director Chris Furber says it has been a privilege to work with Kindred since he took up his role four years ago.\n\n\"Sascha's contribution to not just Para-swimming but Paralympic sport over the last 20 years has been phenomenal and I think something we are unlikely to see surpassed,\" he said.\n\n\"He has been a fabulous ambassador for British Swimming and ParalympicsGB and I very much hope he remains in sport.\"\n\nSascha Kindred's experience and wisdom will be sorely missed from the Great Britain Para-swimming team.\n\nThe 'old man' of the British swimming team, last year he marvelled at how he had only learned to swim when he was 11 and now in Rio he had team-mates like 13-year-old Abby Kane competing at the elite level at a young age.\n\nFind out how to get into swimming with our inclusive guide.\n\nHis victory at the Rio Aquatics Centre was one of the most emotional moments of the Games, after he had been disqualified after the heats and then subsequently reinstated to the final.\n\nAt the age of 38 and despite the aches and pains, he dug deep to ensure his Paralympic career finished on a high with a world record and a gold medal.\n\nThe Manchester United fan will enjoy spending more time with his biggest fans, wife Nyree (herself a former GB Para-swimmer) and daughter Ella, and hopefully go on to inspire another generation of Para-swimmers.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nFootball Association chairman Greg Clarke says he will quit if the organisation cannot win government support for its reform plans.\n\nA motion of no confidence in the FA is to be debated in the House of Commons on Thursday after five former FA executives said the governing body had failed to \"self-reform\".\n\nClarke \"strongly disputes\" the motion, but accepts FA governance must change.\n\n\"I don't believe that the FA is failing football,\" he said.\n\nClarke said the FA had a set of proposals \"to improve our governance\", which it would ratify and then take to sports minister Tracey Crouch for her approval.\n\n\"Delivering real change is my responsibility and I firmly believe this is critical for the future of the game,\" Clarke added.\n\n\"If the government is not supportive of the changes when they are presented in the coming months, I will take personal responsibility for that.\n\n\"I will have failed. I will be accountable for that failure and would in due course step down from my role.\"\n\nWhat will happen on Thursday?\n\nThe Commons Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee is leading an inquiry into football governance and as part of that, committee members have secured a debate in the Commons to ask whether the FA can \"comply fully with its duties\".\n\nThey will also discuss whether reform is impossible within the FA's structure, and whether new laws should be proposed.\n\nBut Clarke said the FA was \"not sitting idly by\", adding: \"Change won't be easy, but I am confident it will happen - and it will be substantial.\"\n\nHe says the governing body needs to:\n• None Be more open about decision-making;\n• None Better represent those playing the game.\n\nIn July, Crouch said the FA would lose its £30m to £40m of public funding if it did not reform.\n\nThen, in December, she announced the government would bring in legislation to force through reforms if the governing body did not make changes itself.\n\nSelect committee chairman Damian Collins MP revealed on Friday that the FA had been given six months to meet the government guidance on best practice for sports governance but had failed to do so.\n\nHowever, Clarke said he hoped those attending the debate were aware of \"the FA's duties and the great work we are actually doing\".\n\n\"Many people hear talk of an old-fashioned FA, but they don't actually realise how it works or what it does. That's a real shame,\" he said.\n\nClarke said the FA was \"supporting the game from top to bottom\" and:\n• None It was investing record amounts into the grassroots game and changing the face of football in England.\n• None It had invested over £65m into grassroots football last year - more than any governing body in the world invests into a national sport.\n• None It was adapting to flexible formats of the game, with 12 million people playing every year.\n• None It had a plan in place to double its number of female players by 2020.\n• None It provided £22m every year for desperately needed new playing facilities.\n\nWhisper it... but could change within the FA's corridors of power finally happen?\n\nThe debate around governance reform has been going on for decades. Despite that, not a lot has changed since the FA was founded in the mid-19th Century.\n\nGreg Clarke has upped the stakes though. He will resign as chairman if he fails to deliver.\n\nIt's a noble gesture but one which speaks to the confidence he clearly has in achieving some form of modernisation and gaining government approval.\n\nBut his statement goes further, and Clarke clearly has the MPs who are staging Thursday's debate in his sights.\n\nAs I reflected last week, there's growing indignation within Wembley over continually being called a failing organisation.\n\nThere's a recognition that work needs to be done to increase diversity and to change a board structure whose members have been criticised for representing vested interests.\n\nBut, as Clarke reflects, the FA's view is that it is very much meeting its role as a governing body.\n\nTo that extent the statement is indicative of a leadership team determined to fight back against its critics and an attempt to recalibrate opinion, given their belief in the positive role the FA plays in promoting and protecting football.", "In its distribution warehouse in Hampshire, swarms of robots collect groceries.\n\nThe BBC had a look at some of the robotics the firm is working on.", "According to some predictions, robots will go on to replace people in a third of UK jobs by 2030.\n\nSo should we be worried by the rise of the machines?", "The NHS has come under intense pressure this winter, with record numbers of patients facing long waits in accident and emergency units among other challenges.\n\nWe asked some of those who have fallen ill, and the families of others, to share their experiences of winter 2016-17.\n\nSue's father's life changed dramatically after he fell out of bed while in hospital in December 2016.\n\nBryan, 84, had been admitted to hospital near their house in Cornwall for a hip operation.\n\nSue says she was not told about his fall for several days, eventually she was told he would not walk again and possibly had only six months left to live.\n\n\"I am devastated - six weeks ago everything was fine, now this is not the world I imagined I'd be in.\n\n\"In December he was walking into town, doing gardening, he loved mechanics and tinkering.\n\n\"Now in hospital his mental health has really deteriorated, he does not speak and strips naked in public.\n\n\"I blame the trauma of the fall and the time he's been forced to spend in hospital.\n\n\"I'm really on edge, I feel like I'm about to fall off a cliff.\n\n\"I break down in tears at least once a day.\n\n\"He's had his life taken away too soon.\n\n\"Are we saying that because he's too complicated, our society can't care for him?\n\n\"It seems like such a big fight to just find out from the hospital what is going on.\n\n\"I just hope to God that he doesn't understand what is happening to him.\n\n\"I feel like he'll never come home again, he seems lost to us.\"\n\nJohn Perrins was on the M6 motorway, driving home from Cambridge, when he realised he was having a heart attack.\n\nAn ambulance driver himself, he had feared he would never see his wife again - so intense was the pain. But a paramedic saved his life at the side of the road.\n\n\"I was vomiting and felt like a horse was kicking me in the chest.\n\n\"My wife called an ambulance, which arrived within 10 minutes - seeing the blue lights was the most wonderful thing I've ever seen.\n\n\"I passed out, but apparently they performed three lots of heart massage - 90 compressions.\n\n\"When I came round they spoke to me and, although I was scared, the way that the paramedic spoke to me made me feel safe.\n\n\"A friend who is a paramedic came to see me and he told me that the last six heart attack patients he worked on had died - I felt so lucky that I had this particular ambulance crew.\n\n\"They have given me my life back.\n\n\"The paramedic was treating me, teaching a trainee and looking after my wife in the ambulance - I could not have asked for a better person.\n\n\"I am trying to find out the names of the ambulance crew - I want to find them so I can say thank you.\"\n\nTrevor, 58, says that the NHS has treated his diabetes and depression \"brilliantly\"\n\nTrevor Dallimore-Wright says his local GP and hospital are \"like a family\" to him, regularly providing life-saving care for his complex health conditions.\n\n\"The NHS has been absolutely brilliant,\" says Trevor, from London, who has diabetes and depression.\n\n\"My GP keeps me sane and out of hospital - I would give her 10 out of 10.\n\n\"I've had emergency admittance twice recently with sepsis - I went to A&E and was treated very quickly.\n\n\"They've had a great impact on my life.\n\n\"NHS treatment has helped me during the times that I could not get out of bed.\n\n\"My GP is extremely kind and patient. They are so patient-centred, I would put them in the luxury bracket.\n\n\"All the hospital staff are extraordinarily friendly.\n\n\"They are there despite the infrastructure problems in the NHS, and the care could not be better.\n\n\"From the moment I walk in, I know I'm being looked after.\n\n\"My only problem is that the NHS won't pay for immunotherapy drugs which are at the front line of treatment but are expensive.\"\n\nNikki, 36, had her scheduled operation cancelled twice and she is still waiting\n\nThirty six-year-old Nikki Alldis' satisfaction levels are at the other end of the spectrum, however, despite also living London. She says she has waited 15 months for a bowel operation, which has been twice cancelled.\n\nWhen the procedure was scheduled for early January, she mentally prepared her young children and rearranged her work. But Nikki has twice received a last-minute call telling her there is no bed space.\n\n\"I'd prepared mentally - I planned my whole Christmas around the operation and recovery. I prepared frozen dinners for my kids, they are seven and 13, and I said a farewell goodbye.\n\n\"Then in the morning the nurse called me and said, 'We have no bed for you.'\n\n\"I was gutted. The kids were so confused when they came home and I was still there.\n\n\"I've been waiting for 15 months now - it's hanging over me.\n\n\"I did not believe the second appointment would happen, but I packed my bags anyway.\n\n\"We didn't even bother to rearrange my husband's work that time, if he's not working we're not earning, so we can't afford these cancellations.\n\n\"I put things in place with my work for people to cover me.\n\n\"I'm still waiting, hopefully it's third time lucky.\"\n\nWhen 29-year-old Paul was feeling suicidal in January, the NHS crisis care team in west London gave him 24-hour care to keep him safe.\n\nHe has received treatment for bipolar disorder for four years and says his consultant and crisis team are outstanding.\n\n\"They helped me in my darkest and most depressive hours,\" says Paul, who asked for his surname not to be revealed.\n\n\"I came back home after New Year and went back to day-to-day life, but it kicked off a hefty depression and I was left feeling really low and suicidal.\n\n\"My partner called the crisis team, and they came to our house three or four times a day.\n\n\"They come at 02:00 or 03:00, they are really responsive.\n\n\"I don't feel like they are just doing their jobs, they have genuine care for me.\n\n\"They take away my medication to make sure I will not overdose and when they visit, they make me take the medication.\n\n\"Sometimes they just spend time with me.\n\n\"They ask how I am, what did you eat and sometimes they make me do things like go and buy some milk, which I don't always feel able to do.\n\n\"I would not be alive without them.\n\n\"But one problem I have with NHS mental health care is that they medicate but do not do counselling, there is a massive waiting list, so now I have to get counselling privately.\"\n\n\"Before she was diagnosed with cancer, my mum could run a marathon,\" says Richard Taylor, 55 from Liverpool.\n\nHe was devastated after watching her \"undignified\" death last month.\n\nThe local cancer centre did not have the capacity to give her end-of-life care.\n\n\"After she received the second diagnosis, she was sent home and we got caught in a communication loop between three hospitals. It was an emotional rollercoaster.\n\n\"Eventually I had to take her to A&E - she could not eat or drink.\n\n\"She spent 13 hours on a trolley, behind a curtain in a noisy and busy ward.\n\n\"I stayed on a chair beside her and slept on the floor - she died a week later.\n\n\"My gripe is with the lack of communication and the delays in my mum's treatment.\n\n\"The nursing staff were fantastic, but there is only so much they can do - they could not give my mum 24-hour attention.\n\n\"She was a very proud and dignified woman - but in the end she was simply scared to be alone.\n\n\"It was awful watching someone die in this extremely undignified way.\n\n\"If she was an animal, they would have put her down - she was starving and dehydrated.\n\n\"The nurses were lovely and compassionate, but they offered me no support.\n\n\"The NHS is a great thing, but it is under the hammer.\"\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.", "Last updated on .From the section Sport\n\nWomen's Sport Week will be \"a fantastic campaign\" and \"encourage more women to try a new sport\", says minister for sport Tracey Crouch.\n\nThe initiative returns from 19-25 June ahead of a busy summer of elite sport which includes the cricket and rugby World Cups in the UK and Ireland.\n\nThe European Football Championship starts in July in the Netherlands.\n\nThe campaign will encourage the public to watch, listen, volunteer and take part in sporting activities.\n\nCrouch added: \"We want more women and girls to get involved in sport and enjoy the huge benefits that being active brings to their lives.\"\n• None Read: How Judy Murray is boosting women's tennis in the UK\n\nShelley Alexander, editorial lead for women's sport for BBC Sport, said: \"We'll devote even more resources to showcasing the best of women's sport across television, radio and online this year.\n\n\"We'll also examine the pertinent issues across women's sport, with our original journalism interrogating the state of play of women and girls' sport from the grassroots to the elite.\"", "The comedian who pretended to be a \"rapping rabbi\" on Britain's Got Talent has told 5 live he thought Simon Cowell would be amused by his stunt.\n\nSimon Brodkin told 5 live's Afternoon Edition: \"I thought Simon Cowell would have a sense of humour about it and would find the whole thing funny\", but he has been told he is \"pretty furious\" about the prank.\n\nBrodkin, known for his comedy character Lee Nelson, has carried out similar stunts on President Trump, Sir Phillip Green and Sepp Blatter.\n\nBrodkin reveals how he does his stunts in a Channel 4 documentary called Britain's Greatest Hoaxer.", "Mark Hepburn and his partner Laura bought a house with a 5% deposit\n\nOwning a home by the age of 25 has become an unachievable dream for many over the last two decades.\n\nSoaring property prices mean just one in five 25-year-olds own a property, compared to nearly half two decades ago, according to one recent study.\n\nBut as the government unveils its Housing White Paper, there are some young people who have managed to buck the trend - without help from the bank of mum and dad.\n\nHere four young homeowners - all couples - who bought properties in 2016 - reveal just how they did it.\n\nLives with: Partner Laura Starkie, age 25. An accountant on £20,000 a year\n\nDeposit: £6,250 (5%) with the Help to Buy mortgage scheme (which ended in December)\n\nWe were sick of living at home with each of our parents and wanted our own space. I'd rather live in a house than just a bedroom. We discussed moving out and renting, but we both agreed it was dead money.\n\nThere was a lot of budgeting. I literally know where every penny goes. I had to drill it into Laura a little bit, but she got used to it after a while. Like her make-up - she had to go for a cheaper brand. We were both working at McDonald's when we were saving and if there were extra shifts, we would take them.\n\nMark and Laura say they had to change their lifestyle in order to save money to buy their home\n\nDid you make any sacrifices?\n\nThere was definitely a lifestyle change when we were saving. We would buy supermarket budget stuff instead of brands. We didn't go on holiday during the time we were saving up - and that was a massive thing for Laura.\n\nHow does it feel to be a home owner?\n\nI feel ridiculously happy. I feel proud and our friends are too because they know we worked extremely hard for it. Once you get there, you don't need to worry as much.\n\nWhat if you need to move?\n\nI recently went for a job in Bolton, which is not that close to where we are now. The salary was £27,000 per year, but I wouldn't move house for that. It would have to be significantly higher to consider jobs away from where we are now.\n\nMark says you need to watch your money if you want to save up to buy a home\n\nI can't count how many times our friends have asked us how we've done it. We just explain you need to save, watch your money and cut back. They're happy for us and we are just trying to get it into them not to leave it too long and to start saving.\n\nShould more young people be able to buy a home?\n\nI have got mixed opinions. When Laura and I were at McDonald's we were on a combined salary of £23,000 and we managed to save up £7,000 between us within a year. So I don't see how people can't do it. But then we don't have any kids. The Help to Buy mortgage scheme was a God-send. But if you're stopping something that's so good and helping young people, it's going to cause mayhem.\n\nName: Ruby Willard, age 22. A recruitment consultant on £19,000 a year plus commission\n\nDeposit: £18,220 (10%) with the Help to Buy Isa\n\nIt was a case of living at home. I moved back into the box room of my mum's house and I hated it. Sam lived with his parents too so we thought if we can, let's do it - so we decided to save and go for it. We were looking at renting but to us it was like throwing away money.\n\nBeing quite tight is probably the answer. When we decided we were going to buy, I thought I'm not going to spend money elsewhere when I don't need to. We did still have a nice holiday to Greece. I get commission and Sam gets overtime so we probably earn £55,000 overall, which meant we were in a position we could borrow maybe more than people on minimum wage.\n\nDid you make any sacrifices?\n\nWe may have not had such a big social life. We still did things, but we were conscious. What I did was save what I knew I needed to save, and lived on whatever I had left - which was usually about £200 a month. I wasn't buying lunch at work, which would save about £25 a week.\n\nHow does it feel to be a home owner?\n\nIt was weird at first. When we got the keys it was like \"are we on holiday?\" When things started to come together it felt like such an achievement. Everything we had chosen not to do, not going to the cinema one night, helped towards it.\n\nWhat if you need to move?\n\nWe would be open to the idea, but we would probably look for work closer to where we bought a house, so it probably would affect future decisions. If we did decide we wanted to go somewhere else, we would probably look to sell the house and hopefully we will have made some money on it.\n\nIt's been quite positive. I have got friends that have bought houses, but a lot of them have had big lump sums of money given to them.\n\nShould more young people be able to buy a home?\n\nNeither of us completed three years at university, so we probably established a career path earlier than those that do go. I speak to a lot of people that have graduated, and they cannot find jobs that will allow them to borrow enough. It takes years to save a deposit, and then house prices go up and they can't borrow enough. I think this is how it is now.\n\nThe couple have been told they are \"adulting hard\" because they have bought a home\n\nHouse price: £145,000 for a two-storey terraced house with two bedrooms\n\nDeposit: £21,750 (15%) with the Help to Buy Isa\n\nWe decided we wanted to get on the property ladder as quickly as possible. If we get on it now, we would be able to buy what we want by the time we are older and looking to have a family.\n\nWe started saving at the beginning of 2015 and were probably saving between £400 and £500 a month each. We did go on a couple of holidays, so although we've been saving, we've still been living. We weren't scrimping, but we do only spend about £30 a week on food. We check receipts and look for the best deals, so that is more thrifty than most people.\n\nAndrew and his partner saved around £400 a month each for their deposit\n\nDid you make any sacrifices?\n\nWe spoke about going away for three weeks to somewhere like Australia, but we thought - it's going to cost £2,000 each and we can put that towards the house now rather than waiting a few extra months.\n\nHow does it feel to be a home owner?\n\nIt feels strange. It does feel like quite a lot of responsibility - I didn't realise how much. Things like taking out mortgage protection. Our friends call it \"adulting hard\". They're renting and not really thinking about owning a place and they're like \"wow, you've bought a house\".\n\nLots of people think it's really good, other people say they're nowhere near that stage. I don't know if they're thinking I'm growing up too fast. It's generally been positive. I don't know anyone who has done it without a partner, so I think it would be difficult to do it on your own.\n\nAndrew and Kirsty bought their home with a 15% deposit\n\nWhat if you need to move?\n\nWith a big move we might give it a trial, and rent out this house while we lived somewhere else.\n\nShould more young people be able to buy a home?\n\nI do think people complain they can't afford to buy a house but they go out every weekend, they smoke or they eat out all the time. But property prices have also shot up in the last 20 years with more people buying second homes. There are also people who don't want to have the responsibility. I think it's good that the government is helping with Help to Buy schemes and it needs to do more to help first-time buyers.\n\nRebecca bought a three-bedroom home with her boyfriend Adam in Irlam, Greater Manchester\n\nName: Rebecca Thompson, aged 23. An information analyst on £21,900 a year.\n\nDeposit: £6,300 (5%) with the Help to Buy mortgage scheme and Isa\n\nWe lived in a rental flat together for 18 months and realised that the amount we were paying in rent was more or less the same as we would be paying with a mortgage. When we were renting there were a lot of things we couldn't do, like decorate or move anything around.\n\nIt was difficult. I was working part-time in my final year at university so I saved my entire wage and lived off my student loan, which wasn't much. We didn't go on holiday that year and saved as much as we could.\n\nDid you make any sacrifices?\n\nWe came straight from university, where you're living on a bit of a shoe-string anyway, so we probably sacrificed but not realised, because we've not been enjoying the extra income we've had since graduating. We would have probably gone on some more holidays or gone out more and probably bought a few more clothes.\n\nHow does it feel to be a home owner?\n\nIt's brilliant. I feel it's a really secure base while I'm going on to develop my career. It's one less thing. A lot of people are aiming towards saving a deposit while I've got past it.\n\nWhat if you need to move?\n\nIt would be really difficult, and it's definitely an attraction for staying where I am. In my career there are a lot of opportunities down south, but I wouldn't want to entertain it because of the house prices. It would take us five times longer to save up a deposit, and the amount of income you need to get for a mortgage is totally unobtainable for the average graduate.\n\nRebecca says there needs to be more affordable housing\n\nSome live in a more expensive area and I think they were surprised. It's not something that's on a lot of people's radar, owning a home at this age. Particularly if you're not in a relationship, I don't think it is affordable.\n\nShould more young people be able to buy a home?\n\nI think cultures have changed a bit. When my parents were growing up, their parents drilled into them 'sort yourself a house, get married and that's when your life begins'. Now there's not as much of an emphasis. I think homes do need to be more affordable. It's silly that the town where we live in, a lot people can afford to buy - whereas only as far south as Birmingham no-one can afford to buy a house earning what we do.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "BBC Breakfast presenter Dan Walker was left red-faced after getting a reporter's name wrong.\n\nClick on the video to hear what he called him.", "If BP group chief executive Bob Dudley was paid £14m for delivering a $6.5bn (£5.3bn)* loss last year, what on earth will he get paid for delivering a profit in 2017?\n\nThe answer to this will shed a lot of light on the politically current and intense debate around executive pay.\n\nA year ago, Mr Dudley became the unwilling poster boy for angry shareholders when, at the BP annual general meeting, 59% of shareholders voted against his £14m pay award.\n\nHe got the money anyway because the vote was not binding, so the board did not have to do what the owners of the company wanted.\n\nUnder rules introduced by the coalition government and championed by then Business Secretary Vince Cable, shareholders can only reject a pay packet or the formula by which it is calculated every three years. That measure gave them more control than they had previously enjoyed but it clearly did not work or go far enough.\n\nRemember, the formula by which Mr Dudley's pay was calculated in 2016 was approved by 95% of shareholders in 2014. Two years later they did not like the answer that formula spat out.\n\nIn defence of Mr Dudley, it was not his fault that BP's Deepwater Horizon platform exploded in 2010 killing 11 people and pumping millions of barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico (that was on the watch of his predecessor Tony Hayward).\n\nThe explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig led to an environmental disaster\n\nIt was not his fault that the price of oil in 2015 came crashing down from more than $100 (£81) a barrel to around $30 (£24) during that year. Given the hand he was dealt, goes the argument, he did a pretty good job.\n\nSome of the arguments will be the same this year. It is not his fault that he had to put another $7bn (£5.7bn) in the Deepwater kitty, but it is also not to his credit that the oil price rebounded to its current price of $56 (£45).\n\nThe chairman of BP's pay committee, Dame Ann Dowling, came in for a lot of stick for not using more discretion in adjusting the final pay award down last year and I understand that she has met with dozens of shareholder groups to avoid the same howls of protest this time around.\n\nThis April's vote on 2016 pay will also be non-binding but there will be a binding vote on the formula used to calculate pay packets for the next three years. It would take a particularly tin ear for BP to settle on a formula that finds it at such odds with its shareholders in the future.\n\nMany executives are rewarded with a formula that takes a large account of relative performance. Doing badly - but less badly than the competition - means you did well. Even though the company lost money - you can often take home a hefty bonus.\n\nThe merits of this approach will be hotly debated this year as around half the companies in the FTSE 100 have binding votes on executive pay formulas. That will add real edge to a debate that has already been politically sharpened by Theresa May's warnings to corporate Britain over the rocketing disparity between bosses and workers' pay.\n\nWe are expecting new proposals on changing the manner, and in whose interests, UK companies are run when the government publishes its green paper on corporate governance in March.\n\nI have presented the economic arguments as to why high performance-related pay is actually bad for companies and the economy here before. In short, it can prioritise cost cutting over investment which damages productivity and ultimately living standards. They are arguments that are gaining currency in Whitehall and it is not only shareholders who are disgruntled.\n\nIt may be only February, but this year's shareholder spring promises to be a belter.\n\n*the headline loss of $6.5bn includes the compensation paid for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. The number reported in our news story excludes one-off items to give a better sense of the underlying economics of the company.", "This year's Oscars \"class photo\" has been released - and as usual there are several quirks and questionable outfits.\n\nThe picture sees 163 of this year's nominees gathered together and smiling away, but zoom in and there is a whole lot more going on.\n\nHere are just seven of the things we spotted in this year's photo.\n\n1. Pharrell Williams didn't exactly dress for the occasion\n\nAll of this year's male nominees are dressed smartly in tuxes and suits. Well, almost all.\n\nThe \"dress code\" memo must have gone into Pharrell's junk email inbox, because he turned up wearing a green baseball cap and grey sweater.\n\nTo be fair - the sweater does have the Nasa logo on it, a reference to best picture nominee Hidden Figures.\n\nPharrell wrote several songs for the soundtrack to the film, which tells the story of three African-American women who worked behind the scenes at the space agency in the 1960s.\n\nCasey Affleck's facial hair is fast becoming the eighth wonder of the world. It gets longer with every awards ceremony he appears at this season.\n\nIt's now on the verge of totally eclipsing poor Michelle Williams, Affleck's co-star in Manchester by the Sea, who has to peep out from behind his mane.\n\nShe must be getting used to Affleck stealing her limelight.\n\nThe actor appears in nearly every scene in the 137-minute movie, while Williams's screen time clocks in at 11 minutes.\n\n3. The writer of Moonlight wants you to know how many nominations it has\n\nTarell Alvin McCraney brightens up the back row of the photograph with his winning smile.\n\nHe's the man behind the stage play In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue - which went on to become Moonlight, one of this year's most hotly-tipped Oscars contenders.\n\nMcCraney is so pleased with the film's success he wants to let you know just how many Oscar nominations the film has received, and he is seen here holding up eight fingers.\n\nAlso - hats off to Shawn Levy (who's standing next to Tarell), who wins the award for the most delightfully bright smile of the whole photo. He is the producer of Arrival, which is nominated for best picture.\n\n4. Justin Timberlake needs to sack his tailor\n\n\"Hmmm, I don't have enough material for that. Have a 28-inch pair of trousers instead.\"\n\n5. The front row is so where we wanna be\n\nEmma Stone, Matt Damon, Natalie Portman, Octavia Spencer are all sitting together in the front row.\n\nCan someone please organise for us to join this BFF group, that'd be great, thanks.\n\nExtra respect for Octavia Spencer for wearing a pair of white trousers while so many of the other female nominees are in a dress or skirt, and for Natalie Portman, who looks like she's wearing high heels even while pregnant with twins.\n\nAlso - Manchester by the Sea producer Kimberly Steward (far right) is that sweet kid in your class who was accidentally never looking at the camera in the school photo every single year.\n\n6. Ryan Gosling needs to cheer up\n\nYou're the lead actor in the jointly most-nominated film of all time, pal. Uncross your arms for goodness sake.\n\nSlightly happier to be there is the lovely Dev Patel, in the row in front, looking every inch the Hollywood star.\n\nHe's come a long way from how he looked at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2009 when he was starring in Slumdog Millionaire.\n\nHe told the BBC: \"I first came to Toronto in my school shoes and I had a blazer and I was with Frida [Pinto, his co-star] and they said 'You can't put this guy next to her because he looks so terrible'. I think I got a free penguin suit that didn't quite fit me and they gave me shoes.\"\n\nThis year, he's nominated for best supporting actor and is seen wearing a burgundy Valentino suit. Nice.\n\n7. Is this gap for Meryl Streep?\n\nMissing nominees from the photo include Michael Shannon (nominated for best supporting actor for Nocturnal Animals) and Andrew Garfield (best actor, Hacksaw Ridge).\n\nBut of course, the most notable absentee is Her Royal Acting Highness, Meryl Streep - who is up for best actress this year for her role in Florence Foster Jenkins.\n\nMaybe this gap in the back row behind Denzel Washington was intended for her, and she got held up in traffic.\n\nAlternatively, perhaps she's been to so many of these things she's just had enough. Either way, we're pretty sure she'll be at the ceremony.\n\nThis year's Oscars, which will be hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, will take place in Hollywood, Los Angeles on 26 February.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCanada's Denis Shapovalov has been fined $7,000 (£5,600) after hitting an umpire in the eye with a ball.\n\nThe 17-year-old was trailing Great Britain's Kyle Edmund 6-3 6-4 2-1 when he struck the ball in anger and hit Arnaud Gabas - and defaulted the match.\n\nHe must pay $2,000 for the default and $5,000 for unsportsmanlike conduct, escaping the maximum $12,000 penalty as it was not deemed intentional.\n\nThe International Tennis Federation has said no further action is anticipated.\n\nThe Davis Cup World Group first-round tie in Ottawa was poised at 2-2 after Vasek Pospisil beat Dan Evans to set up a decider, but Canada's hopes ended when Shapovalov was disqualified after letting frustration get the better of him.\n\nHe later apologised to Frenchman Gabas in the match referee's office before the umpire went to Ottawa General Hospital as a precaution.\n\nNo damage to the cornea or retina was found and Gabas will see an eye doctor in France on Tuesday for a further examination.\n\nShapovalov, who had just dropped serve when the incident happened, said he feels \"incredibly ashamed and embarrassed\".\n\n\"I just feel awful for letting my team down, for letting my country down, for acting in a way that I would never want to act,\" he added.\n\n\"I can promise that's the last time I will do anything like that. I'm going to learn from this and try to move past it.\"\n\nShapovalov was full of remorse and handled himself very impressively in the hour after his disqualification. He is only 17, and should be allowed to put this behind him.\n\nBut - given the ferocity with which he hit the ball away - this appears a lenient response from the ITF.\n\nBy way of comparison: Heather Watson was fined $12,000 and Serena Williams $10,000 for smashing racquets into Wimbledon's turf last year. Yes, they are both much more experienced than Shapovalov - but the consequences in Ottawa were potentially far greater.\n\nI wonder if chair umpires around the world feel their employers are doing all they can to protect them?", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nBritish markets are seen as a microcosm of the city or town in which they are based, encapsulating the diversity of communities and skills a place has to offer. But with some being sold off due to their prime locations and others fighting for their existence amid the rise of discount supermarkets and online retailers, will generations to come be able to enjoy them?\n\nKirkgate Market has been selling food and goods to the people of Leeds for more than 150 years.\n\nThe winner of \"Britain's Favourite Market\" for the second year in a row, the cavernous hall at the south of the city centre remains popular. But it is not immune to the need to adapt to changing trends.\n\nAmong the 170 stall-holders, optimism for the future is mixed with serious concern about dropping footfall and the rising costs of renting floor space.\n\nNear an entrance to the 1904 hall, with its glass roof and cast-iron balcony, sits North African and Middle Eastern food vendor Cafe Moor.\n\nOwner Kada Bendaha set up his stand after a life-changing breakfast in the bustle of London's Borough Market and its speciality food stands.\n\n\"The beauty of a market is you have that one-to-one contact, you build that relationship with your fishmonger or butcher,\" he said.\n\n\"If you go to the fish section, there's a gentleman there who has been there for 38 years, you go and ask him about a particular fish, he knows the business inside out.\n\n\"Go to a supermarket and you will have a student who is just working part time there, it's not the same.\"\n\nDating back to 1857, Kirkgate has become one of the largest indoor markets in Europe, selling fish, meat, fruit and vegetables, clothes, jewellery, haberdashery, flowers and hardware.\n\nThe booming voice of a butcher offering the day's best prices still echoes down its walkways, although e-cigarette stands and racks of iPhone covers tick off some modern requirements.\n\nIt has been a turbulent time for the Leeds City Council-run market over the past couple of years, with temporary walls and scaffolding becoming a familiar sight during a £13.7m renovation.\n\nDespite the council reducing rents during this period, stall-holders have complained of regulars becoming put off and heading elsewhere.\n\nMonthly footfall at Kirkgate dropped significantly from 718,000 in 2014 to 628,000 in 2015, but the number rose again to 699,000 in 2016.\n\nLeslie Burwell, of Whitaker's Farmhouse Eggs, has worked in the market for 25 years in total.\n\nShe said: \"It used to be heaving, you couldn't move for people down the aisles, there was an atmosphere with people shouting.\n\n\"They've taken all of the shops out of one section and made a big wide open space - they have spent millions of pounds and have nothing to show for it.\"\n\nKashif Ali Raja, who recently took over Spice Corner, said he was positive despite widespread change.\n\nHe said: \"When you start a business, you have to work really hard. There's early mornings, working late.\n\n\"We sell seeds, fresh vegetables, things which are very difficult to find in Leeds, this is the only place you can get it.\n\n\"I don't think recent changes have made any difference, because the regular customers are the same, they will always come.\"\n\nThe outdoor section of Kirkgate, with its fruit stalls, luggage-sellers and flea market, is where Michael Marks opened his Penny Bazaar, leading to the founding of Marks & Spencer in 1890.\n\nThe patch now sits a stone's throw away from the newly-opened 42,000 sq m Victoria Gate complex, a £165m retail development featuring a flagship John Lewis store.\n\nLeeds City Council wants the market to be able to take advantage of the expected increase in shoppers in the area, but not everyone feels it will make a difference.\n\nJulie Carr has worked in the outdoor section for 35 years and now sells second-hand toys and collectables at her stall.\n\nShe said: \"The new John Lewis has made no difference to us, I don't think their customers and ours are connected at all.\n\n\"My theory is in 20 years there will be no shops, no markets, everything will be online and people will say 'I remember when we used to go to the market' - and they've gone.\"\n\nThe market's 1976 Hall has seen the most significant change, with the space transformed into a brightly-coloured communal seating area, where established \"street food\" traders have decided to set up permanently.\n\nA rotating schedule of craft fairs, live music and kids' entertainment is used to draw people in, with long tables encouraging those new to the market to get chatting to those who have been regulars for decades.\n\nOne of the new food traders is the Yorkshire Wrap Company, selling hot meals wrapped up in a Yorkshire pudding.\n\nMichael Pratt, who runs the stall, said: \"First impressions are good, word of mouth seems to be getting out about the new food hall area.\n\n\"It's bringing a lot of different faces into the market, people who maybe wouldn't have usually come here.\"\n\nHe added: \"Markets give a sense of community and the ability to get everything under one roof, great produce for great prices. I think they're going from strength to strength.\"\n\nDown in the basement of the top end of the market, Brian Bettison has been providing haircuts since 1982. He said rents for stalls had gone \"up and up and up\".\n\nHe said: \"They've had numerous different ways of doing it through the years, it was measured on square footage, it was zoned into the most desirable areas.\n\n\"Everyone now has different agreements with the markets, nobody will let you know, they will keep it to themselves.\"\n\nWhat do the shoppers think?\n\nClose to where the indoor market meets the outdoor section, Cheryl Murtheh has been selling cosmetics for 16 years.\n\nShe said: \"They're giving cheaper rent to newcomers coming in, but they should lower the rents of people who have been here a long time.\n\n\"What happens to the people who have been keeping you going for years, shouldn't they be entitled to something as well?\"\n\nAccording to the National Association of British Market Authorities, from 2009 to 2016 the number of market traders in the UK dropped from approximately 55,000 to 32,000.\n\nThe recession has been highlighted as a key reason for this, although there is some evidence the sector as a whole has started to turn a corner.\n\nThe National Market Traders Federation (NMTF) said traditional retail markets currently have a collective annual turnover of £2.7bn, with the figure increasing by £200m year on year since 2013.\n\nLike Kirkgate, several markets across the UK are adapting to modern trends to cater for younger shoppers.\n\nMany have introduced hot food areas, improved their branding, have extended opening hours and provided free wi-fi.\n\nJoe Harrison, chief executive of the NMTF, said: \"It's easy to follow trends, but five years down the line you may realise you've got nothing.\n\n\"They need to make sure careful steps are taken to keep them popular with the next generation, but it needs to have that social value, dealing with every demographic rather than focusing on one specific thing as it's currently the most economically viable.\"\n\nLeeds City Council said visitor numbers were now \"on the up\" since the refurbishment, with the number of vacant units \"also reduced significantly\".\n\nA spokeswoman said: \"We recognise that there is still some way to go but we are very optimistic that more and more visitors will continue to discover the traditional charm combined with the new modern areas that Kirkgate has to offer.\"\n\nClearly the market has reached a key moment in its history, with bold decisions about the site's future use being made.\n\nWhile serving up mint teas and chicken shawarmas to lunchtime customers at his food stand, Mr Bendaha said: \"This is not just a full-time job, it's a lifestyle and it's a big part of the city.\n\n\"Hopefully it will never die.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "One of the world's leading political scientists believes Donald Trump most likely won the US presidential election for a very simple reason, writes Hannah Sander - his name came first on the ballot in some critical swing states.\n\nJon Krosnick has spent 30 years studying how voters choose one candidate rather than another, and says that \"at least two\" US presidents won their elections because their names were listed first on the ballot, in states where the margin of victory was narrow.\n\nAt first sight Krosnick's idea might seem to make little sense. Are voters really so easily swayed?\n\n\"Most of the people that voted Republican were always going to vote Republican and most of the people that voted Democrat were always going to vote Democrat,\" says James Tilley, professor of politics at the University of Oxford.\n\n\"There is a human tendency to lean towards the first name listed on the ballot,\" says Krosnick, a politics professor at Stanford University. \"And that has caused increases on average of about three percentage points for candidates, across lots of races and states and years.\"\n\nIt has the biggest impact on those who know the least about the election they are voting in.\n\nYou are more likely to be affected, Krosnick says, \"if you are feeling uninformed and yet feel obligated to cast a vote - or if you are feeling deeply conflicted, say between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.\"\n\nWhen an election is very close the effect can be decisive, Krosnick says - and in some US states, such as Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, the 2016 election was very close.\n\nA ballot paper used in the 2016 presidential election in Wisconsin\n\n\"In the states where Trump won very narrowly, his name was also listed first on the ballot in most of those states,\" says Krosnick.\n\nSome always list parties in the same order. Some allow the state's officials to make a new choice each time. Some put the party that lost in the last election at the top of the ballot. Some list alphabetically.\n\nIn 2002, a court overturned the result of the mayoral election in the Californian city of Compton, after hearing testimony about the name-order effect. The judge decided that in this instance, the decision to list one of the candidates first had been deliberate and unfair.\n\n\"Candidates whose last names begin with letters picked near the end of the lottery have it tough,\" Krosnick explained during the Compton court case. \"They will never get the advantage that comes from being listed first on the ballot.\"\n\nThere are numerous cases where the primacy effect is thought to have influenced the result of an vote.\n\nIn January 2008, Hillary Clinton unexpectedly beat Barack Obama in the New Hampshire primary - part of the long battle to decide which of them would become the Democratic Party's presidential candidate. Professor Michael Traugott from the University of Michigan believes that name order enabled Clinton to pick up extra votes. Her name was at the top of a long list. Obama's was near the end.\n\nThe primacy effect can also affect polling.\n\nThe exit poll from the 2004 US presidential election led pundits on the night to believe that Democratic Party candidate John Kerry would win, when in fact he went on to lose to incumbent president George W Bush. The poll had listed Democrat candidate Kerry before Republican candidate Bush.\n\nWhat can be done to prevent the primacy effect? One option is to randomise the ballot papers. The states of California and Ohio have both adopted this system. An equal number of ballot papers is issued with a different candidate at the top of the list. This spreads the benefit of the name-order effect across the candidates.\n\nIn 1996, Bill Clinton received 4% more votes in the regions of California that listed him first in the ballot papers than in those where he featured lower down the list.\n\nResearch by Robert Darcy of Oklahoma State University shows that, given the choice, most election officials tend to list their own party's candidates first.\n\nIn one famous example of this, Florida's rules meant that Republican governor Jeb Bush's brother George W Bush was placed at the top of the list of candidates in his state, in the 2000 presidential election.\n\nBush went on to win Florida - which turned out to be a decisive state - by a very narrow margin.\n\nGeorge Bush was listed first in Florida in 2000 - the \"butterfly ballot\" used in Palm Beach (pictured) also led to arguments in court\n\n\"Because of the fact that different states in the US order candidate names differently and idiosyncratically, and almost none of the states do what Ohio and California do which is to rotate candidate name order across ballots to be fair, we have unfortunately had at least two recent election outcomes that are the result of bias in the name ordering,\" says Krosnick.\n\n\"If all of those states had rotated name order fairly, most likely George W Bush would not have been elected president in 2000, nor would Donald Trump have been elected president in 2016.\"\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "It's got all the markings of a John Le Carre novel: the killing of the North Korean leader's brother with one of the deadliest chemical weapons created by man. But who by? And why? Many questions remain unanswered.\n\nHere's a look back at how the killing unfolded, the details that emerged, and the subsequent accusations and diplomatic row.\n\nHe was waiting at a budget departure hall inside Kuala Lumpur international airport when the attack happened. Leaked CCTV footage would later show the 45-year-old man loitering in the budget terminal, a rucksack slung over his shoulder, ahead of his return flight to the Chinese territory of Macau at 10:00.\n\nSuddenly a woman in a long-sleeve white top approaches him from behind. Her hands grab his face, before she walks away. It's not clear if she uses a cloth or her bare hands to touch his face.\n\nThe attack is over in a matter of seconds.\n\nCCTV footage appears to show a woman accosting Mr Kim in the airport\n\nThe man reportedly told airport staff that \"someone had grabbed him from behind and splashed a liquid on his face\".\n\nHe sought medical help at the airport, but later died en route to hospital.\n\nA day later, he was confirmed to be Kim Jong-nam, the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.\n\nReports on the attack first start to emerge in South Korean media, who name the man as Kim Jong-nam - it's not until two days later that Malaysia confirms his identity.\n\nTo complicate matters, he was travelling on a passport under the name Kim Chol. It was not the first time Mr Kim had travelled under an assumed identity: he was caught trying to enter Japan using a false passport in 2001. He told officials he had been planning to visit Tokyo Disneyland.\n\nMany believe it was this incident that led to his father's decision to pass him over for leadership, forcing him to live a life in exile. During a time of estrangement from his family, Mr Kim became one of the regime's highest-profile critics.\n\nTheories abound that North Korea might have been involved in his murder - what some are already calling an assassination - despite a lack of proof.\n\nSouth Korea was one of the first to point the finger at its northern neighbour.\n\nMalaysian authorities begin the autopsy, ignoring demands from North Korea to send the body back for investigation.\n\nMeanwhile, the first person suspected of involvement in the attack is arrested: a 28-year-old Vietnamese woman named Doan Thi Huong. Police say she was identified from CCTV footage taken at the airport, where she was seen wearing a white top emblazoned with the letters \"LOL\".\n\nThis CCTV image has been broadcast by South Korean and Malaysian media\n\nFour days after the airport attack, Malaysia's deputy prime minister officially confirms the dead man is Kim Jong-nam.\n\nAnother female suspect, Siti Aisyah, a 25-year-old Indonesian, is named and arrested. Her Malaysian boyfriend, Muhammad Farid Jalaluddin, is briefly questioned by police.\n\nEvents take a bizarre turn when Siti Aisyah tells police she thought she was taking part in a bizarre TV prank with Mr Kim.\n\nIndonesia's most senior policeman, Tito Karnavian, said Ms Aisyah and Doan Thi Huong had performed the prank on other men - persuading them to close their eyes before spraying them with water.\n\nSiti Aisyah was the second suspect to be named\n\n\"She was not aware that it was an assassination attempt by alleged foreign agents,\" Mr Karnavian told reporters.\n\nTensions between Malaysia and North Korea also start to simmer after North Korea's ambassador to the country says Pyongyang will reject the results of the autopsy - he does not trust the inquiry, he says.\n\nMalaysia also refuses to hand over the body until it receives a DNA sample from Mr Kim's next-of-kin.\n\nMalaysian police arrest the first North Korean person over Mr Kim's death - a 46-year-old man called Ri Jong Chol.\n\nA day later, Malaysian police widen their search to include four more suspects, all men from North Korea.\n\nThey are named as: Ri Ji Hyon, 33; Hong Song Hac, 34; O Jong Gil, 55, and Ri Jae Nam, 57.\n\nTwo of the suspects wanted by Malaysian police: Hong Song Hac, 34, and Ri Ji Hyon, 33\n\nThe deputy police chief said the men had left Malaysia on 13 February, the day Mr Kim was killed, after arriving on different days within the previous fortnight.\n\nInternational police agency Interpol are later requested to issue an alert for the suspects.\n\nAt the same time, South Korea explicitly states it believes its northern neighbour was behind the killing of Kim Jong-nam.\n\nTensions between North Korea and Malaysia threaten to turn into a full-blown diplomatic row as the latter recalls its ambassador from the North Korean capital Pyongyang and summons the North Korean ambassador \"to seek an explanation\".\n\nFuji TV airs grainy CCTV footage of the attack for the first time. The lady with the white top emblazoned with the letters \"LOL\" is seen lunging at Kim Jong-nam.\n\nMalaysian authorities say they are unable to formally identify the body because no family member has come forward. Security is high at the Kuala Lumpur mortuary, amid widespread speculation Mr Kim's son, Kim Han-sol, might travel to Malaysia.\n\nMalaysia and North Korea continue to trade harsh words as the situation escalates.\n\nA senior North Korean embassy official is named as one of two men wanted in connection with the killing as the investigation widens.\n\nThe men are Hyon Kwang Song, 44, the second secretary of the North Korean embassy in Kuala Lumpur and Kim Uk II, 37, who works for North Korean airliner Air Koryo.\n\nMalaysian police also confirm Mr Kim died after two women wiped a toxin on his face while he was waiting for his flight to Macau.\n\nNorth Korea appears to blame Kim Jong-nam's death on Malaysia, without actually naming him.\n\nThe state news agency KCNA said only that \"a citizen of the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea]\" travelling on a diplomatic passport had died due to \"a heart stroke\".\n\nReports of poisoning were false, it said, slamming Malaysia for holding an autopsy without North Korea's permission.\n\nIt is the first time North Korean state media have referred to Mr Kim's killing.\n\nOne of the deadliest chemical weapons created by man is confirmed by Malaysia to have been the nerve agent that killed Kim Jong-nam.\n\nJust a small drop of VX, which is classified as a weapon of mass destruction by the United Nations, can kill a person within minutes.\n\nOne of the woman who attacked Mr Kim suffered symptoms of vomiting, which Malaysian officials say was probably due to exposure to the agent.\n\nWeapons expert Bruce Bennett says a small quantity of VX was likely to have been put on cloths used by the attackers to touch his face, with a separate spray possibly used as a diversion.\n\nMalaysian police chief Khalid Abu Bakar previously said the fact the woman who accosted Mr Kim immediately went to wash her hands showed she was \"very aware\" that she had been handling a toxin.\n\nIt would have begun affecting his nervous system immediately, causing first shaking and then death within minutes.\n\nVX is not available commercially, which experts say points to some kind of government involvement. There are a number of North Korean organisations capable of directing such an attack, including the exclusive Guard Command.", "Last updated on .From the section Scottish Rugby\n\nScotland secured their first Women's Six Nations win since 2010 as they recovered from two tries down to beat Wales.\n\nCarys Phillips' score was followed by a penalty try for the visitors, with Elinor Snowsill converting both.\n\nThe Scots responded with Lisa Thomson's converted try, and Rhona Lloyd crossing in the second half.\n\nLana Skeldon missed the conversion for Lloyd's try, but Sarah Law's late penalty gave the Scots victory.\n\nA shaky start by Wales allowed Scotland to camp in their 22 early on. However, the opening was plagued with unforced errors from both sides, one of which by Wales allowed Skeldon and Jemma Forsyth to gain a penalty but Law's attempt was wide.\n\nDyddgu Hywel and debutant Jasmine Joyce's use of wide spaces meant Scotland were soon on the back foot and from a driven maul off a line-out Wales captain Phillips touched down.\n\nThe Welsh then utilised a powerful scrum drive to force their penalty try and Snowsill added her second conversion.\n\nHowever, the tide started to turn when Law offloaded for Thomson to cross and scrum-half Law converted.\n\nThe try gave Scotland renewed impetus after the break, but Amy Evans, Hywells and Phillips all threatened to add to the Welsh advantage.\n\nA rolling maul applied more pressure to the hosts and only Jade Konkel's interception and burst forward allowed space for the Scots to breathe.\n\nAnd it was from Konkel's pass to Lloyd that the hosts were finally back in contention. The winger managed to soar over the line in the left corner for her third international try.\n\nThe closing stages were fiery and Thomson's powerful drive through the Welsh defence resulted in a scrum dangerously close to the line.\n\nWales managed to get the ball away and were safe, momentarily, but their inability to disrupt the Scottish line-out meant the hosts were back on the attack and Law held her nerve with the decisive kick after the visitors had been penalised for offside.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChelsea stretched their lead at the top of the Premier League table to 11 points after victory over battling Swansea City at Stamford Bridge.\n\nCesc Fabregas marked his 300th Premier League appearance by firing the Blues ahead, poking the ball through the legs of Jack Cork and into the net.\n\nThe hosts were stunned when Swansea equalised from their first serious attempt on target on the stroke of half-time - Fernando Llorente heading in Gylfi Sigurdsson's free-kick.\n\nFabregas hit the bar before Pedro's curling effort restored the lead and Diego Costa netted the third from close range.\n\nSwansea were denied a penalty when Cesar Azpilicueta handled inside the area at 1-1.\n• None 'Chelsea will take some stopping now' - 5 Live's Football Daily\n• None Reaction from Stamford Bridge and Saturday's other Premier League games\n\nThis was far from straightforward for Antonio Conte's side and had referee Neil Swarbrick awarded Swansea a penalty shortly before Pedro made it 2-1 then the outcome might have been different.\n\nHowever, in the end Chelsea's sweeping forward play earned them a 10th straight home Premier League win as they took another significant step towards a second title in three seasons.\n\nOn a weekend when the first major silverware of the season - the EFL Cup - is handed out at Wembley, the Blues look unstoppable. They have 63 points from 26 games - three more than at the same stage in 2014-15 when last crowned champions of England.\n\nFabregas could have ended the game with four goals on his return to the side.\n\nThe Spain midfielder had a goal-bound shot deflected behind shortly before he opened the scoring, was denied by former Arsenal team-mate Lukasz Fabianski and also rattled the bar.\n\nWith former Blues midfielder Frank Lampard watching on, Chelsea turned on the style.\n\nWhile it required an error from Fabianski to restore the lead, Eden Hazard's exquisite timing and pass for Costa to make it 3-1 was a delight.\n\nChelsea were forced to work hard for three points thanks to a well organised and energetic Swansea side and the Swans looked a shadow of the team that was bottom of the Premier League table five weeks ago.\n\nTheir four-point safety cushion at the start of the day is down to three, but boss Paul Clement will have been pleased with the way his side frustrated the runaway leaders for long spells.\n\nLlorente's equaliser shook Chelsea who were showing signs of frustration before Pedro made it 2-1.\n\nSwansea's next four games - Burnley (home), Hull City (away), Bournemouth (away) and Middlesbrough (home) - give them a chance to stay clear of the bottom three before they entertain Tottenham on 4 April.\n\n'It was a clear handball' - what they said\n\nChelsea manager Antonio Conte: \"We played very well, it was a good performance, and we created many chances to score. We conceded at the end of the first half, after the time was finished, so in this case there was a bit of luck, but we showed great character in the second half.\n\n\"We deserved a lot to win the game, now it's important to continue in this way.\"\n\nSwansea City boss Paul Clement: \"Any game we play and don't win we are disappointed. Chelsea are a very good side, they have fantastic quality and that was the difference. We didn't have a lot of chances but we came in at 1-1 for half-time and for long periods we defended really well.\n\n\"There was a big moment with the handball, I thought Cesar Azpilicueta handled it at 1-1, it's a clear handball. That gives you a chance to go 2-1 up but three minutes later you're 2-1 down with a soft goal. Based on chances they deserved to win, but there was big moment that didn't go our way, and who knows what might have happened.\"\n\nFormer England midfielder Jermaine Jenas: \"I don't think Swansea should have had a penalty as the distance from Gylfi Sigurdsson to Cesar Azpilicueta is too close and Azpilicueta's arm is already out. His hand is there because he's trying to stop Sigurdsson's run.\"\n\nEx-England captain Alan Shearer: \"I think it was a penalty. I think it was a deliberate movement of his hand towards the ball and I think Chelsea got away with one there. It could have been very different if the ref had given it.\n\n\"We've seen in recent weeks with Swansea that they made it very difficult for Liverpool at Anfield, they were unlucky to lose at Manchester City. They are very organised. The difference between Liverpool and City with this Chelsea side is the pace with which they go forward. That's why Cesc Fabregas was in the team today. He was brilliant. He's the one that started the goal off.\n\n\"It's topical that players are not working for mangers. The irony is last season we were sat here with a large bunch of these same Chelsea players - they weren't working for their manager and we know what happened. It's such a transformation now. We saw how brilliant they were with the ball but look at them now without it. The transformation from then to now is incredible.\"\n\nAnother assist for Sigurdsson - the stats\n• None No player has more assists in the Premier League this season than Gylfi Sigurdsson (nine, level with Kevin de Bruyne).\n• None Chelsea conceded in consecutive home league games for the first time under Antonio Conte.\n• None Swansea have conceded 26 goals in their past 10 Premier League away games, an average of 2.6 per game.\n• None Pedro has been directly involved in 10 goals in his past nine games for Chelsea in all competitions (seven goals, three assists).\n• None Fernando Llorente has scored nine goals in all competitions this season for Swansea, three with his head, three with his left foot and three with his right.\n\nChelsea have nine days to prepare for their next game away to West Ham United on Monday, 6 March (20:00 GMT). Swansea entertain Burnley on Saturday, 4 March (15:00 GMT).\n• None Attempt missed. Cesc Fàbregas (Chelsea) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Willian.\n• None Goal! Chelsea 3, Swansea City 1. Diego Costa (Chelsea) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Eden Hazard.\n• None Attempt missed. N'Golo Kanté (Chelsea) right footed shot from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Nemanja Matic.\n• None Leroy Fer (Swansea City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt saved. Gylfi Sigurdsson (Swansea City) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nWales captain Alun Wyn Jones wanted to kick for goal at a crucial stage of Saturday's 29-13 defeat by Scotland, but says his kickers said \"no\".\n\nWales opted to kick for the corner when trailing 16-13 in the 51st minute.\n\nThey were penalised at the ensuing line-out as Scotland recorded their first win over Wales since 2007.\n\n\"The kickers didn't want to so we just went for the corner,\" said 107-times capped Jones, who added he \"would have liked to\" have taken the points.\n\n\"We didn't do it, did we?\" he added.\n\n\"And I got done for blocking at the back of the lift then, but, yeah, I would have liked to have gone for the three (points).\"\n\nThe incident was more remarkable as Irish referee John Lacey could be heard saying a kick at goal had been indicated while Wales fly-half Dan Biggar could be heard asking Jones if he could kick for the corner.\n\nAfter the match Jones said the referee had not been involved.\n\nThe penalty was awarded on the Scotland 22-metre line close to the touchline, so would normally be considered well within the range of place kickers Leigh Halfpenny, who kicked eight points, and Biggar.\n\nWales led 13-9 at half-time, but failed to add to their tally after the break as Scotland scored 20 unanswered points.\n\nJones felt the momentum shift started before the interval when Halfpenny missed a chance to give Wales a 10-point lead and man of the match Finn Russell cut the gap to four points with the last kick of the half.\n\n\"At the tail end of the first half they took an opportunity and then into the second half, but we coughed up possession a little too easily,\" he said.\n\nJones said he wanted Wales to improve their discipline for their next game against Ireland on Friday, 10 March in Cardiff.\n\n\"We gave away one or two soft penalties and Scotland did a good job of disrupting us at the breakdown in the second half,\" he added.", "I have a theory that every US election since the turn of the millennium is driven by a new form of digital media.\n\nMoreover, the evolution of this media indicates a growing threat to the traditional role of reporters and editors.\n\nI should say at the outset that this theory, which grew out of conversations I had in Chicago when Barack Obama was elected in 2008, is certainly not mine alone.\n\nI've discussed it with many students and hacks, and the likes of Jim Rutenberg, author of the excellent Mediator column for the New York Times, have advanced similar positions - albeit with crucial differences.\n\nIn 2000, the internet itself was still relatively fresh to many of us, and perhaps the defining tool of that period, search engines aside, was email.\n\nEmail radically sped up the process by which politicians could directly reach millions of people, spreading campaign messages at virtually no cost, and keeping both allies and enemies abreast of their latest thinking.\n\nThe advent of email reduced the need to communicate to a mass market through the prism of journalistic scrutiny.\n\nIn 2004, weblogs, or blogs, initiated the fall of the opinion class. Of course, 13 years later, some columnists still get paid vast amounts to give us the benefit of their views.\n\nBut with blogs, a thousand opinionated flowers could bloom.\n\nThis gave more hard-line writers, who were further from the mainstream and therefore couldn't always be guaranteed a slot in conventional media, the chance to build their own fan bases. It also gave blogging politicians the chance to do the same.\n\nIn 2008, when I was in the Grant Park press pen as Mr Obama gave his victory speech, there was a unanimous feeling that his had been the most brilliant digital campaign in history.\n\nBarack Obama's 2008 campaign was hailed for innovative use of social media\n\nLed by David Plouffe and Jim Messina, Mr Obama's team harnessed the network effects of Facebook to reach tens of millions of supporters.\n\nThey drove donations using the power of peer to peer recommendation on social media.\n\nIn 2012, another social media phenomenon drove the news agenda: Twitter. Adored by journalists, not least because it is essentially a personalised news feed, Twitter radically sped up the news cycle, making it not so much \"rolling\" as relentless.\n\nWith instant rebuttals now open to politicians, and yet more opportunity to build a following and communicate directly to voters, Twitter became a key feature of President Obama's re-election.\n\nMany people, Rutenberg included, wondered aloud whether or not Snapchat would be the new media of last year's election.\n\nThe stunning growth of this social media company, currently embarked on its initial public offering, suggested a new portal for engaging with hundreds of millions of young people.\n\nHowever, the digital media that defined last year's election wasn't Snapchat, perhaps because young people don't vote in anything like the numbers that old people do, and partly because - save for a few social media superstars such as Michelle Obama - the political class hasn't really cottoned on to Snapchat yet.\n\nIn fact, the digital media that has suddenly come to the fore in US politics is fake news: the capacity of lies to go viral, spread maliciously by those with either a political or (much more common) financial motive.\n\nFacebook has woken up to the threat from fake news, as I have noted on this blog.\n\nDonald Trump has spoken out against fake news\n\nI reported last week on how Germany is leading the fight back against fake news, but there is no question that the phenomenon really came to prominence during Donald Trump's campaign against Hillary Clinton.\n\nSpread out as they are over a decade and a half, these digital media aren't of course the result of US politics; but in each case they have had an impact on the result of US elections.\n\nAnd if you put them next to each other - email; blogs; Facebook; Twitter; fake news - you begin to detect some patterns. These patterns don't bode well for the news industry.\n\nYou could argue that these media demand progressively shorter attention spans, but I think that's too crude.\n\nA more relevant pattern is the ever expanding number of people that can be reached, and the new ways to reach them. Facebook has nearly two billion users; Twitter over 300 million.\n\nThe world is becoming a giant, super-connected network. Politicians have more and more ways of touching the lives of voters.\n\nThe third (and to my mind most alarming) trend is that as digital media evolve, the role of journalists seems to diminish.\n\nTo the political campaigner, these digital media offer the chance to reach literally billions of people and encourage them to influence their peers and family - all without having to go through a pesky hack.\n\nMoreover, with fake news, the traditional role of the journalist, to verify truth and separate it from falsehood, is completely traduced in favour of sensationalism and viral energy.\n\nGeorge Orwell said the journalist's first task was to get a hearing\n\nOf course digital media offer journalists amazing opportunities. \"My initial concern\", wrote George Orwell in Why I Write, \"is to get a hearing.\"\n\nThese days journalists can get a hearing as never before. That's one reason why we are living in a new golden age of journalism.\n\nNevertheless, the reality we are confronting is that politicians are using digital tools to circumvent journalists, and reaching vast audiences without necessarily making the same demands on their attention and time that journalists of yore did.\n\nPerhaps 2020 will be the Snapchat election - a form of social media even more transitory than Twitter (it's full of videos, or \"snaps\", that quickly disappear).\n\nIn the era of fake news that is going to be our bridge to that election, redundancy will be a fact of life for some journalists: not just those who lose their job, but many of those who used to make a living out of being the intermediary between politics and the public.\n\nIn my view that just shows we need proper journalism more than ever. But then I'm biased.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nPatrick van Aanholt scored the winner for Crystal Palace, as they moved out of the Premier League relegation zone with victory over struggling Middlesbrough.\n\nPalace had the better of the first half and deservedly took the lead through the Dutchman's low drive from the edge of the box - his first goal since joining the club in the January transfer window.\n\nChasing the game in the second half, Boro's Cristhian Stuani struck an effort straight at Wayne Hennessey from inside the area, and Fabio sent a shot over the crossbar late on.\n\nThe Teessiders have now failed to win in their past nine league games and are 16th in the table, one point above the relegation zone and level on points with their opponents.\n\nThe victory for Palace also drops champions Leicester into the bottom three.\n\nSam Allardyce had won just once in eight games since taking over as Palace boss in December and questions were being asked about whether he had returned to football too soon after his embarrassing departure from the England job, or been affected by that experience.\n\nAllardyce has never been relegated from the top flight and told Football Focus before the game that the problems at Selhurst Park \"were a lot deeper than he had expected\".\n\nBut the Eagles collected a priceless win - their third at home this season - to boost their own survival hopes, while pushing managerless Leicester deeper into trouble.\n\nGoalkeeper Hennessey made four comfortable saves as he helped his side to just their second clean sheet of the campaign, but debutant Mamadou Sakho was a towering presence at the back.\n\nThe Frenchman, signed on loan from Liverpool in January, was making his first start of the season and in an assured performance, he won the ball back 11 times and made six clearances, which was more than any team-mate.\n\nAitor Karanka's side have won just four games all season, fewer than any other side in the division.\n\nTheir biggest problem is scoring goals, having found the net a mere 19 times in 26 games on their return to the Premier League, and this was their third consecutive league game without a goal.\n\nUruguayan Stuani, who has scored four of those 19, had their best opportunity to claim a point, but his angled shot from inside the area caused Hennessey no problems.\n\nStriker Rudy Gestede was signed from Aston Villa in the transfer window to boost their front line, but the £6m acquisition failed to make an impact after appearing as a half-time substitute.\n\nHaving lost against a relegation rival, Boro will be hoping to pick up maximum points against fellow strugglers Swansea, Hull and Bournemouth, who they face in their remaining 13 games.\n\n'Our approach was not the best'\n\nCrystal Palace manager Sam Allardyce: \"Selhurst Park was rocking today. It felt like they really enjoyed the commitment from the players and really got behind us.\n\n\"For me it was all about the quality in the first half we continued to pepper Middlesbrough's box with crosses and shots and it came to Patrick van Aanholt and he scored with his weaker foot.\n\n\"We need that sort of quality if we are going to stay up and he has proved himself with four goals this season now - three for Sunderland, one for us.\"\n\nCrystal Palace full-back Patrick Van Aanholt: \"I lost my granddad last week. I am very pleased to get the goal for him. Obviously I am very sad to lose him but I thank him a lot.\"\n\nMiddlesbrough manager Aitor Karanka: \"It difficult to lose but we have to keep going.\n\n\"This is not the first time I'm living this situation but the only thing I know is to keep working.\n\n\"The way we approached the game wasn't the best. I didn't need to say how important the game was to win - I think everyone knew.\"\n\nEx-England striker Alan Shearer: \"It was a performance that deserved three points. Other than the 10 minutes after half-time I thought they were the much better team throughout.\n\n\"They understood what each other's roles were, how they were going to play the game. They just did not hesitate at all to get balls into the box. They knew, I think, that they had to do that.\n\n\"That was their first thought - can we hit the big man, even if there's no bodies around him? Second half, that didn't change either. They thoroughly deserved the three points today and it was three massive points for them.\n\n\"We say the same thing every week about Boro - 19 goals, 26 games, they haven't won since mid-December, not won in nine. They're in a slump and they're in big trouble, I think.\"\n• None Palace ended their run of five home league defeats in a row, the longest such run by any team in the Premier League this season.\n• None Middlesbrough remain on the current longest winless run in the Premier League, failing to win any of their past nine games, drawing four and losing five.\n• None Sam Allardyce enjoyed his first win in his past 10 Premier League games against Middlesbrough (drawn six, lost three).\n• None Aitor Karanka's Boro side have scored a league-low 19 goals, while their top-flight games have produced a total of 47 goals, 12 fewer than any other team in the competition this season.\n• None Middlesbrough have failed to win on any of their past 13 Premier League visits to London (drawn four, lost nine), last winning in the capital at Fulham 2-1 in August 2007.\n• None Patrick van Aanholt is the first player this season to score for two clubs in the Premier League (excluding own-goals), also netting for Sunderland.\n• None Van Aanholt has scored eight goals in the Premier League since the start of last season - a joint-high for a defender (excluding penalties), with team-mate Scott Dann also netting eight.\n• None Yohan Cabaye registered a Premier League assist for the first time in his past 48 Premier League appearances (since 3 October 2015 against West Brom).\n\nCrystal Palace travel to West Brom next Saturday (kick-off 15:00 GMT), while Middlesbrough go to Stoke at the same time.\n• None Attempt missed. Andros Townsend (Crystal Palace) right footed shot from the right side of the box is close, but misses the top right corner. Assisted by Christian Benteke following a fast break.\n• None Attempt missed. Adlène Guédioura (Middlesbrough) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Assisted by Gastón Ramírez.\n• None Substitution, Crystal Palace. Jeffrey Schlupp replaces Patrick van Aanholt because of an injury.\n• None Attempt missed. Fabio (Middlesbrough) right footed shot from the right side of the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Rudy Gestede with a headed pass.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Patrick van Aanholt (Crystal Palace) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt missed. Ben Gibson (Middlesbrough) header from the left side of the six yard box misses to the left. Assisted by Fabio with a cross.\n• None Joel Ward (Crystal Palace) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho defends sacked Leicester City manager Claudio Ranieri and says he was let down by \"selfish\" players.\n\nWATCH MORE: Five things we'll miss about Claudio Ranieri", "A spirited second-half performance at Murrayfield earned Scotland their first Six Nations win over Wales since 2007.\n\nFor all their superior physicality in the first half, Wales led by only 13-9 at the interval, Liam Williams rounding off a slick move for their sole try.\n\nScotland were dominant thereafter, with Tommy Seymour and Tim Visser crossing the line and stand-off Finn Russell earning 19 points with his kicking.\n\nThe Scots' success ended Wales' run of four consecutive wins in Edinburgh.\n\nThe result put Vern Cotter's team top of the championship table before Ireland's 19-9 win over France saw the Scots drop back to second. For Wales, though, it was a second loss in three matches in this year's campaign.\n\nIt was compelling from the first whistle, a fire-cracker of a Test match, ferocious, error-strewn at times, but utterly fascinating all the way through.\n\nRussell and Halfpenny had traded penalties in the opening quarter before Wales made the first significant move.\n\nA free-kick at a scrum was tapped by the wonderful Rhys Webb, a whirling dervish at nine for the visitors. Wales' eye for the chance was quick and their execution was a delight. They came screaming across the field, Halfpenny putting Williams over in the left corner. Halfpenny then converted to put Wales precisely where they wanted to be - in the lead on the front foot.\n\nScotland then suffered another blow a minute later when John Hardie went off injured. Another injured body piled on top of the other injured bodies - Alasdair Dickinson and WP Nel, Sean Maitland and Duncan Taylor, Greig Laidlaw, their captain, and Josh Strauss, their principal back-row ball-carrier.\n\nTheir resilience, though, is astonishing. On came Hamish Watson, who was terrific as Scotland set sail. Russell made it 10-6 with the boot, before Halfpenny re-established the seven-point lead. It was the last time Wales troubled the scoreboard.\n\nEven before the break there were signs of the Scots stirring. Justin Tipuric had to pull off a fine tackle to keep Huw Jones out, but Russell at least gave them the consolation of three more points. A four-point game at the break. Scotland were a bit fortunate, but they kicked-on magnificently from there.\n\nSeymour's try electrified Murrayfield, Hogg's sweet delayed pass-and-give to Visser drew Halfpenny and created space for the Glasgow Warriors wing to go over. There was concern about obstruction earlier in the move but the try stood and so did the conversion after Russell's effort slapped off the inside of the post and obligingly fell over on the right side of the crossbar.\n\nWales came again through Webb, but Ali Price, wonderful on his first start, pulled off a try-saving tackle. The visitors quickly became ragged. They ran into blue walls, each error, each big hit stripping them of their belief.\n\nRussell eased Scotland further clear just short of the hour; 19-13. Wales responded and once again they were repelled. It was Webb again, darting in at the corner only to be put in touch, just, by Visser, arguably playing the game of his life for Scotland.\n\nThe Scots had more pressure to soak up, but soak it up they did. There was a desperate lack of invention in the Wales attacks, a predictability that Scotland absorbed before striking out themselves. And here, again, we saw the difference between the sides. Scotland had elan and skill and invention. Wales did not.\n\nVisser's score was a glorious illustration of it. Patience in the forwards through the phases and the ruthlessness when the chance arrived. Hogg's hands in delivering the try-scoring pass to the winger brought Murrayfield to its feet. Russell converted, then added another penalty and Scotland were home.\n\nTwenty unanswered points in the second half was a thunderous response from a Scottish team that can no longer be deemed improving or emerging. They've arrived. In the here and now, they are reborn.\n\nFor the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Scottish Rugby\n\nVern Cotter hailed his Scotland side's second-half display, in which a haul of 20 unanswered points secured a first victory over Wales since 2007.\n\nIn round three of the Six Nations, the Welsh had led 13-9 at the break.\n\nBut two tries, and 10 points from the boot of Finn Russell after the interval, paved the way to a 29-13 win.\n\n\"We realised we were watching them play rather than playing ourselves,\" Cotter said after Scotland's second win of the championship.\n\n\"I'm very proud of that response. The boys went out and started taking the game to the Welsh team.\n\n\"We were more assertive and organised in the second half. We applied pressure and got over the line with well-scored tries.\n\n\"It means we're still in the competition and we can get back to work on Monday and prepare for Twickenham.\"\n\nJohn Barclay, captaining Scotland from the back row, became only the fourth of 14 Scotland skippers in the Six Nations era to have tasted victory in his first game leading the team.\n\nThe 30-year-old, who took over from the injured Greig Laidlaw, was cautiously optimistic about Scotland's chances against England at Twickenham on 11 March.\n\nHe told BBC Sport: \"We won very well against Ireland (in round one), then we didn't play particularly well (against France). We wanted to get out of that cycle of having a good win, then not backing it up.\n\n\"The second half, to go out there, no panicking and play with control and accuracy - we recovered from a poor first half to go on and beat a very good Welsh side.\n\n\"We believe within the group that we can do something. We go to England for the next game. We'll have a look at them. If we play well, we can win.\n\n\"If we play like we did in Paris, if we play like we did in the first half (against Wales), then it becomes very difficult.\"\n\nEngland can re-take top spot in the Six Nations table from Ireland with victory over Italy on Sunday.\n\nNew Zealander Cotter has only two games remaining as Scotland head coach - the penultimate being the Calcutta Cup match - before he makes way for Gregor Townsend.\n\n\"Real guts and desire, the boys threw their bodies into it,\" was Cotter's assessment of his team's battling performance.\n\n\"We were competitive at the breakdown so, all in all, I'm happy we came away with the win.\n\n\"We will enjoy the evening, it's been a few years since we beat Wales. The boys can have a couple of quiet, cold beers. Then we go down to England.\n\n\"I think these experiences for the young players are great. John (Barclay) did a great job out there and steadied the ship.\"", "A few years ago Jessy would have been stuck in hospital because there was no provision of social care in her area\n\nWith health and social care budgets feeling the squeeze, the need to find ways to care for people that are both affordable and effective is one of the country's biggest challenges.\n\nAround the UK many attempts are being made to deliver care in different ways and here are three different approaches to community-based care.\n\nKathryn Humpston, a local area co-ordinator for Derby City Council, says: \"I try to help people help themselves.\"\n\nOne of the people she visits is John, an alcoholic who was in and out of hospital because of his condition. He often spent all his money on alcohol rather than food and Kathryn has to check what is in his larder.\n\nAs he only has two tins of beans and some powdered soup in stock, she tops up his supplies, gathered by an informal community food bank operating in the Boulton area of Derby.\n\nLocal area co-ordinators were introduced into Derby five years ago, copied from an existing scheme in Western Australia.\n\nThe idea is that vulnerable older people could find a lot of the support they need from within their own communities, rather than from council services, their GPs or from hospitals.\n\nJust over half the £500,000 annual costs of the scheme are paid for by the NHS to reduce demand on those services,\n\nThe co-ordinators tap into an often hidden network of support from neighbours, friends, family, voluntary groups and churches, who all seem willing to help improve the communities they live in by looking out for people who need help.\n\n\"All this costs nothing,\" says Kathryn.\n\nThe 10 co-ordinators working in Derby's inner city have helped about 700 people, all of whom have very complex needs. Only 17 of them have actually gone on to need a taxpayer-funded package of support from social services.\n\n\"If those 700 people had just one episode of social care fewer in their lifetime that would be a system saving of some £600,000,\" explains Mick Burrows of the NHS Southern Derbyshire Clinical Commissioning Group.\n\nJessy has nothing but praise for her carer after coming home from hospital following a hip replacement operation.\n\n\"I wouldn't be here at all if it wasn't for her. I'd probably be still in hospital waiting to get home,\" she says.\n\nA few years ago she would have been stuck in hospital because there was no provision of social care in the rural area she lives in, south of Loch Ness.\n\nBoleskine Community Care was set up by the local community, who recognised that their older people were having to move away to get help if family members could not help.\n\nIn the Scottish Highlands the NHS, not local councils, is responsible for providing home care\n\nIt is run by local women who work for Highland Home Carers, an employee-owned company in Inverness. The carers manage themselves and do their own assessments of old people's needs.\n\nIn the Scottish Highlands, spending on health and social care is fully integrated, meaning the NHS, rather than local councils, is responsible for providing care at home.\n\n\"The way we're funded helps us to give you what you want and gives you more choices,\" explains carer Julie Russell. \"You can choose how you use your hours.\"\n\nThis is because of the Scottish system of Self Directed Support, or personal budgets. Once a person's needs are assessed, they can decide how their care budget is spent. It can lead to some surprising choices.\n\n\"We've cleared snow, chopped firewood, helped in the garden, as well as taken people to the GP and all the usual personal care,\" says Julie.\n\nAngela is very clear about why she agreed to live with Gill.\n\n\"When I first saw her I thought she was very nice and I liked even more because she had a horse,\" Angela explains.\n\nGill, and her partner Pete, became Shared Lives carers for Angela about six years ago. It is a much greater commitment than the usual caring duties.\n\nGill and Pete share their home with her and also with Adrian, who moved in with them 14 years ago. Both Adrian and Angela have learning disabilities.\n\nAngela and Adrian now live with Gill and her husband as an extended family\n\n\"At first I was a bit scared,\" says Angela. \"But I thought I'll meet her and get to know her. I think it's a great idea. It's nice for families to take people like us in.\"\n\nAngela and Adrian are among almost 400 people, most of them with learning disabilities, who live with their Shared Lives carers across Lancashire.\n\n\"It's the best thing I've ever done,\" says Gill. \"We get more out of it than Adrian and Angela probably.\"\n\nCarers are paid about £400 a week for each person they look after, which is a saving for the local authority compared to the alternative. For people with learning disabilities who are unable to look after themselves, the alternative would be supported living or a residential care home.\n\nShared Lives Plus, which oversees the Shared Lives schemes around the country, estimates it saves about £25,000 per person per year. The NHS is currently establishing five Shared Lives schemes to cater for people leaving hospital.\n\nIt estimates savings of £130m over the next five years by speeding up hospital discharges using the service.\n\nListen to the full series of Andrew Bomford's reports for BBC Radio 4's PM programme here.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nKyle Edmund missed out on his first win over a top-10 player when he lost to world number four Milos Raonic in the Delray Beach Open quarter-finals.\n\nThe British number three started well and took the first set but the Canadian top seed hit back to win 4-6 6-3 6-4.\n\nRaonic won five games in a row to seal the second set and go 2-0 up in the decider and help set up the victory.\n\nRaonic will face Argentina's former US Open winner Juan Martin del Potro in Saturday's semi-final.\n\n\"I was a little bit slow off the block, got a little down on myself after that and wasn't necessarily focusing on the right things,\" Raonic told the ATP website.\n\n\"I was glad to be able to get out of that midway through the second set.\n\n\"But Kyle has very good potential. He takes it to you and has a forehand that's very hard to read. He's constantly improving, so things look bright for him.\"\n\nSeventh seed Del Potro, who won the event in 2011, beat American wildcard Sam Querrey 7-5 7-5.\n\nIn the other semi-final, American world number 21 Jack Sock faces compatriot Donald Young, ranked 69.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nClaudio Ranieri says his \"dream died\" when he was sacked as Leicester manager nine months after winning the Premier League.\n\nRanieri, 65, guided the Foxes to the title despite them being rated 5,000-1 shots at the start of the campaign.\n\nLeicester are one point above the relegation zone with 13 matches left.\n\n\"After the euphoria of last season and being crowned champions, all I dreamt of was staying with Leicester. Sadly this was not to be,\" Ranieri said.\n\n\"The adventure was amazing and will live with me forever. My heartfelt thanks to everybody at the club, everybody who was part of what we achieved, but mostly to the supporters.\n\n\"You took me into your hearts from day one and loved me. I love you too.\n\n\"No-one can ever take away what we achieved together and I hope you think about it and smile every day the way I always will.\n\n\"It was a time of wonderfulness and happiness that I will never forget. It's been a pleasure and an honour to be a champion with all of you.\"\n• None Mancini? O'Neill? Hodgson? Redknapp? Who next for Leicester?\n\nRanieri's departure came less than 24 hours after Wednesday's 2-1 defeat at Spanish side Sevilla in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie. The second leg is on 14 March.\n\nOn Saturday, Leicester were knocked out of the FA Cup by League One Millwall.\n\nIn explaining the club's decision, vice-chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha said \"long-term interests\" had been put above \"personal sentiment, no matter how strong that might be\".\n\nThe Foxes took last season's Premier League title by 10 points but have won just five top-flight games this season, and could become the first defending champions since 1938 to be relegated.\n\nThey have lost their past five league matches and are the only side in the top four English divisions without a league goal in 2017.\n\n'He had not lost the dressing room'\n\nBBC Sport understands some players were summoned to meet the chairman after the defeat by Sevilla, and Ranieri's fate was sealed by the negative reaction.\n\n\"There was a lot of frustration because of the results, but he had not lost the dressing room,\" Shakespeare said.\n\n\"A lot of the talk of unrest has been speculation. I've not had one problem with the players.\n\n\"I always feel sorry when people lose their jobs. My relationship with Claudio has been fine all along.\n\n\"I spoke to him last night and he thanked me for my support throughout. It was not brief and we exchanged views. A lot of what we said will stay private.\"\n\nShakespeare and first-team coach Mike Stowell will take charge of the squad until a new manager is appointed.\n\nRanieri's compatriots Paolo Benetti and Andrea Azzalin, both key members of his coaching staff, have left the club.\n\nEx-Manchester City and Inter Milan boss Roberto Mancini and Nigel Pearson, who Ranieri replaced in 2015, are the early bookmakers' favourites to take over at Leicester.\n\nFormer Birmingham boss Gary Rowett - a one-time Foxes player who is around fifth favourite - told BBC Radio 5 live: \"I'm sat at home waiting for the right opportunity to come along. Leicester would be an amazing one, but it's still raw for everyone.\"\n\nRowett, who played for Leicester between 2000 and 2002, was controversially sacked by Birmingham in December, and replaced by former Chelsea striker Gianfranco Zola.\n\n\"I played there for two years so I've had good experiences at Leicester and it's an excellent club. It would be a daunting one for anyone and a fantastic opportunity for someone,\" he added.\n\nThe contenders: Read more from Phil McNulty\n\nAfter the euphoria of last season and being crowned Premier League champions, all I dreamt of was staying with Leicester City, the club I love, for always.\n\nSadly this was not to be. I wish to thank my wife Rosanna and all my family for their never-ending support during my time at Leicester.\n\nMy thanks go to Paolo and Andrea, who accompanied me on this wonderful journey. To Steve Kutner [Ranieri's agent] and Franco Granello [his Italian agent] for bringing me the opportunity to become a champion.\n\nMostly I have to thank Leicester City Football Club. The adventure was amazing and will live with me forever.\n\nThank you to all the journalists and the media who came with us and enjoyed reporting on the greatest story in football.\n\nMy heartfelt thanks to everybody at the club, all the players, the staff, everybody who was there and was part of what we achieved. But mostly to the supporters. You took me into your hearts from day one and loved me. I love you too.\n\nNo-one can ever take away what we together have achieved, and I hope you think about it and smile every day the way I always will.\n\nIt was a time of wonderfulness and happiness that I will never forget. It's been a pleasure and an honour to be a champion with all of you.", "The claim: The Conservatives' win in Copeland is the first time since 1878 that a governing party has made a comparable gain in a by-election\n\nReality Check verdict: A governing party gaining a seat at a by-election is an extremely unusual event. It has happened since 1878, but you could argue that those occasions had unusual circumstances that meant they were not comparable.\n\nGoverning parties rarely look forward to by-elections, which tend to have relatively low turnouts and are seen as having less at stake than general elections.\n\nIt is very rare for the governing party to pick up votes from the opposition. It is even rarer for them to gain a seat, as the Conservatives did when Trudy Harrison won Copeland in Cumbria.\n\nThe constituency and its predecessor, Whitehaven, had returned Labour MPs since 1935.\n\nThe Conservatives say this is \"the first time since 1878 that a governing party has made a comparable gain in a by-election\".\n\nThe party was referring to the Worcester by-election 139 years ago, when they won the seat from the Liberals.\n\nCopeland is certainly not the first instance of a ruling party winning a seat at a by-election since that year, when Benjamin Disraeli was prime minister and women could not vote.\n\nThat has happened several times since, but in unusual circumstances which are perhaps not \"comparable\" to Copeland.\n\nFor example, in 1982 at the height of the Falklands War, a Labour MP defected to the Social Democratic Party in the south London seat of Mitcham and Morden.\n\nThis split the left-of-centre vote, meaning the Conservative candidate won despite getting a smaller share of the vote than at the previous general election.\n\nA Conservative/National Liberal candidate won the Yorkshire seat of Brighouse and Spenborough from Labour in 1960, but that seat was very marginal. Labour won by just 47 votes at the 1959 general election, and lost by 666 a year later.\n\nIn 1953, the governing Conservatives took Sunderland South from Labour, but this was also very close and the Conservative vote share fell slightly because a Liberal picked up some votes.\n\nCopeland was not nearly as tight as these examples, and the Conservatives increased their vote share substantially.\n\nLabour's Jamie Reed won the seat by more than 2,000 votes in 2015, while the new Conservative MP took it by a similar margin.\n\nThe swing was 6.7%, a stunning result for a governing party.\n\nThere are various other examples of government by-election gains since 1878.\n\nHowever, as Matt Singh of NumbrCrunchr Politics points out, these are \"mostly the product of freakish circumstances… none of which apply to Copeland\".\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Leicester striker Jamie Vardy says speculation that he was involved in manager Claudio Ranieri's dismissal is \"untrue and extremely hurtful\".\n\nRanieri was sacked on Thursday, nine months after leading the club to the Premier League title.\n\n\"Claudio has and always will have my complete respect,\" Vardy said in a post on Instagram.\n• None When Ranieri invited BBC reporters in for coffee\n\n\"There is speculation I was involved in his dismissal and this is completely untrue, unfounded and is extremely hurtful.\n\n\"The only thing we are guilty of as a team is underachieving, which we all acknowledge both in the dressing room and publicly, and will do our best to rectify.\"\n\nLast season's champions dropped into the relegation zone on Saturday following Crystal Palace's win over Middlesbrough.\n\nVardy scored 24 goals as the Foxes secured an unlikely Premier League title in 2015-16, but the striker has struggled this season.\n\nHe ended a nine-game goal drought during Leicester's 2-1 Champions League loss at Sevilla, which proved to be Ranieri's last match in charge.\n\n\"He believed in me when many didn't and for that I owe him my eternal gratitude,\" former Fleetwood striker Vardy wrote.\n\n\"I wish Claudio the very, very best in whatever the future holds for him. Thank you Claudio for everything.\"\n\nFormer England captain Alan Shearer said: \"I didn't need the sacking of Ranieri to tell me the players weren't working for him. I could see it. I've been saying it for the last two or three months, that the players just weren't working for him.\n\n\"I would say to the Leicester players, if you look in the mirror and ask yourself a question - have I worked as hard as I could and given the manager everything? I would pretty much say, for the vast majority of that Leicester squad, the answer would be no. They could do more, I'm certain of that.\n\n\"Fans will get over it, I'm sure. We saw what happened with Chelsea when Diego Costa and Cesc Fabregas were booed after half an hour and then Chelsea go and score goals and get back to winning ways. Fans soon forget. However, you will never ever forget what happened last season. That was the best thing that has happened and will ever happen, in the Premier League, a team achieving what like Leicester did.\"\n\nFormer Tottenham midfielder Jermaine Jenas said: \"The timing is ludicrous. They've just gone to Seville and in the second half they were back to their best defensively. Give Claudio Ranieri the chance to keep them in the Premier League.\"\n\n'You believed in me' - Players thank Ranieri\n\nBBC Sport understands some players were summoned to meet the chairman after the 2-1 loss to Sevilla and Ranieri's fate was sealed by the negative reaction.\n\nHowever goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel said he had \"no problem with Ranieri\" while several players, including midfielder Andy King and winger Demarai Gray thanked Ranieri on social media.\n\n\"Big respect to this great man who helped us achieve history, you helped me build myself as a player and gave me the courage I needed,\" forward Riyad Mahrez wrote on Twitter.\n\n\"You believed in me from day one. Huge thank you for everything and good luck.\"\n\n\"My Leicester career was over, he believed in me and gave me a chance. That's something else I will also never forget,\" defender Danny Simpson added.\n\n\"I wish him luck for the future and I had the opportunity to say this today, however we really need the true Leicester fans to be with us and not against us through this tough period, starting on Monday night.\n\n\"What's happened has happened and we have to move on and stay in the Premier League.\"", "Gavin McDonnell's dream of joining twin brother Jamie as a world champion was shattered as classy Mexican Rey Vargas scored a points decision to land the vacant WBC super-bantamweight title.\n\nThe 30-year-old produced a display of immense grit - landing telling blows in the ninth round - but his 26-year-old opponent's confident work throughout saw him gain a 114-114 117-111 116-112 decision.\n\nVictory would have delivered Britain's first simultaneous twin world champions, with Jamie McDonnell already in possession of the WBA bantamweight belt.\n\nBut Vargas - unbeaten in 29 bouts - was rewarded for his control of the early exchanges and left the noisy Ice Arena in Hull with his first world title.\n\nVargas, with Iganacio Beristain - who has trained Oscar de la Hoya and Juan Manuel Marquez to world titles - in his corner, took the middle of the ring early and confidently landed three-shot combinations with McDonnell visibly cautious against a man with 22 previous knockouts.\n• None Listen to the fight again on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, every hour from 06:00 GMT until 12:00 on Sunday\n• None Relive the fight as it happened\n\nIn the build-up to the fight, McDonnell's promoter Eddie Hearn said he pushed for the bout to take place at the \"down and dirty\" Hull Ice Arena in the hope the \"bear-pit\" atmosphere could do \"strange things\" to the travelling fighter.\n\nThere were moments of home hope, as McDonnell landed a stinging right in the 10th but in just his third fight outside Mexico, Vargas even had the temerity to smile back at his man after taking some punishment late on.\n\nThe younger man's confidence to switch from making the fight to boxing on the back foot near the ropes perhaps showed he knew he had built a good early lead. McDonnell's head movement was energetic throughout, while his opponent was happy to remain static at times as he waited to pick his attacks.\n\nNow 19 fights into his career, McDonnell can take great pride from the heart he showed and none of the 3,500 in the venue appeared to feel short-changed by his efforts.\n\nIn truth, he simply came up against a fighter who carried plenty of power in his 8st 10lb frame, and showed variation and a cool head to handle the occasion.\n\nAt the final bell, Vargas threw his hands into the air before slumping to the ropes and looking to the heavens. McDonnell in contrast seemed to know hopes of family history were over, for now.\n\nEarlier in the night, London 2012 Olympic champion Luke Campbell maintained his momentum as he seeks a world title shot in 2017 - \"the biggest year of my career\", according to the Hull fighter.\n\nThe 29-year-old lightweight recorded his fourth straight win following a shock defeat in 2015 to Yvan Mendy, with a series of crushing left hands to Jairo Lopez.\n\nThe Mexican, down in the first, somehow made the second round but was flattened by a left uppercut. Campbell, who began training in Miami after the Mendy defeat, showed his typically energetic style and now has hopes of a shot at WBC champion Mikey Garcia.\n\nAnother Hull fighter, Tommy Coyle - beaten by Campbell in 2015 - kept his hopes of a return to world level alive with a third-round stoppage of Rakeem Noble.\n\n'I lost by three rounds' - what they said\n\nGavin McDonnell, talking to BBC Radio 5 live, said: \"I will learn, I know where I went wrong, I am disappointed, but I will work so hard.\n\n\"I had him winning by a couple of rounds, probably three rounds in my opinion. Everyone is in with a puncher's chance - if I can improve my speed and power I will land and I can beat that kid.\n\n\"If we do have a rematch, I know how to beat him in the future.\"\n\nIn an interview with Sky Sports, he added: \"I gave it everything and I hope everyone enjoyed it. I feel like I let everyone down.\n\n\"I just fell short at the end. I felt all right in there, I was a bit too eager and I couldn't get close enough. I will come again - I have only had 18 fights and I want to show I belong at this level.\n\n\"I have no doubt I will be a world champion.\"\n\nPromoter Eddie Hearn told BBC Radio 5 live: \"I think Gavin started too slowly and he was always chasing it. Vargas was very good - he had excellent feet and confidence.\n\n\"To put in a performance like that, Gavin should be very proud but ultimately he was not good enough. I think Rey Vargas will go on to do a lot in the sport.\n\n\"Gavin has improved so much but he was not letting his hands go and that was the frustrating thing. It was a little bit of inexperience. If he did what he did in the ninth from the fifth round onwards then he would've had a chance.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nBilly Mckay scored a stunning overhead kick as Inverness Caledonian Thistle beat Rangers to move off bottom spot in the Premiership.\n\nMckay's goal came minutes after Iain Vigurs had missed a penalty for the hosts.\n\nInverness took a first-half lead thanks to Greg Tansey's long-range strike.\n\nRangers levelled through Martyn Waghorn's penalty after Lee Wallace was downed but the Ibrox side ultimately fell to a second straight defeat.\n\nThey remain six points behind second-placed Aberdeen, who entertain Ross County on Saturday.\n\nVictory takes Inverness one point above Hamilton Academical, who visit Celtic on Saturday.\n\nVigurs' spot-kick was poor and easily saved by Wes Foderingham. Amazingly, it did not matter.\n\nWhat happened next was utterly fantastic from an Inverness point of view. Mckay, with his back to goal, angled a perfect overhead kick into the left corner to earn a monumental win.\n\nAnd no-one celebrated more than Vigurs.\n\nIt was in the last minute and is a game-changer in terms of the outlook of this season for boss Richie Foran.\n\nThere is a renewed steel about Caley Thistle these past few weeks, a return to the \"old Inverness' as Foran describes it. That was on show in spades against Rangers.\n\nTansey's opener was as good as Mckay's winner. He arrived on to a blocked Liam Polworth shot and curled a magnificent effort home.\n\nInverness might have had a penalty when Polworth stayed on his feet after looking like he was caught by Wallace.\n\nDefensively, the home side harried, blocked, diverted. They dropped a little too deep and were made to pay despite surviving a few scary moments.\n\nThey reacted well to conceding, though, and Tansey was unlucky with a fierce drive that Foderingham save brilliantly.\n\nThe dramatic nature of the victory should give Inverness the shot in the arm they need. They were tremendous.\n\nRangers started the match superbly. They were incisive and crisp in their passing and created a few chances. But, as has so often been the case this season, they lacked a cutting edge.\n\nBarrie McKay nodded over from a great position before Emerson Hyndman missed one great chance then hesitated and lost another.\n\nRangers began to hem Inverness in during the second half and got the break they badly needed.\n\nLouis Laing was outfoxed by a one-two but rashly slid in, took Wallace out and conceded a soft spot-kick. Waghorn made no mistake.\n\nIt looked like Rangers would kick on on from there but Inverness had other ideas.\n\nThe Ibrox side have now won only once in their last seven league matches and face a huge struggle to overtake second-top Aberdeen.\n• None Goal! Inverness CT 2, Rangers 1. Billy McKay (Inverness CT) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the top left corner.\n• None Penalty saved! Iain Vigurs (Inverness CT) fails to capitalise on this great opportunity, right footed shot saved in the bottom left corner.\n• None Danny Wilson (Rangers) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Penalty conceded by Danny Wilson (Rangers) after a foul in the penalty area.\n• None Brad McKay (Inverness CT) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Attempt saved. Billy McKay (Inverness CT) right footed shot from a difficult angle on the left is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Attempt missed. Danny Wilson (Rangers) header from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the left. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "When RBS lost £24bn in 2008, my daughter was half way through junior school.\n\nShe's now doing her A-levels and RBS is still losing billions.\n\nNext year she'll apply for university - next year RBS will lose another few billion.\n\nWatching RBS develop has not been a very rewarding experience - for anyone.\n\nTaxpayers have seen the £45bn they sank into the bank more than offset by £58bn of losses and counting.\n\nThe RBS headcount has shrunk by 100,000 in that time, with thousands more yet to lose jobs as the bank shrinks further and branches close.\n\nIf there has been a scandal going, RBS has been involved.\n\nFines for PPI, Libor rigging, foreign exchange fixing, squeezing small businesses for profit, and selling risky mortgages have laid waste to any earnings the core UK bank has been making.\n\nIn terms of fines for past misconduct the worst is yet to come in the form of a whopping fine from US authorities for RBS's role in the subprime mortgage crisis.\n\nThat should be settled this year but if RBS gets much change out of £10bn it will be considered a pretty good result.\n\nAnd yet... beneath all this wreckage is a UK-focused bank that lent £24bn into the UK economy and has been churning out a profit of about £1bn every three months.\n\nSadly, that bank will have to wait till 2018 to see the light of day.\n\nSo why has it taken RBS so much longer than others to heal itself?\n\nLloyds and Barclays are both making a profit, the US banks at the epicentre of the 2008 financial earthquake are flying high while RBS shares need to double in value for the UK taxpayer to break even.\n\nA former senior Treasury official told the BBC: \"You have to remember that wherever something bad or unwise was happening, RBS was at the forefront.\n\n\"It took the biggest risks, was involved in every scandal, was the most aggressive, made the most absurd acquisition (£50bn for ABN Amro in the teeth of the crisis) and had the biggest balance sheet in the world.\"\n\nThat put it in the worst possible position to recover from the crisis.\n\nWhich begs another question. Why wasn't the fix imposed in 2009 more radical?\n\nSome £45bn was pumped in for an 81% stake. In hindsight, that was nowhere near enough and the coalition government of 2010 should have done more to fix it after it had survived the initial crisis.\n\nHe told the BBC: \"We should have recapitalised the banks much quicker like in the United States and then allow the conduct issues to come back when the banks were making money.\n\n\"In the UK, the banks didn't have sufficient capital and got hit by the conduct issues at the same time, and this bank (RBS) had that in spades.\"\n\nBut remember, the economic and political picture looked very different in 2010.\n\nAusterity was the name of the game and George Osborne could ill afford to be seen to be throwing more money at RBS, possibly paying to fully nationalise it, when he was making swingeing cuts elsewhere.\n\nNot only that but there were real hopes that RBS would make a profit in 2011 and the share price was on the way up.\n\nIt looked like the government could get away without putting in any extra money. So it didn't.\n\nThat turned out to be a very false dawn as the eurozone crisis hit and the full magnitude of past misconduct began to emerge.\n\nThere was also a battle over what kind of bank RBS should try to be.\n\nThe man heading the bank at the time, Stephen Hester, wanted to hang on to the investment banking bits in the hope that when the world returned to normal, the high profits usually associated with trading - helping companies raise money and advising them - would help the bank return to health.\n\nThe Treasury disagreed and since it owned 80% of the bank, Stephen Hester was shown the door in 2013.\n\nFormer Treasury officials acknowledge that at least two of his five years in charge was wasted in strategic wrangling with the government.\n\nWe still care about this humbled giant because we still own so much of it and the prospect of the taxpayer getting its money back is still a very distant one.\n\nCompare that to Lloyds which has paid back nearly all the £20bn put in.\n\nAs discussed, RBS was a much sicker bank than Lloyds - and failing to recognise that earlier led to another mistake.\n\nThe government overpaid for its stake.\n\nUnder enormous pressure, working all night, with the prospect of cash machines not working on a Monday morning, the government agreed to pay roughly 500p a share in today's money.\n\nThe financial crisis led to drastic action by the government\n\nThat was what each share was worth on paper at the time - or the so called \"book value\".\n\nA couple of weeks later, the US government paid half that for the shares it bought in US banks.\n\nThat enabled the US government to sell off its stakes much earlier.\n\nNow, the prospect of selling at a big loss is an unattractive one for the government and the prospect of a bank predominantly owned by the government is an unattractive one for investors.\n\nThey know that one day there will be a big seller of the shares. It's a stand-off that keeps the price stubbornly low.\n\nThere is a core bank churning out profits, a billion pounds a quarter and today's announcement included the first confident prediction of bottom line profit we have seen from Ross McEwan\n\nThere is still pain ahead but there is also light.\n\nWho knows, by the time my daughter leaves home, RBS may be back in the black.", "Anna Rowe had a whirlwind romance with Antony Ray after meeting him through the dating app Tinder.\n\nBut their 14-month relationship came crashing down when she discovered his profile was a fake.\n\nHis name was not Antony and he was not single.\n\nIn fact, he was a married dad who had initially used photos of a Bollywood actor on his profile and had lured in other women too.\n\n\"He used me like a hotel with benefits under the disguise of a romantic, loving relationship that he knew I craved,\" says Anna.\n\nThe practice of using a fake profile to start an online romance is known as \"catfishing\".\n\nNow Anna, 44, from Kent, has launched a petition calling for it to be made illegal.\n\nBut how serious is catfishing and is it practical to make it a crime?\n\nMany dating apps and sites offer advice on how to spot fake profiles\n\nMore than half of online dating users say they have come across a fake profile, according to consumer group Which?\n\nWhile the number of people defrauded in the UK by online dating scams reached a record high in 2016.\n\nThere were 3,889 victims of so-called romance fraud last year, who handed over a record £39m.\n\nIt has become so prevalent, that it led to the creation of reality TV show Catfish - which is dedicated to helping victims learn the true identity of their online romances.\n\nCurrently catfishing is not illegal but elements of the activity could be covered by different parts of the law.\n\nIf a victim hands over money, the \"catfish\" could be prosecuted for fraud.\n\nSomeone using a fake profile to post offensive messages or doctored images designed to humiliate could also face criminal action.\n\nA review of social media and the law by the House of Lords in 2014 concluded there was enough current legislation to cover crimes committed online.\n\nNew guidance was also issued by the CPS in October to help the police identify online crimes - including trolling and virtual mobbing.\n\nBut Anna thinks the law needs to go further.\n\nWriting on her petition, she said: \"I did not or would not consent to have a sexual relationship with a married man, let alone a man who was actively having relations with multiple women simultaneously.\n\n\"His behaviour was definitely premeditated showing his intent to use women, yet the current law will not find his actions a criminal offence.\"\n\nTony Neate, chief executive of Get Safe Online, recognises the devastating impact catfishing can have on victims.\n\n\"It can ruin a life. I know there have been suicides because it's affected someone badly,\" he says.\n\n\"It can affect their mental stability and lead to depression and the victims feel they can't trust anyone again.\n\n\"I do think we need to look more wisely at this in relation to how it is tackled at the moment.\"\n\nMr Neate, a former police officer, says there should be a \"discussion\" about punishing the worst catfishing offenders.\n\nBut he raises concerns about how practical a new law would be to implement.\n\n\"I really feel for that poor woman [Anna] but we have got to be realistic on how far we got and how the police would be able to enforce it,\" he says.\n\n\"Let's have the discussion because we can't have people being hurt and it's something we have got to look at.\"\n\nMany dating websites offer users advice on how to spot a scammer and tips to avoid being taken in by a fake profile. (See \"Tips to avoid catfishes\", below)\n\nPopular dating site Match.com has a team which will remove unwanted accounts and check photos and personal ads.\n\nIt also has a built-in screening system that can help identify suspicious accounts, remove them and prevent re-registration.\n\nLovestruck has a verification service that can confirm members are single and professional by checking their profiles against their other social media sites.\n\nBut the advice has not stopped many people being duped.\n\nLast month, university professor Judith Lathlean revealed how she was tricked out of £140,000 by a gang using a fake profile.\n\nIfe Ojo, 31, and Olusegun Agbaje, 43, were jailed in 2016 after conning a woman out of £1.6m using a fictional character.\n\nBut Andrew McClelland, chief executive of the Online Dating Association - the trade body for the industry - believes legislating against catfishing would be \"difficult\".\n\nHe said there could be genuine reasons why someone might not use their real details online - for example if they had been in an abusive relationship and did not want their ex-partner to find them.\n\nData protection and freedom of expression would also be an issue when it came to enforcing such a law, he added.\n\n\"The biggest problem this faces is how do you legislate against someone lying?\" says Mr McClelland.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Scotland will attempt to end their decade-long winless streak against Wales with a team missing five key men as the Six Nations resumes this weekend.\n\nNot since 2007 have Vern Cotter's men won a Six Nations match against Wales, with the average margin of defeat 15 points in that period.\n\nIreland have recalled Lions fly-half Jonny Sexton as they look to re-establish themselves in the title race with a win over a resurgent France.\n\nAnd Sexton's main rival to be the Lions' 10 this summer, Owen Farrell, will lead unbeaten England out against the Azzurri at Twickenham on Sunday as he wins his 50th cap in arguably his most impressive championship yet.\n\nFarrell has a new partner at outside-centre in former rugby league star Ben Te'o for a fixture that England have never lost, coach Eddie Jones content to try out new combinations against at Italy side on a nine-match losing run in the Six Nations.\n\nWith James Haskell back at flanker after coming off the bench to great effect in the wins over France and Wales, it is a more direct, muscular selection from Jones, blessed with a greater depth of talent than either Scotland or Wales.\n\nIn an entertaining, free-scoring tournament so far, the clash at Murrayfield is pivotal to two sides who have shown both signs of rebirth and flashes of old flaws thus far.\n\nWith one win and one defeat apiece, Saturday's early kick-off will go a long way to defining the season not only of the two sides but of their coaches, Cotter in his last campaign in charge, Rob Howley once again in a caretaker role as Warren Gatland focuses on Lions preparation and selection.\n\nThe fixture has often produced classics - not least a Wales win in 1988 garlanded by superb tries from Jonathan Davies and Ieuan Evans, and the 31-24 thriller in 2010 when Wales were 10 points down on 76 minutes.\n\nAnd despite recent history it is arguably the hardest of the third round matches to call, although the loss of Scotland's captain and place kicker Greig Laidlaw to injury and the return of talismanic winger George North to Wales's ranks may prove pivotal.\n\nIreland ran up 63 points against Italy in Rome a fortnight ago, and after a chastening opening-day defeat in Edinburgh a victory over France would keep their hopes of a third Six Nations title in four years alive.\n\nFrance have lost their last four away matches in this competition but led England until late at Twickenham at the start of the month, and came past Scotland in Paris with a blend of power and guile that hinted that their long statistical and stylistic slump may be coming to an end.\n\nWhile the return of captain Rory Best after a stomach bug will be welcomed in Dublin, Sexton's return is not without controversy.\n\nHe has played very little rugby this season, this most physical of fly-halves once again dogged by injury, and in his absence Paddy Jackson has appeared liberated from the unflattering comparisons of old, kicking 12 of his 13 goals to be leading points scorer in this year's tournament.\n\nFarrell, meanwhile, has shown a craft with ball in hand this winter to match what was always considered his defining strength, that ability from kicking tee across the pitch and no matter what the pressure.\n\nIt was his long, flat pass that sent Daly away for the late try in Cardiff a fortnight ago that kept England on course for a final-day Grand Slam decider in Dublin and maintained the extraordinary 15-match unbeaten run under Jones.\n\nEngland have not yet fired fully this year, coming from behind in the final quarter against both France and Wales.\n\nBut what is ominous for Italy is that strength in depth on the replacements' bench and the impact it is consistently having in big matches.\n\nUnder Jones England have scored a cumulative 83 points more than their various opponents in the last 20 minutes of matches, while Italy - weaker in their starting XV, weaker still on the bench - have shipped almost half their total points conceded in the last 20 minutes of their opening two matches.\n\nSo many options does Jones have that he can afford to leave Jonathan Joseph, scorer of three tries in the corresponding fixture last year, out of his match-day squad altogether.\n\nAnd with star prop Mako Vunipola returning to the bench after recovering from a knee injury, anything else than a heavy defeat would count as a victory of sorts for Italy's Irish coach Conor O'Shea.", "They are some of the best-known lines from one of the nation's favourite poems, the mantra of numerous self-help manuals and an inspiration for a range of politicians from President Franklin D Roosevelt to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.\n\n\"If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster, and treat those two imposters just the same.\"\n\nBut while the words of Rudyard Kipling's poem are familiar, the application of them is altogether more challenging. How does one live without being lifted by success or dumped by failure? How can anyone maintain such detachment from the vicissitudes of life?\n\nAfter playing in 69 international rugby matches, Ireland's wing three-quarter Andrew Trimble knows the highs and lows of professional sport. Last year, the team achieved its best ever series of results, with victories over southern hemisphere giants Australia and South Africa and then, for the first time in 111 years, Ireland beat the reigning world champions, the New Zealand All Blacks.\n\n\"There's no bigger moment than beating the All Blacks,\" Trimble explains. \"After the game, we were walking around just shaking our heads and saying, 'What have we done? We've just beaten the All Blacks!' No Irish team has ever done this before.\"\n\nAndrew Trimble says his spirituality enhances his love of rugby\n\nSo was his life suddenly and completely fulfilled by winning these important matches?\n\n\"I love the game,\" he says. \"It's a driving force and a massive part of what I want to do. But it's important to be reminded that there's something else out there, there's something more important than rugby.\"\n\nWe're seated in the wooden pews of Ballyalbany Presbyterian Church in County Monaghan, about two miles from where the international team has just completed an open training session in preparation for Saturday's Six Nations match against France.\n\nStanding on the touchline throughout the session, it's hard to imagine how rugby union professionals can do anything other than submit themselves to the demands of the game. It's relentlessly fast, consistently ferocious. It is all-consuming.\n\nOff the field, Trimble is impeccably courteous to every autograph-hunter and maintains that having \"something more important than rugby\" actually enables him to cope better with the pressures of professional sport.\n\nJust 16 months ago, after two operations on the same foot injury were followed by a stress fracture, he began to believe that his career might be over. Trimble was dropped from Ireland's squad for World Cup 2015 and, aged 29, was faced with losing something that had dominated his life since the age of seven.\n\n\"If it's over, you have to draw on something else so rugby doesn't become the be-all-and-end-all. It doesn't define me, I'm defined by something more important. It's a different mindset and perspective.\"\n\nSo what is that perspective?\n\n\"There's an eternal perspective,\" he explains. \"Rugby lasts for 10, 15 years but the perspective of having a faith, and a sincere faith, is something that doesn't end and something that lasts forever.\"\n\nTrimble believes that spirituality enhances his love for the sport.\n\n\"I'm far happier having that perspective and knowing that there is a bigger picture than putting all my trust in rugby, in a career that can be over in 10 years or a lot less than 10 years.\"\n\nHe says that his Christian faith has also enabled him to fight against the temptation to become entirely self-absorbed.\n\nLast year, he visited a camp in Tanzania. It's run by Oxfam and houses hundreds of refugees from Burundi. He was profoundly moved by the experience.\n\n\"Some of these people will live their entire lives in refugee camps. They had families, they had careers, they had hopes and dreams and they've been cut short.\"\n\nTrimble laments his own ignorance of the issue and says if he hadn't been taken to Tanzania by Oxfam, he would never have known about the refugee crisis in Africa. And his motivation to do something is shaped by his theology.\n\nAndrew Trimble during his visit to Tanzania\n\n\"Pope Francis says they're all created in the image of God. They're just like you and me, they're no less special. It's a real shame that they're forgotten about because they're considered less important.\"\n\nWith that, our time together runs out and Trimble returns to the Ireland training camp - with the French in his sights.\n\nHe certainly embodies Kipling's view that triumph and disaster should be treated \"just the same\". But in some ways, his approach is closer to that of 17th Century poet Richard Lovelace. In his poem, To Lucasta, Going to the Wars, Lovelace argues that his affections are only heightened by being answerable to a higher authority.\n\n\"I could not love thee, Dear, so much, Loved I not honour more.\"\n\nAccording to Andrew Trimble, an eternal perspective does the same for him - win, lose or draw.", "Last updated on .From the section Winter Sports\n\nCoverage: Live coverage on Connected TV, BBC Red Button and the BBC Sport website\n\nOlympic champion Lizzy Yarnold won bronze at the Skeleton World Championships in Germany.\n\nThe 28-year-old Briton was fastest in the first of Saturday's two runs to climb from fourth to third and she held her position in the final run.\n\nGold went to World Cup leader Jacqueline Lolling, with fellow German Tina Hermann finishing second.\n\nYarnold's overall time of two minutes 36.08 seconds was 0.73secs behind Lolling.\n\nShe returned to competition in December after taking a year out and will attempt to retain her Olympic title in South Korea next year.\n\n\"This is where I want and need to be - and is a major stepping stone,\" Yarnold told BBC Sport.\n\n\"It shows I've made the right decisions over the past couple of years and means more than I could ever explain.\n\n\"I've had a few head and back issues recently and I physically wouldn't be here without the help of my physio and my family.\n\n\"I am still dealing with some stuff but I am lucky with the team I have and that helps make me a stronger person and a better athlete.\"\n\nDespite all of Lizzy Yarnold's previous gold medals, World Championships bronze is a huge result both for her at the British skeleton team.\n\nShe seemed to ease to Olympic, World Championship, European and World Cup titles between 2013 and 2015 - but, in truth, those successes left her exhausted.\n\nAlthough a year sabbatical has seen her return refreshed, younger rivals have emerged and the reappearance of dizzy spells - which first emerged in late 2014 - as well as the appearance of a new serious back problem, has made her comeback challenging than expected.\n\nHowever, despite just one World Cup podium finish this season Yarnold states she's now a \"better slider\" than before her break - and she has proved that when the big occasion arises she can still deliver.\n\nThat is a crucial confidence boost for the British team, because with Laura Deas yet to rediscover the form that led to World Cup podiums last season and the GB men some way off he pace, Yarnold remains their only realistic hope of an Olympic skeleton medal in 2018.", "Last updated on .From the section Irish Rugby\n\nIreland kept their hopes of a third Six Nations title in four years alive by recovering from an early deficit to beat France in a bruising encounter.\n\nTwo Camille Lopez penalties put France 6-0 up but Conor Murray's converted try edged Ireland into a one-point lead.\n\nJohnny Sexton added two penalties and a drop goal in a keenly contested second half, with Lopez and replacement Paddy Jackson trading late penalties.\n\nSexton, back after injury, passed the 600-point mark in international rugby.\n• None Win keeps us in title hunt - Murray\n\nIreland move a point ahead of Scotland at the top of the table, with England's game at home to Italy to come on Sunday.\n\nJoe Schmidt's men, beaten in their first match in Scotland, have 10 points from their three matches and now face Wales away and England at home.\n\nFrance left the Aviva Stadium empty-handed to remain on five points and they next host Italy before a final-day trip to Cardiff.\n\nIreland remain unbeaten at home in the Six Nations during the tenure of coach Schmidt, a run stretching back to 2014, and they will go into their next game in Cardiff on 10 March with confidence.\n\nFrance displayed glimpses of their much-heralded revival under their coach Guy Noves but showed signs of tiredness throughout the second half and their hopes of a first championship success since 2010 are now surely over.\n\nOnly once in the past 10 Six Nations meetings between these sides had the winning margin reached double digits, so Ireland will be happy to come away with a hard-fought win and deny their opponents a losing bonus point.\n• Get all the latest Six Nations news by adding in the BBC Sport app.\n\nFrance began in intense fashion as they sought to carry through the momentum gained from their narrow defeat by England and morale-boosting success over Scotland.\n\nTheir enterprising start was epitomised by an outrageous dummy by scrum-half Baptiste Serin, which almost yielded a try, while centre Remi Lamerat was only denied a score by a knock-on by his midfield partner Gael Fickou after Lopez's audacious cross-field kick had set up the chance.\n\nIn the event, the visitors only had two Lopez penalties to show for their early dominance and it was Ireland who assumed control for the remainder of the half.\n\nThe hosts were rewarded for their superiority in territory and possession when Robbie Henshaw made ground after a five-metre scrum and passed to man-of-the-match Murray, who dived over from close range for the only try of the game.\n\nIreland should have gone in at half-time further ahead, but turned down a couple of kickable penalties in favour of kicking for the corner, while the French defended stoutly to keep their half-time arrears to a single point.\n\nFrance looked a more confident, settled and better prepared side for periods in the first half, but despite their squad having enjoyed an unaccustomed break from Top 14 action last weekend, they were already showing signs of fatigue by the interval.\n\nIt was Ireland who showed the greater purpose and spirit after the break, with fly-half Sexton defying the fact that he had been out of action through injury for the past five weeks by pulling the strings and piling on the points.\n\nIn the first half, the Leinster man converted Murray's try and almost created a try for Keith Earls when he kicked towards the corner after a fine Ireland wraparound move along the backs, only for wing Noa Nakaitaci to ground the ball first.\n\nThe number 10's early second-half penalty was followed by an exquisite drop-goal, which brought the home supporters to their feet and the Aviva Stadium to life.\n\nA further penalty extended Ireland's advantage in a breathless second half and although the French put up some resistance, the hosts showed the greater resilience and, with the Ireland pack largely in control, the outcome never looked in doubt.\n\nAfter Sexton was withdrawn to a rapturous reception, Lopez pulled France back to bonus-point range with his third penalty, but Jackson's kick with four minutes remaining ensured the Noves' side went home empty-handed and broken-hearted.\n\nReplacements: Trimble for Kearney (51), Jackson for Sexton (69), Marmion for Murray (79), C. Healy for McGrath (60), Scannell for Best (68), J. Ryan for Furlong (74), Henderson for D. Ryan (60), O'Mahony for O'Brien (68).\n\nReplacements: Camara for Spedding (74), Chavancy for Lamerat (60), Machenaud for Serin (62), Ben Arous for Baille (51), Tolofua for Guirado (62), Atonio for Slimani (51), Le Devedec for Vahaamahina (51), Ollivon for Le Roux (60).", "Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho has not ruled out the prospect of Wayne Rooney leaving the club this month.\n\nThe 31-year-old England forward, who scored his 250th United goal last month to become the club's record scorer, has been linked with a move to China in recent weeks.\n\nThe Chinese Super League's transfer window shuts next week and Mourinho was asked if the club captain would still be at Old Trafford by then.\n\n\"You have to ask him,\" Mourinho said.\n\n\"Of course I can't guarantee [he will be here]. I can't guarantee that I'm here next week, how can I guarantee that a player is here next season?\"\n\nRooney is contracted to United until 2019 and had previously said he was committed to seeing out his deal.\n\nHe has not been a first-team regular this season and has scored just five goals.\n\nHowever, Mourinho said in October that Rooney was \"going nowhere\" and reiterated on Tuesday that he did not want him to leave.\n\n\"I would never push - or try to push - a legend of this club to another destiny,\" added the Portuguese coach.\n\n\"So you have to ask him if he sees himself staying in the club for the rest of his career or if he sees himself moving.\n\n\"It is not a question for me because I am happy to have him. I don't want him to leave.\"\n\nThere is a clear sense now that time is ticking down on Rooney's Manchester United career.\n\nLess than a month after Rooney eclipsed Sir Bobby Charlton to become the club's record goalscorer, manager Jose Mourinho delivered the kind of response he came out with when he was asked about the futures of Morgan Schneiderlin and Memphis Depay during the January transfer window.\n\nSchneiderlin and Depay ended up leaving for Everton and Lyon respectively. And at 31, with 549 United appearances and 250 goals to his name, Rooney seems destined to experience the same fate.\n\nIt might not happen now. Rooney is known to be coveted by the Chinese Super League, who would offer vast sums to get the England captain to join Carlos Tevez and Oscar in the exodus east, but twice over the past few days I have been told such a move before the 28 February deadline is unlikely. The summer window in China runs from 19 June to 14 July.\n\nHowever, the end is in sight and Rooney's camp will doubtless spend the next few months exploring options.\n\nRooney has the carrot of knowing if he can remain in the England fold until next year's World Cup, he is likely to become his country's most-capped player, in addition to its record goalscorer.\n\nWhether he can do that from China is doubtful, and though former team-mate David Beckham eked out the end of his England days in Major League Soccer with LA Galaxy, it is by no means certain Gareth Southgate would offer the same opportunity to a player who has plenty of competition for his number 10 role.\n\nThis is the reality that is likely to focus minds because, four years after it seemed to be happening under Sir Alex Ferguson, it now seems a question of when, not if, Rooney leaves Old Trafford for good.\n\nMartial determined to stay at Old Trafford\n\nMeanwhile, Rooney's team-mate Anthony Martial insists he wants to stay at the club \"for as long as possible\".\n\nThe 21-year-old has struggled to recapture the form shown during his debut season at Old Trafford and was linked with a loan move to Sevilla in December.\n\n\"I love Manchester, I love the club and I love the fans,\" Martial said.\n\n\"The fans give me a lot of joy and I really enjoy having them backing me. I try to be as good as possible to make them happy, to satisfy them.\"", "When I first met Sean Rad, back in 2013, Tinder was a blossoming dating app. It was known primarily for, how shall I put it, casual relationships.\n\nBack then he told me Tinder was “good for humanity”, a line I instantly latched onto as being faintly ridiculous, and wonderful for a headline.\n\nBut now when I think of how Tinder has impacted my life, and those of several people close to me, I start to see what he was getting at.\n\nLife-changing things have happened to millions of people thanks to that simple swipe-yes-swipe-no interface.\n\nI know people who have married their Tinder matches. I know many others who are in serious relationships. And yes, I know many people who have had casual hook-ups and one-night stands. Yet why that last point is seen as a negative to be joked about I’ll never know. People have been doing that in bars for well over 100 years.\n\nAnyway, Tinder is growing up. It’s now a serious technology company tackling one of life’s most important matters, and is by far the most popular dating app worldwide.\n\nAfter a lot of boardroom musical chairs, Mr Rad is the chairman of both Tinder and Swipe Ventures, the arm of the company designed to buy other dating-related technologies.\n\nOne of which is artificial intelligence. And its collision with dating might be the most intriguing application of AI yet.\n\nSean Rad spoke at the Startup Grind Global conference in Redwood City, California\n\n“I think this might sound crazy,” Mr Rad said on Tuesday at tech conference Start-Up Grind.\n\n\"In five years time, Tinder might be so good, you might be like “Hey [Apple voice assistant] Siri, what’s happening tonight?’\n\n“And Tinder might pop up and say 'There’s someone down the street you might be attracted to. She’s also attracted to you. She’s free tomorrow night. We know you both like the same band, and it’s playing - would you like us to buy you tickets?’… and you have a match.\n\nAlso a little lazy, you might say. Part of the dating process is surely assessing someone’s tastes and idea of fun. If that’s taken out of the equation, it’s a lot harder to understand a person.\n\nStill, even though it can be difficult to admit, dating really is a numbers game, and right now the data Tinder uses is primitive: age, location and mutual friends - as well as a few mutual interests as defined by what you “like” on Facebook. Why not add a few parameters and make it even more likely you will click?\n\nAnyone who has been a student will know about “traffic light parties” (or stoplights if you’re an American). A hideous concept in which you go on a night out dressed in either red, amber or green. Red means “in a relationship and happy”. Green means “single and looking”. Amber means you’re a bad human being.\n\nThe idea is that two “greens” can find each other easily. Quite why anyone would go as a “red” is anyone’s guess.\n\nNow, this works (in theory) on university campuses. But such a system would be bedlam in the real world - particularly on St Patrick’s Day, I'd imagine.\n\nBut you have to admit, a way of knowing someone’s relationship status without having to ask would be a very useful tool. Indeed, it’s what made Facebook popular in its early days.\n\nMr Rad sees a time when Tinder could offer a form of real-life traffic party through augmented reality.\n\nAR is the technology that overlays digital images onto the real world as you walk around. So far the only truly popular application of it has been Pokemon Go, which, while bringing people together, isn’t the relationship fast-track most people are presumably looking for.\n\nBut what if you could use AR to meet potential partners?\n\n\"That will definitely impact dating,” Mr Rad said, noting Tinder is popular for so many people because it allows us to show interest in a person without the fear of rejection.\n\n\"You can imagine how, with augmented reality, that experience could happen in the room, in real time. The impact is profound as these devices get closer to your senses, to your eyes, to your experiences.”\n\nThat might make you deeply uncomfortable. I don't blame you. As ever, it will be up to technology companies - not just Tinder - to roll out such ideas in way that doesn’t encroach on privacy, or indeed, common decency and manners. The key word here is, as always, consent.\n\nTinder’s future lives and breathes on its ability to remain the most popular app for getting people together and into relationships. More recently, rival services like Bumble have shown signs of disrupting Tinder’s dominance. Bumble’s key selling point is the fact women have to initiate the conversations.\n\nBut there’s plenty of market to go round. Tinder now has a far more global focus, Mr Rad said, with approximately 600 million smartphone-toting single people ready to find The One.\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook. You can reach Dave securely through encrypted messaging app Signal on: (628) 400-7370", "Helen Bailey's husband John Sinfield died while the pair were on holiday in Barbados in 2011\n\nHelen Bailey's life changed completely following the death of her husband in 2011. Overcome by loneliness, she sought solace through the internet, writing a successful blog and communicating with others dealing with grief. It was here that she met the man she thought would become her life partner - but he would instead prove to be her killer.\n\nSix years ago, Ms Bailey was enjoying success as a children's author, having written more than 20 books, including the popular Electra Brown series.\n\nA lover of cooking, Arsenal FC and her Dachshund Boris, the Northumberland-born writer lived with her husband John Sinfield in Highgate, north London. The pair had been together for 22 years, and married for 15.\n\nIn February 2011, during a holiday to Barbados, her world was turned upside down when Mr Sinfield got caught in a rip current in the sea and drowned.\n\nMs Bailey was, in her own words, \"a wife at breakfast, but a widow by lunch\".\n\nThe aftermath saw her start a blog, Planet Grief. The posts shine with wit, humour, honesty and authenticity as she recounts moments from her life as a widow.\n\nShe describes releasing memorial balloons on Hampstead Heath; buying a single Scotch egg in the deli she used to frequent with her husband; coping with Christmas and the loss of the festive traditions she used to enjoy as a couple.\n\nMs Bailey wrote more than 20 books, including the Electra Brown series for teenagers\n\n\"I'm on a Facebook bereavement page, piddling around,\" she wrote in one post. \"A photo comes up. I am surprised to see it because I know the man in the photo.\n\n\"I keep wondering where we met, wracking my grieving brain.\n\n\"As it turned out, we had never met, but the man was Gorgeous Grey-Haired Widower, a man who from the moment we first met, I felt as if I had known for my entire life.\"\n\nMs Bailey went on to date GGHW, as she referred to him in her blog, and they later bought a house in Royston, Hertfordshire, moving in together along with his two sons.\n\nThey were planning to marry and were arranging a wedding at nearby Brocket Hall.\n\nBut in April last year, she was reported missing; a disappearance friends and family said was completely out of character.\n\nMs Bailey and Stewart moved in together at a house in Royston, Hertfordshire\n\nStewart made the initial call to police - he claimed to have found a note from Ms Bailey saying she needed \"space\" and had gone to her holiday home in Broadstairs, Kent.\n\nHe later issued a heartfelt message which said: \"You not only mended my heart five years ago but made it bigger, stronger and kinder.\n\n\"Now it feels like my heart doesn't even exist. Our plans are nowhere near complete and without you there is no point.\"\n\nStewart sent text messages to her phone asking him to let her know she was OK, pleading with her to call.\n\nFriends and fellow dog walkers organised searches to try to find her, with many also sending messages to her phone and social media accounts.\n\nBut all along, her body - and that of her beloved pet Boris - were hidden metres away from where police were searching.\n\nWhen she was found in a cesspit three months later, tests revealed she had been systematically drugged over a period of time before finally being suffocated.\n\nStewart and Ms Bailey were described by a neighbour as \"complete opposites\"\n\nStewart, described by many as \"quiet\" and \"reserved\", had been widowed in 2010 when his wife, Diane, died. She had an epileptic fit in the garden of their home in Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire.\n\nThe 56-year-old had worked as a software engineer before being forced to give up work due to poor health. Early in 2016 he had been told there was a high chance he had bowel cancer, but was later given the all-clear.\n\nHe suffered from insomnia and was prescribed a drug called zopiclone - the same drug pathologists found in Ms Bailey's system.\n\nMavis Drake, the couple's nearest neighbour in Royston, said Stewart was a man \"without much personality\".\n\n\"He didn't make any impression on me,\" she said. \"He wouldn't venture information, so you'd have to try to prise it out of him.\n\n\"I would never in a million years have matched them up as a couple. To me they were complete opposites in character.\"\n\nThe search for Ms Bailey lasted three months\n\nDuring the murder trial, St Albans Crown Court heard evidence about Stewart's behaviour and actions in the weeks after the killing.\n\nOn 11 April, the day he suffocated Ms Bailey, he went to watch his son Jamie play bowls before having a Chinese takeaway in the evening.\n\nDetectives investigating the author's disappearance told the jury he seemed \"quite blasé and non-committal\", appearing, at one point, to \"turn his head to the side and look at us and grin\".\n\nAs the prime beneficiary of Ms Bailey's will, he stood to inherit the bulk of her fortune - thought to be more than £3.3m at the time of her death.\n\nWhile the search for her was under way, he renewed their Arsenal season tickets from the couple's joint account and went on holiday to Mallorca, the jury heard.\n\n\"In hindsight, I think he was beginning to believe everything was going to carry on as normal and she'd never be found,\" said neighbour Mrs Drake.\n\nAn aerial view of the couple's home in Royston and the garage, beneath which Ms Bailey's body was found\n\nMs Bailey's body was found in a cesspit underneath a Victorian well\n\nIt was a comment from Mrs Drake herself that led to his downfall, after she mentioned to officers about the cesspit hidden below her neighbours' garage.\n\nThree months after he reported her missing, Stewart was charged with murder. He was convicted after a seven-week trial at St Albans Crown Court.\n\n\"To say it sent shockwaves through the widowed community is an understatement,\" said Laraine Mason, who, like Stewart, had met Ms Bailey online following the death of her spouse.\n\n\"For this tragedy to have happened to a lady who had found happiness again, after being widowed in the most tragic of circumstances is in itself horrific.\n\n\"Words cannot possibly express the horror and repulsion we feel by the fact that these acts have been perpetrated by one of our own against one of our own.\"\n\nStewart was arrested on suspicion of murder on 11 July last year\n\nComments left by friends on the final Planet Grief blog post after Ms Bailey's death show just how loved and respected she was within the bereaved community online.\n\nThey speak of the comfort her words had brought over the years, her honesty and humour, how much she would be missed.\n\nThe blog had been hugely successful, gaining followers from around the world. In 2015, the posts had formed the basis for a book: \"When Bad Things Happen in Good Bikinis.\"\n\nAt Ms Bailey's memorial service, Ms Mason spoke of the \"exceptional talent\" of her friend, the \"searingly honest, yet at the same time witty account of life after the death of a loved one\".\n\nBereavement coach Shelley Whitehead, who met Ms Bailey a few months after Mr Sinfield died, called her \"a brave, gutsy, connected woman\" who was \"so funny\".\n\n\"Helen created tribes - she had a following on widow and widower's websites,\" she said. \"It helped her, and it helped others who had experienced loss.\n\n\"She was making sense of the world and her loss through her writing.\"\n\nMs Bailey's Planet Grief blog gained followers from around the world\n\nShelley Whitehead, left, said she was \"blessed\" to call Ms Bailey her friend\n\nFor some of those closest to Ms Bailey, it is her writing which stirs up memories of the woman she was, and the impact she had on their lives.\n\n\"Helen lives on in her books - I keep copies of her book on grief in my office. I give them to newly bereaved partners,\" Ms Whitehead said.\n\n\"I feel blessed to have coached a woman like Helen. I feel blessed to call her my friend.\"\n\nIn the wake of the trial, with its revelations about the extent of Stewart's deception and his actions, the dedications at the end of Ms Bailey's book are difficult to read.\n\n\"And finally, this book is dedicated to my Gorgeous Grey-Haired Widower, Ian Stewart: BB, I love you,\" it says.\n\n\"You are my happy ending.\"", "Grime star Stormzy talks to BBC News about his music and global recognition ahead of the Brit Awards.", "On 1 January 1985 a passenger jet crashed into a mountain in Bolivia killing all 29 people on board. No bodies were ever found. Nor were the black boxes that would have revealed the cause of the accident. But last year two young Americans decided to have a look themselves - and ended up achieving far more than official investigators.\n\n\"What are the chances that a couple of knuckleheads, with no mountaineering experience could actually go up to the top of this 20,000ft mountain and find anything?\" asks Isaac Stoner.\n\n\"Still I thought it would be a neat vacation.\"\n\nIt was his flatmate, Dan Futrell, who came up with the idea one Saturday afternoon in 2015, as he idly browsed the internet looking for developments in the search for the missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370.\n\nHe found himself on a Wikipedia page listing 19 unrecovered flight recorders, and one immediately caught his attention - Eastern Airlines Flight 980, which had crashed in Bolivia in 1985, as it was coming in to land in the capital, La Paz.\n\nMount Illimani as seen from La Paz, Bolivia\n\nUnlike most of the missing black boxes, this one wasn't at the bottom of the sea, it was on land. It hadn't been found, Wikipedia said, due to \"extreme high altitude and inaccessibility of the accident location\". But to Futrell it just seemed like \"a typical Andean peak\".\n\n\"We were on the couch drinking beer,\" Stoner recalls, \"and Dan said, 'Look, this black box is just sitting on the top of a mountain in Bolivia. Let's go get it.'\"\n\nFutrell, 32, a former soldier who served two tours in Iraq, says he misses physical challenges now that he works at an internet company in Boston. So he seeks them out, and gets 31-year-old Stoner, who works at a biotech company, to accompany him.\n\nThey started finding out more about Eastern Airlines Flight 980. It had set off from Asuncion on New Year's Day 1985, heading to Miami via La Paz, carrying 19 passengers and 10 crew. The Boeing 727 had just been cleared to land at El Alto airport at 19:47, when it veered off course and crashed into Mount Illimani, the 21,000ft (6,400m) peak that towers over La Paz. Everyone on board was killed.\n\nThe crash site was located a day later by the Bolivian air force, however a search team was forced to turn back by heavy snowfall. In all, at least five expeditions made it up the mountain over the next 30 years, but none recovered bodies or flight recorders.\n\nAs contraband was often smuggled on flights from South America to Miami, conspiracy theories swirled around. Five members of one of Paraguay's richest families were on the flight and the US ambassador to Paraguay would have been on it too, if he had not changed his plans at the last minute. One unsubstantiated theory even alleges that a climber who reached the wreckage two days after the crash removed the black boxes to prevent a successful investigation.\n\nStoner started contacting climbers in Bolivia to see if two \"ordinary guys\" with no mountaineering experience could make the trip. One, Robert Rauch, said that they could.\n\n\"He told us 'I can put you right on the wreckage.' It turns out the glacier where the plane had crashed had retreated and there hadn't been much snowfall, so we might be able to see debris not seen for decades,\" Stoner says.\n\nRauch also revealed that some of the wreckage had fallen over a cliff, landing 3,000ft (915m) below the rest of the plane. This lower site was more accessible and a good place to start the search.\n\nIt was still high though. They would be operating at altitudes between 13,000ft and 20,000ft (4,000m-6,100m), where oxygen levels are 50% lower than at sea level.\n\nRauch warned them they would need at least three weeks in La Paz to acclimatise, but this was more time than they had available.\n\n\"We told him we had a total of two weeks' vacation,\" says Futrell, 32. \"So he recommended we sleep in an altitude tent beforehand. We rented one and set it up in the basement. It pumps in nitrogen and simulates a low oxygen environment. It was awful and we would wake up with headaches.\"\n\nFutrell and Stoner enlisted the help of experienced mountaineer Robert Rauch\n\nRauch also told the pair to build up their upper arm strength to prepare them for ice climbing.\n\n\"[We did] a lot of pull-ups with backpacks on,\" says Futrell.\n\n\"Isaac mostly attempted and I did all the pull-ups for both of us. I envisioned him hanging off the end of a cliff and me being the only person that could save his life.\"\n\n\"I envisioned cutting the rope and sending Dan down to the bottom of the abyss,\" jokes Stoner.\n\nOther training included trekking up and down the steps of the Harvard Football Stadium in Boston. They also got a prescription for Diamox, which helps the body to absorb oxygen.\n\nIsaac (left) and Dan bought ice axes and shovels in La Paz\n\nOne of the frequent avalanches that Dan and Isaac think are bringing wreckage down the mountain\n\nOn 17 May last year they flew to El Alto airport in Bolivia where they met up with their team - guide Robert Rauch, Bolivian cook Jose Lazo and journalist Peter Frick-Wright, who went on to write a detailed story for Outside magazine. After a few days of acclimatisation, they drove to a nearby peak to practise emergency drills.\n\nThe friends planned to split their time between the lower site Rauch had told them about and the impact site on the glacier, higher up the mountain, where the plane tail was still lodged in the snow.\n\n\"Robert decided that the best course of action would be to get us up on a mountain, to teach us how to ice climb, because we honestly didn't know what we were doing when it came to crampons and ice axes and being tied into a rope,\" says Stoner.\n\nThe housemates also struggled with the changes in temperature that veered from -6C (21F) in the shade to 9C (48F) in the sun.\n\n\"We knew we were going to suffer,\" says Futrell, \"and in fact that was part of the draw of this trip. Worthwhile things are often challenging and that's what we were looking for.\"\n\nThe team set off for their base camp at 15,400ft (4,700m) above sea-level in a battered four-wheel drive, though two miles short of their destination they came to a halt. The road had been blocked by a rock fall, and they had to get out and walk.\n\n\"We camped at this spooky old abandoned mine with a view of the big cliff face where the crash had happened,\" Stoner says.\n\n\"Every now and then there was a distant avalanche that sounded like a runaway train. Apart from that it was silent. We were up above cloud level and it was really wild and beautiful scenery.\"\n\nThe next day they hiked for 45 minutes and, as Rauch had promised, they found themselves in the midst of the plane wreckage.\n\nDebris was scattered over one square mile of rocky ground. Pieces of mangled plastic and wiring mingled with cutlery, wheels and broken cockpit equipment.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Flatmates Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner look for the black box from Eastern Airlines 980\n\nThe first thing they saw, however, was a life jacket - \"a piece of equipment intended to save somebody's life\" as Futrell puts it.\n\n\"So not only did we know we were in the right spot, but we were instantly reminded that there's tragedy here for 29 families.\"\n\nThey had planned a grid search pattern but in their excitement decided first to go off in different directions to take a look.\n\nDebris from the Boeing 727-225 was strewn across one square mile\n\nA pair of children's trainers were among the wreckage\n\nThe friends were busy picking through the wreckage when they were called by Rauch on their walkie-talkies. They rushed over to see what he had found. Slowly they realised they were looking at a human femur lying among the rubble.\n\n\"We all took a moment. We tried saying a few words but couldn't come up with anything,\" says Stoner.\n\nThe discovery disproved one conspiracy theory put forward by former Eastern Airlines pilot George Jehn in his book Final Destination: Disaster. After no remains were found on the first five expeditions, he suggested a bomb had depressurised the cabin and sucked the passengers out of the plane. This would have flung the bodies far from the wreckage. However, Futrell, Stoner and their companions found six body parts in separate locations.\n\nOne of the rock stacks the team used to mark human remains found on the mountainside\n\nCutlery from on board the Eastern Airlines 980 flight\n\nOne of the windows from the plane and orange metal found at the site\n\nThey decided to bury each find and mark the spot with a geomarker and a stack of rocks, in case anyone wanted to retrieve them later on.\n\n\"We also found silverware from the meal service, a sink from one of the bathrooms, shoes and shirts and jackets with pilot stripes on them. We found the emergency slide and life jackets, plane windows, landing gear and part of the instrument panel from the cockpit,\" says Futrell.\n\n\"There were wires everywhere and thousands of reptile skins which were likely to have been contraband.\"\n\nHowever, there was no sign of the black boxes, which despite their name are typically bright orange.\n\n\"We were finding orange bits of metal the whole time, but I was holding on to the hope they weren't pieces of the black box as they are supposed to withstand a plane crashing into a mountain,\" says Stoner.\n\nBut on the final day of searching at the lower site, Stoner unearthed a piece of metal with a label attached to some wires that read \"CKPT VO RCRD\" an abbreviation of Cockpit Voice Recorder.\n\nWires labelled \"cockpit voice recorder\" suggested the team were on the right track\n\nThey decided this probably meant that at least one of the recorders had broken apart.\n\nNot far away, they found a spool of magnetic tape.\n\nWould this hold a recording of the final moments of the aircraft? Futrell describes this as his \"greatest hope\".\n\nAfter three or four days at the lower site, the team decided to move on to the higher debris site and drove to a higher base camp. They set off at 04:30 the next morning but soon ran into serious problems.\n\n\"We had wanted to get up there and back in one day but we found we didn't have the time to do it. We were going slower as we were inexperienced at mountaineering and new crevasses had opened up which meant we had a longer and more difficult route,\" says Futrell.\n\nThey eventually decided it was too risky and turned back.\n\nDan and Isaac spent time digging out debris. At times the high altitude make them feel nauseous\n\nReturning to La Paz they boxed up the orange pieces of metal, wires and tape they had found and flew home with them to Boston. They suspected this might be breaking the rules of air investigations but decided it was the right thing to do anyway.\n\n\"We knew there was a specialist government lab in the States that would give us the best shot at an answer as to why the plane went down. Plus it was a US airliner and there had been no Bolivians on board,\" says Stoner.\n\nBack home in the US, though, they had a problem. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the US department in charge of investigating plane crashes, didn't want to touch their packages.\n\n\"They said 'Great job guys, but we can't do anything with it unless we get Bolivian sign-off,'\" says Futrell.\n\nThe housemates then spent months sending emails and letters and telephoning Bolivian officials.\n\n\"So at this point the black box has been sitting in our apartment on the kitchen counter next to the dog food for seven months,\" Stoner said at the end of 2016. \"And really it's become a key part of the decorative aesthetic in the apartment.\"\n\nFinally, in December, they were contacted by Capt Edgar Chavez, operations inspector at the General Directorate of Civil Aviation of Bolivia, who gave the NTSB permission to analyse the material.\n\nSo on 4 January, Futrell and Stoner handed over the plane fragments to Bill English from the NTSB, who took them to a laboratory in Washington.\n\nBill English picks up the plane fragments that had been sitting on Dan and Isaac's fridge\n\nThe housemates had already concluded that poor weather, the tricky descent to El Alto airport and unreliable equipment had all probably played a part in the crash. However, data from the voice recorder might give conclusive answers to the families who had lost their loved ones.\n\n\"We had people reaching out from Paraguay, we had family members reaching out from the US, right down to an old girlfriend of the pilot calling me on the phone,\" says Stoner, \"and most of them just really did want to say, 'Nice job guys, thank you.'\"\n\nOne of the family members was Stacey Greer, the daughter of Mark Bird, the flight engineer on Eastern Airlines Flight 980. Greer was only two years old when her father was killed.\n\n\"I was surprised that someone would be interested in finding out what happened. It gave me hope that people still care,\" Greer says.\n\nShe had asked Futrell and Stoner to bring back some metal from the plane for her.\n\n\"It was a really touching meeting,\" says Futrell. \"She got to put her hands on pieces of the plane, the last plane that her father flew and that took his life. She took this metal home and she turned one of the pieces of metal into a necklace just in memory of her dad and his loss.\"\n\n\"Usually there is a grave site or a memorial for a lost one, but my family never had that. Now we have something,\" Greer says.\n\nThe items studied by the National Transportation Safety Board in the US on behalf of the Bolivian authorities\n\nFutrell and Stoner had not found the cockpit flight recorder, it said, but rather the rack that had fixed it on to the plane - and the promising spool of tape turned out to be \"an 18-minute recording of the 'Trial by Treehouse' episode of the television series 'I Spy', dubbed in Spanish.\"\n\n\"Needless to say, we're disappointed,\" Futrell wrote on his blog.\n\nHowever, it means both the recorders are still up on the mountain and could still be intact. Futrell and Stoner hope others will now follow in their footsteps.\n\nAlready one member of the US Forces has declared his intention to organise an expedition to recover human remains.\n\n\"This tragedy really deserves a formal, resourced, governmental investigation,\" says Futrell. \"We've proved that 'inaccessible terrain' is an unacceptable reason for failing to close this investigation.\"\n\nListen to Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner speaking to Outlook on the BBC World Service\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nSutton United's FA Cup fairytale turned into a \"nightmare\" with the resignation of goalkeeper Wayne Shaw on Tuesday, says manager Paul Doswell.\n\nShaw, 45, was seen to eat a pie on the bench during Monday's FA Cup loss to Arsenal, after a bookmaker offered odds of 8-1 that he would do so on camera.\n\nThe Gambling Commission and Football Association are investigating if there was a breach of betting regulations.\n\nShaw resigned from the National League side less than 24 hours after the cup tie.\n\n\"I spoke to him on the phone and he was crying. In the end we had to almost stop talking to each other because it was that type of conversation,\" added Doswell.\n\n\"We are going to be investigated, and it has turned into a bit of a nightmare.\"\n\nThe bookmaker involved tweeted that it had paid out a \"five-figure sum\" on the bet.\n• None 5 live In Short: Lawyer says pie eating should be \"treated in the same light as spot-fixing\"\n\nShaw, who first joined Sutton in 2009, said he had been aware of the betting promotion before the match but insisted the incident in which he ate the pie - which he later insisted was a pasty - was \"a bit of fun\".\n\nBBC Match of the Day presenter Gary Lineker claimed the incident showed \"football has lost its sense of humour\".\n\nBut Doswell said that while he had sympathy for Shaw, he also felt he had been \"naive\".\n\n\"He's been caught in this mad world over the last month that has enveloped us. His profile has got bigger and bigger, I think he embraced that,\" said Doswell.\n\n\"Whilst we were very much concentrating on the football, I think Wayne was almost becoming like a superstar.\n\n\"The team were magnificent against Arsenal, but to think someone's openly eating a pie behind them reflects very much away from what they did. I know Wayne regrets it, he is very, very sorry about the whole situation.\"\n\nShaw, who began his football career as a striker at Southampton in the same youth team as Alan Shearer, also had a coaching role at Sutton and carried out other jobs for the club such as sweeping the 3G pitch.\n\nIt is not the first time he has been sacked by Sutton - he was dismissed in 2013 after an altercation with Kingstonian fans, but returned to the club two years later.\n\n\"I'm devastated for him,\" added Doswell. \"This is someone who's got a family to support.\n\n\"My overriding wish is he'd have asked my advice because very clearly I'd have advised him not to do it. I wouldn't have allowed him to do it.\"", "Christine Lewis took medical retirement at 48 but felt she had more to give\n\nSome 600,000 people with arthritis are missing out on the opportunity to work, according to the charity Arthritis Research UK. BBC presenter Julian Worricker, who has psoriatic arthritis, spoke to people trying to juggle staying in work with a painful and debilitating condition.\n\nBritain is a nation of \"put up and shut up\" when it comes to workplace health.\n\nThat's according to leading charity Arthritis Research UK. This isn't just based on anecdotal evidence - before Christmas the charity questioned more than 2,000 people about their attitudes and experience regarding health and the workplace.\n\nOne theme arose time and time again - people's willingness to suffer in silence.\n\nI have arthritis. Not rheumatoid, but another inflammatory form of the disease - psoriatic arthritis. It's linked to the common skin complaint, psoriasis.\n\nI'm lucky in that I've rarely had serious flare-ups. I'm now taking a drug that dramatically improves my symptoms, and at work I can think of only a handful of occasions when I've been hampered, discomforted or forced to make adjustments for any nagging pain I may have been experiencing.\n\nBut for thousands of other people in the UK it's a very different story.\n\nOsteoarthritis - which makes movement more difficult - is the most common form of arthritis\n\nSarah Dillingham is a case in point. She was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis in her 20s when she was working in a high-pressure corporate environment.\n\nSome people at work didn't understand the severity of Sarah's health issues, she says\n\nDuring bad flare-ups she had to cope with extreme fatigue and intense pain. Everyday tasks, even holding a pen, were difficult.\n\nCommuting, or as Sarah put it \"being bashed about on the tube\", really took it out of her.\n\nOver 10 years she struggled to control her symptoms.\n\n\"My world became all about my job because in order to go in and deliver I could only do that if I got up early to deal with the pain. I didn't have any social life. Your world does shrink in quite an unhealthy way,\" she says.\n\nShe experienced the best and the worst from the people she worked alongside.\n\nShe tells me: \"A fantastic colleague used to help by writing on the white board for me during presentations when I couldn't lift my arms up.\"\n\nBut one boss made it very clear that Sarah's health issues were not something to be considered important, forcing her to try and act as if there was no problem at all.\n\n\"Being bashed about on the tube\" on her daily commute was one of the things that made working difficult, says Sarah Dillingham\n\nChristine Lewis's story taps into some of the same narrative.\n\nShe was a nurse when she was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, but daily work tasks became too much for her and she switched her career to banking.\n\nInitially her new employers were very receptive to her needs, but as time went on they became less supportive.\n\n\"They employed someone to come and assess me. She assessed my working environment and made various recommendations.\"\n\nThey suggested minor changes to her desk and workstation, Christine told me.\n\n\"They said that things don't happen very quickly in business. A year later, still nothing,\" she says.\n\nSarah's and Christine's stories diverge at this point. Sarah is now her own boss, works mainly from home, and can manage her travel so that it rarely coincides with the London rush hour.\n\nChristine Lewis, pictured here with Julian, says employers are missing out on a \"wealth of experience.\" She now volunteers for the National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society\n\nAs an employer, partly as a result of what she went through as an employee, she's a believer in what she calls \"sensible flexibility\".\n\nShe says: \"I absolutely understand the importance of hiring people who will give 100%.\n\n\"At the same time pretty much everyone has something in their life, whether that's a long-term medical condition, or young children or having to care for someone.\n\n\"It can be as simple as being able to hold meetings over Skype, or an ergonomic mouse which is very cheap.\"\n\nChristine, by contrast, took medical retirement at the age of 48.\n\nShe feels she still had a number of good working years ahead of her but, without the necessary adjustments being made in the office to help her manage, she felt she had no choice but to give up her job.\n\n\"Employers are missing out on the wealth of experience that people have,\" she says.\n\n\"Being that bit older, I've got a house. I've had children, I've been a housewife and all that actually is quite a lot of experience that employers should tap into.\"\n\nThe Department for Work and Pensions told us that funding is available through the government's Access to Work scheme to pay for equipment or support that a disabled person might need in the workplace.\n\nStories like those of Sarah and Christine might well influence the government's thinking in the coming months.\n\nIt says it wants to halve what's known as the disability gap - that's the difference between employment rates of disabled and non-disabled people - and it's been consulting on how best to do that.\n\nThe Labour MP, Frank Field, chairs the parliamentary work and pensions committee. A lot of evidence about work and disability has come before him in recent months.\n\n\"Nobody doubts the will of the government wishing to do this. What's worrying is whether they've really thought about how hard this objective is to achieve,\" he says.\n\nOne suggestion is to encourage employers using incentives. \"One should have, in this coming Budget, a reduction in national insurance contributions to those employers who say I'm taking [disabled] people onto my payroll,\" he says.\n\nDuring our conversation Mr Field highlighted one statistic that put into perspective what the government wants to do: according to the Learning and Work Institute, halving that disability gap will take - at current rates - 200 years.\n\nJulian Worricker presents a mini-series about arthritis on You & Yours, from Wednesday 22 February to Friday 24 February at 12.15GMT on BBC Radio 4.\n• None 'How I got arthritis to loosen its grip'\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Scottish Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on Scottish Rugby TV. Highlights on BBC Two on Sunday, 26 Feb. Report on BBC Sport website\n\nScotland have made one change to their side for the third match of their Women's Six Nations campaign against Wales on Friday at Cumbernauld.\n\nFlanker Jemma Forsyth is promoted from the bench to start at blind-side in place of the injured Karen Dunbar.\n\nDunbar has been ruled out of the remainder of the Six Nations after suffering a knee injury against France.\n\nWorcester back-row Lyndsay O'Donnell is called up to the replacements, with the rest of the 23 unchanged.\n\nScotland, seeking a first Six Nations win since 2010, suffered an agonising last-gasp 22-15 home defeat by Ireland in their opening game being being thrashed 55-0 in France.\n\nWales, meanwhile, won 20-8 in Italy but crashed 63-0 at home to England the following week.\n\n\"We had a strong performance against Ireland in our opening match and a lot of good things were achieved, from which the players can take great pride from,\" said Scotland head coach Shade Munro.\n\n\"Unfortunately, we were unable to build on those positives against a very physical French team.\n\n\"The players are a tight-knit group and are determined to keep improving together. As a squad we remain focused and determined on making progress in this campaign and competing hard against all opposition.\n\n\"Wales pose a different challenge but one we are familiar with, having played them last October in a friendly as part of our increased training and game schedule.\n\n\"Home advantage will be key and I know the noise from the crowd during the Ireland game really lifted the players, so it would be great to see more supporters in the stands at Broadwood Stadium this Friday.\"", "Rhododendrons are a non-native shrub that can grow taller than 25ft (8m) if not controlled\n\nThe Irish army should be called in to do battle with rhododendrons because the plants are \"taking over\" a national park, the government has been told.\n\nThe invasion of the \"aggressive\" plant was raised in the Dáil (Irish parliament) by the colourful County Kerry politician, Michael Healy-Rae.\n\nHe claimed \"we are losing the war\" against overgrown rhododendrons in Killarney National Park.\n\nHe also said the park's deer population had \"exploded\" in recent years.\n\nThe Kerryman claimed the park was being neglected by the authorities and pleaded with Regional Economic Development Minister Michael Ring to allocate more resources to its maintenance.\n\n\"The rhododendron situation in Killarney National Park has become so bad that nothing short of calling in the army is going to put it right,\" said Mr Healy-Rae.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Michael Healy-Rae said 'nothing short of the army' would solve the problem\n\nRhododendrons are a non-native shrub that can grow taller than 25ft (8m) if they are not controlled.\n\nMr Healy-Rae requested a Dáil debate on the issue, in which he warned the plants were \"taking over completely, despite programmes of work over the years to cut them\".\n\nThe minister admitted that the management of the \"aggressive rhododendron is a long-standing, ongoing programme in the national park\".\n\nHowever, Mr Ring rejected the suggestion that the government had neglected the public facility or its flowery foreign foes.\n\n\"My department has invested heavily in tackling this invasive species, the control of which is difficult, costly and labour-intensive,\" he said.\n\nMr Ring added that more than 700,000 euros (£590,000) had been spent on rhododendron clearance in Killarney National Park over the past six years.\n\nHe said this work had made \"significant inroads into the problem\".\n\nThe minister added that his department was working on an \"updated strategic rhododendron management plan\" and had appointed a \"specialist\" to assist with the shrub situation.\n\nWild rhododendrons decorate Torc waterfall in Killarney National Park, but the plants are difficult to manage\n\nIn respect of the exploding deer, Mr Healy-Rae referred to a 2008 study which he said was the most up to date he could find.\n\nThis research, he said, showed red deer numbers had \"increased by 565%\" over a 30-year period while and the sika deer population had risen by 353%.\n\nMr Ring said staff from his department are \"currently undertaking a cull of deer\" in the national park.\n\nThe cull, which is due to end next month, followed a \"comprehensive survey\" on the park's deer population carried out at the end of last year.\n\nMr Healy-Rae is not the first person to issue warnings over the Republic of Ireland's rhododendron invasion.\n\nIn 2014, a couple in their 50s had to be rescued after they became trapped in a \"treacherous\" rhododendron forest.\n\nIt took search teams five hours to reach the couple in the Knockmealdowns Mountains, on the border between County Waterford and County Tipperary.", "Heard the term but not sure what it means? Chris Fawkes explains.", "Manchester City \"will be eliminated\" if they do not score in the second leg of their Champions League last-16 tie with Monaco, says manager Pep Guardiola.\n\nCity, who came from behind twice to beat the French league leaders 5-3 in a pulsating first leg at the Etihad Stadium, play the return on 15 March.\n\n\"We are going to fly to Monaco to score as many goals as possible,\" Guardiola said afterwards.\n\n\"That is my target. It is impossible to progress if we don't score a goal.\"\n\nMonaco led 2-1 and 3-2 before City fought back to clinch a thrilling victory in the highest-scoring first leg of a knock-out tie in the 25-year-history of the Champions League.\n\nGuardiola is expecting another wide open game when the teams meet again, and feels that is the best way to combat Monaco's own attack-minded tactics that have seen them score 76 goals in 26 Ligue 1 games this season.\n\n\"They play in that way too - they will attack more and more,\" he explained. \"We will have to defend better but we will have our chances, I am pretty sure of that.\n\n\"Am I happy with my team playing so open? Yes. A lot.\n\n\"I would like to see how many teams are able to make a clean sheet against Monaco this season. They attack with so many good players, who make runs in behind, that it is difficult to control the game.\n\n\"But we created a lot of chances too and I don't know if Monaco have played a team who created as many chances as we did against them.\n\n\"We arrived in their box so many times which is why I want to play in that way again.\"\n\nSemi-finals (2-2 agg with Atletico. Atletico through on away goals)\n\nMonaco coach Leonardo Jardim had no regrets about his side's approach and said he had \"congratulated his players\" despite their defeat.\n\n\"We still have 90 minutes to go and we will be playing at home so the tie is far from over,\" Jardim said. \"And I think everyone who watched this game was happy to be able to witness such a spectacle.\n\n\"It was a great game for supporters. Two great teams, very good in attack, and eight goals scored.\n\n\"I think my players played a great game. We made a couple of errors in defence which we were punished for but I think the real key to this game was when we could have gone 3-1 up [with a penalty] but the score came back to 2-2.\"\n\nGuardiola felt Willy Caballero's save from Radamel Falcao's second-half spot-kick was vital and praised the way his side dug in to turn the game around.\n\n\"At 1-3, mentally it would have been so tough for us, but Willy made an excellent penalty save,\" Guardiola added.\n\n\"The lesson we got from the game was that we did not give up. There were moments we were lucky, especially in the second half, and when we were so unlucky - especially in the first half.\n\n\"But we did not give up, which is why we are still alive in the tie.\"", "Sutton United have accepted the resignation of reserve goalkeeper Wayne Shaw, who is under investigation for potentially breaching betting rules.\n\nA bookmaker had offered odds of 8-1 that Shaw would eat a pie on camera. Shaw, who said he was aware of the betting promotion prior to the match, played the incident down as \"a bit of fun\".", "Uber said it would publish diversity figures in the 'coming months'\n\nOn Monday Uber boss Travis Kalanick sent an email to his employees with more information about the probe - and further plans the company has to address the issue.\n\n“It’s been a tough 24 hours,” he began, adding that the company was “hurting”.\n\nThe investigation will be lead by former US attorney general Eric Holder, who served under President Obama between 2009 and 2015, and Tammy Albarran - both partners at law firm Covington and Burling.\n\nArianna Huffington, best known for being the founder of the Huffington Post, will also help carry out the review. Ms Huffington has been on Uber’s board since April last year. Also conducting the review will be Uber’s new head of human resources, Liane Hornsey, and Angela Padilla, Uber’s associate general counsel.\n\nAfter coming into widespread criticism for never having published statistics on diversity at the company, Mr Kalanick said he would deliver figures in the \"coming months\". He said that of the employees working as engineers, product managers or data scientists, 15.1% are women - a number which he said hadn’t changed significantly in the past year.\n\n“As points of reference,” he wrote, “Facebook is at 17%, Google at 18% and Twitter at 10%.”\n\nUntil now, Uber had been standing firm on not publishing its diversity figures. Most major technology companies make public their EEO-1 - a government filing that breaks down employees by race, religion, gender and other factors.\n\nUber has not specified if it will publish its entire EEO-1, or just post select figures from the company.\n\nIn her blog post, Susan Fowler cited anecdotal figures of women leaving Uber in droves.\n\nSpeaking specifically about the site reliability engineering team, which she worked on for a year, she said that by the time she left, “out of over 150 engineers in the SRE teams, only 3% were women”. She now works at San Francisco-based payment firm Stripe.\n\nUber said it would be holding an “all hands\" meeting on Tuesday to tell its employees what its “next steps” will be.\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook.\n\nIf you are an Uber employee, you can reach Dave directly and anonymously on encrypted messaging app Signal using +1 (628) 400-7370.", "Thirty-three homes have been evacuated and nearly 100 people left homeless by a landslide which is tearing apart the village of Ponzano in Italy.\n\nOfficials say a hill has been cut in two, and the landslide is moving at a rate of a metre a day.\n\nThe village is in the Abruzzo region, which was hit by a string of earthquakes in 2016.", "Skepta and Bowie are both listed in the best British album category\n\nSkepta and David Bowie are among the stars expected to win at the Brit Awards on Wednesday night.\n\nThe grime star and the late rock icon are up for best British male. Other nominees at \"music's biggest night\" include Beyonce, The 1975 and Bastille.\n\nPerformances will come from Ed Sheeran and Little Mix, as well as US stars Katy Perry and Bruno Mars.\n\nThere will also be a tribute to pop star George Michael, who died on Christmas Day.\n\nThe show kicks off at 19:30 on ITV and you can follow the red carpet action on BBC Music News Live from 15:00 GMT.\n\nDermot O'Leary and Emma Willis have been drafted in to present the ceremony at London's O2 Arena, after original host Michael Buble pulled out to care for his young son, who is receiving treatment for cancer.\n\nWillis, a mum-of-three who presents The Voice UK and Big Brother, said she hoped she could \"do him proud\".\n\n\"Every part of me sends so much love and all the best wishes in the world to Michael and his family at such a difficult time,\" she said.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Best single nominee Zara Larsson on why she loves the Brit Awards\n\nThe star will introduce performances from the following acts:\n\nThis year's ceremony is notable for its recognition of grime, which re-emerged from the underground last year, asserting its position as the UK's biggest musical movement since Britpop.\n\nSkepta, who won the 2016 Mercury Prize for his self-released album Konnichiwa, is favourite to win best breakthrough artist; while fellow grime MCs Stormzy and Kano are also up for awards.\n\nBowie - who died in January last year - is likely to prevail in the best British male category, as the music industry takes its chance to honour one of rock's most recognisable and influential figures.\n\nHis haunting swansong, Blackstar, is also up for best British album.\n\nLittle Mix have three nominations\n\nPop group Little Mix tie with Skepta for the most-nominated act of the night - each has three.\n\nThe girl band look like they will be locked out of their categories, best group (likely to go to The 1975), best video (One Direction) and best single (Clean Bandit, for Rockabye).\n\nBut they have solid support from Stormzy, who's rooting for Jade, Perry, Leigh-Anne and Jesy to take home a trophy.\n\n\"They have smashed it,\" the grime star told BBC Newsbeat. \"Their new song, Touch, is a banger. I can't even lie.\"\n\nMeanwhile, Beyonce and her younger sister Solange Knowles are both up for best international female, after releasing albums about race and politics last year.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nThe FA Cup quarter-finals between Chelsea and Manchester United and Tottenham and Millwall will be broadcast live on BBC One.\n\nPremier League leaders Chelsea will host Jose Mourinho's United on Monday, 13 March with kick-off at 19:45 GMT.\n\nMauricio Pochettino's Tottenham welcome League One Millwall on Sunday, 12 March at 14:00 GMT.\n\nBT Sport will broadcast non-league Lincoln's trip to Arsenal on Saturday, 11 March (17:30 GMT).\n\nThe game between Middlesbrough and the winner of the fifth-round replay between Manchester City and Huddersfield will also be live on BT Sport on Saturday, 11 March at 12:15 GMT.", "Ahead of her Brits show, Katy fills in Nick Grimshaw on the power of performing as a thirty-something, and what it's like seeing her peers in the audience.", "Doctors from a children's hospital have stepped in to help save the life of a baby hippo which was born prematurely at Cincinnati Zoo.", "A photo of PCSO Dave Bunker helping an elderly woman has been shared hundreds of times online\n\nA PCSO heralded for helping an elderly woman find her way home said he was \"proud\" with the recognition but he was \"just doing my job\".\n\nA photo of Dave Bunker, 49, taking the woman by the hand has been shared hundreds of times on social media.\n\nInsp Colin Haigh, of Lincolnshire Police, posted the photo and a caption: \"Community policing at its best.\"\n\nMr Bunker said: \"I was really surprised at the reaction. I've done nothing special, it's what we do.\"\n\nMr Bunker has been a PCSO with Lincolnshire Police for more than 10 years\n\nHe said he had gone to the woman's aid after spotting her on Roman Bank, Skegness, on Monday.\n\n\"She told me she was on her way to the bus station but she must have been three-quarters of a mile away.\n\n\"I thought I would give her an hand. I offered her my arm but she chose to take me by the hand.\n\n\"We started walking but it became obvious it was too far to walk so I called a colleague who came and picked her up.\"\n\nHis actions have been praised online, with one Twitter user calling it \"British policing at its best\", while another said: \"This is why we love our boys and girls in blue\".\n\nMr Bunker, who has been a PCSO with Lincolnshire Police for more than 10 years, said: \"Incidents like this happen on a regular basis. It's not just me it's other PCSOs and PCs too. We are doing things like this daily.\n\n\"Somebody on Twitter said I needed a reward but I said the smile on the woman's face was all the reward I needed.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Thursday's early rush hour will be very disrupted as snow in parts of Scotland, rain in Northern Ireland and strong winds everywhere make travel very tricky. Chris Fawkes forecasts the impacts of Doris.", "The claim: The government's figures on business rates are misleading because they exclude inflation and an appeals adjustment.\n\nReality Check verdict: The figures do exclude both those things, but government publications specify that they do. The government's figures are for the situation after any appeals have been completed, so they depend on how accurately it has predicted their outcome.\n\nThe government has produced tables showing how much business rates would rise or fall in the coming year, broken down by region of the country and type of business.\n\nThe overall effect of all the changes comes to zero, which means that the policy is revenue neutral.\n\nBut there is a key caveat at the bottom of the table, which is that the figures are: \"Before inflation and the adjustment to the multiplier for future appeal outcomes.\"\n\nThe inflation part is widely known. The measure of inflation used will become CPI (Consumer Price Index) instead of RPI (Retail Price Index), which will usually mean the increase is smaller, but that change will not happen until 2020. Increasing rates for RPI will add about 2% per year.\n\nBut the other part is a bit more complicated - it is the adjustment required to make sure that the changes in rates are revenue neutral even after some businesses have appealed against the rated value of their premises and won.\n\nAnalysis from the property consultants Gerald Eve suggested that the adjustment would be between four and five percentage points. They did that by working out how much business rates would change across the country to find out what adjustment would then be needed to make the policy revenue neutral again.\n\nThey add that including both the inflation and the appeals adjustment means that business rates will fall in 135 of the 326 local authorities in England, not 259 as the government claimed.\n\nThe Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) has strongly disputed suggestions that it has misled people with its figures, but has not disputed the suggestion that the appeals adjustment is between four and five percentage points.\n\nSpeaking on the Today Programme, Conservative MP Andrew Bridgen said he thought the figures provided, \"might not be giving the picture that businesses in the real world are going to get when they get their bills\".\n\nThis is certainly true. The DCLG has been clear that its figures are before inflation and the appeals adjustment.\n\nThe government's figures are for the situation after any appeals have been completed, so they depend on how accurately it has predicted their outcome.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Many Europeans eye the months ahead with foreboding. They see anti-establishment parties on the ascendancy. Angela Merkel - for so long Frau Europe - may lose power. And the financial markets are skittish over the possibility of a Marine Le Pen victory in France. Every edge up in her poll ratings sends bond yields rising.\n\nAnd yet an entirely different scenario may play out. It is quite possible that before the end of the year observers will declare that the Brexit-Trump tide has turned and that European integration has found new champions.\n\nFirst to the politics: in the Netherlands Geert Wilders has a history of under-performing at the polls. Even if he emerges as the leader of the largest party after the elections in March, he will struggle to get a foothold in government.\n\nThe contest that preoccupies Europe's political class, however, is France. The conventional wisdom is that Marine Le Pen will win the first round in the presidential elections but be substantially defeated in round two. But France is on edge, gloomy and unsure of itself.\n\nShe has expanded her lead in the polls and closed the gap on her most likely challenger in the second round, Emmanuel Macron. Still, he retains a 16% poll lead.\n\nMarine Le Pen supporters: Many believe she will win the first round of the election\n\nBut observers no longer trust the polls, and they fear the unforeseen event that could turn even more voters against governing elites.\n\nYet if Marine Le Pen loses, as seems most likely, Europe could be facing an entirely different future. Currently the candidate most likely to win in France is Mr Macron. Yes, he's a novice: a man who has never been elected to high office. He has been drawing the crowds because he has sold himself as a new politician, neither left nor right.\n\nAs the campaign gets under way, Marine Le Pen will be scathing, dismissing Mr Macron as an international banker, the epitome of the failed global elite, and the man who was Economy Minister under Francois Hollande.\n\nMr Macron has yet to define himself, and he may yet stumble. But if he made it to the Elysee Palace, Europe and France would have a pro-European president, committed to the survival of the euro and the alliance with Germany.\n\nEmmanuel Macron has faced accusations that he is part of a governing elite\n\nAt the same time, Germany has grown more restless and more open to change. Some see Angela Merkel, who is hoping for a fourth term as chancellor, as weary and burnt-out. Some of her zeal for power has gone. And many Germans will forever blame her for allowing more than a million refugees into the country.\n\nHer main political opponent, the Social Democratic Party, has a new standard bearer in Martin Schulz. In the past month, the SPD has surged 12 points, even surpassing Mrs Merkel's Christian Democratic Union.\n\nMr Schulz is a former President of the European Parliament. For a long time in German politics, he has been known as \"Mr Europe\". He has a good back-story: he's a former bookseller without a high school degree. He is a straight-talker, passionate about Europe and further integration.\n\nAngela Merkel is standing for a fourth term as Chancellor of Germany\n\nHis greatest strength is his unbridled passion to succeed, his weakness is a love of power and some of its trappings, which he demonstrated in Brussels. He also may stumble, having not yet declared his policy on refugees. And never underestimate the appeal of Angela Merkel and her safe pair of hands.\n\nBut the crowds are turning out for Mr Schulz, much as they have done for Mr Macron in France. If both men were to win, the outlook in Europe would change suddenly and dramatically.\n\nBoth are European integrationists who would look to deepen and strengthen the European project. Together, they would breathe new life into the Franco-German relationship that has always been the engine room of the EU.\n\nMartin Schulz is a former President of the European Parliament\n\nBoth, politicians from the centre-left, would loosen austerity further and favour spending on infrastructure projects to help countries such as Italy escape stagnation.\n\nThere would be little generosity from either man towards Britain as it starts to negotiate its exit from the European Union.\n\nMr Macron has said that it will be \"pretty tough\" on the UK and Mr Schulz would want to see the UK pays a price for its departure.\n\nAs this European election season begins, no-one yet knows what the Trump effect will be on Europe.\n\nWill US President Donald Trump's victory encourage voters that they can support anti-immigration candidates who want powers returned to the nation states and, in the case of France, have a vote on membership of the European Union?\n\nOr will President Trump deter voters from taking further risks?\n\nWill voters turn away from the United States - whose president has openly discussed which country would leave the EU next - and incline towards building a Europe more confident in its own values and security?\n\nThe President of the European Council, Donald Tusk, has said Europe wants the US's \"wholehearted and unequivocal support for the idea of a united Europe\".\n\nIt may not be forthcoming, and the insecurity may yet prompt some voters to back deeper European integration rather the outsiders, the insurgents, the challengers.\n\nFor Europe, the script for 2017 is a long way from being written and the outcome may yet surprise.", "Manchester United's Juan Mata tells Gary Lineker he would love to take over as the presenter of Match of the Day when he retires from playing football.\n\nWatch the full interview with Juan Mata on The Premier League Show, Thursday, 23 February, 22:00 GMT on BBC Two and the BBC Sport website & app.", "An airport in California has released video of a plane, being flown by the actor Harrison Ford, mistakenly flying low over an airliner.\n\nFord's single-engine plane landed on a taxiway instead of a runway at John Wayne airport in Orange County earlier this month.", "The British Antarctic Survey has released new footage of the ice crack that promises to produce a giant iceberg.\n\nThe 175km-long fissure runs through the Larsen C Ice Shelf on the eastern side of the Antarctic Peninsula.", "Immigration rules that require a Briton to be earning a minimum amount before they can bring a non-EU spouse to the UK have been upheld in the Supreme Court. How does this policy affect families?\n\n\"My son has seen his father a few times only,\" says British national Toni Stew.\n\n\"I feel like a single mother rather than a wife.\"\n\nMs Stew, from Worcester, met her Egyptian husband Mohamed El Faramawi, 33, while on holiday in Sharm el-Sheikh in 2009. They got married six years later.\n\nBut, as the 25-year-old does not earn a minimum of £18,600 per year, her husband has been unable to join her and their 17-month-old son Ali in the UK.\n\n\"I feel very guilty towards my baby,\" she says.\n\n\"He hasn't done anything to deserve being without his father.\"\n\nMs Stew, who works as a part-time sales assistant, says she can't afford to work full-time as she also needs to care for Ali.\n\nThey are just one couple out of thousands who are said to be unable to meet the minimum income requirement that came into force in July 2012.\n\nUnder the family migration policy, only British citizens, foreign nationals who are deemed to be \"present and settled\" in the UK, or those with refugee status can apply to sponsor their non-European partner's visa.\n\nAnd whichever of those three categories they are in, they must also show they have sufficient funding. In most cases, this is proof of an annual salary of £18,600, held for at least six months prior to the application. This level rises to £22,400 for a non-European partner and child, with an additional levy of £2,400 for each additional child. The rule does not apply to EU citizens.\n\nThose who are granted the \"family of a settled person\" visa cannot usually claim benefits or other public funds.\n\nThe Home Office introduced the rules as part of attempts to control immigration from outside Europe, with ministers in the then coalition government arguing that the rules would ensure no incoming families would burden the UK taxpayer.\n\nMohamed El Faramawi has been unable to join his son Ali in the UK\n\nBut the minimum income requirement policy was challenged in the High Court in 2013 and again in the Court of Appeal in 2014 by two British claimants and one claimant who has refugee status who want to bring their non-EU spouses to the UK.\n\nThey said the rules were discriminatory and interfered with Article 8 of the Human Rights Act, the right to a private and family life.\n\nThe case then went to the Supreme Court, which said that while family immigration rules requiring minimum income cause hardship, they are lawful.\n\nThese rules need to be changed as the income threshold is too high, the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants says.\n\nThe charity's chief executive Saira Grant says it would \"greatly help\" if the income of the foreign partner was taken into account.\n\nThousands of people are impacted by the rules, she says.\n\nBritish national Laura Segan and her American husband Spencer Russ are facing the possibility of separation less than a year after they have got married.\n\n\"Just because she happens to fall in love with me and I have the wrong passport, she isn't allowed to live with me in her own country,\" says Spencer, 28.\n\nHis student visa expired in January and he has applied for leave to remain in the UK, but if that is rejected he fears he will have to leave the country.\n\nLaura Segan and Spencer Russ have found their relationship complicated by visa rules\n\nFull-time graduate student Laura would then need to earn a minimum of £18,600 per year for a minimum amount of six months in order to bring her husband back to the UK.\n\nLaura, from Devon, says she cannot work full-time while she is studying. \"It doesn't seem right,\" the 28-year-old says.\n\n\"I think it is ridiculous to put a financial requirement on love,\" adds Spencer, who met his wife when they were both teaching English in Russia.\n\nAndy Russell, from Bath, reluctantly describes himself as \"one of the lucky ones\".\n\n\"Yet I don't feel that,\" he says.\n\nMolly's only contact with her family for a year was on Skype\n\nThe 43-year-old teacher faced a long battle to get his Chinese wife Molly, 36, a partner visa after they decided to move to the UK from China in 2012 with their two sons - then just three and five years old.\n\nMolly had to return to China to apply for the visa while Andy searched for a job that met the income requirement.\n\nShe was told she could not enter the UK on a visitor visa because she had expressed her intention to get a partner visa.\n\nA year of separation with Molly able to see her family only via Skype led to her youngest son referring to her as \"computer mummy\".\n\n\"It broke my heart,\" Andy says.\n\nHe says their sons lost the ability to speak Chinese, which affected their bond with their mother as she struggled with English, and led to them \"losing some respect for her\", although their relationship is \"much better now\".\n\n\"They [the government] have got to deal with migration, but not at the expense of genuine, honest families. It is a scandal,\" Andy says.\n\nThe Children's Commissioner for England says that at least 15,000 children are separated from a parent because of the income rules and are growing up in \"Skype families\".\n\nAndy Russell with his two sons and wife Molly before she left for China\n\nSome Britons who are unable to meet the sufficient funding requirements have used the \"Surinder Singh\" route to get their non-EU partners into the country. This involves working in another nation in the European Economic Area (EEA) for about three months.\n\nIt means that when they return to the UK, their case is considered under different rules - as they are treated as a citizen of the EEA rather than a British citizen.\n\nBut the Home Office must be satisfied that people who have demonstrated they did actually \"move\" to their new EEA country for the period they lived there and did not just simply take a short-term job there for immigration purposes.\n\nHome Office figures show the number of partner visas granted fell from 46,906 in the year ending June 2006 to 27,345 in the year ending June 2015, when it says 66% of applications were approved.\n\nA Home Office spokesman said those who wish to make a life in the UK were welcomed \"but family life must not be established here at the taxpayer's expense\".\n\nHe said that was \"why we established clear rules\" based on advice from the independent Migration Advisory Committee.\n\nAll cases are \"considered on their individual merits,\" he said.\n• None Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Man Utd\n\nWayne Rooney's agent Paul Stretford is in China to see if he can negotiate a deal for the forward to leave Manchester United.\n\nThere are no guarantees of success and it is thought a deal remains highly unlikely before the Chinese transfer window closes on 28 February.\n\nBut the fact Stretford has travelled to China is a clear indication United boss Jose Mourinho would let Rooney, 31, go.\n\nIn a BBC Sport poll, 30% of voters think that Wayne Rooney's next move should be to move to China.\n\nAnd if he does not leave this month it seems certain he will go in the summer.\n\nRooney has fallen down the pecking order at United under Mourinho.\n\nThe England captain has been made aware of interest in him from the Chinese Super League for some time, although it is not known which clubs Stretford has spoken to.\n\nHowever, two of the three clubs who looked the most likely options for Rooney have ruled themselves out.\n\nBeijing Guoan, believed to be the favourite team of Chinese President Xi, had been seen as one of the favourites to sign Rooney but sources close to the club have told BBC Sport they are not interested in signing him.\n\nThe England captain's representatives have already spoken to Tianjin Quanjian and their coach, Fabio Cannavaro, said talks did not progress, while sources close to Jiangsu Suning also dismissed speculation over a transfer.\n\nOn Tuesday, Mourinho said he did not know whether Rooney, who has only just returned to training after a hamstring injury, would still be at Old Trafford in a week's time.\n\nIt is not known whether this latest development will affect Rooney's chances of being involved in Sunday's EFL Cup final against Southampton.\n\nThey had appeared to have increased after Henrikh Mkhitaryan limped out of Wednesday's 1-0 Europa League win against Saint-Etienne.\n\nIf Rooney follows former team-mate Carlos Tevez to the Chinese Super League, it would almost certainly cost him any chance of making the seven appearances he needs to become England's most capped player.\n\nRooney's preference is understood to be to remain with United for the rest of his contract, which expires in 2019, but a lack of time on the pitch is forcing him to consider alternatives.\n\nRooney is United's record goalscorer and has won five Premier League titles and a Champions League trophy since joining them as an 18-year-old for £27m from Everton in 2004.\n\nThe forward, who has started only three games since 17 December, has said he would not play for an English club other than United or Everton .\n\nThe big difference between Chinese Super League clubs' transfer process and their Premier League counterparts is the preparation.\n\nEnglish top-flight clubs have extensive scouting departments with links around the world. They identify players months in advance, watch many live games and base their decision on an extensive process.\n\nIn CSL, the process is more agent-led. Most of the clubs are approached with recommendations for a position they are recruiting in, rather than seeking out players themselves.\n\nForeign players coming in on large fees are commanding three-, four-, five-year deals, even at the end of their career. They have the upper hand in negotiations and wouldn't leave European football without long-term financial guarantees.\n\nHowever, the Chinese government is concerned about capital leaving the country and it is difficult for these big transactions to exist while they are trying to crack down in other areas.\n\nI think we will see a levelling out in fees. The £15m-£20m transfers will continue to happen for the next few years, but maybe we won't see the likes of the £60m deal that brought Oscar to China.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester United eased into the last 16 of the Europa League with victory at Saint-Etienne but goalscorer Henrikh Mkhitaryan could be out of Sunday's EFL Cup final after limping off.\n\nLeading 3-0 from the first leg thanks to a Zlatan Ibrahimovic hat-trick, United started sharply in front of a noisy home support at a stadium often referred to as 'The Cauldron', with Mkhitaryan flicking in Juan Mata's cross early on to leave the hosts needing five goals.\n\nThe Armenian departed shortly after and clutched his hamstring as he entered the tunnel, an injury which could impact on manager Jose Mourinho's team selection for Sunday's Wembley meeting with Southampton.\n\nAnd although United had defender Eric Bailly sent off for two bookable offences in the second half, they rarely looked under pressure in securing a place in Friday's last-16 draw.\n\nShort of a Loic Perrin header, which was easily held by Sergio Romero in the first half, United - who had made six changes - were comfortable throughout, with Marcus Rashford poking wide when well placed in the second period.\n\nThe first leg of their next game in the competition will arrive days before an FA Cup tie at Chelsea but with just one defeat in 25 matches, Mourinho continues to shuffle his pack efficiently and the challenge for three cup successes remains in tact.\n\nUnited's brilliant run of form since early November has largely coincided with Mkhitaryan establishing himself as a first-team regular.\n\nHis sixth goal for the club was a deft flick at the near post as he guided the ball low into the net, effectively ending the contest.\n\nHis inclusion, along with that of Ibrahimovic and Paul Pogba, perhaps suggested Mourinho felt United still had work to do in the tie, despite the prospect of a first major trophy of the Portuguese manager's reign being on offer on Sunday.\n\nBut Mourinho believes his playmaker will have \"too little time\" to overcome the injury and Michael Carrick also looks a doubt with a calf complaint.\n\nThe injuries will pose selection dilemmas but could pave the way for Wayne Rooney - whose future at the club looks uncertain - to perhaps figure more prominently at Wembley.\n\nIf Mkhitaryan's injury frustrated Mourinho, he was visibly angered as he waved his hand up in protest when by Bailly was dismissed for two yellow cards in a 185-second spell.\n\nBailly was fractionally late on Romain Hamouma to bring about his second caution, though Mourinho felt the winger \"enjoyed too much the diving and simulation\".\n\nThe defender will miss the first-leg of the next round, but his dismissal should not take any gloss from a professional display. When resistance was needed, it arrived - notably when Bailly and Romero raced to thwart Kevin Monnet-Paquet's burst towards goal in the first half.\n\nAt the other end, the pace of Rashford, drive of Pogba and threat of Ibrahimovic ensured United always looked capable carving their hosts open and finding extra gears if needed.\n\nAlmost nine years have passed since their last European success under then-manager Sir Alex Ferguson, who watched from the stands as United made it five wins in a row, with just one goal conceded.\n\nTough opposition such as Lyon and Roma could yet arise in the Europa League but United clearly look well placed for an assault on a trophy they have never won and though injuries mount, they carry strong momentum into the first domestic cup final of the season.\n\n\"The right message\" - what the managers said\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho: \"Everything was under control, solid, focused, professional. Obviously the first goal kills every hope. We still like to win the game. I told the players if someone gives me a 2-1 victory it is not enough. I always want the best possible result.\n\n\"I have to give the right message to the players and the right message is to play with a strong team and have a bench with options. We knew it would be difficult. It was important to play solid and to have complete control of the game.\"\n\nSaint-Etienne manager Christophe Galtier: \"I would love for my players to have won this game for themselves, first of all, but also for the fans because they would have deserved it. The fans were just exceptional tonight.\"\n• None Since winning their final Europa League group game against Zorya Luhansk in December, United have conceded just seven goals in 18 games, winning 14.\n• None Man Utd have kept four successive clean sheets in European competition for the first time since December 2013.\n• None Henrikh Mkhitaryan has been involved in five goals in his last six games for Man Utd in all competitions (three goals, two assists).\n• None Man Utd have scored in all but one of their last 26 games in all competitions (0-0 v Hull on 1 February).\n• None Attempt saved. Jorginho (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top left corner.\n• None Offside, St Etienne. Fabien Lemoine tries a through ball, but Kévin Monnet-Paquet is caught offside.\n• None Offside, St Etienne. Florentin Pogba tries a through ball, but Nolan Roux is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Bastian Schweinsteiger (Manchester United) right footed shot from the left side of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Paul Pogba.\n• None Attempt missed. Vincent Pajot (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the right.\n• None Offside, St Etienne. Kévin Théophile-Catherine tries a through ball, but Romain Hamouma is caught offside.\n• None Offside, Manchester United. Paul Pogba tries a through ball, but Zlatan Ibrahimovic is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Romain Hamouma (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high. Assisted by Kévin Monnet-Paquet.\n• None Attempt missed. Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United) right footed shot from the right side of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Paul Pogba. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nYorkshire seamer Ryan Sidebottom has announced he will retire at the end of the forthcoming county season.\n\nThe 39-year-old left-armer played 22 Tests for England, also winning the ICC World Twenty20 title with them in 2010.\n\nHe also won five County Championship titles, three with his native Yorkshire and two with Nottinghamshire.\n\n\"There's a tear in my eye whenever I think about not playing professional cricket again - a game that's given me so much over the years,\" he said.\n\nSidebottom, whose father Arnie also played for Yorkshire and won one Test cap in 1985, has taken 1,028 wickets in all competitions, including 737 in first-class cricket.\n\nBorn in Huddersfield, he began and will end his career at Yorkshire, either side of a spell at Nottinghamshire between 2004 and 2010.\n\n\"I've always tried to play with a smile on my face and give 110% because I absolutely love this sport,\" he continued.\n\n\"It's been an honour to represent my home county, Yorkshire, play for my country and help make history at Nottinghamshire.\n\n\"I couldn't have asked for better team-mates and they've helped me become the cricketer I am today.\"\n\nAfter making a wicketless Test debut against Pakistan at Lord's in 2001, Sidebottom had to wait six years for a second chance.\n\nHis most successful series came in New Zealand in 2008, when his left-arm swing bowling captured 24 wickets at an average of 17.08 - including a hat-trick in the first Test at Hamilton - in a 2-1 England victory.\n\nHe never played against Australia during his Test career, but took 2-26 against them in the 2010 World T20 final as Paul Collingwood's side became the first - and so far only - England team to win a global International Cricket Council limited-overs tournament.\n\nHe retired from international cricket later that year.\n\nMeanwhile, Yorkshire pair Liam Plunkett and Alex Lees have been added to the MCC team for the champion county match against Middlesex, starting in Abu Dhabi on 26 March.\n\nPlunkett replaces injured team-mate Matt Fisher, while Lees comes in for England opener Haseeb Hameed, who has withdrawn from the squad to undergo sinus surgery.", "A McDonald's based inside a medieval building in Shrewsbury is set to close.\n\nWith parts of the structure dating back to the 12th Century it is thought to be the oldest in the world to house one of the chain's restaurants.\n\nThe outlet on Pride Hill opened 34 years ago and will shut when the lease expires.\n\nA spokeswoman for McDonald's said the building \"wasn't suitable to meet their future plans\".", "A family in the UK say they are at risk of being torn apart because of income rules surrounding foreign spouses.\n\nLian Papay's American husband AJ, who is their son's main carer, faces being deported because of repeated visa rejections.\n\nAs of 2012, Britons must earn more than £18,600 before a husband or wife from outside the European Economic Area (EEA) can settle in the UK.\n\nJudges in the Supreme Court rejected an appeal by families who argued that the rules breached their human right to a family life.", "A picture of Ronald Fiddler was released by the so-called Islamic State group\n\nThe Brexit Secretary David Davis has said Britain will stay open to EU immigration many years after leaving the EU, according to The Times.\n\nSpeaking in the Estonian capital, Tallin, Mr Davis is quoted as saying: \"Don't expect just because we're changing who makes the decision on the policy, the door will suddenly shut. It won't\".\n\nBrexit Secretary David Davis was speaking on a visit to eastern Europe\n\nAccording to the Guardian, the City of London has warned that the loss of banking jobs to EU countries because of Brexit could threaten British and European financial stability.\n\nInterviews with several senior bankers and business leaders are said to reveal growing certainty that there will be a wave of relocations this year.\n\nThe front of the Daily Mail carries a picture of the former Guantanamo Bay detainee from Manchester, Ronald Fiddler - also known as Abu-Zakariya al-Britani - who is believed to have carried out a suicide bombing in Mosul over the weekend.\n\nReferring to compensation he received after being released in 2004, the Mail tells readers: \"You paid him one million pounds.\"\n\nHis brother, Leon Jameson, tells the Times: \"It is him, I can tell by his smile\". He says his brother \"wasted his life\".\n\n\"UK roads are ruined\" says a headline in The Times. A leading economics consultancy has found that Britain's roads are in a worse state than those of many other developed nations - despite high fuel taxes.\n\nThe Centre for Economics and Business Research ranks UK roads 27th in the world and claims our main highways are in a worse state than those in poorer countries such as Malaysia, Namibia and Ecuador.\n\nThe lead in the i says the dream of owning a home is fading for young families. Figures apparently show that house-buying rates among the \"just about managing\" have fallen far behind their foreign counterparts.\n\nFor those with incomes slightly below the national average, Britain is placed 32nd out of 37 countries - behind Romania, Croatia and Mexico.\n\nThe paper claims the figures have brought charges that ministers are failing a whole generation of aspiring home owners. But the government says its halted a decline in home ownership, which began in 2003.\n\nA couple of the papers lead on the storm heading for Britain. The Express predicts plunging thermometers and \"chaos\". \"Batten down the hatches,\" says the Mirror, \"here comes Doris\".\n\nA picture of the Queen presenting poet Gillian Allnutt with a medal at Buckingham Palace shows an electric fire\n\nAnd the Sun wonders if Her Majesty has been trying to save on the heating bills this winter. A picture in several papers of her handing The Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry to to Gillian Allnutt at Buckingham Palace yesterday reveals the room is being heated by a portable two bar electric fire. The Mail calls the Queen \"the thriftiest royal.... bar none\".", "Children's birthday parties can be an expensive affair.\n\nIn some parts of Asia, where disposable incomes are high, families are happy to fork out a fortune. As part of our Business of Kids series, we met some top-notch party planners cashing in on the opportunity .", "Jago Lawless said drivers have to adjust their parking to get in and out of their cars, which resulted in his front wheel being \"an inch, two inches over the line\"\n\nA motorist has had a fine for parking over the line of a bay overturned after he proved the spaces were \"too small\".\n\nJago Lawless, 46, was fined £80 for not parking his Hyundai i10 within a bay at Southampton Central station about a week ago.\n\nAfter receiving the ticket, the naval architect measured the space and said it was \"too small for an average-size car\".\n\nSouth West Trains said some spaces at the station would now be repainted.\n\nAccording to the British Parking Association, there is no legal minimum size for parking bays, but there is a design standard which is 15.7ft (4.8m) in length and 7.8ft (2.4m) in width.\n\n\"When I first measured the entrance into the car parking bay, it measured at about 2.4m,\" Mr Lawless said.\n\n\"But because they've angled the parking bar over, the parallel width between the lines is actually only 1.978m wide, which is too small for an average-size car.\"\n\nMr Lawless measured the space after receiving an £80 fine for not parking within the white lines\n\nMr Lawless added: \"I couldn't believe that, having parked such a small car, that I could not have parked it properly.\n\n\"Because they are at an angle, they are too small - they're far too narrow and they're not long enough.\n\n\"You have to adjust parking your car to enable you to get in and out of the car.\"\n\nSouth West Trains said the 21 angled spaces at the 182-space car park would be repainted\n\nSouth West Trains said the spaces at the car park were set up prior to any recommendations on parking bays being issued.\n\nIn a statement, it said: \"Now this issue has been raised, we will be re-marking the small number of angled spaces in this car park to increase their width.\"\n\nIt said the penalty issued to Mr Lawless had also been withdrawn.\n\nThere is no legal minimum size for parking bays, but there is a design standard which is 15.7ft (4.8m) in length and 7.8ft (2.4m) in width\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "British businesses could be losing out on a potential £420 million a week by failing to target disabled consumers.\n\nSophie Morgan is an artist who designed the 'Mannequal' – a wheelchair for mannequins that is both a style guide for wheelchair users and a symbol of inclusivity.", "Developing new drugs to fight major diseases can take years and cost billions of dollars\n\nDeveloping a drug from a promising molecule to a potential life-saver can take more than a decade and cost billions of dollars.\n\nSpeeding this process up - without compromising on safety or efficacy - would seem to be in everyone's interests.\n\nAnd cloud computing is helping to do just that.\n\n\"Cloud platforms are globally accessible and easily available,\" says Kevin Julian, managing director at Accenture Life Sciences, Accelerated R&D Services division.\n\n\"This allows for real-time collection of data from around the world, providing better access to data from inside life sciences companies, as well as from the many partners they work with in the drug development process.\"\n\nAll pharmaceutical drugs are tested on animals first before humans\n\nClinical trials - testing how a new drug works on people once you've tested it on animals - are a crucial part of this process. But they can be very complex to organise and run.\n\nThere are three main phases, starting with a small group of healthy volunteers, then widening out to larger groups who would benefit from the drug.\n\n\"A big phase three trial will cost anything from $30m-$60m (£24m-£48m) for a pharma company,\" says Steve Rosenberg, general manager of Oracle Health Sciences Global Business Unit.\n\nThese trials may be conducted over 30 to 50 countries and involve hundreds or even thousands of patients - this takes a lot of time and money.\n\nGenomics is driving the development of more targeted drugs rather than \"blockbusters\"\n\n\"Patient recruitment has always been the number one problem,\" says Mr Rosenberg.\n\nAnd as drug development targets more specific groups of people, largely thanks to the insights coming from genomics, finding the right patients for such clinical studies is becoming even harder.\n\nThis is where the cloud can help.\n\n\"With cloud and related technologies, we are now able to mine real-world data to find patient populations better, and utilise globally available technology to conduct trials in an even more distributed and inclusive manner,\" says Mr Julian.\n\nCloud and increasing digitalisation is also helping to improve the efficiency of data collection and analysis.\n\n\"Data collection used to be very inefficient, with data being written on paper forms, faxed and then entered into computers manually,\" explains Tarek Sherif, co-founder and chief executive of Medidata, a company that has developed a cloud platform for clinical trials.\n\n\"Then it had to be double-checked for errors. It could take up to a year before you could draw any conclusions from the patient data.\"\n\nThe demand for cheap medicines is often at odds with drug companies' need to make a profit\n\nDigitising the process and automating the checking process in the cloud has reduced this time to \"one to two weeks,\" says Mr Sherif.\n\nAnd cloud offers many additional advantages to pharma companies, says Mr Rosenberg.\n\n\"These days health data is coming from a wide variety of sources, like labs, wearable devices, electronic diaries, health records. Pharma companies can't necessarily handle all the data that's coming in to them.\n\n\"So cloud computing helps them do that and gives them a whole bunch of other advantages - the technology is kept up to date, you get the latest security, the latest features and so on.\"\n\nA spokesman for pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) told the BBC: \"Advances in computing and data analytics are providing new opportunities to improve the efficiency of our research and increase our understanding of a disease or a patient's response to medication.\"\n\nFinding the right patients for a clinical trial is time-consuming and costly\n\nSpeeding up the clinical trial process also cuts costs.\n\n\"We were able to save one of our clients about 30% on the cost of running a trial,\" says Mr Sherif, whose firm facilitates nearly half of all clinical trials in the world and counts 17 of the top 25 pharma companies as clients.\n\nAnd Accenture's Mr Julian says: \"We've seen overall savings of 50% - in some cases up to 75% - on the historically labour-intensive parts of the drug development process.\"\n\nOf course, not all prospective drugs work, or they're shown to work but not any better than existing drugs on the market.\n\n\"So the Holy Grail is to fail faster so you're not failing in the very final phases of drug development when you've already spent most of your money,\" says Mr Sherif.\n\nWinning regulatory approval for a drug is only half the battle. Pharma companies also have to convince health services and insurance companies that's it's worth paying for.\n\nIn the past, patients were often asked to keep written diaries of their experiences with a drug being tested, but these were \"horribly inefficient\", says Mr Sherif.\n\nSo the rise of electronic diaries and wearable devices is helping to improve the evidence a pharma company can present in defence of their latest drug.\n\nWith this is mind, Oracle is helping add \"mHealth\" capability to Accenture Life Sciences' cloud platform.\n\nAnd GSK says: \"We've been conducting clinical studies with biosensors and mobile devices for some time.\n\n\"Today's digital technology is enabling us to collect and analyse data in new ways - monitoring activity and vital signs in patients, and collecting patient feedback in real time, improving the quality of data we use in the development of new medicines.\"\n\nThe cloud is also encouraging more pharma companies to co-operate on molecule development [the building blocks of a potential drug], says Mr Rosenberg, as well as on data analysis.\n\nAnd all this anonymised patient data - historical and recent - can potentially be shared in the battle to combat disease.\n\nDiscovering new molecules that could be developed in to drugs is still very difficult\n\n\"We are seeing clients increasingly use 'virtual studies' - using external and historical data to perform advanced statistical analysis and reduce the need for complicated, costly site-based study activity,\" says Accenture's Mr Julian, citing a collaborative Alzheimer's project between some of its clients and the Coalition Against Major Disease.\n\nBut while efficiencies in the drug development process are undoubtedly being found, discovering the initial molecule is still very difficult, experts warn.\n\nCloud computing is having a big practical impact, but won't necessarily result in a flurry of \"miracle\" cures.", "The progress in driverless car technology over recent years has been astounding. A future when you can hop in and have a sleep while an autonomous vehicle takes you to your destination appears to be closer than anyone thought just five years ago.\n\nGetting there, however, will involve quite a few stages, with cars getting more and more autonomous but human drivers still having some role. Or will it?\n\nA report by Bloomberg says Ford is going to skip a step and go straight to fully autonomous driving. The article says that is because engineers who are testing the company's self-driving vehicles are falling asleep at the wheel because there is so little for them to do.\n\nFord tells me that only part of this story is true: \"Reports that Ford engineers were falling asleep while testing autonomous vehicles are inaccurate.\"\n\nBut it goes on to say that \"high levels of automation without full autonomy capability could provide a false sense of security\".\n\nThat means it is difficult for the driver to suddenly take control if there is a situation where the technology is not up to it. And that's why it is going to head straight to what is known as SAE level four - \"autonomous capability that will take the driver completely out of the driving process in defined areas\".\n\nSAE is a global organisation of automotive engineers that has come up with a definition of six levels of automation, from zero - where the driver is in full control - to five, where the car does everything in all circumstances.\n\nIn January, at CES in Las Vegas, Ford's Ken Washington told me confidently that the company would have a fully autonomous car on the road by 2021: \"The vehicles we are going to put in our 2021 fully autonomous ride service will not have a steering wheel, they won't have a brake pedal,\" he explained.\n\n\"So this means there's no issue with drivers having to take over control because the vehicle will know how to handle all scenarios.\"\n\nMost of the car industry seems to believe that the evolution of automation will be a more gradual affair, with drivers slowly learning to trust their cars to do ever more. But I can see why Ford sees a problem with a halfway house, where the driver only occasionally needs to take over.\n\nLast year, I drove a Tesla in Autopilot mode down an American freeway - and found it a nerve-wracking experience. My hands hovered over the steering wheel and my foot over the brake, ready to act if needed. As the technology improves, perhaps we will get more relaxed about taking our hands off the wheel, eating a sandwich or watching a video - but that could then make us less capable of responding quickly when we need to take over.\n\nThat is why Ford wants to move swiftly to full autonomy - but is that practical? I caught up with a leading British figure in this field, Professor Paul Newman, whose Oxbotica firm is developing autonomous vehicles.\n\nHe thought Ford was serious about that 2021 target but stressed that what it was promising was not a car that would drive itself anywhere but what he called \"mobility as a service\". The vehicles would be owned by the company and would operate as a sort of autonomous taxi: \"It would be a limited service on specific routes. Just like a bus can't go anywhere, you would only operate this where you were confident that it would work.\"\n\nProfessor Newman believes that we will first see fully autonomous vehicles operating at quite slow speeds in cities rather than on motorways. \"The trick is then to have the machines learn through use and ever expand their domains.\"\n\nSo we have two competing strategies. Most of the car industry is looking to build ever more autonomous capabilities into something that will still look like a traditional car, in the expectation that it will take until 2030 to reach the full autonomy of SAE level five.\n\nBut both Ford and Google seem confident that building vehicles that won't look so familiar will get them to level four - full autonomy in defined areas. They hope that will change the way we think about road transport far more quickly. Let battle commence...", "Two giant railway arches have been lifted into place linking Manchester's Victoria and Piccadilly stations as part of the Ordsall Chord scheme.\n\nThe 600-tonne structure was lifted into place across the River Irwell using one of the largest cranes in Europe on Tuesday.\n\nThe scheme is part of the multi-million pound Northern Hub upgrade for rail services across the North of England.", "Unilever is behind some of Britain's best-known brands\n\nThink of Kraft Heinz's assault on Unilever as a slap in the face for management. It was short-lived, shocking, and will smart for a good while yet.\n\nIt's a slap that says \"we think we can do a better job for your shareholders than you\". That is not a message you want to get lodged in shareholders minds if you are Unilever's management and today the company acknowledged the sting.\n\n\"Unilever is conducting a comprehensive review of options available to accelerate delivery of value for the benefit of our shareholders. The events of the last week have highlighted the need to capture more quickly the value we see in Unilever.\"\n\nThat is the sound of a company cheek smarting.\n\nIt is very rare for corporate raiders like Warren Buffett (24% owner of Kraft Heinz) and Brazilian financier Jorge Lemann (owner of 3G) to back off so quickly. Once you dangle higher returns in front of pragmatic investors, they usually want to see what the next chat up line might be.\n\nThe Unilever management will take some pride in the fact they convinced some of their own major shareholders to back their rejection of the offer so flatly. The management argument, as told to me by senior management, went something like this.\n\nYes - Kraft has much higher profit margins than Unilever (23% compared to 15%) so looks like the better operator. But - Kraft habitually invests less in the future, therefore has lower organic (internally generated) growth and is saddled with more than average amounts of debt.\n\nAs a result it needs to acquire other companies to keep the growth going and pays for it by using yet more debt, which is financed in part with cash the target company has in the bank.\n\nThat model, argues Unilever, is not sustainable. Before long, we would be part of an underinvested, short-term profit-seeking, company-eating machine. As soon as Unilever had been digested, Kraft would be hungry again.\n\nWhen the management of the company you want to buy REALLY don't want to sell to you, you can always go over their heads, cut them out of the negotiation and appeal directly to the shareholders.\n\nBut \"going hostile\" costs a lot more money and excites much more regulatory and political interest than a deal which the management recommends.\n\nMany UK politicians welcomed the Kraft defeat as a victory for responsible long-term thinking by one of Europe's biggest companies and its shareholders who wisely eschewed the Jerry Maguire \"show me the money\" approach.\n\nIt's lucky for them they did. It will give the government a bit more time to figure out their own play book for how to deal with future bids - which are certainly coming thanks to the discount UK companies are selling at thanks to a near 20% depreciation in sterling post-referendum.\n\nAt the World Economic Forum in Davos last month, I spoke to half a dozen US executives who were running the rule over potential UK targets - big and small.\n\nCurrent rules only allow the government to intervene when takeovers could compromise financial stability, national security or media plurality.\n\nTargets I heard discussed included food and drink, engineering and technology companies based or listed in the UK with foreign earnings potential. You can come up with a reasonably long list using those criteria.\n\nDespite a few eye-catching deals like Japan's Softbank swoop on ARM Holdings and the upstart company Skyscanner being sold to a Chinese rival, there is no flood yet.\n\nIn fact, merger activity overall is still subdued as bidders are still wary of the prospects for UK companies with exposure to domestic and EU markets until greater clarity emerges on the future relationship between the two.\n\nAs Kraft Heinz retreats with its tail between its legs for now there is plenty of food for thought for both Unilever and government.\n\nUnilever's CEO Paul Polman has been warned that if he doesn't focus more on the bottom line, someone else will.\n\nThe government may have to decide quickly whether foreign takeovers are a sign of confidence in the UK to be welcomed or opportunistic raiding parties to be resisted.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nWing George North has recovered from a bruised thigh to start for Wales in Saturday's Six Nations match against Scotland at Murrayfield.\n\nThe 24-year-old replaces Alex Cuthbert in the only change from the 21-16 defeat by England in Cardiff.\n\nRoss Moriarty continues at number eight, while Taulupe Faletau remains on the bench for Rob Howley's side.\n\nThere is just one change among the Wales replacements, as second row Luke Charteris replaces Cory Hill.\n\nNorth was selected for the match against England on 11 February but was withdrawn an hour before kick-off.\n\nThe Northampton Saints wing was replaced by Cuthbert, who was criticised after England scored a late try to snatch victory at the Principality Stadium.\n\n\"We have been able to select from a position of strength which is a huge positive and it is good to welcome George [North] back into the starting XV and Luke [Charteris] on to the bench,\" said Howley.\n• None Four changes for Wales women's team to play Scotland\n• None Keep up to date with BBC Six Nations alerts\n• None How to watch and follow Wales in the Six Nations with the BBC\n\n\"In terms of intensity and performance, we stepped up a level against England and we need to take the positives from that performance and take it into 80 minutes against Scotland at Murrayfield.\"\n\nWales in the 2017 Six Nations", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nEngland centre Jonathan Joseph has been left out of the squad preparing to face Italy in the Six Nations on Sunday.\n\nJoseph, 25, has played in all 15 Tests under Eddie Jones but is back with Bath after being cut from a 24-man squad.\n\nElliot Daly is favourite to start at outside centre, with Ben Te'o also pushing for a starting berth, while James Haskell is set to return on the open-side flank.\n\nEngland will confirm their starting XV and replacements on Friday morning.\n\nThey need to shed one more player from the retained squad when they select their matchday 23.\n\nIf selected in the run-on XV Haskell would be making his first start since June 2016.\n\nThe 31-year-old spent six months out with a foot injury before featuring as a replacement in victories over France and Wales in this year's Six Nations.\n\nProp Mako Vunipola and wing Anthony Watson have been included after recovering from injury, but both may be used from the bench against the Azzurri.\n\nEngland trained last week with Owen Farrell at fly-half and Teo'o and Daly in the centre, a combination which has yet to start a Test.\n\nIn recent matches Farrell has played at inside centre, outside starting fly-half George Ford.\n\nBut assistant coach Steve Borthwick says vice-captain Farrell, who is set to win his 50th cap, will be an influence wherever he is selected.\n\n\"It's great we have versatility there, it allows flexibility,\" Borthwick said. \"He is a great player and a fantastic leader.\"\n\nItaly have recalled Exeter centre Michele Campagnaro as they make four changes for Sunday's match.\n\nThree come in the backs, with fly-half Tommaso Allan and wing Giulio Bisegni joining Campagnaro in the starting XV.\n\nBraam Steyn replaces Maxime Mbanda at blind-side flanker as Italy search for their first win of the tournament.\n\nConor O'Shea's side are bottom of the Six Nations table after heavy defeats by Wales and Ireland.", "Comedian Bill Maher (left) hosted Milo Yiannopoulos (right) on his television show\n\nLeading figures and activists on the alt-right have split over controversial comments made by one of the movement's champions.\n\nMilo Yiannopoulos is a passionate supporter of Donald Trump and rose to fame as an editor at the right-wing website Breitbart. His extreme views on feminism and Islam made him a darling of the American alt-right - a loose collection of anti-immigration, anti-political correctness conservatives including many white nationalists. Although Yiannopoulos has consistently said he is not a member of the movement, in March 2016 co-wrote a much-cited defence of the alt-right.\n\nBut now he appears to have crossed a line with his views after videos surfaced in which he appeared to condone paedophilia, and some of his former allies have turned against him.\n\nThe footage showed him discussing the supposed merits of gay relationships between adults and boys as young as 13. Yiannopoulos will no longer speak at a US conservative conference and a book deal, reportedly worth $250,000, has been cancelled.\n\nOn Tuesday he resigned from Breitbart. In a statement he said his \"poor choice of words\" was detracting from the work of his colleagues.\n\nWriter Milo Yiannopoulos at one of his controversial university speaking engagements in the US\n\nWhile many grass-root supporters are standing by him, a number of high profile right-wing figures seem to have decided his latest comments are a step too far.\n\nTim Treadstone tweets under the name Baked Alaska and ranked number eight on Time Magazine's most influential Twitter feeds of 2017. He was one of the first alt-right activists to openly criticise Milo.\n\nGavin McInnes, a co-founder of Vice Media and now a leading anti-feminist campaigner, was also quick to distance himself from Milo's comments, but at the same time claimed that the Breitbart editor was being targeted by establishment forces.\n\n\"Advocating sex w 13-yr-olds under ANY conditions is indefensible but this is ultimately about the old right's disdain for the new right,\" he tweeted.\n\nThe white nationalist Richard B Spencer, one of the leaders of the movement and someone who had previously described Yiannopoulos as \"alt light\" was dismissive.\n\nYiannopoulos did though get support from some parts of the far right. Alex Jones, who runs the far right Infowars, uploaded a video defending Yiannopoulos, blaming the mainstream media for taking his words out of context.\n\nDebate has also been raging on the social media site Gab, which as BBC Trending has previously reported, is a favourite hangout of the alt-right. Users seem divided over whether Yiannopoulos deserves sympathy or condemnation.\n\n\"Yes, Milo is a flamboyant provocateur, but this coordinated attack on him by the #FakeNews is disgusting,\" wrote one user who signed off with the hashtag \"Stand with Milo.\"\n\nAnother wrote: \"Please let's not lose this guy. Nothing is worse than serving a cause, and getting chewed up and spit out.\"\n\nWhile most of the messages on Gab defended Yiannopoulos, many users were critical: \"Regardless if recent events are justified or not, I haven't liked that many were hitching the movement to Milo. He's always been a bit of an attention whore.\"\n\n\"Milo has always insisted he isn't #altright, he recently disavowed white identity and on Maher said he wasn't even conservative,\" wrote another. \"He basically disavowed the entire right so what are we defending here exactly?\"\n\nNext story: The mystery of the anti-UKIP Twitter machine\n\nWhy is a strange network of Twitter accounts, usually the source of pro-Russian messages, now pumping out tweets about a very specific British election?READ MORE\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "The fiance of a children's author who drugged and suffocated her before throwing her body in a hidden cesspit has been found guilty of murder.\n\nIan Stewart, 56, had denied murdering Helen Bailey but was convicted at St Albans Crown Court.", "The ingredients from a simple ready meal may have come from all corners of the earth\n\nWhen you pop your chicken tikka masala ready meal into the microwave at the end of a long day at work, you're likely to be thinking how hungry you are rather than marvelling at the global trade deals that brought it about in the first place.\n\nYet the chicken, spices and rice in that box are in reality the result of a series of complex trading relationships.\n\nThe chicken may have come from Thailand, the pilau rice from India and the spices from elsewhere in Asia. Even the packaging is likely to have been sourced internationally, while the meal itself may well have been produced outside the UK.\n\nThe recent scandal at Waitrose, which was forced to rebrand the lamb ready meals in its \"British\" range because some are made with lamb from New Zealand, has highlighted the issue.\n\nWaitrose has said all its \"British\" lamb meals will be rebranded as \"Classic\"\n\n\"When we go into a supermarket, restaurant or coffee shop, we're at the very centre of a huge web of food and drink trading relationships, with layers and layers of exchanges going on out of sight,\" says James Walton, chief economist at food and grocery research charity IGD.\n\nAll those deals add up to a significant industry. We import more than we export of all types of food. The UK imported a whopping £38.5bn worth of food, feed and drink in 2015, the most recent official statistics available.\n\nThe number dwarfs the £18bn worth of food we exported that year. In fact, just half of the food we eat in the UK originates here, with most of the rest imported from Europe.\n\nA recent vegetable shortage, driven by bad weather in southern Europe, highlighted this dependence, and led to a flurry of pictures on social media of empty supermarket shelves.\n\nOn top of this, the pound's 14% fall against the euro since the Brexit vote means imports cost more, and there is huge uncertainty over what effect leaving the EU will have on the cost and availability of food from Europe.\n\nAll of this begs the obvious question: shouldn't supermarkets simply rely more on British suppliers instead?\n\nSupermarkets are coy on just how much they source from the UK, with Morrisons the only one of the \"Big Four\" to answer my email on this question. Tesco, Asda and Sainsbury's did not reply.\n\nMorrisons, which says it already sources around two-thirds of its supplies from the UK, has pledged to recruit 200 more British suppliers after a report it commissioned found global uncertainties meant it \"makes increasing sense to build up a stronger local food sector\".\n\nThe report's author, Prof Tim Benton, said the aim of doing this \"is not to disengage from reliance on global trade, but to hedge our bets by increasing local production for local consumption\".\n\nLocal is all the rage right now, with the popularity of farmers' markets, homemade artisan breads and craft beers continuing apace. People expect food and drink that hasn't travelled thousands of miles to taste better. The assumption is also that production standards will be higher.\n\nPeople are also keen to support their local economy. In fact, three-quarters of people said they try to buy British food and drink if it is available, mainly with the motivation to support British manufacturers and jobs, according to IGD's December survey of 1,700 shoppers. Although notably, a lot less - just under a third - said they were willing to pay more for the privilege.\n\nTesco was criticised last year for tapping into this trend, using fictional British-sounding farm names on labelling for a range of meat and fresh produce, some of which was sourced from abroad.\n\nRosedene Farms may sound British - but the strawberries are from Morocco\n\nBut while the notion of buying British may be appealing, the reality is that on a bigger scale it's very difficult to achieve.\n\nEven if we ate all the food we exported, we would still generate less than two-thirds of what we need, according to Prof Benton.\n\nAnd while Morrisons has pledged to source more from the UK, the chain is in an unusual position in that it already owns an abattoir and meat-processing operations, as well as bakeries and produce-packing sites, making it easier for it to be more self-reliant.\n\nFor many of its rivals, replicating this kind of domestic supply chain would be much tougher.\n\nPaul Martin, head of retail at consultancy KPMG, says often the economics just don't stack up.\n\n\"On paper, it's very appealing, but the challenge is that due to the high cost of manufacturing in the UK, you need to have a very high utilisation rate. If you are a supermarket then you're likely only to supply to yourself,\" he says.\n\nThe hurdles aren't just financial. The UK doesn't actually have enough room to grow all the crops and keep all the animals that we currently eat. The climate means there are also certain items, such as bananas, that we simply cannot grow at scale in the UK.\n\nGiven the massive housing shortage in the UK, Mr Martin says it's unlikely to be desirable politically to use more land for farming.\n\nThe UK could never produce enough wine to satisfy demand, says KPMG's Paul Martin\n\nAnd while supermarkets may talk of looking at alternative supply sources - something he notes is a good way of putting overseas suppliers under pressure to keep costs low - the reality is that the impact on consumers may also be unpalatable.\n\n\"If you suddenly say we'll shift 30% or 40% of imported food categories, even if it was possible, it would have a significant shift on the way people consume goods,\" says Mr Martin.\n\nLots of products, such as tomatoes and strawberries, which we take for granted as being available all year round, no longer would be. And, he says with a smile, the UK could never produce enough wine to satisfy demand.\n\nThe other problem is producing more home grown products in significantly more volume in an economy almost entirely reliant on the services economy would require a dramatic revolution that would take years.\n\n\"The evolution of our supply chain moving abroad took some years and moving it back would take a similar length of time. The reality is this is something that cannot be changed quickly, whether you're talking about courgettes or cotton trousers,\" says veteran retail analyst Richard Hyman.\n\nWhile the rising costs of imports are expected to push the cost of our supermarket shop higher, Mr Hyman thinks the intensity of competition from discounters Lidl and Adli, and the ever-present threat of Amazon, means supermarkets will be willing to absorb much of these to protect their market share.\n\nHe believes for supermarkets this fierce war for customers is a far bigger priority than sourcing more food from the UK.\n\n\"This is the real challenge. A lot of questions go far, far deeper than a hut in a field in Lincolnshire. Would that it was that simple,\" he says.", "The Duchess of Cambridge showed off her pool-playing skills on a visit to a children's charity in south Wales.\n\nShe teamed up with Craig, 15, a service user at Torfaen Multi-disciplinary Intervention Service (MIST) - a child and adolescent mental health project.\n\nHe said: \"She was talking about how MIST helps us and stuff with life and school. She was really interested in what we were talking about.\"\n\nAsked what he thought of her pool skills, he pulled a face and said: \"She was dreadful.\"", "The UK's next top police officer will be chosen on Wednesday.\n\nThe final four candidates for Metropolitan Police Commissioner will face interviews with Home Secretary Amber Rudd, Mayor of London Sadiq Khan and Policing Minister Brandon Lewis.\n\nThe Commissioner is not only the head of policing in London. He or she also has a range of national responsibilities including leading on counter-terrorism, national security policing, protection of the royal family and parliamentarians and major public events.\n\nThat means the job is not just about how to deploy the 31,000 police officers across the capital - but also how to deal with the complex challenges of keeping Britain and London's streets safe.\n\nSo who are the final four candidates for one of the toughest jobs in policing anywhere in the world?\n\nCressida Dick is one of the country's most experienced and well-known chief police officers who isn't actually working as one.\n\nIn 2014 she left Scotland Yard to take up a highly sensitive and undisclosed director-general post at the Foreign Office.\n\nIf the 56-year-old is selected to be the next commissioner, it will mean for the first time that all three top policing jobs in the UK are held by women: the Met Commissioner, the head of the National Crime Agency and the president of the National Police Chief's Council.\n\nMs Dick joined the Met in 1983 after graduating from Oxford University. She first came to public prominence when she was the senior officer in charge of the operation in July 2005 that led to the mistaken killing of Jean Charles de Menezes as a suspected suicide bomber.\n\nWhen the force was later prosecuted for breaching health and safety laws, the jury in the case said they believed there was \"no personal culpability\" for then Commander Dick after listening to her evidence.\n\nIn 2009 she became the first woman to be appointed an assistant commissioner in the Metropolitan Police, becoming the national lead for counter-terrorism across the UK.\n\nHer other experience includes taking on internal reforms of Scotland Yard and being one of the two senior officers in charge of security at the London 2012 Olympic Games.\n\nSara Thornton became the first chair of the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) in 2015 when it replaced the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo).\n\nIt is the co-ordinating body for all of the police forces in England and Wales, bringing together all the chief officers to thrash out national policies on everything from investigating murders to modernising the workforce.\n\nThat means that she has been at the heart of the extremely complex challenges of changing the way police are recruited, trained and prepared for how their role is changing as crime does in the 21st century.\n\nShe joined the Metropolitan Police in 1986 after studying at Durham University and in 2000 went to neighbouring Thames Valley Police as an assistant chief constable. Seven years later she was made chief constable before becoming vice-president of the NPCC in 2011.\n\nShortly after taking over at the NPCC she warned that in the future the public should not expect to see a police officer after some burglaries.\n\nShe told the BBC that budget cuts and the changing nature of criminality meant the police had to prioritise and there had to be a conversation with the public about where limited police resources should be focused.\n\nStephen Kavanagh is the chief constable of Essex. He began his policing career with the Metropolitan Police Service in 1985 as a constable in Leyton in East London.\n\nAs a detective sergeant he worked in homicide and the then anti-terrorist branches and rose up the ranks to become area commander for North London.\n\nBefore that, he was part of the team that had to come up with the force's action plan and response to the Stephen Lawrence inquiry, which had branded the Met institutionally racist.\n\nHis other roles inside Scotland Yard have included working as a commander in counter-terrorism after the 2005 attacks on London and designing anti-corruption plans to root out crooked officers.\n\nIn 2011 he became the public face of the Metropolitan Police during the August riots that followed the shooting of Mark Duggan. As deputy assistant commissioner he also had responsibility for the politically-charged investigations into phone hacking and payments to public officials by journalists.\n\nMark Rowley is the only one of the four candidates currently working inside Scotland Yard - and the only one to have started his career with another force.\n\nAfter graduating from Cambridge, he joined West Midlands Police in 1987 and, after serving as a detective, joined the then National Criminal Intelligence Service, one of the predecessors of the National Crime Agency.\n\nWhile he was there, Mr Rowley worked on developing covert techniques to target major organised crime gangs that work across the UK and other countries.\n\nIn 2009 he was appointed chief constable of Surrey, nine years after joining the force and having been in the chair temporarily since 2008.\n\nTwo years later he was recruited to the Metropolitan Police as an assistant commissioner - the rank inside the force broadly equivalent to a chief constable outside of London.\n\nDuring his five years inside Scotland Yard he has been one of the public faces of the force. He has talked widely about terrorism threats - including the changes to counter-terrorism strategy in the wake of the Paris attacks.\n\nWhen an inquest jury concluded that Mark Duggan had been lawfully killed by firearms officers in 2011, AC Rowley was the officer who gave a statement outside the court amid a barrage of chants from the dead man's supporters.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nBritons Adam and Simon Yates will miss the Tour de France to focus on the Giro d'Italia and Vuelta a Espana.\n\nNeither twin, 24, has competed in two Grand Tours in a single year before.\n\nAdam Yates came fourth in last year's Tour de France general classification, but his Orica-Scott team boss said it was in the brothers' long-term interests to skip the 2017 race.\n\n\"We want to give the guys a bigger foundation for the future,\" said Matt White.\n\nItalian Vincenzo Nibali is returning to defend his Giro title in May, with 2014 winner Nairo Quintana also set to appear in the field.\n\nFind out how to get into cycling with our special guide.\n\n\"Two Grand Tours is something I have never done and it's a new challenge,\" said Adam Yates.\n\n\"The 100th edition gives the Giro some big prestige this year. If we can get as close to the podium as possible, that is the aim.\"\n\nSimon Yates missed last year's Tour de France as he served a four-month ban for a failed drugs test, blamedon an administrative error over his use of an asthma inhaler.\n\n\"From a purely physical standpoint, I think this year can really benefit me for the future,\" he said.\n\n\"It's a big load to do two Grand Tours, and ever since I have been a professional I have only done one Grand Tour per year.\"\n\nThe Giro begins in Sardinia on 5 May, while the Vuelta starts in the French town of Nimes on 19 August.", "From Sydney and Los Angeles to Hong Kong, artist Joshua Smith's small models depict the buildings of big cities. Everything in them is reduced to scale, down to worn posters and discarded cigarette stubs.\n\nThis model is based on a building found on Willow Street, in the Tenderloin neighbourhood of San Francisco.\n\nThis shipping container was originally located in Haymarket in Sydney, before Smith shrunk it down to size.\n\nThis building is also based on one found in Sydney's Chinatown, and contains LED lights to keep it illuminated at night. Smith has even recreated the bin bags left on the street.\n\nSmith's work features in New Realities, a group show that runs until 25 March 2017 at the Muriel Guepin Gallery in New York.\n\nAll photographs courtesy of the Muriel Guepin Gallery", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nHolders Hibernian beat Edinburgh rivals Hearts to set up a home Scottish Cup quarter-final with Ayr on 4 March.\n\nJason Cummings latched on to substitute Andrew Shinnie's clever pass to give Hibs an early lead.\n\nCummings turned provider for Grant Holt's strike as Hearts fell two down before the break.\n\nAnd Shinnie, who had replaced Chris Humphrey early on, rifled in the hosts' third in the second half, Esmael Goncalves replying for Hearts.\n\nHearts found themselves engulfed at the home of their closest rivals. The visitors had expected Hibs to start the game assertively, but the intensity and commitment still saw their resolve collapse.\n\nHibs were canny in their approach, since the vivid pace of Martin Boyle and Humphrey on the flanks was enough to alarm the Hearts full-backs. The latter only lasted four minutes, due to injury, but a series of crosses from the right by both wingers led to desperate Hearts defending.\n\nThe opening goal was typical, with Hibs swarming upfield and Shinnie having the presence of mind to split the Hearts defence with a through ball that allowed Cummings to finish with a powerful and precise finish - continuing his scoring record against Hearts after netting the winner in last season's fifth-round replay.\n\nThe second goal was agonising for Ian Cathro's side, since they conceded possession deep in their opponents' half through a sloppy Lennard Sowah pass, then found themselves further behind after three passes and a counter attack ended with Holt slipping home.\n\nHibs' tenacity was irrepressible. John McGinn set the tone in the second half when he carried the ball into the Hearts penalty area, lost it, but then won it back with such eagerness that the visiting defenders looked forlorn. He cut a pass back to Shinnie, and his effort was saved one-handed by Jack Hamilton.\n\nEvery Hibs figure was fully in command. When the home fans grumbled angrily at a misplaced pass, head coach Neil Lennon turned to the stand and beckoned them to calm down. When they applauded in response, he lifted his arms to raise the atmosphere.\n\nMcGinn, too, was a forceful presence in midfield. It was his determination to win the ball that led to Shinnie striking an effort from 20 yards that seemed to fly through Hamilton's hands for the decisive third goal.\n\nBy the end, the home fans were chanting \"there's only one Ian Cathro\" in mocking tones.\n\nThe Hearts head coach did not need a squad so much as the ability to clone Jamie Walker. The attacking midfielder was the sole figure of defiance in his side, but had to roam the field looking for a way to influence the game that he was mostly isolated.\n\nAlexandros Tziolis is a clever, accomplished footballer, but he seemed at odds with the pace of the game. Malaury Martin looked like a player who had found himself in the wrong game.\n\nHe did not re-emerge for the second half, along with Perry Kitchen, but with Hibs so well organised and drilled, even the addition of a winger in Sam Nicholson and a forward in Rory Currie could not disrupt them.\n\nNicholson did create a chance for Walker, which he sent over, and Currie did win the ball before sending it to Goncalves, who was fouled by Darren McGregor for a penalty.\n\nGoncalves took the spot-kick, but even that was half-hearted and Ofir Marciano saved twice before the striker eventually bundled the ball over the line.\n\nIt was too little, too late, and on the final whistle Walker sank to the ground, alone in feeling too deflated to stand. He was also the only one of the Hearts players to head towards the away fans to applaud them before he left the field.\n• None Attempt saved. Sam Nicholson (Heart of Midlothian) left footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the bottom left corner.\n• None Attempt missed. John McGinn (Hibernian) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the left.\n• None Lewis Stevenson (Hibernian) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Jamie Walker (Heart of Midlothian) wins a free kick in the defensive half.\n• None Attempt missed. Arnaud Djoum (Heart of Midlothian) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left.\n• None Arnaud Djoum (Heart of Midlothian) wins a free kick on the left wing. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "An exhibition tracing the changing styles of Diana, Princess of Wales, opens at Kensington Palace - featuring iconic outfits from before she was married to after her divorce in the 1990s.", "Nighttime in the city but the sensors never sleep\n\nThe connected city never sleeps. The thousands of sensors embedded in roads, sewers, water pipes, streetlights are busy collecting information day and night. Perhaps even your bin, which might also be tweeting.\n\nSensor provider Enevo offers internet connection for bins in cities in Finland, the Netherlands, UK, Belgium, Canada and the US, and runs a Twitter feed - Trashcan Life.\n\nThe tweets aren't exactly sparkling wit, including insights such as:\n\nIt is part of a push to make bin collection smarter, cheaper and less frequent and may ultimately mean an end to the early wake-up call of the bins being emptied.\n\nWe may not be cyborgs yet, but many of us are already plugged into the network via wearables\n\nIf our cities are getting increasingly plugged into the network, then so are we.\n\nWearables that measure all kinds of things from body temperature, hydration levels, heart-rate and sleep patterns are commonplace.\n\nAnd the data we collect can reveal interesting insights about how our lives, day and night, impacts our health.\n\nFitness band provider Jawbone compared the sleep data of one million users around the US and found that city residents tended to get far less than those in rural or suburban areas.\n\nIt also found that people living in the Brooklyn area of New York went to bed the latest while those in Maiu, Hawaii, had the earliest bedtime.\n\nWill our future cities be run by machines?\n\n''Our sleep cycles adapt to the pace and lifestyle of the world we live in and the world by which we are surrounded - which can be much more hectic, fast-paced and full of nightlife entertainment in major cities,\" the report said.\n\nMeanwhile, a recent study from Microsoft mined data from 75 million keystrokes and clicks on Bing from more than 30,000 individuals wearing a fitness device.\n\nThe research found that those who were busiest during the day, based on their Microsoft calendars and search activity, slept worse at night and those who slept less than six hours for two consecutive nights were sluggish for the next six days.\n\nThe trend towards both cities and citizens being plugged into the network has only one logical conclusion, says Prof Andrew Hudson-Smith, from University College London's Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis.\n\n\"Bees exist on Earth to pollinate flowers, and maybe humans are here to build the machines,\" he says.\n\n\"Urban robots are just starting to appear, and in 200 years time, machines may run the urban form.\n\n\"The city will be one big joined-up urban machine, and humans' role on Earth will be done.\"\n\nLight levels can be controlled via smart streetlamps\n\nIf that thought doesn't keep you awake at night, then a more mundane problem just might.\n\nCities never really get dark any more and that is becoming a serious issue, particularly for those who want to spend time looking at the night sky.\n\nIn September, the city authorities in Reykjavik, Iceland, ordered all street lights to be turned off in multiple sections of the city to facilitate better views of the northern lights.\n\nOther cities are making the move to smart LED lights in an attempt to control the brightness of streetlights.\n\nAs well as offering significant savings because they last longer (up to 20 years) and emit far less energy, such lights can also be plugged into the network, meaning cities can decide when they want to throw out light and when they want to dim it.\n\nStreet lighting is estimated to account for 40% of a city's electricity bill, and cities that have made the move report huge savings - Detroit says it has shaved $2.5m (£2m) off of its annual bill.\n\nIn Glasgow, the council has taken the idea one step further - fitting smart street lights with noise sensors and connecting them to CCTV cameras so that, if noise goes above a certain level, an alert is sent to its operations centre for evaluation in case it is caused by anti-social or criminal behaviour.\n\nThe council told the BBC that it does not yet have any significant data on how the lights are performing.\n\nIt is just one illustration of how connected cities can veer from their original purpose into entirely new territories, which may not always be ones their inhabitants will feel entirely comfortable about.\n\nTechnology may help impose some order and efficiency on the urban landscape, but many who live there will hope cities long continue to be fast-paced and hectic. It is why many of us love them.\n\nBarcelona has an impressive 500km (311-mile) fibre-optic network, which acts as a backbone for a host of connected services as well as providing citizens with city-wide wi-fi.\n\nThere are 19,500 smart meters in targeted areas of the city, which monitor and optimise energy consumption.\n\nIn transport, Barcelona has plenty of electric cars and bike-sharing schemes, while digital bus-stops don't just give waiting passengers updates on when buses will arrive but also provide charging stations, free wi-fi and information about the best apps to download to learn more about the city.\n\nDrivers can take advantage of an app - ApparkB - that can identify empty parking spaces and allow users to pay for the spot online.\n\nEven the irrigation systems in Barcelona's parks are hooked into the network.\n\nSensors monitor rain and humidity, allowing park workers to decide how much water is needed in each area, which has led to a 25% cut in the city's water bill.\n\nBarcelona has made its city operating system - Sentilo - which controls all the sensors open-source and available to other cities.\n\nThrough the system, data is also shared with citizens.", "A new toy billed as the world's \"first transgender doll\" has created a buzz on social media.\n\nThousands of tweets about the product unveiled by the Tonner Doll Company have been posted since it was announced that the doll would make its first appearance at this week's New York Toy Fair.\n\nThe doll is modelled on a teenage activist who was born a boy, but lives as a female. Jazz Jennings shot to fame when she was interviewed about her gender dysphoria by US TV presenter Barbara Walters.\n\nThat was a decade ago, and Jennings is now 16. She said on her Facebook page: \"I was assigned male at birth but was a girl right from the start. I expressed myself as a girl to my family by gravitating towards dolls, dresses, sparkles, and everything feminine. I didn't just like girly objects, but I heavily insisted that I WAS a girl.\"\n\nJazz Jennings was just six years old when she went on US television to talk about her gender dysphoria\n\nThe question on many people's lips on social media was: what exactly makes a doll transgender? In one post, the doll's makers explained how the doll is a likeness of Jennings, but doesn't have genitalia.\n\nBut the company also came in for criticism:\n\nAnother person said any doll can be a transgender doll:\n\nBut many others on Facebook welcomed the idea:\n\nAs for Jazz's reaction to the doll, she wrote: \"I love her. A portion of my proceeds will be donated to help trans youth who are struggling.\n\n\"I hope that it can place transgender people in a positive light by showing that we are just like all other people.\n\n\"Of course it is still just a regular girl doll because that's exactly what I am: a regular girl!\"\n\nNext story: The mystery of the anti-UKIP Twitter machine\n\nWhy is a strange network of Twitter accounts, usually the source of pro-Russian messages, now pumping out tweets about a very specific British election? READ MORE\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "Lewis Hamilton says he believes the new faster Formula 1 cars this year will be a \"massive challenge\".\n\nThe Mercedes driver said he had trained hard but had no idea whether he was fit enough for cars which could be four seconds a lap faster than 2016.\n\n\"I don't know if I'll be easily fit enough, or will struggle a bit or be super-underneath and need to work harder,\" the 32-year-old said.\n\nWhile confident, he said he did not know if Mercedes would remain in front.\n\nThe three-time world champion, in an exclusive interview with BBC Radio 5 live, added that he:\n• None was over losing the title to team-mate Nico Rosberg last year\n• None looked forward to the challenge of his\n• None was concerned some aspects of the new rules might not work\n• None believed Red Bull's form was the one to watch before the start of pre-season testing\n• None hoped new F1 owners Liberty Media would implement changes to make the sport more exciting\n\nListen - 'I'm very happy to have Lewis as my team-mate'\n\nHamilton lost the world title last year at least partly because he had worse reliability than Rosberg.\n\nBut asked how much that hurt, he said: \"Nowhere near as much as you think. It doesn't change my life. You just move onwards and hopefully upwards.\"\n\nHamilton said it would be \"strange\" not having Rosberg in the team following the German's decision to retire last season but added: \"I have rivalry with everyone so it doesn't really matter who it is against.\"\n\nOf his new Finnish team-mate, who joins from Williams, Hamilton said: \"I have known him a little bit from being at the track and he seems a really nice, pleasant guy and I look forward to working with him and racing against him. I always welcome challenges and competition.\"\n\nBotta, 27, added: \"I've always wanted to be partnering a team-mate who is very good and Lewis obviously is.\n\n\"At the same time for me it's also a big challenge. I'm still much less experienced than him but I almost see that is a positive thing and a good thing.\n\n\"I'm just very happy to see Lewis as my team-mate and I see no reason why we couldn't be a good pair of team mates and race hard on track.\"\n\nNew rules could make it 'harder to overtake'\n\nF1 has introduced new rules this year that have changed the look of the cars and made them much faster.\n\nSwept back front wings, lower and wider rear wings, bigger tyres and a larger floor area should add up to at least a 30% increase in downforce and vastly faster cornering speeds and forces.\n\nIn addition, Pirelli has been told to produce tyres on which drivers can push hard throughout a grand prix, rather than having to nurse them by driving a second or more off the pace to prevent them overheating.\n\nBut Hamilton said he had concerns about whether the new rules would improve F1.\n\n\"My engineers say it's going to be a lot harder to overtake,\" Hamilton said. \"If we see overtaking is worse, it's going to be worse for the fans, the spectacle will be worse so I'm hoping that's not the case.\n\n\"For example, I heard tyres might not be as grippy as we'd hoped but the aero downforce is going to be huge because it's a bigger, wider car so there's going to be more downforce, so the car behind will be affected even more than it ever was before.\n\n\"And I've heard the engineers said this would potentially happen and there is an alternative route but this is the route that's chosen.\n\n\"So we are where we are and I really hope that the engineers, who are the smartest guys, are wrong and I hope that the spectacle is greater and the most competitive that it's ever been and if it is, then I look forward to being part of that.\"\n\n'I hope we'll be fighting with Red Bull and Ferrari'\n\nHamilton said expecting Mercedes to dominate this year in the manner of the past three seasons was \"just jumping to the easy conclusion\".\n\nHe added: \"It's a completely new slate. It might be Ferrari at the front, it might be Red Bull, we have no idea.\n\n\"I think the big unknown is Red Bull, I think they always create an amazing car and this is a new area of downforce and they're amazing at creating downforce so I think it'll be really interesting to see what they pull out and I'm hoping it'll be a real mixture of competition.\n\n\"I hope it'll be close so we'll be fighting with Red Bull and Ferrari. That's what the fans want to see.\"\n\nF1 'has a lot of catching up to do'\n\nUS group Liberty Media completed its takeover of F1's commercial arm last month, removed Bernie Ecclestone as chief executive, and is formulating plans for the future.\n\nHamilton said: \"I'm excited for the new owners who have come in and I hope they do something new and I really think they're going to bring new blood, new ideas, new ways of engaging the fans in a new and unique way.\n\n\"F1 is a bit outdated in the sense that if you look at other sports they're further ahead in the entertainment factor but F1 is catching up and I think there's a lot of catching up to do.\"\n\nHe said he believed Liberty should ask the fans for their opinions.\n\n\"The first step would be to see what the fans feel they're lacking, what they feel they would want more of,\" he said. \"I think you'd get a good balance of opinions of people who have been to a grand prix. You'd get a lot of opinions but, a bit like our government, it might go the wrong way.\"", "Dozens of houses and almost 3,500 hectares of forest have been destroyed by fires which continue to burn in Chile.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "'Anna' was trafficked from Albania into the UK last year by someone pretending to be her boyfriend.", "Tens of thousands of women are missing out on workplace pensions as a result of having more than one job, according to Citizens Advice.\n\nTo qualify for an auto-enrolment pension, workers have to earn at least £10,000 a year.\n\nBut more than 100,000 people - most of them women - do not reach that threshold, because they work for several employers.\n\nThe government said that it is planning to review the issue later this year.\n\nA separate study shows that women still receive far smaller pensions than men.\n\nAccording to the insurance company Zurich, the average woman will have £47,000 less in her pension pot than a man by the time she retires.\n\nCitizens Advice said that 72,000 women were missing out on auto-enrolment pensions, which require employers to pay a pension automatically, unless a worker deliberately opts out.\n\nThe charity said too many people were being shut out of the opportunity to be paid a pension.\n\n\"Many people - particularly women - work several part time jobs, which helps them manage commitments like childcare or study,\" said Gillian Guy, the chief executive of Citizens Advice.\n\n\"But while in many cases they earn over £10,000, and pay tax on this combined income, they don't have access to a workplace pension and miss out on the opportunity to save for their retirement.\"\n\nThe government said in December that it would examine the issue of workers with multiple jobs when it reviews the auto-enrolment programme later this year.\n\n\"There's more to do - especially for people with more than one job - and we're currently reviewing the policy to see how it can be improved,\" a spokesperson for the Department of Work and Pensions said.\n\nThe Zurich analysis found that between 2013 and 2016 men received 7.8% of their salary in pension contributions on average, compared to women receiving 7%.\n\nIt said men tend to work in sectors with more established or generous pension schemes.\n\nIn addition, women are more likely to take career breaks.\n\n\"This difference in the contributions that they receive from their employer presents a serious - and growing - problem,\" said Rose St Louis, Zurich's head of partnership development.\n\n\"The triple effect of smaller salaries, career breaks for women and lower contribution rates needs to be addressed: we can't ignore a £47,000 shortfall,\" she said.\n• None Learn about Zurich Insurance - About us - Zurich Insurance The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nOwen Farrell has hailed the \"brilliant and constant\" guidance from retired World Cup winner Jonny Wilkinson as he prepares to win his 50th England cap.\n\nFormer fly-half Wilkinson, 37, has been a consultant on Eddie Jones' coaching staff over the past year.\n\nFarrell, 25, told Radio 5 live: \"It's brilliant working with him, he has a massive understanding of everything we are going through as players.\"\n\nEngland host Italy on Sunday in the Six Nations seeking a 17th straight win.\n\nAnd Farrell said he has no doubt he has benefited from working with Wilkinson, who is England's record points scorer with 1,179, more than double the total of second-placed Farrell.\n\n\"You can speak to him whenever. [The advice] is pretty constant. [I've learned] quite a bit, as you would imagine,\" he said.\n\nFarrell broke into the Saracens first team as a teenager in 2008, the same year current England forwards coach Steve Borthwick joined the club.\n\nBorthwick said he knew straight away Farrell's competitive nature meant he was destined for greatness.\n\n\"As soon as I met him and saw him around the club as a youngster, with the competitive desire he had then and still has now, he was always going to have a great future in the game,\" said Borthwick.\n\n\"The work he has put in over the years to get to the player he is now is fantastic, and shows the character of the guy. All the respect and accolades he gets are richly deserved.\"\n\nFarrell admitted he has been a driven character for as long as he can remember, following in the steps of his father Andy, himself a dual-code rugby international and now Ireland's defence coach.\n\n\"My dad never let me win at anything. That was probably more to do with it,\" Farrell said.\n\n\"I was always competitive. Probably too competitive at times when I was younger. I've always been that way inclined.\"\n\nSince making his debut under Stuart Lancaster in the Six Nations in 2012, Farrell has scored 562 points in an England shirt, and has assumed the role of vice-captain under skipper Dylan Hartley.\n\nOver the course of 2016 Farrell overtook both Rob Andrew and Paul Grayson in the list of England all-time points scorers, but the 25-year-old said he is not motivated by personal records.\n\n\"I am not really too aware of them, it's only when things come around that people tend to talk about them,\" he added.\n\nFarrell said he has learned from difficult times in his career, and believes he is a much improved player since he made his debut.\n\n\"You like to think you have improved in most areas, and learned from experience,\" he said.\n\n\"Hopefully from the start of my career to where I am now, I am miles away.\"\n• None Listen to the latest Six Nations news on BBC Radio 5 live between 21:00 and 22: 00 GMT on Thursday.", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nManchester City came from behind twice to secure a crucial two-goal advantage after a classic Champions League last-16 tie against Monaco at Etihad Stadium.\n\nOn a night of fluctuating fortunes and thrilling football, Pep Guardiola's side were on the precipice in this tournament before dragging themselves back to ensure they go into the return in Monaco with a priceless lead.\n\nRaheem Sterling gave Manchester City a 26th-minute advantage after fine work by Leroy Sane but Monaco proved their threat to lead before half-time through Radamel Falcao's header and Kylian Mbappe's powerful rising drive.\n\nFalcao then saw a penalty saved by Willy Caballero just after the break before Monaco keeper Danijel Subasic's blunder gave Sergio Aguero his first goal.\n\nColombian Falcao, back to his best after failed loan spells at Manchester United and Chelsea, then lifted a brilliant chip over Caballero to put Monaco back in front - but this was the signal for City to launch an enthralling attacking salvo.\n\nAguero - who felt he was denied a first-half penalty after he tumbled under a challenge from Subasic - volleyed in another equaliser before John Stones made amends for poor defending in the build-up to Falcao's second by putting City ahead on the night with a sliding finish at the far post after 77 minutes.\n\nMan of the match Sane handed City that two-goal cushion with a simple tap-in from Aguero's pass eight minutes from time - but Monaco's vibrant attacking ambition means this tie is far from over.\n\nAguero's Manchester City future has been the subject of debate with recent arrival Gabriel Jesus appearing to find greater favour with manager Guardiola - but how can they seriously consider life without this world-class striker?\n\nCity may have been rattling at the back but Aguero was in magnificent form throughout, terrorising Monaco with his prodigious work-rate and sheer menace.\n\nAguero was denied a penalty in the first half when he was booked for diving after he was upended by Monaco keeper Subasic but he was not to be denied and was a key component of City's enthralling fightback.\n\nHe enjoyed some deserved good fortune when his shot went straight through Subasic for his first goal but he delivered a sumptuous right-foot volley to make it 3-3 and then set up Sane for the crucial fifth goal that gave City that two-goal advantage.\n\nAguero was substituted to a standing ovation and a kiss on top of the head from his manager with four minutes left - this was the night he delivered proof, as if it were needed, that he is the man City and Guardiola cannot do without.\n\nFalcao looked a lost soul in two seasons on loan from Monaco to Manchester United and Chelsea - but this was a master striker back to his best.\n\nThe Colombian marred his display with a horribly hesitant penalty that was saved by Caballero and would have put Monaco 3-1 up, but there was so much about his and the visitors' display to admire.\n\nFalcao looked nothing like the demoralised figure who made 26 league appearances for United, scoring only four goals, and who got one goal in 10 league games for Chelsea.\n\nHe pounced like the poacher supreme to head his first but his second was a work of the striker's art, dismissing Stones from his presence before having the composure and class to deliver a lofted finish that left Caballero helpless.\n\nAnd in those moments, he and Monaco delivered the message to Manchester City that this tie is not over. Monaco looked a side packed with threat and goals and they will still feel they can claw this back.\n\nMbappe has the sleek elegance of a young Thierry Henry while Bernardo Silva is a player of the highest quality. Monaco still represent a danger.\n\nManchester City deservedly celebrated at the final whistle, the moment of triumph after a demonstration of resilience and attacking verve that brought a memorable win.\n\nGuardiola, however, will not be fooled - and his agitated body language was a giveaway when it came to their defensive frailties.\n\nCaballero helped Monaco equalise with poor distribution and Mbappe's second was the result of routine long ball. Stones was too weak in the physical exchanges with Falcao for Monaco's third.\n\nAnd throughout, Nicolas Otamendi cut a nervous, uncertain figure whose weaknesses were probed relentlessly by Monaco.\n\nManchester City are in the driving seat - but they will need to make sure the back doors are firmly locked in the return leg in Monaco.\n\nWhat they said\n\nManchester City manager Pep Guardiola: \"I am so happy for the result, we are still alive. These kind of things help this club to achieve another step. We attacked in small spaces. That's why they wanted me to come here. Everybody has to be congratulated.\n\n\"We are going to fly to Monaco to score as many goals as possible. If we don't score in Monaco we will be eliminated.\"\n\nMonaco boss Leonardo Jardim: \"It was perhaps one of the most exciting games of this year's Champions League. A great game of football.\n\n\"The key to the game was the missed penalty to make it 3-1 but there's 90 minutes with us. Nothing is finished.\"\n• None Manchester City scored five goals in a Champions League game for just the second time (the other was 5-2 v CSKA Moscow in 2013, excluding qualifiers).\n• None This game is the first time eight goals have been scored in the first leg of a Champions League knockout game.\n• None Raheem Sterling has had a hand in 10 goals in his past nine Champions League starts (five goals, five assists).\n• None Kylian Mbappe is the second youngest French scorer in the Champions League, following Karim Benzema (17 years 352 days) who scored for Lyon against Rosenborg in December 2005.\n• None Falcao scored as many goals at the Etihad (two) as he managed in 15 appearances at Old Trafford for Manchester United.\n• None Fabinho assisted more goals (two) than he had in his previous 15 appearances in the Champions League (one).\n• None Sergio Aguero's first goal was Manchester City's 200th European goal (203 at the end of this game). He has scored five goals in his last three Champions League games at the Etihad.\n• None Manchester City have saved each of their past five penalties in the Champions League (two from Caballero, three from Joe Hart).\n• None Monaco are the highest scorers in the top five European leagues this season in all competitions with 111 goals.\n• None There were 10 yellow cards handed out - the most in a Champions League game this season.\n\nManchester City are not in action this weekend because Manchester United's involvement in the EFL Cup final has led to the Manchester derby being postponed, so the Blues' next game is an FA Cup fifth-round replay with Huddersfield at the Etihad Stadium on Wednesday, 1 March.\n\nMonaco, meanwhile, travel to Guingamp on Saturday looking strengthen their place at the top of Ligue 1.\n• None Attempt blocked. Fabinho (Monaco) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt saved. Falcao (Monaco) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Benjamin Mendy. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Glitz, glamour, oddballs and glitterballs: The Brits are back. The annual music awards take place on Wednesday 22 February, live from the O2 Arena – and BBC Music will be there, bringing you all the gossip from the red carpet and backstage. You can follow the action on Music News LIVE from 15:00. In the meantime, here are some of the big themes and talking points to get you prepared...\n\n1. Will it be the year of grime?\n\nSkepta performs on Later... with Jools Holland\n\nThere were calls for a Brits boycott last year, after black artists were omitted from every category (except the international ones). In response, organisers overhauled the voting system, improving the representation of both women and people from ethnic minority backgrounds amongst the judges. Perhaps as a consequence, all but one of the best British male nominees this year is from a BAME background: with Kano, Skepta, Michael Kiwanuka and Craig David pitted against David Bowie. \"This is a dream come true and the increase in diversity is a great thing,” Kiwanuka told BBC News – but Craig David said he wasn’t expecting to win. “David Bowie’s career has been so epic,” he said. “He influenced me and so many other artists. There's no competition.\" With grime entering its imperial phase, it would be remiss of the Brits not to recognise the genre. The best chance for a win comes in the best breakthrough category, where Skepta and Stormzy lead the field.\n\nSometimes in life, you just have to put a goldfish in a handbag. Or at least that’s what Clean Bandit’s Grace Chatto thought the first time she attended the Brits. And who can blame her? If you’re not at the top of the celebrity tree, “going weird” is a sure-fire way to make it into the papers the next day. This year’s red carpet walkers have some heavy competition from history. Here are some of our favourite outfits from years gone by.\n\nLabrinth turned up last year looking like a human Magic Eye picture; Lady Gaga chose “nightmare ballerina” as the theme for her 2010 outfit; and Jess Glynne helpfully let us know her favourite Quality Street is the Green Triangle.\n\nGirls Aloud made it to the 2005 Brit Awards after surviving an explosion in a Kleenex factory.\n\nAnd JLS were forced to choose their clothes blindfold in a jumble sale before attending the 2010 ceremony.\n\nWith 17 nominations and zero wins, Radiohead are the unluckiest band ever at the Brits. They were first nominated in 1994, when Creep was up for best single, losing out to Take That’s Pray. Since then, landmark albums like The Bends, OK Computer and In Rainbows have all been overlooked; while Robbie Williams has hogged 18 trophies. Eighteen! So, could this finally be Radiohead’s year? The best group category isn’t the strongest, which plays in their favour, but two of the nominees out-performed Radiohead’s A Moon Shaped Pool. That would be Little Mix, whose Glory Days was the seventh best-selling album of 2016; and The 1975, who topped the charts on both sides of the Atlantic with their breakthrough, I Like It When You Sleep, for You Are So Beautiful Yet So Unaware of It.\n\n4. Will Katy Perry throw up again?\n\nMoments after Lionel Richie handed over 2009’s best international female award, Katy Perry ran backstage and threw up in a bucket. Not because she was overwhelmed or nervous - but because she was really, really poorly. \"I'm so sick right now,\" she croaked in her acceptance speech. \"But they said I should show up to the Brits because something special might happen. \"Thank you to everyone at my record label. Obviously, I've worked pretty hard because I want to die right now.\" Katy’s back this year to give one of the night’s biggest performances. Let's hope she holds down her lunch.\n\n5. What will people do with their trophies?\n\nZaha Hadid’s bendy Brits statue is sure to draw some comments from the winners.\n\nEver since Adele brought the nation to a standstill with her performance of Someone Like You at the 2011 Brit Awards, the ceremony has been one big blubfest. While we used to get Geri Halliwell emerging from a giant pair of Styrofoam legs; or Justin Timberlake (consensually) groping Kylie Minogue, these days everyone wants to stand in a solitary spotlight, emoting their lungs out. Thankfully, this year’s performers are known for their bangers – Skepta, Little Mix, Katy Perry and Bruno Mars should keep the tempo above “induced coma” (although Bruno has set alarm bells ringing with his performance of the boudoir ballad That’s What I Like at last week’s Grammys). That means Ed Sheeran is the most likely candidate. His release, How Would You Feel (Paean) is a swoonsome love song cut from the same cloth as Thinking Out Loud, and set to chart at No.1 this Friday. We’re hoping he does Shape Of You instead.\n\n7. Could it be Rag N’ Bone Man’s big night?\n\nIt might be Rag N’ Bone Man’s first ever Brit Awards but he’s already a winner. Back in December, the singer bagged the Critics’ Choice award – which tips a new artist for success - joining the ranks of Adele, Sam Smith and Florence + The Machine. But for the first time ever, a Critics’ Choice winner is also up for Best Breakthrough Artist. The man born Rory Graham faces strong competition in that category from Skepta and Stormzy - but if he wins, he could go home with the biggest haul of the night. Only two artists are up for more awards – Little Mix have three, but will struggle in the best group category; while Skepta, as we mentioned earlier, is unlikely to win best male over David Bowie. Find out if we’re right on BBC Music News LIVE (and Radio 1 and Radio 2).", "Seven planets have been discovered in a solar system 40 light-years from Earth.\n\nThe researchers say that all seven could potentially support liquid water on the surface, depending on the other properties of those planets.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLiverpool midfielder Adam Lallana has extended his contract until 2020.\n\nLallana, 28, joined Liverpool from Southampton for £25m in July 2014 and has scored 16 goals in 80 Premier League appearances.\n\nThe deal, worth a reported £110,000 a week, is effective from the summer and has the option of a further year.\n\n\"I'm very proud and feel quite humbled by the show of faith from the club and the manager in particular,\" Lallana told Liverpool's website.\n\n\"This is a really good place to be at the moment and, for a player who wants to be part of something special, I can't think of a better club to commit your future to.\"\n\nForward Philippe Coutinho signed a five-year contract in January worth about £150,000 a week, making him the highest-paid player at the club.", "Manchester City's heady mix of fantasy football and flawed defending was on display for all to see in the thrilling Champions League victory over Monaco at Etihad Stadium.\n\nPep Guardiola's side were irresistible going forward and an open door at the back as they secured a 5-3 first-leg win in the last 16, the highest-scoring game at this stage of the tournament's 25-year history.\n\nCity's performance still leaves them with questions to answer when they confront this gifted Monaco side in the second leg on 15 March - but one fact remains without dispute in this Guardiola era...\n\nLeroy Sane was the stand-out performer in one of the finest matches seen at Etihad Stadium - but the cutting edge was provided by 28-year-old Argentine Sergio Aguero, whose future has come under scrutiny in recent weeks.\n\nThe spectacular and instant impact of Brazilian teenager Gabriel Jesus saw Aguero left on the bench for the Premier League victories against West Ham, Swansea City and Bournemouth.\n\nIt is on nights like this, however, where Aguero demonstrated that the idea City would somehow be better off without him is a nonsense.\n\nJesus, at just 19, and 21-year-old Sane, represent a golden future for Manchester City along with Raheem Sterling at 22, but Aguero looks like a player in his prime and fit to play his part - not just now but in the years ahead.\n\nAguero has no point to prove, his record speaks eloquently enough, but he has accumulated a reputation and body of work that makes the finest defenders fear his threat. And at the elite level of the Champions League, that is a priceless commodity.\n\nIt was a match that was arguably the most enthralling seen here since Aguero's 94th-minute winner in May 2012 which secured City their first title in 44 years. And the striker showed he still retains all the old powers.\n\nAguero and his City colleagues had to contend with a blaze of attacking intent from Monaco, but in between the youthful zest of Sane and Sterling, he was the spearhead and the creator.\n\nHe was rewarded for trying his luck with his first goal that prompted a dreadful error from Monaco keeper Danijel Subasic. He scored his second with a crisp, instinctive right-foot volley and then set up the fifth for Sane, the goal that gave City a cushion. It was the complete, consummate attacking performance.\n\nAguero also has a psychological impact on opponents and it gives Guardiola and City a powerful weapon. His first goal was City's 200th in the Champions League and he has now scored five in his past three games at Etihad Stadium in this competition.\n\nYes, his recent goalscoring form has not been of his usual standard but he is the epitome of the phrase \"class is permanent\".\n\nOne of the modern game's great strikers Aguero has scored 20 goals in 29 appearances this season, with 11 in 19 Premier League games The Argentine has scored a total of 156 goals in 237 games for Man City He has scored 91 goals at Etihad Stadium in 116 games at a rate of a goal in 94.84 minutes, 0.78 goals per game He has 64 in 116 games away from home and one goal in five games on neutral territory\n\nThe Catalan's decision to shunt the popular goalkeeper Joe Hart out to Torino on loan was taken on the chin by supporters who idolised him. Any similar fate for Aguero would not meet such easy acceptance.\n\nThe manager's embrace and kiss on Aguero's forehead when he left the action late on Tuesday evening was surely a gesture of appreciation that should end the speculation - although this latest masterclass must have done that anyway.\n\nAnd the bottom line is this.\n\nHow much would it cost City to even think about replacing Aguero? A lot more than the £38m it cost them to bring him in from Atletico Madrid in July 2011.\n\nAmid the fanfare and celebration at the conclusion of a quite magnificent game of football, Manchester City were accompanied on their way to a warm weather break in Abu Dhabi by notes of caution.\n\nYes, they have a crucial two-goal cushion, which Guardiola would have taken gratefully before kick-off - but an examination of City's defending and Monaco's wonderful attacking pace, movement and threat tells you this may yet be a flimsy advantage.\n\nGuardiola knows the score. Park the bus with this defence and Monaco will have that particular vehicle off the road and rolling away into the distance with ease.\n\nThis will not be City's way, as Guardiola said: \"We will fly to Monaco to score as many goals as possible. If we don't score in Monaco we will be eliminated.\"\n\nRead that as code for saying 'City have got no chance of keeping a clean sheet'. This reality has been grasped by Guardiola - helped by the fact that Monaco are the highest scorers in the top five European leagues with 111 goals in all competitions.\n\nHe said: \"If one team can score a thousand million goals it's Monaco. They arrive with six or seven players in the box and it's tough to control that on the counter attack.\"\n\nAnd if there is a team that is vulnerable to such a threat it is City.\n\nGuardiola's decision to play Fernandinho at left-back and leave Yaya Toure isolated was flawed - can he really repeat such a tactic in Monaco?\n\nGuardiola was, at times, frantic in his technical area. One cry of anguish as possession was conceded in a dangerous area was so pained it was plainly audible at the back of the lower tier of the stand behind him.\n\nGoalkeeper Willy Caballero's poor distribution led to Radamel Falcao's headed equaliser, while brilliant teenager Kylian Mbappe's rasping finish for Monaco's second saw City's defence split by a routine long ball.\n\nFalcao's second and Monaco's third was brilliantly executed but easily created as John Stones showed an alarming lack of strength and determination when challenging the Colombian.\n\nGuardiola must find a way to eradicate these flaws and somehow make City a tougher proposition by 15 March or this dangerous, predatory, pacy Monaco side will make short work of a two-goal deficit.\n\nAnd Manchester City's manager knows it.\n\nCaballero, it can now be assumed, is Manchester City's first-choice goalkeeper. Claudio Bravo, Guardiola's chosen one when he was brought in for £17m from Barcelona last August, has been demoted.\n\nCaballero was given the starting place on Tuesday after Bravo, who has earned a reputation as the shot-stopper who does not stop shots, was on FA Cup fifth round duty at Huddersfield.\n\nThe 35-year-old Argentine is surely only a sticking plaster solution for a bigger problem facing Guardiola, one he must address in the summer.\n\nThis means there is an element of muddling through some potentially vital games between now and May and Caballero delivered a decidedly mixed bag against Monaco.\n\nThe ability, or lack of, to play with the ball at his feet was among the factors that apparently did it for Hart and prompted the signing of Bravo.\n\nIt is a central plank of Guardiola's philosophy and one that cost City the first goal against Monaco. The manager's leaping, head-in-hands reaction was a sign he knew trouble - in the shape of Falcao's header - was coming from the moment Caballero sent out a poor clearance.\n\nCaballero was only obeying orders but it was clear on several occasions he is not comfortable with them.\n\nHe redeemed himself with a save from Falcao's penalty; the striker hesitating so long over the spot-kick he almost seemed to forget what he was supposed to do when he arrived at the ball.\n\nCaballero also pulled off a vital stop with his feet from Falcao's late effort with City 5-3 up, an intervention which may prove invaluable in the context of the tie. He made a significant contribution.\n\nThere is no doubt, though, that the story of Manchester City's goalkeepers will provide a narrative between now and the end of the season.", "Philip Hammond is not a man known for political surprises.\n\nSpreadsheet Phil, as he probably doesn't like to be called, prefers to keep any rabbits that might be hopping around Whitehall stuffed deep in the Treasury's public spending hat.\n\nSo, anyone thinking that today's better news on the state of government's finances will lead to any Budget largesse is likely to be disappointed.\n\nThe public sector net borrowing numbers showed a surplus in January, a month when the government receives a significant proportion of its tax receipts.\n\nWith those receipts higher than expected and economic growth stronger than expected, the government earned more than it spent to the tune of £9.4bn.\n\nTaking a year to date comparison, these are the best borrowing numbers the government has achieved since the financial crisis.\n\nA little bit of that roof has been fixed, and the sun is still shining.\n\nMr Hammond is now likely to undershoot his end of year deficit target by £10bn, borrowing less over the year, around £60bn, than the Office for Budget Responsibility expected last autumn.\n\nThough it should be remembered that target was significantly loosened following the referendum result.\n\nOn the surface, a £10bn undershoot may appear good news, and is likely to lead to calls that the Treasury could loosen the public spending purse strings.\n\nThe chancellor could spread a bit of salve on that toxic issue of the day - business rate increases due in April which are leaving some firms with significantly higher bills - and still hit his deficit target.\n\nBusiness rate relief could be made more generous and transition periods extended so that any abrupt increases are put on a smoother trajectory.\n\nWhich might be good politically.\n\nAnd Mr Hammond could offer something for the National Health Service and social care.\n\nWhich might also be good politically.\n\nBut, Mr Hammond does not want to be a \"political chancellor\" in the style of one George Osborne, moving rapidly to plug political holes with Treasury gold.\n\nThose close to him are making clear, there may be some minor tweaks but there will not be major changes of direction on Budget day on 8 March.\n\nBrexit is still, in the Treasury's mind, a risk to the economy that looms large and any buffers built up now are likely to be kept back for future rainy days - if they come - rather than be spent now.\n\nAnd January's strong numbers have been flattered by the recent sale of government shares in Lloyds Bank and the fact that self-assessment receipts from individual tax returns have come in earlier this year compared to last.\n\nThe chancellor has set himself two tasks ahead of the next general election.\n\nProve that the Treasury is the nation's cautious chief financial officer, focused on \"balancing the books\" and reducing the deficit (the amount the government spends over the amount it earns) to zero.\n\nAnd second, reboot the economy by improving private sector growth with a focus on productivity and infrastructure spending.\n\nIn Mr Hammond's mind, one month's good figures do not change that sober to-do list.", "Lt BJ Gruber (right) went above and beyond the call of duty when he answered this appeal for help (left) from Lena Draper, 10\n\nEvery child knows when you are in trouble, you call the cops.\n\nBut it is fair to say, no police officer expects that trouble to be related to the complexities of a 10-year-old's maths homework.\n\nYet when faced with just such an issue, one brave officer in Marion, Ohio, stepped up to the mark.\n\nLena Draper decided to use Facebook to get in touch with her local police force, sending them an appeal for help at the weekend.\n\n\"I am having trouble with my homework. Could you help me?\" she asked.\n\n\"What's up?\" asked officer BJ Gruber, who told the BBC he was hoping \"for something in the realm of history\".\n\nUnfortunately for him it was maths, with the added complication of a few brackets.\n\nUndeterred, Lt Gruber threw himself into the challenge.\n\nUnfortunately, Lt Gruber's second answer was less correct\n\n\"I felt pretty confident with my answers on both questions and perhaps that worked against me with the second equation,\" Lt Gruber admitted.\n\nIndeed, more than a few people have pointed out the answer he gave to the second, more complicated question, was incorrect - but the Police Department in Marion, Ohio, are still seeing the episode as a win.\n\n\"We are nailing our goals of increasing trust, transparency & being approachable. Still a work in product on the math skills,\" the force wrote on its Twitter page after Lena's mum Molly uploaded screenshots of the conversation to Facebook.\n\nThe post has now been liked more than 2,300 times.\n\n\"We really hope that are are not flooded with homework requests... so far, so good,\" Lt Gruber said.\n\n\"We really see this not different that a child walking up to an officer on the street and asking for help. This is just a 21st Century version of that interaction. We do however encourage kids to communicate with parents, teachers, siblings and fellow students before asking us.\"\n\nAs for Lena, she knows she can't always rely on the police to help her with her homework. But she does have a backup plan.\n\n\"Well, I'd call Ghostbusters then,\" she told Inside Edition.", "President Trump (pictured here with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on the left) has made visits to his Florida golf courses a weekend habit during his first month in office\n\nA Hillary Clinton retweet has drawn attention to President Donald Trump's golf outings, which critics are hoping to turn into a political handicap.\n\nThe former Democratic White House candidate shared a graph suggesting her former rival spent 25 hours on the links during his first month in office.\n\nMr Trump made his sixth trip to the golf course on Sunday, joined by professional golfer Rory McIlroy.\n\nThe Republican was a frequent critic of Barack Obama's fairway excursions.\n\nAccording to an analysis of Washington Post pool reports that was retweeted by Mrs Clinton, the president has dedicated 21 hours to foreign relations, 13 hours to tweeting and six hours to intelligence briefings in his first weeks.\n\nWhat do you do when your life's goal, a dream that was nearly realised, slips away in a flash? That's the question Hillary Clinton has faced since Donald Trump smashed her presidential hopes last November.\n\nIn the ensuing days, the former secretary of state has taken long walks in New York woods with her husband, Bill. She's given a few speeches and caught some shows on Broadway, where she's always warmly received. And she's tweeted.\n\nHaltingly, at first. A few Thanksgiving messages here, a get-well note to George HW Bush there. She stood firmly on uncontroversial ground.\n\nNow, however, her voice is sharpening. She celebrates the anti-Trump protests that have swept across the country. She's poked fun at the president and taken more pointed shots at his policies and positions. As the president has stumbled, she's tiptoeing closer and closer to the land of \"I told you so\".\n\nWhat's next for a woman in her life's third or fourth act? Rumours of a run for New York swirled then receded. When the presidential prize was so close, will anything else bring satisfaction?\n\nGiven that the Clintons have been in the national spotlight for decades, a quiet exit seems increasingly unlikely.\n\nMr Trump joined Rory McIlroy, one of the world's highest ranked golfers, at Trump International Golf Club on Sunday.\n\nThe Irishman later told a golf blog he had played a full 18 holes with the president, as well as the chief executive of Clear Sports and former New York Yankee Paul O'Neill.\n\nShe said Mr Trump had only \"played a couple of holes\" on Saturday, as well as Sunday.\n\nWhen pressed about McIlroy's comments on Monday, she said Mr Trump had \"intended to play a few holes and decided to play longer\".\n\nThe White House has otherwise declined to say who plays with Mr Trump, drawing backlash from US media over how much time he spends on the green.\n\nBut the president's golf hobby also recalls his repeated criticism of President Obama.\n\nMr Trump regularly accused Mr Obama of spending too much time golfing before and throughout his presidential campaign.\n\nPresident Trump (2nd left) with Rory McIlroy (2nd right) on Sunday\n\n\"Can you believe that, with all the problems and difficulties facing the US, President Obama spent the day playing golf. Worse than Carter,\" he tweeted in October 2014.\n\nTen days later, he tweeted: \"President Obama has a major meeting on the NYC Ebola outbreak, with people flying in from all over the country, but decided to play golf!\"\n\nMr Trump also said he would be too busy to swing at a tee if elected.\n\n\"I'm going to be working for you. I'm not going to have time to go play golf,\" he said last August.\n\nBut he later softened his tone toward the game, which he said could be used as a tool of diplomacy.\n\nPresident Barack Obama (R) lines up a putt as British Prime Minister David Cameron (L) looks on near Watford in Hertfordshire, England, in April 2016\n\n\"I don't think you should play very much,\" he told the Golf Channel in July.\n\n\"But if you're going to play, you should use it to your advantage, and the country's advantage.\"\n\nEarlier this month, the president hosted Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and played a full round with the foreign leader as well as professional golfer Ernie Els.\n\nHowever, his foursome on Sunday did not include any political types.\n\nFormer Presidents George W Bush and his father, George HW Bush, were also criticised for their golf outings, at the outsets of the first and second Iraq wars.", "Pressures have been building on the NHS this winter\n\nNHS leaders in England have been asked by the statistics watchdog to rethink current policies that delay publishing official data on accident and emergency waiting times.\n\nThis follows two separate leaks to BBC News of A&E data for January, which suggested the worst performance by hospitals since records began.\n\nNHS England and the regulator NHS Improvement have been told by the UK Statistics Authority to review the practice of publishing the data six weeks after collecting it.\n\nTheir leaders have been asked to \"to determine how you could reduce the time lag in publication\".\n\nThe call for a review comes in a letter from Ed Humpherson, director general for regulation at the authority, to those who chair the organisations.\n\nThe two leaks of A&E statistics to BBC News came from management information collected by NHS Improvement.\n\nThe second leak - relating to the full month of January - suggested that from a total of more than 1.4 million attendances at A&E:\n\nAt the time the leaked data, obtained by BBC reporter Faye Kirkland, was dismissed as incomplete by NHS sources.\n\nMr Humpherson described the leaks of management information as \"a disorderly release of data\", which had created \"a confused picture\".\n\nBut, in what amounts to a rap over the knuckles, he goes on to urge the NHS organisations to \"undertake the appropriate reviews of how this management information is used and shared\".\n\nEmbarrassingly for NHS leaders, the Statistics Authority chief criticises the publication policy for A&E attendance stats.\n\nIn the summer of 2015, NHS England announced it would stop publishing this data weekly and would shift to a monthly cycle to \"standardise reporting arrangements\" with other information such as cancer waiting times and ambulance response times.\n\nThis was criticised at the time as a reduction in timely information flow from hospitals, especially during winter months.\n\nMr Humpherson notes that the monthly publication policy creates a six-week lag for A&E data, which \"leaves the system vulnerable to leaks because management information circulates around the NHS system for operational purposes well in advance of the publication of the statistics\".\n\nHe has called on the NHS bodies to review the \"timeliness\" of the official performance data by the end of April and talks of the importance of \"maintaining trust\".\n\nIn effect, the statistics watchdog is saying that if the information is available to NHS managers in January, it should also be made available to the media and the public rather than held until March for publication.\n\nIt amounts to a warning to NHS England that leaks are inevitable under the current arrangements.\n\nA spokesperson for NHS England said: \"UKSA has approached the NHS following a leak of unvalidated NHS improvement material to the BBC ahead of its official publication, and NHS Improvement is now considering with other national bodies how best to ensure timely official publication while ensuring this doesn't happen again.\"\n\nThis will no doubt create headaches for NHS chiefs who have tried hard to justify the adoption of monthly rather than weekly data releases.\n\nTheir case was weakened when the Scottish government opted to move to a weekly A&E publication schedule just as NHS England was going in the opposite direction.\n\nAnd the case has certainly been weakened even further by the UK Statistics Authority's intervention and what amounts to a clarion call for transparency.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nBritish Cycling has been accused of watering down the findings of an internal review in 2012 by the chief executive of UK Sport.\n\nLiz Nicholl said the governing body \"fed a very light-touch version\" to the funding agency.\n\nFormer British Cycling chief executive Peter King took anonymous statements from 40 personnel as part of a report that was never made public.\n\n\"We were given to believe that... actually we had a very light-touch version of it fed to us at UK Sport, so we had no indication of the significance of that report.\n\n\"It's only now come to light.\"\n\nSpeaking to national newspapers, Nicholl confirmed she considered it to effectively be a cover-up, adding: \"That's a complete lack of transparency and that's a relationship that is not acceptable in terms of what was shared with us as opposed to what the actual facts of that report were.\"\n\nUK Sport have faced questions over why they did not act on a report that is known to include allegations of bullying.\n\nNicholls' incendiary comments come as the country's most successful and best-funded sports governing body braces itself for the publication of another report into alleged bullying, favouritism and sexism, led by British Rowing chair Annamarie Phelps.\n\nPublication is expected in the next month.\n\nFormer British Cycling chief executive Ian Drake commissioned the King report in September 2012 but left the organisation in January, three months earlier than planned. He could not be reached for comment.\n\nUCI president Brian Cookson, who was president of British Cycling when King delivered the report in December 2012, said he would not comment until the Phelps report was published.\n\nUK Sport are currently considering whether to help fund Cookson's re-election campaign, having contributed £77,000 in 2013.\n\nKing told BBC Sport he was \"disappointed\" to hear Nicholl say she never saw his full report.\n\nIn a statement, British Cycling said: \"Contributions were made with a guarantee of anonymity, so key findings and recommendations were shared in briefings with UK Sport and the British Cycling board.\n\n\"The full report was also made available to the 2016 independent review, jointly commissioned by UK Sport and British Cycling in April last year, of the world class programme.\"\n\nThe current Phelps inquiry was jointly commissioned by UK Sport and British Cycling following allegations of sexism and bullying made by rider Jess Varnish against former technical director Shane Sutton.\n\nVarnish claimed the coach had used sexist and discriminatory language when dropping her from the Olympic programme, something he strongly denies.\n\nIn October, Sutton resigned and was found guilty of one charge of using inappropriate language by an internal review.\n\nA number of other riders and former staff members have backed Varnish's portrayal of \"a culture of fear\" within British Cycling, including former road world champion Nicole Cooke, who told a parliamentary select committee that it was a sport \"run by men, for men\".\n\nFormer performance director Sir Dave Brailsford has insisted he ran a regime that was \"not sexist but definitely medallist\".\n\n\"All those views are being taken into account through the review,\" said Nicholl.\n\n\"It's fair to say that the high-performance system here is pretty male-dominated. There aren't very many female coaches and there's an opportunity to address that in future, and to get a better balance to support athletes in a way that athletes of today want to be supported.\n\n\"Athletes have moved on and maybe the programmes haven't moved on as fast as they should have done, but what we see is an opportunity.\"\n\n'There's no excuse for not putting athletes first'\n\nThe legally sensitive nature of Phelps' report has meant it has been delayed, with fears it could be heavily redacted to protect witness confidentiality.\n\nThose who gave evidence are now being asked how much of their testimony can be revealed, while those criticised have an opportunity to respond.\n\nPublication could take another month, but on 1 March British Cycling will brief staff and riders on an \"action plan\" - effectively its response to the report and concerns over the way it operates.\n\nThis will include greater oversight of its high-performance programme, and more consideration of athlete welfare.\n\n\"There's no excuse for not addressing duty of care responsibilities to athletes,\" said Nicholls. \"There's no excuse for not putting athletes first.\n\n\"They are are the ones who'll deliver the medals and every programme should be trying to ensure they have happy and successful athletes and there probably hasn't been enough attention in sport about how they do things.\n\n\"There's a lot of focus on operational delivery, probably not enough on leadership management and communication.\"\n\nNicholl told the BBC that she would be \"clear about the actions that UK Sport and British Cycling need to take\".", "You may remember Roland Mouret as the designer who came up with the famous Galaxy dress in 2005, which went on to be worn by the likes of Victoria Beckham and Cameron Diaz. He made a triumphant return to LFW to unveil his 20th anniversary collection - an homage to his design work so far.", "The movie Fifty Shades of Grey has been cited as a reason for the upsurge in incidents\n\nFirefighters have blamed a rise in callouts involving sex games on kinky blockbuster Fifty Shades of Grey.\n\nThe London Fire Brigade said the number of people who had to be released from handcuffs almost doubled in two years, from 15 in 2014-15 to 27 in 2015-16.\n\nThere were nine callouts involving \"men with rings stuck on their penises\" since April, it said.\n\nThe brigade urged adventurous couples to be careful in order to to avoid an \"embarrassing\" visit.\n\nIn the last five years the capital's fire crews have been called out to:\n\nEach incident costs taxpayers at least £326 - a total of £830,000 over the past three years.\n\nLondon Fire Brigade director of operations Dave Brown said: \"We're pleased that fewer people are getting themselves stuck in difficult situations and reducing callouts; however, it seems the Fifty Shades of Grey effect is still leading to some call embarrassing callouts.\"\n\nThe warning was issued upon the cinematic release of the second Fifty Shades of Grey film.\n\nBased on EL James's trio of hit erotic novels, it follows an affair between student Anastasia Steele and billionaire Christian Grey.\n\nAccording to BBC Entertainment, the film adaptation has received a \"critical spanking\" from reviewers.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Adele called a halt to her performance as she paid tribute to George Michael at the Grammys.\n\nThe star was performing a sombre version of Fastlove in honour of the star, who died on Christmas Day, but went badly off-key as she went into the first chorus.\n\n\"I can't mess this up for him,\" she said, fighting back tears. \"I'm sorry for swearing. Can we start again?\"", "Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has met President Donald Trump for the first time and discussed issues including trade and refugees.\n\nPresident Trump has become known for his rather dominant handshake - but it seems Mr Trudeau found a way of dealing with it, as this video demonstrates.", "In the least surprising move since England last needed a new Test captain, England have appointed Joe Root as the successor to Alastair Cook.\n\nLike Cook before him, Root has been promoted from vice-captain, an elevation such a formality that the anointing of another leader would have come as a seismic shock.\n\nBut an expected coronation does not guarantee that the crown will sit right, especially when Root is such an inexperienced skipper.\n\nWhy is he the man for the job? What type of leader might he be? And how will it affect his batting?\n\nNo ordinary Joe - why he is the right man...\n\nRoot has long been tipped for the top job. As a 13-year-old playing club cricket for Sheffield Collegiate he was nicknamed 'FEC', for 'future England captain', a title once bestowed on Michael Atherton with similar accuracy.\n\nSince he made his debut at the age of 21 in December 2012, no batsman on the planet has made more than Root's 4,594 Test runs and only India's Virat Kohli has a better tally in all international cricket. He is perhaps the most complete three-format player that England have ever produced.\n\nThe English way is to push the batting totem towards leadership - it was the same with Atherton, Michael Vaughan, Kevin Pietersen and Cook, with varying degrees of success.\n\nNow it is Root's turn. Although his leadership experience amounts to only four first-class matches, the tiny glimpses offered when he has briefly deputised for Cook hint towards an enthusiasm and dynamism for the job.\n\nAt 26, he is a year older than Atherton when he took charge, but a year younger than Cook was. With 53 Tests to his name, he has 22 more than Vaughan when he was named skipper in 2003.\n\n\"He's the obvious candidate,\" said England pace bowler James Anderson. \"The decision is a big one because he's our best player, so you obviously don't want that to be affected.\n\n\"He is fairly quiet but he has got that fire in his belly. He's a really impressive young man.\n\n\"Root gets into situations, one-on-ones, with people. He speaks a lot of sense when he does speak and he's a really impressive young man.\"\n\n...or is he?\n\nRoot hasn't quite been named captain by default, but it's not far off. Ben Stokes, Stuart Broad and Jos Buttler were all consulted after Cook's resignation, but it always seemed incredibly unlikely that any would beat Root to the job.\n\nStill, there is the suggestion that Root's carefree, jovial approach might not be best suited to leadership.\n\n\"Root is the outstanding candidate, but you wouldn't want it to be a case of making your best player captain, only for it to backfire on you later,\" said former England off-spinner Graeme Swann.\n\n\"I'm still not convinced Root is the right man for the job. I want him to concentrate on being the best player we have ever had, rather than having his talent curbed by the pressures of captaincy.\n\n\"He has tried to be more sensible later, but part of his cheeky chappy persona makes him the player he is, and I don't want to see that taken away.\"\n\nAnd although Cook proclaimed Root to be \"ready\" for the captaincy during the tour of India, it was Root himself who said that he needs to \"start growing up a bit\" after an angry reaction to a dismissal in the fifth Test in Chennai.\n\nFatherhood should help, a first-born son having arrived on 7 January, but if it is a different Root who leads England out against South Africa at Lord's on 6 July, will he have the same success that brought him to the captaincy?\n\n\"It's hard to say how ready I am,\" said Root in January.\n\n\"I've got quite a lot experience in Test cricket now, but it's one of these things where you have to learn on the job.\n\n\"Being a dad you don't know what to do, you just have to go with it and see how it goes. I imagine being captain would be very similar.\"\n\nWhat type of captain will he be?\n\nIt is a downside of central contracts that England players have little or no opportunity to learn captaincy in the county game.\n\nArguably, another related negative is that a player can only ever be schooled by the limited number of captains he has played under.\n\nRoot, for example, has never played a Test under anyone other than Cook, while Cook's style of leadership was heavily influenced by predecessor Andrew Strauss.\n\nWith just those four first-class matches under his belt, Root is one of the most inexperienced captains ever appointed by England - at least Cook had benefited from 18 months in charge of the one-day side.\n\nRoot's style of leadership is therefore something of a mystery. The perception is that he will be more adventurous than Cook - but so is popping to the corner shop in your slippers instead of your shoes.\n\n\"Joe will know what he would like to improve or what he would like to do differently,\" said former England captain Vaughan. \"When all the speculation over Cook's future began, he will have gone home at night and thought 'what if I do get the job?'\n\n\"But you're never too sure how you're going to be as a person until you get it. You can think you're going to be X or Y, but you can't be 100% sure.\"\n\nOf the four times Root has led in the first-class game, one match was in charge of England Lions, with the other three as Yorkshire skipper.\n\nIn each of Root's matches as Tykes captain, fast bowler Ryan Sidebottom was part of the Yorkshire team.\n\n\"I get changed next to him and he can be a scruffy little git, but when it comes to cricket knowledge he's very clued up and knows everything about the game,\" said Sidebottom.\n\n\"If you look at the way he bats, he's got all the shots. He works hard on innovation, so I think he will be a creative captain.\n\n\"When he plays, he takes the game to the opposition. The English way can be quite conservative; I'm sure he'll change that for the better.\"\n\nHow will it affect his batting?\n\nIt is incredibly English to fret over how taking on the responsibility of captaincy might affect the new leader's batting (they are almost always batsmen, after all).\n\nHowever, of the seven men with the most Tests as England captain, only one - Vaughan - has an average significantly worse as captain than when in the ranks.\n\nThe batting records of Cook, Strauss and Nasser Hussain are similar whether captain or not, while Atherton, Peter May and Graham Gooch saw their runs increase with responsibility, the latter two dramatically so.\n\nIt is not just English leaders with lengthy tenures who have seen a spike in their scoring.\n\nOf Root, India's Kohli, Australia's Steve Smith and New Zealand's Kane Williamson - widely regarded as the four finest batsmen on the planet right now - the Englishman is the last of the quartet to take over as his nation's Test captain.\n\nEach has seen an improvement in his batting average, Williamson by a small amount, Kohli and Smith by more than 20 runs each.\n\nRealistically, though, England would probably settle for Root's record to hold steady.\n\nHis batting average of 52.80 is the highest by any England player to have played at least 20 innings since 1968. Any improvement on that would be pretty remarkable.\n\nWhat about the one-day captaincy?\n\nThe status quo of Cook leading the Test side and Eoin Morgan taking charge of the one-day and Twenty20 outfits worked well for England because neither was a threat to the other. Both were miles away from getting into the teams they did not lead.\n\nThree-format man Root's elevation to lead the Test side poses a problem for the England and Wales Cricket Board.\n\nDo they leave Morgan, who has presided over an incredible improvement in England's one-day cricket and guided them to the World Twenty20 final, in charge, or give Root three sets of reins?\n\nThose in favour of change will say there are very few examples of a Test captain playing for too long under a different limited-overs skipper, while any dip in results or form could increase pressure on Morgan.\n\nHowever, director of cricket Strauss' crusade to bring limited-overs success to the England side has seen greater and greater separation between the red-ball and the white-ball teams. One skipper for all could be seen as a return to a uniform approach that had largely been abandoned.\n\nAnd the relentless scheduling of international cricket more than justifies two skippers, particularly if resting Root from the shorter formats helps him cope with the mental and physical demands of Test leadership.\n\nConsider the winter schedule of 2017-18. The five Ashes Tests that begin at the end of November are followed by an ODI series against Australia, which rolls into a T20 tri-series also involving New Zealand. After that, England play five more ODIs and two Tests against the Kiwis, which might not conclude until the end of March.\n\nA player involved in all parts of that tour could be on the other side of the world for five months or more. Even two captains might not be enough.\n\nHow long might Root be captain for?\n\nOf the seven skippers with the most Tests, discounting any time as a stand-in, only May's reign spanned more than five years - and that ended in 1961.\n\nOf the longest-serving skippers since the late 1980s, Gooch managed five years, Atherton four, Hussain four, Vaughan five (with an enforced 18-month break because of a knee injury), Strauss four and Cook just over four.\n\nFrom the seven longest serving of all-time, Cook has taken charge of most matches thanks to the Test-hungry nature of the ECB's scheduling department.\n\nThat Root's tenure begins with five Test-free months is an anomaly, but one that will soon be compensated for. Over the succeeding 14 months or so, England will cram in 21 Tests.\n\nIf we take July to be the proper start to Root's reign and assume that the fickle mistresses of form, fitness and results allow him to be in charge for four and a half years, then his spell as skipper could end with the 2021-22 Ashes in Australia.\n\nBy then, he could have been at the helm for more than 60 Tests - an England record - and, at his current rate of scoring, will have become the second Englishman to reach 10,000 runs.\n\nHe will have just turned 31, so will still feasibly have half a decade of Test batting left in him, much like Cook does now.\n\nAt the point, a 25-year-old Haseeb Hameed could be the next unsurprising candidate to be given the keys to the kingdom.", "News that Tom Hardy will read the Bedtime Story on CBeebies on Valentine's Day has been met with delight on social media.\n\nThe trailer had more than four million views after it was posted on Facebook.\n\nThe star, whose films include The Dark Knight Rises and Mad Max: Fury Road, will read The Cloudspotter by Tom McLaughlin at 1850 GMT.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nAsylum seekers are illegally crossing from the US into Canada in growing numbers hoping to receive refugee status. One small prairie town in southern Manitoba has become the nexus point for migrants who have lost hope in the US.\n\nIt was a cold Seidu Mohammed and Razak Iyal could barely comprehend.\n\nOn Christmas Eve, they found themselves struggling through a waist-deep field of snow in a rash night-time bid to sneak across the Canada-US border.\n\nThe two men had met just few hours before at a Minneapolis bus station and both faced deportation back to Ghana after being denied refugee status in the US.\n\nThey had heard through a network of other refugees and African expats that if they could get into Canada, they had a second shot at asylum in the north.\n\nThe view towards the US from Emerson, Manitoba\n\nThe path was straightforward: find a ride to the border from Minneapolis, MN or Grand Forks, ND, avoid patrols until you reach Canadian soil, and then turn yourself into Canadian authorities as an asylum seeker.\n\nIyal and Mohammed decided to make the trek together, and paid US$200 each to a cab driver who dropped them near the international boundary.\n\nThey kept to the road until they neared the border.\n\n\"That's where we saw the big farm with the snow. Snow everywhere. We were seeing the light of the border far from us, but we are seeing the light,\" Iyal recalls.\n\nSoon they had lost their gloves in the snow. The wind stole Mohammed's baseball cap.\n\n\"There is wind and cold,\" he says \"And the wind is blowing the snow into our face. So I can't see nothing.\"\n\nBy the time they reached Highway 75 in Manitoba, their hands had frozen into claws. They could not reach the phones in their pockets to dial 9-1-1 as planned. Mohammed's eyes had frozen shut.\n\nThe only vehicles on the road before dawn on Christmas were transport trucks ferrying cargo between the US and Canada. Many passed, flashing their high beams at the two before blowing by, until one stopped to give them assistance.\n\nThey have been receiving treatment at a specialised burn unit in a Winnipeg hospital since that 10-hour journey. Both had most of their fingers amputated due to the severe frostbite.\n\nIyal says nurses had to chip away at the snow and ice between Mohammed's fingers.\n\nTheir story has brought attention to a phenomenon that is not new but has been growing steadily in recent years. And it has not deterred others from making the cross-border trip. Record numbers of people have crossed near Emerson in the past few weeks.\n\nIt is not just Manitoba. Quebec and British Columbia are also seeing more and more people illegally crossing the border to make refugee claims.\n\nIn the prairie province, the influx is centred on Emerson, a municipality of about 700 people that borders Minnesota.\n\nThe rural town, surrounded by farm fields, is about 625km (390 miles) up the Interstate from Minneapolis, which has the largest Somali population in North America. Word about the Emerson crossing has spread within the expat community, as far as down to Brazil.\n\nJanzen and other officials held an emergency meeting\n\n\"We've always had people jumping the borders, for, I don't know, 30, 40, 50 years. Back then, it was people running away from something - usually the law,\" says town official Greg Janzen.\n\nBut in recent years it has been mostly asylum seekers, hailing mainly from Somalia but also Ghana, Djibouti, and Ethiopia, who are finding their way across. Community workers say most have been denied refugee status in the US.\n\nMany have been met with generosity.\n\nYahya Samatar, a former human rights worker in Somalia, fled threats from Islamist al-Shabab militants and sought refugee status in the US, where he spent seven months in an immigration detention centre.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThe US denied his status but said it was too dangerous to deport him back to war-torn Somalia, and released him with a warning that he could be sent back anytime.\n\nLike Iyal and Mohammed, he heard about the backdoor into Canada, and found himself in August 2015 on the banks of the Red River, which runs through Manitoba and between North Dakota and Minnesota.\n\nHe stripped to his underwear and swam across. Shivering and covered in mud, he then walked into Emerson, where a resident gave him a sweater and called border services.\n\n\"I was given clothes, I was given food, everything\" by border agents, says Samatar, who has since received refugee status and lives in Winnipeg.\n\nBut now in Emerson, a wariness is emerging.\n\nThe municipality that has opened its doors to those seeking refuge is wondering how far town resources will be stretched and what happens if someone who comes across poses a danger.\n\nThere are also concerns that someone will die trying to make the trek across frozen fields in temperatures that can easily fall to -20C (-4F). Many also expect the number of attempts to cross will increase with warmer weather.\n\nFor now, they do not see what other option there is except to do what they can to help.\n\n\"If we don't they'll freeze and starve, and it would be on our conscience wouldn't it?\" says resident Walter Kihn, who lives on the eastern edge of Emerson.\n\nMr Janzen says \"most people in town are more concerned than scared\" about the strangers wandering into town.\n\nIn the last three weeks, almost 60 people made the trek, including 21 who crossed in the hours before dawn on Saturday morning.\n\nA group of 16 people, including women and children, rang doorbells in town seeking help.\n\n\"They went to the neighbours and got everybody riled up there,\" said resident Ernie Neufeld. One house took in the women and children, while \"the RCMP tried to decide what to do with\" the men.\n\nThe Manitoba-US border runs 500km (310 miles) along Minnesota and North Dakota.\n\nAuthorities from the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), which oversees the official border points, and the Mounties, which polices the rest, say they are confident in the border's integrity.\n\nAnd they say those coming are quickly spotted or turn themselves so they can submit refugee claims.\n\nOnce apprehended, they are identified, searched and screened. If they are eligible to make an asylum claim, they are allowed entry and referred to the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada.\n\nRefugee claimants arrive at the Welcome Place in Winnipeg\n\nA refugee claimant arrives at Welcome Place settlement agency in Winnipeg\n\nSettlement workers assisting with the newest claims are pointing to the political rhetoric south of the border for the recent spike.\n\nRita Chahal, executive director of the Manitoba Interfaith Immigration Council, has opened over 300 files since April 2016 for refugee claimants crossing near Emerson.\n\n\"Anecdotally, many people do express that they are concerned about what they saw at the airports, what they are seeing in the US,\" she says.\n\nIn fact, in a November speech in Minnesota, then-presidential candidate Donald Trump singled out the state's Somali community.\n\n\"Here in Minnesota, you've seen first hand the problems caused with faulty refugee-vetting, with very large numbers of Somali refugees coming into your state without your knowledge, your support or approval,\" he said.\n\nMohammed says he once viewed the US as a beacon for human rights and a place that welcomed newcomers but \"when we came, we didn't see that\".\n\nHe and Iyal have hearings in March to determine whether they can stay in Canada.\n\nTheir lawyer has told them not to divulge too many details about the specifics of their refugee claims but Iyal says he left Ghana for personal and political reasons.\n\nMohammed left because of his sexuality - being gay is illegal in the African country.\n\nThey say in the meantime they will continue to heal from their injuries and learn how to live with their disability.\n\n\"We just wait, impatiently, for what is coming next,\" Iyal says.\n\nPrime Minister Justin Trudeau has spoken about how important it is for Canada to welcome refugees", "As with any resignation there are a thousand small, but nevertheless important questions. Most are of the who-knew-what-and-when variety. But with this astonishing fall from grace there is one big overarching question. I'll save that best bit for last.\n\nThe small questions concern whether Donald Trump knew about the calls Mike Flynn was making to the Russian ambassador, and what the substance of their conversations were.\n\nWhat happened to the advice given by the acting attorney general to the White House counsel cautioning that Gen Flynn had not been entirely honest. Was the president aware of this? Were there different factions operating within the White House yesterday with different agendas on the embattled national security adviser's future?\n\nThen we can go a sub-section of those questions which revolve around management at the White House. The seemingly dull-sounding process questions: What are the lines of communication? Who reports to whom?\n\nKellyanne Conway and Sean Spicer had very different public reactions to stories about Flynn on Monday\n\nIf that all sounds rather trivial, ask this - how was it possible that within a single hour yesterday afternoon Kellyanne Conway, counsel to the president, said Mr Flynn enjoyed the full support of Mr Trump, and then shortly afterwards, Communications Director Sean Spicer said the president was evaluating Mr Flynn's position?\n\nThose just aren't reconcilable statements. Who was speaking on whose authority? This is not good communications strategy; this is what shambles looks like.\n\nAnd let's deal with one bit of smoke that has been thrown up since the resignation. Kellyanne Conway was across the US networks this morning with a simple and tempting argument - what sealed Flynn's fate was his misleading of the vice president over the nature of his conversations with the Russian ambassador.\n\nThat resulted in Mike Pence going on TV in the middle of January and saying: \"It was strictly coincidental that they had a conversation. They did not discuss anything having to do with the United States' decision to expel diplomats or impose censure against Russia.\"\n\nOf course, you can't lie/mislead/deceive/inadvertently misreport to (delete as appropriate) the vice president. But, if you draw yourself a little timeline of what happened then, what is striking is this - it is not the lie/misleading/deception/inadvertent misreporting that cost General Flynn his job, it is the lie/misleading/deception/inadvertent misreporting being made public by the Washington Post that cost him his job.\n\nWe now know the acting attorney general went to the White House weeks before to say voice intercepts of Gen Flynn's call proved that lifting of sanctions was discussed. But no action was taken then.\n\nOnly when it blew up did this become an issue. This conforms to the little discussed 11th Commandment that Moses handed down on his tablets of stone: Thou Shall Not Get Found Out.\n\nBut let us move on to the really big question. What does this say about President Trump's relationship with Russia? For a man who at the drop of a hat will freely spray insults on Twitter to anyone and anything, the one person he stubbornly refuses to say a bad word about is Vladimir Putin. Not ever.\n\nWhite House staff in the Oval Office as Donald Trump speaks by phone to Vladimir Putin in late January\n\nIn one recent interview he seemed to suggest that America as a state had no greater moral authority than Russia. It was the doctrine of American Unexceptionalism, if you like.\n\nMichael Flynn had sat with the Russian president not that long ago at a dinner honouring the pro-Moscow TV network Russia Today. Extraordinary that a former three star US general would be there. A dossier drawn up by a former MI6 officer - that was flatly denied - alleged all manner of Russian involvement in President Trump's businesses and presidential campaign.\n\nMake no mistake, the Trump base love what they've heard about the migrant ban, the eviction of illegal immigrants, the jobs pledges and a lot more besides.\n\nBut what causes a lot of people to scratch their heads is why the love-in with Putin? What is driving this? Even if the most lurid things in the dossier were untrue, are there other things that are? Does Putin have some kind of leverage over the new American president?\n\nThe smaller questions, like they often do, will fade away with the next news cycle. These huge ones won't.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nNew England Test captain Joe Root is ideally suited to the role, says former skipper Michael Vaughan.\n\nRoot, 26, takes over from Alastair Cook despite having led in only four first-class matches - three for Yorkshire and one for England Lions.\n\n\"People who say he's not quite ready are talking nonsense. He's driven and got the right attitude,\" ex-Yorkshire batsman Vaughan told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\nRoot, who has played 53 Tests, will not properly take over until the first Test against South Africa in July, with England only playing limited-over cricket for the first half of 2017.\n\nHis four matches as captain in first-class cricket have produced mixed results.\n\nIn April 2014, his Yorkshire side conceded 472 in the fourth innings to lose to Middlesex, but later that year he skippered them to a victory over Nottinghamshire that sealed the County Championship.\n\n'Root has to take risks' - Boycott\n\nFormer Yorkshire and England captain Geoffrey Boycott said fans will be looking for Root \"to take a risk now and again\" and the nature of Test cricket means the new captain will occasionally \"have to make things happen\".\n\n\"Everything that has ever been thrown at Joe, every time he's moved upwards in his career, he's handled it,\" Boycott told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"If not straight away, then he's quickly got to it because he's got an acute cricket brain.\"\n\nBoycott, who led England in four Tests in 1978, said he hoped to see Root move back down the order to bat at four, to give him more time to cope with the added interview demands of the captaincy.\n\nThe 76-year-old added that being a Yorkshireman will stand Root in good stead as captain, because \"we're good at it\".\n\n'He looked like the Milky Bar kid' - Gale\n\nYorkshire director of cricket Martyn Moxon described Root as \"a born leader\".\n\n\"He has always studied the game and different tactics throughout his career,\" said Moxon.\n\n\"It's not something that he is going to have to learn before his first Test. I'm sure he will do a good job.\"\n\nRoot is a \"fantastic role model\" and vastly experienced for a player in his mid-20s, said Yorkshire coach Andrew Gale, who captained Root at the county.\n\n\"Whatever level he has stepped up to, it hasn't taken him long to adapt and he has learned very quickly. I would say that I have actually learned more from him,\" added Gale.\n\n\"You learn on the job. I think we will see a different style of cricket with Joe in charge. He's a bit of tinkerman and not afraid to think outside the box.\"\n\nRoot made his England debut in 2012 and since then has scored more Test runs than any other batsman in the world.\n\nThe right-hander, a product of the Yorkshire youth set-up, was made England vice-captain in 2015 and steps up to lead after Cook resigned last week.\n\n\"I remember him as a 13-year-old, saying to the batting coach that he wanted to know what he needed to do to play for England,\" added Gale. \"That's a big statement for a 13-year-old.\n\n\"He made his one-day debut for Yorkshire against Essex in 2009. He was a little lad who looked like the Milky Bar Kid and couldn't hit the ball off the square. He's never been overawed and that will stand him in good stead.\"\n\nRoot's appointment sees him join Australia's Steve Smith, India's Virat Kohli and New Zealander Kane Williamson as captain of his country.\n\nThe quartet, widely regarded as the four finest batsman in the world, occupy the top four spots in the International Cricket Council's batting rankings.\n\n\"It's exciting for cricket, for all of us who are supporters of the game, seeing four wonderful batsmen ply their trade and now lead their countries,\" said former Yorkshire coach Jason Gillespie.\n\nThe Australian told the BBC World Service: \"It reminds me a little bit of when we had four wonderful all-rounders - Ian Botham, Richard Hadlee, Kapil Dev and Imran Khan.\n\n\"Now we have four high-class batsmen who are absolutely brilliant and happen to be captain of their country. It's very exciting.\"\n\nRoot's father Matt said he was \"incredibly proud\" and insisted his son would not get carried away with the appointment.\n\n\"He's taken it in his stride. He won't get ahead of himself. His feet are firmly on the ground,\" he said.\n\n\"People say his form might dip but I absolutely think he can do the job. He's got a great team to manage.\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Justin Trudeau was asked to comment on Donald Trump's migrant ban.\n\nCanadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had a fine line to walk on Monday and came through with his best diplomatic balancing act.\n\nMr Trudeau headed to Washington hoping to secure reassurances that President Donald Trump valued the Canada-US relationship, especially its economic ties.\n\nThe prime minister can travel back to Ottawa with Mr Trump on the record as calling the trade relationship between the two nations \"outstanding\" and only in need of a \"tweaking\".\n\nWhat those tweaks might entail is still to be revealed, but you could almost hear anxious Canadian businesspeople breathing a sigh of relief.\n\nTrade relations with the US are crucial for Canada. More than 75% of its exports head south of the border, while 18% of US exports are sent north.\n\nBut Mr Trudeau and his ministers have repeatedly hammered home other statistics over the past few weeks that underscore the importance of Canada to American commerce.\n\nNearly nine million US jobs depend on trade and investment from Canada, while Canada is the top customer for 35 US states.\n\nMr Trump also made it clear he views economic relations with Mexico in a very different light than those with Canada. Mexico is the third partner with Canada and the US in the North American Free Trade Agreement.\n\n\"It's a much less severe situation than what's taking place on the southern border,\" the president said in reference to Canada-US trade during the joint news conference with Mr Trudeau at the White House.\n\nThis first face-to-face meeting also offered a clue at how far Mr Trudeau was willing to go preserve those vital trade ties.\n\nHe refused to bite when the press repeatedly baited him to criticise his host on thorny issues like immigration, though many of his own policies stand as a reproach to those of the new US president's.\n\nMr Trudeau is a self-described feminist who calls himself \"extremely free trade\" and has made Canada's openness to immigration, diversity, and refugees part of the country's - and his own - brand.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. A brief look at the long friendship between the United States and Canada\n\nBut on Monday his message was that \"the last thing Canadians expect is for me to come down and lecture another country on how they chose to govern themselves\".\n\nIn fact, Mr Trudeau and Liberal MPs have been disciplined in their refusal to criticise Mr Trump over the past few months.\n\nThe most pointed they got was when the prime minister tweeted out a welcome to refugees just as the US was implementing the temporary ban on immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries.\n\nOpposition Conservative leader Rona Ambrose said that discipline is a smart move given how paramount relations with the US are to Canada.\n\n\"This is a delicate situation here. I don't think it would help anyone in this country if the prime minister went to the US and started a fight,\" she told reporters in Ottawa.\n\nAnother clue as to just how much significance Ottawa has placed on this first face-to-face meeting with the new American administration was the prime minister's entourage.\n\nMr Trudeau brought five ministers with him to Washington, a who's who of Canada's top Cabinet members, as well as his most trusted senior aides.\n\nThe two world leaders worked hard to play up the similarities in their first meeting and beyond that key trade assurance, the Canadian delegation will leave Washington having secured a few other commitments from the US.\n\nThose include commitments to collaborate on improving clean energy and enhancing efficiency at border crossings, to tackle opioid trafficking, and the creation of a Canada-US council geared towards promoting women-owned enterprises.", "Soldiers and their families must be able to sue the Ministry of Defence for negligence in court, a father has told the BBC.\n\nThe MoD says proposals to assess compensation claims in-house would see better payouts for service personnel injured or killed in combat.\n\nBut Colin Redpath, whose son was killed in Iraq, says they should be held accountable by the legal system.", "Stefan spends up to half an hour a day on Tinder\n\nIt's Valentine's Day - and for many single people it may be difficult to find a date. But not for Stefan - the most coveted man on dating app Tinder. He receives more \"swipe-rights\" than any other man on the app, as he explains to the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme.\n\nJob: Fashion model. Previously worked as a toy demonstrator in Hamleys and Harrods.\n\nClaim to fame: The most swiped-right man on Tinder.\n\nPopularity: I get around 40 matches a day. The number's doubled in the last month alone - I've had to turn my notifications off.\n\nRelationship status: I've been single for around seven months now. I was seeing someone, but it didn't really work out.\n\nDo you enjoy being single? When I find the right girl, I'm more than happy to settle down - I want someone who will be my best friend as well as a partner. But as I get older, there is a bit more added pressure to find someone. My mum drops little hints here and there that she wants to be a grandma.\n\nStefan has a piloting licence, having been in the RAF Air Cadets\n\nTime spent on Tinder: Quite often half an hour a day, sometimes just 10 minutes.\n\nTips for success: Have a bit of character on your bio, definitely. There's no point in just being good looking in photos if you're bland to talk to. I always look for personality - someone who can have a laugh. One of my own previous bios was simply \"Model. Too stupid to write a bio,\" playing on the idea that models aren't supposed to be clever.\n\nAnd when it comes to starting the conversation: I'm looking for someone who has a good opening line, something funny or that makes them stand out. One match recently started with \"so what gives you the privilege of me swiping right?\". That's been one of the best.\n\nWhat are your interests? I'm really into aviation. I used to be in the RAF air cadets, so I have a pilot's licence to fly the Cessna 152, a fixed-wing plane.\n\nHow often do you date? I don't get a lot of time because of my job. I've probably only been on five or six while on Tinder, but I have also met people at events with my work - so it's not just dating apps.\n\nWhat are you like on a date? I'd say I'm shy to start off with, and then I warm up and become more confident. I like to think I'm good at getting the conversation flowing, but I think everyone finds first dates can become a bit like an interview with all the questions!\n\nWhat's your worst Valentine's Day date? There was one time when I made lots of effort, with my girlfriend at that point. I bought lots of little gifts for her, and we went to a really nice restaurant - but I just got nothing back in return. Not even a card.\n\nDo you have a Valentine's date this year? Yes, I'm going on a second date with a girl I met on Tinder - to a nice restaurant in Knightsbridge in London.\n\nAre you paying? Of course! It would be rude not to.\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "There is no other job in major sport like a cricket captain. It is a huge job.\n\nJoe Root thinks a lot about cricket. He is a natural cricketer and that is where captaincy comes into it. The most important thing for him is to get a good start.\n\nIt's not going to be easy and I hope people give him time. You get judged very quickly these days. People have got to be patient and understand this is a long-term appointment.\n\nHe's starting from a team that took a bit of a mauling in India. He has to come back and he has just a short time to get them ready for the Ashes. There's a lot going on.\n\nHe will be very excited about it and very proud when he walks down those steps for the first time, leading his team out. It will be fantastic - but there will be obviously some uncertainty about how things go.\n\nHe'll have a lot of help with Alastair Cook, Stuart Broad and James Anderson out there, but ultimately it's your responsibility. It needs to start well, otherwise you inevitably start to question yourself and so on.\n\nI think he will be more adventurous than Cook. He is that sort of person: a bit of a jack-the-lad, a playful character, an impersonator. All that will have to change now in the dressing room. He will still have a bit of a laugh with his team-mates but there is now a bit of water between you and them.\n\nThey all respect him immensely as a batsman but now he's got to win the bowlers over and convince them he knows what he's doing in terms of bowling changes and field settings, all that sort of business.\n\nWill being captain affect how he plays?\n\nIt's impossible to say if the captaincy will affect his batting. We saw Root have a hard time in Australia in 2013-14 and he ended up being dropped for the final Test in Sydney. He hasn't looked back since then.\n\nAnybody can have a dip in form. When you are captain at the same time, that's when it gets difficult and when your own game starts to decay because you have other worries and pressures.\n\nIt will be a more standardised England formula in the summer. I would hope he would bat at four and I wasn't happy with him batting at three. I would have thought it would be Cook, Haseeb Hameed and Keaton Jennings at three. Jennings looks a natural three to me and it gives England a left-hand-right-hand opening combination.\n\nHow does he manage England's bowlers?\n\nAs a batting captain, you do have to earn bowlers' trust, especially when it comes to fields. I think Anderson and Broad can both be a little bit defensive at times with their field settings and I thought Cook allowed them to be.\n\nThey often fall back into defensive mode - and that's OK - but there are times when you have to attack: have a gully in rather than a backward point and so on. I would hope that Root will stamp his authority on them and say: \"No actually, we're going to have a man there, catching, if he's just come in.\"\n\nIt's important he establishes who is boss, but you obviously want the bowlers to work for you. They all know him and like him, he is a very popular member of the team - so they will all work for him. Anderson and Broad have had their injury concerns and they both want to keep playing for as long as they can.\n\nIt's important for the captain to assert himself, particularly over experienced bowlers, and explain why he's making a decision - but at the same time making bowlers think for themselves. That is what makes a good bowler. The bowler is doing a lot of the thinking and the planning, then executing those plans.\n\nFor someone more inexperienced, like Moeen Ali, it is different. Moeen comes on quite relaxed and bowls well for his opening over, but he is not as consistent as I'm sure he would like to be. Root will decide if you give him some cover or defensive positions just to get him settled down and into a rhythm.\n\nWhat sort of vice-captain will Stokes be?\n\nHaving Ben Stokes as vice-captain is good for both players. Stokes is a lively character, a real in-your-face cricketer. Vice-captains are rather good like that if you have a more mellow captain. With Stokes you want someone a bit like a sergeant major, to fire up everyone. I hope it'll lift his game too. I think he and Root will be quite an exciting combination.\n\nCaptains like India's Virat Kohli and New Zealand's Kane Williamson have taken to the job without any experience and that is what players are expected to do now. People are still going to have to be patient.\n\nJoe is going to have to learn and he's going to have to talk to people. I think perhaps modern-day captains aren't as imaginative as those brought up playing three-day county cricket, where you had to really create matches and really work bowling to set matches up and win from difficult positions.\n\nThere's an awful lot Root could learn from driving a little way up the M1 for an hour and speaking to Ray Illingworth. That would be brilliant. Go back a bit, talk to some of the old fellas who were captains! You never stop learning in this game.\n• None Is Root the right man?\n\nHow big a test will the summer be?\n\nThe odds are it is going to be a difficult summer for Root. First England face South Africa, who are the third-ranked Test team in the world. They have just beaten up Australia in Australia and they are not coming over here to give England a nice, easy time.\n\nPeople will immediately start saying the captaincy is affecting his form. That puts him even more on the back foot - and these things can spiral.\n\nI would suspect that potentially a bit of a tricky series is the West Indies series. Everyone will be expecting England to win handsomely. South Africa will be very tough and we know that - but the West Indies shouldn't be.\n\nThey should be dealt with easily by England in our conditions. That's the series that he mustn't slip up in otherwise, before the Ashes and everything else, that's when people might start talking.\n\nIt's a potential area where he needs to get through and not give anybody any opportunity to suggest the captaincy is in any way affecting his batting.", "Valentine's Day is sweet for some, but not everyone sees it through rose-tinted spectacles\n\nFor the cynics among us, Valentine's Day is an annual nightmare: everything turns pink and heart-shaped, restaurants slap a premium price on a sub-par \"special menu\", and Hallmark shareholders are laughing all the way to the bank.\n\nBut beyond the cuddly toys and red roses, the tradition draws mixed reactions around the world.\n\nFrom the hardline to the downright bizarre, here are just some of the ways Valentine's Day is embraced - or spurned like an unwanted lover...\n\nAuthorities in some parts of Indonesia have banned students from celebrating Valentine's Day, saying it encourages casual sex. In the city of Makassar, police raided shops and dismantled condom displays.\n\nThe mayor told the BBC that condoms were removed from sight after customers complained, but would still be sold discreetly.\n\nValentine's Day has its roots in a Roman fertility celebration, but later evolved into a Christian feast day - a fact that worries conservatives in some Muslim-majority countries.\n\nIn Indonesia's second-largest city, Surabaya, pupils were told to reject the festival as it runs against cultural norms.\n\nNext door to Indonesia, Malaysia has also seen a Valentine's backlash.\n\nA group called the National Muslim Youth Association has urged women and girls to avoid using emoticons or overdoing the perfume, in a pre-Valentine's Day message.\n\nThe group's guidance included advice on how to combat the celebration of romance by making anti-Valentine posters and shunning Valentine-themed outfits.\n\nThe group made its anti-Cupid views clear through its Facebook picture\n\nRobben Island will forever be associated with the infamous prison that held Nelson Mandela - but since 2000, it has hosted a mass celebration of love on 14 February.\n\nThe tradition was started by South Africa's Department of Home Affairs and the Robben Island Museum, and now attracts couples from across the globe.\n\nThis year, 20 pairs are planning to say \"I do\" in the island's little white chapel.\n\nThe service is offered for a small fee, and includes a tour of the island.\n\nOrganisers say 2017's couples were \"chosen by the department based on their diversity and interesting romantic stories\".\n\nA bride and groom laugh during their Robben Island ceremony\n\nThailand's civil servants are handing out free pre-natal pills on the streets of Bangkok on Valentine's Day, hoping to boost the country's falling birth rate.\n\nAround 1 million baht ($28,600; £22,900) has been spent on the pills, for prospective mothers aged 20 to 34.\n\nThe \"very magical vitamins\" (to use the government's words) contain folic acid and iron.\n\nIn 1970, Thai couples had an average of six children, but the figure now stands at 1.6.\n\nThe High Court in Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, has banned public celebrations of Valentine's Day, saying it is not part of Muslim culture.\n\nThe festival has gained a foothold in recent years, but local critics say it is a decadent Western invention.\n\nThe court order bans the media from covering Valentine's events, and bans festivities in public places and government offices.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. A court in Pakistan has banned public celebrations of Valentine's Day in Islamabad\n\nSaudi Arabia's religious police are on alert at this time of year for love-themed merchandise, including flowers, cards and suspicious \"red items\".\n\nFlorists have been known to deliver bouquets in the middle of the night to avoid detection, as determined lovers flout the countrywide ban.\n\nA black market in roses and wrapping paper helps some broadcast their feelings.\n\nBut for others, it's the perfect time of year for a romantic break - to nearby Bahrain or the UAE, where celebrations are more tolerated.\n\nHolidays to Dubai are one way for Saudi couples to dodge the crackdown\n\nAs Japan geared up for the 14th, a group of Marxist protesters unfurled a giant \"Smash Valentine's Day\" banner in Tokyo.\n\nThe \"Kakuhido\", or Revolutionary Alliance of Men that Women find Unattractive, want an end to public displays of love that \"hurt their feelings\".\n\nMembers have been known to chant slogans including \"public smooching is terrorism\".\n\n\"Our aim is to crush this love capitalism,\" said Takayuki Akimoto, the group's PR chief.\n\n\"People like us who don't seek value in love are being oppressed by society,\" he added.\n\n\"It's a conspiracy by people who think unattractive guys are inferior, or losers - like cuddling in public, it makes us feel bad. It's unforgivable!\"\n\nThe protests came as Japan's family planning association revealed that \"sexless marriages\" in the country are at a record high.\n\nNearly 50% of married Japanese couples had not had sex for more than a month and did not expect that to change in the near future, it said.", "More than 180,000 people in northern California have been told to evacuate after two overflow channels at the US's tallest dam were found to be damaged.\n\nThe 770ft (230m) high Oroville Dam is not itself at risk of collapsing, but its emergency spillway was close to caving in, officials said.\n\nThe excess water has now stopped flowing.", "Three rescued tiger cubs in India have taken to a life-sized soft toy after their mother was found dead in a wildlife park.", "Nesbitt had notably thicker hair in 2016 (r) than 2005 (l)\n\nHair transplants gave actor James Nesbitt a new lease of confidence, the Cold Feet star has revealed.\n\nSpeaking to the Radio Times, Nesbitt said the highly publicised transplants had benefited his career.\n\nThe 52-year-old underwent several procedures over a number of years.\n\n\"I was very happy to be open about it,\" he said. \"I just thought, 'Come on, somebody is going to say it before I say it'.\"\n\n\"It was something I struggled with,\" he went on. \"And that was probably the vanity in me.\n\n\"But also career-wise it had an impact; in terms of the range of leading roles I've had since then, it's probably helped.\"\n\nDespite his own cosmetic changes, Nesbitt - whose TV roles also include Murphy's Law and The Missing - said he thought it was a shame when young men considered plastic surgery.\n\n\"There always used to be the sense that age adds character,\" he said.\n\n\"You look at Samuel Beckett when he was older, Richard Harris, but I think with younger men it seems to be a big pressure.\"\n\nNesbitt also spoke about his recent split from wife Sonia Forbes-Adam, with whom he has two grown-up children, after 22 years of marriage.\n\nHe said he regretted the amount of time he had put into work.\n\n\"I certainly regret things, but I'm also aware that I can't change them. You can try to learn from it. I regret any pain that was caused.\n\n\"I think separating has an impact because you look at why it happened and you see mistakes that were made,\" he added.\n\n\"I'm lucky enough to be able to look back at stuff and say, 'Oh well that was then, I've had a good lash at that, and this is now'.\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "A council has apologised after trees were planted on a football pitch.\n\nThe trees appeared at the pitch at Logie Durno in Aberdeenshire, sparking social media reaction.\n\nAberdeenshire Council was contacted, and the local authority said the intention was to turn over part of the area for \"biodiversity\" - but talks would now be held with the community.\n\nA spokeswoman said: \"It would seem that we were barking up the wrong tree with plans for this site.\"", "Matt Barrie was trying to help his mother set up a website\n\nIt was doing a favour for his mother that gave entrepreneur Matt Barrie the idea for setting up a business that is now worth more than A$400m ($300m; £243m).\n\nHis company and website Freelancer has a simple concept - it connects people who have work they need doing with others who compete to do the task by submitting the fee they would charge.\n\nFounded just eight years ago in Sydney, today the website has more than 22.5 million users around the world, both freelance workers and those seeking their services.\n\nJobs advertised on Freelancer include everything from help with building a mobile phone app, to writing a company report, designing a tattoo, and help with gaining publicity for something.\n\nUS space agency Nasa has even used the website since 2015, allowing people to bid to help design items for the International Space Station, including a new robotic arm.\n\nIt is a pretty good success story for a 43-year-old who admits that when he came up with the idea for Freelancer he was \"a broken man\".\n\nIn 2006 Mr Barrie had walked out of his first start-up - a Sydney-based firm called Sensory Networks that made computer chips for security equipment. He was not feeling good.\n\nSite users submit photos from around the world - this one is from Maccu Pichu in Peru\n\n\"People used the product but everything was wrong with how we sold it,\" he says.\n\nDespite a blaze of publicity and the support of venture capitalists (VCs), the marketing proved too tough, and the company was struggling. So Mr Barrie quit.\n\n\"You feel you have let your VCs down, the board, your friends that you hired, your family,\" he says.\n\nSensory Networks went on to survive without Mr Barrie, and was eventually bought by chip giant Intel in 2013 for $20m, but he says that back in 2006 he \"really felt like a failure\".\n\nAfter a few months of \"decompressing\", Mr Barrie was beginning to think about his next move when the 2007 global financial crisis swept in.\n\n\"The whole world was collapsing. Businesses weren't getting funded anymore. I thought, 'what am I going to do with myself?'\" he recalls.\n\nHe decided to take advantage of the enforced downtime to build a website for his mother, a wholesale art and craft supplier.\n\nHe wanted to include a directory of the stores she supplied, thinking it might encourage others to want to be included. The first Excel spreadsheet had 1,000 rows.\n\nFaced with that, Mr Barrie decided to outsource the data entry side of things to local kids. But even offering A$2,000 overall, nobody came running.\n\n\"I looked around, asked a few people, and they'd say, 'oh it's boring.' I'd reply, 'I know it's boring! That's why I want you to do it.'\"\n\nMatt Barrie broke the bell when the company floated in 2013\n\nAfter four months Mr Barrie started searching online in desperation for cheap data entry, and stumbled upon a site based in Sweden called Getafreelancer.\n\n\"It was the ugliest site you have ever seen in your life. I eventually figured out how to post a job,\" he says.\n\n\"I went to get lunch, and came back to 74 emails from people saying you're offering A$2,000, I'll do it for A$1,000, A$500 and so on… I thought it was a scam.\"\n\nHe eventually hired a team in India who did the job in three days for A$100.\n\n\"I thought was incredible, a whole army of people out there, many from emerging markets. I looked at all the projects on the website. It was like an ebay for jobs. I thought wow.\n\nMatt's colleagues had fun when he was on the cover of Australian business magazine BRW\n\nMr Barrie was so impressed by the concept that he decided to set up his own version.\n\nThe VCs who had flocked to his first start-up were far more cautious this time round, and banks were unwilling to loan to a web-based business with no physical, recoverable assets in the event of failure.\n\nIn the end a friend who had sold his own firm stumped up the money, and Mr Barrie first secured workers via Getafreelancer, before then buying that business.\n\nFreelancer, whose entire operation is cloud-based using Amazon Web Services, has since gone on to buy up 18 other rival sites. Its directly employed workforce now totals 570 people.\n\nSites like Freelancer have faced criticism for driving down prices for professionals trying to sell their services, but Mr Barrie counters that the company has had a huge, positive impact on millions of people in developing countries.\n\n\"You can be somewhere where your average wage is A$2 a day,\" he says.\n\nMatt Barrie says he is a workaholic\n\n\"You can make your month's salary in a few days. It's the ultimate meritocracy. It's up to you to figure out what you want to do.\"\n\nAnd it is also not necessarily the lowest bidder who wins the job - Freelancer says that 47% of the projects on its site are awarded to \"the median bidder or higher\".\n\nEntrepreneur Emma Sinclair, co-founder of human resources software business Enterprise Jungle, says firms are increasingly looking to hire non-staff to complete projects rather than carry out the work in-house.\n\n\"Nearly 35% of today's total workforce is comprised of non-employee workers and this is set to continue to grow,\" she says\n\n\"Sites like Freelancer are therefore very well-placed to service both the growing on-demand labour force looking for work, as well as the corporates who are hiring them.\n\n\"It is an invaluable marketplace for talent, with an all-important rating system to weed out the poor or unreliable performers.\"\n\nOn a day-to-day basis Mr Barrie is, by his own admission, a workaholic.\n\n\"I live this, I breathe it. I get up in the morning and start work. I'm often in the office until 10pm.\n\n\"I've had several offers to sell - one formal. I had a good think, and said I couldn't think of doing anything else.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Women are banned from driving in Saudi Arabia\n\nAsk about change in Saudi Arabia.\n\nThe reply used to be: it will come, in its own way and in its own time, in the conservative kingdom.\n\nIt was another way of saying it would take a long time - and might never happen.\n\nBut, in Saudi Arabia now, talk of change is measured in months.\n\n\"I made a bet with a male colleague that the ban on women driving would end in the first six months of this year, and he said it would happen in the second half,\" a successful Saudi businesswoman says to me over lunch in the capital, Riyadh.\n\n\"But now I think it will happen early next year, and apply only to women over 40,\" she adds.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThat's a prediction you hear in Riyadh's royal circles too. Some even say younger women will be allowed to drive before too long.\n\nChange on every front is still slow and cautious in a culture where ultra-conservative religious authorities wield great influence, and many Saudis want to hold on to their old ways of living.\n\nBut an accelerating pace is largely being forced on Saudi rulers and society by a dramatic change in fortune for the world's biggest oil producer.\n\nThe crash in world prices for Saudi Arabia's black gold halved its revenues a few years ago and now shapes the hard choices and changes it must make in many parts of life here.\n\n\"It's been a one engine jet for decades,\" is how John Sfakianakis of the Gulf Research Center explains a country that depends on oil and gas for 90% of its income.\n\n\"Now it needs multiple engines.\"\n\nEnter a new master plan, grandly titled Vision 2030, which was unveiled with great fanfare last year.\n\nIt's stamped with the imprimatur of the 31-year-old Deputy Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman, who crafted the ambitious blueprint with a cast of highly paid foreign consultants.\n\nThe deputy crown prince and those around him know that someday oil wells will run dry and, even before that, most people will be driving electric cars.\n\n\"It's absolutely necessary to get to Vision 2030 and our objectives,\" says the country's powerful Oil Minister Khalid al-Falih.\n\nThe former CEO of the state oil giant, Aramco, the world's biggest oil company, Mr al-Falih even has the need to diversify written into his new title. He's the minister of energy, industry and mineral resources.\n\n\"Whether we get there in 2030, whether we get some of them in 2025, some of them in 2030, some of them in 2035, we'll see,\" he explains in a nod to a master plan with demanding benchmarks for every ministry.\n\nSaudi editor and writer Khaled Maeena points to a new accountability starting to emerge.\n\n\"Everybody is on the go, ministers bureaucrats and all, looking over their shoulders not to make mistakes,\" he says.\n\nThose at the top, he adds, must \"lead by example\".\n\nTwo third's of Saudi Arabia's population is aged below 30\n\nSalaries and lavish perks have been slashed in government jobs. The private sector is expected to provide one of the big engines for growth. It's still not up to speed.\n\n\"We're not hiring now,\" asserts a Saudi business executive who oversees a vast conglomerate of companies. \"And we're not selling to the government unless we're sure we'll get paid for our goods.\"\n\n\"Vision 2030 is unlikely to reach its destination in 2030,\" a sceptical Saudi statistician replies when I ask for his view. Like most Saudis who criticise, he asks not to use his name.\n\n\"But at least there is a vision, and this time there are practicalities about how to achieve it,\" he adds, in a reference to previous schemes which never went anywhere.\n\n\"This is la la land,\" was the even more scathing assessment of another consultant. \"Is there a bureaucracy able to implement it and a readiness at the top to change their own lives?\"\n\nMany of Saudi Arabia's young are educated abroad\n\nThe young deputy crown prince driving this plan, who is seen as the favourite son of 81-year-old King Salman, knows there's another clock fuelling pressure for change.\n\nTwo-thirds of Saudis are his age or younger.\n\nHundreds of thousands of them, men and women, were educated at the best western universities thanks to a generous scholarship programme started by the former King Abdullah.\n\nNow they're back, looking for work but also ways to spend their weekends in an austere culture where even cinemas are banned,\n\nUnder the rules, men can only sit with women if they are dining with their female relatives, or \"families\" as that section is known.\n\nBut even since my last visit about a year ago, small but significant steps are visible.\n\nGone from the streets of the capital are the notorious religious police, the Mutawa, who used to roam in a mission to \"prevent vice and promote virtue\" and were often accused of zealously abusing their powers. The deputy crown prince is credited with sorting this out.\n\nMany Saudis are excited at the prospect of more entertainment events\n\nWealthy Riyadh residents speak excitedly of newly opened restaurants where seating arrangements are less strict and music blares loudly.\n\n\"We need to see women drivers and cinemas here,\" insists Waleed al-Saedan when we meet at one of the few public places where the speed of life truly picks up.\n\n\"Dune bashing\" in the desert provides one of the few legal thrills as Saudis rev the engines of sand buggies and SUVs to careen down the soft slopes of sand.\n\nDune bashing is a popular sport in parts of the Middle East\n\nAs is so often the case here, it's usually a men-only adventure.\n\nBut a new General Entertainment Authority is on the case. Despite its stern title, the people who run it are on a mission to bring some fun to Saudi lives, albeit within limits. No one is suggesting drinking and dancing.\n\n\"My mission is to make people happy,\" asserts the authority's chairman Ahmed al-Khatib, whose own serious demeanour is quickly brightened by a smile.\n\nA calendar of some 80 events ranging from art festivals to light shows and live music concerts is carefully prepared and implemented to avoid any backlash which could put the whole project at risk.\n\nHuge crowds turned out for a rare concert in January\n\n\"We will definitely provide things for the more open people and we will provide activities and things for the more conservative people,\" Mr al-Khatib explains, choosing his words carefully.\n\nOpening up more social freedoms isn't just about providing more fun.\n\n\"Seventy billion riyals are being spent by Saudis on holidays abroad,\" laments a Saudi tour operator who is trying to tempt Saudis to spend more of their time and money at home instead of fleeing to the bright lights of Dubai or London.\n\nWomen are being encouraged to take part in Vision 2030\n\nMore profound changes like political reform, tackling a questionable human rights record, or easing a web of restrictions on women's lives aren't on the agenda.\n\nAnd at the same time as happiness is on the agenda, so is pain.\n\nThis is a country where people have always lived with cheap petrol, without taxes, and free water and electricity.\n\nSaudi Arabia will have to diversify its revenue streams in the coming years\n\nNow subsidies are being cut and a sales tax introduced. A new \"Citizen's Account\" will help lighten the burden for poorer families, but Saudis are having to juggle their own finances now.\n\n\"Saudis have taken too much for granted for too long,\" insists Nadia al-Hazza, an engineer who used to work in the oil and gas sector who is now helping to get women involved in Vision 2030.\n\nShe starts her presentations with a famous mantra from former US President John F Kennedy: \"Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.\"\n\nSo now Saudis are also being asked to do more, and faster, than they've ever been used to.\n\n\"We're like a turtle on wheels,\" says political observer Hassan Yassin. \"We're moving in a faster way to try to meet local demands and 21st Century obligations.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nBritain's Olympic champions Jason and Laura Kenny are expecting their first child, the couple's agent confirmed.\n\nFour-time Olympic gold medallist Laura Kenny, 24, revealed the news with a post on Instagram of two adult bikes lined up alongside a child's bike.\n\nHusband Jason added his own post on Twitter, while Great Britain team-mate Dani King tweeted \"best news ever\".\n\nAgent Luke Lloyd-Davies said the couple and their families are \"absolutely thrilled and delighted with the news\".\n\n\"They very much appreciate all the kind wishes and messages of support that they have received already,\" he added.\n\nThe couple, who married in September in a private ceremony, went public with the news following their 12-week scan.\n\nJason, 28, has won six track cycling Olympic gold medals, including three at last summer's Games in Rio.\n\nLaura pulled out of last month's National Track Championships after injuring a hamstring, but said at the time she hoped to be fit for April's World Championships in Hong Kong", "On the face of it, today's results couldn't be more ugly. A reported loss of £4.6bn is the biggest in the company's 133 year history and one of the biggest UK corporate losses of all time. However, while these results are certainly not good, they are not as ugly as they look.\n\nThe results are massively distorted by a whopping hit of £4.4bn thanks to an accounting charge which if you bear with me I can explain.\n\nIn simple terms, Rolls Royce sells engines and long term service contracts in dollars. Those contracts can last 20 years. The biggest risk for Rolls Royce is that the value of the dollar falls against the pound meaning those long term service revenues are worth less in sterling terms. The company insures itself against that by entering into long term foreign exchange deals to guarantee the revenues don't dwindle. If the dollar falls, it doesn't matter, because the value of your foreign exchange contract - or hedge - goes up as the dollar goes down.\n\nWhen the opposite happens and the pound falls sharply (as in the 20% fall since the referendum) the paper value of the contract - or hedge - goes down.\n\nThe £4.4bn loss is a reflection of many years' worth of contracts being worth less than when they were taken out. Once a year you have to tot all these contracts up and this year the result was a whopping accounting charge. It's worth emphasising that the company has not had to fork out this £4.4bn in real money.\n\nTaking that charge out, these results are not so much ugly as bad.\n\nUnderlying profits, meaning profits that strip out these confusing accounting charges have fallen by a half. That is a fair assessment of the business.\n\nMany of Rolls Royce's older engines are being taken out of service faster than its new engines are being taken up by newer planes. Not only that, but the newer engines will take longer to make a profit as the costs of development, testing and launch overshadow the early years of an engines life.\n\nThe real gravy is the money to service them which comes rolling in for many years at little additional cost. With several new engines launched recently those days are some way off.\n\nThe good is that orders for these new engines look pretty healthy which bodes well for future profits. The new management team has simplified a sprawling business and costs are lower which will increase future profit margins. Cash flow remains pretty strong which means that the many pension funds that own Rolls Royce shares should continue to receive their dividends.\n\nThere is something else distorting these results which really muddies the good bad and ugly waters as it pits ethical, pragmatic and political concerns against each other.\n\nSelling civil aviation, nuclear and military hardware to companies and governments around the world can be a murky business. For decades, palms have been greased, strings pulled and backhanders given.\n\nRolls Royce was no exception and this year agreed to pay £671m to settle corruption charges which included falsifying accounts, attempting to thwart investigations, and paying tens of millions in bribes to win engine and other deals in Indonesia, Thailand, China and Russia. The charges relate to a 24 year period from 1989 to 2013.\n\nThe settlement is in place of a criminal conviction. A conviction could have meant Rolls Royce being banned from bidding on lucrative government contracts in the US, the UK and Brazil.\n\nAccording to the judge who allowed this special settlement, Sir Brian Leveson, these were serious breaches of the law, and knowledge of them went right to the top.\n\nHe said: \"The proceedings reveal the most serious breaches of the criminal law in the areas of bribery and corruption (some of which implicated senior management and, on the face of it, controlling minds of the company).\"\n\nThose controlling minds have mostly left the company and may yet have their individual collars felt by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO).\n\nWhen asked whether former executives would have bonuses from that period clawed back, current chief executive, Warren East, said the board had looked \"very hard at that\" but the answer was no.\n\nIn other words, if we could legally have clawed it back years later - we would have done.\n\nThe judge's decision to allow a financial settlement, as opposed to criminal charges, was based on the co-operation of the current management, the reforms it has made to practices, and the significant damage a successful prosecution would do not only to a world-leading company, and \"employees, others innocent of misconduct or what might otherwise be described as the consequences of a conviction\".\n\nThe judge said that the national interest was \"irrelevant\" in fending off prosecution but it seems obvious that some of his concerns for the company and its workers overlap with what most would consider in the national interest.\n\nNo one is suggesting that £671m is a mere slap on the wrist. In fact, the £497m bit of the fine levied by the SFO is the biggest it has ever imposed and will be considered a feather in its cap.\n\nOthers will observe that when it comes to ethics versus jobs and money, jobs and money usually come out on top.\n\nDepending on your own view of the world that is either good, bad or ugly.", "India is set to launch a record 104 satellites into space in a single mission on 15 February.\n\nAlthough there is no direct space rivalry between China and India some analysts have compared it to the US-Soviet \"space race\".\n\nVideo produced by Suniti Singh and Pratik Jakhar; images courtesy of AP/AFP\n\nBBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook.", "A police job candidate was arrested for drinking and driving after he turned up for a interview smelling of alcohol.\n\nA Greater Manchester Police employee noticed an \"overpowering smell\" on the man's breath during an interview for an IT management role.\n\nAndrew Jackson, 48, then disclosed he had had trouble parking, was breathalysed and arrested.\n\nIn court, he admitted drinking and driving and was banned for a year, police said.\n\nThe IT worker appeared at Bury and Rochdale Magistrates' Court on Friday, was fined £120 with a £30 victim surcharge and ordered to pay £85 costs.\n\nMr Jackson, of Barlow Moor Road, Didsbury, Manchester was told his ban would be reduced to seven months on completion of a drink-driving awareness course.\n\nHis hour-long interview took place on 25 January at a training centre in Prestwich, Greater Manchester, but he fell foul of the law when he revealed his travel arrangements.\n\nThe interviewer, a civilian worker, said: \"I asked if he had any trouble in finding us. As soon as he began to speak I could smell something on his breath which I thought was stale alcohol.\n\n\"He mentioned that he did have a little trouble in finding somewhere to park, which immediately raised concerns.\n\n\"Shortly after he arrived in the small office, the smell of alcohol became overpowering.\"\n\nThe job hopeful was arrested and taken to Bury police station\n\nThe interviewer then made his excuses at the end of the interview and left the room to ask a police officer's advice.\n\nA traffic officer quizzed the man over whether he had been drinking but he was adamant that not a drop had touched his lips that morning.\n\nHowever Mr Jackson did admit to sharing a bottle of wine with his wife the night before during a meal out.\n\nThe traffic officer then marched him out of the building to a nearby patrol car and gave him a breathalyser test, which he duly failed.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The ups and downs of Brexit are covered in some of the day's papers, as fears arise about Brits abroad while the forecast for the nation's economy improves.\n\nAccording to the Guardian, a document leaked from the European parliament is warning that British expats living in European countries could face \"a backlash\" because of the UK government's stance on foreigners since the vote to leave the EU.\n\nThe document says that while member states will decide whether British citizens can carry on living in those countries, \"the fact that it appears to be particularly difficult for foreign nationals... to acquire permanent residence status or British nationality may colour member states' approach to this matter\".\n\nThe Daily Express proclaims good news on its front page, saying EU officials \"have admitted\" that UK's economy is \"thriving since the Brexit vote\".\n\nIt also says predictions that the \"gloomy\" forecast that the UK's economy would grow by 1%, made by Brussels last autumn, has been revised up to 1.5%.\n\nThe Times has alarming news for commuters. The paper reports a study by the University of Surrey, which says travelling to work by public transport exposes people to up to eight times as much air pollution as those who drive there.\n\nAccording to the authors, there's little \"environmental justice\" - because those who contribute most to air pollution are also the least likely to suffer from it.\n\nResearchers found that bus passengers, for example, experience higher levels of pollution, and their journeys last longer.\n\nDiesel cars do the most harm to the wellbeing of other travellers - but motorists tend to keep their windows closed, and are protected from harmful particles by filters.\n\nTHE \"I\" devotes eight pages to an investigation which, it says, reveals that 19 NHS hospitals in England face closure. The paper has analysed 44 \"sustainability and transformation plans\" - which it describes as regional blueprints to remodel the health service - as bosses seeks to plug a £22bn \"black hole\" in funding.\n\nThe \"I\" concludes there is to be a massive shift towards \"out-of-hospital\" care, with patients encouraged to manage their own health needs.\n\nOther far-reaching changes are proposed, including the loss of almost 3,000 jobs.\n\nThe Department of Health tells the paper the plans are designed to ensure best standards of care, with doctors, hospitals and councils working in partnership with local communities for the first time.\n\nReaction is mixed. A GP in Lancashire says the proposals merely move \"the deckchairs around on the Titanic\", as social care is collapsing, general practice is \"on its knees\", and the hospital service is in \"meltdown\".\n\nBut Harry Quilter-Pinner, from the Institute for Public Policy Research think-tank, tells the paper the NHS cannot stand still in the face of new technology and an ageing population.\n\nHe says that while the health service is under-funded, there are many instances where treatment could be moved out of hospital and into the community - saving money and improving outcomes for patients.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph carries a warning that half a million women are being left at a higher risk of breast cancer because GPs are unaware they should be prescribing a preventative drug.\n\nThe figures come from a study produced by researchers at University College London, Queen Mary London, and Cancer Research UK.\n\nThe paper says three in four family doctors are unaware they should be offering Tamoxifen, which can reduce the risk of the disease by a third while costing only six pence a day.\n\nPrue Leith spent 11 years on the judging panel of the BBC Two cooking contest The Great British Menu.\n\nThe Sun leads with news that cookery queen Prue Leith will replace Mary Berry as a judge when the Great British Bake Off moves to Channel Four.\n\nAn unnamed source tells the paper that Prue Leith has all the attributes to take over, and that \"in cookery circles, she's practically royalty\".", "Muhammadu Buhari has not been seen in public recently and the Nigerian rumour mill is in overdrive, as Martin Patience explains.", "Phoebee Bambury survived toxic shock syndrome (TSS) by spotting the symptoms early - and she wants others to learn from her experience.\n\nThe rare condition, which can be fatal, is caused by bacteria getting into the body and releasing harmful toxins.\n\nIt's usually associated with using a tampon for too long.\n\nThe 19-year-old now wants more young people to be taught about the dangers of TSS in school.\n\nPhoebee explains that she began with a headache and a fever, both symptoms that sound like the common cold.\n\nIt was the beginning of two weeks spent in hospital.\n\n\"The first symptom I had was the headache one evening while I was at university,\" she tells Newsbeat.\n\nBut later that night Phoebee's condition got worse, she developed muscle pains and started vomiting.\n\nPhoebee had been spending the night at her boyfriend's house when her symptoms got worse\n\n\"Just like anyone would normally think, I thought maybe I'm ill and I'm just going to have a few bad days.\n\n\"You don't want to think 'oh no toxic shock', but in my head I thought those are the symptoms - I need to check this out.\"\n\nAlthough there are many ways you can get toxic shock syndrome, it is often associated with the use of tampons.\n\nThe symptoms of TSS can be found on tampon packets.\n\n\"I thought [the symptoms] all matched so I phoned 111 and they said I was spot on and needed to get to a hospital ASAP,\" she said.\n\nPhoebee's condition deteriorated and within 10 minutes of being in A&E she was hooked up to a drip, with an industrial-sized fan by her side to try and bring down her body temperature.\n\nShe also tells Newsbeat how the infection caused her body to swell.\n\nDoctors confirmed that Phoebee's toxic shock syndrome was caused by her use of tampons but she insists that she followed the guidelines.\n\n\"I've never left a tampon in for longer than eight hours and at the time I started to feel very ill I didn't even have one in,\" she explains.\n\nShe adds that her degree in pharmacy and personal experiences had made her more aware of the infection.\n\n\"My friend's mum died of toxic shock so I'd always been aware of it,\" she said.\n\nBut cases like this are extremely rare.\n\nThere are no exact figures on how many women get TSS from using tampons but of the 40 people estimated to be diagnosed in the UK every year - on average only two people will die from the infection.\n\n\"To raise awareness in more young people, I genuinely believe toxic shock needs to be a part of sex education,\" Phoebee said.\n\n\"You get talks about tampons, periods and condoms at school and TSS should be a part of that.\n\n\"It's an associated risk with tampons and I know it's rare but it is serious,\" she added.\n\nPhoebee has now been out of hospital for two weeks, and during her recovery she's been encouraging her university to do more to raise awareness about the infection.\n\n\"If you know the symptoms and take all the precautions then your chances of getting TSS are so slim.\n\n\"I know the best advice for women would be to just not use tampons but that's not possible for everyone, we just need to educate more people to take precautions.\"\n\n\"High-quality education on sex and relationships is a vital part of preparing young people for success in adult life,\" a Department for Education spokesman said.\n\n\"It is compulsory in all maintained secondary schools and, as the education secretary said recently, we are looking at options to ensure all children have access to high-quality teaching in these subjects.\"\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "The claim: Pensioners are on average £20 a week better off than working-age people.\n\nReality Check verdict: The calculation made by the Resolution Foundation is for household income after housing costs. Before housing costs are taken into account, working-age households still have higher incomes than pensioner households.\n\nNews that pensioner households are now better off than working-age families was widely reported on Monday.\n\nThere have been reports for some time that incomes for pensioners have been growing faster than those for working-age people, largely as a result of pensions being protected by the triple-lock, while many working-age benefits have been frozen.\n\nThe triple-lock guarantees that pensions rise by the same as average earnings, the consumer price index, or 2.5%, whichever is the highest.\n\nBut the report from the Resolution Foundation was the first suggestion that the retired had actually overtaken the working-age group.\n\nThe figures referred to the \"typical pensioner household\", by which it meant the median, which is the household for which half of pensioner households have higher income and half of them have lower incomes.\n\nIn this case, a pensioner household is one in which at least one member is of pension age or older (65 for men, 64 for women) whether or not that person is working. There can also be working people in a pensioner household.\n\nBut the important factor that has been mentioned little in the coverage is that the measure of income that the Resolution Foundation is using is one for income after housing costs have been paid.\n\nThis chart from the Resolution Foundation gives income after housing costs for the median pensioner and working household as well as a richer one and a poorer one.\n\nTaking income after housing costs makes a huge difference because pensioner households are more likely to own their own homes and to have relatively small or paid-off mortgages.\n\nThe report says, for example, that 70% of the silent generation (born 1926-45) own their homes outright, while just over 40% of the baby boomers (1946-65) own theirs, with another 30% still having mortgages to pay.\n\nThe median income for both working-age and pensioner households is just over £20,000 a year, so housing costs would make a big difference.\n\nAlso, the figures do not take account of people in care homes, which would be expected to increase housing costs for those of pension age.\n\nThe Resolution Foundation confirms in the report that before housing costs are paid, the median working-age household still has a higher income than the median pensioner household.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Things not to say to a single person\n\nWith Valentine's Day upon us, we ask a group of singletons to reveal some of the most irritating questions they get asked about their relationship status.", "Want to gape at the Northern Lights? Pull over first\n\nThe Northern Lights are a spectacle many people travel to Iceland to see, but police are having to warn tourists not to try to view them while driving.\n\nOfficers in southern Iceland say that twice last week they had to pull over cars driving erratically, initially on suspicion that the drivers had been drinking. But on both occasions the entirely sober visitors were simply mesmerised by the appearance of the Aurora Borealis in the sky above them, Iceland Magazine reports. The site has dubbed it \"driving under the influence of the Aurora\".\n\nThe first incident was on the road to the airport, with the car swerving between lanes. \"The driver told the police he saw the Northern Lights and couldn't bring himself to stop looking at them,\" a police statement said. \"The police asked him to park the vehicle if he wanted to keep on gazing at the sky.\"\n\nTourists don't always make life easy for Icelanders, especially behind the wheel. In 2015, a roads official complained that visitors were causing collisions by stopping their cars abruptly in the middle of the road in order to photograph sheep, horses \"or anything else which captures their attention\". He suggested that creating designated photo stops could ease the problem.\n\nUse #NewsfromElsewhere to stay up-to-date with our reports via Twitter.", "A ferry crashed into a pier on the Isle of Man as the captain tried to dock in strong winds.\n\nServices from Douglas to the UK have been disrupted after the Ben-my-Chree, which sailed from Heysham, Lancashire, struck the pier on Sunday.\n\nThe Isle of Man Steam-Packet Company confirmed no passengers or crew were injured.", "Lucy had to have surgery at the craniofacial unit to have her skull shortened\n\nEvery year, more than a thousand children with facial abnormalities are treated at the Oxford Children's Hospital's pioneering craniofacial unit. The work carried out by the world-class team is quite simply life-changing.\n\n\"When you've got an odd-shaped head, children are probably more ruthless and cruel,\" says Tom Bowran, whose baby daughter Lucy is being treated at the unit at John Radcliffe Hospital.\n\n\"The name-calling, the possibility you'll miss out on something, the bullying even to a late age... that was something I was so keen that Lucy avoided. I wanted her to have as good a quality of life as any parent would.\"\n\nTom is watching Lucy go through a similar experience to the one he had as a child.\n\nLucy was seven weeks old when Tom and his wife Hanna, who are from Cambridge, were told she had sagittal synostosis.\n\nThe top plates on her skull had fused, stopping it from growing properly, and she had to be referred to the specialist department.\n\n\"I was absolutely terrified,\" Hanna says. \"The fact that her dad had something similar and that was his worst fear, that Lucy would end up with anything like that.\n\n\"The hospital squeezed us in straight away and they've been absolutely brilliant... they've been holding her hands every step of the way.\"\n\nTom Bowran, pictured with wife Hanna, had a similar condition to his daughter as a child\n\nDavid Johnson is head of the unit and a consultant plastic surgeon.\n\nHis department sees about 1,200 patients each year and carries out up to 100 complex procedures in that time, making it one of the busiest units of its kind in the world.\n\n\"Lucy's skull has not been able to grow very well from side to side, and has been forced to grow in a long and narrow fashion,\" he explains.\n\n\"The operation was to shorten her skull by taking the bone off the front and the bone off the back... reshaping that bone and fixing it back in position again.\"\n\nHanna says knowing the surgery had gone to plan \"was the best feeling in the world\".\n\nAs a result Lucy lost the \"big forehead... the funny shape at the back, and she looks completely different\".\n\n\"More importantly it's given her brain the room to grow that it needs.\"\n\n\"Yesterday was possibly the longest seven hours of my life waiting for her to come through the operation,\" Tom says.\n\n\"Just knowing what she was going through and the potential risks that had been spelt out.\n\n\"It was a big relief seeing the reassuring faces and Mr Johnson with his smiley face telling us he was delighted with the progress.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nStaff are used to designing new operations from scratch to solve challenging cases\n\nMore than 25 people work on Mr Johnson's team and they are used to solving challenging cases, some affecting only one child in tens of thousands.\n\nTheir expertise is valued by the Department of Health, and the unit receives specific funding because of its designation as of one of the NHS's \"highly specialised services\".\n\nAnthony Carter, father of two-year-old Brianne, remembers when his family first met the elite team.\n\n\"There were 10 people including Mr Johnson in there and it was so scary,\" says Mr Carter, who is from Wiltshire.\n\n\"It then hit us how serious it was. Then we went through each individual person, and they each explained, and we were a bit more at ease.\"\n\nThe first task for doctors was to repair Brianne's cleft lip\n\nThen in June 2016 she had an operation to reconstruct her skull\n\n\"We have to look at doing unique and novel things for individuals,\" Mr Johnson explains.\n\n\"There are many examples where I've been doing things for the very first time, and a lot of conditions where we're having to think on our feet and almost design new operations from scratch.\n\n\"That in a way is one of the most challenging things of my job, but also one of the most rewarding.\"\n\nBrianne has an extremely rare condition called cranio-fronto-nasal dysplasia. She was born with a flatness on one side of her forehead, a cleft lip and palate, and a complex craniofacial cleft, leaving her with a gap in the bones forming in her face. She's the only child in the UK with this set of issues.\n\n\"All the scans are quite strange to see... the work and detail that has gone into piecing the jigsaw puzzle of her head,\" Anthony says.\n\nMr Johnson describes the complex eight-hour procedure as akin to \"robbing Peter to pay Paul\".\n\n\"I created a new forehead based on a piece of bone on the top of her skull, and her old forehead has been cut up into little pieces and placed back where the new forehead's come from.\"\n\nIt has bought Brianne time, but she will still require a serious procedure when she is about 10 years old, to move her eye sockets closer together.\n\nUnfortunately, the day after Brianne returned home she fell off a sofa on to her head. She had a seizure, and had to be flown to hospital by air ambulance.\n\nIt is a reminder why so many families that use the unit - and who often stay there for extended periods - take things one day at a time.\n\nCT scans are used to solve the \"jigsaw puzzle\" of irregularly-shaped skulls\n\nBut Stephanie says her daughter, who has since recovered from her fall, loves visiting the unit, which takes pride in its welcoming atmosphere.\n\n\"She gets so excited when we pull in, it's like we're taking her to a theme park.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nNorwich City and Newcastle United had to settle for a draw after a frantic Championship game at Carrow Road.\n\nNewcastle had led after just 23 seconds thanks to Ayoze Perez's placed effort.\n\nJacob Murphy's far-post finish made it 1-1 before goalkeeper Karl Darlow gifted Norwich the lead as he scuffed a clearance and Cameron Jerome tucked in.\n\nMatt Ritchie hit the bar for Newcastle before they deservedly levelled through Jamaal Lascelles' sweet finish, keeping them top after Brighton also drew.\n\nThe draw saw seventh-placed Norwich slip further behind sixth-placed Sheffield Wednesday, who won to move themselves four points clear of Alex Neil's side with a game in hand.\n\nThe hosts were stunned when Perez had time and space to tuck in a right-footed shot in the opening minute, and a lively Newcastle could have doubled their lead but John Ruddy saved well from Aleksandar Mitrovic.\n\nA fine throw from keeper Ruddy then led to Norwich levelling from an exquisite team move, with Murphy applying the close-range finish at the far post after Jerome had shown good strength to get to the byeline and square the ball.\n\nThe former Birmingham and Stoke forward then capitalised on Darlow's howler to score the simplest of his 10 league goals so far this season and the Canaries were on course for what would have been a fifth win in six games.\n\nBut the visitors began to dominate after half-time and Ritchie's shot struck the underside of the crossbar as they controlled possession and created the greater number of chances.\n\nLascelles' crisp, left-footed effort from the far post after a neat team move was enough to earn the Magpies a point, though they could have won it late on when Jonjo Shelvey scuffed a shot wide and Perez was denied by Ruddy.\n\n\"To be honest, there are mixed emotions after that. Obviously, you are not expecting to concede a goal in the first minute and we were really nervy in the first five minutes.\n\n\"But once we got our goal and then got ahead, I thought we were excellent - the response from the players was top class.\n\n\"In the second half, we started okay and then we started to drop deeper and deeper to protect what we had and the frustrating thing from our point of view is that we didn't see it out.\"\n\n\"I thought we responded brilliantly to going behind - the character of the players, and their reaction to the setbacks, was the most positive thing for me tonight.\n\n\"We had a lot of supporters in the corner and I am sure they will have enjoyed the effort the players put in.\n\n\"It was a very open game - good for the fans but perhaps not for the managers. Norwich might think differently but I think we had enough chances to have won it - but you can't always take three points and if we can take four points every two games we will go up.\"\n• None Attempt saved. Jonjo Shelvey (Newcastle United) right footed shot from long range on the left is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Jonny Howson (Norwich City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt saved. Ayoze Pérez (Newcastle United) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Christian Atsu with a through ball.\n• None Attempt missed. Jonjo Shelvey (Newcastle United) left footed shot from the centre of the box misses to the right. Assisted by Ayoze Pérez.\n• None Offside, Newcastle United. Jamaal Lascelles tries a through ball, but Christian Atsu is caught offside.\n• None Goal! Norwich City 2, Newcastle United 2. Jamaal Lascelles (Newcastle United) left footed shot from a difficult angle on the left to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Ayoze Pérez with a cross following a set piece situation. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "The news that the president's son, Donald Trump Jr, has admitted meeting a Russian lawyer who promised to reveal damaging material on Hillary Clinton is just the latest twist in a row over the president's potential ties to Russia.\n\nHere's how it all unfolded:\n\n11 July: Donald Trump Jr releases an email chain that reveals how the meeting was set up. The intermediary, a British publicist, said the lawyer represented the Russian government.\n\n9 July: Trump Jr admits he met Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya on 9 June 2016 after being told that she had damaging material on Mrs Clinton. He insists the lawyer provided \"no meaningful information\" but it marks the first time a member of President Trump's inner circle has admitted seeking Russian help in winning the election.\n\n25 June: President Trump accuses Barack Obama of inaction after a Washington Post article says the former president knew well before the 8 November election about the accusations against Russia\n\n15 June: US media report that special counsel Robert Mueller is investigating President Trump for possible obstruction of justice in asking for the end of an inquiry into sacked national security adviser Michael Flynn, and in the firing of FBI chief James Comey\n\n08 June: Mr Comey testifies to a Senate panel, saying the president asked for his loyalty and to drop the inquiry into Mr Flynn. But he backs up the president by saying he had assured him he was not under personal scrutiny\n\n26 May: The New York Times and the Washington Post report that Jared Kushner allegedly proposed setting up a back channel between the Kremlin and the White House through Mr Kislyak. He reportedly wanted to use Russian facilities to avoid any US interception of discussions with Moscow\n\n18 May: The department of justice appoints ex-FBI director Robert Mueller as special counsel to look into the Russian matter\n\n17 May: Russian President Vladimir Putin offers to release a record of Mr Trump's 10 May meeting with Russian officials. Moscow maintains that Mr Trump did not pass on classified information\n\n16 May: US media reports that Mr Comey wrote a memo about his 14 February meeting with the president, saying that Mr Trump asked him to shut down his agency's inquiry into Mr Flynn. The White House says that is \"not an accurate description\"\n\n15 May: Media reports suggest Mr Trump let slip highly classified information during his meeting with the Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Russian envoy Sergei Kislyak\n\n11 May: In an interview with NBC News, Mr Trump says: \"When I decided to just do it [fire Mr Comey], I said to myself, I said, 'you know, this Russia thing with Trump and Russia is a made up story...'\n\n10 May: The president meets a Russian delegation in the Oval Office and US press is excluded. A photographer for a Russian state news agency is allowed in\n\n9 May: The president sends his bodyguard to deliver a letter to FBI HQ, informing Mr Comey that he is fired. The White House says Mr Trump fired Mr Comey on the recommendation of the deputy attorney general, who argued that Mr Comey botched an inquiry into Hillary Clinton's emails\n\n8 May: Mr Trump meets Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to discuss firing Mr Comey. The president later tweets: \"The Russia-Trump collusion story is a total hoax, when will this taxpayer funded charade end?\"\n\n3 May: Mr Comey testifies before a congressional panel about why he decided to re-open the Clinton investigation just days before the election. He says it makes him \"mildly nauseous\" to think he may have had an impact on the election\n\n2 May: The president tweets: \"FBI Director Comey was the best thing that ever happened to Hillary Clinton in that he gave her a free pass for many bad deeds!\"\n\n12 April: Mr Trump says in an interview he has \"confidence\" in Mr Comey\n\n30 March: Mr Flynn's lawyer, Robert Kelner, says his client wants immunity to testify on alleged Russian election meddling. Mr Flynn \"has a story to tell\", but needs to guard against \"unfair prosecution\", Mr Kelner says in a statement\n\n20 March: Mr Comey confirms publicly for the first time in a congressional hearing that the FBI is investigating Russia's alleged interference in the US election and that there is no evidence to support the president's wiretapping allegations\n\n4 March: The president claims on Twitter that former President Barack Obama wiretapped his phones during the US election. A spokesman for Mr Obama denies the claim. Mr Comey reportedly asks the Justice Department to publicly reject the allegation, but no such denial is forthcoming\n\n2 March: Attorney General Jeff Sessions recuses himself from any current or future Russia investigations after it emerges that he met Russian officials during the US election campaign, which he had not previously disclosed to Congress\n\n16 February: Mr Trump says Mr Flynn is \"a fine person\" during a raucous 77-minute press conference at the White House, but that he was \"not happy\" with his performance\n\n14 February: Mr Trump again meets Mr Comey. Mr Flynn, meanwhile, is under investigation for his contacts with the Russian ambassador and his business dealings with Russian and Turkish lobbyists\n\n13 February: Mr Flynn resigns. In his resignation letter, he writes: \"I inadvertently briefed the vice-president elect and others with incomplete information regarding my phone calls with the Russian ambassador\"\n\n11/12 February: Mr Flynn spends the weekend at Mar-a-Lago, Mr Trump's Florida estate, alongside the president and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. The Trump administration faces its first international crisis: a North Korean missile launch\n\n10 February: President Trump tells reporters aboard Air Force One he has not seen media reports about Mr Flynn: \"I don't know about that. I haven't seen it\"\n\n27 January: Mr Comey and Mr Trump have dinner. Mr Trump later says that during the meal Mr Comey asked to keep his job and assured the president he was not under investigation. But Comey associates say the president asked the law enforcement chief to pledge his loyalty. Mr Comey reportedly declined to do so\n\n26/27 January: The Justice Department contacts the top lawyer in the White House, Donald McGahn, about Mr Flynn's communications with Mr Kislyak, warning that Mr Flynn may be vulnerable to Russian blackmail.\n\n20 January: President Trump and his executive team, including Mr Flynn, take office\n\n15 January: Vice-President Mike Pence says, on US television network CBS, that he spoke to Mr Flynn about his phone call with the Russian envoy and asserts it had \"nothing whatsoever to do with those sanctions\"\n\n6 January 2017: President-elect Trump meets Mr Comey for the first time for an intelligence briefing on a report concluding that Russia had interfered with the US election\n\n29 December 2016: Mr Obama announces sanctions expelling 35 Russian diplomats for the country's alleged interference in the US presidential elections. On the same day, Mr Flynn holds a phone call with the Russian ambassador\n\nDecember 2016: White House adviser and Mr Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner meets Russian ambassador to the US, Sergei Kislyak, at Trump Tower in New York. He also meets the head of a US-sanctioned, Russia state-owned bank\n\n18 November 2016: Mr Flynn is announced as the next US national security adviser, despite major questions over his links to Russia. His role, as part of the president's executive office, does not require approval from the Senate\n\n10 November 2016: Then-President Barack Obama warns newly elected President Donald Trump against hiring Mr Flynn as his national security adviser\n\nDecember 2015: Michael Flynn, a retired US Army lieutenant general, is paid more than $45,000 (£35,000) by state-sponsored broadcaster Russia Today to address the network's 10th anniversary gala in Moscow", "Former Trump adviser Michael Flynn - fired after three weeks - set a record, but he's not alone when it comes to short political tenures.", "Organisers say they want people to come to the festival to enjoy the racing\n\nCheltenham Festival racegoers will be restricted to buying four alcoholic drinks at a time in a bid to crack down on anti-social antics.\n\nTwo footballers apologised after being photographed apparently urinating into a glass at last year's festival, where women were seen baring their breasts.\n\nChief executive Ian Renton said: \"It's to ensure that drinking is not the rationale for people coming racing.\"\n\nThe measure is also to be imposed at the Jockey Club's other racecourses.\n\nIt comes in first at Cheltenham, where the festival takes place next month, but will be in place at Epsom, which stages the Derby, and Aintree, where the Grand National is held.\n\n\"It's an improvement on things we are already doing,\" Mr Renton said.\n\n\"Aintree has already got the ball rolling, with their Ladies' Day, they've already taken steps to improve the way that is perceived.\n\n\"We want them to come to racing and enjoy the sport and not have those people coming who will be a nuisance to other racegoers,\" added Mr Renton.\n\nAs well as the four-drink limit, corporate complimentary bars will close earlier and water points will be made available in every public bar.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The top tips from the most swiped man on Tinder.", "The Archbishop of Canterbury was certainly the highlight of the opening day at general synod.\n\nLess an address, more a sermon, he appealed to Christians to turn away from self-indulgence and toward self-sacrifice in order to contribute positively at a time of uncertainty and fear… a climate that he said had been brought about by populist movements across Europe and the election of Donald Trump.\n\n\"It is a moment of challenge, but challenge that as a nation can be overcome with the right practices, values, culture and spirit,\" explained the archbishop. \"Which is where we come in. Let's not be too self-important. I don't mean we, the Church of England, are the answer.\n\n\"But we can be part of the answer, we have a voice and a contribution and a capacity and a reach and above all a Lord who is faithful when we fail and faithful when we flourish.\"\n\nBut while these comments were made in the context of post-Brexit uncertainty, it was obvious to everyone gathered in the assembly hall of Church House in Westminster that the archbishop was also thinking of Wednesday, when synod will debate the bishops' report on same-sex marriage.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nGS2055, as it is known, was published last month and provoked an immediate outcry. Members of the LGBTI community expressed anger that, after engaging in three years of so-called \"shared conversations\", the bishops decided not to recommend any change to church practice. Marriage in church would remain the lifelong union of a man and a woman; there would be no facility to bless same-sex marriages.\n\nWednesday has therefore become the focal point for both traditionalists and those who want the church to mirror a change in the law of the land, which has allowed same-sex marriage since March 2014.\n\nMr Tatchell, anticipating the protest, said: \"The bishops' report defends heterosexual superiority and opposes same-sex blessings and marriages. The church blesses dogs and cats but it refuses to bless loving, committed same-sex couples. It treats LGBTI clergy and laity as second class, both within the church and the wider society.\"\n\nThe bishops' report says marriage in church will remain the lifelong union of a man and a woman\n\nThe debate inside, which begins at 17:30 GMT and is scheduled to last for 90 minutes, will be no less accusatory. It is likely to expose the fractures and fissures that exist within the heart of Christian unity.\n\nEvangelical christians, like Ed Shaw, a member of synod and a trustee of Living Out, a charity that exists to support same-sex-attracted Christians who have chosen to remain celibate, are relieved that the bishops have upheld what they say is the biblical position on marriage.\n\n\"I think the Church of England has carefully listened,\" he said. \"I think the Church has also come to the settled view of what Christians have always believed down the centuries and what most Christians believe around the world.\"\n\nFor the moment, this remains the official position of the Church of England.\n\nAs the Archbishop of Canterbury drew his opening address to a close, he did make one explicit reference to same-sex marriage. He described \"the painful discussions\" that will take place on Wednesday. That phrase may yet prove to be the understatement of the year.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nThe 19-year-old was taken off in the 15th minute at Vitality Stadium after appearing to pick up the foot injury.\n\nCity said in a statement: \"He will undergo further examinations in the coming days to establish the extent of his layoff.\"\n\nThe Brazil international, who completed a £27m from Palmeiras in January, has played five times for City.\n\nJesus was hoping to become the third City player to find the net on each of his first three Premier League starts, having scored at West Ham and two against Swansea.\n\nThe other two players to have achieved that feat are former striker Emmanuel Adebayor and and current midfielder Kevin de Bruyne.\n\nMichael Owen (2006): Fifth metatarsal - predicted six to eight weeks; returned after 17 weeks Wayne Rooney (2004): Fifth metatarsal - predicted eight weeks; returned after 14 weeks David Beckham (2002): Second metatarsal - predicted six weeks; returned after seven weeks\n\nMetatarsals are the five long bones in the forefoot which connect the ankle bones to those of the toes.\n\nThe first is linked to the big toe and the fifth, on the outer foot, links to the little toe.\n\nTogether, the five metatarsals act as a unit to help share the load of the body, and they move position to cope with uneven ground.\n\nInjuries usually occur as a result of a direct blow to the foot, a twisting injury or over-use.\n\nMedical experts recommend rest with no exercise and sport for four to eight weeks.\n\nThe patient might be asked to wear walking boots or stiff-soled shoes to protect the injury while it heals.\n\nIf the cause is over-use, then treatment can vary hugely. Training habits, equipment used and athletic technique should all be investigated.\n\nIt all depends on the damage and which metatarsal bone is involved. It is impossible to put a timescale on recovery from a stress injury.\n\nWith an impact fracture, after the plaster and protective boot is not needed (usually after four to six weeks), it will be a case of exercise and increasing weight-bearing activities.\n\nIce packs, strapping and even the use of oxygen tents can be used to assist recovery.\n\nFull return to action can be anything from another four weeks and upwards - depending on the extent of initial damage. Young bones heal quicker.", "Canadian Donna Penner was relaxed at the prospect of abdominal surgery - until she woke up just before the surgeon made his first incision. She describes how she survived the excruciating pain of being operated on while awake.\n\nIn 2008, I was booked in for an exploratory laparoscopy at a hospital in my home province of Manitoba in Canada. I was 44 and I had been experiencing heavy bleeding during my periods.\n\nI'd had a general anaesthetic before and I knew I was supposed to have one for this procedure. I'd never had a problem with them, but when we got to the hospital I found myself feeling quite anxious.\n\nDuring a laparoscopy, the surgeon makes incisions into your abdomen through which they will push instruments so they can take a look around. You have three or four small incisions instead of one big one.\n\nThe operation started off well. They moved me on to the operating table and started to do all the normal things that they do - hooking me up to all the monitors and prepping me.\n\nThe anaesthesiologist gave me something in an intravenous drip and then he put a mask on my face and said, \"Take a deep breath.\" So I did, and drifted off to sleep like I was supposed to.\n\nWhen I woke up I could still hear the sounds in the operating room. I could hear the staff banging and clanging and the machines going - the monitors and that kind of thing. I thought, \"Oh good, it's over, it's done.\"\n\nI was lying there feeling a little medicated, but at the same time I was also alert and enjoying that lazy feeling of waking up and feeling completely relaxed.\n\nThat changed a few seconds later when I heard the surgeon speak.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. When Donna Penner woke she thought the operation must be over\n\nThey were moving around and doing their things and then all of a sudden I heard him say, \"Scalpel please.\" I just froze. I thought, \"What did I just hear?\"\n\nThere was nothing I could do. I had been given a paralytic, which is a common thing they do when work on the abdomen because it relaxes the abdominal muscles so they don't resist as much when you're cutting through them.\n\nUnfortunately the general anaesthetic hadn't worked, but the paralytic had.\n\nI panicked. I thought this cannot be happening. So I waited for a few seconds, but then I felt him make the first incision. I don't have words to describe the pain - it was horrific.\n\nI could not open my eyes. The first thing that I tried to do was to sit up, but I couldn't move. It felt like somebody was sitting on me, weighing me down.\n\nSource: The Royal College of Anaesthetists/Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland\n\nI wanted to say something, I wanted to move, but I couldn't. I was so paralysed I couldn't even make the tears to cry.\n\nAt that point, I could hear my heart-rate on the monitor. It kept going up higher and higher.\n\nI was in a state of sheer terror. I could hear them working on me, I could hear them talking. I felt the surgeon make those incisions and push those instruments through my abdomen.\n\nI felt him moving my organs around as he explored. I heard him say things like, \"Look at her appendix, it's really nice and pink, colon looks good, ovary looks good.\"\n\nI managed to twitch my foot three times to show I was awake. But each time, someone put their hand on it to still it, without verbally acknowledging I had moved.\n\nThe operation lasted for about an hour-and-a-half.\n\nTo top it all off, because I was paralysed, they had intubated me - put me on a breathing machine - and set the ventilator to breathe seven times a minute. Even though my heart rate was up at 148 beats per minute, that's all I got - those seven breaths a minute. I was suffocating. It felt as though my lungs were on fire.\n\nThere was a point when I thought they had finished operating and they were starting to do their final things. That's when I noticed I was able to move my tongue.\n\nI realised that the paralytic was wearing off. I thought, \"I'm going to play with the breathing tube that's still in my throat.\" So I started wiggling it with my tongue to get their attention.\n\nAnd it worked. I did catch the attention of the anaesthesiologist. But I guess he must have thought I was coming out of the paralytic more than I was because he took the tube and pulled it out of my throat.\n\nI lay there thinking, \"Now I'm really in trouble.\" I'd already said mental goodbyes to my family because I didn't think I was going to pull through. Now I couldn't breathe.\n\nI could hear the nurse yelling at me. She was on one side saying, \"Breathe Donna, breathe.\" But there was nothing I could do.\n\nAs she was continuously telling me to breathe, the most amazing thing happened. I had an out-of-body experience and left my body.\n\nI'm of Christian faith and I can't say I went to heaven, but I wasn't on Earth either. I knew I was somewhere else. It was quiet. The sounds of the operating room were in the background, I could still hear them. But it sounded as though they were very, very far away.\n\nThe fear was gone, the pain was gone. I felt warm, I felt comforted and I felt safe. And instinctively I knew I was not alone. There was a presence with me. I always say that was God with me because there was absolutely no doubt in my mind that he was there beside me. And then I heard a voice saying, \"Whatever happens, you're going to be OK.\"\n\nAt that point I knew that if I lived or died, it would be just fine. I had been praying throughout the whole thing to keep my mind occupied, singing to myself and thinking of my husband and my children. But when this presence was with me, I thought, \"Please let me die because I can't do this any more.\"\n\nBut just as quickly as I went there, I was back. In the time it takes to snap your fingers I was back in my body in the operating room again. I could still hear them working on me and the nurses yelling, \"Breathe Donna.\"\n\nAll of a sudden the anaesthesiologist said, \"Bag her!\" They put a mask on my face and used a manual resuscitator to force air into my lungs.\n\nAs soon as they did, the burning sensation I'd had in my lungs left. It was huge relief. I started to breathe again. At that point, the anaesthesiologist gave me something to counteract the paralytic. It didn't take long before I was able to start talking.\n\nLater, as I recovered from the ordeal, the surgeon came into my room, grabbed my hand with both of his and said, \"I understand there were some problems, Mrs Penner.\"\n\nI said to him, \"I was awake, I felt you cutting me.\" His eyes filled with tears as he grabbed on to my hands and said, \"I am so sorry.\"\n\nI started telling him the different things that I had heard him say - the comments he had made about my appendix and my internal organs. He kept saying, \"Yes I said that, I said that.\"\n\nI said, \"Have you noticed that I have not asked you what the diagnosis was?'\" And he looked at me for a moment and said, \"You already know, don't you?\" And I said, \"Yes I do,\" and I told him what my diagnosis was.\n\nIt's now nine years since I woke up during surgery. I have since pursued a legal claim against the hospital which was resolved.\n\nImmediately after the operation I was referred to a therapist because I was so traumatised. I didn't even have a clue what day of the week it was on my first appointment. I was pretty messed up. It definitely takes its toll on a person.\n\nBut talking about it has helped. After time, I was able to tell my story.\n\nI have done a lot of research into anaesthesia awareness. I contacted the University of Manitoba's anaesthesiology department and have spoken to the residents a couple of times now. They are usually horrified by my story. There are usually quite a few who have tears in their eyes when I'm speaking to them.\n\nMy story is not to lay blame or to point fingers. I want people to understand that this thing can happen and does happen. I want to raise awareness, and help something good come out of this awful experience.\n\nListen to Donna Penner speaking to Outlook on the BBC World Service\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "The car took part in several races including a televised rally cross event in 1967\n\nA car that took part in the 1967 Monte Carlo Rally could fetch up to £50,000 at auction next month.\n\nThe specially modified Hillman Imp was built in 1966 by the Rootes Group, which had bought the Hillman name.\n\nAuctioneer Richard Edmonds, said: \"We're thrilled to be able to offer this historic and much-loved vehicle.\"\n\nThe car, with the registration plate JDU46E will be sold at Richard Edmonds Auctions in Chippenham on 4 March.\n\nIts racing history also includes competing in the Tulip Rally in the Netherlands.\n\nIt was also driven in the 1967 Coupe des Alpines, but did not complete the race because a gasket failed. It was also driven in the UK's first-ever televised rally cross event in the same year.\n\nThe Imp was manufactured in Linwood, Renfrewshire, as a rival to the Mini, but never gained as much popularity.\n\nJust under 500,000 were sold before the final model rolled off the production line in 1976.\n\nThe Imp is being sold by private collector Mark Tudge who has kept it at his home near Malmesbury, Wiltshire.\n\nMr Tudge, who has owned the car since 2013, said he was selling it for personal reasons.\n\n\"I was incredibly lucky to buy the car. I was on holiday in North Wales in 2013 when I saw a classified advert in a local paper selling the car.\n\n\"As it was in Cheshire not too far away, I went to see it and met the then owner, a retired banker and rally fan.\n\n\"He wouldn't sell the car to me for about a month - not until he was sure I was going to look after it.\n\nMr Tudge said the car's scratched paintwork was a reminder of its racing days, so it had not been refurbished.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Women who survived breast cancer hit the catwalk at New York Fashion Week in alternative lingerie, to raise money for the charity Cancerland.\n\nThe AnaOno Intimates show was the brainchild of US designer, and breast cancer survivor, Dana Donofree.\n\nModel Paige Moore, 24, said: \"I felt sexy, I felt beautiful, and I was proud.\"", "The story of a sniffer dog who was retired from the front line in Afghanistan after becoming scared of loud noises will be used to inspire those who struggle to read.\n\nVidar, a Belgian Malinois, hunted out roadside bombs and weapons with the Army in Helmand Province.\n\nMedic Angie McDonnell, from the Vale of Glamorgan, adopted him and wrote Gun Shy about his exploits.\n\nAfter two years of service, five-year-old Vidar suddenly became \"gun shy\" - a term used in the Army to describe dogs who are scared of loud noises.", "A bell-ringer is recovering after being dropped in what's been described as a \"freak accident\" at Worcester Cathedral.\n\nThe ringing master at the cathedral, Mark Regan, gave a vivid account to BBC Hereford and Worcester of the moment Ian Bowman was flipped upside down.\n\nMr Bowman was lowered 80ft (24m) through a trap door in the cathedral by a specialist rescue unit.\n\nThe accident happened during Evensong on Saturday when the bell-ringing rope caught Mr Bowman's heel.\n\nHe's now back home in Devon and able to walk despite fracturing a bone in his back.", "There is a theory in politics that times of upheaval and uncertainty present opportunities as well as problems.\n\nIt's best summed up in the saying that you should never let a good crisis go to waste - an aphorism so seductive that it has been attributed to all the usual historical suspects, from Machiavelli to Winston Churchill.\n\nIt is perhaps in this spirit that the European Parliament has been debating how the EU is going to work in future, in the looming shadow of Brexit.\n\nThe UK's vote to leave the EU, last June, came as a seismic shock to most MEPs. And many are quite open in their view that it amounts to a self-destructive decision by the British to uncouple themselves from one of modern history's primary drivers of peace and prosperity.\n\nBritish Eurosceptics of course would cast the Brexit vote in an entirely different light, and now foresee a future in which the UK will be free to make its fortune - and make its own new global trading relationships - unfettered from the dead hand of stifling Brussels bureaucracy.\n\nIt will be years of course - perhaps many years - before we know who is on the right side of that debate.\n\nBut one consequence of Brexit is already with us - the EU is now free to debate how it might work in the future without any input from the UK.\n\nIn theory that should leave Europe's federalists freer to dream than they have been in the past. Britain's voice has generally been raised to question the wisdom and value of further integration that would give EU institutions greater powers at the expense of individual national governments.\n\nYou would expect such dreams to be articulated best by Guy Verhofstadt - the former prime minister of Belgium, who now leads the liberal bloc in the European Parliament and who will represent that body in Brexit negotiations.\n\nGuy Verhofstadt rejects claims that European voters have turned against the EU\n\nIn the debate on future reform Mr Verhofstadt said: \"The union is in crisis. The European Union doesn't have much friends: not at home, not abroad.\n\n\"The Union does not deliver anymore. Rather than to talk about an 'ever closer union', we have a union of 'too little, too late'.\n\n\"That's why people are angry: they see all these European institutions, all these summits, all these empty words, but they don't see enough results.\"\n\nMr Verhofstadt has a long list of suggested fixes for this continental malaise, including reducing or ending the right of individual members to opt out of collective decisions - something no British government would ever have countenanced.\n\nHe has other ideas for how the EU should respond to Brexit too - including moving out of London the headquarters of two EU agencies: the European Banking Authority and the European Medicines Agency.\n\nUKIP's Nigel Farage - an anti-EU MEP in the vanguard of Brexit\n\nBut for now, at least, it seems radical visions for reform will be quietly kicked into touch.\n\nThe vice-president of the EU Commission, Frans Timmermans, politely welcomed the display of \"vision\" in the proposals, but noted that most of the suggestions would require EU treaty change. He said simply: \"We have to acknowledge that treaty change is not on the top of the political agenda now, in member states in particular.\"\n\nThere are plenty of true believers in the European project who would see in the Verhofstadt proposals the start of a kind of counter-revolution against events which have dismayed them - including Brexit, the US election of Donald Trump and the strong opinion poll showing of insurgent parties in a number of European countries.\n\nBut for now a more cautious and pragmatic approach will prevail - partly because there is a general sense in Strasbourg and Brussels that the European institutions will have enough on their plates negotiating Brexit, without kicking off a parallel process of structural reform which would also take years.\n\nThat takes us back to the idea that every crisis is an opportunity that shouldn't go to waste.\n\nThere are, no doubt, those in Strasbourg who take that view - but it seems for the moment they are outweighed by those who feel that when you find yourself in the middle of a crisis - as they would see Brexit - the smartest course of action is to fix the crisis first and worry about the future later.", "Last updated on .From the section Sport\n\nUsain Bolt and Simone Biles claimed the top accolades at the Laureus World Sports Awards in Monaco.\n\nEight-time Olympic sprint champion Bolt and four-time Olympic gold gymnast Biles were named sportsman and sportswoman of the year for their 2016 achievements.\n\nBritain's Rachel Atherton won the action sportsperson of the year award for her downhill mountain biking feats.\n\nLeicester City won the spirit of sport award for winning the Premier League.\n\nAtherton, 29, became the first rider in history to complete a perfect downhill World Cup season and then won a fourth World Championship title a week later.\n\nLeicester boss Claudio Ranieri and captain Wes Morgan were in Monaco to collect the spirit of sport prize, awarded after the Foxes, 5,000-1 outsiders, won the Premier League by 10 points last season.\n\nIs this the greatest ever sporting selfie?\n\nBolt won three gold medals at Rio 2016 in the 100m,200m and 4x100m relay.\n\nThat took his all-time Olympic medal tally to nine but last month he was asked to hand one back after Jamaican team-mate Nesta Carter tested positive for a banned substance.\n\nCarter was part of the Jamaican quartet that won the 4x100m in Beijing in 2008.\n\nBiles' four gold medals at Rio were in the team, all-around, vault and floor exercise events.\n\nNico Rosberg, who quit Formula 1 in December five days after being crowned world champion, received the breakthrough of the year prize.\n\nTeam of the year: Chicago Cubs, who ended a 108-year wait to win Major League Baseball's World Series.\n\nComeback of the year: American swimmer Michael Phelps, who won his 23rd Olympic gold in his final Games in Rio.\n\nSportsperson of the Year with a disability: Beatrice Vio, Italian wheelchair fencer who won gold at the 2016 Paralympics.\n\nSport for Good Award: for Sporting Inspiration: The Refugee Olympic Team, who competed at the Rio Olympics.\n\nBest Sporting Moment: Barcelona Under-12 team whose players consoled their distraught Japanese opponents at the end of the Junior Soccer World Challenge in a touching show of sportsmanship.\n\nThe Laureus Sport for Good Award: Waves for Change.", "Burger King has unveiled a new \"adult\" meal, which comes with a free adult toy.\n\nA promotion for the offer, which can only be redeemed on Valentine's Day, has appeared on YouTube.\n\nThe adult toys on offer include a pink frilly blindfold, a black feather tickler and a head massager.\n\nBefore you and your partner rush out for a saucy Whopper, though, the promotion is only available in Israel.\n\nIt's a campaign that seems to be aimed at people who forgot to book a candelit dinner for two.\n\n\"Kids meal? That's for kids,\" the advert's narrator says.\n\n\"Burger King presents the adult meal, with an adult's toy inside.\"\n\nThe deal features two burgers, two fries, two beers and, of course, the toy.\n\nIt's over-18s only, though, so couples will have to remember their ID.\n\nThe promotion has also been advertised on Facebook\n\nThe campaign has been produced by advertising agency Leo Burnett.\n\nBurger King isn't the only fast food company trying to do something different this Valentine's Day.\n\nBranches of Hooters in the US are offering 10 free chicken wings to people who've been scorned by a former lover.\n\nThey've even opened the offer to takeaway customers who don't want to eat in their \"world famous breastaurant\".\n\nThe only catch? You have to bring in a photo of your ex so they can shred it.\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "Manchester City are hopeful forward Gabriel Jesus did not suffer a serious foot injury in the 2-0 Premier League victory against Bournemouth.\n\nJesus, 19, scored on his first two league starts for City but lasted just 14 minutes at Vitality Stadium after appearing to turn his ankle.\n\nCity will find out the extent of the problem on Tuesday.\n\n\"Hopefully it won't be for a long time,\" City boss Pep Guardiola told the BBC. \"We will have to wait.\"\n\nJesus, who arrived from Palmeiras in January, scored in wins over West Ham and Swansea and was looking to become only the third City player - after Emmanuel Adebayor and Kevin de Bruyne - to find the net on each of his first three Premier League starts for the club.\n\nHowever, the injury meant the Brazil international was replaced by Sergio Aguero - the third straight game in which the Argentina striker had been left on the bench by Guardiola.\n\nThe Spaniard said: \"Sergio played good. He fought and scored a goal for his confidence and I am so happy for him. He was important before the game and is still important.\"\n\nAguero's 'goal' was officially recorded as a Tyrone Mings own goal after the forward's effort was deflected in by the Bournemouth defender.\n• None Match report: Man City beat Bournemouth to go second\n\nRaheem Sterling's first-half opener and Mings' own goal after the break meant City extended their unbeaten run to five games in all competitions and moved up to second in the table, eight points behind Chelsea.\n\nAsked if they can win the title, Guardiola said: \"It's so difficult. Chelsea have to lose three games and we have to win all the games. You know how difficult it is to win games in the Premier League.\n\n\"We will take it game by game. Now we are second but the gap to third, fourth, fifth and sixth is nothing. The gap to Chelsea is still massive. Game by game, we have to improve.\"\n\n\"I don't think City can catch Chelsea. It's too big a gap with Chelsea performing as they have done, but it was a comfortable performance - they are brilliant going forward.\n\n\"Since being thrashed 4-0 by Everton in January they have responded superbly. Things are coming together for City at the right time.\"\n\nBournemouth had injury concerns of their own as midfielder Jack Wilshere and defender Simon Francis both limped off in the first half.\n\nEarlier this month, the Cherries, who have now won just one of their past nine league games, lost striker Callum Wilson to a season-ending knee injury.\n\n\"Jack was just feeling his ankle,\" said boss Eddie Howe. \"I don't think there's a major injury there but he couldn't move freely and there was pain in his ankle, so we took him off.\n\n\"We will wait and see on Simon - he is feeling his hamstring again. He went to make a pass and felt it, as he had last time [at Everton].\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nThe Champions League returns on Tuesday with the last-16 stage, with Barcelona's trip to Paris St-Germain the evening's stand-out match.\n\nFor PSG and manager Unai Emery, the tie is a daunting test of their place in Europe's elite, made more vital by the £600m spent on transfers since 2011.\n\nEmery has won once in 23 games against Barca, whose striker Luis Suarez faces Uruguay team-mate Edinson Cavani.\n\nAnd in Tuesday's other 19:45 GMT kick-off, Borussia Dortmund visit Benfica.\n\nOn Wednesday, Arsenal resume their rivalry with Bayern Munich, hoping for a different outcome this time, and defending champions Real Madrid host Napoli.\n\nThe four remaining last-16 first legs - including Leicester's trip to Sevilla and Manchester City's match with Monaco - take place next week.\n\nEmery will be all too aware of the importance of performing in Europe after last year's sacking of Laurent Blanc.\n\nFrenchman Blanc won 11 of the 12 domestic trophies available during his three campaigns in Paris, but was fired after falling at the Champions League quarter-finals for a third consecutive year.\n\nPSG's Qatari owners hired Emery on the back of the three consecutive Europa League titles he won with Sevilla, but the Spaniard does not have a good record against Barcelona, with 16 defeats in 23 games.\n\n\"Knowing Unai, I know he will try to make our life complicated,\" said Barca boss Luis Enrique.\n\n\"He knows us perfectly, he knows exactly what we have to offer. Our goal will be to keep the ball and create space because they will be taking risks.\n\n\"They are now more thorough than they used to be and they are more structured, and they also have great forwards.\"", "Our phones can be distracting when driving, but can some apps make us safer?\n\nTudor Cobalas nearly crashed his car while driving and texting on his phone.\n\nIt was this near-death experience that inspired him to turn the smartphone from a weapon of mass distraction into a tool for safer driving.\n\nMr Cobalas, 30, from Romania, developed SafeDrive, an app that rewards drivers for ignoring their phones while driving.\n\nOnce a driver exceeds 6mph (10kmh), the app launches a \"Release\" button on the screen, effectively locking the phone. Driving without checking the phone generates points that can be converted into shopping discounts in the SafeDrive Marketplace.\n\nPressing the Release button while driving wipes out the points earned during that journey.\n\nIt's a simple idea that has attracted nearly 100,000 users globally and 30 commercial partners, from insurance companies to retailers.\n\nMr Cobalas has also developed an app, Milez, aimed at teenage drivers.\n\nDistracted drivers are far more likely to have a fatal accident\n\n\"It was a response to questions from parents in the US who wanted to educate their children, young drivers,\" he says.\n\nAgain, the idea is simple - teenage drivers are financially rewarded by relatives and friends through the Milez app if they drive safely.\n\nMr Cobalas's native Romania has a particularly poor record when it comes to road fatalities.\n\nIn the European Union as a whole, the average number of road deaths per million inhabitants is 51.5. In Romania, it is nearly double that figure at 95.\n\nWorldwide, about 1.25 million people die each year as a result of road traffic accidents, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).\n\n\"Smartphone distraction\" is blamed for an increasing number of accidents. Drivers using a mobile phone are four times more likely to be involved in a crash, the WHO says.\n\nDriveWell founders Hari Balakrishnan (left) and Sam Madden want to make us better drivers\n\nThat is why a growing number of technology entrepreneurs are trying to tackle the problem.\n\n\"Although smartphones are rightly blamed for an increase in distracted driving, we wanted to show that smartphones could be used to make drivers better,\" says Hari Balakrishnan, chief technology officer of Cambridge Mobile Telematics, a US company that has developed an app called DriveWell.\n\nThe app measures all aspects of driving such as hard braking, abrupt acceleration, sharp cornering and speeding.\n\nBut it also monitors how often drivers are distracted by their phones and generates a \"safety score\" at the end of each trip.\n\nThe company emerged from a project at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology run by Mr Balakrishnan and co-founder Sam Madden.\n\nThe free app features competition leader boards that enable drivers to compete with their friends, family and colleagues, as well as personalised safer driving tips.\n\nAbout 1.25 million people are killed on the world's roads every year\n\nGood safety scores can earn drivers discounts on their car insurance with some insurers, Mr Balakrishnan says.\n\nLast year the company launched a competition to find Boston's safest driver. Nearly 5,000 people have signed up, and 98 have been awarded more than $3,400 in prizes.\n\nData from 40,000 DriveWell app users around the world demonstrate its effectiveness, says Mr Madden.\n\n\"By day 30, we see a 35% reduction in phone use and a 20% reduction in the number of hard braking events,\" he says.\n\nNick Lloyd, road safety manager at the UK's Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (Rospa), agrees that apps designed to reduce driver distraction show promise.\n\nBut he points out that as use of these apps is voluntary, \"we do not know what kinds of drivers are likely to choose to use these apps\".\n\nIn other words, dangerous drivers are precisely the ones who do not think they drive dangerously and thus don't think they need any help.\n\nAre hands-free apps that read out messages just as distracting?\n\nThe problem with smartphones is that they constantly buzz and ping with notifications - they are designed to distract us.\n\nSo Rob Joseph, 27, an app developer based in London, developed ReadItToMe, an Android-only app that turns written messages into the spoken word, and vice versa.\n\n\"The idea initially came up when I was receiving text messages while on the London Overground but was too squished in among people to be able to pull out my phone to check them,\" he says.\n\nThe app can read any text notifications your phone receives, including emails and those from social messaging apps such as WhatsApp.\n\nAt present it can read in any language but reply in only a few.\n\n\"I feel that receiving messages you can't check because you're driving is just as much a distraction as texting while driving,\" says Mr Joseph. \"You're constantly thinking: 'who could it be?' and you don't want to wait until you next pull over.\"\n\n\"While some newer cars offer the option to read SMS messages, they don't offer the option to reply, so something like ReadItToMe bridges that gap,\" he says.\n\nThe app, which has 22,000 active users, is free to use for reading SMS messages, or £1.49 if you want to use voice reply or other apps.\n\nBut does hands-free really make you accident-free?\n\n\"There are some safety concerns about safe driving applications, such as those which read text messages out loud to the driver, as this could be distracting,\" says Rospa's Nick Lloyd.\n\nAnd the National Safety Council suggests that the use of hands-free devices still requires you to multi-task mentally, affecting a driver's ability to respond quickly to hazards.\n\nPerhaps the answer is switching off phone notifications altogether before every journey.\n\nFollow Technology of Business editor Matthew Wall on Twitter and Facebook", "Tales of heartbreak, elation, rejection and redemption - to mark Valentine's Day, here are four love letters, each telling a unique story.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nHere we are in each other's arms at long last, settling into our home, we can't stop talking about our lives and especially those three very precious years we spent together over 65 years ago in the 1950s. We cuddled together when my three-wheeler spluttered to a stop on our way home from Chesterfield College of Art and I would ring my Dad to tow us home. What a good excuse that made to have a lingering kiss, although at times it could be a cold wait!\n\nWe got engaged and planned to get married when you were 19 but your parents objected to me, forbidding you to ever see me again. I don't think we knew then how our love would live on. Three years passed before we met again by chance. For your 21st birthday your grandfather bought you a new car and we made a date to meet for a drive the following day. But you never turned up. I was heartbroken but later found out you had discovered I was engaged to someone else, which had broken your heart.\n\nAs I seemed unavailable, you had no option but to look elsewhere. A dashing corporal in the Canadian Air Force swept you off your feet and you married him.\n\nA long period of 35 years with the wrong partners ensued but fate still wasn't on our side because at almost the same time, our spouses died and we both married again.\n\nDecades later, quite by chance, you came across a man with my second name, who turned out to be my son. With the help of your daughter you were able to make contact with me, after a wait of 65 years!\n\nMy second wife Margaret had recently suffered a fatal stroke and my grief was understood by you when we met some months later. Gradually we both realised we felt the same love we had retained in our hearts for all those years and went ahead with plans to have a quiet wedding last November.\n\nOur home is full of photographs featuring our separate lives and I can't help feeling pangs of envy when I see you as a beautiful lady, happy in another's arms. But you are finally all mine now and you make me very happy. You are still the elegant lady I have always loved. There's a lot of work needed on our small bungalow and quite soon when finished, it will become the love nest of our dreams. We will spend our limited future together very much in love and although we will always regret the circumstances that kept us apart in 1956, we are happy together for ever.\n\nIt's been nearly eight years since I wrote. I still have your response, telling me my marriage was offensive. Daily I forgive you for the hurt when you rejected my Mark, the day you found out he was black. No-one but Mark and my best friend fully understand how painful it was and still is.\n\nI choose not to see you to protect myself and my family.\n\nBut I recently lost someone. A reminder that time is short and there are things I have to say.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Sarah hasn’t spoken to her granddad since her marriage to Mark, who is black\n\nMark says the thing he loves most about me is that I always see the good in people. I always seek the other perspective. What's made you so angry Granddad? What's made you so hateful of black, Asian or anyone who doesn't conform to your standards that you were prepared to sacrifice me? Did I not matter more than your racism?\n\nI like to think you were brought up in a time when men weren't allowed to show their emotions. That the hard and angry exterior hides a deeply sensitive soul. I glimpsed yours the day you told me about meeting Grandma. This beautiful woman with sparkling blue eyes walking down the street. You fell in love.\n\nI don't believe, as others do, in a Hollywood ending. I don't believe that if I turned up at your door with my darling family you'd welcome us as if nothing had happened.\n\nLet me tell you about my tan-skinned children you were so afraid of.\n\nThese stories are taken from BBC Radio 5 Live's Love Season, which runs from 14-28 February\n\nThere are many times I've watched my beautiful, sensitive Daniel playing with his trains, fascinated by engines or taking comfort in the rolling of a toy car and thought of you. My extraordinary boy who could have shared your passion for model trains and methodical construction.\n\nAnd little Anna who is all emotion and love and - apparently - so like me.\n\nI tell my son people come into our lives for a reason. Sometimes briefly but always for a reason. I think of the times you were my Granddad. The smell of your bungalow when we visited. How you were always waiting at the door as we arrived. You loved birds (and therefore hated cats) and those rescue dogs no-one else loved.\n\nI love you for those memories.\n\nI can't be angry with you because you are in those memories.\n\nThere are days I find it hard to believe it's not my fault. I simply fell in love with this amazing man - just as you fell in love with Grandma.\n\nI believe your anger hides a hurting soul. So I'll take your anger and send you love.\n\nI'm sitting here with my Mum talking about wedding stuff like a fairy tale story and looking at the photo album.\n\nIn this one, it makes me feel a bit scared, my eyes, my face and my hands... I really was scared. Excited and scared to begin with. Oh my goodness Dad, I'm going to get married!\n\nJoe, you were already there in the marquee waiting for me. When I was waiting to come down the red carpet, I felt a bit tearful listening to my favourite song... When You Wish Upon a Star.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Polly Gibson retells the story of her wedding day to husband Joe Minogue\n\nI walked down the aisle with my Dad, he brought me to you Joe. I never felt this way before our wedding day. Everyone stood up and clapped, it made me happy. Joe, you came up to me from the unicorn throne, you gave me a little kiss on the cheek and put your hands around my waist, it felt really ticklish. You looked like a dream husband looking all grown up in your lovely blue suit. I loved touching the pink rose on your jacket because I love the colour pink.\n\nThe unicorn throne was like a fairytale fantasy film. It was fun to sit on it especially when we did our legs kicks to I do, I do, I do.\n\nNow we're looking at the photo of us dancing to Come What May. Joe, did you like my lovely dress? Colourful, big giant pattern like a leaf and a spinny swishy shape. Oh my gosh, my garter slipped down and I kicked if off away and Dad picked it up and put it in his top pocket... It made me laugh!\n\nWhen Vivienne said: \"You're husband and wife, you may kiss now,\" we both threw our arms around each other and we kissed on the lips. It felt like love's dream. The best thing in the whole wide world.\n\nOnce we were married, we're wife and husband with our rings on, everyone's throwing confetti - I'm surrounded in confetti and it's down my top... too much confetti! We look too happy. Holding my bouquet with everyone smiling and cheering.\n\nI like the photos just of us that Leela took in the garden. I like the way you held my hand. I like the way you've put your arms all round my back. You feel like a really strong person and I want to spend my life being with you. All times. I just love the kissing photo.\n\nJoe, it was so much fun at the party. I love the way I spun round with the singing waiters. I liked the pink and blue balloons and the bunting. Our friends and family found it really good fun.\n\nWe are going to be happy ever after.\n\nLots and lots of love from your Polly\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Hina overcame her views on arranged marriage after meeting her (now) husband Kam (Picture: Khawer Riaz)\n\nBefore I met you, love hadn't been all it was cracked up to be. Life had knocked me down, then just as I picked myself up, it tripped me at a bend. It was a phone call that revealed all. I discovered my ex was involved with someone else. So that perfect wedding hadn't turned into the marriage I'd expected to have.\n\nAnd I became lonely. So lonely that loneliness became a thing. It sat with me at work and followed me home at the end of each day. I'd speak to the birds when no one could see, and stare at the bark of twisted old trees. And all the friends in the world couldn't fill the void it formed in me.\n\nEach day I'd walk about, waiting for that lightning strike. An electric shock. Love at first sight. Hoping it would happen to me, perhaps even while shopping at the local Sainsbury's.\n\nBut nothing. I realised then that stars aren't obliged to align to make our dreams come true.\n\nAnd so, on holiday with mum to see my gran in Pakistan, I caved. Mustering all my courage, I challenged my views on arranged marriage and agreed to marry you. This man I hardly knew. It wasn't love at first sight, but your kind eyes and that smile really drew me in. I ditched my search for lightning bolts and now I can see it was the best decision I would ever make.\n\nOne year in we were told we couldn't have a baby. Had we considered a pet instead, asked that grey-faced doctor in London? You took me in your arms and, with heartbroken eyes, said it would be ok. That it didn't matter if it wasn't meant to be.\n\nWhen I was hurt by those closest to me, it was you that made me see straight. You showed me that I already had all the love I could ever need.\n\nWe've had joy-filled times when we've danced the jive right in the middle of our living room: the news I was pregnant, the birth of our sons and an amazing book deal with my publishers.\n\nThen last year, I faced the toughest test of all. My dear mum passed with me at her side after weeks in the intensive care unit. Each day and night, you held me tight, tears from your eyes mingling with mine.\n\nSo what I'm trying to say to you, is that it may not be a flash of lightning, a six-pack or stubble that makes for perfect chemistry. Love can grow another way. Stars are not obliged to align to make our dreams come true. Except sometimes they do.\n\nAnd if anyone tells me I'm wrong, I'll tell them they really ought to meet my Kam.\n\nHina Belitz is the author of Set Me Free\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester City moved up to second in the Premier League with a hard-fought victory over Bournemouth at Vitality Stadium.\n\nHaving started on the bench again, City striker Sergio Aguero appeared after just 14 minutes following an injury to Gabriel Jesus.\n\nBut it was Raheem Sterling who grabbed the opener from close range on the half-hour mark, having been denied by a brilliant Artur Boruc save two minutes before.\n\nThe hosts thought they had replied immediately, but Joshua King's strike was ruled out after he was adjudged to have pulled John Stones' shirt in the build-up.\n\nHarry Arter's curling shot stretched City goalkeeper Willy Caballero into a fine save, before Tyrone Mings put City's second into his own net under pressure from Aguero.\n\nLeroy Sane rattled the bar late on, as City extended their unbeaten run to five games in all competitions.\n\nPep Guardiola's side jumped three places in the table to emerge as Chelsea's closest challengers, eight points behind the leaders, who dropped points at Burnley on Sunday.\n\nCity face at Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on 5 April. They will take inspiration from their title-winning team of 2011-12 when they clawed back the same deficit on rivals Manchester United - on that occasion with just six games remaining.\n\nThis time they have 13 games in which to do it as former Barcelona and Bayern Munich boss Guardiola looks to win a top-flight domestic title for the seventh time in the past eight seasons.\n\nThe Spaniard's pacy wingers were the difference on this occasion, as Sane's fleet-footedness set up Sterling for his sixth league goal of the season, before the England forward showed superb trickery to beat a defender and force Mings into a costly mistake, after pressure from Aguero.\n\nThe Argentine, who failed to start for the third consecutive game, was sent on after Jesus turned his ankle in the opening minutes.\n\nAnalysis - 'The gap is too big'\n\n\"I don't think City can catch Chelsea. It's too big a gap with Chelsea performing as they have done, but it was a comfortable performance - they are brilliant going forward.\n\n\"I thought John Stones was outstanding and David Silva majestic. Since being thrashed 4-0 by Everton in January they have responded superbly. Things are coming together for City at the right time.\"\n\nEddie Howe's men have big problems. They have not won a game in 2017, extending their winless run in all competitions to seven games.\n\nTheir main worry is in defence, having conceded at least two goals in each of their last 10 games, yet at the other end they tested Caballero just once in this game.\n\nTo make matters worse, the Cherries have picked up just one win from their last nine games and had midfielder Jack Wilshere and defender Simon Francis go off injured in the first half.\n\nIn their second ever season in the top-flight, Bournemouth are 14th in the table, six points above the relegation zone. With Swansea and Hull showing improvement, the south coast side could get dragged into a fight for survival should their poor form continue.\n\n'The right result with a thousand million passes'\n\nBournemouth boss Eddie Howe: \"City were very good. For an away team that was a very controlled performance. Our lads gave absolutely everything, I can't ask any more of them.\n\n\"We need to get our bounce back - that's only going to come from a win, but I think today was a positive step.\"\n\nManchester City boss Pep Guardiola, speaking to BBC Sport: \"We made a real performance. I am so pleased with how we did and especially the last 10-15 minutes, we did the right way to make the result with a thousand million passes. It is important to score goals, we are in deficit but it is OK.\"\n\nManchester City travel to Huddersfield in the fifth round of the FA Cup on Saturday (kick-off 15:00 GMT), while Bournemouth do not play again until 25 February when they go to West Brom (kick-off 15:00 GMT).\n• None Raheem Sterling has scored five Premier League goals against Bournemouth, the most he has against a single opponent.\n• None Sterling has equalled his Premier League goal tally from last season for City (six in 23 this season compared to six in 31 last season).\n• None Sterling has won 24 of 25 Premier League games in which he has scored, only losing against West Ham in September 2014.\n• None Pep Guardiola has won all six league games he has managed on a Monday, with an aggregate score of 20-1.\n• None By contrast, Bournemouth have lost all four of their Premier League games contested on a Monday, without scoring a single goal.\n• None Bournemouth have lost all four of their Premier League games against City, scoring once and conceding 15 goals.\n• None The Cherries took until the 67th minute to register their first shot on target in the game.\n• None Only Leicester (one) have collected fewer Premier League points in 2017 than Bournemouth (two).\n• None Attempt missed. Leroy Sané (Manchester City) right footed shot from the right side of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Kevin De Bruyne with a through ball.\n• None Offside, Manchester City. Nolito tries a through ball, but David Silva is caught offside.\n• None Offside, Manchester City. Aleksandar Kolarov tries a through ball, but David Silva is caught offside.\n• None Attempt saved. Aleksandar Kolarov (Manchester City) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Fernandinho.\n• None Leroy Sané (Manchester City) hits the bar with a left footed shot from a difficult angle on the left.\n• None Attempt missed. Fernandinho (Manchester City) header from the right side of the six yard box is too high. Assisted by David Silva with a cross following a set piece situation. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nLeicester Tigers have re-signed Bath's England fly-half George Ford for the start of next season, with Freddie Burns moving in the opposite direction.\n\nFord, 23, was contracted to Bath until the end of next season, but Tigers have paid a record fee between two English clubs to buy him out of his deal.\n\nFord emerged through Leicester's academy but left to join Bath in 2013.\n\nFellow fly-half Burns, 26, joined the Tigers from Gloucester in 2014 after starting his career with Bath.\n• None Get Six Nations alerts direct to your phone\n\nFord made his Leicester debut as a 16-year-old in November 2009, winning the Premiership and the Anglo-Welsh Cup before his switch to Bath, where he played in the European Challenge Cup final in 2014 and the Premiership final in 2015.\n\nHe won his 32nd England cap in the Six Nations win over Wales last weekend.\n\n\"This hasn't been an easy decision for me to make, but I feel it is the best one for me at this time,\" said Ford, who initially moved to the Rec when his father Mike - now head coach of Top 14 side Toulon - was on the coaching staff.\n\n\"I've really enjoyed my time at Bath and have worked with some incredible players and coaches.\"\n\nTigers head coach Aaron Mauger told his club's website: \"George has become one of the leading players in his position in Europe and is still a young man with a lot of rugby ahead him.\n\n\"While delighted to be able to bring in George, we are disappointed to lose Freddie who has been an outstanding player for us in the last three years.\"\n\nBurns first emerged as an England international during his five years at Gloucester, making his debut at Twickenham against New Zealand in 2012.\n\nHe won the last of his five England caps against the All Blacks in June 2014, and said he was delighted to return to Bath.\n\n\"The opportunity for me to represent my hometown club is one I have dreamt of from the day I started playing rugby,\" he told Bath's website.\n\nBath's director of rugby Todd Blackadder said: \"We are really excited to be working with Freddie next season.\n\n\"He is a fantastic player, who has really developed into an all-encompassing fly-half in the last couple of years and I'm looking forward to seeing that fit into our game here.\n\n\"We are naturally disappointed that George has decided to leave. He is a great player and I have enjoyed working with him.\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nTwo parents fighting legal battles for custody of their children paid thousands of pounds to a company providing \"McKenzie friends\" - people with no legal training who assist in court. But they were badly let down.\n\nRupinder Randhawa had been feeling \"very low\" after her solicitor told her it was hopeless to pursue a court battle for custody of her children.\n\nThe mother-of-four had wanted to fight the adoption of her youngest two children, instigated by social services.\n\n\"I was not in a great space,\" she told the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme, \"but I was still willing to fight for my children.\"\n\nThen, she came across David Bright, who ran The Parent's Voice London, a service that provided McKenzie friends.\n\nBright told Ms Randhawa he had \"never lost a case\" and charged her £480 a month, plus additional one-off charges, to work on her case as a McKenzie friend.\n\nShe subsequently lost her case and is no longer fighting the adoption of her children.\n\nAfter this, Bright asked Ms Randhawa for an additional £6,000 to pay for a book to be published about her case, which he said would help her win her children back.\n\nShe paid him, but no book was ever published.\n\n\"I felt like I'd been conned,\" she said. \"I felt my whole world came crashing around me, because there was no hope in getting my children back.\"\n\nBright was a director of The Parents' Voice, and both he and fellow director Claire Mann were jailed last year for perverting the course of justice in a case separate to Ms Randhawa's.\n\nBright denies any wrongdoing, and says he and The Parents' Voice \"helped hundreds of families\".\n\nClaire Mann and David Bright acted as directors for The Parents' Voice\n\nWhen families break up and there is a dispute over the custody of children it can end up in the family court.\n\nBut since changes to legal aid in 2013, it is more difficult for parents to get funding to help with their costs in these cases - which is why some are turning to McKenzie friends as a cheaper alternative.\n\nThere is presently no regulation of these services.\n\nStephen - not his real name - came across the The Parents' Voice after his marriage broke down and his ex-wife took custody of their children.\n\nHe said Bright initially \"just sang to my ears\".\n\n\"He told me exactly what I wanted to hear,\" Stephen said.\n\n\"He asked me if I wanted custody. He asked me how much I wanted to see the kids.\"\n\nBut, he said, Bright took more than £12,000 from him, by charging him twice and for work he did not do.\n\nRichard Miller is concerned that some McKenzie friends advertise themselves as lawyers\n\nBoth Stephen and Ms Randhawa won county court judgements against David Bright and The Parents' Voice, for more than £10,000 each for work that was not carried out.\n\nThere have also been several other successful claims against the company.\n\nJenny Lewington worked for The Parents' Voice as a McKenzie friend before stopping in a dispute over payment.\n\nShe was also disturbed by some of David Bright's working practices.\n\n\"I'd gone to the hearing with a mother who was trying to appeal an adoption and [David Bright] had submitted the wrong form to apply for the appeal,\" she said.\n\nMrs Lewington said he had then told her he \"did it to try and delay matters\".\n\nUltimately the mother lost her case, and Mrs Lewington felt The Parents' Voice had given her false hope that she could win.\n\nSenior judges have been considering making changes to the way paid-for McKenzie friends operate.\n\nAmong proposals in a consultation last year was the introduction of a code of practice.\n\nThe Law Society, which represents solicitors, has called for a ban on McKenzie friends being able to recover costs in court cases, to underline the fact that they are different to solicitors or barristers.\n\nRichard Miller, from the Law Society, said: \"One of our concerns about the rise in paid-for McKenzie friends is that a lot of these people are effectively acting as lawyers and advertising themselves as lawyers.\n\n\"But they do not have legal training and legal qualifications, and they do not have the duties to the court that a qualified lawyer does.\"\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Vogue Paris is going to feature a transgender model on its cover for the first time next month.\n\nBrazilian Valentina Sampaio has more than 32,000 followers on Instagram.\n\nEditor Emmanuelle Alt says she has \"beauty striking enough to stun on the cover of Vogue\".\n\nThe French fashion magazine has been running since 1920, with previous cover stars including Gigi Hadid, Kendall Jenner and Kate Moss.\n\nIn her editorial column for next month's issue, Emmanuelle Alt goes on to say the transgender model is the \"absolute equal\" of other iconic women in fashion.\n\n\"Apart from one small detail, Valentina, the femme fatale, was born a boy,\" she adds.\n\n\"It's a detail one would prefer not to have to mention... but Valentina is on the cover of Vogue this month, not just for her looks or her sparkling personality, but because despite herself she embodies an age-old arduous struggle to be recognized and not to be perceived as something Other.\"\n\nAlthough this is a first for French Vogue, other magazines have had trans cover stars before.\n\nValentina Sampaio was on the front Elle in her home country of Brazil last October, while fellow trans model Hari Nef has featured in the UK edition of Elle.\n\nBut Emmanuelle Alt says it's something her magazine is now proud to be part of.\n\n\"Trans people, the ultimate symbol of a rejection of conformity, are icons that Vogue supports and chooses to celebrate,\" she says.\n\n\"But only when a transgendered person poses on the front cover of a fashion magazine and it is no longer necessary to write an editorial on the subject will we know that the battle is won.\"\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "Shahab Hosseini and Taraneh Alidoosti play a couple at odds in The Salesman\n\nAn Iranian Oscar contender affected by President Donald Trump's controversial travel ban is to have an open-air London premiere just hours before the ceremony.\n\nThe Salesman, up for the best foreign language film award, will be screened in Trafalgar Square on 26 February.\n\nIts director has said he will not go to the Oscars due to President Trump's attempts to bar people from seven Muslim-majority countries, including Iran.\n\nIt is not yet known if Asghar Farhadi will attend the event in London.\n\nThe director - whose earlier work A Separation won the foreign film Oscar in 2012 - said the free screening had \"a great symbolic value\".\n\nFarhadi won a prize for his screenplay at last year's Cannes Film Festival\n\n\"The gathering of the audience around The Salesman in this famous London square is a symbol of unity against the division and separation of people,\" he said.\n\nThe afternoon event will include a programme of readings and speeches from actors and directors, including Mike Leigh.\n\nThe Salesman, which opens in the UK on 17 March, tells of a couple whose relationship suffers as they rehearse an amateur production Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman.\n\nLast month the organisers of the Oscars said they found it \"extremely troubling\" that Farhadi could be barred from entering the US.\n\nIn a statement, the director said he would not attend the Academy Awards even if he were offered dispensation by the US government.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Haaruun says he would visit the violent websites at the weekend when everyone was outside playing\n\nWhat leads a young child to stand up in front of his class and tell his school friends that he agrees with the aims and objectives of the so-called Islamic State?\n\nMatthew Price met one of the youngsters identified through the government's controversial Prevent programme as being at risk from radicalisation.\n\nThe boy is now 10 years old. He is small, with a round face and engaged eyes. You can tell he is intelligent because he asks questions - lots of them. It is that curiosity that got him into trouble in the first place.\n\nThese days he will not repeat the exact words he used just over a year ago in his primary school classroom in west London.\n\nWhat we are told, however, is that he stood up in front of his class and declared his support for the so-called Islamic State.\n\nIt was a declaration that set in motion a series of interventions from his teachers, children's services and the government's Prevent team which has been set up to de-radicalise at-risk individuals.\n\nHaaruun started researching IS after the Paris attacks\n\nFor obvious reasons we are not revealing the identity of this boy, but let's call him Haaruun. He lives in London, with his mother and several brothers and sisters, and was nine years old when his journey began.\n\n\"I saw on the news the Paris attacks,\" he says. \"As soon as that happened I was on the computer.\n\n\"I searched up ISIS on Google and it came up to BBC News. I saw that. Then I went down and it went to Channel 4 'Children of the Caliphate' and I was shocked. Then I watched other sites.\"\n\nIt was those other sites that really exposed Haaruun to the brutality of IS and left him - his case worker believes - vulnerable to radicalisation.\n\n\"It led me to this one that had brutal executions and them burning people. It just showed them lighting them on fire. The people chained up, lighting them on fire and then they burned them.\"\n\nThere is no emotion as Haaruun describes another video.\n\n\"The men were walking with their hands behind their back,\" he recalls. \"Then they were hit and told to sit down.\"\n\nHe doesn't pause as he delivers the next sentence: \"Then they cut their heads off.\"\n\nThere is no typical case that lands on the desks of Prevent teams across the country.\n\nThey work with children - some as young as Haaruun, others are teenagers - and they work with adults.\n\nSince 2012, Prevent has dealt with more than 1,000 cases. Many involve Islamist radicalisation and in the last year, around a quarter of referrals were because of concerns about far-right extremism.\n\nIt was a far-right website seeking to denigrate Islam which Haaruun had come across and where he was looking at the brutal IS videos.\n\n\"It would be on a weekend, like 'cos everyone was going outside and playing. So when they were all gone and the house was empty, I would go and sit freely in the living room and search up.\"\n\nSiddhartha Dhar, also known as Abu Rumaysah, was suspected of being the man behind some of the IS videos of which Haaruun became aware\n\nHe was not the only one at school who was interested.\n\n\"They'll be kids fighting - like some kids are saying 'Ah, Hezbollah are stronger than ISIS'.\"\n\nHaaruun says a lot of children in his school know about IS because so many have family backgrounds in the Middle East.\n\n\"There was a group of eight children which were always speaking about it. They were searching it up - even in the classroom.\n\n\"When we were doing some research, a boy searched up ISIS and he went on the video. I said 'close the tab' and the teacher came and he heard something and he said 'What was that' - and they all said 'Nothing'.\n\n\"I knew what I was looking at was bad, but then it wasn't only me that was doing it. It was unfair. Other people got away with it.\"\n\nBehind the scenes, unknown to the school, and discovered only by the woman from Prevent who ended up working his case, Haaruun was being bullied.\n\nHe does not talk about it much now. Yet some of the children, he says - both Muslim and non-Muslim - labelled him a \"terrorist\".\n\nThe bullying seems to have played a significant factor in isolating Haaruun and in fuelling his interest in IS. Gradually he became an expert in the group and could name its leadership structure.\n\nIt was all information that led to that day when he stood up in class and declared his sympathy for IS. And that led a woman called Mariam to his home.\n\n\"My mum just said to me one day, 'There's someone coming to the house'. I heard Mariam come in. I was scared and Mariam said the reason she was here and I thought I was going to go to prison.\"\n\nMariam - she prefers we do not use her surname because of her continuing work for Prevent's Kensington and Chelsea team - says it took time to gain Haaruun's trust.\n\n\"It took quite a few meetings before he was opening up and talking about all the things he watched,\" she says.\n\nThere followed almost a year of work between the two. Haaruun would take Mariam to the websites he accessed and they would discuss the videos.\n\nMariam warns that vulnerable people could become radicalised through chatrooms\n\nShe used a social work tool in which Haaruun was asked to list things that made him happy, others that he was interested in and things that were scary.\n\nUnder happy he put \"peace\" and \"family\" and \"Islam\" and under interesting went \"war\".\n\n\"ISIS\" went under scary. So too did \"school\" - and that is what alerted Mariam to the bullying.\n\nHaaruun's mother had tried to deal with the problem, but he had found a way of seeing the material he wanted to see. \"She couldn't keep up with the questions,\" Mariam says.\n\nToday, she does not have to. Prevent have ended their work with Haaruun and if he has learned one thing, he says, it's \"not to go on bad things - bad sites\".\n\n\"Mariam told me the repercussions of it and the impact of how it's not good. Like if you keep on watching it you'll be brainwashed and then you or someone will join ISIS and they will be in trouble and you'll go to prison,\" he says, still matter-of-fact.\n\nBut could that genuinely have happened to Haaruun?\n\n\"We're not suggesting he would become a terrorist,\" says Mariam. \"What we are saying is he was vulnerable.\n\n\"(He could have gone) on to a chatroom and spoken to someone who's there to radicalise him. Could he have said something out on the street and then someone's walking by who's got an interest and attempts to radicalise him?\n\n\"He is a vulnerable young man who's seeing things, forming opinions. How that would have developed without Prevent, we can't predict that.\n\n\"We're not saying he's going to take a bomb and blow anyone up. But it's about minimising those risks.\"\n\nHaaruun is still the engaged, interested little boy he always was.\n\nMariam and the team have given him access to what they call \"safe spaces\" in which to learn. People from his community, the school and other activities all help him explore the wider world, but now in a safe way.\n\nHe says he wants to be a lawyer or an accountant. There is a pause and he adds, with a shy smile, \"or a journalist\".\n\nHear Matthew Price's report on BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Tuesday morning or on iPlayer afterwards.\n• None What is Prevent- - Lets Talk About It The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A man is using sign language to share pop music with deaf people.\n\nWayne Barrow, from Birmingham, whose parents are profoundly deaf, makes online videos in which he signs lyrics.\n\nHe said he learned to sign before he learned English and has called for signing to be taught in schools.\n\nThe videos, which are posted to Facebook and YouTube, have, according to Mr Barrow, helped his mother understand music.", "Last updated on .From the section Snooker\n\nCoverage: Live television coverage on BBC Two Wales, BBC Red Button and online\n\nDefending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan and world number one Mark Selby both progressed to the second round of the Welsh Open on Tuesday.\n\nO'Sullivan, 41, chasing a fifth Welsh Open title, recovered from going a frame down to beat Tom Ford 4-1 and set up a meeting with Mark Davis.\n\nFellow Englishman Selby, 33, did not drop a frame as he beat Liam Highfield.\n• None View the scores and schedule of play from the 2017 Welsh Open.\n\nThere was another surprise exit as China's world number five Ding Junhui was knocked out in the first round in a 4-2 loss to Finland's Robin Hull.\n\nWorld number four Judd Trump eased through 4-1 against Andrew Higginson, while Scottish Open champion Marco Fu beat Martin Gould 4-2.\n\nFifteen-year-old Welsh schoolboy Jackson Page is back in action on Wednesday, when he faces John Astley in the second round.\n\nThe teenage wildcard entry eliminated world number 123 Jason Weston in the first round of his debut professional tournament on Monday.\n\nFind out how to get into snooker, pool and billiards with our fully inclusive guide.\n\nSign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nGreat Britain will travel to the Black Sea city of Constanta for their Fed Cup World Group II play-off against Romania.\n\nThe home city of Romanian number one Simona Halep will host the tie on outdoor clay on 22-23 April.\n\nBritain are looking to return to the elite level of the competition for the first time since 1993, but will go into the tie as heavy underdogs.\n\nFind out how to get into tennis in our special guide.\n\nHalep, the world number four, has already said she will play in the tie.\n\nRomania have four other players in the top 100.\n\nGB captain Anne Keothavong's team kept their promotion hopes alive last month with a 2-1 win over Croatia. and while she will hope to call on Johanna Konta, the world number 11 is not at her best on clay.\n\nBritish number two Heather Watson is currently ranked 108 but has a strong Fed Cup record with 25 wins and only seven losses.\n\nIt is the third time Britain have reached the World Group II play-offs in the past six years, with the team then captained by Judy Murray losing to Sweden and Argentina in 2012 and 2013 respectively.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nBanned cyclist Lance Armstrong has lost his bid to block a $100m (£79m) lawsuit by the US government.\n\nThe suit alleges that Armstrong defrauded the government by cheating while riding for the publicly funded US Postal Service team.\n\nIt was filed by Armstrong's former team-mate Floyd Landis before being joined by the government in 2013.\n\nA federal judge refused to block the lawsuit on Monday, which clears the way for the case to go to trial.\n\nArmstrong was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and banned for life in August 2012.\n\nThe 45-year-old won the seven titles between 1999 and 2005. The US Postal Service sponsored the team between 1996 and 2004.\n\nArmstrong admitted to using drugs in all seven of his Tour wins in January 2013 while Landis was stripped of his 2006 Tour de France title for failing a doping test.", "I ask the Dutch ruling party's Europe spokesman what the election next month is about. \"Identity,\" he replies without hesitation.\n\nI try to ask his leader, the Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, about their strategy.\n\nNear the Dutch Parliament in The Hague, a small crowd gathers in the snow and begins a countdown for Mr Rutte. \"Tien, negen, acht\" - ten, nine, eight - they chant before he unveils the statue of Johan Rudolph Thorbecke, a 19th-Century statesman, hero to Rutte's Liberal party, the VVD.\n\nThe rather delightful mixture of old-fashioned marble for the statesman himself and burnished steel, portraying his modern equivalent, complete with a woman in a short skirt perched on his desk, is the work of Tom Pucke, an English sculptor who's lived here for 20 years.\n\nHe tells me his Thorbecke gazes into the future with worry. \"You see in his face a sort of concern, in his expression, maybe he's concerned about the way things are going.\"\n\nThe prime minister may well feel the same. Another countdown is well under way, to the election on 15 March, and Mr Rutte is becoming decidedly less liberal in reaction to the man leading the opinion polls.\n\nLong before there was Donald Trump, another populist politician with an exotic hairstyle was already making waves. Platinum blonde Geert Wilders was once banned from Britain.\n\nNow he's on course, according to most polls, to head the largest group of MPs in the Dutch Parliament. He wants to ban the Koran and close the country's Mosques.\n\nSo one slogan you won't find Mr Rutte using is \"It's the economy, stupid.\"\n\nDutch PM Mark Rutte says immigrants who \"refuse to adapt\" should \"behave normally or leave\"\n\nHe has devised a plan to ensure he isn't the first continental leader to drown in the new populist tide, joining Hillary Clinton and David Cameron bobbing in the waves. He has issued a very hard-line open letter.\n\nIt begins \"there is something wrong with our country.\" He continues to appeal to \"the silent majority,\" saying Dutch freedoms have been abused, women in short skirts and gay people have been abused. He tells those immigrants who he says \"refuse to adapt\" to \"behave normally or leave.\"\n\nWhen I try to talk to him at the unveiling his spokeswoman butts in: \"This is not the moment.\"\n\nSo I asked his party's Europe spokesman MP, Anne Mulder, what the election is about.\n\n\"Identity,\" he replies. \"What makes the Netherlands the Netherlands. I think it is globalisation, people travelling all around the world, people losing their jobs, so that's why people need some security.\n\n\"People are looking for identity, our shared feelings, acting normal. It is not only Islam, but if people leave their wife at home, if there's not equality between men and women....\"\n\nI say some people might think this was dancing to Geert Wilders' tune. \"Some people might say so,\" he answers, expressionless.\n\nSo has his party been pushed to the right ? He hesitates. \"We have been having discussions in the party. Ten years ago I start in this city council - telling people, \"Act normal.\"\n\nWilders will launch his campaign next week in Spijkenisse, a suburb on the end of the Rotterdam tube line.\n\nSo I go to the community centre there. A group of women are executing a rather slow line dance to gently exercise the limbs. Keeping moving is on their minds, not the election. But when I mention politics, just one name is on all their lips.\n\n\"I am going to vote for Wilders. He's direct. Straight. We shouldn't take in so many people with the Islamic religion.\"\n\nAs they dance to a tune about a beautiful lady from South Texas, some of the views are very similar to those I've heard in the States recently. \"I think we have to close the borders and have less foreigners. People here are getting poorer, kids going without breakfast, no clothes.\"\n\nThere's a paradox too - Wilders is valued for speaking out - but not all supporters want him to lead their country. \"He dares to say things as they are, about the foreigners. They are not good to women, there's the crime, all the murders, they rob shops with guns.\n\n\"Even though I'm voting for him, he can't be prime minister. But we need him to show the truth about Holland.\"\n\nMarianne Vorthoren from Spior, Rotterdam's Islamic umbrella organisation, says the atmosphere has changed.\n\n\"Many Muslims feel 'are we still part of this society?' It's not just that some people say these things, [like calling for a ban on the Koran] but that about 20% of the voters support this. That is shocking. We don't feel safe any more.\"\n\nI ask her about the prime minister's comments that people should leave if they can't \"act normal.\" Fair enough, surely ?\n\n\"Who do you define with 'we' and 'us' and 'our values'? There are lots of groups - some in Parliament, Christian orthodox groups - who don't agree with equal rights for homosexuals. Now we don't say to them 'get out!'\"\n\nDespite these concerns, Wilders' party seems likely to do very well in the election.\n\nThe diffidence I found in the community centre could play either way. People seem to say that they want Wilders around to speak his mind, but not to become their country's leader.\n\nBoth Germany and France will hold major elections in 2017\n\nThat might put people off voting for his party or, my guess, suggest that he's a safe protest vote. Unintentionally the political mainstream cements this appeal, by firmly rejecting him as a possible coalition partner.\n\nWilders has zero chance of becoming prime minister - according to the current prime minister - because the other parties simply won't do a deal with him.\n\nI asked political editor of the right-wing Daily Standard blog Tim Engelbart how that would go down.\n\n\"A government would have to be formed with four or five parties. It would be an extremely unstable, unpopular government, featuring all kinds of parties from left to right with very little in common beyond the desire to keep Wilders out.\n\n\"It would anger Wilders voters, who are worried about security, their country, and who will be told: 'We're going to ignore you, regardless of the results.' Their faith in the Dutch political system won't improve.\"\n\nIt could be a script from the populist playbook - the people's will rejected, the people's choice excluded by a colluding elite. It would suggest betrayal wasn't a myth but a reality.\n\nA lot hangs on several European elections this year. The vote next month in the Netherlands will be followed by even more critical elections in France and Germany.\n\nBut the Netherlands suggests some choices have already been made.\n\nThe 'politics of identity' mean many centrist politicians aren't hesitating at the crossroads, contemplatively chewing their fingers. Many who were once happy to occupy the centre lane have forked to the right and are zooming down the autobahn in emulation of their more popular opponents. The question is not the direction of travel - but how far it goes.\n\nIn the Netherlands, the revolution of the far-right has been brewing for a long time. We'll find out if they are near to taking power on 16 March. But you needn't wait until then to find out how Wilders has done. In one sense he has already won.", "Two Test matches of ferocious intensity and one well short of that.\n\nAfter England and Wales served up a thriller that justified the build-up in Cardiff - capped off with a dramatic late match-winning score from the visitors' Elliot Daly - France out-muscled a spirited Scotland in Paris on Sunday.\n\nSaturday's first fixture - Ireland's 63-10 steam-rollering of Italy - was the sort of confidence-booster that Joe Schmidt's side needed after an opening-weekend defeat by Scotland, but far sterner tests will follow.\n\nWith a fortnight's break before the next round, there is plenty to ponder. And it is still all up for grabs.\n• None Watch the latest highlights and videos from the Six Nations\n• None England have no more get-out-of-jail-free cards - Jones\n\nEngland are very powerful and confident\n\nEngland's win over Wales was a very tight game of fine margins, and it was the visitors' perfect execution of the chance they were given to win the match that proved to be the difference.\n\nWhen Jonathan Davies kicked into the backfield in the last four minutes at the Principality Stadium, England were able to impose themselves enough to create an opportunity and were then clear-headed enough to take it.\n\nThis is a very powerful, confident, internally competitive 23-man England squad.\n\nIndividually Joe Launchbury and Courtney Lawes were mammoth in the second row, expending huge amounts of energy. Nathan Hughes racked up some huge numbers, with the most metres gained (75), carries (22) and defenders beaten (three) of any England player.\n\nElliot Daly showed himself to be a complete footballer. He showed the gas of a winger to round Alex Cuthbert for the crucial score, but he also has the vision of a very good full-back, the touch of a very good fly-half and added to which he can also kick penalties from his own half.\n\nIt is powerful thing to be part of a team that has got that winning habit. You are familiar with your team-mates, but training becomes very high level. There is no sympathy for mistakes that slow up the progress of the project and you go onto the field believing that you will find a way to win.\n\nEngland are going to lose at some point and head coach Eddie Jones is right to say there are only so many times that they are going to come through these tight scrapes - but for the moment that confidence the players have is getting them over the line.\n\nJones may decide to use the Italy game to try some new starting combinations to see if the replacements can be as influential from the beginning of matches. Dylan Hartley was off the pace to my eye , but in modern rugby so much will depend on the condition of the players.\n\nCompared with the game at Twickenham last year, where Wales made a host of errors and gave England a 16-point lead at half-time, this was a markedly better performance.\n\nWales could have easily won this year's match and when they play with that amount of energy they are a real threat to the top four in world rugby.\n\nSome people questioned coach Rob Howley's decision to withdraw number eight Ross Moriarty after 52 minutes. The Gloucester man had had a blast up until then, a real physical presence with some immense hits in defence.\n\nBut it may have been that that impact was a result of him emptying the tanks in the time he was on the pitch, knowing he was going to be taken off soon after half-time. It is not a given that had he stayed on he would have been able to maintain that pace.\n\nThe balance of the Wales back row was good with Moriarty everywhere, blind-side flanker Sam Warburton doing the heavy-duty carrying and tackling and open-side Justin Tipuric fetching, disrupting and supporting in space.\n\nThey were more mobile than their England counterparts and were a big part of Wales securing seven turnovers to England's three.\n\nThere were a few mistakes and a few opportunities that went begging, but England's pressure and instinctive quality in those split-seconds perhaps forced that. The influence of an opposition as good as England cannot be discounted.\n\nScotland were not inventive enough\n\nConsidering they were outgunned in terms of bulk by an enormous France side, the challenge for Scotland was to manoeuvre their opponents around the pitch enough that they tired them out.\n\nWith eight pairs of fresh legs on the bench at French coach Guy Noves' disposal, that was always going to be difficult.\n\nScotland were capable of doing so, the problem was they could not muster the intensity for long enough periods.\n\nIt was not physical intensity they lacked. Instead, they had to be dynamic and inventive, and constantly remould their attacking shape to keep France guessing.\n\nFrance knew that was going to be Vern Cotter's gameplan and the hosts were motivated enough to deny them space and momentum.\n\nStuart Hogg and Tim Swinson's tries were well worked, but there were not enough moments where they got around the outside or in behind France.\n\nAt times it seemed like Scotland had only 14 players on the field. Apart from their two tries, they rarely wobbled this French side.\n\nFrance are brittle mentally in pressure situations, but Scotland did not cause them enough anxiety to see if they would crack again.\n\nScotland could have won the game - but they will not take much solace from that. That has been the story for too many seasons in recent times and they are supposed to have moved on from that.\n\nThe losing bonus point was something to take from a very tricky away trip though, especially considering how tight the standings are.\n\nCJ Stander became the first Irishman to score a Six Nations hat-trick in 15 years, but the way he exploited the space and Italy's weak tackling did not reveal anything new.\n\nWe already knew from his performances in the autumn that he is a very impressive player who will batter his way through a brick wall with ball in hand.\n\nFor me, he is untouchable as the best number six in world rugby.\n\nIreland's intensity dropped for a 22-minute spell early in the second half between Stander scoring their fifth try and replacement Craig Gilroy crossing for their sixth, but Joe Schmidt's side kicked back with a strong finish.\n\nYou have to put this performance in perspective, though.\n\nIt was against a side who have spluttered badly over the past three halves of rugby that they have played.\n\nCoach Conor O'Shea and his assistants Mike Catt and Brendan Venter - who were all together at London Irish in the mid 2000s - are trying to change Italy's culture alongside their style of play.\n\nThat is a major upheaval and, at the moment, they looked just off the pace.\n\nThis is my second-round selection of a Lions XV based on the form shown over the weekend.\n• None Get all the latest Six Nations news by adding", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nWomen who survived breast cancer took over the catwalk at New York Fashion Week in an alternative lingerie show to raise funds for charity.\n\nThe AnaOno Intimates show was devised by US designer, and breast cancer survivor, Dana Donofree, and introduced by Oscar-winning actress Mira Sorvino.\n\nModels with different shapes and stories proudly bared signs of surgery.\n\nNearly half of the models had metastatic, or advanced, breast cancer, according to Ms Donofree.\n\nAll proceeds went to Cancerland, an outreach and advocacy charity in the US.\n\nWarning: This article contains images of partial nudity\n\n\"I felt sexy, I felt beautiful, and I was proud,\" Paige Moore, 24, said after taking part in the show.\n\nFive weeks ago, she had preventative double mastectomy after genetic testing.\n\n\"I was like these scars are sexy and awesome, and I am here, I am alive and I feel good. That is all that matters,\" she said.\n\nIn the US and the UK, cancer researchers say one in eight women in the United States will be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime.\n\nAlmost half the models in the New York fashion show had battled advanced breast cancer\n\n\"It is a very important moment for them [the models] to get out there and experience something like this because breast cancer has taken over their bodies,\" Ms Donofree told Reuters.\n\nMs Donofree also had a double mastectomy after being diagnosed with the disease, aged 27.\n\nShe started designing underwear for others who have undergone breast surgery after realising that traditional garments no longer fitted.\n\nThe show took place in lower Manhattan, New York City\n\nMs Donofree wrote about her story and the inspiration for the show on her website.\n\n\"As I slowly rebuilt my own self-esteem and confidence, first by getting a mastectomy tattoo, then by talking to other women about life after acute treatment, and finally trying on my first bra prototype, I wondered why none of this was part of some greater 'What to Expect When You're Expecting a Mastectomy' pamphlet they handed out at your surgeon's office.\"\n\n\"Whether I have nipples or breasts or not, I am a woman,\" said model Chiaro D'Agostino, a New Jersey teacher and blogger.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland must make people \"fall in love\" with Test cricket again, says newly appointed vice-captain Ben Stokes.\n\nYorkshire batsman Joe Root has been named as new Test captain after Alastair Cook resigned after more than four years in charge.\n\n\"We need to win but we want to perform in a manner that makes people want to come and watch us,\" Stokes said.\n\nRoot's first Test match as England skipper is against South Africa at Lord's beginning on 7 July.\n\nThe 26-year-old has stepped up from vice-captain, with Durham all-rounder Stokes, 25, filling the role as his deputy.\n\n\"Test cricket is the pinnacle and we need people to fall in love with it again,\" added Stokes.\n\nDiscussing his elevation to vice-captain, he added: \"Everything I do is to win and being vice-captain won't change me as a person or as a player.\n\n\"I want to be involved in all aspects of the game, whether it's hitting the winning runs or taking the final wicket. I have always wanted to be in the middle of it.\n\n\"Being vice-captain I will have to bring a mental and supportive side too. If I am not involved in the game then I will have to add my tactical input.\n\n\"I have been more vocal over the last year but I only speak when I think something needs to be said. I'm not one for cliches.\n\n\"Just being vice-captain doesn't give me the right to say whatever I want.\"\n\nEngland have lost six of their past eight Tests, the most recent by an innings and 75 runs against India in December as they slipped to a 4-0 series defeat.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nCoverage: Ball-by-ball Test Match Special commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, Radio 4 LW, online, tablets, mobiles and BBC Sport app. Live text commentary on the BBC Sport website.\n\nDavid Willey has been ruled out of England's tour of the West Indies and will be replaced by Steven Finn.\n\nYorkshire all-rounder Willey, 26, will be out until April after having surgery on a partially torn shoulder tendon, an injury suffered in India last month.\n\nEngland will play two one-day matches in Antigua in March, with a third in Barbados, before the teams face each other again in England in the summer.\n\nThe West Indies are ninth in the ODI standings, four places below England.\n\nMiddlesex seamer Finn, 27, is currently playing for Islamabad United in the T20 Pakistan Super League in the United Arab Emirates.\n\nWilley managed just two overs in England's one-day international win over India on 22 January before a problem with his left shoulder forced him off. The injury also ruled him out of the subsequent Twenty20 series.", "The Canadian prime minister has said he will not \"lecture\" the US president over his controversial immigration ban.\n\nJournalists quizzed the two leaders over their opposing stances on refugees, after bilateral talks at the White House.\n\nAsked if he believed President Trump's ban had merit on national security grounds, Justin Trudeau replied: \"The last thing Canadians expect is for me to come down and lecture another country on how they choose to govern themselves.\"", "Austria's Vegetable Orchestra travels the world making music with carrots, cabbages and red peppers.\n\nBethany Bell caught up with the musicians at their Vienna workshop to see how they make their musical vegetables.", "The claim: The UK's spending on defence fell below 2% of GDP in 2016.\n\nReality Check verdict: Nato has confirmed that its figures for 2016 show the UK is still meeting the 2% target, but won't release the full details until next month. The amount that the IISS claims that defence spending is below 2% of GDP is tiny by the standards of government spending, and may easily be erased by using different exchange rates or definitions of defence spending.\n\nDefence think tank the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) claimed on Tuesday that the UK had dropped below its pledge to spend 2% of GDP on defence, made in the Strategic Defence Review in 2015.\n\nGDP is what you get when you add up all the goods and services produced in an economy. In the UK in 2016 it was about £1.87 trillion.\n\nThe IISS said that as a result of UK GDP being higher than expected, the UK had actually only spent 1.98% of GDP on defence in 2016.\n\nThe Ministry of Defence says that the IISS figures are wrong. It pointed to Nato figures saying that the UK spent 2.21% of GDP on defence last year.\n\nThat figure is based on analysis from Nato, which was published last July, meaning they were based on forecasts for both GDP and spending.\n\nBut Nato later said that it had looked at the final numbers for 2016 and could confirm that the UK was still meeting the 2% target, but it would not be releasing the full figures until next month.\n\nThe alliance said that the UK, US, Poland, Greece and Estonia met the target last year.\n\nAs this is a Nato target, it is Nato's methodology that is important. Before making the calculation, Nato converts both defence spending and GDP into US dollars at 2010 exchange rates and prices.\n\nThere are disagreements about what should and what should not count as military spending - whether pensions paid to soldiers' widows count, for example.\n\nIISS has calculated the figure slightly differently. It gets to a figure of £38.3bn for UK defence spending in 2016 .\n\nIf you divide that by the ONS figure for GDP you get 2.05%, but that's not what the IISS has done. Because it is trying to make comparisons between different countries, it has converted all the figures into US dollars, using International Monetary Fund exchange rates and also used IMF GDP figures.\n\nWhen you do that, you get to 1.98%.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "After a near death experience in 2013 when Co-op Bank nearly went bust, it has been limping along ever since.\n\nIt was kept alive back then when lenders wrote off their debts in return for a stake in the bank, in a so-called debt for equity swap, but it has been unable to earn itself back to health.\n\nIt had been operating without the recommended shock absorbing capital for some time, the Bank of England told the BBC last week. This morning, the Bank welcomed Co-op bank's announcement.\n\nWhen a bank has too little capital it only has three realistic options.\n\nThe first is to earn your way out of trouble. Retain any earnings you make to bolster the rainy-day kitty. In this super-low interest rate environment we have seen since 2008, all banks have found it very difficult to make a margin between what they pay their borrowers and charge their lenders.\n\nIn fact, this year the Co-op is expected to make a loss - after any earnings have been more than offset by the costs of sorting out old problems.\n\nThe second is to get your owners to put in extra money. Those owners include the Co-op Group who own 20%, a group of former lenders, plus a few hedge funds.\n\nAlthough Co-op Group has not ruled out putting in extra money, it's a questionable use of funds for all of them, given that the bank is finding it hard to make a return for that investment for the reasons mentioned in option one.\n\nThe third is to find someone else well placed to add four million customers to an existing business - one which is not so bedevilled by legacy issues and might be able to find some economies of scale.\n\nThis list is not a long one but one name does suggest itself. The TSB, which was carved out of Lloyds to satisfy competition concerns over the scale of the Lloyds/HBOS merger.\n\nWith 600 branches, it lacks the scale to compete against the Big Five and it has a very strong capital position with no legacy issues.\n\nWhether the bank would want to take on the problems of Co-op is questionable but it terms of brand (both have a local and ethical flavour to them) it might work.\n\nThe TSB is currently focused on completing a complicated IT separation from Lloyds, but the BBC understands that at the right price it might consider it,\n\nDetermining the right price will be hard as the amount of capital any buyer needs to sink into the Co-op is very far from clear.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The trees were planted on the pitch at Logie Durno\n\nA council has apologised after trees were planted on a football pitch.\n\nThe trees appeared at the pitch at Logie Durno in Aberdeenshire, sparking social media reaction.\n\nAberdeenshire Council was contacted, and the local authority said the intention was to turn over part of the area for \"biodiversity\" - but talks would now be held with the community.\n\nA spokeswoman said: \"It would seem that we were barking up the wrong tree with plans for this site.\"\n\nThe spokeswoman said of the site: \"Anecdotally it was rarely used. However it is clear now that the community were not engaged with this plan.\n\n\"As such, we are going back to first principles with them so they can help us decide what this area should be used for.\n\n\"There are full pitches immediately next to this area for community leisure use and the trees will remain on this site until we can come to an agreement with residents.\n\n\"We are sorry for any inconvenience this has caused.\"\n\nOn social media, people had been quick to poke fun at the situation.\n\nOne person wrote: \"Are they playing tree a side?\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The Queen was shown how hackers could target the UK's electricity supply as she opened a centre to protect the nation from cyber attacks.\n\nThe National Cyber Security Centre - part of intelligence agency GCHQ - started work in October as part of a £1.9bn five-year strategy.\n\nStaff in Victoria, central London, will be joined by experts from the private sector to help identify threats.\n\nNCSC chief Ciaran Martin said: \"We want to make the UK the hardest target\".\n\nThe secondments to the centre by 100 private sector employees will be funded by their own companies.\n\nAnnouncing the initiative, Chancellor Philip Hammond said the \"best and the brightest in industry\" will help \"test and to challenge the government's thinking\" in cyber security.\n\nHe added: \"Government cannot protect business and the general public from the risks of cyber-attack on its own. It has to be a team effort. It is only in this way that we can stay one step ahead of the scale and pace of the threat that we face.\"\n\nThere were 188 cyber attacks classed by the NCSC as Category Two or Three during the last three months.\n\nAnd even though the UK has not experienced a Category One attack - the highest level, an example of which would have been the theft of confidential details of millions of Americans from the Office of Personnel Management - there is no air of complacency at the NCSC's new headquarters.\n\nCiaran Martin, the centre's chief executive, told the BBC: \"We have had significant losses of personal data, significant intrusions by hostile state actors, significant reconnaissance against critical national infrastructure - and our job is to make sure we deal with it in the most effective way possible.\"\n\nAs well as protecting against and responding to high-end attacks on government and business, the NCSC also aims to protect the economy and wider society.\n\nThe UK is one of the most digitally dependent economies, with the digital sector estimated to be worth over £118bn per year - which means the country has much to lose.\n\nIt is not just a crippling cyber-attack on infrastructure that could turn out the lights which worries officials, but also a loss of confidence in the digital economy from consumers and businesses, as a result of criminals exploiting online vulnerabilities.\n\nA sustained effort was required by government and private sector working together to make the UK the hardest possible target, officials say.\n\nRussia has been the focus of recent concern, following claims it used cyber-attacks to interfere with the recent US presidential election.\n\n\"I think there has been a significant change in the Russian approach to cyber-attacks and the willingness to carry it out, and clearly that's something we need to be prepared to deal with,\" Mr Martin said.\n\nFrench and German officials have warned of the possibility of interference in their upcoming elections, but the NCSC's head said there was no evidence that a significant attack or compromise had yet taken place against the UK democratic process.\n\n\"There has been an identifiable trend in Russian attacks in the West, in terms of focusing on critical national industries and political and democratic processes,\" Mr Martin added.\n\n\"And so it follows from that that we will look to be sure we are protecting those sectors in the UK as well as we possibly can.\"\n\nMPs are being advised by the new centre as to how to keep their data safe\n\nThe centre will be working on a voluntary basis with political parties and giving advice to high-profile individuals - including MPs - on how to protect their sensitive data.\n\nThe UK is already targeting computers in other countries being used for cyber-attack, particularly if there is no possibility of prosecution or for co-operation with authorities where the hackers are based.\n\n\"In the most serious cases, we have lawful powers where we can go after the infrastructure of adversaries - the infrastructure that people use to attack us - and we would do that in some of the most serious cases several dozen times a year,\" Mr Martin said.\n\nIn the past, UK cyber protection was largely situated within GCHQ in Cheltenham, which was criticised by businesses and others as overly secretive.\n\nThe NCSC aims to be more public facing and accessible. It will also protect a far wider range of sectors, rather than just government and national security-related industries, like defence.\n\nGCHQ will still be the parent body for the NCSC, meaning it can draw on the intelligence agency's skills and capabilities.\n\nSometimes, the intelligence arm of GCHQ spots compromised networks as it watches adversaries move across the internet.\n\nGCHQ can detect the work of hackers around the globe\n\nIt was through this type of work that GCHQ spotted the compromise of the US Democratic Party's information by Russian hackers, which it then informed US authorities about.\n\nThe NCSC is working on trial services to pro-actively discover vulnerabilities in public sector websites, help government departments better manage spoofing of their email, and take down tens of thousands of phishing sites affecting the UK.\n\n\"We're actively working to reduce the harm caused by cyber-attacks against the UK and will use the government as a guinea pig for all the measures we want to see done by industry at national scale,\" says the NCSC technical director, Dr Ian Levy.\n\nHe says results would be published openly to enhance collaboration. The centre will be publishing some of its code as open source, so that others can use the techniques.", "These are the players who punch holes in defences no matter how solid they are.\n\nThey are the big men who carry hard into the guts of the opposition, the powerhouses who make metres virtually every time they carry the ball, the forces of nature who burst through flailing limbs as though they were dried twigs.\n\nJerry has picked his Six Nations heavy artillery top six - but do you agree? Join the debate below, and use our interactive tool to rank Jerry's selection yourself.\n\nThe slab-thighed France number eight has a long-standing reputation for being an incredibly destructive runner, and he demonstrated that once more at the weekend.\n\nDespite standing 6ft 4in he has a low centre of gravity and uses that, combined with impeccable timing and excellent balance, to power through the most tightly packed opposition defences.\n\nThough he was on the losing team against England, he was my man of the week, with 16 carries, 131 metres made, two clean breaks and seven defenders beaten, and is the number one pick overall when it comes to asking someone to make the hard yards. Tres bon, Louis, tres bon.\n\nIn the enforced absence through injury of defence-demolishing England number eight Billy Vunipola, Nathan Hughes has big shoes to fill and, judging by his performance at the weekend, the 18st 1lb Wasps behemoth is up to the task.\n\nHe is less nuggety and carries slightly wider than Vunipola but is always eager to get that ball in his hands - he made a team high 15 carries against France - and take on players. He loves the contact.\n\nOn one of his 15 carries against France on Saturday, he ran full tilt at captain Guilhem Guirado and sat him down on his backside - and not many do that to the ferociously competitive hooker.\n\nWe're getting hefty now and, after two number eights, my choice for number three is rumbustious Ireland prop Tadhg Furlong. At knocking on 19 stone he's got plenty of power and he runs around at a fair old clip as well.\n\nThe 24-year-old is a baby in prop terms, both in age and experience - he has only started five Tests - but he has done so well he'd be my starting prop for the Lions this summer if he keeps playing as he has.\n\nHe's very good at hitting into defenders, pumping his legs and maintaining a good body position, which allows him to keep going forward while allowing time for support to get with him. He has not yet had time to make his mark on the Six Nations - don't worry, he will - but anyone who saw him swat aside three New Zealand forwards in one run in the autumn knows this man is a monster with ball in hand.\n\nAs befits someone who bought a tractor with his first big rugby pay cheque, Sean O'Brien possesses true \"farm strength\" and is an out-and-out bruising runner.\n\nNicknamed the 'Tullow Tank' for good reason, he will trample all over you if you don't get the tackle technically correct.\n\nNow aged 29, he has struggled with hamstring injuries but looks somewhere near back to his best and made two clean breaks against Scotland. The first one saw Stuart Hogg attempt the tackle, but he was too low and square into O'Brien and the Ireland flanker just brushed him aside, all from a standing start.\n\nEngland's Ben Te'o is going to have a big impact every time he gets on the field - as befits someone who used to play in Australia's NRL, he's not afraid to carry the ball hard into traffic.\n\nAt 6ft 2in and not far off 17 stone he's a three-quarter wrecking ball and one we will see more of as the Six Nations progresses, because he gives England a different option in midfield to the footballing combination of George Ford and Owen Farrell.\n\nHe came off the bench with just over 10 minutes remaining in the win over France and soon scored the winning try, his powerful charge an indication of what lies ahead.\n\nFrom a man whose best may lie in the future to one who, at the age of 30, may find his previous feats tough to match.\n\nThat is not to write off the blockbusting Wales centre, the doctor hewn from granite who has been smashing it up the middle for Wales for nigh on a decade. But the 6ft 4in centre has been dropped to the bench for the past two Tests as Scott Williams has taken the 12 shirt, something that was unthinkable a year or two ago.\n\nJutting of jaw and never happier than when taking crash ball on a hard line into the heart of the opposition midfield, Roberts has been hammering away at the coalface for Wales - gouging out yards of hard-earned front foot ball - for 90 caps, and although he may have slipped down the heavy artillery rankings this season, I would not be at all surprised to see him make England suffer on Saturday.\n\nWhat? No Mathieu Bastareaud (although he can't get into the French team)? No Ross Moriarty? No Taulupe Faletau? No Cian Healy? No Kyle Sinckler (give it a few weeks...)? Let us know who else Jerry should have included and join the debate below!", "Ashley Madison was fined for not sufficiently protecting customers' data\n\nWhen infidelity website Ashley Madison was the victim of a hacking attack in 2015, the affected 36 million global users were suddenly very worried indeed.\n\nThe business, a dating site for married people who wish to cheat on their spouse, had the data of its customers stolen and released on to the internet. All their names, passwords, phone numbers and addresses.\n\nWhile it was a very bleak time for Ashley Madison's users, the company itself faced a major crisis, and it was found to be lacking.\n\nAs customer numbers and revenues plummeted, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) - the US agency tasked with protecting consumers - ruled that the business had not done enough to protect people's information, both before and after the attack.\n\nThe FTC fined Ashley Madison $1.6m (£1.3m), and said that the financial penalty was only that low because it didn't think that the business could afford to pay any more, such was the impact of the hack on its earnings.\n\nWhere Ashley Madison failed was its insufficient crisis management - it hadn't prepared enough for something bad happening, and how it would react.\n\nAll companies need to prepare for how they would react to a hack of their IT systems\n\nWhile the company tells the BBC it has subsequently overhauled all its systems, how should all firms best plan for and then respond to a crisis, be it a cyber-attack, financial scandal or other serious issue?\n\nWith the UK government confirming last year that two-thirds of large British companies had experienced a cyber-attack in the previous 12 months alone, businesses who have an online presence anywhere in the world simply have to prepare for how they would react to a hack that breaches their system.\n\nA business can make its website as secure as possible, but being 100% protected is just not achievable, say IT experts.\n\nPage Group was ready to deal with the breach of its IT system\n\nThankfully for UK employment agency Page Group it knew exactly how to react when it suffered a data breach of its cloud computing system in October last year.\n\n\"We have senior staff in place from across different parts of our organisation that form an issues management team who are well equipped to deal with a crisis, should it arise,\" says Eamon Collins, Page's group marketing manager.\n\n\"That is why when we were alerted to a data breach by our IT vendor Capgemini, this team was able to act fast, review the issue, and provide counsel on the best course of action.\n\n\"The most important part of the process is putting your customers' interests first.\"\n\nHe adds: \"Once we had sufficient information around what had happened, and the impact, we could undertake a transparent and open dialogue with the customer.\"\n\nAt former US mining group National Coal, the crisis it faced was repeated protests in the early 2000s by environmentalists who objected to its opencast mining in east Tennessee.\n\nIts then chief executive, Daniel Roling, said the company had plans in place for how it responded to everything it faced - from trespassers, to staff being threatened, entry roads being blockaded, and bomb threats.\n\n\"We held a number of run-throughs to test the effectiveness of both communications and operation responses,\" he says.\n\n\"The plan should, at a minimum, include an acceptable and effective means of communication, as well as an outline of who can and should provide direction.\"\n\nDaniel Roling says National Coal had crisis management plans in place\n\nMr Roling, who left National Coal before it was sold to Ranger Energy Investments in 2010, adds: \"We had everything planned right down to where we would hold a press conference, and how we would set it up.\n\n\"In crisis planning, you are looking to create an effective auto-response, so that everyone heads in the right direction, without too much deliberation.\"\n\nAt UK tourist attraction, the Jorvik Viking Centre, in York, its crisis was a major flood in December 2015 that caused significant damage.\n\nDirector of attractions Sarah Maltby says the team worked hard to remove precious artefacts before they were damaged.\n\n\"Every company needs solid staff to assist, offer advice, and manage elements of disaster recovery,\" she says.\n\nSarah Maltby says the Jorvik Viking Centre was saved by staff working together\n\nThe centre is now due to finally reopen in April this year.\n\nCrisis management expert Jonathan Bernstein says it is vital that a company responds quickly to a crisis. \"The crisis moves at its own pace, but you need to be faster.\"\n\nHe adds that firms should be honest about the crisis at hand, especially if it is something they are to blame for, such as a financial scandal.\n\n\"Be honest about how you screwed up, and illustrate how you are going to ensure this doesn't happen again,\" says Mr Bernstein.\n\n\"Provide clear information to customers on what happened exactly, and what new protocols will be in place.\"\n\nDamon Coppola, founder of Shoreline Risk, a company that assists businesses with their risk management, says that when it comes to a firm preparing for a possible crisis \"the public might not necessarily expect perfection\".\n\nBut he adds: \"[The public's] judgement will be hard if it is perceived that the company failed to act on an obligation to limit or prepare for a known risk, if they were dishonest in their communication, and perhaps in the worst case, if profits came before people.\"\n\nThese are views echoed by UK public relations expert Benjamin Webb, founder of media relations firm Deliberate PR, which specialises in Swedish start-ups.\n\nHe says: \"At a time of fast-moving crisis, particularly when people's well-being is at stake, transparency to customers and their family members must exceed any responsibility to shareholders.\"\n\nRob Segal says that Ashley Madison has improved its systems since the hack\n\nAt Toronto-based Ruby Corporation, the owner of Ashley Madison, chief executive Rob Segal, says the company has worked hard to rebuild trust since the 2015 hack.\n\nMr Segal, who joined the firm after the attack, says: \"We partnered with Deloitte's world-leading security team following the breach, and they've been helping the company with privacy and security enhancements and 24/7 monitoring.\n\n\"The go-forward lessons for chief executives is to always stay vigilant about cybersecurity, and to continually invest in privacy and security safeguards.\"", "Since his first day in office, Mr Trump has faced angry opposition - and it's making his opponents money\n\nDonald Trump's adversarial style during the election divided American voters like few campaigns in recent years.\n\nThe president himself has referred to \"my many enemies\" - but it seems they're getting a substantial boost from the new president.\n\nOrganisations that investigate, oppose, or lampoon the commander-in-chief are seeing a surge in support, in what's been dubbed \"rage donation\".\n\nFrom civil rights to media types, the effect is widespread.\n\nPlanned Parenthood advocates for women's reproductive rights, including abortion - to which Mr Trump and Vice-President Mike Pence are both opposed.\n\nCecile Richards, who leads the family-planning group, told the BBC more than 400,000 people had donated since the election - \"an unprecedented outpouring of support\" - some of which has been given jokily in Mike Pence's name.\n\nBut, she said, no level of donations would be able to match the federal funding the group receives - something which may now be under threat.\n\n\"We will never back down, and we will never stop providing the care our patients need. These doors stay open, no matter what,\" she said.\n\nPro-life supporters in the March for Life received open messages of support from both the president and vice president\n\nThe Centre for Reproductive Rights, meanwhile, is trying to raise $1m in Mr Trump's first 100 days\n\n\"We've had thousands of new donors in the last three months, many of whom have signed on to be monthly sustainers - donors who will be with us for the long haul,\" a spokeswoman said.\n\nOne of American's biggest environmental protection groups, the Natural Resources Defence Council (NRDC), was singled out by popular comedian John Oliver late last year when he called on his viewers to donate following the election.\n\nSince then, \"we have seen an incredible response from the public,\" a spokeswoman said.\n\nThe \"huge spike\" continued through November and December, she said, slowing slightly in early January - before picking right back up at the inauguration.\n\n\"It's definitely driven by concern over President Trump's anti-environmental rhetoric and actions,\" the NRDC said.\n\nThe Sierra Club, another major environmental group, reported 11,000 new monthly donors in the days following the election - nine times its previous record.\n\nIt's not just charities and fundraising that are seeing a positive bump from Trump. This week, it emerged that the long-running satire show Saturday Night Live was celebrating its highest ratings in decades.\n\nIts numbers have grown by 22% overall - to 10 million viewers, the highest since 1995, according to Variety.\n\nAlec Baldwin's parody of Trump has become a weekly fixture on the revived SNL\n\nAlec Baldwin's portrayal of Mr Trump, which became wildly popular during the campaign, is now a weekly staple.\n\nStrident Trump critic Stephen Colbert also beat his late-night rival, Jimmy Fallon, for the first time in years in recent ratings - though there's not yet enough evidence to link late-night show ratings to politics.\n\nPerhaps the biggest success story comes from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).\n\nIn a single weekend - as they fought a legal battle against the president's controversial immigration order - the group clocked up $24m (£19.1m) in donations, six times what it usually receives in an entire year. The huge amount prompted the rights group to turn to Silicon Valley for help managing the funds.\n\nThe ACLU was inundated with record donations after it blocked part of Mr Trump's executive order, days into his term\n\nGroups like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Southern Poverty Law Center, and the National Immigration Law Center have also benefited from social media campaigns.\n\nComedian Josh Gondelman, for example, felt uncomfortable with Mr Trump's close ties to the Patriots American football team. So he came up with the idea of donating $100 to the NAACP every time his team scored a touchdown during the Super Bowl.\n\nCoupled with a social-friendly hashtag (#AGoodGame), the idea took off, and brought in thousands of dollars in donations for civil rights groups across the US.\n\nPresident Trump likes to tweet about the (\"dishonest, lying\") media. Most news outlets would say they don't oppose the president - but by nature, question and hold authority to account.\n\nBut amid outcry over \"alternative facts\" and talk of non-existent massacres, many are reporting more readers and subscriptions.\n\nNon-profit public interest news organisation ProPublica said it had seen \"a dramatic increase in donations, beginning late on election night\".\n\nDonor numbers swelled from 3,400 in all of 2015 to more than 26,000 in 2016, the organisation's president Dick Tofel said.\n\nAnd recurring monthly donations jumped from $4,500 in October, just before the election, to $104,000 in January.\n\nProPublica adopted a new slogan after White House strategist Stephen Bannon suggested the press \"keep its mouth shut\"\n\n\"It seems that the election has caused a large number of people to want to take various forms of civic action. We're very flattered that many of them think of ProPublica - and investigative journalism in the public interest generally - in that connection,\" Mr Tofel said.\n\nHe stressed it was not clear that this was tied to \"particular steps\" taken by Mr Trump, but noted that donations picked up in January from inauguration day.\n\nBut the same bump was seen in private newspapers too.\n\nThe (\"failing, wrong, so false\") New York Times, which the president said should fix its \"dwindling\" numbers, actually added 276,000 digital subscriptions in the last quarter - the biggest jump since it brought in a paywall.\n\nAnd the (\"angry, boring\") Washington Post reported almost 100 million users on its website in both October and November last year, \"greatly exceeding previous traffic records\".\n\nMeanwhile, subscriptions to the Wall Street Journal jumped 300% on the day after the election, and it reported 70% growth in new digital subscriptions year on year.\n\nUS voters chose Mr Trump - he won by a large margin in the electoral college system although he did not win the popular vote. Despite a slip in approval ratings, he appears to retain plenty of popular support.\n\nIt's still too early to know if his policies have had a positive impact, but his supporters remain steadfast.\n\nConservative news outlets such as Breitbart have surged in popularity, and Mr Trump's supporters have boycotted brands such as Kellogg's or Budweiser which are perceived to have taken a political stance against the president.\n\nThe president has directly criticised both people and companies through his Twitter account\n\nMr Trump's unique style of Twitter diplomacy, however, has had a direct negative impact on some companies.\n\nShortly after taking office, the new president tweeted that Boeing's costs for Air Force One were \"out of control\", dropping their stock value. A similar tongue-lashing on fighter jets dropped Lockheed Martin's stock by more than 4%.\n\nNow, that effect already seems to be waning - as Fortune magazine pointed out, when the president struck out at retailer Nordstrom for dropping his daughter's fashion line, its stock actually rallied.\n\nIt may be that Mr Trump's rhetoric is no longer having the effect it once did, and is becoming a normal part of politics.\n\nBut with those opposed to the president's policies vowing they won't accept the new status quo, it remains to be seen if the \"rage\" effect will end up a steady revenue stream for the next four years.", "Demonstrators spell out \"No Muslim Ban\" at a protest in Boston\n\nFederal circuit courts usually toil in anonymity. They are a legal rest stop for landmark cases on the way to the Supreme Court.\n\nBut this week it was different. All eyes were on three judges of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, who, for a brief moment, had the fate of Donald Trump's immigration order in their hands.\n\nThey were considering whether to sustain a temporary injunction preventing implementation of Mr Trump's sweeping travel ban on seven predominantly Muslim nations.\n\nOn Thursday night they gave their ruling. Mr Trump's order stayed on ice.\n\nHere are three things we learned from the ruling - and two questions that remain unanswered.\n\n1. The immigration ban is going nowhere fast\n\nThe Ninth Circuit was the Trump administration's best chance to get the president's immigration order up and running again quickly.\n\nThe three judges could have re-instated the order and closed the borders as early as Thursday night.\n\nInstead, the order remains in limbo and it's likely to take time to resolve. The Supreme Court could hear an appeal, but the chances of more than four justices agreeing to reverse the Ninth Circuit ruling seem slim.\n\nIs Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor, Stephen Breyer or Elena Kagan going to side with Mr Trump? Not likely.\n\nIf this goes back down to the district court in Seattle, where it began, the gears of justice will grind even more slowly. A trial on the merits - which is slated to happen next, pending Supreme Court action - is a slow process. Briefs need to be filed. Evidence has to be submitted. Oral arguments will be scheduled. These things can take months or even years.\n\nThat's a painful lesson Barack Obama learned in 2015, when a district court judge blocked implementation of some of his immigration reforms and the Supreme Court didn't hear the case for more than a year.\n\n2. The case will be no slam-dunk for Trump\n\nThis may seem obvious now, but on Thursday the president was fairly certain that his case was open-and-shut when he read what he viewed as the governing immigration statute to a gathering of law enforcement officers.\n\n\"You can be a lawyer, or you don't have to be a lawyer; if you were a good student in high school or a bad student in high school, you can understand this,\" he said. \"And it's really incredible to me that we have a court case that's going on so long.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Bob Ferguson: Travel ban was adopted with \"little thought, little planning, little oversight\"\n\nSome conservatives, as well, wrote that the governing laws were clear that the president has broad powers when dealing with immigration issues.\n\n\"For all except the most partisan, it is likely impossible to read the Washington state lawsuit... and not come away with the conclusion that the Trump order is on sound legal and constitutional ground.\"\n\nIn the end, however, the three justices - two appointed by Democrats and one nominated by Republican George W Bush - saw things differently. While they acknowledged the president's authority on immigration matters, they said the statute Mr Trump cited was not the final word on the matter.\n\n\"Although our jurisprudence has long counselled deference to the political branches on matters of immigration and national security, neither the Supreme Court nor our court has ever held that courts lack the authority to review executive action in those arenas for compliance with the Constitution,\" the judges wrote.\n\nIn other words, federal immigration law may have been on Mr Trump's side, but the Constitution wasn't.\n\nAt the heart of the Ninth Circuit's decision to uphold the injunction against Mr Trump's order was that it violated the constitutional due process rights of all persons in the US, regardless of their citizenship or immigration status. And time and time again the judges pointed to how the order was initially implemented as reason for keeping it on hold.\n\nThey wrote that permanent residents and lawful visa holders were not given \"constitutionally sufficient notice and an opportunity to respond\". While they noted that the Trump administration had since interpreted the order as allowing all permanent residents into the US, they were unconvinced that this new interpretation would be uniformly followed or safe from reversal.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThey said that the travel ban caused considerable harm, including the separation of families, stranding of US residents abroad and prevention of students and employees from travelling to American universities.\n\nA more measured, orchestrated rollout of the immigration order may have avoided these complications, weakening the case against it.\n\nMr Trump said on Wednesday that speed was necessary in implementing the ban because otherwise a \"whole pile of bad people, perhaps with very evil intentions\" would enter the country before border restrictions tightened.\n\nHere, however, haste may have killed his legal case.\n\nShortly after the Ninth Circuit issued its opinion, Nevada Democratic Senator Catherine Cortez Masto released a statement saying that the court \"reaffirms that President Trump's hateful and divisive executive order amounts to religious discrimination against Muslims\".\n\nWhile the decision was certainly a blow for the Trump administration, the judges were notably restrained in discussing the religious issue.\n\n\"The states' claims raise serious allegations and present significant constitutional questions,\" the judges wrote. Then they said they wouldn't consider the question further, since they had already decided the case on due process grounds.\n\nThey did offer one clue as to how they might eventually rule, however. The Trump administration had insisted that the order must be judged on its own, without taking into consideration past remarks made by Mr Trump and his supporters touting a \"Muslim ban\". The judges disagreed.\n\n\"It is well established that evidence of purpose beyond the face of the challenged law may be considered in evaluating Establishment and Equal Protection Clause claims.\"\n\nIn other words, when it comes time to consider whether the order amounted to a de facto Muslim ban, everything is on the table - Trump tweets, Rudy Giuliani diatribes and all.\n\nNow that the Ninth Circuit has rendered its decision, the ball is firmly in the Trump administration's court. They could appeal to the US Supreme Court, where the eight justices - four liberal, four conservative - can consider as much, or as little, of the ruling as they see fit.\n\nMr Trump certainly seemed to hint that this was the next step, tweeting: \"SEE YOU IN COURT, THE SECURITY OF OUR NATION IS AT STAKE!\" shortly after the ruling.\n\nThe administration could also decide to let the circuit court's decision stand and fight out the case in a full trial back in the Seattle district court. This would buy the president time to get his Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch, confirmed by the Republican-held Senate. Then, when the case eventually made its way to the high court, his chances of victory could be markedly improved.\n\nWhatever happens, it's clear that this case will be a political football. The fight will be personal, and it will be ugly.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. 'This American carnage stops right here,' Donald Trump said at his inauguration\n\nDuring his presidential campaign, and since taking office, Donald Trump has repeatedly warned of the dangers facing the United States.\n\n\"I have learned a lot in the past two weeks,\" he told a meeting of police officers in Washington DC on Wednesday.\n\n\"Terrorism is a far greater threat than the people of our country understand. I'm going to take care of it.\"\n\nHis comments came as the legal battle continued over his travel ban on people from seven Muslim-majority nations. Not putting the ban in place would mean the US \"can never have the security and safety to which we are entitled\", he said on Twitter.\n\nOn Wednesday, he also lamented inner-city violence, as well as the killing of police officers.\n\nIt is a vision of an America full of danger, with multiple threats on many fronts, encapsulated by the new president's inaugural address referencing \"American carnage\". But is it correct?\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. In July 2016, the BBC's More or Less programme investigated the unreliable numbers around police shootings in the USA.\n\n\"The number of officers shot and killed in the line of duty last year increased by 56% from the year before,\" President Trump said on Wednesday. And the statistic is accurate, unlike some others he has quoted in the past.\n\nThe number of officers shot and killed in the line of duty did indeed jump 56%, from 41 in 2015 to 64 last year - that's according to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.\n\nIt is a stark statistic. Starker still is the fact that 21 of those officers were killed in ambush-style shootings, a 163% increase on the previous year.\n\nHowever, it would be incorrect to read from this that a wave of police shootings has swept the country. Eight of those killings were in two assaults in 10 days in July 2016, in Dallas, Texas and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and occurred in the context of protests against police killings of African-Americans.\n\n\"Last year in Dallas, police officers were targeted for execution - think of this, whoever heard of this?\" President Trump told the meeting of police officers.\n\nBut the targeting of police officers is not in itself a new phenomenon - it is only that 2016 had higher numbers than before. And statistics show that officers are still more likely to be shot dead responding to a domestic disturbance than any other incident.\n\nIn fact, if you look at the bigger picture, police deaths on duty have been dropping for some time.\n\nThe worst year for police deaths was 1930, when 307 died. More recently, there was a peak of 241 in 2001, largely due to the 11 September attacks.\n\nBut between 2011 and 2013, there was an almost 40% drop in police fatalities - from 177 to 109. The numbers have crept up again in the years since - up 10% in 2016 to 135 - but there is an overall pattern of decline, with the numbers now down to the levels of the 1950s.\n\nHaving said that, the likelihood of a police officer being shot dead is far higher than that of a member of the public being killed by the police.\n\nRead more: How many police die every year?\n\n\"Right now, many communities in America are facing a public safety crisis,\" President Trump told police in Washington on Wednesday. \"Murders in 2015 experienced their largest single-year increase in nearly half a century.\n\nHis statement is factually correct (though he has often, wrongly, said that the murder rate was the highest it has been in nearly half a century, and even attacked the press on Tuesday for not reporting this falsehood.)\n\nThere was a 10.8% jump in nationwide murder rates from 2014 to 2015, and that represents the biggest year-to-year increase since 1970-71, according to the fact-checking website Politifact.\n\nBut it is again important to look at the longer-term trend.\n\nThe number of reported murders and rapes across the country did indeed increase from 2014 to 2015, as did robberies.\n\nBut all are still below the levels they were at 10 years ago - and are respectively 13%, 6% and 34% lower than 20 years ago (even though the population of the US has increased by 55 million in that time).\n\nThe picture is more mixed in large cities, however.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. In September 2016, Donald Trump said some US inner cities were more dangerous than Afghanistan - the BBC's More or Less programme investigated his claim.\n\nLast month, The Economist magazine, having obtained an early look at the 2016 FBI data for violence in 50 US cities, showed that there were four broad trends in play.\n\nMurder rates are stable in 13 of the 50 cities, including Los Angeles and New York, which saw 11 days without a murder in 2015.\n\nIn 15 other cities, including Houston and Las Vegas, murder rates are low but increasing. In another nine, including Philadelphia and Detroit, they are high but stable. And in 13, including Indianapolis and Chicago, they are high and rising. (You can read The Economist's analysis here).\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Life and death on the lost streets of Chicago\n\nIn Chicago, murders rose sharply last year, with more than 760 last year compared with 473 the year before. Up to then, there had been a steady fall in the number of murders since a peak of the early 70s.\n\nMr Trump has repeatedly used the city as an example. \"In Chicago, more than 4,000 people were shot last year alone and the rate so far this year has been even higher. What is going on in Chicago?\" he said on Wednesday.\n\nLast month, he even threatened to send federal agents into the city if the violence did not subside.\n\nBut again, worrying though recent increases in violence in some cities may be, it is critical to look at how those increases fit in to a longer-term trend.\n\nAmes Grawert, of the Brennan Center for Justice, co-authored a report into crime rates in US cities, and spoke to the BBC's More or Less programme. \"If you look at crime rates in American cities in the past 30 years, even with the recent uptick in murders in some cities, we are very far below where we used to be with murder rates in big cities like New York and Los Angeles.\"\n\nRead more (from 2015): Why have cities' murder rates increased?\n\nPresident Trump, when he announced the travel restrictions last month, said it was to \"keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the US\". The restrictions, now in legal limbo, affected citizens from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen - the measures also blocked Syrian refugees from arriving in the US.\n\nSo how big a problem is terrorism in the US? First of all, Mr Trump, like other presidents before him, measures the danger of terrorism to the US according to what could happen, rather than what has happened. His comment \"I have learned a lot in the past two weeks\" indicated he had specific information on the threat to the US.\n\nAnd secondly, it all depends on what your definition of what terrorism is (more on that later on).\n\nRead more: Trump says terror attacks 'under-reported': Is that true?\n\nOne study, by the libertarian Cato Institute, details 3,432 murders committed on US soil between 1975 and late 2015 that it says can be classified as terrorist attacks. Of those, 88% were committed by foreign-born terrorists who entered the country (the 2,977 deaths in the 11 September attacks make up a large chunk of these fatalities).\n\nBut does this mean Americans should be worried about being caught up in a terror attack caused by a foreign-born national? Take a look at the numbers the Cato Institute came up with to provide context:\n\nThe report's author, Alex Nowrasteh, concluded the number of Americans killed in a terror attack by someone from one of the seven countries on Mr Trump's list, between 1975 and 2015, was zero.\n\n(He does point out that six Iranians, six Sudanese, two Somalis, two Iraqis, and one Yemeni were convicted of attempting or carrying out terrorist attacks on US soil in that time).\n\nOnly three deaths were attributed to refugees in the 40 years spanned by the report - and those were caused by three Cuban terrorists in the 1970s.\n\nFor some perspective, here are some other causes of death in the US in 2015 alone:\n\nFar more dangerous than terrorism to Americans are painkillers.\n\nThe leading cause of accidental death in the United States is now overdoses from painkillers - opioid medicines kill 60 people a day, or 22,000 a year, according to the National Safety Council.\n\nBut it is impossible to discuss the threat from terrorism without looking at how the US defines terrorism itself - and therein lies the problem. Even the FBI says there is \"no single, universally accepted, definition of terrorism\". The State Department defines terrorism as \"premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against non-combatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents\".\n\nIn that case, there is an argument that shootings should be defined as terrorism: those such as the racially-motivated killing of nine black worshippers in South Carolina by a self-avowed white supremacist, the murder of 26 people including children in Newtown, Connecticut, and the murder of 12 people in a Colorado cinema.\n\nIf the number of people killed in shootings in the US were considered terrorism - at least 15,055 people were shot dead last year, according to the Gun Violence Archive - then the likelihood of an American being killed in an act of terrorism would increase substantially.", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nLondon 2012 gold medallist Mariya Savinova has been stripped of her 800m title and banned until 2019 after being found guilty of doping.\n\nShe has had her results from July 2010 to August 2013 annulled but has 45 days to appeal against the decision.\n\nThe Russian beat South Africa's Caster Semenya into second at the London Olympics and the 2011 Worlds in Daegu.\n\nSavinova, 31, also beat Britain's Jenny Meadows into to bronze at the 2010 European Championships.\n\nBoth Semenya and Meadows could now have their medals upgraded.\n\nSavinova has also lost her 800m silver from the 2013 Worlds and her four-year suspension will be backdated to 2015.\n\nThe case against Savinova was brought by the IAAF based upon her biological passport, which the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas) has used to make its decision.\n\nA Cas statement read: \"On the basis of clear evidence, including the evidence derived from her biological passport (ABP), Mariya Savinova is found to have been engaged in using doping from 26 July 2010 (the eve of the European Championship in Barcelona) through to 19 August 2013 (the day after the World Championship in Moscow).\n\n\"As a consequence, a four-year period of ineligibility, beginning on 24 August 2015, has been imposed and all results achieved between 26 July 2010 and 19 August 2013, are disqualified and any prizes, medals, prize and appearance money forfeited.\"\n\nSavinova was one of five Russian athletes named in a World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) report into doping.\n\nShe has not raced since 2013 after being suspended during an investigation sparked by the release of undercover footage filmed by whistleblower Yuliya Stepanova.\n\nShould the International Olympic Committee decide to reallocate the medals from the London 2012 final, Semenya would be awarded a second gold after she claimed the 800m title in Rio last summer.\n\nSavinova is now the second Russian finalist from that race to have been retrospectively banned - after Yelena Arzhakova - while a third - bronze medallist Ekaterina Poistogova - is also under investigation for doping.\n\nSavinova is one of Russia's best known middle-distance athletes - she is now one of Russia's best known drugs cheats.\n\nIt means in effect Savinova loses her London 2012 gold medal and Caster Semenya will likely be promoted from silver to gold.\n\nSo while there are consequences for Savinova, the world of sporting detection is once again showing it will catch up with athletes if they have cheated even if it is some years after the event.", "Moor Park Health and Leisure Centre where you can swim and also see a doctor\n\n\"My colleagues think I'm mad,\" says Dr Andrew Weatherburn.\n\nAs a consultant in geriatric medicine, he is an unlikely addition to the Moor Park Health and Leisure Centre, where schoolchildren queue for swimming lessons and people grab coffees between Zumba lessons.\n\n\"Moving out of the hospital and into the community is the best thing I've done as a consultant.\"\n\nDr Weatherburn works on the Fylde Coast, an NHS Vanguard area. The local health service here is pioneering a new model of working, which could become a blueprint for the rest of the NHS.\n\nBlackpool and Fylde suffer from many of the problems that plague the NHS nationally. With constantly increasing demand and a shortfall in supply, the local services have been under considerable strain for years.\n\nAdd to that a higher than average elderly population, which is set to double by 2030, and the local health service begins to look unsustainable.\n\n\"It's about 3% of our population that use about 50% of the resources,\" says Dr Tony Naughton, the head of the clinical commissioning group in Fylde.\n\nAs a part-time GP, he understands the need for an accurate diagnosis so their first innovation was to use patient data to work out who was actually using the services.\n\nThey were predominantly elderly and tended to suffer from more than one long-term condition. Rather than waiting for these patients to arrive at A&E, the Fylde Coast district set up the Extensive Care system, targeting resources on actively trying to keep them healthier.\n\nRather than providing temporary fixes every time a patient is in hospital, this model takes a more holistic approach.\n\nThe Extensive Care clinic allows patients to have all their health needs addressed together\n\n\"These patients were going off to see a kidney specialist and then a diabetic specialist and then a heart specialist. They had a career in attending hospital, whereas this service wraps all of those outpatients appointments together and looks at each person as an individual, rather than as a heart or as a kidney.\"\n\nDr Naughton explains that to make this more joined up system work, it was taken out of the rigid departmental structure of the hospital and placed firmly in the community.\n\nDr Weatherburn, at his clinic in the leisure centre, believes the benefits are obvious. \"I definitely know my patients much better now.\"\n\nWhile in hospital, he would have had about 10 minutes to assess a patient's most urgent needs. Now every patient who is referred to them receives a thorough two-hour assessment with a group of medics, who then hold a meeting to come up with a co-ordinated treatment plan for each one.\n\nThis system uses welfare workers as well as medics to manage each patients needs.\n\n\"Somebody may come in with a chest infection, but that maybe because they're not eating properly or they have a damp house. Now, I can't write a prescription for a dry house, but I can put them in touch with someone who can help with their housing problem,\" explains Dr Naughton.\n\nThe welfare workers spend more time with the patients, helping them with broader social issues and finding ways of managing their illnesses at home. Their job is really to empower patients to take control of their own health.\n\nA thorough assessment means the team can come up with a co-ordinated treatment plan\n\nDr Weatherburn says it is working. \"It's often the little things that made the big difference. It's not the big medical interventions and fancy tests, it's helping with loneliness, and helping the carers and families as well.\"\n\nThis may sound expensive, but the scheme should pay for itself. The new welfare workers are not medically trained so employment costs are lower, but their intervention can solve underlying problems which keep people coming back to A&E.\n\nThe results are certainly impressive. After a year-and-a-half of trialling the scheme, the Fylde Coast has already seen 13% fewer attendances at A&E, and 23-24% fewer outpatient attendances.\n\nWhen Lily Greenwood's husband, Peter, left hospital after suffering from a stroke, they were referred to the Extensive Care service.\n\n\"The doctor sent us here. We didn't want to come, but it's been the best thing ever.\"\n\nAlthough Lily wasn't the patient, the team's approach of looking at every aspect of the patient's well-being, meant that attention turned to 80-year-old Lily too, as Peter's sole carer. The team helped her to take control.\n\n\"It took its toll on me at the beginning, but now, I just feel that with coming here, we can cope with it.\"\n\nThe Extensive Care system helped look after Lily Greenwood's needs as well as those of her husband\n\nThe team filled in all the forms that Lily had been baffled by, they helped her to apply for the extra benefits she was entitled to and, most importantly, they helped her to manage her husband's condition.\n\nThey even introduced her to local support groups for carers so that she no longer feels alone or overwhelmed.\n\n\"The nurses to me are friends. They have time for you. We're a lot happier now. I feel I can cope with Peter now.\"\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.\n\nGiven their success in reducing pressure on A&E departments, Blackpool and Fylde applied a similarly local, holistic model of care to a broader section of the population.\n\nEvery neighbourhood received its own dedicated team of therapists, nurses and welfare workers who could treat patients at home in order to reduce the pressures on GP surgeries.\n\n\"It's a cultural change. We don't just do the therapy and rush to the next appointment, we think about a patient's overall well-being.\"\n\nLucy Leonard is part of a neighbourhood team in Blackpool. Having been an occupational therapist for 17 years, she knows the NHS is notoriously resistant to change. Yet, she insists, this system is being embraced by patients and practitioners alike.\n\n\"Sometimes people can feel a bit frightened and threatened by change, especially when they worry about their professional identity and being asked to do new roles, but really, it's just about putting the patient at the heart of what we do.\"\n\nThis system has been a success on the Fylde Coast, and the principles could be replicated across the country. By investing in a more holistic approach, not only has the pressure on hospitals and GP surgeries been eased but, vitally, people are healthier and better able to manage their health too.", "One of Germany's most senior banking regulators has warned London that it is likely to lose its role as \"the gateway to Europe\" for vital financial services.\n\nDr Andreas Dombret, executive board member for the German central bank, the Bundesbank, said that even if banking rules were \"equivalent\" between the UK and the rest of the European Union, that was \"miles away from access to the single market\".\n\nMr Dombret's comments were made at a private meeting of German businesses and banks organised by Boston Consulting Group in Frankfurt earlier this week.\n\nThey give a clear - and rare - insight into Germany's approach as Britain starts the process of leaving the European Union.\n\nAnd that approach is hawkish.\n\n\"The current model of using London as a gateway to Europe is likely to end,\" Mr Dombret said at the closed-door event.\n\nMr Dombret made it clear that he did not support a \"confrontational approach\" to future relations between the UK's substantial financial services sector and the EU.\n\nBut he argued there was \"intense uncertainty\" about how the Brexit negotiations would progress and significant hurdles to overcome.\n\nThe Bundesbank executive, who is responsible for banking and financial supervision, said he was concerned that the trend towards internationally agreed standards was under pressure.\n\nAnd that Britain might try to become the \"Singapore of Europe\" following Brexit, by cutting taxes and relaxing financial regulations to encourage banks and businesses to invest in the UK.\n\n\"Brexit fits into a certain trend we are seeing towards renationalisation,\" he said.\n\n\"I strongly believe that this negatively affects the well-being of us all.\n\n\"We should therefore invest all our efforts in containing these trends.\n\n\"This holds for the private sector as well as for supervisors and policymakers in the EU and the UK.\n\n\"Some voices are calling for deregulation after Brexit,\" he continued.\n\n\"One such example is the 'financial centre strategy' that is being discussed as a fallback option for the City of London.\n\n\"Parts of this recipe are low corporate taxes and loose financial regulation.\n\n\"We should not forget that strictly supervised and well-capitalised financial systems are the most successful ones in the long run.\n\n\"The EU will not engage in a regulatory race to the bottom.\"\n\nAt present, London operates as the financial services capital for the EU.\n\nMore than a third of all wholesale banking between larger businesses, governments and pension funds takes place in Britain.\n\nNearly 80% of all foreign exchange transactions in the EU are carried out in the UK.\n\nThe business is valued in trillions of pounds, with billions of pounds being traded every day to insure companies, for example, against interest rate changes, currency fluctuations and inflation risk.\n\nIf there were significant changes to the present free-trading relationship between Britain and the EU, that could have a major impact on the value of the financial services to the UK and on the one million people employed in the sector.\n\nMr Dombret said it would also have an impact on German businesses which use London as a source of funding.\n\nSome banks are hoping that, with the government looking to fully leave the single market, an \"equivalence regime\" can be agreed where the UK and the EU recognise each other's regulatory standards.\n\nThat would allow cross-border transactions to continue with few regulatory hurdles.\n\nBut Mr Dombret said that equivalence had \"major drawbacks\" and was not an \"ideal substitute\".\n\n\"I am very sceptical about whether equivalence decisions offer a sound footing for banks' long-term location decisions,\" he said.\n\n\"Equivalence is miles away from single market access.\n\n\"Equivalence decisions are reversible, so banks would be forced to adjust to a new environment in the event that supervisory frameworks are no longer deemed equivalent.\n\n\"These lead to the overall conclusion that equivalence decisions are no ideal substitute for passporting [which allows banks in one EU country to operate in another as part of the single market].\"\n\nWhatever the arrangements, Mr Dombret said that a \"transition period\" would ease the pressure of change and reduce what he described as the \"earnings risk\".\n\n\"Let me say that I expect London to remain an important financial centre,\" Mr Dombret told the audience.\n\n\"Nevertheless, I also expect many UK-based market participants to move at least some business units to the EU in order to hedge against all possible outcomes of the negotiations.\"\n\nOne of the biggest EU-focused businesses in the UK is euro-denominated clearing - insurance products called derivatives, which allow companies to protect themselves from movements in currencies, interest rates and inflation.\n\nThree-quarters of the multi-trillion-pounds-a-day market is executed in London and a recent report from the accountancy firm EY estimated that nearly 83,000 jobs could be lost in Britain over the next seven years if clearing has to move to an EU member state following Brexit.\n\nMr Dombret said it was difficult to see how euro-clearing could remain in London, as it depended on the \"acceptance of the European Court of Justice\" as the arbiter of the thousands of legal contracts signed between counter-parties, many of which last for years.\n\nBritain has made it clear that it does not want to be bound by ECJ judgements once it has left the EU.\n\n\"I see strong arguments for having the bulk of the clearing business inside the euro area,\" Mr Dombret said.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One, Radio 5 live, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nWales wing George North says he will be fit to face Scotland in round three of the Six Nations after being \"gutted\" to miss out their defeat by England.\n\nAlex Cuthbert's return for North was confirmed an hour before kick-off. North had a dead leg suffered in Wales' win against Italy six days earlier.\n\n\"A six-day turnaround with a pretty decent dead leg was always going to be tough,\" said North.\n\n\"Two weeks time, Scotland in mind. I'll be fit to go again.\"\n\nNorth had been named on the team sheet handed out to the media before kick-off, but told the Welsh Rugby Union's television service he had been ruled out on the morning of the game.\n\nHowever, Dan Biggar was passed fit to start the match after picking up a rib injury in Rome.\n\nProps Rob Evans and Tomas Francis were the other two changes from the 33-7 win over Italy in Rome.\n• None Sign up for rugby union news alerts and get Six Nations news the moment it breaks\n• None How to follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n• None Bright lights and big hitters - take our rugby quiz\n\nBath number eight Taulupe Faletau, who had not played since Christmas Eve, was on Wales' bench for Wales, taking the place of Ospreys forward James King.\n\nIt meant a vote of confidence for the starting back-row of Sam Warburton, Justin Tipuric and Ross Moriarty.\n\nThe roof at the Principality Stadium was open for the match at the request of England coach Eddie Jones, who said he was ready for Welsh 'shenanigans' after he named his team to face Wales.\n\nHowley wanted the roof closed on the other hand and said he thought that would be the case on Thursday lunchtime, before England confirmed it would remain open.\n\nBoth teams have to agree for the roof to be closed.\n\nWales in the 2017 Six Nations", "The star's music is currently withheld from most major streaming services\n\nAfter months of rumour, it has been confirmed Prince's music will become available to stream this weekend.\n\nSongs like Purple Rain, Kiss and Little Red Corvette, currently only available on Tidal, will appear on Sunday, ahead of the Grammy Awards.\n\nSpotify, the world's biggest streaming platform, told the BBC that all of Prince's albums from 1978 to 1996 would be part of the deal.\n\nThe BBC understands the music will also arrive on Apple Music and Napster.\n\nPrince was the ninth-most successful recording artist of 2016, despite his most famous recordings being withheld from those services,\n\nPrince, one of the biggest stars of the 1980s, was both a pioneer and a sceptic when it came to putting his music online.\n\nIn 2001 he began a monthly online subscription service, the NPG Music Club, that earned him a Webby lifetime achievement award in 2006.\n\nOrganisers said the star \"forever altered the landscape of online musical distribution\" and \"reshaped the relationship between artist and fan\".\n\nA day later, he shut the website down.\n\nAlbums becoming available for streaming include 1999, Purple Rain and Sign O The Times\n\nIn later years, he aggressively pursued people who put unauthorised clips of his music and performances on YouTube and pulled his music from all streaming sites except Tidal.\n\nHe wasn't being capricious. Prince was a life-long advocate of artists' rights and would simply pick up his ball and go home when he felt business terms were unfavourable.\n\nIf he were alive today, it is unlikely his catalogue would be appearing on streaming services.\n\nHowever, his estate potentially owes $100 million (£80 million) in taxes, making new business deals a matter of urgency.\n\nAs well as the streaming announcement, which will be made official on Sunday, Prince's team have arranged to license his unreleased recordings to Universal Music.\n\nThe company will be able to exploit his vast archives of live recordings, alternate takes and unheard songs.\n\nThey also gain the rights to the 25 albums he released after parting ways with Warner Bros in 1996, which include hits like Musicology, 3121 and Emancipation.\n\nPaisley Park - Prince's home and recording complex - contains a \"vault\" of unreleased recordings\n\nSpeaking to Billboard magazine, Charles Koppelman and L Londell McMillan - special advisers to Prince's estate - said they had been inundated with requests from people who wanted to honour the star's legacy.\n\n\"Whether it's a motion picture, documentaries, Broadway, Cirque du Soleil - all of those are opportunities that I think are in the future for Londell and me and the estate to work on,\" said Koppelman.\n\n\"Prince has amazing content beyond the music,\" added McMillan. \"There are [filmed recordings of] the most amazing performances that we haven't even begun to discuss.\"\n\nMcMillan, a music industry lawyer who worked with Prince for 12 years and acted as his manager for some of that time, said he had no intent to disrespect the musician's memory.\n\n\"Some people may say. 'Why are you making all these deals? Prince wouldn't make these deals,'\" he said.\n\n\"Prince never wanted to lose ownership and control of his creations, so we place ownership and control over dealmaking [in order to] preserve the assets and stay within Prince's brand values.\n\n\"As I have told everybody, there's not gonna be a big IRS truck backing up to Paisley Park saying 'I'll take those assets!'\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Campaigners are challenging the government's handling of the arrival of unaccompanied child refugees from Europe, at a High Court hearing.\n\nWe look at the background to the row, with the help of BBC correspondent Dominic Casciani.", "The day after his hip replacement, Georg Thoma was cheerfully sitting up in bed.\n\nLike most Germans, the businessman pays into compulsory health insurance.\n\nHe contributes 7% of his salary before tax and his employers match that amount.\n\nIn return, patients get access to care which is so rapid that national waiting data is not collected.\n\n\"The doctor said to me that I have to decide when I get the operation. Normally it takes three or four weeks.\"\n\nGeorg travels for work to the UK and tells me he was astonished to hear that patients can sometimes wait months for a similar routine operation.\n\nGermany's spending on health care is relatively high, just over 11% of its wealth, compared to 9.8% in the UK and it has more doctors and hospital beds per patient than the UK.\n\nGeorg's operation was carried out in an 80-bed hospital in one of the Black Forest towns in the south-west region Baden Wurttemberg.\n\nBut even in Germany's well-funded system, the financial viability of a hospital this small is not guaranteed.\n\nA group of doctors in this area is trying to manage costs in an experiment that has attracted interest from the UK.\n\nMartin Wetzel, a GP for 25 years, explains they have done a deal with big insurance funds to make prevention a priority.\n\n\"I have more time - and it needs more time to explain to patients what I'm doing and why. So my consultations changed from an eye wink to an average of 15 minutes,\" he says.\n\nDuring that time patients might be offered a range of interventions to improve their health provided locally, which frees up time for the GP.\n\nThese include subsidised gym sessions, access to different sports and nutrition advice as well as screening programmes to reduce loneliness as well as increasing healthiness.\n\nIt is being run by a company called Gesundes Kinzigtal in which the doctors are majority shareholders.\n\nAlready a couple of years into their 10-year project, they say healthcare is costing 6% less than you would expect for the population.\n\nThey are trying to improve data sharing and believe hospital treatment can be reduced further.\n\nMuch of the vision comes from its chief executive Helmut Hildebrandt, a pharmacist and public health expert.\n\nHe says the health insurance funds have tended to concentrate on short-term cost control measures, rather than improving the health of their patients.\n\n\"At the moment the economy in Germany runs so well they don't have a problem. But in the long run every politician or administrator knows in the next 10 or 20 years the system will run into a crisis.\"\n\nHe fears that could undermine the commitment to the health insurance covering most Germans, with a risk of richer people opting out of it.\n\nWhat Gesundes Kinzigtal is trying to do is similar to some integrated care projects in the NHS.\n\nThere is more money in the German system, but arguably more waste too.\n\nThe Caesarean rate is higher, so is the use of MRI for diagnosis and the length of hospital stay.\n\nPatients waiting to see a GP in Thuringia\n\nAnd in many ways there has been little incentive for change in a system where doctors still have a high degree of influence and life expectancy in Germany is not higher than the UK.\n\nBernadette Klapper heads the health section of the Robert Bosch Foundation, which funds social policy innovation.\n\n\"I think we should get more for the money we spend inside healthcare. While we see other countries spending less, but having the same results as us, there's something wrong.\"\n\nGermany is ageing very rapidly, only just behind Japan in forecast for its population profile.\n\nBut the health system is changing slowly and the Bosch foundation is trying to encourage more small health centres.\n\nMany doctors in Germany set up in practice on their own, as GPs or out-of-hospital specialists, but as cities are more popular that leaves rural areas with a shortage.\n\nTravel east to the wide open rolling countryside of Thuringia and you get a glimpse of the challenge.\n\nFive years ago they were 200 GPs short of what was needed in this region.\n\nIt has taken grants, and offers of help with housing and arranging childcare, to reduce that to 60.\n\nAnnette Rommel is head of the doctors' association in the village of Mechterstadt and says: \"A few years ago we arranged for specially-trained nurses to make home visits and for more teamwork with nurses and doctors together.\"\n\nIt is similar to the way many community nurses work in the UK, but in Germany this is a recent development.\n\nNurses have a much more restricted role.\n\nOn a visit I saw a nurse and a carer, who is paid for out of the long-term care insurance that Germany introduced 20 years ago, check up on an elderly couple.\n\nIt has reduced the amount families have to pay, although social care can still be a financial worry.\n\nThere is enough money in the German system to make trying new approaches to healthcare a little easier.\n\nMost patients feel they can see a doctor easily, so for example the number of visits to the equivalent of A&E is very low compared to the UK.\n\nWhile out of hours care has been reorganised, GPs and other out of hospital doctors are often still involved in helping provide cover on a rotation.\n\nNone of this removes the long-term worry about whether providing such rapid and easy access to care is affordable in the long term.\n\nA debate that German politicians are unlikely to begin publicly in this election year or any time soon.\n\nThe lessons for the UK are that money on its own is not the only solution, although it does ease pressure in the system considerably.\n\nFinding better co-ordinated ways of looking after patients, often elderly, with the highest health needs is a priority.\n\nAnd in Germany, despite the long-term care insurance, families still have to contribute a significant amount to looking after older people.\n\nHowever, there is a mechanism for sustainable funding for social care that is very different from the significant reductions in care budgets seen in the UK.\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.", "Raymond Briggs also created When The Wind Blows and Fungus the Bogeyman\n\nAuthor and illustrator Raymond Briggs, the creator of The Snowman, has been recognised with a lifetime achievement award by the charity BookTrust.\n\nA panel of six judges said the award recognised his \"outstanding contribution\" to children's literature.\n\nBookTrust paid tribute to the impact his \"captivating and inspiring work\" has had on children and adults alike.\n\nBriggs, who also created When The Wind Blows and Fungus the Bogeyman, said it was \"an incredible honour\".\n\n\"It's lovely to be given an award for all my life achievements,\" he said.\n\n\"Drawing, telling stories and sharing these adventures is something I've always been passionate about.\n\nRaymond Briggs designed six Christmas stamps for the Royal Mail in 2004\n\n\"Being awarded the BookTrust Lifetime Achievement Award is an incredible honour and I'm so glad I've been able to make such an impression on people.\"\n\nIn an interview with BBC Radio 4's Today programme, he added: \"It's a bit funny, it being called a lifetime achievement because it implies that you're at the end, you've had your lifetime, we want it tidied up, here's your award, get out.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Raymond Briggs discusses publishing more work and his feelings about Christmas on the Today programme\n\nHe also said he is not a fan of Christmas, despite being so heavily associated with The Snowman.\n\n\"I don't like Christmas at all, I don't think anybody does,\" he said.\n\n\"It's full of anxiety, 'Have I got enough, have I spent enough, have I spent so much, we had so and so last year so we have to have so and so this year,' I can't bear it really. I get letters from people all the time saying 'We agree with you'.\"\n\nEthel and Ernest was screened on the BBC at Christmas\n\nRaymond Briggs has that gift only relatively few artists possess, which is an ability to produce work that touches people of all ages and backgrounds.\n\nBe it The Snowman - now a Christmas perennial - or Ethel and Ernest - the graphic novel charting his parent's life - the characters he portrays are invariably imbued with a soulfulness that makes you, the reader, care deeply about their story.\n\nHis style as an illustrator and storyteller is understated in tone but bold in approach.\n\nDifficult subjects are not ducked; the shade accentuates the light.\n\nFor each new generation introduced to his Fungus the Bogeyman, or Father Christmas, there lies in store a lifetime of literary and artistic discoveries produced by the unsentimental, but sympathetic hand of Raymond Briggs.\n\nBriggs' other most noted works include Father Christmas, Ug, The Bear, Gentleman Jim, and Ethel and Ernest.\n\nThe panel of judges included children's laureate Chris Riddell, How to Train Your Dragon creator Cressida Cowell and ex-director of the human rights group Liberty, Baroness Chakrabarti.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Pimlico Plumbers boss Charlie Mullins says his firm is \"very likely\" to appeal after losing a significant court case.\n\nIt comes after the Court of Appeal agreed with a tribunal that Garry Smith was entitled to basic workers' rights, following a heart attack, even though he'd been technically self-employed.\n\nCharlie Mullins told the BBC that Mr Smith had chosen to be self-employed, meaning he was paid twice as much, but then would not receive worker benefits.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nArsene Wenger has told Ian Wright his time as Arsenal boss is \"coming to the end\", claims the Gunners legend.\n\nWenger has managed Arsenal since October 1996 and won the last of his three Premier League titles in 2004.\n\nThe 67-year-old's contract expires at the end of the season.\n\n\"I get the impression that that's it,\" ex-Arsenal striker Wright told BBC Radio 5 live. \"He looks tired. You just feel that he looks winded. I feel that he will go at the end of the season.\"\n\nArsenal's hopes of winning the championship this season took a huge blow when Saturday's 3-1 loss at league leaders Chelsea left them 12 points behind the Blues.\n\nWright says he spoke with Wenger on Thursday night.\n\n\"He actually mentioned that he is coming to the end. I have never heard him say that before,\" said the 53-year-old.\n\n\"I was with him for a few hours. He didn't say to me, 'I'm leaving at the end of the season', but I get the impression, looking at him, that that's it.\"\n\nWright added: \"The players have let him down badly.\n\n\"If he does leave at the end of the season, there will be a lot of changes. They should have a long, hard look at themselves. He has been so faithful to his team, it has been misplaced.\"\n\nSome fans have called for Wenger to leave, with one holding up a poster at Stamford Bridge telling the Frenchman: \"Enough is enough. Time to go.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nThe Football Association of Wales will be appealing against sanctions imposed by Fifa for displaying poppies during a World Cup qualifier.\n\nThe FAW were fined 20,000 Sfr (£15,694) following commemorations prior to Wales' World Cup qualifier against Serbia in November.\n\nFootball's governing body took action against because fans wore poppies in the stands and the armed forces held bunches of poppies at the side of the pitch.\n\n\"The Football Association of Wales can confirm that it has received written reasons from Fifa's disciplinary committee relating to sanctions imposed during our World Cup qualifier against Serbia on 12 November, 2016,\" the FAW said in a statement.\n\n\"Following this, the FAW have now informed FIFA of our intention to appeal the decision.\"\n\nFifa also fined the national associations of England, Northern Ireland and Scotland for displaying poppies.\n\nThe Scottish FA confirmed they will be appealing against Fifa sanctions that followed Scotland players wearing poppies at Wembley.\n\nEngland's Football Association have also indicated they will appeal against the fine of 45,000 Swiss francs (£35,311).", "A tribunal found courier Maggie Dewhurst should be classed as a worker\n\nWhat is the so-called \"gig\" economy, a phrase increasingly in use, and seemingly so in connection with employment disputes?\n\nAccording to one definition, it is \"a labour market characterised by the prevalence of short-term contracts or freelance work, as opposed to permanent jobs\".\n\nAnd - taking opposing partisan viewpoints - it is either a working environment that offers flexibility with regard to employment hours, or... it is a form of exploitation with very little workplace protection.\n\nThe latest attempt to bring a degree of legal clarity to the employment status of people in the gig economy has been playing out in the Court of Appeal.\n\nA London firm, Pimlico Plumbers, on Friday lost its appeal against a previous ruling that said one of its long-serving plumbers was a worker - entitled to basic rights, including holiday pay - rather than an independent contractor.\n\nLike other cases of a similar nature, such as those involving Uber and Deliveroo, the outcome will now be closely scrutinised for what it means regarding the workplace rights of the millions of people employed in the gig economy in the UK.\n\nIn the gig economy, instead of a regular wage, workers get paid for the \"gigs\" they do, such as a food delivery or a car journey.\n\nIn the UK it's estimated that five million people are employed in this type of capacity.\n\nProponents of the gig economy claim that people can benefit from flexible hours, with control over how much time they can work as they juggle other priorities in their lives.\n\nWorkers in the gig economy may be delivering meals\n\nIn addition, the flexible nature often offers benefits to employers, as they only pay when the work is available, and don't incur staff costs when the demand is not there.\n\nMeanwhile, workers in the gig economy are classed as independent contractors.\n\nThat means they have no protection against unfair dismissal, no right to redundancy payments, and no right to receive the national minimum wage, paid holiday or sickness pay.\n\nIt is these aspects that are proving contentious.\n\nIn the past few months two tribunal hearings have gone against employers looking to classify staff as independent contractors.\n\nLast October Uber drivers in the UK won the right to be classed as workers rather than independent contractors.\n\nThe ruling by a London employment tribunal meant drivers for the ride-hailing app would be entitled to holiday pay, paid rest breaks and the national minimum wage.\n\nUber is appealing against the tribunal finding against it\n\nThe GMB union described the decision as a \"monumental victory\" for some 40,000 drivers in England and Wales. In December, Uber launched an appeal against the ruling that it had acted unlawfully.\n\nAnd in January this year, a tribunal found that Maggie Dewhurst, a courier with logistics firm City Sprint, should be classed as a worker rather than independent contractor, entitling her to basic rights.\n\nAnd, also towards the end of last year, a group of food takeaway couriers working for Deliveroo said they were taking legal steps in the UK to gain union recognition and workers' rights.\n\nOne difference worth noting is that workers in the gig economy differ slightly from those on zero-hours contracts.\n\nThose are the - also controversial - arrangements used by companies such as Sports Direct, JD Wetherspoons and Cineworld.\n\nLike workers in the gig economy, zero-hours contractors - or casual contractors - don't get guaranteed hours or much job security from their employer.\n\nChancellor Philip Hammond is looking for effective ways to tax workers\n\nBut people on zero-hours contracts are seen as employees in some sense, as they are entitled to holiday pay. But, like those in the gig economy, they are not entitled to sick pay.\n\nMeanwhile, the Department for Business is holding an inquiry into a range of working practices - including the gig economy.\n\nThe department says it wants to ensure its employment rules are up to date to reflect \"new ways of working\".\n\nThe status of gig economy workers is of importance to the government, as last November's Autumn Statement showed for the first time how it is cutting into the government's tax take.\n\nThe Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimated that in 2020-21 it will cost the Treasury £3.5bn.\n\nChancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond said then he would look to find more effective ways to tax workers in the UK's current shifting labour environment.\n\nFor more on the gig economy listen to In The Balance: Precarious Future on BBC World Service at 09:30 GMT on Saturday, 11 February.", "La La Land? More Na Na Land according to this survey\n\nWant to get lucky this Valentine's Day? Then you had better leave show tunes off your shuffle queue.\n\nAccording to a new poll, songs from musicals are the least likely to get played in the British bedroom.\n\nMusicals came dead last in a list of the 19 genres of music that couples listen to as the lights go down.\n\nEven chamber music, thrash metal and hymns ranked higher in a survey of more than 2,000 people conducted by Birmingham's Symphony Hall.\n\nMusicals like Chicago and Cabaret are not sexy - apparently\n\nSo what musical genre was judged to have the most sex appeal? Well, it's no surprise to find it's good ol' R&B.\n\nSixteen percent of respondents chose it as their favourite bedroom music - proving once and for all that there is indeed nothing wrong with a little bump and grind.\n\nTwelve percent chose chart music, while just over one in 10 chose classic pop from the 1980s and '90s. Heaven, it seems, really is a place on earth.\n\nThe survey found that 43% of people play music while making love - though the percentage skews much higher with younger people.\n\nSixty percent of 18-24 year olds said they liked listening to music while getting intimate, as opposed to 38% of over-55s.\n\nIt also makes a difference whether you've tied the knot - or not.\n\nSixty-two percent of unmarried couples like to have something playing in the background, compared with 28% of married ones.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "June Lord, 82, is one of those helped home from hospital under the Wakefield project\n\nEvery Monday morning, in a meeting room within earshot of the bells of Wakefield cathedral, a group of healthcare workers help to stage a mini-revolution.\n\nNothing that you read in the next few minutes may strike you as particularly surprising.\n\nYet the experimental manner in which they are working together in this corner of Yorkshire is being seen as a possible way to improve healthcare across the country, and save the NHS money.\n\nAt the table is a healthcare assistant, called Kay, Karen the physiotherapist, then Jane the occupational therapist.\n\nOn the other side sit two mental health nurses both called Rachel, and finally Sue Robson - another mental health nurse who's been with the NHS for 37 years.\n\n\"I've seen many, many changes, and this is one of the most exciting,\" smiles Sue.\n\nEach Monday, they sit together and plan the care that will be offered to the mostly elderly people they are working with in a number of care homes in the Wakefield district.\n\nBecause each here brings a different specialism to the table, they can, as a group, build up a complete picture of how best to help each patient.\n\nThere is one woman they are especially worried about this week. She has fallen quite a few times, but as they talk it begins to look less like a purely physical problem.\n\n\"I carried out a physio session last week,\" says Karen.\n\nShe was \"very anxious. It was difficult to engage with her,\" adds Kay.\n\n\"So today if things don't seem to be improving we may look at discussing with the psychiatrist whether she needs a review,\" concludes Sue.\n\n\"As professionals we are linking up,\" Sue continues. \"We're discussing the case between ourselves. We have links to the GP. We have links to the mental health services and we are all working together rather than in isolation.\"\n\nMental health nurse Sue Robson says they have seen good results in Wakefield\n\nAcross the board this project in Wakefield - which at its most basic aims to get the different parts of the health service and the care system working together - is easing the pressures on the NHS and on care homes.\n\nThey have seen a sizable reduction in the number of patients who've had to go to hospital from the care homes they work in. A reduction in the use of ambulances. A reduction in the number of days patients who do go to hospital end up spending in a hospital bed.\n\nIt's both about keeping patients out of hospital in the first place, and getting them home as quickly as possible if they do need to go.\n\nIn the first nine months of 2016-17, phase one of the Wakefield Vanguard Care Homes scheme recorded:\n\nThe project has involved NHS workers training up care home staff beyond the basic first aid most already have. That gives care homes the skills they need to better diagnose what is wrong with a resident who falls ill. It is resulting in better care for patients and fewer 999 calls for an ambulance.\n\nThere are also efforts to improve people's health in the first place. A lot of work is going into making the men and women who live in care homes and \"independent living\" flats (they used to be known as sheltered accommodation) feel less isolated.\n\nSharon Carter runs one project that aims to stop the elderly feeling lonely. It's called Portrait of a Life. Essentially it's a photo and memory book that residents like 91-year-old Marjorie Smith receive.\n\nMarjorie Smith is a resident at the Croftlands independent living scheme\n\nIt helps them reminisce, it helps other older people living in the same accommodation get to know their neighbours, and it helps care staff learn about what makes the people in their care tick.\n\n\"We're finding they have a better sense of well-being as opposed to ill-being,\" says Sharon.\n\nAlong with everything else the project is doing, she says it's led to fewer people going into hospital and residential care.\n\nMany of course still do end up in hospital. And when they do Louise Lumley works at the \"getting them home\" end of the process.\n\nShe's part of Age UK's Wakefield District team, and outside Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield she's securing 82-year-old June Lord's wheelchair in the back of an adapted car. It will be a 20-minute journey home.\n\nWhen they arrive, Louise goes through a list of questions. Does June have someone who can help her in the coming days? Does she have the medicine she needs? Is there anything at home that's particularly dangerous that might need to be made safe, to prevent future injuries?\n\nThe answers will go into a database that can help tailor June's care in the coming months.\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.\n\nThere is plenty of other work besides. A local not-for-profit Housing Association sits in meetings with health staff to work out how best to improve the lives of the elderly people who rent flats from them.\n\nThey're trying to join up all the parts of the system as much as they can.\n\nEveryone here stresses it's about improving patient care. But there are savings to be made. They estimate that if they roll this project out across the whole district, by 2021 they will make a net saving of £5.3m a year.\n\nYou can download the podcast containing Matthew Price's full report for BBC Radio 4's Today programme here.", "It will take two days to lift the bridge into place\n\nThe 330ft (100m) centrepiece of Sunderland's new River Wear road bridge has begun its two-day journey being lifted in to place.\n\nThe structure, between Castletown and Pallion, weighs the equivalent of 125 double decker buses and will be supported by a 379ft (115m) pylon.\n\nDavid Abdy, project director for Sunderland City Council, said the £117m bridge was essential for the city.\n\nThe bridge and its approach roads are due to be open by 2018.\n\nIt is the first bridge to be built in the city for more than 40 years.\n\nThe bridge's pylon is twice as high as the Millennium Bridge in Gateshead and taller than Big Ben's clock tower.\n\nIt will have two lanes of traffic in each direction, plus dedicated cycle paths and footpaths along its full length.\n\nThe structure weighs the equivalent of 125 double decker buses\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The changes give sweeping new to powers Mr Erdogan\n\nA new draft constitution that significantly increases the powers of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been approved by voters in a referendum. Here, the BBC's Turkey correspondent, Mark Lowen, explains why this was such a bitterly-contested process.\n\nIn one brawl, a government MP alleged an opponent bit into his leg. In another, a plant pot was hurled across parliament. A microphone was stolen and used as a weapon. An independent MP handcuffed herself to a lectern, sparking another scuffle. The parliamentary debate on changing Turkey's constitution wasn't a mild affair.\n\nOn the surface, it might seem a proposal that would enjoy cross-party consensus: modernising Turkey's constitution that was drawn up at the behest of the once-omnipotent military after the coup of 1980.\n\nBut instead it's arguably the most controversial political change in a generation, giving sweeping powers to the country's powerful but divisive President Erdogan.\n\nThe plan turns Turkey from a parliamentary to a presidential republic. Among the numerous changes:\n\nThe government - and, principally, President Erdogan - argue that the reforms streamline decision-making and avoid the unwieldy parliamentary coalitions that have hamstrung Turkey in the past.\n\nSince the president is no longer chosen by parliament but now elected directly by the people, goes the argument, he or she should not have to contend with another elected leader (the prime minister) to enact laws.\n\nThe current system, they say, is holding back Turkey's progress. They even argue that the change could somehow end the extremist attacks that have killed more than 500 people in the past 18 months.\n\nHundreds of people have been killed in attacks in Turkey in the past 18 months\n\nA presidential system is all very well in a country with proper checks and balances like the United States, retort critics, where an independent judiciary has shown itself willing to stand up to Donald Trump and a rigorous free press calls him out on contentious policies.\n\nBut in Turkey, where judicial independence has plummeted and which now ranks 151 of 180 countries in the press freedom index of the watchdog Reporters Without Borders, an all-powerful president would spell the death knell of democracy, they say.\n\nMr Erdogan's opponents already decry his slide to authoritarianism, presiding over the world's biggest jailer of journalists and a country where some 140,000 people have been arrested, dismissed or suspended since the failed coup last year.\n\nGranting him virtually unfettered powers, said the main opposition CHP, would \"entrench dictatorship\".\n\nSince the failed coup 140,000 people have been arrested, dismissed or suspended from their jobs\n\nAhmet Kasim Han, a political scientist from Kadir Has University, said before the vote: \"It doesn't look as bad as the opposition paints it and it's definitely not as benevolent as the government depicts it.\n\n\"The real weakness is that in its hurry to pass the reform, the government hasn't really explained the 2,000 laws that would change. So it doesn't look bright, especially with this government's track record.\"\n\nHow did the referendum come to happen? The governing AK Party had to rely on parliamentary votes from the far-right MHP to lead the country to a referendum.\n\nOpposition to the reform was led by the centre-left CHP and the pro-Kurdish HDP parties, the latter of which had been portrayed by the government as linked to terrorism. Several of its MPs and the party leaders are now in prison.\n\nDevlet Bahceli, leader of the far right MHP, now supports the proposed constitutional changes\n\nAKP and MHP voters who opposed the reform might have felt pressured into voting in favour, so as not to be tarnished as supporting \"terrorists\", especially since the referendum took place under the state of emergency imposed after the attempted coup.\n\n\"Holding the vote under this state of emergency makes it susceptible to allegations that people don't feel free to say no,\" says Dr Kasim Han. \"It casts a shadow over the outcome.\"\n\nWith the detail of the constitutional reform impenetrable to many, the referendum became focused around Mr Erdogan himself: a president who elicits utmost reverence from one side of the country and intense hatred from the other.\n\nThe result will now determine the political fate of this deeply troubled but hugely important country.", "A motion of \"no confidence\" in the Football Association has been passed by MPs debating the organisation's ability to reform itself.\n\nWhile the motion is largely symbolic, MPs have warned legislation will be brought in if changes are not made.\n\nSports Minister Tracey Crouch has said the FA could lose £30m-£40m of public funding if it does not modernise.\n\nCulture, Media and Sport (CMS) Select Committee chairman Damian Collins said: \"No change is no option.\"\n• None Timeline: Calls for changes at the FA\n\nHe added: \"The FA, to use a football analogy, are not only in extra time, they are at the end of extra time, in 'Fergie time'. They are 1-0 down and if they don't pick up fairly quickly, reform will be delivered to them.\"\n\nI would have thought with the state of the NHS, the lack of building, not enough cash for defence, that [MPs] would put energy into that not the organisation of football\n\nFA chairman Greg Clarke has said he will quit if the organisation cannot win government support for its reform plans.\n\n\"I watched the debate and respect the opinions of the MPs,\" he said.\n\n\"As previously stated, we remain committed to reforming governance at the FA to the agreed timescale of the minister.\"\n\nCollins suggested ministers should intervene to overhaul English football's governing body because \"turkeys won't vote for Christmas\" and it will not reform itself.\n\nCrouch warned the FA that if it played \"Russian roulette\" with public money it will lose.\n\nThe minister also said the government would be prepared to consider legislation if the FA fails to present plans for required reforms before April. However she felt the debate - which was sparsely attended by MPs - was premature given her desire to see the FA's proposals.\n\nHow have we got here?\n\nThe committee has published two reports since 2010 recommending greater representation at the FA for fans and the grassroots game, as well as more diversity in positions of authority. It also wants to dilute the perceived dominance of the Premier League.\n\nCollins has said the FA was given six months to meet the government guidance on best practice for sports governance but had failed to do so. That guidance called for things such as a move towards gender equality on boards, more independent oversight, more accountability and term limits for office bearers.\n\nHe was joined by fellow Tories and Labour MPs - keen to ensure the \"national game\" is run correctly - in bemoaning the current state of the FA.\n\nThe cross-party motion stated that MPs have no confidence in the FA's ability to comply fully with its duties as its existing governance structures make it \"impossible for the organisation to reform itself\".\n\nIt was approved unopposed at the end of a backbench business debate, which was attended by fewer than 30 MPs.\n\nThe FA is effectively run by its own parliament, the FA Council, which has 122 members - just eight are women and only four from ethnic minorities. More than 90 of the 122 members are aged over 60.\n\nShadow sports minister Rosena Allin-Khan said: \"Not only is diversity not in the heart of the FA ,it isn't in its body, or even its soul.\"\n\nLabour MP Keith Vaz, whose constituency of Leicester East is home to the Premier League champions Leicester City, added: \"A quarter of all professional footballers are black, however only 17 of the 92 top clubs have an ethnic minority person in a senior coaching role.\"\n\nHowever, Keith Compton - one of 25 FA life vice-presidents and a director of Derbyshire FA - questioned why the FA was being discussed in Parliament.\n\n\"It is pity that the MPs have got nothing better to do,\" he told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"I would have thought with the state of the NHS, the lack of building, too many people living in boxes, not enough cash for defence, that some people would put energy into that not the organisation of football.\n\n\"Football is reforming all of the time.\"\n\nAsked whether there should be more female and ethnic minority involvement in FA decisions, he said: \"That's not really the responsibility of the council. If those people were interested enough, and we had enough people, we would have enough women and other people on the FA.\n\n\"I have heard people say supporters aren't represented but that is not true. They have one representative. People want the council to be reduced and now I am hearing it should be increased.\"\n• None FA Council member: 'Old, grey-haired men still have a lot to offer'\n\nResponding to the interview, former FA chairman David Bernstein said: \"I think if you want an argument for change, you've just heard it.\"\n\nAnd Yunus Lunat, the first Muslim to get a seat on the FA Council before leaving three years ago, said new recruits were needed.\n\n\"No-one is disputing the contribution the previous generation has made but there comes a time when you have got to recognise that you are not the most suitable people for the role,\" he said.\n\nThe debate may have been attended by fewer MPs than is needed for a full football match, but the fact a motion of no confidence in the FA was passed still gives it an embarrassing bloody nose, ramping up the pressure on the governing body.\n\nThe few MPs who spoke seemed to mostly agree with each other, demanding greater diversity on the council, independent directors and fan representation on the board, and raising concerns over the clout and money of the professional clubs, especially the Premier League.\n\nBut the people who really matter here are the government.\n\nThe sports minister said the debate was \"premature\" and reiterated that she may consider the nuclear option of legislation to force through reforms - but only if a threat to cut funding does not work. That however, remains some way off and the FA is confident it can comply with a new code of governance. If it fails, chairman Greg Clarke has vowed to step down and then it really will be in the last-chance saloon.\n\nWhat do fans think?\n\nFootball Supporters' Federation chairman Malcolm Clarke: \"We're very pleased to see so many MPs back our proposals for a minimum of five fan representatives on the FA Council, representation on the FA board, and increased diversity.\n\n\"Supporters are integral to the health of our national sport yet are still shockingly under-represented in the FA hierarchy - the FA Council has only one supporter representative, yet the Armed Forces and Oxbridge have five.\n\n\"It is also important to acknowledge that the FA Council has stood up to rampant commercialism within the game and protected fans' interests - such as when the FA Council stopped the 'Hull Tigers' name change.\"\n\nWhat the MPs said - key quotes\n\nSports minister Tracey Crouch: \"The FA's current model does not, in my opinion, and clearly that of other colleagues, stand up to scrutiny. Reform is therefore required.\"\n\nJudith Cummins (Labour, Bradford South): \"At best they're dragging their feet, at worst they're wilfully failing to act.\"\n\nAndrew Bingham, CMS Select Committee member: \"The issues of Sam Allardyce, who manages the (England) team for 67 days, one game, walks away with allegedly around £1m, it is destroying people's faith in football.\"\n\nNigel Huddleston (Conservative, Mid Worcestershire): \"I have a great deal of respect for Greg Clarke but I sense his hands are tied and a sense of institutional inertia pervades the governance of football in this country.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Leicester\n\nEight months after celebrating a Premier League title win that ranks among the greatest of all sporting achievements, Leicester find themselves firmly mired in a relegation battle.\n\nManager Claudio Ranieri this week received a vote of confidence, the club insisting he retains their \"unwavering support\".\n\nBut Leicester's fall has been a dramatic one, leaving them one point and two places above the bottom three.\n\nSo what has changed for the champions, and why are things going wrong for a manager who only two months ago was named coach of the year at the Best Fifa Football Awards?\n\nIn a BBC Sport poll, 62% of voters think that Leicester will not be relegated this season.\n\nHow bad have Leicester been?\n\nIt is 79 years since the top-flight title winners have dropped into the second tier 12 months after winning the league, but that is the prospect facing Leicester after the worst title defence ever seen.\n\nThe Foxes have yet to win away in the league all season and have started 2017 with a run of five league games without a goal. No other top-flight team has endured such a miserable run since Tottenham, 31 years ago.\n\nIt is a staggering contrast to their results in 2015-16, when they lost only three league matches throughout the campaign. In fact, at the start of this season, they had lost only three times in their previous 47 Premier League games.\n\nAnd don't forget - they did not just win the league last season, they ended up walking it by 10 points.\n\nBut since August things have unravelled fast and they have lost 13 out of 24 matches, winning just five times.\n\nWhat has happened to Jamie Vardy?\n\nWould you be surprised to find out Jamie Vardy's conversion rate is actually better this season than it was during the title campaign?\n\nVardy scored 24 Premier League goals in 2015-16, form that saw him named Football Writers' Footballer of the Year and shortlisted for the Ballon d'Or and Fifa's own player of the year award.\n\nThis season he has only five league goals, three of which came in one game against Manchester City, and has scored in only one league game since 10 September - a run of 17 matches.\n\nBut he is actually more clinical this year.\n\nThe problem, it seems, is he is simply not getting the chances. This season, on average, he gets one opportunity every two matches, whereas last season it was more than one per game.\n\nVardy after 24 games of last season and this season\n\nWhile the evidence points to the lack of a supply line (fewer shots, fewer chances), there has also been the suggestion Vardy is not making the runs that proved so successful last season.\n\nIan Stringer, who covers the Foxes for BBC Radio Leicester, said: \"Jamie Vardy haring around is a sight to behold, but it seems rare this season.\n\n\"I think that's due to his chances being few and far between; he can't run in behind if he's not being slotted in.\"\n\nThe stats actually show that Vardy is working as hard as last season - covering exactly the same average distance per game - and he is even making more sprints than last year. The ball is simply not finding him when he does. And certainly not in dangerous areas.\n\nAnd what about Riyad Mahrez?\n\nRiyad Mahrez's attacking excellence in 2015-16 earned him the PFA Player of the Year award, as well as seeing him named BBC African Footballer of the Year.\n\nThat recognition came after a season in which he scored 17 goals and provided assists for a further 11.\n\nThis year, his return from 22 matches is three goals - all penalties - and two assists.\n\nSo what is he doing differently?\n\nLast season, many of his goals and assists came from trickery and mazy dribbling. This season, he is simply not showing those same skills.\n\nMins per pass into final third\n\nAnd, of course, there is the collapse of his previously lethal link-up play with Vardy, a combination that led to seven goals last season (ie one player directly assisting the other).\n\nIn October, the pair famously went on a run of eight game in which they passed to each other only twice.\n\nThat has improved since then - but to no great effect.\n\nIn the six Premier League games they have played together since the start of December, Mahrez has found Vardy 16 times (including five times against Manchester United on Sunday).\n\nBut it is not leading to goals and, remarkably, the pair have combined for just one goal in the past 12 months.\n\nIt always seemed likely Leicester would lose one, two or maybe all of their three star performers last season.\n\nThey kept hold of Vardy after he turned down the chance to move to Arsenal, but the Foxes were powerless to prevent N'Golo Kante leaving for Chelsea for around £30m, as he reportedly had a release clause in his contract.\n\nFor a team so reliant on playing on the counter-attack, Kante's ability to break up opposition attacks and protect the back four was a cornerstone of their success.\n\nThe Foxes have tried to fill that void, using Daniel Amartey and new signings Nampalys Mendy and Wilfred Ndidi in his central midfield position.\n\nAnd while Kante has long been noted for his energetic style and ability to cover so much ground, his replacements have more or less matched - and in Mendy's case bettered - his workrate.\n\nBut it is Kante's ability to disrupt the opposition's play that they simply have not been able to replace.\n\nAs Watford striker Troy Deeney said earlier this season: \"You can get through their midfield and get at their back four a little bit easier now.\n\n\"Whenever we broke on them last season, I always had the fear factor that Kante was coming back and I knew we didn't have much time before he got there.\n\n\"Even if I actually did have time, I always thought he might be there, so I would rush things a bit.\n\n\"I always felt Kante did the work of two players.\"\n\nPerhaps the biggest impact of Kante's departure has been on Leicester's defensive solidity.\n\nWhile last season they kept 15 clean sheets in their 38 games and became notorious for eking out 1-0 wins - they managed seven in total - this term they have been conceding far more regularly and have won 1-0 only once.\n\nNumber of times conceded two or more Number of times conceded three or more\n\nTheir backline is an ageing one - centre-backs Wes Morgan and Robert Huth are 33 and 32 respectively - and they are frequently finding themselves exposed.\n\nAnd it does not help that the team appear to be working less hard as a unit.\n\n\"Leicester in recent years have been a team built on effort, going back to their League One days,\" said Stringer. \"All that seems to have disappeared.\n\n\"While I'm not questioning the desire or effort, it's the physical exertion which seems less - understandable when you've lost a player like Kante who's dominating the tackles and distances-made charts.\"\n\nAnd the stats back up the argument that their workrate has dipped.\n\nThey are collectively running an average of 2.1km less per game than they were last season.\n\nThe return of the Tinkerman\n\nLeicester used fewer playerslast season - 23 - than any other Premier League team, with Ranieri making a total of 33 changes to his starting line-up over the course of 38 games, the fewest in the division.\n\nThis season, with things going wrong from the outset (an opening-day defeat against a Hull side in disarray), the Italian has reverted to being the 'Tinkerman', a nickname picked up while in charge at Chelsea.\n\nThere are, of course, mitigating factors. This season, the Foxes have played five more games in all competitions than at the same stage 12 months ago, with Ranieri having to consider the demands of Champions League football on his squad.\n\nHe also lost Amartey, Mahrez and Islam Slimani to Africa Cup of Nations duty, making changes inevitable.\n\nBut it is not just the players who have changed regularly - Ranieri has also started tinkering with his formation.\n\nThe 4-4-2 set-up that brought them so much success last season has been replaced in recent weeks, and Leicester have started with a different formation in each of their past four games.\n\nThat has widely been perceived as a failing of Ranieri's, confusing his players and sending mixed messages - the Italian himself conceding they were struggling to adapt after a 3-0 defeat at Southampton in January.\n\n\"Maybe my players didn't understand my idea very well,\" he reflected.\n\nBut perhaps Ranieri was actually too slow to identify his side's problems, and too reluctant to move away from 4-4-2.\n\nWhile many teams adapt their formation depending on the opposition (Tottenham and Manchester City are just two of the sides to have played three at the back against Chelsea's system this season), Ranieri had avoided doing that.\n\nIn fact, of the 18 Premier League teams to have used more than one formation in 2016-17 (Arsenal and Liverpool have not altered theirs), Leicester were the last to change.\n\nWhich teams were the slowest to try a new formation this season?\n\nRanieri is making up for lost time though. Since his first instance of tinkering - a 1-0 win against West Ham on 31 December - he has yet to choose the same formation in back-to-back fixtures.\n\nSo after their dismal start to 2017, will Leicester be able to reproduce the kind of end to the season that saved them in 2014-15, when they recovered from being bottom and seven points adrift with nine games to play?\n\nThey are not in quite such serious trouble yet this time around, and Stringer expects them to do enough to stay in the Premier League.\n\n\"I think this will be a watershed for them,\" he says. \"Many of the current crop have experience of escaping relegation, and experience of doing it with this team. They'll survive.\"", "An Australian man has survived spending hours struggling to keep his nose above water after his excavator rolled into a waterhole. Daniel Miller, 45, had been riding the machine at his remote property 300km (180 miles) north of Sydney.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nRangers have replaced Mark Warburton as manager with under-20 coach Graeme Murty before Sunday's Scottish Cup tie with Greenock Morton.\n\nThe Scottish Premiership club say they have accepted the resignations of Warburton, assistant David Weir and head of recruitment, Frank McParland.\n\nBut Warburton, who took charge in 2015, told BBC Scotland he has not stood down and was unaware of the statement.\n\nAnd the 54-year-old Englishman is consulting his legal team.\n\nThe BBC has learned that Warburton had contact with Nottingham Forest around 10 days ago and was high on the English Championship club's list of possible managers.\n\nHowever, he was not offered the job and they decided to retain their interim team of Gary Brazil and Jack Lester until the end of the season.\n\nWarburton, who had a contract at Ibrox until 2018, had taken Rangers' training on Friday as normal before Sunday's fifth-round tie.\n\nHe had earlier in the morning defended McParland's record of signings after media criticism of the Glasgow club's recruitment.\n\n\"At a meeting with the management team's representative earlier this week, the club were advised that Mr Warburton, Mr Weir and Mr McParland wished to resign their positions and leave the club on condition that Rangers agreed to waive its rights to substantial compensation,\" said Rangers' statement.\n\nAlthough born in England, Graeme Murty qualified to play for Scotland and won four caps between 2004 and 2007 The 42-year-old played for York, Reading, Charlton Athletic and Southampton in a career lasting 17 years and 437 games He won the Football League Championship with Reading in 2005/06. He has coached at Southampton and Norwich City, both at youth level\n\n\"Rangers' agreement to waive compensation would assist the management team to join another club.\n\n\"This compensation amount was agreed when Rangers significantly improved Mr Warburton and Mr Weir's financial arrangements before the start of this season.\n\n\"The board urgently convened to consider the offer made on behalf of the management team and its ramifications and agreed to accept it and release the trio from the burden of compensation, despite the potential financial cost to the club.\"\n\nRangers claim that Warburton's representative attempted to alter the the terms.\n\n\"A further board meeting was held this afternoon to discuss this and it was decided not to agree to this additional request but to hold with the original agreement,\" he said.\n\n\"Mr Warburton, Mr Weir, and Mr McParland have therefore been notified in writing that their notices of termination have been accepted.\"\n\nRangers lie third in the Scottish top flight, but they are a distant 27 points behind city rivals and reigning champions Celtic and their statement went on to suggest that the management team have not reached the targets set.\n\n\"The board is very appreciative of the good work previously done by the management team but believes it had no alternative,\" it added.\n\n\"Our club must come first and absolute commitment is essential.\n\n\"It is important that Rangers has a football management team that wants to be at the club and that the board believes can take the club forward to meet our stated ambition to return to being the number one club in Scotland.\n\n\"We are clearly short of where we expected to be at this time.\"\n\nRelations between Mark Warburton and the Rangers board have been strained for some time. The manner of the departure could never have been predicted, but the departure itself had been coming. Recent results have been poor, but the former Brentford boss was unhappy with the financial backing he received from owner Dave King - a man who he hasn't spoken to in person, on a one to one basis, for months. For his part, King had grown disillusioned by Warburton's signings and what he perceived to be a lack of progress. It was a relationship well beyond repair. Some will believe Warburton was agitating to get out, others will say the board turned on him. Whatever the truth, it's another mess this club could well do without.\n\nWarburton's reign at Ibrox suffered a blow in November, when high-profile summer signing Joey Barton was sacked after a training ground disagreement with team-mate Andy Halliday and the manager following a 5-1 defeat by Celtic.\n\nIt called into question his signing policy, but Warburton gave another ringing endorsement to McParland, who was with him at Brentford, before Sunday's game.\n\n\"I've said time and again - his track record is outstanding,\" he said. \"There would be no shortage of takers for someone of his quality.\"\n\nWarburton also quoted a former Rangers manager in pointing out the pressures that come with the post.\n\n\"Walter Smith said to me that you are never more than two or three games away from a major crisis,\" he said. \"That is life at Rangers.\n\n\"That is the nature of it. You just get on with it.\"\n\nWarburton was in charge of Rangers for 82 games, winning 55, drawing 14 and suffering 13 losses.\n\nHis 67% win rate was more than Stuart McCall, who took charge at the end of the 2014-15 season, and had a 41% win rate, but less than his predecessor, Ally McCoist, with 72%.\n\nMark Warburton attempted to explain away his team's - or former team's - dreary draw against Ross County by saying a series of random events conspired against his players.\n\nIt was, he said, football's strange ways that denied them on the day, as if some cosmic force was to blame for the failings rather than his own players and his own management.\n\nWarburton's comments were bizarre but nowhere near as surreal as the nonsense that took hold of Rangers on Friday evening as the club said that Warburton was leaving and Warburton said that he wasn't.\n\nRangers have known dysfunction in recent years, but those times are not as distant as some chose to believe.\n\nThey're just dysfunctional in a different way now. Rudderless, leaking like a sieve and now embarrassed in a way that surely took their supporters back to the dog days of Charles Green and chums.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nJordan Rhodes and Sam Winnall's first goals for Sheffield Wednesday saw them boost their play-off hopes with a 3-0 victory over mid-table Birmingham City.\n\nRhodes met Ross Wallace's early free-kick to give the hosts the lead.\n\nBirmingham then hit the woodwork three times as they searched for a leveller.\n\nWinnall's close-range, diving header from an inch-perfect Jack Hunt cross put the game beyond the Blues' reach, before Adam Reach showed good pace and composure to add a late third goal.\n\nThe defeat was Gianfranco Zola's seventh in 12 games in all competitions in charge of Birmingham, who have now lost five of their past seven away games, while the in-form Owls have won five of their past six at home.\n\nThe hosts could have gone ahead as early as the second minute when Tomasz Kuszczak denied Sam Winnall from close range, before Rhodes rose to nod home Wallace's expert right-wing set-piece delivery soon afterwards.\n\nBut after a disjointed start, the visitors then settled into the game and struck the woodwork twice in quick succession, firstly when Wednesday's Sam Hutchinson inadvertently diverted Craig Gardner's cross onto his own post, before Blues right-back Emilio Nsue struck the other upright with a crisp half-volley.\n\nAfter the break, Birmingham midfielder Maikel Kieftenbeld was fortunate to only receive a yellow card for a rash challenge on Morgan Fox, but Zola's side began to control possession and cause problems with Gardner's set-pieces.\n\nThe game's decisive twist then came when Gardner's fierce strike hit the crossbar moments before Winnall - against the run of play - got in between two Birmingham defenders to head in Hunt's outstanding cross for his fourth goal of this season against the Blues, having netted three times in two games against them for Barnsley before his January move to Hillsborough.\n\nBirmingham, who were in seventh place and level on points with Wednesday when former manager Gary Rowett was surprisingly sacked on 14 December, are now 12 points below the Owls, who remain sixth.\n\n\"We know that was not perfect, but there are a lot of things that I like.\n\n\"Even in the first minute, we could have achieved a goal, and after that we had three or more clear chances.\n\n\"I think the score was very heavy to Birmingham, but I think with the opportunities that we created and the goals that we scored, I think we deserved to win this game.\"\n\n\"The second goal was a fantastic cross and a good piece of football. The disappointing bit for me was the beginning, the first 10 minutes.\n\n\"After that I saw only one team on the pitch. We played good football and created chances. But that is not enough. We have to be stronger and more hungry.\n\n\"We controlled the midfield and controlled the game so, other than the result, I thought it was one of the best performances, after the first few minutes.\n\n\"The bottom line is that we play good football but we don't score enough.\"\n• None Attempt blocked. Greg Stewart (Birmingham City) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Lukas Jutkiewicz.\n• None Paul Robinson (Birmingham City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Goal! Sheffield Wednesday 3, Birmingham City 0. Adam Reach (Sheffield Wednesday) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Sam Winnall.\n• None Attempt blocked. Nsue (Birmingham City) left footed shot from the right side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Craig Gardner.\n• None Attempt blocked. Che Adams (Birmingham City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt missed. Adam Reach (Sheffield Wednesday) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Assisted by Almen Abdi.\n• None Goal! Sheffield Wednesday 2, Birmingham City 0. Sam Winnall (Sheffield Wednesday) header from very close range to the centre of the goal. Assisted by Jack Hunt with a cross.\n• None Craig Gardner (Birmingham City) hits the bar with a right footed shot from outside the box. Assisted by Kerim Frei. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Walter Swinburn was found in the courtyard of his home by his father\n\nFormer jockey Walter Swinburn fell to his death from his bathroom window, an inquest heard.\n\nThe three-time Derby winner and Shergar rider was found by his father in the courtyard of his London home.\n\nIt was not possible to establish whether his epilepsy - the result of a riding accident in 1996 - contributed to the fall, Westminster Coroner's Court was told.\n\nCoroner Dr Shirley Radcliffe ruled his death on 12 December was an accident.\n\nThe court heard he suffered a fatal head injury after falling 12 feet (3.5m) from the window at his home in Belgravia.\n\nWalter Swinburn was known for his victories riding Shergar including winning the Derby by 10 lengths at Epsom in 1981, aged just 19.\n\nMr Swinburn was nicknamed the 'Choirboy' and picked up numerous successes around the world before his retirement in 2000.\n\nThe 55-year-old was best known for his partnership with Shergar, which had at one time an estimated worth of £10m as the most famous and valuable racehorse in the world.\n\nHe had suffered from post-traumatic epilepsy after falling from a racehorse in Hong Kong in 1996, which left him prone to seizures.\n\nHe took over a training licence from his father-in-law, Peter Harris, in 2004 and went on to send out over 260 winners from his yard in Tring, Hertfordshire, before quitting in 2011.\n\nHe claimed one of the biggest victories of his training career in 2011 when Julienas won the Royal Hunt Cup at Ascot.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "President Donald Trump's senior aide Kellyanne Conway is under fire for promoting Ivanka Trump's products live on air from the White House press briefing room.\n\nHer comments followed a tweet by the president which criticised retailer Nordstrom for dropping the US first daughter's clothing line.", "On January 21st 2003, Antoine Dixon attacked his ex-partner Simonne Butler with a samurai sword, severing both of her hands.\n\nAfter dozens of operations, Simonne's hands were reattached. Her friend Renee Gunbie, who was with her at the time, lost one of her hands.\n\nDixon then stole a vehicle and drove to Auckland, where he shot dead a man called James Te Aute. Two years later, he was given a life sentence for murder, wounding, kidnapping and using a firearm against a police officer.\n\nHe killed himself in jail. Simonne told 5 live's Nihal Arthanayake what happened on that day in 2003.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThe skeletons of plague victims, a Tudor bowling ball and medieval ice skates fashioned from animal bones are among hundreds of artefacts on display at a new exhibition showcasing the most interesting finds made during the Crossrail excavations.\n\nWhat's been unearthed undoubtedly offers a fascinating insight into London life over the centuries - but what will be the archaeological legacy of what is Europe's largest infrastructure project?\n\nTens of thousands of artefacts have been dug up during work to create the 42km (26-mile) Elizabeth Line, which runs from the east to the west of the capital.\n\nWith careful planning, 20 sites were excavated by archaeologists at locations where ventilation shafts were put in, where railways entered tunnels and where new ticket halls were to be built.\n\n\"We've managed to take a slice down through London but also across London,\" said Jackie Keily, the curator of the exhibition at the Museum of London Docklands.\n\nOne of Ms Keily's favourite exhibits is a bowling ball discovered at the site of a Tudor manor house in Stepney Green.\n\n\"It's amazing it survived,\" she said.\n\nThis Tudor bowling ball was found preserved in the boggy moat of a manor in Stepney Green\n\nThese objects, found near Liverpool Street station, have been identified as ice skates with the help of the writings of a 12th Century monk, who described young men skating on bones tied to their shoes\n\n\"It had been in a moat which was boggy. Henry VIII brought in a ban banning commoners from bowling. It was only for the aristocracy.\n\n\"Stepney Green is now part of Greater London but it would have been a weekend retreat in the countryside.\"\n\nA chamber pot found beneath 19th Century terraced housing, also in Stepney Green, ranks as another highlight for Ms Keily.\n\n\"It dates back to when there were no indoor toilets or bathrooms,\" she said. \"This one is fabulous because it has a shocked-looking man saying: 'What I see I will not tell'.\"\n\nThis chamber pot gives an insight into modesty in Victorian times\n\nThe discoveries made were by no means restricted to those from Victorian, Tudor or medieval times though, with considerably older items being unearthed, including bison bone fragments in the part of the capital we now call Royal Oak.\n\nAsked if there had been previous evidence of bison roaming there, Ms Keily said: \"We kind of knew but it's incredible to find the remains.\n\n\"There were three fragments of bison bone and one of reindeer from an antler. They were dated back to about 68,000 years ago.\n\n\"Some of the bones had traces of gnawing, possibly from wolves.\"\n\nScientific analysis of skeletons identified the DNA of the bacteria that caused the 1665 Great Plague\n\nTwo finds from the Crossrail project have ended up among the 80 million specimens at the Natural History Museum: a piece of 55-million-year-old amber and two parts of a woolly mammoth jawbone. Both were discovered beneath Canary Wharf.\n\nThe bone find could prove to be important, as Jessica Simpson from the museum explains: \"They can date the woolly mammoth specimen once it is off display and they might be able to determine when they became extinct in our region.\n\n\"The last known woolly mammoths were roaming a small part of northern Siberia about 4,000 years ago.\"\n\nFor Ms Keily, the discovery that will perhaps provide the most significant element of Crossrail's archaeological legacy is the human remains found at Liverpool Street.\n\nDNA testing on teeth found in the 17th Century Bedlam cemetery confirmed the identity of the bacteria behind London's Great Plague for the first time.\n\n\"That's an important discovery,\" she said.\n\nAnd it's not the only one.\n\nDon Walker, senior human osteologist at the Museum of London Archaeology, analysed some skeletons found at Charterhouse Square in Farringdon.\n\nThis leather shoe is believed to date from the 15th or 16th Century\n\nHe said of the discovery: \"It was important because we found documented evidence of a Black Death cemetery dating to 1348 or 1349.\"\n\nIsotope, radiocarbon and DNA analysis was performed in an effort to reveal details such as how a person's diet had changed during their lifetime and where they were likely to have lived.\n\nMr Walker said: \"We don't know much about how infectious diseases interacted with people in the past.\n\n\"If we can understand the evolution of infectious diseases such as the plague that will help us understand how diseases will behave in the future.\"\n\nAsked what the impact of the Crossrail excavations would be, he said: \"I think it goes beyond archaeology and I'm certain there will be some benefits for future medical work as well.\"\n\nCurator Jackie Keily: \"We've managed to take a slice down through London\"\n\nDr Piers Mitchell from Cambridge University is president of the Paleopathology Association and was part of the team that found Richard III's skull in a Leicester car park.\n\nAsked if Crossrail would go on to be viewed as a significant project in British archaeology, he said: \"The problem with Crossrail is you only get a little vertical shaft, a little box to excavate.\n\n\"That gives you a little vignette of life in the past. It's a little bit frustrating.\n\n\"They've got lots of little circles and they are trying to interpret London from that.\"\n\nBut he added: \"Only time will tell. If interesting papers are published and we learn more about diseases of the past and how they are changing, it's going to be a good resource to teach students with.\"\n\nSome of the finds as they were reported\n\nJay Carver, lead Crossrail archaeologist, believes the project will be held up as an example of how developers, engineers and archaeologists can work together and share finds with the community.\n\nHe said: \"Every 10 years there's a mega-project that involves a lot of archaeology; previously there was the Eurostar tunnel and then Terminal 5 at Heathrow.\n\n\"With each project we are developing the way we work with construction and engineering. In the past archaeologists and engineers have been at loggerheads.\n\n\"I think it's been a really successful project.\"\n\nAnd it's a project that is set to continue, with plans in place for Crossrail 2, the proposed north-south line from Epsom in Surrey to Broxbourne in Hertfordshire.\n\nCurzon Soho cinema campaigner Stephen Fry has said he is not being a \"numby\" - not under my backyard - but objects to plans to tear down the building\n\nBut wherever there are huge infrastructure projects of this kind, there are difficult decisions to be taken, such as the possibility the Curzon cinema in Soho might have to make way for a new ticket hall.\n\nStephen Fry has said he does not want to be a \"numby\" - not under my backyard - but, as a supporter of the Curzon Soho, objects to the plans as they stand.\n\nAnd the Victorian Society warns Wimbledon is among the areas that face losing important architecture to Crossrail 2's bulldozers - although a Transport for London spokesperson said: \"Demolition is always our last resort.\"\n\nBack in east London at the Museum of London Docklands - a stone's throw away from where engineers are putting the finishing touches to the Canary Wharf Crossrail station - Jackie Keily reflects happily on the impact of the several years of excavations.\n\n\"It's been an amazing project,\" she said.\n\n\"To be able to archaeologically take a slice through London east to west is pretty amazing.\"\n\nTunnel: The Archaeology of Crossrail runs from Friday 10 February to 3 September at the Museum of London Docklands.", "He's only four but Mason Foulkes is probably better at darts than you.\n\nIf you'd like to find out about how to get into darts, read the special BBC Get Inspired guide.", "The costs of school meals could rise in some areas, according to a report\n\nThe Daily Mail and Daily Telegraph both lead on a survey by the think tank, the Local Government Information Unit, suggesting millions of households are facing above-inflation rises in council tax.\n\nAlmost all of England's town halls are said to be planning to increase bills by up to 5% to pay for social care.\n\nMany are also planning higher charges for parking, school meals and even burials and cremations.\n\nAccording to the Mail, critics say councils could avoid the rises if they stopped hoarding cash and dipped into their huge reserves.\n\nOthers say they could employ fewer chief executives earning more than the prime minister.\n\nThere is a continued focus on problems besetting the health service.\n\n\"With the NHS collapsing around her ears, brazen Theresa May yesterday insisted the Tories have lavished record sums of cash on the service,\" the paper says.\n\nHowever, it quotes figures from the Institute of Fiscal Studies which the paper says \"shatter\" that claim.\n\nAnd it says the IFS has warned that \"a shocking funding crisis gripping the NHS\" means it'll be unable to cope with a growing and ageing population.\n\nThe Guardian quotes a government health adviser, Patrick Carter, warning that hospitals are under such extreme pressure that they're \"in a state of war\".\n\nThe Times quotes Sir Robert Francis QC, who led the public inquiry into the Mid Staffordshire scandal, warning that the NHS faces an \"existential crisis\".\n\nIt's manifestly failing, he says, and he dismisses plans for savings as \"unrealistic\".\n\nSeveral papers report that doctors will not have to reveal their income from private work, after a U-turn by health chiefs.\n\nA revolt by doctors is said to have forced NHS England to abandon plans to make them publish their outside earnings.\n\nInstead, they'll be expected to publish on NHS websites how much time they spend on private work.\n\n\"What are they hiding?\" asks the Daily Mail.\n\nThe Times castigates Wikipedia's volunteer editors in the UK for deciding that the Daily Mail can no longer be cited as a reliable source.\n\nIt suggests there's been an extension of the phrase \"fake news\" to cover publications that people merely dislike.\n\nThe paper also rejects Jeremy Corbyn's claim that reports suggesting he's close to stepping down as Labour leader are \"fake news\".\n\nMr Miller was pinned down by a bar on the excavator\n\nIt says he's a liability for his party - and that colleagues are appalled by what it calls his ineptitude.\n\nA cartoon in the Telegraph likens the plight of Mr Corbyn to the misfortune of an Australian man who was trapped in a muddy ditch for six hours and survived by just about keeping his nose above the murky water.\n\nThe photograph is published in a number of the papers.\n\nThe Daily Express says migrants were caught trying to enter Britain illegally at the rate of 200 a day in the run-up to the Brexit referendum.\n\nFigures apparently show that 24,800 people were stopped in the first six months of last year.\n\nBut as the historic vote on 23 June approached, the paper says, the rate of detection increased - with 5,900 being caught in June.\n\nThe Express says the scale of illegal immigration through northern France can be revealed for the first time after the paper won a long battle with the Home Office to publish the figures.\n\nSeveral papers feature a former maths student from the University of Liverpool who is believed to be the first British woman to join the fight against so-called Islamic State in Syria.\n\nKimberley Taylor, who is 27, travelled to the war zone without telling her family in Merseyside after becoming shocked by the plight of refugees.\n\nShe is quoted saying: \"I'm prepared to give my life for this.\"\n\nThe Mail says women fighters are greatly feared by the jihadis who believe it's a disgrace to be killed by a woman in battle, prohibiting them from entering paradise.\n\nFinally, there is more bad news for healthy eaters already struggling to find iceberg lettuces and courgettes.\n\nThe Times warns that Britons will soon have to be a little less generous drizzling their olive oil.\n\nApparently erratic weather in the Mediterranean has sent wholesale prices soaring.\n\nItalian olive groves have been particularly badly hit because fruit flies have been attracted by the humid weather, while a heatwave in Greece last spring is said to have cut the supply there by a quarter.", "Dr Brittain-George said most staff had been attacked or felt unsafe\n\nThe body set up to advise hospitals on staff safety is to end that work at the end of March, the BBC has discovered.\n\nThis is despite figures showing almost 200 assaults on doctors, nurses and other NHS staff in England every day.\n\nOne A&E doctor said \"most NHS staff\" could say they had been attacked or felt unsafe at work.\n\nNHS Protect said it could not comment before a staff consultation ended but the government said it believed a new approach was needed to protect staff.\n\nThe body was tasked with overseeing the measures that trusts were taking to stop physical attacks on doctors and nurses.\n\nIt has co-ordinated safety standards and held trusts to account since 2003.\n\nDr Jess Brittain-George, who works in accident and emergency, said: \"Most NHS staff can say they've been attacked or felt unsafe at work, especially those of us on the front line.\n\n\"Everyone is on alert and looking out for the patient who is going to kick off.\n\n\"When I joined as a student in 2008 it was never mentioned. I did an A&E placement and no-one talked about it.\n\n\"Now it's a running joke in the staffroom - 'What's happened to you today? I've been hit again', or something like that.\"\n\nKim Sunley was shocked by the number of assaults on NHS staff\n\nDr Brittain-George works in a hospital that takes staff security seriously and has seen attacks decline, but she says elsewhere in the health service security \"isn't stellar\" and has been frustrated by the unwillingness of police officers to investigate.\n\nShe says a man told an A&E receptionist that he intended to wait outside to kill her when she left work.\n\n\"The police didn't care. They said, 'It's just a threat and it isn't important.' But everyone knows that a threat to your life is an offence and it is prosecutable.\"\n\nNurses' leaders say the intense pressure on the health service has fuelled attacks on staff.\n\nIn total, 70,555 NHS staff were assaulted in 2015-16, according to NHS Protect figures - up 4% on the previous year.\n\nKim Sunley, of the Royal College of Nursing, described it as \"an absolutely shocking figure\".\n\n\"You see some horrible physical assaults - people being punched in the face, grabbed by the throat, limbs being broken, chairs being thrown at people.\n\n\"There's the physical impact of the injury, but also the psychological impact, the long-term effect. People are traumatised.\n\n\"Where people are frustrated and are having to wait a long time, an environment that isn't fit for purpose so you have trolleys in corridors, it's going to increase tension, it's going to increase frustration and it's a tinderbox atmosphere.\"\n\nMany assaults are carried out by people who lack mental capacity, but it is thought some claim mental disability as a way of dissuading the police from investigating.\n\nNHS Protect has stepped in to secure convictions in cases when the police have decided not to act.\n\nOn the issue of ending security work, NHS Protect said in a statement that it was \"not appropriate for us to comment in detail\" before the consultation with staff ended on 1 March.\n\nBut it confirmed that it was consulting staff about plans under which \"our organisation would not be tasked with security management work\".\n\nIt added: \"Work continues on the potential of identifying who might be best placed to take the lead on guiding this work, if it is felt appropriate that another body should take it forward\".\n\nA Department of Health said its proposals come amid a \"persistently high numbers of these unacceptable incidents\".\n\nA spokesperson added: \"NHS staff work incredibly hard in a high-pressure environment, and it is completely unacceptable for them to be subject to aggression or violence.\n\n\"Trusts should have no hesitation in involving the police and pressing for the strongest penalties against offenders.\"\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.", "Not everyone was won round by Donald Trump when he became the Republican presidential nominee last year - even members of his own party had their doubts.\n\nWe spoke to a group of Republican women in New Hampshire who were among those initially sceptical of the current president, but who have since had a change of heart.", "He's only 19cm (7.4 in) tall and has been named Thanos.", "The NHS is under huge pressure. But how does being a patient in the UK compare with being a patient in Germany?", "Last updated on .From the section Golf\n\nFourteen-time major winner Tiger Woods has withdrawn from next week's Genesis Open and the Honda Classic on 23 February with \"ongoing back spasms\".\n\nThe American, 41, pulled out of this month's Dubai Desert Classic before the second round with the injury.\n\nThe former world number one, who returned in December after two back operations, has said his playing schedule will now be reassessed.\n\nThe Masters, the first major of the year, takes place from 6-9 April.\n\n\"My doctors have advised me not to play the next two weeks, to continue my treatment and to let my back calm down,\" said the four-time Masters winner.\n\n\"This is not what I was hoping for or expecting. I am extremely disappointed.\"\n\nWoods' first return to competitive action after his lengthy lay-off came at the Hero World Challenge - an 18-man tournament in the Bahamas - in December and he finished 15th at the PGA Tour event.\n\nAfterwards, he expressed concerns over the physical challenge of being scheduled to play four full-field tournaments over five weeks.\n\nHis next outing came at the PGA Tour's Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines where a first-round 76 and level-par second round of 72 meant he missed the cut.\n\nHe struggled in the first round in Dubai as he shot a five-over 77, before ending the tournament prematurely.\n\nOnce again Tiger Woods is under doctor's orders, the advice is not to play for the next two weeks. During the Dubai Desert Classic week he said he felt good, but admitted he would never again feel great, such is the legacy of his recent back surgeries.\n\nThe 41-year-old is becoming an increasingly frail figure and there is no word on his chances of being fit for April's Masters.", "George and Amal Clooney married in Venice in 2014\n\nProminent human rights lawyer Amal Clooney and her husband, award-winning actor George, are expecting twins, Matt Damon has confirmed.\n\nSpeaking to Entertainment Tonight Canada, the actor explained Clooney had told him the news while they were working together last autumn.\n\nDamon said: \"They're going to be awesome parents. Those kids are lucky.\"\n\nHe was speaking after the news of the couple's pregnancy was revealed by CBS's The Talk host Julie Chen.\n\nExplaining how Clooney revealed the news, Damon said: \"I was working with him last fall and he pulled me aside on set and I almost started crying.\n\n\"I was so happy for him. And I was like, 'How far along is she?' And he goes, 'Eight weeks'.\n\n\"I said, 'Are you out of your mind? Don't tell anybody else! Don't you know the 12-week rule?' Of course he doesn't. I was like, 'just shut up, man'.\"\n\nAnother source close to the couple, quoted by People, said they were \"very happy\". The Clooneys' representatives have not yet commented.\n\nGeorge and Amal Clooney married in Venice in 2014 with a star-studded list of guests who included Damon and Bill Murray.\n\nRumours that they might be expecting began to circulate last month when Amal was spotted wearing a loose-fitting dress.\n\nGeorge, 55, has starred in numerous Hollywood films and has won two Academy Awards.\n\nAmal, 39, has represented a number of high profile figures, including former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko and Australian Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "The health secretary said he didn't want to make excuses about very long waiting times in A&E\n\nMy interview with the Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt struck an interesting note after a day of bleak news from NHS England.\n\nOfficial figures showed the worst performance in A&E units in December since records began in 2004.\n\nThe number of patients waiting on trolleys for more than four hours because beds were not free rose nearly 50% year on year.\n\nRather than hitting back with a raft of statistics on extra investment by the government, Jeremy Hunt acknowledged that progress had not always lived up to expectations.\n\nMr Hunt accepted the reality of the situation in some of England's hospitals, highlighted by images of patients waiting more than 13 hours for beds and a six-month delay discharging an elderly woman because of care shortcomings.\n\nThese were \"unacceptable\", he said, and \"bad for the NHS\".\n\nHe volunteered that \"it's incredibly frustrating for me\" and he \"didn't want to make excuses\".\n\nThis sounded like a health secretary who knew only too well that the NHS was under immense strain and there was no denying the real challenges facing staff and patients every day.\n\nI repeatedly asked Mr Hunt what he was doing about it. He emphasised the government's long-term moves to get health and social care working together and the \"big transformation programme\" aiming to treat more people in their local community rather than in hospitals.\n\nBut on the pressures right now in hospitals, Mr Hunt had little new to say apart from noting that some were a lot better than others at managing the flow of patients.\n\nSo what can the government do? Ministers are now focused on social care, where successive spending cuts have made it harder to look after the frail elderly at home. Mr Hunt told me the government recognised there was a problem and it was being addressed.\n\nAll roads for a move on social care now lead to the Budget on 8 March. Rumours that the Chancellor, Philip Hammond, will announce a new financial package on social care have been rife in Whitehall.\n\nThe sudden scrapping of Surrey County Council's referendum on a 15% council tax rise fuelled suspicions that its leader had been quietly tipped off about an impending announcement on social care funding.\n\nIntriguingly, when I asked the health secretary about what might happen in the Budget he said that was up to the prime minister and the chancellor. It sounded like a plea to Downing Street to come up with new money for social care.\n\nMr Hunt added, though, that a quick fix on its own was not enough and that a long-term answer was needed as well.\n\nThere is a danger in building up expectations which cannot be met on Budget Day.\n\nBut it feels like the health secretary and other ministers are resting their hopes on the chancellor. There is not much they can do about this winter's A&E pressures except to wait and hope.\n\nMost worryingly for the health secretary is the knowledge that this was supposed to be the \"year of plenty\" for NHS England with a \"frontloaded\" financial settlement. Even with a relatively generous allocation for this year, the hospital system is in trouble.\n\nMr Hunt knows that funding in the next couple of years will tail off. He will hope that promised and planned efficiency savings start to materialise soon.\n\nAn intervention by his former adviser, the American health guru Don Berwick, has lent weight to calls for more funding for the NHS.\n\nIn a BBC interview, Mr Berwick, commenting on the government's current financial plans for health, said: \"I have serious doubts whether you can have a healthcare which is universal, not rationed and responsive to needs at that target level - I am concerned.\"\n\nHe may also be alarmed that even with intense winter preparations in each area of England between local health and local care chiefs, some A&E units have struggled under the weight of patient numbers.\n\nThere were orders from on high for routine operations to be cancelled for four weeks but, even so, many hospitals had very few spare beds.\n\nUnderstandably, Mr Hunt stressed that the NHS was not alone in experiencing pressures of rising patient numbers and that French and German hospitals were under strain this winter.\n\nBut he knows he will be judged only on the performance of the NHS. He will hope the chancellor has something to offer.", "More than 50 of the government's Toyota Prados could not be found\n\nGhana's new government is trying to track down more than 200 cars missing from the president's office, a government spokesman has said.\n\nThe ruling party counted the cars a month after taking power following victory in December's elections.\n\nAfter previous transfers of power, state-owned cars have been seized from officials who did not return them.\n\nA minister in the former government said the implied allegation of wrongdoing by his colleagues was false.\n\nFormer Communication Minister Omane Boamah told the BBC's Thomas Naadi that this was \"a convenient way for the new government to justify the purchase of new vehicles\".\n\nPresidential spokesman Eugene Arhin told the press that officials could only find:\n\nGhanaian radio station Citi FM reported that the president has been \"forced to use a 10-year-old BMW\" as a result.\n\nIn making the statement Mr Arhin revealed the president's office was meant to have more than 300 cars but he did not divulge the purpose of these vehicles.\n\nNana Akufo-Addo from the the New Patriotic Party won the Ghanaian presidential election at the beginning of December, taking power from John Mahama, of the National Democratic Congress.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The claim: The government had committed to taking 3,000 unaccompanied refugee children from Europe, but it will now close the programme after taking in just 350.\n\nReality Check verdict: The government previously referred to a goal to bring 3,000 unaccompanied children to the UK but eventually passed an amendment that did not commit to a specific figure. Immigration Minister Robert Goodwill says the 350 figure meets the \"intention and spirit\" of the Dubs Amendment, but Lord Dubs disagrees.\n\nSpeaking on the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme, Labour peer Lord Dubs spoke of his disappointment that the government had \"gone back on their word\" on how many unaccompanied asylum-seeking children would be brought to the UK from Europe.\n\nThe 3,000 figure was originally put forward in a campaign run by charity Save the Children.\n\nAnd in January 2016, the then Immigration Minister, James Brokenshire, said the government would commit to resettling increasing numbers of refugees, most of whom would be children, mentioning the 3,000 figure as a goal but without giving any figure as a commitment.\n\nThen, in March 2016, Lord Dubs, who came to the UK himself as a child refugee fleeing the Nazis, tabled an amendment to the Immigration Bill, which would require the UK to take in 3,000 children who had been separated from their families.\n\nThis had strong support from all opposition parties and a number of Conservative MPs.\n\nAnd it passed in the House of Lords by a significant margin at the end of March.\n\nBut when it went to the Commons in April, the Conservative government's position was to vote against the amendment, and it was rejected by a narrow margin.\n\nIt then went back to the House of Lords, where Lord Dubs reworded the amendment to read that the UK should take a \"specified number\" of unaccompanied children from Europe and that this number would be agreed later in discussion with local authorities.\n\nThis again passed in the Lords with a significant majority.\n\nIt then went back to the Commons and was expected to go to a vote on 9 May.\n\nBut, on 4 May, ahead of the vote, Mr Cameron accepted the revised version of the amendment.\n\nNearly a year later, on Wednesday, 8 February 2017, Immigration Minister Robert Goodwill announced that the government would transfer 350 unaccompanied children - about a 10th of the original figure - from refugee camps in Europe, which, he said, would meet the \"intention and spirit\" of Lord Dubs's amendment.\n\nMr Goodwill said this would include about 200 children already brought to the UK under the terms of Lord Dubs's amendment and another 150 still to come.\n\nHe said that more than 900 children had been brought here from Calais in total in 2016.\n\nThe 700 brought to the UK but not under the terms of Lord Dubs's amendment were brought here under a different regulation, which allows unaccompanied minors to come to the UK if they already have immediate family here.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Record numbers of common dolphins were recorded last year\n\nRecord numbers of three dolphin species found off Scotland's west coast were found during a survey by the Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust (HWDT).\n\nHWDT said its scientists and volunteers last year recorded 2,303 individual common dolphins, 42 bottlenose dolphins and 94 Risso's dolphins.\n\nThe figures for all three species were the highest ever recorded in the Mull-based trust's annual survey seasons.\n\nThe conservation charity has been carrying out the surveys since 1994.\n\nDr Lauren Hartny-Mills, HWDT science officer, said: \"The reasons for the high number of sightings of these charismatic dolphin species - and the broader effects on the marine environment and other species - remain unclear.\n\n\"But the intriguing findings highlight the importance of on-going monitoring and research.\"\n\nFrazer Coomber, a scientist from HWDT, told the BBC's Good Morning Scotland radio programme: \"It's been fantastic. We've had massive groups of 200 and 300 individuals at a time.\n\n\"The nice thing about dolphins is that often they come over to the vessel to come and have a look. They swim along at the front of the vessel and you get really close and get to see their beautiful yellow colouration.\n\n\"Dolphins are known as indicator species. They are a top predator, and if your top predator in an eco-system is doing well then that's a good sign that everything else in the eco-system is going well.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The authorities at a national park in India protect the wildlife by shooting suspected poachers dead. But has the war against poaching gone too far?\n\nKaziranga National Park is an incredible story of conservation success.\n\nThere were just a handful of Indian one-horned rhinoceros left when the park was set up a century ago in Assam, in India's far east. Now there are more than 2,400 - two-thirds of the entire world population.\n\nThis is where David Attenborough's team came to film for Planet Earth II. William and Catherine, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, came here last year.\n\nBut the way the park protects the animals is controversial. Its rangers have been given the kind of powers to shoot and kill normally only conferred on armed forces policing civil unrest.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Entire villages are being destroyed to make way for extended national parks\n\nAt one stage the park rangers were killing an average of two people every month - more than 20 people a year. Indeed, in 2015 more people were shot dead by park guards than rhinos were killed by poachers.\n\nInnocent villagers, mostly tribal people, have been caught up in the conflict.\n\nRhinos need protection. Rhino horn can fetch very high prices in Vietnam and China where it is sold as a miracle cure for everything from cancer to erectile dysfunction. Street vendors charge as much as $6,000 for 100g - making it considerably more expensive than gold.\n\nIndian rhinos have smaller horns than those of African rhinos, but reportedly they are marketed as being far more potent.\n\nBut how far should we go to protect these endangered animals?\n\nI ask two guards what they were told to do if they encountered poachers in the park.\n\n\"The instruction is whenever you see the poachers or hunters, we should start our guns and hunt them,\" Avdesh explains without hesitation.\n\n\"Yah, yah. Fully ordered to shoot them. Whenever you see the poachers or any people during night-time we are ordered to shoot them.\"\n\nAvdesh says he has shot at people twice in the four years he has been a guard, but has never killed anybody. He knows, however, there are unlikely to be any consequences for him if he did.\n\nThe government has granted the guards at Kaziranga extraordinary powers that give them considerable protection against prosecution if they shoot and kill people in the park.\n\nCritics say guards like Avdesh and Jibeshwar are effectively being told to carry out \"extrajudicial executions\".\n\nGetting figures for how many people are killed in the park is surprisingly difficult.\n\n\"We don't keep each and every account,\" says a senior official in India's Forest Department, which oversees the country's national parks.\n\nGuards like Avdesh and Jibeshwar have considerable powers\n\nThe director of the park, Dr Satyendra Singh, is based at the park's impressive colonial-era headquarters.\n\nHe talks about the difficulties of tackling poachers in the park, explaining that the poaching gangs recruit local people to help them get into the park but that the actual \"shooters\" - the men who kill the rhinos - tend to come from neighbouring states.\n\nHe says the term \"shoot-on-sight\" does not accurately describe how he orders the forest rangers to deal with suspected poachers.\n\nOur World: Killing for Conservation is broadcast at 21:30 GMT on Saturday 11 February on the BBC News Channel and this weekend on BBC World News\n\n\"First we warn them - who are you? But if they resort to firing we have to kill them. First we try to arrest them, so that we get the information, what are the linkages, who are others in the gang?\"\n\nDr Singh reveals that just in the past three years, 50 poachers have been killed. He says it reflects how many people in the local community have been lured into the trade as rhino horn prices have risen. As many as 300 locals are involved in poaching, he believes.\n\nFor the people who live around Kaziranga the rising death toll has become a major issue.\n\nKaziranga is densely populated, like the rest of India. Many of the communities here are tribal groups that have lived in or alongside the forest for centuries, collecting firewood as well as herbs and other plants from it. They say increasing numbers of innocent villagers are being shot.\n\nIn one of the villages that borders the park live Kachu Kealing and his wife. Their son, Goanburah, was shot by forest guards in December 2013.\n\nThe only picture they have of him is a fuzzy reproduction of the young man's face.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Kaziranga National Park in India is home to rhinos, elephants and tigers\n\nGoanburah had been looking after the family's two cows. His father believes they strayed into the park and his son - who had severe learning difficulties - went in to try and find them. It is an easy mistake to make. There are no fences or signs marking the edge of the park, it just merges seamlessly into the surrounding countryside and fields.\n\nThe park authorities say guards shot Goanburah inside the forest reserve when he did not respond to a warning.\n\n\"He could barely do up his own trousers or his shoes,\" his father says, \"everyone knew him in the area because he was so disabled.\"\n\nKachu Kealing does not believe there is any action he can take now, especially given the unusual protection park guards have from prosecution. \"I haven't filed a court case. I'm a poor man, I can't afford to take them on.\"\n\nKachu Kealing says his disabled son was only looking after the family's cows\n\nConservation efforts in India tend to focus on protecting a few emblematic species. The fight to preserve them is stacked high with patriotic sentiment. Rhinos and tigers have become potent national symbols.\n\nAdd to this the fact that Kaziranga is the region's principal tourist attraction - its 170,000 or more annual visitors spend good money here - and it is easy to see why the park feels political pressure to tackle its poaching problem head on.\n\nIn 2013, when the number of rhinos killed by poachers more than doubled to 27, local politicians demanded action. The then head of the park was happy to oblige.\n\nMK Yadava wrote a report which detailed his strategy for tackling poaching in Kaziranga. He proposed there should be no unauthorised entry whatsoever. Anyone found within the park, he said, \"must obey or be killed\".\n\n\"Kill the unwanted,\" should be the guiding principle for the guards, he recommended.\n\nHe explained his belief that environmental crimes, including poaching, are more serious that murder. \"They erode,\" he said, \"the very root of existence of all civilizations on this earth silently.\"\n\nAnd he backed up his tough words with action, putting this uncompromising doctrine into practice in the park.\n\nThe numbers of people killed rose dramatically. From 2013 to 2014 the number of alleged poachers shot dead in the park leapt from five to 22. In 2015 Kaziranga killed more people in the park than poachers killed rhinos - 23 people lost their lives compared to just 17 rhinos.\n\nAnd, as the park's battle against poaching gathered in intensity, there were to be other casualties.\n\nIn July last year, seven-year-old Akash Orang was making his way home along the main track through the village, which borders the park.\n\nHis voice falters as he recounts what happened next. \"I was coming back from the shop. The forest guards were shouting, 'Rhinoceros! Rhinoceros!'\" He pauses. \"Then they suddenly shot me.\"\n\nThe gunshot blasted away most of the calf muscle on his right leg. The injuries were so serious he had to be rushed to Assam's main hospital five hours away.\n\nHe was there for five months and had dozens of operations but, despite the hospital's efforts, Akash can still barely walk.\n\nHis father, Dilip Orang, bends down and removes the bandage from the boy's leg to display the wound. His leg appears to be stripped of its skin - the calf muscle is bunched into tight ball. It doesn't flex. \"They took the muscle from here and grafted it here,\" he says. \"But it hasn't worked very well. Just look at it.\"\n\nAkash has not fully recovered and has to be carried to the shop by his brother\n\nIt is clear just how terrible his injuries are when Akash gets up to move out of the sun. He can barely limp the few feet into the shade. His older brother now has to carry him to the local shop.\n\n\"He has changed,\" Dilip says. \"He used to be cheerful. He isn't any more. In the night he wakes up in pain and cries for his mother.\"\n\nThe park admits it made a terrible mistake. It paid all his medical expenses and gave the family almost 200,000 rupees ($3,000; £2,400) in compensation. Not much given the scale of Akash's injuries, says his father, who worries whether his son will ever make a living.\n\nThe crippling of Akash led to a huge outcry from villagers. It was the culmination of long-simmering disquiet over the mounting death toll in the park. Hundreds marched on the park headquarters.\n\nIn a house a short walk from the park HQ, human rights campaigner Pranab Doley, himself a member of a local tribe, pulls out a bag stuffed with paperwork. He has made a series of requests under India's Right to Information Act and says the replies show that many cases aren't followed up properly.\n\n\"In most cases you don't have things like the magisterial inquiry, the forensic report, the post mortem reports,\" he says, rifling through the stacks of paper.\n\nThe park says that it's not responsible for investigating the killings, and whatever action it does take follows the law. Even so, some of Mr Doley's documents reveal a surprising lack of information. He pulls out a table listing deaths in one of the park's four districts. It shows nine suspected poachers killed in one year, six of whom are recorded as unidentified.\n\nThe Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have visited the park\n\nAnd there are other indications that careful investigation is not a priority when it comes to wildlife crime in Assam. The park says that in the last three years just two people have been prosecuted for poaching - a striking contrast to the 50 people who were shot dead in the park in the same period.\n\nThe park justifies the number of deaths, saying the figures are so high because the heavily armed poaching gangs engage guards in deadly shoot-outs. However, the statistics indicate that these \"encounters\" are more one-sided than the park suggests. Once again, firm figures are hard to come by, but according to the reports we can find just one park guard has been killed by poachers in the past 20 years, compared with 106 people shot dead by guards over the same period.\n\nMr Doley argues the high number of deaths is because, at least in part, of the legal protection the park and its guards enjoy. \"This kind of impunity is dangerous,\" he says. \"It is creating animosity between the park and people living in the periphery of the park.\"\n\nThat animosity is deepened because so many of the local community are tribal people who claim they and their ancient way of life are - like the animals the park is trying to protect - also endangered.\n\nTheir cause has been taken up by Survival International, a London-based charity. It argues that the rights of tribal people around the park are being sacrificed in the name of wildlife protection.\n\n\"The park is being run with utmost brutality,\" says Sophie Grig, the lead campaigner. \"There is no jury, there's no judge, there's no questioning. And the terrifying thing is that there are plans to roll [out] the shoot at sight policy across [the] whole of India.\"\n\nHer strong language is testimony perhaps to the concern felt by activists like her that traditional communities might be sacrificed in the name of wildlife protection.\n\nShe says some of the biggest animal conservation charities in the world, including the World Wildlife Fund, have turned a blind eye to the activities of the park.\n\n\"WWF describes itself as a close partner of the Assam Forest Department,\" says Ms Grig. \"They've been providing equipment and funds to the forest department. Survival has repeatedly asked them to speak out against this shoot-on-sight policy and extrajudicial executions which they have so far failed to do.\"\n\nAccording to the WWF India website, it has funded combat and ambush training for Kaziranga's guards and has provided specialist equipment including night vision goggles for the park's anti-poaching effort.\n\n\"Nobody is comfortable with killing people,\" says Dr Dipankar Ghose, who helps run much of WWF's conservation programme in India. \"What is needed is on the ground protection. The poaching has to stop.\"\n\nThe bulk of WWF's funding comes from individual donations. So how would the WWF's donors feel about the organisation's involvement with a park facing allegations of killing, maiming and torturing? Dr Ghose does not answer the question directly.\n\n\"Well, as I said, we are working towards it. We want the whole thing to reduce - we don't want poaching to happen, and the idea is to reduce it involving all our partners. It is not just the Kaziranga authorities but also the enforcement agencies, also the local people. So I think the main thing is to work with the local people.\"\n\nThe park is popular with both Indian and foreign visitors\n\nAnd there are plenty of conservationists that accept that, in some circumstances, there must be a tough response to poachers. \"No park would exist in India without having regular anti-poaching operations,\" says naturalist and writer Valmik Thapar. \"Anti-poaching is an essential element of conservation.\"\n\n\"There are some that do it well. There are some that fail miserably… and they don't have any tigers. So there are some tiger reserves in India, that actually don't have any tigers at all because they have all been poached.\n\n\"In some exceptional cases you can use the gun against the gun, but in other places in India you need to use community intelligence, because the local community are the eyes and ears of the forest.\"\n\nThree months after Akash was shot and villagers marched on park headquarters once again - this time to protest allegations of torture.\n\nMono Bora was sitting at a roadside cafe when he was picked up by forest guards. He claims he was punched in the face repeatedly as he was driven to park headquarters. Once inside the offices the questioning became even more violent.\n\n\"They gave me electric shocks here on my knees, and here on my elbows. And here on my groin too.\" Mr Bora describes how he was tied in a stress position to bamboo staves.\n\n\"They kept on hitting me,\" he says. The ordeal lasted for three hours until finally his assailants became convinced they had the wrong man.\n\nKaziranga confirmed it did bring Mono Bora in for questioning but categorically denies any harm came to him, adding that it \"never uses electric shock during interrogation\".\n\nThe chief of Mono Bora's village picked him up from the park headquarters. Biren Kotch says he did not believe Mr Bora had any involvement in poaching. \"How can they justify torture?\"\n\nBut it isn't just the anti-poaching effort that threatens local people. Big wild animals like tigers and rhinos need lots of space.\n\nTo accommodate them India is planning a massive expansion of its network of national of parks. It is great news for conservation, but the plans involve relocating 900 villages. More than 200,000 people will have to leave their homes, it is estimated.\n\nKaziranga will double in size and an eviction order has been issued. State police recently evicted two villages amid chaotic scenes in which stone-throwing villagers were beaten with batons and fired on by police. Two people - a father of two and a young female student - were killed.\n\nSophia Khatum’s husband was shot dead by police in the demonstration against the evictions\n\nDiggers were brought in and the national park provided a team of elephants to help raze every home to the ground.\n\nIn the wreckage of the village critics might see more evidence of a brutal approach to conservation. The problem is the park's tactics appear to have worked. Since the crackdown in the park began in 2013 the numbers of rhinos poached has fallen back. Last year just 18 rhinos were killed.\n\nBut the important question is what the long term cost will be, says Pranab Doley, the tribal rights campaigner. He believes the park's behaviour betrays a misguided attitude to conservation. \"That's what their policy and philosophy is - move the people out of here and create pure pristine forest.\"\n\nHe says the park is on a collision course with local tribal people. If it gets its way, he says, it will destroy the ancient culture of tribal people like him, but could also end up frustrating its own efforts to protect its animals.\n\n\"Without the people taking care of the forest, no forest department will be able to protect Kaziranga. It's the human shield which is protecting Kaziranga.\"\n\nOf course, there's no arguing that endangered species must be protected and preserved, but the costs on the human community need to be taken into account too.\n\nOur World: Killing for Conservation is at 21:30 GMT on Saturday 11 February on the BBC News Channel and this weekend on BBC World News", "It was Diplomats' Day in Russia on Friday and the country's Diplomacy For Peace choir, made up of newly qualified diplomats, has been singing the praises of their diplomacy.", "It's the weekly news quiz - have you been paying attention to what's been going on in the world over the past seven days?\n\nIf you missed last week's quiz, try it here\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nSix Nations 2017 on the BBC Coverage: Live across BBC TV, radio and online, with live text commentary and scores from every game on the BBC Sport website and app (\n\nWales welcome England to Cardiff in the Six Nations on Saturday with visiting coach Eddie Jones warning his team to expect all manner of \"shenanigans\" from the hosts.\n\nIn Saturday's earlier game Ireland travel to Italy determined to bounce back after their opening defeat by Scotland, while on Sunday Vern Cotter's buoyant Scots travel to Paris, where they have not won since 1999.\n\nBut the undoubted highlight of the weekend is the 130th edition of Wales and England, a fixture that was first played in 1881.\n\nWales v England, Sat 11 Feb, 16:50 GMT - live on BBC One, connected TV and online France v Scotland, Sun 12 Feb, 15:00 GMT - live on BBC One, connected TV and online\n\n\"You go to the hotel and unless you take steps, players get rung incessantly through the night. Those things happen,\" Jones said.\n\n\"You go to the ground and the traffic controller drives slower than the traffic's going to make sure you're late.\n\n\"You get to the ground and there's something wrong with your dressing room - there's lights off or the heater's switched off.\n\n\"You can't check because they traditionally tell you one thing and something else happens. It happens regularly in South Africa and it happens regularly in Wales.\"\n\nEven before Jones aired his concerns the occasion was always likely to be a high-octane affair as, given their long-standing history and neighbourly rivalry, Wales playing England in Cardiff is among the most emotive occasions in world sport.\n• None Wales v England is make or break for Howley\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n• None News alerts put you at the centre of the Six Nations\n• None \"It's not different water or different air\" - Jones\n\nWales' assistant coach Robin McBryde believes that the fierce rivalry is an inevitable consequence of the shared history and proximity of the two nations.\n\n\"We are neighbours, aren't we? I have got two English brothers-in-law,\" he said\n\n\"It is that English-Welsh rivalry, and wanting to get the better of your neighbour. It's as simple as that.\"\n\nEngland have 60 victories to Wales' 57 in the teams' 129 matches with nine draws. However, Wales have a 60% winning record against England in Cardiff.\n\nJones, whose side have won a national record 15 Tests in a row, has been merrily making mischief since the narrow opening win over France last weekend, suggesting earlier this week that the Welsh are \"a cunning lot\".\n\nSaturday's match is the sort of occasion which prompts week-long debates about whether the roof on the Principality Stadium will be open or closed.\n\nWales wanted it closed, to ramp up the noise inside the 72,000-capacity stadium which is renowned for its vertiginous stands and electric atmosphere.\n\nEngland, as the away side, had the final say under Six Nations rules and - having said he was not bothered one way or the other earlier in the week - Jones has opted for it to be left open.\n\nWhile the Australian has been stoking the flames, the hosts have been more circumspect - although Wales defence coach Shaun Edwards was moved to compare Jones to legendary former Nottingham Forest manager Brian Clough.\n\nAnd despite his barbs the England head coach has not been short of compliments, praising the Principality Stadium's \"amazing atmosphere\".\n\nHe added: \"How could you not want to play rugby there?\n\n\"It is one of the greatest rugby countries in the world, so to play Wales in Cardiff with that sort of atmosphere is one of the great delights of rugby.\"\n\nWales have injury worries about winger George North - who is chasing a new record of scoring a try in six championship games in a row - and fly-half Dan Biggar and both will have fitness tests on matchday.\n\nBut there is some good news for them, with world class number eight Taulupe Faletau back in action, although he only makes it as far as the bench after injury.\n\nEngland have made two changes from the team that edged past France, with winger Jack Nowell recalled and back rower Jack Clifford handed just his second England start as Jones searches for more ball carrying options.\n\nScotland looking for first Paris win of the millennium\n\nScotland have lost nine successive games on French soil since they won 36-22 at the Stade de France in 1999 on the final weekend of their triumph in the last Five Nations championship.\n\nHow their forwards match up against a formidably physical French pack could be key to halting that losing run.\n\nScotland flanker Hamish Watson, who weighs in at a relatively lightweight 15st 12lb, says he is confident that he and his team-mates can meet the challenge.\n\n\"They are a big pack and will pose us a different threat to Ireland, We know they are going to scrum well and have been concentrating on that,\" he said.\n\n\"But it's nothing we can't deal with, so I think it will go well.\"\n\nFrance coach Guy Noves believes that counterpart Vern Cotter's work is bearing fruit as he approaches the end of his stint with Scotland. Gregor Townsend will take over in June.\n\n\"We will mainly adapt to the Scottish rugby that you have seen evolve for four years - a game based on commitment, speed, aggression, with players who have gained confidence in a highly organised collective,\" he said.\n\nScotland have made one change with the starting line-up that beat Ireland with John Barclay coming in at blind-side flanker to replace Ryan Wilson, who is out with an elbow infection.\n\nIreland coach Joe Schmidt will make sure his side are at Rome's Stadio Olimpico in plenty of time for the weekend's opening fixture as he feels that their late arrival at Murrayfield last week contributed to their lacklustre start to the match.\n\nIreland, whose team bus turned up about 15 minutes late after its police escort reportedly guided it away from an agreed route, conceded three tries in the first half hour to trail by 16 points.\n\n\"I don't think it was apathy, there was a bit of anxiety at not having had the full period to warm up,\" said Schmidt.\n\n\"Players get anxious, they get very routine-based and I do think it's a challenge for a professional player that they can be adaptable in different circumstances, so they can still start well and cope.\"\n\nSchmidt has kept faith with fly-half Paddy Jackson at 10 with Johnny Sexton still returning to fitness after a calf injury picked up playing for Leinster in January.\n\nItaly, led by former Ireland international Conor O'Shea, have beaten Ireland four times in 26 meetings, with their latest success coming in 2013.\n\nSign up for rugby union news alerts and get Six Nations news the moment it breaks\n• None How to follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n• None Bright lights and big hitters - take our rugby quiz", "Hiddleston was nominated for the Bafta Rising Star award in 2011\n\nThe last few months haven't been too easy for Tom Hiddleston.\n\nIn September, he and girlfriend Taylor Swift broke up after three months together amid accusations their relationship was a publicity stunt.\n\nThen, in January, he apologised for an \"inelegantly expressed\" winner's speech at the Golden Globes in which he referred to aid workers in South Sudan \"binge-watching\" The Night Manager.\n\nThis time last year, the actor was riding the crest of a wave.\n\nAfter starring in hugely successful BBC drama The Night Manager as well as the big-screen adaption of JG Ballard's High-Rise, he was a hot favourite to be the next James Bond.\n\nBut have his off-screen actions since done damage to his brand?\n\n\"Some of the recent headlines have been unhelpful,\" admits Mark Borkowski, a strategic PR consultant.\n\n\"There are events that happen and they're not thought through properly, and the nature of being caught up with Taylor Swift's gang and not thinking it through strategically has undone him.\n\nSwift and Hiddleston dated for three months last year\n\n\"Sometimes people don't recognise the power of their brand, and often you can't conduct yourself in the way you think you can.\"\n\nBut Steven Gaydos, vice-president and executive editor of Variety, thinks Hiddleston is still a hot property, despite his recent PR mishaps.\n\n\"I don't think anything he's done to date has put any serious dent into his career,\" he told the BBC.\n\n\"He's a fantastic actor doing fantastic work. He has a fanbase and he's delivering the goods.\n\n\"These are just missteps - somebody doing something that causes chatter. In this case Tom Hiddleston made a speech and people thought it was silly, or he dated a woman and people thought it was a little bogus.\n\n\"He's not going to be hauled in front of the courts for any of this.\"\n\nHiddleston starred in BBC One's adaption of The Night Manager\n\nNonetheless, it's fair to say HiddleSwift brought Tom a great deal of negative attention.\n\nSome fans thought the couple were being suspiciously open about their relationship, leading to accusations that all was not what it seemed.\n\nHiddleston has now defended his relationship with Swift in an interview with GQ, saying: \"Of course it was real.\"\n\nHe also said the 'I ♥ T.S. [Taylor Swift]' tank top he was photographed wearing was \"a joke\", explaining he was lent it by a friend to protect a graze from the sun.\n\nThe actor said the pictures of him wearing the shirt were taken \"without consent or permission\", and that fans and the media had \"no context\".\n\n\"I was just surprised that it got so much attention,\" he said. \"The tank top became an emblem of this thing.\"\n\nThe series was directed by Susanne Bier (right) and adapted from a John le Carre novel\n\nSo is this latest interview simply damage limitation? \"Absolutely,\" says Mark Borkowski.\n\n\"I don't think Tom Hiddleston knew at the time just how big a brand he was. Now he does know that and has to think carefully.\n\n\"This GQ interview is an example of putting the record straight and trying to get a narrative together to try and recover from some poorly judged moments.\"\n\nBorkowski adds: \"There's a beautiful naivety about Tom Hiddleston that is projected through this interview where he's trying to talk directly to his fans. This is material you put there for them.\"\n\nHiddleston's acceptance speech at last month's Golden Globes was criticised\n\nHiddleston himself admits in the interview: \"A relationship in the limelight takes work. And it's not just the limelight. It's everything else.\n\n\"And I'm still trying to work out a way of having a personal life and protecting it, but also without hiding.\"\n\nGaydos has a lot of sympathy for the 36-year-old on the Taylor Swift front.\n\n\"Imagine you just met someone and you're having a relationship and the whole world is watching. It's like snakes all around you,\" he says.\n\n\"I'd hate to to live in a fish bowl and have every move analysed, with people saying you're a fraud, your relationship is a fraud, everything you're doing is insincere and fake.\"\n\nHiddleston said his relationship with Taylor Swift wasn't a publicity stunt\n\nHiddleston has two films coming out later this year - Thor: Ragnarok and Kong: Skull Island. Gaydos says the film studios won't be particularly worried about Hiddleston's off-screen actions.\n\n\"They're worrying about the tracking. If the trailer goes out for Kong and the response isn't strong or the awareness of the movie isn't high, that's what they're really concerned about,\" he says.\n\n\"Tom has not ventured anywhere near the space where we've seen stars screw up their careers and really damage their star wattage.\"\n\nHiddleston will be seen in the new Kong and Thor films later this year\n\nBorkowski adds: \"Anything is recoverable in this day and age.\n\n\"Last week we were hearing about the death of the David Beckham brand, but we'd forgotten about it by Thursday.\n\n\"Things move so quickly now, so it is always about recovery.\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Mike Stubbs had to leave his house in Keswick after Storm Desmond caused severe floods.\n\nOne year later he's finally been able to move back home.", "The NHS is under unprecedented pressure. Demand is rising and hospitals, in particular, are struggling to cope.\n\nBut how exactly do patients flow round the system and what happens to hospitals when they cannot cope?\n\nThe BBC has produced an animated video to help you understand more about the health service and the strain it is under.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nTerminally ill Sunderland fan Bradley Lowery was visited in hospital by the club's players on Thursday.\n\nBradley was diagnosed with neuroblastoma in 2013 and his mother says he has only months to live.\n\nLast year £700,000 was raised for him and treatment has now begun in hospital in a bid to prolong his life.\n\nEverton pledged £200,000 to the cause in September, when Bradley was mascot for Sunderland's home fixture with the Toffees at the Stadium of Light.", "Sharpen your pencils. Now Theresa May has her prize from the Commons, getting the Article 50 bill (she never wanted) through with no major changes, it makes its way to the red and gold end of the Palace of Westminster, to the Lords.\n\nThe first debate is set for 20 February. More than 140 Peers have already put their names down to speak. But at that stage there probably won't be a vote. A week later the thornier more detailed committee stage begins. Then the last certain stage, the third reading and report is scheduled for 7 March.\n\nIf it all goes according to the government's plan, which sources say is \"hugely unpredictable\", it would allow Theresa May to stick to her timetable and push the button for exit talks to start the next week, once the Bill has been rubber-stamped by the other Palace. (It's daft in this business to make too many predictions, but I'd put a fiver on that happening on Wednesday 15 March.)\n\nThe government will have a bumpier ride in the Lords after a grumpy process in the Commons. The Lords is dramatically different because the government most certainly does not have a majority among peers. And, it is the Lords' express purpose to scrutinise and if needed, improve draft laws before sending them back along the corridor to the Commons.\n\nOvernight a government source suggested that the Lords had better jolly well let the Brexit bill go through, or else. Despite the sabre-rattling though, the atmosphere in the Lords is less febrile than that language might suggest.\n\nDowning Street this morning tried to dampen down the aggressive briefing. And one source in the Lords described the threat as \"total BS\" - I'll leave you to work that out.\n\nThe main opposition leader, Baroness Smith, has made it plain on several occasions that although the Lords may try to tweak the Bill, Labour, broadly, has no intention of trying to block it. Her modus operandi is to \"hold to account, not hold to ransom\".\n\nThe Liberal Democrats are more intent on making changes in the Lords, for it is there they can wield power, rather than in the Commons. But unless they have the support of Labour too, there is a limit to how much trouble they can cause.\n\nThe chatter suggests the Lords will push for concessions from the government over the rights of EU citizens to stay here, reporting the progress of negotiations regularly to Parliament and maybe on a final \"meaningful vote\" for both Houses on the deal.\n\nIt will be up to the government to decide whether to tweak the bill slightly as they did in the Commons or risk some defeats. Insiders predict it is likely the Lords may end up sending back the bill to the Commons once, as \"ping pong\" to force the government to make a change or two. But even senior Lib Dem sources don't expect hostile stand-offs for weeks on end.\n\nThe Lords will make their voices heard, there is no question about that and the Article 50 bill could run into trouble.\n\nIt would be wrong to suggest that ministers don't anticipate a tricky time. But today at least, whatever the sabre-rattling from some parts of government, this historic piece of legislation looks likely to be the subject of a few skirmishes in the Lords, rather than an apocalyptic battle.", "The health secretary says there's no silver bullet to ease pressure on the NHS but that he has a plan.\n\nJeremy Hunt has been speaking exclusively to the BBC's Hugh Pym.", "The issue of fake news on social media has grabbed headlines since the 2016 US presidential election. But how do fake news sites make money?\n\nFind out more on Talking Business on Friday, 10 February at 15:30 GMT on BBC World, and on Saturday, 11 February at 20:30 GMT on the BBC News Channel in the UK.", "Last updated on .From the section Scottish Rugby\n\nCoverage: Watch live on BBC television, BBC Sport website & app. Commentary on Radio Scotland, Radio 5 live Sports Extra; Live text commentary on BBC Sport website.\n\nFlanker John Barclay comes in to the back-row for the injured Ryan Wilson as Scotland seek their first win over France in Paris since 1999.\n\nFull-back Stuart Hogg will earn his 50th cap and, at 24, becomes the youngest Scotland player to do so.\n\nHooker Fraser Brown retains his place despite an eye injury against Ireland.\n\nGuy Noves makes one change to the France team that lost to England last week, with flanker Loann Goujon coming into the back-row for Damien Chouly.\n\nWhile Glasgow Warriors back-rower Wilson misses out with an elbow infection, his Scotstoun team-mate Hogg becomes the seventh-youngest player in world rugby to make the landmark half century of international appearances.\n\nThe previous record for a Scot was held by lock Richie Gray, who made his 50th appearance during the 2015 Rugby World Cup, aged 26.\n\nWilson's absence has resulted in open-side flanker John Hardie being called up to the bench. He was due to play for Edinburgh against Ulster on Friday evening, and only made his comeback after three months out with an ankle injury in last Friday's game against Munster.\n• None Scots 'need subtlety to win in Paris'\n\nScotland are in buoyant mood thanks to their opening-day 27-22 home win over Ireland in this year's Six Nations, while France, despite pushing England close at Twickenham, lost 19-16.\n\nGoujon, 27, will win his 15th cap as he replaces veteran Chouly, 31, who drops to the bench.\n\nIt is Goujon's first start since he was injured in France's 52-8 win over Samoa at the beginning of November.\n\nYoung Bordeaux-Begles scrum-half Baptiste Serin, who only made his France debut in June, retains his place ahead of Maxime Machenaud.\n\nScotland head coach Vern Cotter: \"France in Paris is a monumental challenge. They have improved markedly since Guy Noves took charge and will be smarting since their narrow defeat to England at Twickenham last weekend.\n\n\"We're their next opportunity to get their campaign up and running and they'll be intent on throwing every part of their considerable fire power at us this Sunday.\n\n\"We'll have to match their ferocity while ensuring we take that, and all the other battles we can expect in this game, on our terms, whether that's in collisions, in set-piece, at the breakdown or in the air.\n\n\"This will be an excellent test for this group of players: mentally, physically, tactically and of our skillsets under pressure.\n\n\"We will need to be at our relentless best once again.\"\n\nFrance head coach Guy Noves: \"It's normal (not to make many changes) if changing everything means that we're not satisfied with what happened, when you lose a match by three points in England in the last nine minutes.\n\n\"For the most part the lads delivered, even though once again we need to develop more character to finish matches in the right way.\n\n(On Goujon) \"We wanted a little more density in the pack, although they're two very similar players.\n\n\"Gaining in power is an objective, but it's not a guarantee for getting past defences.\n\n\"We're going to adapt to the way Scotland have been playing. Their game is based on combat, speed and aggression with players who have gained in belief at the service of a well-organised side.\"", "A man armed with a handgun failed to intimidate the shopkeeper he threatened - a former Kurdish special forces soldier.\n\nWith the weapon pointing at him, and another man bundled into the premises at gunpoint, shopkeeper Shikha Mahsum grabbed animal repellent spray and squirted it in the gunman's eyes, forcing him to flee.\n\nCCTV released on Thursday shows the events unfolding at Kobani Stores in West Bromwich Street, Walsall, just before midnight on 9 January - after which Mr Mahsum, 39, said the gunman had picked on \"100% the wrong shop\".\n\nPolice, who are searching for the gunman and two suspected accomplices at the door, have commended his bravery.\n\nThis video has no sound.", "Two parliamentary by-elections, two weeks away.\n\nIs Labour a sitting duck in its own heartland territory?\n\nA quick road-trip to the West Midlands and the Lake District was enough to conclude that Labour can look forward to a sweaty, and quite possibly a painful night on 23 February.\n\nBoth seats would normally be considered \"safe\" for Labour.\n\nBut \"normal\" now seems a long time ago. Stoke voted 70% to 30% to leave the EU. In Copeland the margin was 60% to 40%. That would be enough to give Remain-supporting Labour sleepless nights.\n\nBut add to that the fact that, in 2015, UKIP came second in Stoke - 5,000 odd votes behind Labour.\n\nThrow in Labour's long term deficit in the polls, which suggests former Labour voters have turned away from Jeremy Corbyn.\n\nThen, chat to people in Hanley town centre - in the Stoke-on-Trent Central constituency - before travelling north and doing the same in Whitehaven, the large coastal town in the sprawling, and beautiful, Copeland constituency in the Lake District.\n\nIf you don't hear enough cause for Labour to fear losing one or both of these seats, you're not listening.\n\nIn Copeland, the biggest employer by far is the Sellafield nuclear power plant.\n\nIn Whitehaven, where Sellafield has a large office block, Jeremy Corbyn's past opposition to nuclear power - which has since softened - comes up in almost every conversation.\n\nThe local grocer - whose family have run Kinsella's since the turn of the last century - told me customer after customer was switching allegiance away from Labour for that reason.\n\nCould UKIP leader Paul Nuttall win the party's second seat?\n\nThat, and the doubts about Mr Corbyn's fitness to lead which have handed him a quite dismal personal rating of minus 40.\n\nThat's 46 points behind Theresa May who was the only national leader with a positive rating in the survey conducted by Yougov last week.\n\nIn Stoke, the UK Independence Party's new leader, Paul Nuttall, is standing as a candidate. UKIP has a great deal invested in this fight.\n\nIt's not clear whether the perception of an outsider parachuting into the seat - a charismatic Scouser seizing his chance in an area with a strong identity of its own - will count against Mr Nuttall and his party.\n\nIf UKIP fails it will hurt, and suggests the party lost its way when it lost Nigel Farage as leader.\n\nSo Labour will throw everything into both campaigns. Jeremy Corbyn's visited both, and will visit again.\n\nVictory in both seats will buy time and space to try to regain ground, to try to recover from the visible splits which opened up so glaringly during debate and voting on the bill to begin Brexit.\n\nBut if Labour loses in either or both seats - each of which has been held by the party since 1935 - it means talk of existential crisis for the party.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nGreat Britain will face second seeds Croatia in the Fed Cup promotion play-off on Saturday.\n\nHeather Watson and Johanna Konta won their singles matches against Turkey to take an unassailable lead in their final best-of-three group match.\n\nJocelyn Rae and Laura Robson completed a 3-0 sweep in the doubles, with Anne Keothavong's team topping Group C.\n\nTheir play-off place was already sealed after Latvia earlier beat Portugal in Britain's group.\n\nBritish number one Konta then overcame an early wobble to beat world number 86 Cagla Buyukakcay 5-7 6-4 6-3 in the second singles match.\n\n\"I didn't get the chance to play Fed Cup last year, but from the very beginning of the season I was clear that I wanted it to be part of my schedule,\" Konta told British Tennis.\n\n\"I think whenever I get an opportunity to represent Great Britain in a team environment, I look to take it.\"\n\nRae and Robson then breezed to a 6-2 6-2 victory over Ayla Aksu and Pemra Ozgen in 58 minutes to ensure Great Britain ended the group stages unbeaten.\n\nUnlike the men's team competition, the Davis Cup, which has a World Group of 16 nations, the Fed Cup divides its top teams into two groups of eight - World Group I and World Group II.\n\nThe 91 nations outside the top tiers are divided into three regional zones and Britain have one chance per year to escape - a format that hugely frustrated former captain Judy Murray.\n\nThe Europe/Africa Group I event, which this year takes place in Estonia, has 14 teams divided into groups, with Poland, Croatia, Britain and Serbia the seeded nations.\n\nFour group winners will progress to promotion play-offs on Saturday, and two nations will then qualify for World Group II play-offs in April - which could see Britain given a home Fed Cup tie for the first time since 1993.\n\nThey fell at the same stage in 2012 and 2013 - away ties in Sweden and Argentina - under the captaincy of Judy Murray.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nJoe Root, Ben Stokes and Stuart Broad have met with Andrew Strauss to discuss the England Test captaincy.\n\nAlastair Cook, England's highest Test run scorer, stepped down on Monday after a record 59 Tests in charge.\n\nRoot, vice-captain to Cook, is the favourite to take over but director of cricket Strauss previously refused to \"rule anyone in or out\" of the role.\n\nA new captain will be appointed before England's limited-overs tour of the Caribbean in March.\n\nThe trio met Strauss and his team on Thursday, although it is understood that the discussions were not considered as interviews for the position.\n\nStrauss previously stated that he would be speaking to senior squad members in leadership roles about who should succeed Cook.\n\nBowler Broad previously captained the Twenty20 side between 2011 and 2014 and all-rounder Stokes was vice-captain on the recent limited-overs tour of Bangladesh.\n\nBatsman Root was described as the \"obvious candidate\" for the captaincy by England's leading Test wicket-taker James Anderson on Tuesday.\n\nWicketkeeper Jos Buttler, who is the limited-overs vice-captain but not a Test regular, was also spoken to over the phone by Strauss and his team.", "Does rice really contain harmful quantities of arsenic? Dr Michael Mosley of Trust Me, I'm A Doctor investigates.\n\nMany of us are regular consumers of rice - UK consumption is on the rise, and in 2015 we ate 150m kg of the stuff. But there have been reports about rice containing inorganic arsenic - a known poison - so should we be worried?\n\nArsenic occurs naturally in soil, and inorganic arsenic is classified as a category one carcinogen by the EU, meaning that it's known to cause cancer in humans.\n\nClick here for detailed information about arsenic levels in rice and what experts say is safe to eat .\n\nTrust Me, I'm A Doctor is on BBC Two on Wednesdays at 20:00 GMT - catch up on BBC iPlayer\n\nThe consequences of arsenic poisoning have been seen most dramatically in Bangladesh, where populations have been exposed to contaminated drinking water.\n\nThe result has been described as a \"slow burning epidemic\" of cancers, heart disease and developmental problems.\n\nBecause arsenic exists in soil, small amounts can get into food, though in general these levels are so low that they're not a cause for concern.\n\nRice is grown under flooded conditions, which contributes to arsenic content\n\nRice however, is different from other crops, because it's grown under flooded conditions. This makes the arsenic locked in the soil more readily available, meaning that more can be absorbed into the rice grains.\n\nThis is why rice contains about 10-20 times more arsenic than other cereal crops. But are these levels high enough to do us any real harm?\n\n\"The only thing I can really equate it to is smoking,\" says Prof Andy Meharg of Queen's University Belfast, who has been studying arsenic for decades. \"If you take one or two cigarettes per day, your risks are going to be a lot less than if you're smoking 30 or 40 cigarettes a day. It's dose-dependent - the more you eat, the higher your risk is.\"\n\nHe believes that the current legislation isn't strict enough, and that more needs to be done to protect those who eat a lot of rice.\n\nEating a couple of portions of rice a week isn't putting an adult like me at high risk, but Prof Meharg is concerned about children and babies.\n\n\"We know that low levels of arsenic impact immune development, they impact growth development, they impact IQ development,\" he says.\n\nBecause of this, the legislation is stricter around products specifically marketed at children - but many other rice products that they may also eat, such as puffed rice cereals, can contain adult levels of arsenic.\n\nIt sounds quite scary, even if you don't eat lots of rice, but there's an easy solution - a way to cook rice that dramatically reduces the arsenic content.\n\nNow, some ways of cooking rice reduce arsenic levels more than others. We carried out some tests with Prof Meharg and found the best technique is to soak the rice overnight before cooking it in a 5:1 water-to-rice ratio.\n\nThat cuts arsenic levels by 80%, compared to the common approach of using two parts water to one part rice and letting all the water soak in. Using lots of water - the 5:1 ratio - without pre-soaking also reduced arsenic levels, but not by as much as the pre-soaking levels.\n\nSo, while I would now think twice about feeding young children too much rice or rice products, I'm not going to stop eating rice myself. I will, however, be cooking it in more water and, when I remember, leave it to soak overnight.\n\nJoin the conversation on our Facebook page\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "It was the decade of The Empire Strikes Back and Michael Jackson's song Beat It.\n\nA time when Madonna introduced legions of teenage girls to scrunchies and Jane Fonda made lycra and leg warmers cool.\n\nAnd if you were listening to cassette tapes - there's a good chance it was on the revolutionary Walkman - made by Japanese electronics firm Sony.\n\nBut not everyone was a fan of this Asian influence.\n\nBooks like \"Japan as Number One\" made the bestseller list, underscoring the antagonism many Americans felt about the then rising Asian superpower.\n\nAnd US President Ronald Reagan was slamming Japan for not opening its markets enough to US products.\n\n\"We sell a car into Japan, and they do things to us that make it impossible to sell cars in Japan, and yet they sell cars into us,\" is the kind of rhetoric you might hear.\n\nExcept that's not Reagan in 1982. It's Donald Trump in 2017.\n\nSo are we rewinding back to the 1980s?\n\nIt's a pertinent question to ask, especially as Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe visits the US to meet newly elected President for some leisurely golf and tough talking.\n\nCurrency will be a talking point on the tee. Like in the 1980s, the US dollar is stronger than the Japanese yen - making Japanese goods cheaper for American consumers.\n\nJapanese car giant Toyota says will invest $10bn in the US over the next five years\n\nThen, like now, the industries that were the main sticking points were the auto sector and agriculture.\n\nCars, cows and citrus fruit led to a soaring US trade deficit with Japan, worth almost a fifth of the US's GDP at the time.\n\nToday the deficit between the two nations has halved, but when the two leaders meet over the next few days, it is these same three subjects that will likely be the focus of their talks.\n\nIn the 1980s, Japanese car-makers built factories in the US to ward off criticism that they were unfairly dumping products in American markets.\n\nMost recently, Toyota has become a target of Mr Trump's trade rage for building a car plant in Mexico\n\nAs a result, these days more than six million Japanese cars are sold in the US, with only around one million of them made in Japan.\n\nBut apparently, that isn't enough.\n\nToyota became a target of Mr Trump's trade rage recently for building a car plant in Mexico.\n\nIn response, Toyota said it would invest $10bn in the US over the next five years.\n\nBut analysts say the tough talk on cars won't end until Tokyo offers up some major concessions elsewhere, in particular on agriculture.\n\nTo protect its farmers, Japan places an average 14% tariff on all agricultural goods imported into the country. By comparison, the US has a much lower tariff of 5%.\n\nIf the Trans-Pacific Partnership had gone through, many of Japan's tariffs would have been eliminated.\n\nTo protect its farmers, Japan places an average 14% tariff on all agricultural goods imported into the country\n\nTariffs on beef for example - the US's top agricultural export to Japan - would have been slashed by 74% within 16 years.\n\nMr Trump effectively killed the TPP by removing the US from it. He will argue that if Tokyo wants to trade with the US and sell its cars to American consumers, it's going to have to cut tariffs even more aggressively.\n\nMr Trump says that Japan is using monetary policy and intervention to keep the yen weaker against the US dollar, making its goods cheaper in the US.\n\nTokyo has heard this before. In 1985, Japan signed the Plaza Accord - an agreement that eventually saw the yen rise by 46% against the US dollar.\n\nSome economists argue that this brought about the \"Lost Decades\" of Japan - an era of low wages and low growth that Japan is still trying to get out of.\n\nTokyo will be wary of any arrangement that will see the yen's value strengthen.\n\nPrime Minister Abe may be forced to make some concessions to get the new US president to see his point of view\n\nThat's especially true at a time when every controversial tweet by President Trump sends investors flocking to the safe-haven yen, making it even harder for Japan to stick to its export-led recovery path.\n\nPrime Minister Abe will be under great pains to emphasise to President Trump that Japan today is very different from the 1980s - and that Tokyo shouldn't be a target of his trade rage.\n\nThere is one thing though that has stayed pretty much the same since then, and that's Japan's dependence on the US.\n\nMany of the trade concessions Tokyo made in the 1980s to appease the US were based on geopolitical considerations. Japan wanted continued US military and political support in its backyard.\n\nThe same, to some extent, is true today.\n\nPrime Minister Abe may be forced to make some concessions to get the new US president to see his point of view, even if there's a possibility that Japan Inc gets hurt in the bargain.", "It takes a special kind of person to run a radio station in an area controlled by Islamist militants in northern Syria. Music is forbidden, so are women presenters. But Raed Fares - manager of Radio Fresh FM - has come up with a creative response to the militants' demands.\n\nIt is mid-day and almost time for the latest news from Radio Fresh FM in the rebel-held province of Idlib, in north west Syria.\n\nSuddenly the airwaves are filled with assorted sounds of tweeting birds, clucking chickens and bleating goats. As the newsreader gets under way, the cacophony continues beneath his voice.\n\nYou might be forgiven for thinking that this is some sort of farming bulletin. It's not. It's simply that the station's manager, Raed Fares, has had enough of being told what to do by the powerful jihadist group, Jabhat Fateh al-Sham or JFS - which until last July was linked to al-Qaeda and known as the al-Nusra Front.\n\n\"They tried to force us to stop playing music on air,\" says Fares. \"So we started to play animals in the background as a kind of sarcastic gesture against them.\"\n\nIn what appear to be further acts of sarcastic sabotage aimed at JFS's ban on music, Radio Fresh FM has introduced long sequences of bongs from London's Big Ben clock, endless ticking sounds, ringing explosions and the whistle of shells flying through the air.\n\nAnd instead of songs with melodies, the station now plays recordings of tuneless chanting football fans.\n\nFares has been getting involved in confrontations of one kind or another for years now.\n\nHe took part in hundreds of demonstrations against Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime at the beginning of the uprising in 2011 and continues to see it as the biggest enemy. Many of his friends were killed or imprisoned, as the authorities responded with increasing violence.\n\nRaed Fares was one of many demonstrators in the town of Kafranbel in the early days of the Syrian uprising\n\nThen came the threats from fighters of the so called Islamic State. Like JFS, they said the station's music was haram, or offensive to Islam. Believing this to be totally wrong, Fares ignored the threats and carried on as before, but nearly paid with his life.\n\nJust over three years ago, when the 44-year-old former estate agent arrived home in the early hours of the morning, after finishing work at the radio station, two IS gunmen with Kalashnikovs were waiting for him. They fired a barrage of shots, leaving more than a dozen holes in his car, even more in the wall behind, and two in the right side of his body. These shattered several bones in his shoulder and ribs, as well as puncturing his right lung.\n\nFares was left lying in a pool of blood and only narrowly survived after being rushed to hospital by his brother.\n\n\"I still have trouble breathing,\" he later said, \"but my doctor says my lungs should be no problem because of the size of my nose.\"\n\nIt's not that surprising that IS doesn't like Fares. After all, he did once design a poster depicting Syria as an alien with a monster called ISIS exploding out of its chest. The group has since been pushed out of Idlib province.\n\nPresident Assad, though, is his favourite target. He once got his friends to drape themselves in shrouds and then filmed them staggering out of graves calling for Assad to step down, as if even the dead want him gone. He posted it online and it was played on a number of Arabic television stations.\n\nHumour, it seems, is never far from the surface with Raed Fares. Take his response to another of JFS's demands, to get rid of women news readers - who are also haram, they say.\n\nHas he, I ask him, agreed to swap them for men?\n\n\"No, I have another solution for that issue. We simply put their voices through a computer software program which makes them sound like men.\"\n\nThough having heard the resulting broadcasts, I would say the women now sound closer to Daleks or robots than men.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThe feisty 6ft 2in station manager has also refused JFS's demands to allow their members into the radio station to monitor the behaviour of his staff.\n\n\"We said 'No,'\" he says. \"You have to monitor the transmissions, not what people are doing inside the radio station.\"\n\nJFS are not the only extremist rebels in the area. There are about a dozen others, and even though some of the biggest factions have recently been forming new alliances, this still makes the area chaotic to govern.\n\nThere is little more than two hours of mains electricity a day, water supplies are limited and food increasingly expensive in a region flooded with 700,000 refugees from elsewhere in the country.\n\nThe fact that Fares's dispute with JFS has continued for so long is evidence that the group is a little more tolerant than IS. But as a family man with three children is he not worried that sooner or later one of these jihadist groups will kill him?\n\n\"They've tried that five times already,\" he says. \"If it happens, it happens. But they haven't succeeded yet. I try to survive, but if I can't, it's OK.\"\n\nHe tells me that the lowest point in his life came when one of his closest friends was killed and another severely injured by a bomb last summer. Fares admits that he nearly took his own life in the days that followed. But now, he says, he is more determined than ever to carry on.\n\n\"We started the revolution together and were all aware that we faced the same risks,\" he says. \"That means that my life isn't more expensive than my friends who lost their lives.\"\n\nMike Thomson's report about radio Fresh FM ran on the Today programme on 9 February.\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "In most countries, the authorities arrest anyone growing large quantities of cannabis.\n\nBut in Italy, the army does something different: it grows the plant itself – for medical use.", "The Crau plain grasshopper is confined to a small area of the South of France\n\nThe first comprehensive assessment of Europe's crickets and grasshoppers has found that more than a quarter of species are being driven to extinction.\n\nAccording to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the insect group is the most threatened of those assessed so far in Europe.\n\nEurope harbours more than 1,000 species of grasshopper and cricket.\n\nIf we don't act now the sound of crickets could become a thing of the past, said the IUCN.\n\nCrickets, bush crickets and grasshoppers - a group known as Orthoptera - live on grassland.\n\nThey are an important food source for birds and reptiles, and their decline could affect entire ecosystems.\n\nTheir habitat is being lost due to wildfires, intensive agriculture and tourism development.\n\nThe knotty sand grasshopper is threatened by tourist development\n\nJean-Christophe Vié, deputy director, IUCN Global Species Programme, said to bring these species back from the brink of extinction, more needs to be done to protect and restore their habitats.\n\n\"This can be done through sustainable grassland management using traditional agricultural practices, for example,\" he said.\n\n\"If we do not act now, the sound of crickets in European grasslands could soon become a thing of the past.\"\n\nThe assessment took place over two years and involved more than 150 scientists.\n\nAxel Hochkirch is chair of the IUCN invertebrate conservation sub-committee and lead author of the report.\n\n\"If we lose grasshoppers and other Orthoptera like crickets and bush crickets, we will lose diversity,\" he told BBC News. \"They are very good indicators of biodiversity in open ecosystems.\"\n\nThe Adriatic marbled bush cricket is classed as endangered\n\nThe experts are particularly concerned about species that occupy small ranges, such as the Crau plain grasshopper, which lives only on the Crau plain in the South of France.\n\nSome populations are also being lost through wildfires, particularly in Greece and on the Canary Islands.\n\n\"The results from this IUCN Red List are deeply worrying,\" said Luc Bas, director of the IUCN European Regional Office.\n\nThe report recommends the setting up of a monitoring programme across Europe to obtain information on population trends.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby League\n\nSt Helens earned a narrow win in a low-scoring but enthralling Super League season opener against Leeds Rhinos.\n\nJoel Moon scored the first try of the new season in the corner as Rhinos went into the break 4-0 ahead.\n\nTheo Fages crashed over early in the second before Mark Percival's conversion gave the lead to Saints, who had two tries ruled out by the video referee in the match.\n\nLeeds pressed for another, but Saints stood firm in an energy-sapping game.\n\nAs the game came to a close, both sides needed last-ditch defending to save them, including from Rhinos' Ashton Golding, a stand-out performer to deny Saints getting more scores on the board throughout.\n\nThe Rhinos, who had to secure their Super League place through The Qualifiers last campaign, looked a totally different side to the one that found itself bottom of the table during last season.\n\nRob Burrow, playing his 500th Leeds Rhinos match, and Carl Ablett put Moon in for the first try, and Golding held up Tommy Makinson to ensure the visitors kept their advantage going into the second half.\n\nSaints were without the injured Matty Smith, but Danny Richardson was impressive throughout, and his half-back partner Fages broke through the defence to help put Saints ahead.\n\nMakinson then superbly saved a certain try himself, taking Liam Sutcliffle out of play when the Leeds man looked to be heading for the line.\n\nLeeds had the majority of play towards the end of the match, but Saints' long-kicking game made it difficult for Rhinos to gain ground and the hosts held out for victory.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\n\"A confused shop with a mish-mash of products with no emphasis on the fact that this is supposed to be a shop specialising in cruelty-free, fair trade toiletries and make-up,\" is Suzy Bourke's damning verdict on The Body Shop.\n\nThe 42-year-old stage manager used to be a regular shopper at the High Street chain, but now she tends to go to Boots instead.\n\nAnd she's not alone. Its owner, cosmetics giant L'Oreal, wants to offload the High Street chain, which has been suffering slowing sales.\n\nThe Body Shop, founded by Dame Anita Roddick in 1976, was a pioneer using natural ingredients for its beauty products when it started out. It initially thrived, expanding rapidly, and by the 1980s was one of the most well-known brands on the High Street.\n\nI remember the chain fondly from my youth, when it seemed to be an exciting shop full of affordable, fun and exciting products. Coloured animal soaps, banana shampoo, white musk perfume and strawberry shower gel were the height of 1980s beauty chic as far as I was concerned.\n\nBut by the early 2000s, rivals had caught up, with firms such as Boots, for example, developing similar natural beauty ranges. New challengers such as Lush also emerged, encroaching on The Body Shop's market share.\n\n\"You never see a Body Shop busy any more, they always used to be packed,\" says Suzy Bourke\n\nThe chain is still a sizeable High Street presence with more than 3,000 stores in 66 countries and employs 22,000 people, according to its website.\n\nThe Body Shop's results for 2016 show total sales were 920.8m euros (£783.8m), down from 967.2m euros in 2015, which L'Oreal blamed on market slowdowns in Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia.\n\nThe sales were a tiny proportion of L'Oreal's overall 25.8bn euros of sales for the same period.\n\nAnd arguably the chain - which L'Oreal bought for £652m ($1.14bn) in 2006 - remains a lower-end and insignificant part of its huge portfolio of brands, which include skincare specialists Kiehl's, Lancome and Garnier, as well as fragrance brands Ralph Lauren and Giorgio Armani.\n\nVeteran retail analyst Richard Hyman argues that L'Oreal overpaid for the chain and has failed to add any value to it.\n\n\"Frankly it's a bit of mystery them buying it in the first place.\n\n\"What they bought is a retailer and what they're good at is brands,\" he says.\n\nThe Body Shop's use of natural ingredients made it a pioneer when it started out in 1976\n\nHe thinks The Body Shop's struggles are down to the same issues facing the retail sector as a whole:\n\n\"Retailing in shops is becoming an increasingly challenging business. You've got to have a very compelling retail proposition as opposed to a brand or product proposition.\n\n\"Everyone that shops in The Body Shop spends most of their personal care budget somewhere else. They're constantly chasing their tail, having to work hard to attract people into a store,\" he says.\n\nWhen the 2006 deal was struck, founder Dame Anita - who died just a year later - was forced to reject claims that The Body Shop, known for its ethically sourced goods, was joining with \"the enemy\".\n\nThere were concerns that some of the ingredients L'Oreal then used in its products had been tested on animals, while The Body Shop was publicly opposed to animal testing.\n\nThe French firm insisted the brand would complement its existing offering, giving it increased presence in the \"masstige\" sector - mass market combined with prestige.\n\nBut Charlotte Pearce, an analyst at consultancy GlobalData Retail, believes the firm has \"slightly lost its way\" under L'Oreal's ownership.\n\n\"While The Body Shop's heritage is strong, it needs to work on its brand perception. It's not known as a brand which is innovative and new, and it's failed to keep up with market trends - contour sticks, kits and palettes were a strong trend in 2016, and these are nowhere to be seen in The Body Shop's range,\" she says.\n\nAnalysts say The Body Shop has lost its cachet as a fashionable brand\n\nThese days the firm is not seen as \"a trendy brand\", but mostly as a shop for gifting and low-value items, such as its body butters and body lotions, she says.\n\n\"With premium retailers such as Jo Malone and Liz Earle offering in-store treatments, there is more that The Body Shop could be doing to raise its profile and improve the customer experience,\" she adds.\n\nNonetheless, Prof John Colley from Warwick Business School believes there will still be plenty of interest from private equity funds.\n\nHe expects the firm to be sold with its current separate management team, who he says are likely to have their own ideas for how to improve it.\n\n\"When a major corporate has decided it doesn't want a business, it will sell it, probably, whatever the price.\n\n\"They [L'Oreal] are trying to get rid of it because it's underperforming. But anyone bidding will see a clear turnaround. Independent ownership would probably serve the firm well. A refreshed image would almost certainly work,\" he says.\n\nMr Hyman, too, believes a new owner could improve The Body Shop, particularly by selling the chain's products outside its own shops. But he says trying to offload the large store estate with long committed leases will be a hindrance to any buyer.\n\n\"That's not to say it isn't a business with potential, but it could perform much more strongly,\" he says.\n\nDame Anita Roddick, who founded the firm in 1976 at the age of 34, said her original motivation for the firm was simply to make a living for herself and her two daughters while her husband was away travelling.\n\nBut as someone who had travelled widely, she set out to do things differently, relying on natural ingredients and her customers' interest in the environment.\n\n\"Why waste a container when you can refill it? And why buy more of something than you can use? We behaved as she [my mother] did in the Second World War, we reused everything, we refilled everything and we recycled all we could.\n\n\"The foundation of The Body Shop's environmental activism was born out of ideas like these,\" she wrote.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nWales Women made a winning start to the Six Nations with a gritty 20-8 victory over Italy Women at Jesi.\n\nCaryl Thomas' close-range score after 16 minutes helped Wales to a 10-0 lead, with Elinor Snowsill kicking a penalty and conversion.\n\nItaly cut the Welsh lead to 10-8 at the break after Manuela Furlan's try.\n\nBut full-back Dyddgu Hywel and hooker Carys Phillips crossed for Wales in the second period before the Welsh defence held out in the closing stages.\n\nWales dominated the early territory thanks to an astute kicking game, with Snowsill chipping over a 25-metre penalty after nine minutes.\n\nThe visitors then made the most of running a tap penalty, with prop Thomas emerging from underneath a pile of bodies as the Welsh pack drove over, Snowsill converting.\n\nItaly mounted a storming comeback in the second quarter as winger Michela Sillari knocked over a penalty after the Welsh scrum was put under severe pressure, to the delight of a noisy home crowd.\n\nThen full-back Furlan made the most of room out wide to cross in the corner, leaving Wales hanging on to a precarious 10-8 advantage at half-time.\n\nA similar move then saw Wales' number 15 Hywel emulate Furlan, cutting inside to score the visitors' second try five minutes after the break.\n\nWales had their fair share of defending to do, but proved more efficient in turning pressure into points as captain Phillips crashed over from a driving maul with 10 minutes left.\n\nWales then held out in defence for a fifth straight win under new coach Rowland Phillips, the former Wales flanker.\n\nHywel was named woman of the match for a commanding all-round performance in attack and defence.\n\nShe told BBC Wales Sport: \"First half, the Italians were putting quite a lot of pressure on us, maybe we lost our shape at some points, but we kept our composure and came back stronger in the second half.\n\n\"I feel in the second half we really showed what we can do on the pitch. It's always nice to score but it came off a good drive by the forwards and simple work to finish it off from the backs.\n\n\"We've got a lot of analysis to do and then head into training on Tuesday to concentrate on the England game.\n\n\"It's a great environment with new management - we've had the perfect build-up with four warm-ups and beating Ireland two weeks ago. It's all about confidence and thankfully we've got that massive win [and are] ready for England next week.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nBBC Sport's football expert Mark Lawrenson will be making a prediction for all 380 Premier League games this season against a variety of guests.\n\nLawro's opponent for this weekend's Premier League fixtures is two-time Super Bowl winner Osi Umenyiora, an analyst on the BBC's NFL Show.\n\nUmenyiora says he does not support a Premier League team - instead he follows his favourite player, Manchester United striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic.\n\n\"Anywhere Zlatan goes, that is who I follow,\" he explained. \"Last year I was a fan of Paris St-Germain, but now I am a fan of United - because of Zlatan.\n\n\"He is the kind of footballer who could make the transition to play in the NFL, partly because of his attitude and also because he has the physicality to dominate games.\"\n\nAs well as predicting the outcome of the weekend's Premier League games, Umenyiora has picked a winner of Super Bowl LI on Sunday - he thinks the Atlanta Falcons will beat the New England Patriots 31-27 in Houston.\n\nSuper Bowl LI, with Umenyiora, Mark Chapman, Mike Carlson and Jason Bell is live on BBC One and BBC Radio 5 live from 23:20 GMT on Sunday.\n\nYou can make your Premier League predictions now, compare them with those of Lawro and other fans by playing the BBC Sport Predictor game.\n\nA correct result (picking a win, draw or defeat) is worth 10 points. The exact score earns 40 points.\n\nFrom the midweek Premier League games, Lawro got three correct results, including two perfect scores, from the 10 games for a total of 90 points.\n\nHe beat England spinner Moeen Ali, who got two correct results, with no perfect scores for a tally of 20 points that leaves him joint bottom of the guest leaderboard.\n\nAll kick-offs 15:00 GMT unless otherwise stated.\n• None The celebrations that were bigger than the goals", "Ciaran Maxwell was set upon and beaten unconscious as a teenager in Larne\n\nA Royal Marine Commando from Northern Ireland has pleaded guilty to preparing acts of terrorism linked to dissident republicanism. Ciaran Maxwell's case raises alarming questions of how he was able to penetrate the ranks of an elite British military unit and smuggle out arms.\n\nIn the early hours of a morning back in June 2002, Maxwell, then 16, was walking from his home in Larne towards the Seacourt estate, which sits on a hill overlooking the port. What happened next left the Catholic teenager \"angry and traumatised\", according to someone in the nationalist community who knew him.\n\nMaxwell was struck by a bottle, fell to the ground and was set upon and beaten unconscious by a gang of loyalists armed with golf clubs and iron bars.\n\nThe unprovoked attack featured in the republican newspaper An Phoblacht, which claimed that an Army patrol arrived at the scene but did not intervene.\n\nThat cannot be substantiated, though amid escalating tension in the town, soldiers were back on the streets to support the police who dealt with nearly 300 sectarian incidents between April 2001 and March 2004.\n\nA security source we spoke to recalled shootings, houses being burnt out and regular beatings.\n\nThis was the environment in which Maxwell - described as a \"quiet republican\" - became an adult.\n\nSeveral residents in his home town said the mental scars of his beating never fully healed, leaving a vulnerability that others would later exploit.\n\nThe failure of police to prosecute anyone for the assault may also have caused him bitterness.\n\nEight years later the adventure-loving, physically fit Maxwell began the gruelling 32-week training to become a Royal Marine, writing online: \"Pain is temporary, the Green Beret is forever.\"\n\nIn May 2011 his mother expressed her pride ahead of attending his passing out parade in England.\n\nBut all was not as it seemed. One of the men who completed training with Maxwell, and does not want to be identified, told the BBC: \"He was a strange character, very reserved, didn't join in with the banter.\"\n\nHe described him as \"shifty\" and unwilling to form close relationships with others in the unit.\n\nBefore he had even completed his training, court papers show that Maxwell began \"assisting another to commit an act of terrorism\" although it is not clear which individual or group he was working with.\n\nHe was not the only young man from Larne being drawn into the orbit of dissident republicanism.\n\nA friend from the Seacourt estate was jailed in 2014 after pleading guilty to possession of explosives with intent to endanger life. Niall Lehd had buried chemicals, a pipe bomb and a deactivated submachine gun in blue barrels in a field.\n\nBy 2016, despite having become a father, Maxwell had begun burying his own blue barrels full of explosive ingredients during visits to see family in Larne.\n\nSome of the ammunition discovered\n\nIn a country park, he stockpiled chemicals which he bought online, timer units and improvised detonators. Even more alarmingly, in a remote forest he hid a handgun, ammunition, pipe bombs and Claymore anti-personnel mines he had stolen from the British military.\n\nHis behaviour was becoming increasingly reckless as he built more hides in the woods near his home in Devon where he also stashed cannabis he planned to sell in Larne.\n\nIn his work locker were bank card details stolen from fellow Marines to carry out fraud and handwritten notes on tactics used by terrorist groups.\n\nBut his plans unravelled when police uncovered the hides in Northern Ireland in one of the most significant arms finds of recent years.\n\nDetectives traced the serial numbers on the mines across the Irish Sea to 40 Commando, the Royal Marine unit based near Taunton where Ciaran Maxwell had been quietly building a career. They also found his DNA on some of the material found in the woods.\n\nMaxwell had endured so much to get the green beret only to trade it for terrorism. Was his a long-planned infiltration or was he dragged back by others to a past he thought he had escaped?\n\nIn his hometown few are willing to talk on the record about his case. Larne is much calmer these days but the occasional street mural and flag hint at the continuing presence of loyalist paramilitary groups such as the Ulster Volunteer Force and the Ulster Defence Association.\n\nThere are concerns that dissident republicans are becoming more active in parts of Northern Ireland. Last month a police officer was shot and injured in north Belfast.\n\nAlthough Maxwell had links to dissident republicans, it is not known how extensive they were. A security source told the BBC that he was \"operating as a bit of a lone wolf.\"\n\nSammy Wilson, Democratic Unionist MP for East Antrim, said: \"There has always been a dissident group which has been operating around Larne engaged in firebombing, that kind of activity, and it's been known that they have been trying to move into the area and recruit.\"\n\nMr Wilson is concerned that Ciaran Maxwell was able to sneak munitions out of his base and evade detection for so long.\n\nHe said: \"Where it is clear that someone is vulnerable either to coercion or may well have sympathies to aid and abet terrorist groups because of their background, perhaps we should give special attention to them when they come back to their own community.\"\n\nThe BBC asked the Ministry of Defence about its security vetting procedures for Royal Marines but received no response.\n\nThe criminal case against Ciaran Maxwell was overwhelming, paving the way for today's guilty plea.\n\nWhat is much less clear is exactly why he turned to terrorism, although his actions offer a stark reminder of the dark forces that still threaten stability in Northern Ireland.", "As anti-government protests in Romania enter their fifth day, the BBC's Steve Rosenberg speaks to parents about why they have decided to bring their children along.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nIreland could be granted Test cricket status in April after a meeting of the International Cricket Council board in Dubai.\n\nAn agreement has been made to include them and Afghanistan in future plans.\n\nAt the meeting, the ICC also agreed the principle of a nine-team Test league, to be run over a two-year cycle, probably starting after the 2019 World Cup.\n\nDecisions will be made at the next ICC board meeting in April.\n\nIn addition, after the controversy of the recent India-England series, the ICC has agreed in principle to use the decision review system in televised World Twenty20 matches from October.\n\nThe ICC has been discussing ways to revamp the Test structure for some time.\n\nIt is unclear if Ireland and Afghanistan would be able to play Tests straight away or would have to wait for the new structure of Test cricket to begin.\n\nIreland made their one-day international debut in June 2006 when they played England, while Afghanistan's maiden ODI was three years later.\n\nAfghanistan's domestic four-day and Twenty20 competitions have now been granted first-class and List A status respectively, four months after Ireland's Inter-Provincial Championship became the first domestic event outside a Test-playing country to earn first-class status.", "Eddie Jones' England appear to have minimal problems: reigning Six Nations champions, 14 wins on the spin, a summer spent whitewashing Wallabies, an autumn of being tested and pulling through every time.\n\nAnd yet. As they prepare to get their title defence under way against France this Saturday, Jones has been in typically restless mood - decrying his players' global standing, downplaying the team's decorated past year, and being as likely to appear satisfied as he is to tarmac Twickenham.\n\nThese are the six key questions the old schemer knows he has to answer:\n• None Daly and Launchbury in for England\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\n1. How does he combat complacency?\n\nEngland haven't lost at home to France in the Six Nations for 12 years. They have won four of their past five meetings with Wales. Scotland last won at Twickenham when Margaret Thatcher was in her first term as prime minister; Italy, even buoyed by the charisma and drive of Conor O'Shea, have a record against the men in white of played 22, lost 22.\n\nAll of which might lead England supporters to think this championship will all come down to the final match in Dublin, and all of which means Jones - 13 matches in charge, 13 wins - is making sure his players do not fall into the same trap.\n\n\"Nothing in our team is permanent,\" he has said of his 100% men.\n\n\"No-one owns the jersey; no-one owns their position in the team. It's something you borrow, and something you've got to cherish.\"\n\nIt is why he has claimed that his squad doesn't yet contain a single player good enough to make a world XV, no matter how many caps, Premiership trophies, European Cups or French scalps there might be among the 34 names. It is why he has quoted Sir Alex Ferguson, who said that he only managed two world-class players in his 27 years at Manchester United.\n\nNo matter that Ferguson actually said there were four (Eric Cantona, Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs and Cristiano Ronaldo). It is the headline rather than the small print that matters in Jones' message. No-one is safe. Everyone can do better.\n\n2: How does he improve leadership in the team?\n\nEveryone can do better, including a captain who, less than a year ago, became only the second man in 19 years to lead England to a Grand Slam.\n\nDylan Hartley's successes in the role have bought him only the slightest insurance. With his six-week ban for an illegal tackle on Leinster's Sean O'Brien having only expired last week, he is seriously short of match time but has retained the armband for the Six Nations.\n\nBeyond the championship, there are no guarantees. There is the pressure at hooker from the consistently excellent Jamie George, Tommy Taylor and Luke Cowan-Dickie, and there are Jones' repeated hints that his captain for the games leading up to the next World Cup may not be a 33-year-old.\n\nJones has talked of \"leadership density\" - of having eight or nine generals throughout the ranks, as the World Cup-winning side of 2003 could boast, and he may already have earmarked the man most likely to lead them all, Owen Farrell.\n\nOne of Jones' first acts as head coach was to promote Farrell from the ranks to vice-captain, a move in keeping with his decision, when in charge at Saracens, to give him a debut against Llanelli just 11 days after his 17th birthday. A greater promotion yet may come early again.\n\nIn other words: stick or twist? You might think only the bravest or most cocksure of coaches would change a winning team. The Six Nations does not tend to reward the experimental or the untested.\n\nBut what if those wins were not enough? What if the stated long-term aim of winning the World Cup in Japan in 2019 outranks this oldest of tournaments?\n\nAnd so suddenly there are dilemmas everywhere. Does Jones move Farrell inside to 10, breaking up his partnership with George Ford to create fresh options at centre, or does he look at the continued injury problems of Manu Tuilagi and the international inexperience of Ben Teo'o and keep old friends together?\n\nMike Brown will be 34 by the time of that World Cup. Isn't Anthony Watson his natural successor at full-back, particularly bearing in mind the surfeit of options on the wing? Yet Brown is rock-solid under the high ball, beats a man every time he attacks with ball in hand and brings the grunt and aggression that Jones so appreciates in his charges.\n\nIs this the time to let the outstanding Maro Itoje run free in the back row, leaving the second row in the combative and athletic hands of Courtney Lawes, George Kruis and Joe Launchbury? Or does the sensible coach let his superman fly where he has excelled so far in his brief international career?\n\nJames Haskell, like Brown, will be 34 by 2019 - so there is the question as to should he return to the flanks whenever fit. Jones must also consider if it realistic to expect another 30-something, Chris Robshaw, to remain a first choice when his spell out with a shoulder problem ends this spring.\n\nEngland's head coach knows that to win the World Cup, he needs more than one world-class side. He may need more than two; unless injury rates dramatically and unexpectedly drop, he requires both cover and a fitting replacement for that cover, as his current problems at loosehead prop illustrate.\n\n4. How does he manage expectation?\n\nEngland expects, as another successful captain of the ship once remarked. Jones' team have set high standards over the past 12 months, beating every major rugby nation bar the one they did not meet, New Zealand.\n\nSo will supporters giddy on that long unbeaten stretch feel disappointed if England fail to win a second successive Grand Slam? If they lose to Ireland yet win the Six Nations title, is that no longer enough, despite the fact it would have been very welcome during the run of four successive second-place finishes for which they had to settle from 2012 to 2015?\n\nAnd what if that remarkable run goes on? If England win every one of their matches in this Six Nations, they will break New Zealand's all-time record for most consecutive Test victories. English teams and those who cheer them have not generally reacted well to sustained success; England's cricket team won only one of their next four Test series having attained the world number one ranking in 2011, while the rugby team's World Cup and Grand Slam triumph of 2003 was followed by a third place in the 2004 Six Nations, a fourth in 2005 and another fourth in 2006.\n\nIt may be a happy problem for Jones to have, when so little was expected for so long, when the past two World Cups have seen the team fall apart and the head coach sacked. But a problem it may be, now the bar has been raised.\n\n5. How does he improve England's attacking game?\n\nJones made no secret his first Six Nations campaign was about tightening the defence. England had, after all, shipped 33 points in Australia's last match at Twickenham, 28 in their last home game against Wales, and 35 on France's previous Six Nations visit. Jones also wanted to buttress a set-piece that had gone from traditional strength to Achilles heel during that World Cup disaster of 2015.\n\nThat England scored five fewer tries in the tournament last year than they had in coming second in 2015 mattered less than the bigger Slam scenario. Now, in his second, Jones wants to revitalise the offensive element of his team's make-up in the same way.\n\nThere has been the appointment of Rory Teague as full-time skills coach, but Jones understands that more developments must follow - perhaps a different balance of personnel in the backs, maybe a more expansive gameplan, almost certainly a ruthlessness when chances do appear.\n\nThe theory is unarguable. The reality - in what are likely to be cold, wet conditions, in the most ferociously competitive tournament in world rugby, when every other nation and all their support are looking forward to knocking England off their throne - may be several degrees harder.\n\n6. How does he deal with defeat?\n\nIt will come at some stage, perhaps in Cardiff, where England have won only twice in the Six Nations in a decade, or Dublin, where they have been victorious in the tournament just once in 14 years. It may come on tour in Argentina, while Jones' best players will be absent as they join up with the British and Irish Lions in New Zealand. It may happen beyond that still, should the Jones magic continue to cast its spell.\n\nWhen it does, how will his side react? Will it feel worse to players and supporters because of the long unbeaten run that preceded it, and will its manner deflate some of the good feeling which Jones has created since his appointment?\n\nBecause the end is not the end. Maybe a truly world-class team never countenances defeat, but a truly world-class team also develops from one - from the lessons that reverse has taught, from the weaknesses it exposes, from the players who fall short.\n\nAs Jones said last month: \"If we lose a few battles on the way, it will help us win the war.\"\n\nJones and England have been like a married couple who have enjoyed the most extraordinary start to their relationship. When the first fight happens, when the first door slams, will it strengthen the bond between them, or will they forever be looking back to when it all seemed so special, so untarnished?", "Donald Trump (R) met technology leaders when he was president-elect\n\nIt also just so happens to be the sixth largest economy in the world and home to the most influential, profitable and powerful companies on earth.\n\nIf the bubble bursts, or even just contracts a little, the whole country suffers - including President Donald Trump and his supporters. California is a so-called “donor” state, meaning it simply pays more into the US Treasury than it gets out.\n\nSo when President Trump talks about making deals, he’ll know full well that in California he faces formidable bargaining chips he can’t ignore. He may even be on the back foot.\n\nAnd that may be one of the reasons why we saw a peculiar thing happen on Friday.\n\nUber boss Travis Kalanick decided not to turn up to President Trump’s economic advisory panel, and the president said... nothing.\n\nHe didn’t call the company “failing” or “once great” or “weak” or any of those words he’s typically thrown around when he feels personally slighted.\n\nIn fact, aside from a few pre-election skirmishes with Apple, President Trump has been relatively ambivalent towards tech firms, and there’s a very good theory as to why - he really needs them.\n\nTravis Kalanick put Uber's reputation ahead of the value the company might get from a meeting with the president\n\nAnd they need him too, of course.\n\nUnder President Trump, Silicon Valley is holding out for a lower corporate tax rate - which could bring billions back into the US, a win-win for both sides.\n\nBut there’s a snag in this arrangement. For the most part, the workers at these companies are outraged, seething at the prospect of their bosses even sitting at the same table as the new president.\n\nThat’s why we saw 2,000 Google employees across the world leave their desks on Monday to demonstrate against the immigration ban.\n\nIt’s why Amazon’s own employees are calling on the company to stop advertising on right-wing news website Breitbart.\n\nIt’s why Uber’s staff wrote a lengthy “Letter to Travis”, informing their boss about how unpopular his involvement with President Trump was among the ranks. It worked.\n\n“Joining the group was not meant to be an endorsement of the president or his agenda but unfortunately it has been misinterpreted to be exactly that,” Mr Kalanick told staff in a memo announcing he was stepping down.\n\nThe tone was understanding, but a little frustrated. Would it not be better to at least have a seat at the table? Uber’s staff didn’t see it that way.\n\nAlthough he said he didn’t support President Trump’s immigration policy, people thought he did. And that’s what mattered most.\n\nHe put Uber’s reputation ahead of the value Uber might get from a meeting with the president.\n\nHe may have been extra-sensitive after a long week.\n\nLast Saturday, a misjudged tweet caused a reported 200,000 Uber users to delete their accounts - so many, in fact, the company had to create a special tool to automate the process.\n\nUber’s explanation that it was all a big misunderstanding has merit, but the furore, justified or not, underlined the fine line tech companies tread with their users.\n\nThe firms have until now acted in ways that were “good for business”, but now they are being forced to consider what is simply “good”.\n\nOne minute you can be helping the people of San Francisco get around, the next those same people are protesting outside your headquarters.\n\nAnother company tip-toeing along is Twitter, buoyed by its role as the mouthpiece for the most important man in the world, but cowed by what that man chooses to share.\n\nIt has faced calls to ban President Trump from the site on account of some feeling he has breached the network’s rules on hate speech and harassment.\n\nIt of course hasn’t done that - and to be fair, the demand didn’t gain significant traction, even amongst Trump’s opponents.\n\nBut Twitter’s employees, nervous about their role as President Trump’s megaphone, contributed a combined $1m (£800,775) to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).\n\nThe ACLU has been the benefactor of choice for companies that have one eye on public perception.\n\nMany are dealing with what can be plainly described as the “Peter Thiel problem”. Mr Thiel, an investor with an arguably unrivalled track record, has his fingers in almost every significant pie around here.\n\nAnd, uncomfortably for many, he also has the ear of the president, of whom he is an outspoken supporter.\n\nWhen Facebook’s chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg chose not to make a public statement on the Women’s March two weeks ago, people jumped to various conclusions, most of which inevitably led to the hand of Mr Thiel - who sits on Facebook’s board.\n\nThis comes despite any evidence Mr Thiel is calling any kind of shots on Facebook’s political position.\n\nSupport for President Trump in California is harder to come by than in other parts of the US\n\nMeanwhile, well-regarded start-up accelerator Y Combinator is also feeling pressure thanks to its links with Mr Thiel.\n\nThe company’s president Sam Altman said he wouldn’t sever ties with the investor. The programme has said it will take on the ACLU as one of its cohorts, offering mentorship on digital projects.\n\nIt seems for now the rank-and-file of Silicon Valley see advising President Trump as indistinguishable from supporting him.\n\nTechnology companies are perhaps paying for years of hyperbolic statements about changing the world, in a place where a minor software update gets people “super excited”.\n\nOne thing that has struck me about staff at these huge companies is the infectious, passionate loyalty. It exists because those employees believe the company stands for the same issues they do. Any wavering creates shockwaves.\n\nThe atmosphere may get less toxic as the presidency continues, but it leaves bosses extremely hesitant to get around President Trump’s table.\n\nWill President Trump need to get around theirs?\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCoverage: Watch live on BBC TV, Red Button, Connected TV and online, plus follow text updates on the BBC Sport website\n\nGreat Britain's reward should they beat Canada will be a Davis Cup quarter-final against France, who saw off Japan with a day to spare in Tokyo.\n\nNicolas Mahut and Pierre-Hugues Herbert won the doubles to give France an unassailable 3-0 lead.\n\nAustralia went 3-0 up on the Czech Republic and next face the USA, who beat Switzerland - who were missing Roger Federer and Stan Wawrinka.\n\nSerbia also progressed on day two as they went 3-0 up on Russia.\n\nBritain lead Canada 2-1 heading into the final day in Ottawa, with the three remaining World Group first-round ties also to be decided on Sunday.\n\nChampions Argentina, without Juan Martin del Potro, are 2-1 down at home to Italy; 2015 runners-up Belgium lead Germany 2-1 in Frankfurt; and Croatia have taken a surprise 2-1 lead over Spain, missing Rafael Nadal, in Osijek.", "Iran is \"on notice\" after a missile test, National Security Adviser Michael Flynn says, but didn't specify what US ramifications would be\n\nWithin days of an Iranian missile test and a subsequent warning from the Trump administration, the US has now followed up by imposing a new round of economic sanctions.\n\nThe sanctions focus upon suppliers to Iran's missile programme and groups that help to arm what Washington sees as terror organisations in the region.\n\nIt is hard to see what practical impact these sanctions will have, since few of these organisations or individuals probably do business in the United States.\n\nBut the sanctions sends a clear warning to Tehran the guard has changed in Washington.\n\nThe Obama administration saw its relationship with Iran largely through the prism of the need to negotiate a deal to constrain Tehran's nuclear programme.\n\nIran's regional activities - support for Hamas and Hezbollah, military support for the Assad regime, backing of the Houthis in Yemen, and its growing influence in Iraq - were all played down to ensure that the nuclear deal might go ahead.\n\nFor the Obama team, restraining Iran's nuclear activities was the overarching goal.\n\nThis was seen as an end in itself, one that might stave off military action, but also a step that might, over time, also lead Iran away from its relative economic isolation towards an improved relationship with the West.\n\nOpinion was deeply divided on the nuclear deal.\n\nThe US and its major western allies, along with Russia, saw merit in the nuclear agreement that effectively \"kicked the can down the road\", postponing any confrontation with Tehran over its nuclear programme.\n\nWashington's regional allies though - countries like Israel, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states, who have watched Tehran's rise with alarm - were much less impressed.\n\nAnd many of them may well have been hoping that the Trump team - which includes several vocal opponents of Tehran - might seek to undo the agreement.\n\nThings are a little more complex than that. On a recent trip to Israel's major annual security conference last week, many experts and officials there took the view that a bad deal, if properly implemented, might be better than no deal at all.\n\nWhat worries Israelis is the fact that Iran is now becoming a major player in the region.\n\nIts support for the Assad regime in Syria and the deployment of its allies - Hezbollah and various Shia militias, supported by officers from its Revolutionary Guard Corps - has provided Tehran with at least the opportunity to establish its allies on a long border with Israel from the Mediterranean Sea through Lebanon and Syria - all the way to the Jordanian frontier.\n\nJordan too is concerned, as are several of the Gulf states, which explains their quiet strategic rapprochement with Israel.\n\nThe irony in all of this is that it was largely US military power that established the conditions for Iran's rise to regional prominence.\n\nBy deposing its archenemy Saddam Hussein and reducing Iraq to a minor military player with many other security problems on its plate - Washington opened the door to the expansion of Iranian influence in the region.\n\nIraqi boys walk near the University of Mosul after its liberation from IS\n\nA further irony is that in supporting the Iraqi government's efforts against so-called Islamic State, the US is objectively allied with Tehran, with several Iranian-influenced Shia militias fighting in the same campaign.\n\nThe Obama administration's failure to countenance the forced removal of Syria's President Assad and its inept and half-hearted efforts to arm and train Sunni forces there, again favoured the emerging Shia axis.\n\nSo the Trump administration comes to office with a desire fundamentally to change Washington's stance towards Tehran. These sanctions are but the first step.\n\nA declaration that Iran is now \"on notice\", in the words of National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, may sound good, but it doesn't amount to a policy.\n\nWhat real steps does the Trump team envisage?\n\nIs it ready to back - albeit reluctantly - the nuclear accord while monitoring stringently Iran's behaviour?\n\nWhat wider international support can the US gather for tougher action against Tehran's missile programme - which it insists it is entitled to pursue?\n\nOn the face of it here the US may have a point. UN Security council resolution 2231 calls on Iran not to undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering a nuclear weapon.\n\nA US National Security Council briefing earlier this week noted that ballistic missiles designed to be capable of delivering a payload of at least 500kg to a range of 300km are inherently able to deliver nuclear weapons.\n\n\"There should be no doubt,\" the briefing went on , \"that the United States is committed to holding Iran accountable for adhering to missile restrictions and accountable for behaviour in the region that we consider to be destabilising.\"\n\nBut what exactly does the Trump Administration mean by phrases like \"holding Iran to account\"?\n\nThese are two countries whose warships potentially come into close proximity in Gulf waters every day. Tensions could spark a major confrontation. Is Washington on a collision course with Tehran?\n\nIts rhetoric might suggest so. But it is President Trump's actions - and of course Iran's own responses - that will determine where things go from here.", "It's the weekly news quiz - have you been paying attention to what's been going on in the world over the past seven days?\n\nIf you missed last week's quiz, try it here\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "We have asked four wise old heads what they expect to happen over the next seven weeks in the Six Nations.\n\nJeremy Guscott, Jonathan Davies, Keith Wood and Andy Nicol have 191 Test caps - including 13 for the British and Irish Lions - between them.\n\nThey will be on your televisions and radios analysing all the action from the 2017 tournament - but we've nabbed them first to find out who they expect to win, and plenty more besides.\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n• None Sign up for our new rugby news alerts\n• None Matt Dawson scored 12 - can you beat him on our rugby quiz?\n\nHow do you expect your team to get on?\n\nFormer England centre Jeremy Guscott: England are the reigning Grand Slam champions and have won 13 out of 13 under Eddie Jones, but being realistic they haven't taken teams apart with amazing attack. It's been very much brutal defence that's been giving them the edge and improved fitness. They may need to produce more than that this year.\n\nEx-Wales fly-half Jonathan Davies: Wales will have to perform better defensively - and more importantly offensively - if they are to be contenders this year. They also need to have more variety in their game.\n\nKeith Wood, former Ireland hooker: Ireland are looking very good at the moment. The coaching seems to be a little more flexible than it has been and the team seem more comfortable, with the current gameplan suiting the expanded squad.\n\nFormer Scotland scrum-half Andy Nicol: Scotland are in pretty good shape - they are definitely improving, with a well-balanced team and good coaching. There is confidence throughout the squad after a positive autumn, as well as Glasgow qualifying for the knockout stage in Europe. My target for them is three wins.\n\nWho will win the title?\n\nJG: It's between England and Ireland. England have three home games (and I expect them to win all three), which gives them a slight advantage, but that is countered with having to play Ireland away. Ireland are playing at a tempo and intensity that the rest of the Six Nations haven't reached yet, and I expect them to win the championship.\n\nJD: It's got to be Ireland. However, I don't expect them to win the Grand Slam (winning all five of their matches), so bonus points - introduced this year - will be important.\n\nKW: I expect Ireland to win. It is the right cycle of games for them, their confidence is high and the provinces are doing well in Europe. They also have a small injury list - notwithstanding Johnny Sexton's absence from the opening weekend - and more strength in depth than before.\n\nAN: England and Ireland start as favourites, with not much between them. They meet in the last game in Dublin with home advantage being crucial and probably the difference between the two. The style that England play and their ability to score more tries and points make them my favourites to win the Six Nations on points difference - or bonus points - but with no Grand Slam.\n\nHow will the Six Nations finish?\n\nWhat new rule will have the biggest effect?\n\nThere are two main changes this year - stricter rules on high tackles and the introduction of bonus points.\n\nThe former means anyone making contact with the head of an opposition player, either recklessly or accidentally, will be punished more severely.\n\nThe introduction of bonus points brings the Six Nations in line with other competitions around the world and means sides scoring four tries, or losing by less than seven points, will earn bonus points.\n\nJG: The new rules on high tackles will have the biggest effect. Without doubt players will be going to the bin for high tackles and that will have a bearing on results for sure.\n\nJD: The new high tackle ruling and the way each referee interprets each incident.\n\nKW: High tackle rule. The margin between a correct tackle and a high hit is too small.\n\nAN: The new high tackle law could see more yellow cards, which could influence games. I'm not sure bonus points will come in to it - certainly not in first few games.\n\nWho do you think will be the key player?\n\nAN: England's Owen Farrell. Tactician, kicker, intense, brave, winner - there's five words I'd use to describe him.\n\nJD: I pick Farrell too - he is key to England's game management.\n\nKW: Ireland scrum-half Conor Murray - he leads by deed and composure.\n\nShould the Six Nations have promotion and relegation?\n\nThe Six Nations began as a four-team competition - the Home Nations Championship - in 1883 before adding first France and then Italy - the latter in 2000.\n\nThe growth of rugby union over the past decade has seen Georgia, in particular, and a resurgent Romania become competitive at the highest level, but unable to move up from the second-tier Rugby Europe Championship because there is no promotion and relegation.\n\nThe second tier nations have called for the chance of admission to the Six Nations but the chances of that happening in the \"Short to medium term\" are unlikely, according to the tournament's boss John Feehan.\n\nAN: I am not in favour of straight relegation from the Six Nations but I am in favour of a play-off between the bottom team in the Six Nations and the top nation in the Rugby Europe Championship. Georgia have earned the right to have a shot at making the top level having won the Nations Cup (the Rugby Europe Championship) in eight of the past nine years.\n\nJG: I'm not sold on relegation yet. It may come in the future, but I've not heard enough compelling evidence to make a change yet.\n\nJD: I think the bottom team in the Six Nations should take part in a two-game play-off against the top candidate.\n\nKW: No, but we need to see these teams - the likes of Georgia, Romania and Russia - play tier-one teams more often.", "Sunday's coverage: Watch live on BBC Red Button, Connected TV and online from 17:00, plus follow text updates on the BBC Sport website.\n\nJamie Murray and Dom Inglot put Great Britain 2-1 up against Canada with victory in Saturday's Davis Cup doubles contest in Ottawa.\n\nThe British pair beat Daniel Nestor and Vasek Pospisil 7-6 (7-1) 6-7 (3-7) 7-6 (7-3) 6-3 to edge the visitors ahead in the best-of-five World Group tie.\n\nDan Evans will play Pospisil in Sunday's fourth rubber, before Kyle Edmund faces Denis Shapovalov.\n\nThe winners of the tie will travel to France for the quarter-finals in April.\n\n\"Both teams knew how important this match was to give them a lead going into Sunday,\" said Murray.\n\n\"It was 50/50 going into the match. We knew it would be a close game because of the surface, how everyone was serving on the court and because we all know how to play doubles.\"\n\nCaptain Leon Smith said: \"There's still a lot of tennis. We've been in these situations before. The good thing is it gives you two cracks at it and gives everyone a lot of confidence.\n\n\"It does feel good going into the team room, it feels like the momentum is with you, and we've got two very good players that we can prepare for Sunday.\"\n\nBoth Britain and Canada are without their leading players, as world number one Andy Murray recuperates after the Australian Open and number four Milos Raonic is injured.\n\nPospisil's surprise win over Edmund in the second singles on Friday had given Canada a huge boost, but Britain took back control of the tie over the course of three hours with a clinical performance.\n\nOn the fast indoor surface there was only one break of serve apiece, and three tie-breaks were required, but the final break-point tally stood at 10-2 in favour of the Britons.\n\nIn 44-year-old Nestor, playing his 50th Davis Cup tie, Canada had one of the most successful doubles players in history alongside Pospisil, himself a former Wimbledon doubles champion.\n\nThe Canadian pair had the edge in rankings but after the opening two sets were shared in tie-breaks, it was Scotland's Murray and Englishman Inglot who began to take charge.\n\nThree break points went begging in the third set, before they were gifted a mini-break in the tie-break thanks to a Pospisil double fault, and Inglot in particular forced home the advantage.\n\nPospisil, who had served superbly for three sets, was now the one under pressure and he succumbed in the fourth set to give Britain a decisive lead.\n\nIt was Inglot, the man of the match, who coolly served out to put Britain within sight of their fourth Davis Cup quarter-final in a row.\n\n\"As the match went on we started to start the points better and make a few returns. And I think they got a bit tired as well,\" said Murray.\n\n\"The surface was not easy, it was hard on the joints. Vasek played yesterday and Daniel is older than us, so there was no excuse for us not to outlast them.\n\n\"We did a great job, we stayed strong in the important moments. It was fine margins.\"\n\nMurray has now won seven rubbers in a row in the Davis Cup and he was very ably supported by Inglot, in what may have been his best display yet in British colours. The visitors were sharper in the key moments, and are in a strong position heading into Sunday's singles.\n\nA quarter-final in France in the first week of April beckons if Britain can win one one more point. Dan Evans has first use of the slick court against Vasek Pospisil: both have been in good form, and both will enjoy the surface.\n\nIt would be a third match in three days for the Canadian, but he is taking pain killers for a knee injury and when he spoke after Saturday's doubles did not sound overly confident about his chances of playing.", "When I was a child I vividly remember being marched into town at the end of the summer holidays for new shoes and a coat before autumn arrived. That was just the way it was.\n\nBut now, it seems British shoppers are doing things differently.\n\nWe are waiting for the sales and buying things out of season, holding on to them until they are needed. And this has led to a fall in sales.\n\nThe overall value of retail sales dropped by 2% in 2016 compared to 2015, according to consumer insight company Kantar Worldpanel.\n\nWith shoppers being more flexible on when they buy items, shops have leftover stock, which then has to be discounted to shift it.\n\nGlen Tooke, consumer insight director at Kantar, says many retailers have been \"left behind\" as buying patterns have changed.\n\n\"These companies are stuck in a rigid, seasonal buying cycle which no longer reflects how consumers shop,\" says Mr Tooke.\n\nThe data covered clothing, footwear and accessories sold by both High Street retailers and supermarkets.\n\nThe drop in sales was across all types of clothing, including children's, according to Kantar Worldpanel\n\n\"This is the deepest decline the market has seen since August 2009, knocking nearly £750m off its total value in the 52 weeks ending 18 December 2016,\" Kantar said in a statement.\n\nMr Tooke said the decline was a \"serious cause for concern\".\n\nRetail analyst Richard Hyman agrees that shoppers are shifting focus away from seasons when buying.\n\n\"There are twin evils at play here. The discounting going on and retailers not knowing their customers well enough to know what they want.\n\n\"In 90% of the trading weeks in 2016, more than half the retailers in the fashion market had some sort of sale going on.\"\n\nThis, Mr Hyman says, results in customers learning that if they hang on, the item they have their eye on might well end up being reduced in price.\n\nDr Dimitrios Tsivrikos, a consumer and business psychologist at UCL, says the constant discounting can lead to a \"dilution of trust\" meaning shoppers come to believe goods are overpriced to begin with.\n\nDr Tsivrikos believes there could also be something else at play - shoppers have adopted an entirely new way of thinking about their wardrobes.\n\n\"Retailers are failing to fully understand that consumers are now making modular purchases rather than single-item purchases,\" he says.\n\nFor example, rather than buying a thick winter coat, a shopper might instead invest in a lighter spring jacket, and a sports layer such as a hoodie, which can then be worn together or separately across the seasons.\n\nConsumers are increasingly looking to buy items they can layer up\n\n\"This trend is supported by key design labels, which are leaving behind the conventional fashion week presentations and shows. Such events are driven by seasons, so instead these key design labels present fewer and more versatile collections of garments that consumers can wear throughout the year,\" says Dr Tsivrikos.\n\nThere is also another train of thought, particularly for the footwear industry.\n\n\"Online purchases have already reached 25% of overall sales of footwear in the UK - this is the fastest-growing sector,\" says John Saunders, chief executive of the British Footwear Association.\n\n\"The growth of online is doing away with season as collections change on a much more regular basis and products are available all year round to reflect consumer demand.\n\n\"A good example of this is the growth of sandals and open footwear for consumers taking winter sun holidays,\" he adds.\n\nWinter sun holidays means we are buying sandals and flip-flops all year round\n\nThere were some bright spots for the retail market in Kantar Worldpanel's data - online-only retailers saw impressive growth of 7% in 2016 compared to 2015, while independent retailers improved sales by 3%. So what are they doing differently?\n\n\"It sounds obvious, but the fashion retailers that are doing well right now are the ones that are managing to keep all the balls in the air at once - having the right product, at the right price, in the right place, at the right time,\" says Graham Soult, owner of retail consultancy CannyInsights.\n\n\"It's where chains like Uniqlo and Zara benefit from controlling their own supply chains, and being really agile in getting new stock into store quickly when it's needed.\n\n\"At the same time, some of the online fashion retailers, such as Boden, are great at mixing selected seasonal pieces with timeless items that can be layered or accessorised, and sold and worn throughout the year,\" he adds.\n\nBut there's a new threat around the corner, one that will affect all retailers, big, small and online: the continuing fluctuation and downward trend in the value of the pound.\n\nWe hear forecasts of prices going up as retailers are forced to pass on the rising costs of items imported from abroad, but in a world where most of us own more items of clothing than are strictly necessary, will we continue to buy if prices rise?\n\n\"It's easy to make do. Our wardrobes are generally made up of 10% items we need, 90% items we want. Retail has to inspire desire, or we won't buy. Higher prices won't do that,\" he says.\n\nSo if retailers are paying more, but cannot pass on these increases, the future for the British High Street could be as uncertain as a shopper's whim.", "Last updated on .From the section Horse Racing\n\nA new rule in France allowing horses with female jockeys to carry less weight has been labelled \"unfair\", \"offensive\" and \"patronising\".\n\nGoverning body France Galop will allow 2kg (4.4lbs) less in the saddle to encourage use of female riders.\n\nGroup One-winning jockey Hayley Turner wants \"more subtle\" help, adding: \"It seems a bit unfair on the lads.\"\n\nThe British Horseracing Authority noted the move \"with great interest\" but has \"currently no plans\" to do the same.\n\nJean-Pierre Colombu, vice president of France Galop, said the rule change provided a \"real opportunity\" for female riders.\n\nThere are 53 female and 354 male professional jockeys in Britain.\n\nAround 90% of races in France will be subject to the rule change, though listed and group races will be exempt.\n\nApprentice and conditional jockeys in the UK are given a weight allowance, which in theory combats their inexperience by reducing the burden on a horse.\n\nBut leading male jockey Adam Kirby believes a 2kg reduction for women would be too much.\n\nKirby said: \"It's ridiculous, isn't it? 4lbs is two lengths. I appreciate women might not be as strong as boys, but riding in races is not about strength, it's about positioning, rhythm and things like that.\"\n\nIn 94 years of the British flat racing Champion Apprentice title, only three female riders in Turner, Amy Ryan and Josephine Gordon - in 2016 - have won the honour.\n\nGordon, who turned professional in November and has eight wins this season, believes there will be a female champion jockey in the next 15 years.\n\nShe said: \"I think an allowance would give a lot more females more opportunities to get rides at lower weights, but personally, I find it a bit offensive.\n\n\"Last year I had a claim and was competing against the male apprentices and I won it fair and square.\"\n\nJane Elliott, who has four wins from her last eight rides, described the French move as \"a bit patronising\".\n\n\"If you did get a 4lb allowance, I'd be expecting to get five rides a day in handicaps,\" she said. \"It's such a big amount of weight to be giving jockeys.\"\n\nTurner, who became the first woman to ride 100 winners in a calendar year in 2008, added: \"I very much doubt it will happen in the UK. I'd be disappointed if it did, to be honest.\"\n\nThe BHA intends to speak to French authorities and the Professional Jockeys Association (PJA) before deciding if it should \"consult more widely across our sport\".\n\nThe governing body claims as many women have graduated as apprentices as men in recent years.\n\nThe PJA said it was \"unaware\" the rule change was coming in France, adding: \"The feedback we've had is that it isn't something the majority of our female members would want.\n\n\"There are plenty of female riders out there who are at least as good as their peers, and we have no doubt that such a weight allowance would put them at a significant advantage and increase their opportunities.\n\n\"Whether it is the right thing to do or is necessary is another matter, but it is important we canvass the views of our members, which we will do.\"\n\nBut jump jockey Lucy Alexander, the first female to become champion conditional in 2012-13, said she would \"welcome\" the change, adding: \"The BHA should look at it.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nCoverage: Highlights on BBC Two on Sunday, 5 February from 14:45-15:45 GMT; BBC One on 11 February 13:15-14:00; BBC Two on 12 February 13:00-14:00.\n\nUsain Bolt's team of All-Stars won the first day of the inaugural Nitro Athletics event in Melbourne in a series IAAF president Lord Coe says will \"revolutionise\" the sport.\n\nEight-time Olympic gold medallist Bolt was the star attraction as six teams of 12 male and 12 female athletes competed in a mixture of old and new events.\n\nBolt raced in the mixed 4x100m relay, which his All-Stars won.\n\n\"I was just enjoying myself from the start to the end,\" said Bolt, 30.\n\n\"Everybody was just having fun. Everybody was trying to support their team-mates - going over to the long jump, to the javelin - that's something we're not really used to.\"\n\nDuring the meet, flame cannons shot fireballs into the air and there were dancers as pop music blared out, with a 7,000 crowd at the 8,500-capacity stadium.\n\nThe All-Stars, Australia, England, New Zealand, Japan and China competed across 12 events, with points awarded for each athlete's placing.\n\nThe 4x100m mixed relay featured two male and two female athletes, with Bolt handing over to American Jenna Prandini.\n\n\"We just want to do something different,\" said Bolt. \"I've never handed [a baton] over to a girl. For me that was exciting.\"\n\nThere was a men's elimination mile, where the last-placed runner was eliminated at the end of each of the first three laps of the track.\n\nIn the 2x300m mixed relay, England's Christine Ohuruogu and Theo Campbell finished third.\n\nThe second of the three-event series will take place on Thursday, 9 February, with the final one on Saturday, 11 February.\n\nFull results and points table available here.", "Our bathrooms are filled with shampoo bottles, toilet rolls and cleaning products which could easily be put into our recycling bins when finished with.\n\nYet research shows our green intentions are washed away as soon as we step near a toilet.\n\nNow a business group has come up with an idea for how to combat this problem - two bathroom bins.\n\nThe Circular Economy Taskforce, who were brought together by Prince Charles's Business in the Community environment charity, says it could boost recycling.\n\nSo should two bins really sit alongside your stack of loo roll in the bathroom?\n\nWhy should people have two bins in their bathrooms?\n\n\"It's trying to address the problem that people are less likely to recycle packaging for things we use in our bathrooms than for things we use in other rooms of the house,\" says Jonny Hazell, senior policy adviser for environmental think tank Green Alliance.\n\nThe Recycle Now campaign points to its statistics, which show that while 90% of packaging is recycled in our kitchens, only 50% is being recycled in the bathroom.\n\n\"Often homes have one central recycling bin located in the kitchen, so when in the shower or washing your face it can be tricky to remember to transfer it to that bin,\" it says.\n\n\"This is why having a recycling bin or bag in the bathroom might be useful, if there is space.\"\n\nBusiness in the Community says two bins could make it easier to separate out the plastics that can be recycled.\n\n\"But it doesn't have to be a bin, it could be as simple as a bag on the door handle that you bring down to the kitchen every week,\" it added.\n\nWhere has this idea come from?\n\nWhile recycling has grown from 12% to 45% in the UK over the last decade, campaigners say the bathroom is an area that needs more focus.\n\nThe Circular Economy Taskforce came up with the idea as part of its work looking at practical collaborative ways to boost recycling and re-use rates.\n\n\"The bathroom is one of the areas that has come up time and time again in the group as somewhere where both business and consumers can make a difference to help us all reduce our impact on the environment,\" says Business in the Community.\n\n\"Thinking about how different types of bins could boost recycling in the bathroom is just one example of a potential simple solution that could have a big impact.\"\n\nWhy are people failing to recycle their bathroom products?\n\nCampaigners believes it comes down not just to where a recycling bin is located but also to confusion over what can be recycled.\n\nRecycle Now says: \"There can also be confusion about what can or can't be recycled with bathroom products.\n\n\"For example many people don't realise that bleach bottles can be easily recycled - simply make sure it's empty and put the lid back on.\n\n\"Recycling just one bleach bottle saves enough energy to power a street light for 6.5 hours, so the value quickly adds up.\"\n\nResearch from the University of Exeter also found that people who threw away waste in the bathroom saw it as being \"dirty\" and were less likely to recycle it.\n\nGoing through your bathroom bin to separate out what can and can't be recycled can seem off-putting,\" says Business in the Community.\n\nIt added: \"There is also a lot of confusion around what can be recycled in the bathroom, for example many consumers are confused by aerosols.\"\n\nHow much recyclable waste comes from a bathroom?\n\nPlastic shampoo, conditioner and shower gel bottles, plastic moisturiser bottles (such as for hand cream and body lotion), glass face cream pots (plus the cardboard packaging they come in), perfume and aftershave bottles, aerosols for deodorant, air freshener and shaving foam, bleach and bathroom cleaner bottles, toothpaste boxes and toilet roll tubes.\n\nIs a lack of recycling in bathrooms a real problem?\n\nEvery little helps, is the message from environmental and recycling groups.\n\n\"In general, the less we recycle, the more water and energy we need to use to produce the materials we use in our daily lives,\" said Mr Hazell.\n\nRecycle Now says recycling reduces the amount we are sending to landfill and makes use of resources already available rather than making them from scratch.\n\n\"Ultimately this means reduced levels of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere which contribute to climate change,\" it added.\n\n\"For instance it takes 75% less energy to make a plastic shampoo bottle from recycled plastic compared with using virgin materials.\"\n\nCan two bins have a meaningful impact on recycling overall?\n\n\"Ensuring you recycle in the bathroom can make a big difference,\" says Recycle Now.\n\n\"It would save £135,000 in landfill costs if every UK household threw their next empty shampoo bottles into the recycling bin.\n\n\"On top of this, if everyone recycled one more toilet roll tube it would save enough cardboard inner tubes from landfill to go round the M25 38 times.\"\n\nBut what if you don't have the space for two bins?\n\nThere are other options. Hang a reusable bag on the bathroom door so you can transfer your recyclable items straight into the recycling bin. Or opt for a bin with split compartments which can be used to separate recyclable and non-recyclable items.\n• None Are you rubbish at recycling?\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Ozzy Osbourne reflects on his fame and how reality TV affected his life as Black Sabbath prepare to perform their final gig.", "The Six Nations, which begins on Saturday, is set to be watched by the highest average attendance per match of any tournament in world sport.\n\nOver the next seven weeks the northern hemisphere showpiece, which features England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland, France and Italy, will see the cream of European rugby meet across five rounds, culminating in the final set of games on 18 March.\n\nScotland play Ireland in the tournament's opening match in Edinburgh at 14:25 GMT, before defending champions England host France at Twickenham at 16:50 GMT, while Wales play Italy at 14:00 on Sunday in Rome.\n\nLast year's tournament attracted an average 72,000 fans a game, leading sport's global standings above American football's NFL in second and the Fifa World Cup in third - according to statistics published by European football body Uefa.\n\nMore than a million people in total watched last season's 15 matches, with 81,916 fans packing in to see England beat Wales 25-21 at Twickenham in the best-attended game.\n\nEngland secured the 2016 title with a perfect record of five wins from their five games, earning them the Grand Slam.\n• None Alerts put you at centre of Six Nations\n• None Who will win the 2017 Six Nations?\n\nThey are the bookies' favourites to win again but an Ireland team that claimed a famous win over world champions New Zealand in Chicago in November are serious contenders to regain the title they won in 2014 and 2015.\n\nWales are without head coach Warren Gatland - who has stepped away from his role for a year to coach the British and Irish Lions tour of New Zealand in the summer - but interim replacement Rob Howley leads a team that includes the likes of barnstorming wing George North.\n\nScotland come into the tournament buoyed by the domestic success of a Glasgow Warriors side currently fourth in the Pro12 and into the last eight of the top-tier European Champions Cup.\n\nFrance and Italy are both under relatively new leadership, with Guy Noves and Conor O'Shea taking over in January and June 2016 respectively, but the former showed signs of their old form in an improved showing in the autumn Tests, while O'Shea was the mastermind behind Harlequins' 2012 Premiership title.\n\nOne of the key factors in deciding the destination of the title may be the strength in depth of each squad.\n\nHigh-profile stars such as Ireland's Johnny Sexton, Wales' Taulupe Faletau and England's Billy Vunipola will miss the start of the tournament through injury, and the physicality of the modern game means more are sure to join them on the sidelines.\n\nFor the first time bonus points will be on offer.\n\nIn addition to the four points to be gained for a win, teams can pick up a further point for scoring four or more tries or by losing by seven points or less.\n\nAnother change is that referees have been told to pay extra attention to high tackles, with more severe penalties to be handed down to players who make contact with an opponent's head, whether accidentally or recklessly.\n\nWhile the chance to clinch this season's title will spur on supporters, the tournament will also be a chance to renew age-old rivalries and add another chapter the tournament's long history of famous results.\n\nAnd in a competition that saw England captain Bill Beaumont carried shoulder-high from the pitch in 1980, David Sole's slow walk onto the Murrayfield turf in 1990, Scott Gibbs carving through the England defence at Wembley in 1999 or a fresh-faced Brian O'Driscoll's hat-trick against France in 2000, there is every prospect of new heroes being made.", "A goat has predicted the winner of Sunday's Six Nations rugby match between Italy and Wales.\n\nLilian, who lives at Cefn Mably Farm Park, near Cardiff, uses two buckets to select her favourite side.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nAlfred N'Diaye scored on his Hull City debut as Liverpool's terrible start to 2017 continued with a fourth defeat in five league and cup games.\n\nSenegal forward N'Diaye, signed on loan from Villarreal, tapped home unmarked after Simon Mignolet dropped the ball at his feet.\n\nDespite striker Sadio Mane's first start since 2 January, Liverpool failed to force a single save in the first half and were poor throughout.\n\nHull, who have won all four home games under new manager Marco Silva, sealed victory when Oumar Niasse, on loan from Everton, kept his composure after the Reds defence had been carved open.\n• None Reaction: 'Unacceptable' Liverpool 'need to wake up'\n• None Relive the action from the KCOM Stadium\n• None Reaction from the KCOM and the rest of Saturday's Premier League games\n\nHull were bottom of the table and three points from safety when former Sporting Lisbon and Olympiakos boss Silva took charge on 5 January.\n\nFast forward four weeks and the Tigers have a win over Liverpool and a draw at Manchester United, as well as an EFL Cup semi-final home win over United under their belt.\n\nHull are an organised and well-drilled unit at the back while the arrival of N'Diaye, as well as Poland winger Kamil Grosicki, has provided them with an added threat.\n\nThey overcame the loss of captain Michael Dawson, who was injured in the warm-up, to produce their most complete performance so far under Silva.\n\nHull are 18th in the table - one point from safety - and now have seven points from a possible 12 under Silva's reign.\n\nWith Arsenal losing earlier in the day and Tottenham kicking-off late, Liverpool would have climbed to second in the table with victory.\n\nYet they ended the day 13 points behind leaders Chelsea. In the last 14 days Jurgen Klopp's side have been knocked out of the FA Cup and the EFL Cup, and seen their hopes of a first league title since 1990 all but vanish for another season.\n\nWhile Jurgen Klopp remains unbeaten in seven games against the top-six, the German has now seen his side lose to Burnley, Bournemouth, Swansea City and Hull City.\n\nThis was as bad as any of them; an abject, disjointed performance sprinkled with individual errors and a lack of cutting edge.\n\nLiverpool's defenders were as much to blame for the first goal despite Mignolet's mistake, leaving N'Diaye completely unmarked when he steered the hosts ahead.\n\nThe Reds enjoyed 72% possession but as Klopp said afterwards: \"Possession is only good when you create something from it.\"\n\nHull manager Marco Silva: \"It is a fantastic afternoon for us. Our supporters were fantastic, we need them and they support our team always.\n\n\"I am sure in the future we will play better, but at these moments we need to keep our focus and our organisation, because every game it is possible to get valuable points.\n\n\"In the Premier League it is fantastic to get clean sheets, to do that against Manchester United and Liverpool is fantastic.\"\n\nLiverpool manager Jurgen Klopp: \"I don't want to find excuses, it is hard to think of intelligent things to say after a match like this.\n\n\"It is not the time to talk about these things [qualifying for the Champions League], we have to show our best and then people can judge us.\n\n\"We all know how good we can be, and it's still there, but not if we play like we did in the first half today.\"\n• None Marco Silva has now taken seven points from his first four games in the Premier League, as many as Hull City managed in their 18 league games prior to his arrival.\n• None The Tigers kept their first home clean sheet in the Premier League this term, having conceded in each of their previous 11 league games at the KCOM Stadium in 2016-17.\n• None Jurgen Klopp has now lost five of his past eight games in all competitions; as many as he had in his previous 32 games in charge of Liverpool beforehand.\n• None Klopp has also gone five consecutive league games without winning for the first time since February 2015 (with Borussia Dortmund in the Bundesliga).\n• None Alfred N'Diaye netted on his Premier League debut for Hull; this after scoring just two goals in 134 appearances within the top five European leagues beforehand (PL, La Liga & Ligue 1 combined).\n• None Liverpool have conceded the opening goal in each of their past three Premier League games - only between May and August 2016 have they suffered a longer such run under Jurgen Klopp (four games).\n\nHull will make the journey to face Arsenal next Saturday (12:30 GMT) with confidence sky high. Liverpool need to find some confidence for their home game with Tottenham on the same day (17:30) in a game which could go a long way to deciding who qualifies for the Champions League.\n• None Offside, Liverpool. Sadio Mané tries a through ball, but Roberto Firmino is caught offside.\n• None Attempt saved. Daniel Sturridge (Liverpool) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Jordan Henderson.\n• None Attempt saved. Jordan Henderson (Liverpool) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top left corner.\n• None Attempt blocked. Roberto Firmino (Liverpool) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Jordan Henderson.\n• None Goal! Hull City 2, Liverpool 0. Oumar Niasse (Hull City) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the centre of the goal. Assisted by Andrea Ranocchia with a through ball following a fast break.\n• None Offside, Hull City. Oumar Niasse tries a through ball, but David Meyler is caught offside. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Nasa has released a video of the International Space Station crew preparing to watch the Super Bowl from 250 miles above Earth.", "One of the show gardens will be located inside a 44-tonne granite cube at Chatsworth Estate and will only be visible through peepholes\n\nThe first new Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) show in a decade will \"break the mould\" of Chelsea and allow \"revolutionary\" designs to take centre stage, organisers say.\n\nThe show at Chatsworth, a Derbyshire stately home, will have eight \"freeform\" gardens, RHS said.\n\n\"Chelsea is a big event crammed into a small site - we'll have more freedom,\" Chatsworth's Steve Porter said.\n\n\"Predictability is being thrown out of the window,\" he added.\n\nThe RHS Chatsworth Show will run from 7-11 June and up to 80,000 visitors are expected.\n\nThree new temporary pontoon bridges will be built across the River Derwent as part of the show to allow visitors to access displays on both sides.\n\nThe Wordless Cupboard by Sheena Seeks is a freeform garden with a \"landslide of glacial boulders\" that will not contain any plants\n\nAll three will float on the water, with one being designed in classic Palladian style with a flower display inside it.\n\nRHS spokesman Liz Patterson said artists of all genres including sculptors and visual artists will take part.\n\nOne installation, called The Wordless Cupboard, has two 3-metre high cubes and a \"landslide of glacial boulders\" that are meant to evoke \"the oppression of powerlessness\".\n\nA garden designed by landscape architecture students from Leeds Beckett University called the Path of Least Resistance will include weeds and wildflowers in \"an urban wasteland\".\n\nMoveable Feast is a garden for the \"Rent Generation\" who want something that will move with them when they move from house to house.\n\nThe Moveable Feast by Worcestershire-based Tanya Batkin is a pack-up-and-go garden aimed at the Rent Generation who want portability\n\n\"The sheer scale of the location, with the River Derwent running through it, allows designers to \"break the mould and do something slightly different\" Ms Patterson said.\n\n\"Our aim is to create a new show that champions the horticultural innovation of today and the future, and encourages exhibitors to be progressive and think outside the box,\" RHS director of shows Nick Mattingley added.\n\nThe student-led Path of Least Resistance Garden is meant to promote sustainability by using wildflowers and weeds\n\nThe Curves and Cube garden designed by Gaze Burvill and David Harber has a steel lattice with curving oak pieces \"piercing through its core\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "An icy stretch of road in Oregon in the US caused a 30-vehicle pile-up.\n\nThe crashes were filmed by a onlooker, with all the people involved escaping serious injury.", "The world is getting its first look at Donald Trump the Diplomat. He looks a lot like Donald Trump the Candidate, Donald Trump the Businessman and Donald Trump the Reality Television Host.\n\nHe's brash. He has a temper. He's willing to say impolite things. He can be bullying or ingratiating, depending on his own internal calculations.\n\nSuch attributes made him must-see television on The Apprentice. It helped him land blockbuster real-estate deals in boom times and stay one step ahead of financial collapse when business went bad.\n\nIt's an open question whether it will be effective as a way to assert national authority on the world stage. There's no doubt, however, that it represents a sharp break from how US presidents have conducted themselves in the past, with carefully managed foreign interactions that seldom deviate from a prearranged script.\n\nPerhaps it's better to say that what the world is getting is its first look at Donald Trump the Un-Diplomat.\n\nMultiple media accounts on Wednesday described Mr Trump's recent phone conversations with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, based on reports from senior government officials and leaked transcripts of the communications.\n\nThe president told Australia's leader that an agreement the Obama administration had negotiated to admit entry of more than a thousand refugees currently detained in Australia was \"the worst deal ever\" and described his conversation with Mr Turnbull as the \"worst call by far\" among those he had conducted with world leaders that day.\n\nAustralian PM Malcom Turnbull says his conversation with Donald Trump was candid and frank\n\nThe discussion, scheduled for an hour, ended after about 25 minutes.\n\nIn his call with Mr Nieto, Mr Trump reportedly said Mexico \"had not done a good job\" knocking out its \"bad hombres\". An Associated Press article reported that Mr Trump had threatened to send US troops into Mexico, but other media outlets were unable to confirm this or said the remark was made in jest.\n\nIn both episodes, Mr Trump reportedly took time to boast about the size of his inauguration crowd - a recurring theme in his public remarks since becoming president.\n\nAccounts of the conversations differ dramatically from the official White House readouts, which paint a sterile picture of leaders embracing the \"enduring strength and closeness\" of their nation's relationships and discussing common interests.\n\nAccording to CNN reporter Jim Acosta, however, the reality is far different, as a source told him Mr Trump's conversations \"are turning faces white\" in the White House.\n\nA subsequent tweet by Mr Trump condemning the Australian refugee agreement seemed to confirm that the Turnbull conversation was more contentious than the original readout would indicate.\n\nThe morning after the reporting double-whammy - further evidence that this administration already leaks more than a Swiss-cheese boat - Mr Trump addressed the swirling controversy.\n\n\"When you hear about the tough phone calls I'm having, don't worry about it,\" he said, his New York accent a touch thicker than usual. \"They're tough. We have to be tough. It's time we're going to be a little tough, folks. We're taken advantage of by every nation in the world, virtually. It's not going to happen anymore\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nIt's the kind of in-your-face attitude that Mr Trump's supporters have long said they admired and wanted in the White House, although it has left much of the traditional foreign policy establishment stumbling to the fainting couches.\n\n\"This kind of behaviour generates a deep uncertainty on the part of other countries about whether they can trust America - and trust in America is the foundation on which much of the current world order is structured,\" writes Vox's Zach Beauchamp. \"If Trump continues to behave this erratically, the consequences could be, well, unpredictable - and that's scary.\"\n\nMr Trump's foreign interactions haven't been all tough talk, however. A few weeks after his surprise election, Mr Trump spoke with Pakistani Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif and, according to that nation's readout of the conversation, the then-president-elect was effusive in his praise.\n\nDonald Trump's negotiating strategy is outlined in The Art of the Deal\n\n\"President Trump said Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif you have a very good reputation,\" the release read. \"Your country is amazing with tremendous opportunities. Pakistanis are one of the most intelligent people. I am ready and willing to play any role that you want me to play to address and find solutions to the outstanding problems.\"\n\nIn his 1987 book, The Art of the Deal, Mr Trump explained what he saw as the keys to good negotiating. One of them was to be nice, but \"fight back hard\" if you think you're being treated unfairly.\n\nAnother is to never show weakness.\n\n\"The worst thing you can possibly do in a deal is seem desperate to make it,\" he writes. \"That makes the other guy smell blood, and you're dead.\"\n\nDonald Trump the Un-Diplomat seems to be putting those maxims to use early and often in his global interactions - no matter who is on the other end of the line.", "In eastern Ukraine, one woman has told the BBC she cannot tell her grandson his mother is dead after another night of heavy shelling.\n\nGovernment forces and Russian-backed rebels have accused each other of attacking civilians as fighting intensifies, with some of the heaviest clashes just over 10 miles from rebel-held Donetsk.\n\nTom Burridge reports from the city of Avdiivka.", "Police officer Elizabeth Rooney felt the comments were \"misogynistic and unpresidential\"\n\nIt seems President Trump has high standards when it comes to the way his staff are dressed. Looking the part is as important as acting the part when you are in the president's circle, apparently.\n\nBut his reported requirement that his female staff \"should dress like women\" has provoked an inevitable backlash on social media.\n\nAccording to a former Trump campaign worker, quoted in a news report by Axios, the president wants the men who work for him to wear ties and the women to dress \"appropriately\".\n\nDresses are apparently preferred, but if a female staffer wears jeans, they must \"look neat and orderly\", the publication reported.\n\nThe internet responded in a powerful way, with many using the hashtag #DressLikeAWoman.\n\nElizabeth Rooney, a police officer in Worcester, Massachusetts, and army veteran, posted a photo of her in uniform.\n\nShe told the BBC: \"I'll start dressing like a woman when he starts acting like a president. I felt his remarks that women should \"dress like a woman\" are misogynistic and unpresidential.\n\n\"Each morning when I wake up, I dress myself in pride, honour, duty and freedom.\"\n\nDr Judy Melinek tweeted \"Yes I'm doing an autopsy wearing pearls.\"\n\nThe hashtag has already generated more than 130,000 tweets since early on Friday.\n\nOne of the first tweets was by @NJGirlSEliza whose army uniform selfie has been retweeted nearly 2,000 times.\n\nOthers followed suit by posting pictures of themselves in their own work attire or of other inspirational women.\n\n\"This is how you #DressLikeAWoman when there is hazardous waste\"\n\nDr Rebecca Alleyne posted a photo of herself in scrubs during surgery. She told the BBC: \"I believe in social media as a change agent and a photo is an efficient means for making a point. I've had a very positive reaction, only one or two negatives.\n\n\"I want women everywhere to be judged on their abilities, not on what they're wearing. I believe that, no matter who's issuing the dress code.\"\n\nDr Rebecca Alleyne in Los Angeles responded to Trump's alleged comment with this picture of her at work\n\nThere were some voices in favour of the more gender-appropriate approach, but the majority of comments appeared to mock the remarks, which have not been confirmed as coming from President Trump, which they perceived to be sexist.\n\nCorrection: A previous version of this article incorrectly referred to Elizabeth Rooney as being a police officer in Boston.", "CCTV images showing the aftermath of an attack by a man with a machete at the Louvre museum in Paris feature in many papers - with the Daily Telegraph saying troops had prevented a fresh terrorist incident.\n\nThe i reports that the man was shot several times in the stomach, after he allegedly attacked soldiers with a machete, shouting \"Allahu Akbar\".\n\nThe Daily Mirror reports 50 sixth formers from Surrey were held inside the museum for two hours as the authorities searched for possible bombs.\n\nThere is anger at Npower's decision to increase its energy prices by an average of more than a £100 a year for customers on its standard variable tariff.\n\nThe Daily Express describes the move as a \"kick in the teeth\" for families. \"For too long these companies have been making huge profits while punishing their customers,\" it says.\n\nThe Daily Mirror comments that such a price hike demands \"powerful action\" and calls for the \"tough regulation of companies ripping off customers\".\n\nThe Times reports on its front page that the shadow international trade secretary Barry Gardiner is receiving money from a law firm with links to the Chinese state.\n\nThe paper says the son of the law firm's founder works in the MP's office - and that the donations partly pay his salary.\n\nThere's no suggestion of impropriety, but some Labour sources have expressed \"disquiet\" to the paper.\n\nAccording to the Guardian, Jeremy Corbyn's team have \"informally explored the idea of collaborating with the Greens and Liberal Democrats\" in Stoke Central, to prevent UKIP winning the seat at the upcoming by-election.\n\nThe paper says a senior figure in the Labour leader's office has asked a go-between what it would take to persuade the other parties to \"dial down\" their campaigns - or even withdraw candidates.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph and Times both report on what the government may do to alleviate the housing crisis.\n\n\"Get building or lose planning\" is the headline on the front of the Telegraph, which says developers will be ordered to make use of planning permission quickly - or risk losing it. The paper says ministers want to discourage firms from sitting on land earmarked for new homes.\n\nAccording to the Times, local authorities will be told to target vacant properties with sharp rises in council tax, as part of a drive to bring hundreds of thousands of empty homes back into use.\n\nElsewhere, a police chief in Merseyside has spoken to the Guardian about the pressing need for communities in Liverpool to break the wall of silence around gang crime.\n\nAssistant chief constable Nikki Holland urges residents to \"stop tolerating\" gang members in their midst and \"take back control\" by talking to police.\n\nWhat is called the on-going \"veg panic\" also attracts headlines.\n\nThe Daily Mail says a growing number of supermarkets are rationing vegetables in response to crop shortages caused by adverse weather across the Mediterranean.\n\nSome stores, it reports, have even decided to block people from buying certain products online.\n\n\"Seize a salad\" is the headline in the Sun, which accuses Spanish supermarkets of \"stockpiling\" lettuces, while shelves across the UK are left bare.\n\nFor some columnists, the entire episode illustrates the lunacy of our consumer habits. \"Humans are absurd\" writes Deborah Orr in the Guardian.\n\n\"Why do we persist in flying planes full of lettuce to Britain? How can it be said to be a consumer crisis when such a piece of ridiculous foolishness goes wrong?\"\n\nFinally, the papers seem bemused by David Cameron's reappearance in the limelight - alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger.\n\nThe Sun says the former prime minister appeared in a short 10-second video posted by the actor-turned-politician on social media.\n\nThe Daily Mail says he is seen leaning into the shot and draping his arm over the star, before saying \"I'll be back\".\n\n\"Exactly what the former PM means is a mystery\" says the paper, adding he \"should probably know better than to make bold promises\" only seven months after being forced to bid \"hasta la vista to Number 10\".", "Competitors have been taking part in the Wind Games 2017.\n\nMore than 80 teams and 200 flyers from around the world met in Spain for the event.", "A BBC News investigation has revealed how Sheffield City Council failed to stop an employee, a predatory sex offender, from abusing his victims in council offices over two decades.\n\nRoger Dodds has been sentenced to 16 years in prison.\n\nThe council was first told about the allegations against Dodds back in 1981 - but didn't inform the police.\n\nYears later, following further allegations, they allowed him to take early retirement with an enhanced pension.", "Australia detains asylum seekers on the small Pacific nation of Nauru\n\nAs the US-Australia refugee deal dominated headlines this week, a medical emergency was unfolding at an Australian detention centre on the Pacific island of Nauru.\n\nAdvocacy groups have been pushing the Australian government to allow a Kuwaiti refugee, who is 37 weeks pregnant, to be flown to Brisbane to give birth by caesarean section.\n\nThey say they alerted the government that she was a high-risk patient in December, due to the condition of pre-eclampsia, her baby being in the breech position, because of her age of 37 and because she had been prescribed the antidepressant citalopram, which can result in harmful side-effects on newborn babies.\n\nKnown only as \"Dee\", the woman has been on Nauru since late 2013 and is now living in the local community after being deemed a genuine refugee.\n\nHowever, with Australia having not approved her entry, the woman had remained in Nauru's general hospital. While previously refugees on Nauru were routinely allowed into Australia to give birth in better-equipped hospitals, Australia has been reluctant to allow the practice since 2015, fearing that once in the country refugees will seek legal help to remain here.\n\nFinally on Friday, Dee was flown to Brisbane. According to Nauru's government, it came after Australia gave permission late on Thursday night.\n\nConditions for refugees in Nauru have been criticised by rights groups\n\nAustralia sends all asylum seekers who arrive by boat to detention centres in Nauru and Papua New Guinea's Manus Island. Those processed there and classed as genuine refugees have been released into the local communities. Children of asylum seekers who give birth in Australia are not automatically given visas or citizenship.\n\nThis \"Pacific Solution\" has been criticised by refugee advocacy groups, who say Australia - the sixth-largest country in the world geographically and with the seventh-lowest population density - could afford to show more compassion to asylum seekers and is obliged to do so under a UN convention.\n\nThe government, supported by the main opposition, argues boat journeys are dangerous and controlled by people-smugglers. It says its policies have restored the integrity of Australia's borders, prevented deaths at sea and discouraged people who aren't genuine refugees from making the journey.\n\nIt becomes still more complicated by the question of who should bear the responsibility in medical emergencies for those awaiting processing.\n\nCanberra's reluctance to grant medical evacuations is not confined to problematic pregnancies. It has also been the case for refugees needing other treatment, such as an 11-year-old Iranian boy who was prevented from going to Australia for corrective surgery on a broken arm in 2015, despite a storm of protest.\n\nAustralia-based activist groups Doctors for Refugees and the Refugee Action Coalition say the government's delayed action over Dee was based on a fear of her remaining in Australia after her procedure, and showed again that the government was ready to put lives at risk to make a political point.\n\nIt was not immediately clear if her condition had changed before she was airlifted on Friday.\n\nDoctors for Refugees President Dr Barri Phatarfod said Dee had been identified by a team of several Australia-based specialists assessing her medical tests as a high-risk patient requiring urgent transfer to Australia in December. But, Dr Phatarfod said, approaches to Australia's Immigration Minister Peter Dutton had been rebuffed.\n\n\"Either the minster, who is not an obstetrician, chose not to believe us, which would take a certain amount of arrogance, or else the government just doesn't care,\" Dr Phatarfod told the BBC.\n\n\"This is a very high-risk pregnancy, which requires medical assistance that simply cannot be provided on Nauru. The Australian government is putting politics above people's lives.\n\n\"Nauruan women with complicated pregnancies are allowed to be flown to Australia. But because Dee is a refugee, she's effectively a prisoner. Her choices have been taken away. She'll be delivering how the Australian government says she'll be delivering.\"\n\nDr Phatarfod said despite promised funding from Australia to upgrade the Nauru hospital, the facility was still grossly inadequate for cases such as Dee's and operated by poorly trained staff.\n\nShe said the woman also had a large fibroid, or benign tumour, on the front of her uterus. Cutting through such growths for a caesarean delivery usually resulted in substantial bleeding, and Dr Phatarfod said the Nauru hospital was not equipped to handle transfusions.\n\nThis issue has been in the spotlight in the past few years through several high-profile cases, including:\n\n\"After that [the Somali refugee's] case, who in their right mind would take this risk with this latest case?\" said Sydney-based Refugee Action Coalition spokesman Ian Rintoul.\n\n\"People on Nauru are hostage to politics. And Australia's two big political parties (Liberal and Labor) are both hostage to the offshore solution. There's no principled position by the two main political parties anymore.\"\n\nAustralia's offshore detention policies have been the subject of protests\n\nAustralia's Department of Immigration and Border Protection has kept its statements on the case brief. Handling media enquiries via email, it said it did not \"provide specific details on the health and transfer arrangements of individuals\".\n\n\"Australia provides comprehensive medical support services to the regional processing centre in Nauru and to the Nauruan Government Health Facilities,\" a spokesman wrote in an email to the BBC.\n\n\"Refugees in Nauru are eligible to access the Government of Nauru Overseas Medical Referral process if required medical services are not available in Nauru. This process is under the management of the Government of Nauru.\n\n\"Decisions relating to medical treatment, including medical transfers, for refugees in Nauru are made at the discretion of the Government of Nauru.\"\n\nIn a statement late on Thursday, Nauru's government said it had \"no control over decisions by Australia on who to transfer\".\n\n\"Within the last 30 minutes we have received confirmation from Australia that the patient [Dee] will be airlifted and this is expected to happen tomorrow,\" it said in a statement.\n\nNauru's government and Mr Rintoul confirmed Dee had boarded the plane early on Friday afternoon. Australia did not comment on Friday.\n\nThe Refugee Action Coalition says there are 1,800 people who have been determined to be refugees on Nauru and Manus. Australia's agreement with the US is for it to take up to 1,250 of them, although President Donald Trump's criticism of the deal means it is far from certain.\n\nEven if all 1,250 were resettled, Mr Rintoul says this would still leave 550 in limbo on the Pacific islands, and continuing debate over their care.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nSaturday's coverage: Watch live on BBC Two, Connected TV and online from 18:00, plus follow text updates on the BBC Sport website.\n\nKyle Edmund lost to an injured Vasek Pospisil as Great Britain and Canada ended day one of their Davis Cup World Group tie level at 1-1 in Ottawa.\n\nPospisil, ranked 86 places below Edmund at 133rd in the world, overcame a leg injury to level the best-of-five tie.\n\nJamie Murray and Dom Inglot are scheduled to face Daniel Nestor and Pospisil in Saturday's doubles contest.\n\nThe two nations are missing their leading players as world number one Andy Murray recuperates following the Australian Open, while Canada's world number four Milos Raonic is injured.\n\n\"We had a video from Andy last night and [captain] Leon [Smith] put it on the big screen,\" Evans said.\n\n\"I'm guessing he was watching. He said he would be. It's obviously nice he supports the team. He's a good guy to have in our corner.\"\n\nEvans successfully carried the responsibility of being Britain's number one as he converted a gulf in experience over world number 234 Shapovalov into a straight-sets victory - the Briton's first win in a live Davis Cup rubber since 2013.\n\nShapovalov gave evidence that he has a bright future, the Wimbledon junior champion hitting plenty of flashing winners behind a swinging left-handed serve, but 39 unforced errors proved too much.\n\nThe Canadian dropped serve in a nervous opening game and again to lose the set, but he threatened more in the second and it took an ace and a deft drop volley for Evans to see off the first two break points against him.\n\nThat was as close as Shapovalov would get, however, with Evans then breaking thanks to a fantastic lob and making the decisive move at 4-3 in the third set.\n\n\"I tried to get on top early,\" Evans said. \"That was the plan, to come out and silence him and not give him confidence. I did that and then rolled him from then on. I was happy with way I played.\"\n\nEdmund, ranked 47th in the world, looked a good bet to increase Britain's lead against Pospisil, who has slipped from 25th three years ago to a lowly 133rd in the world.\n\nThe Canadian, 26, was further hampered by a left leg injury which required a medical timeout as early as the fifth game, and continued to require bouts of treatment.\n\nIt was therefore all the more remarkable that Pospisil reeled off eight of nine games following the timeout with some fine serving, while Edmund produced an error-strewn performance across the net.\n\nThe fast pace of the court allowed Pospisil to keep the points short, race through his serving games and put pressure on the increasingly vulnerable Edmund serve.\n\nEdmund, 22, managed to get through to a tie-break in the third set but was outplayed once again, ending with eight double faults and 39 unforced errors.\n\n\"It was just not good enough, pretty dismal from my standards,\" the Briton said.\n\n\"Everyone can accept winning and losing but it needs to be a lot better at this level. I'm just very disappointed for myself, for the team.\n\n\"It's annoying when you have support like that and fans come out and spend money and travel and to put on a performance like that. You just really want to do well.\"\n\nCaptain Smith added: \"The most important thing is to dust it [Edmund's defeat] off but focus now on the next matches. There's a lot of tennis to be played\"\n\nThere was real composure, confidence and style in the way Evans defused the challenge of his 17-year-old opponent. Having saved the only two break points he faced midway through the second set, Evans then pounced immediately to secure the only break required to win the set.\n\nEdmund, in contrast, put in a very ragged performance against Pospisil, who has had a miserable time in singles these past 12 months. The Canadian was in excellent form, serving 19 aces and getting the very best out of the quick court laid over the ice rink here in Ottawa.\n\nMurray and Inglot have been warned: Pospisil will play again in Saturday's doubles, and his partner Daniel Nestor is a former Olympic champion, world number one and multiple Grand Slam champion (all in doubles).\n\nWorld number two Novak Djokovic is the only member of the top 10 in action and he trailed by a set and a break against Russia's Daniil Medvedev before the 20-year-old was struck down by cramp.\n\nDjokovic, playing for the first time since his shock second-round loss to Denis Istomin at the Australian Open, had earlier needed treatment to his right shoulder.\n\n\"The pain I had prevented me from playing the points as I wanted to,\" said the 12-time Grand Slam champion, who led 3-6 6-4 6-1 when Medvedev eventually retired to give Serbia a 2-0 lead.\n\n\"But it's a good victory and we are in a very good position.\"\n\nThe winners of the tie in Ottawa look set to face a trip to France in the quarter-finals, after Yannick Noah's side took a 2-0 lead over Japan in Tokyo.\n\nArgentina's Davis Cup defence could be short-lived without star man Juan Martin del Potro, as they trail 2-0 to Italy in Buenos Aires.", "The story of Wales' remarkable journey to the semi-final of Euro 2016 is to be released in cinemas.\n\nDon't Take Me Home follows how Wales ended a 58-year wait to reach a major tournament and surpassed expectations in France.\n\nChris Coleman's team topped their group and beat Belgium on their way to the last four before losing to Portugal.\n\nThe film is out in UK cinemas on 3 March but there will be previews around Wales on St David's Day.\n\nIn his first interview about the movie, film-maker Jonny Owen told the BBC's Good Evening Wales programme: \"The biggest part for me, and one of the biggest parts of the film, was that we'd finally made a major tournament for the first time in nearly 60 years and, when we found our place in the sun, boy did we revel in it.\n\n\"I think everybody would want Wales in a major tournament from now on because the way we were was just exemplary all round.\"\n\nMr Owen said the FAW brought him in after the Wales team watched his film about Nottingham Forest - I believe in Miracles - while in France.\n\nAnd he added that he had only managed to keep it a secret because he was living in Nottingham.\n\n\"If I'd been living in Wales and had a few pints with the boys, I might have been more loose-lipped,\" he said.\n\n\"Full credit to the FAW, they kept their nerve and didn't say anything when they could have and they wanted it to be a big surprise.\"\n\nHe said he had interviewed all the players who started games, so it is their narrative in the film.\n\nAnd he said the glossy film footage is interspersed with lots of mobile phone footage, showing the fans' journey as well as that of the players.\n\nHe said he had been told watching the film was an emotional experience.\n\n\"I do mention the passing of Gary Speed at the top because one thing about this team was they were young men, or young boys in many cases, when Gary passed.\n\n\"What they've achieved since is very emotional when you think of where they've come from.\"", "Oliver the police horse carried the weight of Britain's top cop at Stamford Bridge\n\nBritain's most senior police officer has saddled up to join mounted officers patrolling a Premier League derby match.\n\nMetropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe kept an eye on Chelsea and Arsenal fans while perched on police horse Oliver.\n\nThe top of the table clash attracted 41,490 fans to Stamford Bridge.\n\nA spokesman said Sir Bernard has attended patrols \"quite a lot\" since being appointed in September 2011.\n\nHe is due to retire next month, after five years in the role.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Just months after the Olympics, a dispute over the condition of Brazil's Maracana stadium has erupted.\n\nThe building has been damaged by looters and has lain empty as clubs and authorities argue over who should manage it.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho says certain members of his squad need to realise the importance of winning.\n\nUnited are unbeaten in 14 Premier League games but have drawn their past three and been sixth in the table after each round of matches since 6 November.\n\n\"Playing to win, having the responsibility to win, and coping with the pressure of winning is something that has to belong to your natural habitat,\" said Mourinho.\n\n\"For some guys, it doesn't.\"\n\nSix players in the Old Trafford club's first-team squad have not won a domestic league title or major international tournament - Luke Shaw, Matteo Darmian, Jesse Lingard, Ander Herrera, Anthony Martial and Marcus Rashford.\n\nMourinho did not name any individuals but, speaking before Sunday's trip to champions Leicester (16:00 GMT kick-off), he said his squad contains players who \"need time to go out of a comfort or a protected zone where they don't think the aim is to win\".\n\nMeanwhile, midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger has been added to United's Europa League squad after being left out for the group stages.\n\nThe 32-year-old former Germany captain will now be available for the last-32 tie against Saint-Etienne later this month.\n\nHaving signed four players last summer, United did not buy anyone during the January transfer window - but Mourinho has identified the men he wants in the summer.\n\nIn recent seasons, United have become embroiled in negotiations with Real Madrid defender Sergio Ramos and forward Gareth Bale, and midfielder Cesc Fabregas when he was at Barcelona, but the Mourinho says he will not chase \"impossible\" transfers.\n\n\"I know what I want and I am very realistic,\" said the Portuguese. \"I know what are the impossible targets and I don't like my club to participate in them.\n\n\"It is a waste of time. It is a gift to the agents to help them improve their situation.\"\n\nGiven they have been in sixth place since early November, there is a real possibility that United will fail to qualify for the Champions League for a second successive year.\n\nThat would cost them more than £20m in sponsorship income due to a clause in their £750m, 10-year deal with Adidas, but is unlikely to impact on their ability to attract top-class players because of Mourinho's reputation and the club's ability to pay top salaries.\n\nMourinho's priorities will be to bring in at least one \"game-changing forward\" and bolster his defence significantly.\n\nAtletico Madrid forward Antoine Griezmann has been heavily linked, although United officials have played down a story from France that personal terms with the 25-year-old have already been agreed.\n\nA formal move for Benfica's Victor Lindelof is anticipated after United ruled out a January move for the 22-year-old Sweden defender due to his near £40m buyout clause.\n\nMonaco defensive midfielder Tiemoue Bakayoko is also of interest to Mourinho, with England winger Ashley Young and Schweinsteiger top of the list of likely departures.", "Why film maker Matt Callanan has hidden £10 notes around Cardiff for others to spend.", "A letter listing mundane items dated October 1633 has been discovered during renovations of Knole House, a stately Tudor home in Kent.\n\nJan Cutajar, the man responsible for the renovations, tells BBC World Service about the rare find.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChelsea tightened their grip on the Premier League title race and delivered a blow to Arsenal's aspirations with a convincing victory at Stamford Bridge.\n\nManager Arsene Wenger, watching from the stands as he served the third of a four-match touchline ban, was hoping Arsenal could respond to Tuesday's shock home defeat by Watford - but Chelsea exerted their authority to leave the Gunners 12 points behind the leaders.\n\nMarcos Alonso gave Chelsea the lead after 13 minutes, heading home after Diego Costa's header came back off the bar. Arsenal were unhappy with Alonso's challenge on Hector Bellerin that saw the defender take a heavy blow to the head which forced his substitution, but referee Martin Atkinson saw nothing wrong.\n\nEden Hazard made the decisive contribution with a magnificent solo goal eight minutes after half-time, leaving a trail of Arsenal players in his wake in a run from the halfway line before beating Petr Cech.\n\nThe goalkeeper's poor clearance gifted substitute Cesc Fabregas Chelsea's third, five minutes from time, and Olivier Giroud's late goal barely counted as consolation for Arsenal. The visitors had chances but saw Thibaut Courtois save well from Gabriel, Mesut Ozil and Danny Welbeck.\n• None 'Arsenal have settled for fourth again'\n• None Reaction from Stamford Bridge and the rest of Saturday's Premier League games\n\nChelsea's lead at the top of the Premier League was 12 points at the conclusion of this victory - although Tottenham moved back to within nine points with a win against Middlesbrough - and to underscore the scale of their improvement, it is worth going back to the first meeting between these clubs at Arsenal in September.\n\nTheir 3-0 loss to the Gunners left Chelsea in eighth place and eight points behind then-leaders Manchester City after six games. This proved to be a watershed moment for the Blues and manager Antonio Conte.\n\nIn the intervening 18 games after Conte switched to his preferred three-man central defensive system, they have won 16 league games, lost at Spurs and drawn at Liverpool. It has been a powerhouse run that has effectively brought a 20-point swing in the title race.\n\nChelsea once more looked the model of efficiency, although they conceded more chances than Conte would have liked, with N'Golo Kante a tireless midfield influence.\n\nThe Italian wanted to make amends for that heavy loss at Emirates Stadium and he had the players and system to do it in style.\n\nAnd when they have individuals who can produce game-defining moments like Hazard, it is almost impossible to see any way they will leave the door far enough ajar for any of their pursuers to squeeze through.\n\nConte's celebration after Hazard's goal showed how much the win meant to him.\n\nAll over for Arsenal?\n\nArsenal's loss here at Stamford Bridge caps a dreadful week for the Gunners and manager Wenger - watching from the stands as their title hopes were surely snuffed out for another year.\n\nFirst they were knocked off course by that defeat by Watford and here they were beaten by a Chelsea side that looked like everything Arsenal did not. Strong, streetwise, ruthless and confident.\n\nWenger's side were limp in the opening phases, not even getting a touch in the Chelsea penalty area for 35 minutes and when chances did come along they were squandered.\n\nWenger can make all the usual positive noises but this was, ultimately, an emphatic beating and barring a dramatic and unforeseen turn of events, the wait for their first title since the year of \"The Invincibles\" in 2003-04 will go on.\n\nA single banner saying \"Enough Is Enough. Time To Go\" was held aloft in the Arsenal end - but it was almost a token gesture of defiance, rather like Giroud's late goal.\n\nThe two faces of Chelsea\n\nThis Chelsea side mixes silk and steel - and does it in the shape of N'Golo Kante and Eden Hazard.\n\nKante has been a key contributor this season and was again here. He breaks up opposition attacks and starts Chelsea's own. He makes it his business to make life impossible for opponents.\n\nHazard sprinkles the stardust on Chelsea, as he proved with that slalom, weaving run for the crucial second goal that effectively decided the contest.\n\nChelsea look a team for all season. And look like Premier League champions in waiting.\n\nWhat the managers said\n\nChelsea manager Antonio Conte: \"It was an important game. I consider Arsenal one of the six teams that can fight for the title until the end of the season. To put them 12 points behind is very important for us.\n\n\"In four days we have had two games against two great teams. I think we are showing we deserve to stay on top of the table. I am very pleased for my players. In every session they show me great attitude and great will to fight and win this league.\n\n\"Was the first goal a foul? In England never. No.\"\n\nArsenal manager Arsene Wenger: \"It was a foul. If you look at a number of games recently we can feel sorry.\n\n\"It was 100% a foul, it was even dangerous play. That doesn't take anything away from the performance of Chelsea.\n\n\"We had a strong start but didn't take the opportunities and after half-time the second goal was the killer for us.\"\n• None Chelsea have won nine successive Premier League home games and the aggregate score in these matches is 27-4 in Chelsea's favour.\n• None Arsenal have lost four of their past nine Premier League games, the same number that they lost in their previous 35 matches in the competition.\n• None Chelsea have won all nine Premier League games in which Hazard has scored this season.\n• None Petr Cech has failed to keep a clean sheet in three of his four Premier League games against Chelsea for Arsenal and has conceded in both meetings at Stamford Bridge.\n• None Diego Costa failed to score in consecutive Premier League appearances for the first time since 2 May 2016 (three in a row).\n• None Cesc Fabregas scored his first ever Premier League goal against Arsenal.\n\nChelsea will be looking to extend their lead further when they travel to Burnley in the Premier League next Sunday (12:30 GMT), while Arsenal host Hull on Saturday (12:30 GMT).\n• None Attempt saved. Shkodran Mustafi (Arsenal) header from the left side of the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain.\n• None Goal! Chelsea 3, Arsenal 1. Olivier Giroud (Arsenal) header from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Nacho Monreal with a cross.\n• None Attempt missed. Diego Costa (Chelsea) right footed shot from a difficult angle on the left is too high.\n• None Attempt saved. Marcos Alonso (Chelsea) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Cesc Fàbregas.\n• None Goal! Chelsea 3, Arsenal 0. Cesc Fàbregas (Chelsea) right footed shot from outside the box to the high centre of the goal.\n• None Attempt saved. Victor Moses (Chelsea) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Eden Hazard.\n• None Attempt missed. Shkodran Mustafi (Arsenal) header from the left side of the six yard box misses to the left. Assisted by Mesut Özil with a cross following a corner. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Olympian Jessica Ennis-Hill has taken part in her first park run in her home city of Sheffield.\n\nThe retired athlete ran two laps of Endcliffe Park, with dozens of other runners in the morning 5km event, to mark a new sponsor for the series of events.\n\nShe later posted online: \"Loved my first park run this morning! 5km is a little bit further than the 800m I'm used to.\"", "President Donald Trump must honour the temporary nationwide block on his travel ban, the Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson has said.\n\nEarlier, Federal Judge James Robart ruled against government lawyers' claims that US states did not have the standing to challenge Mr Trump's executive order.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. \"I remember... looking at Roger Dodds with his big bunch of keys, locking the door, and that was horrifying\", one victim said\n\nPredatory sex offender Roger Dodds was left free to abuse his victims by Sheffield City Council despite bosses having known about his offending for years, BBC News has found.\n\nDodds, who was jailed earlier for 16 years after pleading guilty to four counts of indecent assault, was allowed to operate as an employee of the council \"without sufficient challenge, accountability or consequences\", a council-commissioned report found.\n\nCouncil officials not only knew about his behaviour, but also failed to report his activities to police and gave him early retirement with an enhanced pension.\n\nKenny Dale, who was abused by Dodds in the early 1990s and has waived his right to anonymity, said: \"I was the victim of a horrible man and the council are to blame for that.\"\n\nSheffield City Council said it \"accepted responsibility\" and was \"deeply sorry\" Dodds had been allowed to commit these offences while in its employment.\n\nDodds abused at least one man while heading up the council's Grants and Awards Department\n\nDodds, now 81, was employed in 1975 to head the council's Grants and Awards Department.\n\nThe unit was responsible for providing financial support to students attending college or university. However, Dodds used his position to sexually abuse young men, typically in their late teens.\n\nOne victim, who did not want to be named, said he was assaulted during their very first meeting.\n\nHe told the BBC: \"Dodds was asking me things about my studies, and, very gradually, his left hand started to feel its way into my right jeans pocket. When that started to happen, I just became frozen and unable to move.\"\n\nAccording to former colleagues, Dodds was part of a club that operated within the council swapping hardcore pornographic magazines in internal envelopes and screening adult films in a basement room.\n\nHe was first investigated by Sheffield City Council in the early 1980s after a series of allegations were made against him.\n\nThe complaints gave one employee the courage to tell managers about the abuse he had been subjected to.\n\nRichard Rowe said he grew to fear turning up for work as a result of his abuse at the hands of Dodds\n\nRichard Rowe, who has also waived his legal right to anonymity, said he was subjected to \"terrifying\" assaults over an 18-month period.\n\nHowever, he said when he told bosses what was happening, he was told to stay quiet.\n\n\"They asked for specifics and I gave them as much details as I could bring myself to voice. But they knew, they knew exactly,\" he said.\n\n\"At the end of the interview it was, 'there is nothing more to tell us, so go back to the office and you do not speak about this inside or outside the building'. I clearly remember that warning.\"\n\nFollowing the investigation, Dodds was moved to a position working with schools.\n\nAn investigation carried out for Sheffield City Council, and seen by the BBC, said he was given \"substantial unregulated and unsupervised access to schools\".\n\nThe report continues that \"there appears to have been no disciplinary consequences to his behaviour at the time\".\n\nNor was his transfer a chastening experience for Dodds.\n\nKenny Dale said he blamed the council for failing to stop Dodds\n\nMr Dale began working at the council in the early 1990s and, despite warnings from colleagues, applied for a post working alongside Dodds.\n\n\"Everyone told me not to go for it,\" he said, \"[but] I didn't think that kind of behaviour would be allowed\".\n\nHe said Dodds began touching him inappropriately almost immediately and continued to do so despite his objections and the lack of challenge from managers.\n\nAnother investigation by the local authority was launched and in 1993 Roger Dodds left the council.\n\nHowever, despite Mr Dale's insistence Dodds should not be given a payoff, he was given an early retirement package that included an enhanced pension.\n\nMr Dale said he blames the council for the abuse he suffered.\n\n\"The council are so responsible, more responsible than he was,\" he said.\n\nRoger Dodds was the subject of two internal investigations while working for Sheffield City Council\n\nFollowing the second internal investigation officials concluded a criminal investigation should have been launched.\n\nIn 2008, one of Dodds' victims went to South Yorkshire Police with his allegations.\n\nHowever, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) decided not to prosecute at the time - a CPS spokesman said its files did not contain details on why that decision was taken.\n\nDodds was eventually charged in 2016 after another complainant came forward in 2014.\n\nThe police investigation prompted the council to commission consultants to investigate how it had handled Dodds.\n\nThe 2008 review concluded: \"It was clearly wrong that Dodds should receive early retirement. He was not subject to any official sanction by the council for his alleged behaviour.\"\n\nThe 28-page dossier also revealed repeated failures by the council, describing the authority's action as clearly unacceptable not just by present-day standards but by the policies and legislation in place at the time.\n\nIt conceded the council did not know how many other victims there might be.\n\nIts conclusion was damning, stating: \"The actions of Roger Dodds have caused enormous distress to his victims, and the city council has been complicit in allowing Dodds to operate apparently without sufficient challenge, accountability or consequences.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Watch the best of the action as Dan Evans sees off Canada's 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov in straight sets to win his first match as Great Britain's Davis Cup number one.\n\nREAD MORE: Evans gives Britain early lead over Canada in Davis Cup", "No story dominates the headlines but the Sunday Telegraph and Sunday Times both lead on defence issues.\n\nThe Sunday Telegraph takes aim at officials in the Ministry of Defence, reporting that MPs will blame a \"rotten core\" of civil servants for allowing British soldiers to be hounded by false claims of abuse dating from the Iraq War.\n\nThe story is based on a parliamentary inquiry whose findings have not yet been published.\n\nThe Telegraph expects the report to condemn the activities of the government's Iraq Historic Allegations Team and to call for it to be shut down immediately.\n\nIHAT has said that it handles investigations with sensitivity. The Telegraph, though, calls it a \"grotesque charade\".\n\nThe MoD also finds itself under attack from the Sunday Times, which claims that equipment failures and bungled procurement deals have left gaping holes in Britain's defences.\n\nAmong a number of examples, it cites the Royal Navy's new Type 45 destroyers, which are apparently so noisy they can be detected by Russian submarines 100 miles away.\n\nIn a statement, the MoD says it is focused on delivering the equipment needed to keep Britain safe.\n\nElsewhere, the Sun on Sunday reports that the British veteran, Johnson Beharry, who was awarded the Victoria Cross for heroism in Iraq, was delayed and questioned at JFK airport in New York by officials enforcing President Trump's travel ban.\n\nLance Sergeant Beharry, who was en route to a charity event for war veterans, believes that an Iraq stamp in his passport aroused suspicions.\n\nHe complains that he felt \"humiliated\" and missed the fund-raising show because of the delay.\n\nThe Observer says that the government is to break with Margaret Thatcher's policy of supporting home ownership, with a shift in favour of people who rent.\n\nIt says the new approach, to be set out in a White Paper this week, will aim to deliver more affordable and secure rental deals, and threaten tougher action against rogue landlords.\n\nIn the Observer's view, it is a turning point for the Conservative party and an admission by Theresa May's government that home ownership is out of reach for millions of families because of sky-high property prices.\n\nThe Mail on Sunday devotes its front page and two others to news that the former UKIP leader Nigel Farage is sharing a house in west London with a French politician, described by the newspaper as \"glamorous\" and \"foxy\".\n\nThe Mail says Laure Ferrari, who moved in with Mr Farage last week, is the head of a Eurosceptic think-tank which is accused of diverting EU funding to UKIP before the general election and the referendum.\n\nMr Farage tells the Mail he is simply helping Miss Ferrari with somewhere to stay. They both deny having an affair. Mr Farage also denies any financial wrongdoing.\n\nDavid Beckham appears on a number of front pages, after the leak of private emails apparently revealing his anger at missing out on a knighthood in 2013.\n\nHis spokesman has said that the emails have been \"hacked and doctored\" and contain \"outdated material taken out of context\".\n\nThe Mail on Sunday is unimpressed by friends of the footballer explaining that he was simply \"a normal person\" who was \"extremely disappointed\" not to get a knighthood.\n\nBut the Sunday Mirror says it is understandable that Beckham feels \"miffed\" after giving so much to charity and his country. It says it is high time he was told \"Arise, Sir David\".\n\nThe story of Mary Ellis from the Isle of Wight, one of the few women who flew Spitfires during World War Two, is told in the Sunday Times and the Mail on Sunday.\n\nMrs Ellis, who turned 100 last week, joined the Air Transport Auxiliary in 1941. She and her fellow so-called \"ATA girls\" delivered planes to RAF airfields, releasing male pilots for combat duty.\n\nFor an early birthday treat, she recently took control of a Spitfire once again on a flight over the South Coast accompanied by a co-pilot.\n\nFinally, for those with a sweet tooth, the Sunday Times reports that chocolate bars are about to get 20% smaller.\n\nIt comes as manufacturers try to meet government targets for reducing sugar in their products.\n\nThey can not use artificial sweeteners, according to the paper, because this ruins the taste and can even have a laxative effect.\n\ndeclined to comment on the possible 20% cut.", "A ferry port assistant from Greenock says he is \"a bit shaken up\" after winning more than £4m from Saturday night's National Lottery draw.\n\nJames Couper, 46, first found out that he had won during his lunch break at work the following day when a colleague read out the winning numbers.\n\nHis winning numbers were five, 21, 23, 34, 43 and 45.\n\nMr Couper is still deciding what to do with his winnings, but has promised his children Rachel, 20, and Daniel, 16, a trip to Walt Disney World in Florida.", "1. Johnny Depp is alleged to have spent $30,000 a month on fine wine.\n\n2. The Great Scottish half-marathon course is 150m too short.\n\n3. You can carry one falcon in economy class on a Qatar Airways flight.\n\n5. A dating app is being developed to help orangutans find a love match.\n\n6. A man sold his back tattoo to German art collector, for 150,000 Euros.\n\nSeen a thing? Tell the Magazine on Twitter using the hashtag #thingididntknowlastweek\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Seventy years ago the post-war government promised to help victims of the London blitz by building \"new towns\". Six thousand acres were bought in Hertfordshire and Hemel Hempstead was born.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nTeam Sky believe Britain's Chris Froome can retain his Herald Sun Tour title in Australia, despite remaining one minute 12 seconds behind race leader Damien Howson going into Sunday's final stage.\n\nA 7km climb features on each of the four laps on stage four.\n\nAnd while Team Sky sporting director Brett Lancaster said the 121km course was not hard enough, he said \"never say never\" about Froome's chances.\n\n\"He's an animal,\" Lancaster told the Herald Sun. \"He's a racer. He's a gentleman off the bike, but when he gets on the bike - that rhino he's got on his bike is there for a reason.\"\n\nThe three-time Tour de France champion and Orica-Scott's Howson of Australia were held up in Saturday's crash, just 1.5km from the finish line.\n\nMcCabe was one of only a handful of riders to emerge from the pile-up and beat Australians Mitch Docker and Leigh Howard, with Froome's team-mate Luke Rowe, who won stage two, in fourth.\n\nAustralian Howson retained his lead with Jai Hindley in second place, 38 seconds behind, with Froome back in sixth.", "This late autumn photo - from Snowdonia National Park in North Wales - has been crowned the overall winner of the 10th annual International Garden Photographer of the Year competition.\n\nTaken by Lee Acaster, and entitled Left, this stark image won the Trees, Woods and Forests category - and then beat thousands of other entries to win the top spot.\n\nGarden designer Chris Beardshaw - one of the competition judges - says the photo \"perfectly encapsulates both the extremes of fortune and personality of these giants\".\n\nWhile Clare Foggett - who edits The English Garden Magazine - says the image \"draws the viewer in, to reveal the still surface of the lake behind. It demands closer inspection\".\n\nScroll down to see a selection of some of the best images from each category.\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"This is a classical composition with the bridge leading us into the garden and its wonderful display of October colour. The angle of view is very precisely aligned, creating the feeling of serene calm.\"\n\n\"It has a calm, almost Eastern zen-like quality. The autumn leaves on the handrail could have been artfully placed there by a stylist, but the fact that they had been spontaneously placed there by children visiting the garden earlier seems to add even more serendipity to the image.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of the International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"A dreamy midsummer scene. It is an unusual composition with the main subject near the picture's edge, but this, taken together with the empty space in the middle of the frame, heightens the faint sense of unreality that marks this photograph out.\"\n\n\"A fleeting and delicate image that encourages a holding of the breath and calm silence, for fear of disturbing the perfection.\"\n\n\"Wordsworth was right about daffodils filling the heart with pleasure and this photo of 'the stars that shine and twinkle on the Milky Way' does just that, with beautiful light from the setting sun. One look at the image and you want to be there.\"\n\n\"White Stars at Sunset is a descriptive title for this field of wild Narcissus with the beautifully backlit sta- shaped flowers. The low viewpoint chosen by the photographer has encouraged the flowers to command the stage against a dramatic evening sky.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"Texture and softening effects have been created in post-capture processing, but the strength of the image is in its very simple but accurate composition. In simplifying the still-life, the photographer has created a strong sense of romantic elegance.\"\n\n\"This charming image of Bergenia not only illustrates the character of the flower, but the added texture and softness to the palette gives it an artistic painterly feel.\"\n\n\"No-one could fault this image for not being true to its subject 'Breathing Spaces'. The glimpse of the mountainside in the break in the clouds has been very well caught and contrasts with the vibrant autumn colours of the foreground. A strong composition with the diagonal of the hillside.\"\n\n\"This anonymous person collecting fodder for his animals has a touch of humour about it. We have to assume he can see where he is going. The mountainous background with lovely soft, misty and low light adds a sense of place.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"This is a spontaneous shot that tells the story perfectly. The photographer has intuitively positioned the farmer in the frame in such a way that we can trudge along with him to the village we can see in the background.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"A clever shot. The flowers are beautifully lit and balanced with the lights of the city. There is so much activity to be seen in the background, but the photographer has succeeded in keeping the flowers in the foreground of our attention.\"\n\n\"The shallow depth of field has rendered the lights of a city purely as a glow which leaves the interpretation to the viewer.\"\n\n\"A blaze of colour brings out the true feel of summer. The shallow depth of field adds to the intrigue of the image. An accomplished image for this young photographer.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"A wonderfully exuberant image. The photographer has captured the scene very well by excluding anything that might interfere with the appreciation of colour and pattern.\"\n\nThis portfolio of microscopy images was entered as a set in the Beauty of Plants category and features sectioned and stained flower buds.\n\nA selection of the images - including some close-up details - can be seen here.\n\n\"The images are stunning - a rarely seen glimpse of the mechanics and 'insides' of a plant, normally only seen by botanists peering down microscopes. Their other-worldly quality brings a new level of intrigue to our garden plants.\"\n\n\"Well executed and inspirational in design. A very unusual way to portray these flowers, the clarity and design are stunning and a lot of worthwhile hard work has gone into this portfolio.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"One of the most attractive macro images in this year's competition. The light falling on this tiny subject is wonderfully handled and reveals the other-worldly elegance of the subject.\"\n\n\"A captivating image, glorious colours and the composition cannot be faulted. The depth of Field is perfect. The detail is beautiful and this is a very worthy winner of the macro category.\"\n\n\"A dramatic composition for this monochrome image with lighting to bring out the detail and texture in the leaves and yet maintaining the subtlety of the petals.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"A complex plant stripped down to its essentials of tone, form and texture. It is skilfully processed with a large amount of detail in a complex gradation of grey tones. There's a calm stillness that makes it a worthy winner.\"\n\nThe winning photos are being exhibited at the Royal Botanic Gardens, at Kew in London, from 4 February to 12 March 2017.", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nLaura Muir continued her recent record-breaking form by setting a European 3,000m indoor record in Karlsruhe.\n\nThe Scot, 23, beat Russian Liliya Shobukhova's record by 1.45 seconds to post a new mark of eight minutes 26.41 seconds, fifth on the world-best list.\n\nMuir is preparing for next month's European Indoor Championships.\n\nEngland's Andrew Pozzi won the 60m hurdles in Germany in 7.44 seconds - the fastest time in the world this year and-third fastest in British history.\n\nPozzi ran a personal best of 7.49 in the heats before bettering that mark as he finished 0.14secs outside Colin Jackson's British record in the final.\n\nDina Asher-Smith set a world best time of 7.13 in the 60m heats before being edged into second in the final by Jamaican Gayon Evans (7.14).\n\nMuir broke the British indoor 5,000m indoor record in Glasgow last month, and took Kelly Holmes' British 1500m record outdoors last July.\n\nShe then beat her own 1500m mark in Paris on her way to winning last year's Diamond League title.\n\nAs well as the European Indoor Championships in Belgrade in early March, she is also targeting a medal at the World Championships in London in August, after finishing seventh in last year's 1500m Olympic final in Rio.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nA groundsman uses a fire extinguisher to disperse the bees at the Wanderers A swarm of bees stopped play midway through Sri Lanka's innings in the third one-day international against South Africa in Johannesburg. The bees disrupted play twice - sending players diving to the ground - before the game was officially stopped in the 27th over, with Sri Lanka on 117-4. A groundsman used a fire extinguisher to try to disperse the bees, before a beekeeper was called to the Wanderers. Play restarted over an hour later and South Africa won by seven wickets.\n• None Scorecards from the third ODI Players and umpires dive to the ground", "The former prime minister and Mr Schwarzeneggar appeared in a video on the ex-California governor's Snapchat page.", "Marco Hauenstein as a baby with his birth mother\n\nA man who launched an online search for his missing birth mother discovered she died years ago in Germany - but bureaucratic errors led to the family never being informed.\n\nGina Hauenstein, who came from a small village in northern Switzerland, had been listed as officially missing since 2000.\n\nIn January this year her son Marco, who spent his childhood with foster parents in another part of the country, posted a Facebook appeal for information about the mother he last saw as an infant.\n\nHis story captured attention across Europe, prompting new enquiries - until Swiss police confirmed that the remains of Gina Hauenstein had actually been found just across the border in Germany in 2013.\n\nMarco did not have an easy start in life.\n\nHe knew very little about his birth family, but he did know that his mother had been a drug addict, and is believed to have spent time during the 1990s in Zurich's then-notorious Platzspitz drugs scene, where addicts bought heroin in a city centre park and injected it openly.\n\nWhen Marco was born in 1997, he was already addicted, and had to spend the first months of his life in hospital withdrawing and recovering.\n\nAlthough his mother visited him from time to time, he never lived with her, and when Marco was just three, she disappeared.\n\nAlthough Marco describes his childhood with foster parents as happy, he says questions about his birth family were \"always on my mind\".\n\nHis search first started when he was around 16, and he began by asking local town councils in the region of Switzerland his mother had come from. He also made enquiries with the police.\n\nNo information was forthcoming. Police told him that despite a search both within Switzerland and across Europe, no trace of her had ever been found.\n\nGina Hauenstein had been missing since 2000\n\nOnly when an appeal Marco made on Facebook began to attract attention - it was shared thousands of times in just a few days - did Swiss police look again at their records.\n\nThey discovered that in 2013 they had been contacted by German police, with news that human bones had been found in a village just across the border from Gina Hauenstein's home town in Switzerland.\n\nThe results of a forensic examination by Swiss investigators confirmed the bones were Gina's.\n\nLocal police in her home town were informed in 2015, but inexplicably that information never reached either Gina's family or the German authorities investigating the remains.\n\nThis week, Swiss police visited Marco and broke the news, apologising for a mistake they admit should never have happened.\n\nMarco's social media feeds were saturated with messages during the search\n\nMarco, who patiently gave many interviews when he first launched his Facebook appeal just four weeks ago, is now taking time for himself to digest the news.\n\nHe has not posted on Facebook since January. While not quite the happy end he had hoped for, there was at least one positive development.\n\n\"Danke! Thank you! Merci!\" he wrote. \"Thanks to your help, on 20 January, I was able to meet my uncle and my grandmother for the first time. It was a very emotional moment.\n\n\"At last, I have part of my family back.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nAfter several world tours spanning five decades, heavy metal pioneers Black Sabbath are bringing it to a close in the city where it all began. How did Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and former member Bill Ward's upbringing in post-war, industrial Birmingham influence their unique sound - and is this really \"the end\" for the band?\n\nFor a group that has been widely credited with creating the sound of heavy metal, influencing thousands of bands and inspiring generations of guitarists, it was a term Black Sabbath initially wanted to have nothing to do with.\n\n\"We called it heavy rock,\" recalls Iommi. \"The term heavy metal came about from a journalist when I came back from America (in the 70s).\n\n\"He said 'you're playing heavy metal' and I said 'no, it's heavy rock - what's that?'\"\n\nWho coined the phrase is disputed, with Rolling Stone critics Lester Bangs and Mike Saunders both credited with using it first.\n\nThroughout the 1970s, many reviewers used it as an insult - a sneering description of this new wave of \"aggressive\" musicians, their loud, thrashing sounds reverberating around packed, sweaty rooms full of fans.\n\n\"At first we didn't like being called heavy metal,\" admits Butler. \"But everyone likes to put you into certain pigeon holes, so we sort of got used to it.\n\n\"And then instead of it being derogatory, it became a whole lifestyle.\"\n\nAlong with Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath were credited with 'inventing' heavy metal\n\nLed Zeppelin and Deep Purple, who, like Black Sabbath, formed in 1968, were also progenitors of the movement.\n\nBut Sabbath are credited with inventing the distinctive riffs that characterised the sound in the early days - and that was all down to a terrible twist of fate that befell a 17-year-old Iommi at a steelworks in Aston, Birmingham.\n\nIt was the last shift for the young welder at the Summer Lane factory, who was leaving to try and make his fortune as a professional musician.\n\nAs he went to cut a piece of metal, the guillotine came crashing down on his right hand, slicing off the tips of his middle and right fingers.\n\n\"I was told 'you'll never play again',\" says the lead guitarist.\n\n\"It was just unbelievable. I sat in the hospital with my hand in this bag and I thought 'that's it - I'm finished'.\n\n\"But eventually I thought 'I'm not going to accept that. There must be a way I can play'.\"\n\nHe went home and fashioned new fingertips out of an old Fairy Liquid bottle - \"melted it down, got a hot soldering iron and shaped it like a finger\" - and cut sections from a leather jacket to cover his new homemade prosthetic.\n\n\"It helped to make me play a different style because I couldn't play the conventional way - I couldn't play the proper chords like I could before the accident, so I had to come up with a different way of making a bigger sound.\"\n\nA 17-year-old Iommi fashioned his own prosthetic fingertips to enable him to carry on playing the guitar - the prosthetics he uses today were crafted by professionals\n\n\"Tony's an incredible guy,\" says Osbourne. \"He not only played again, he invented a new sound. I often say to him, 'how do you know when you're touching the strings?' - and he says 'I just do it'.\"\n\nThe bleak, factory-laden streets of Aston, where Osbourne, Iommi, Butler and Ward grew up just a few roads apart, also had an impact on Sabbath's haunting sound and ominous lyrics.\n\nThe working-class suburb hadn't benefitted from post-war regeneration in the way Birmingham city centre had, just a couple of miles away.\n\nIommi and Butler worked in factories after leaving school, Ward delivered coal and Osbourne, after stints in a slaughterhouse and car plant, turned his hand to burglary. Music was an escape for the teenagers.\n\n\"It wasn't a great place to be at that time,\" recalls Butler. \"We were listening to songs about San Francisco, the hippies were all love and peace and everything.\n\nWithin two years of forming their band in Aston, Birmingham, in 1968, Black Sabbath were touring America\n\n\"There we were, in Aston, Ozzy was in prison from burgling houses, me and Tony were always in fights with somebody, and Bill, so we had quite a rough upbringing.\n\n\"Our music reflected the way we felt.\"\n\nIt was the chance sighting of a small, oddly-written note in a Birmingham music shop - 'Ozzy Zig needs a gig' - that brought the four together.\n\nIt was spotted by Iommi and Ward, who were looking for a singer after leaving \"a band people could fight to\".\n\n\"I knew Ozzy from school, Birchfield Road in Perry Barr, and I didn't know he used to sing,\" remembers Iommi.\n\n\"His mum came to the door and we said we were answering the advert, and she said 'John, it's for you'.\n\nThe musicians all lived a few streets away from each other in Aston - Osbourne and Iommi used to attend the same school\n\nOzzy Osbourne said the band \"had to finish in Birmingham\" where it all began\n\n\"I saw him walking up the hallway and I said to Bill, 'forget it'. We talked for a bit and then we left.\n\n\"I said, 'I don't think he can sing, I know him from school'.\"\n\nA few days later, Osbourne and Butler went round to the Iommi family's grocery shop in Aston, saying they were looking for a drummer.\n\n\"Bill was with me but he said 'I'm not going to do anything without you',\" says Iommi.\n\n\"So we said let's give it a go - the four of us.\"\n\n\"I have been out of Black Sabbath longer than I've been in,\" says Ozzy Osbourne\n\nTony Iommi's much-publicised battle with cancer is among the reasons the band has finally decided to stop touring\n\nCalling themselves Earth, they started out playing blues, before turning their attention to writing their own material.\n\nButler recalls: \"It was always the hippy, happy stuff on the radio and there were we, in Aston, having to go to work in factories.\n\n\"We wanted to put how we thought about the world at the time. We didn't want to write happy pop songs. We gave that industrial feeling to it.\"\n\nAnd it was Butler and Iommi's love of horror films that gave the group its signature, stirring sound.\n\n\"We wanted to create a vibe like you get off horror films - try and create a tension within the music,\" says Iommi.\n\n\"We thought it would be really good to get this sort of vibe, this fear and excitement.\n\n\"It was a struggle. There was nothing like what we were doing. We'd taken on something because we believed in it, and loved what we were doing.\"\n\nBlack Sabbath have had many line-ups over the years, with Tony Iommi the only constant presence\n\nFollowing a mix-up with another band called Earth, the band changed their name to Black Sabbath, after the title track that took its moniker from a 1963 horror film by Boris Karloff.\n\nAnd within just two years, they were flying to the US to perform to an emerging, global fan base at the start of a career that would span the next 50 years.\n\nOver 70 million records, several line-up changes - Iommi has been the only constant presence - and one headless bat later, the band has decided to call time on touring, performing the last gig on their exhausting 81-date \"The End\" tour in their home city.\n\nIommi's much-documented cancer battle and the musicians' advancing years - Osbourne and Iommi are 68 and Butler is 67 - contributed to the decision to slow down.\n\nAll three founding members speak with a mixture of pride, excitement and sadness when talking about performing in their beloved Birmingham.\n\n\"We've toured everywhere else in the world but there's nowhere like Birmingham,\" says Butler.\n\nGeezer Butler said the band \"came from nothing\", growing up on the streets of Aston, Birmingham\n\n\"It's still the only place where I get nervous before I go on. It means the world to me. It's where our hearts are.\"\n\n\"It's where we started,\" adds Osbourne. \"The old road has gone back to Birmingham.\n\n\"I don't live there any more but most of my family live there. We started in Birmingham so why not finish in Birmingham?\"\n\nBut, like many bands before them who have announced \"the end\" before being enticed back on stage with lucrative deals, should we actually expect to see Sabbath back together again one day?\n\nIommi's certainly keen. \"We're not saying goodbye as such, as in we're never going to do it again, [but] we don't want to do any more world tours,\" he says.\n\n\"I wouldn't rule out doing a one-off show. Or even an album. I think the door's open.\"\n\n\"As far as I am concerned, this is the end,\" he insists.\n\n\"I have been out of Black Sabbath longer than I've been in. We've all had different arguments and fallings out.\n\n\"I don't know about them but I'm not doing it again. We want to end on a high note.\"\n\nFor the full interviews with Black Sabbath, watch Inside Out West Midlands on Monday at 19:30, or on iPlayer.", "For seven years, part of Edward Evans's sternum was missing - the bone would normally have protected his lungs and heart.\n\nA single blow to his chest could have killed him.\n\nNow Edward, from the Midlands, has become the first person in the UK to get a 3D-printed titanium replacement.\n\nHis story was featured on Trust Me I'm A Doctor on BBC Two - @BBCTrustMe on Twitter\n\nJoin the conversation - find BBC Stories on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Kale is used as an alternative to iceberg lettuce in Riverford's Caesar salad\n\nSome supermarkets are rationing iceberg lettuces, with experts warning it could be the, er, tip of the iceberg.\n\nBad weather in Europe has already caused a #courgette crisis, alongside a shortage of broccoli, tomatoes, salad peppers and aubergines.\n\nWith vegetable shortages expected to continue until April, what alternatives are there for shoppers?\n\nDuring the UK's winter months of December, January and February, UK farmers produce beetroot, Brussel sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, celeriac, chicory, fennel, Jerusalem artichokes, kale, leeks, parsnips, potatoes, red cabbage, swede and turnips.\n\nWe've become a \"slightly strange group\", expecting all-year-round produce, according to Lord Haskins, the former chairman of Northern Foods, which supplies Tesco.\n\n\"Thirty years ago you'd never have worried about buying lettuce in the middle of the winter - lettuces were things that grew in the summer and you ate them in the summer - you ate cauliflowers and Brussels sprouts in the winter,\" he says.\n\nAs for courgettes, they are actually \"very, very out of season\", says organic vegetable retailer Riverford. We have just got used to supermarkets supplying them all year round.\n\nEating British produce that's in season is often cheaper, as it is produced locally - and it can be healthier too.\n\nAccording to food industry campaign group Love British Food, fruit and vegetables that are in season contain the nutrients, minerals and trace elements that our bodies need at particular times of year.\n\nApples, for example, are packed with vitamin C to boost our resistance to winter colds.\n\nBeetroot is \"terrific in soups\" says Alexia Robinson from Love British Food\n\nThe group's Alexia Robinson recommends beetroot, kale, cabbages, broccoli and traditional root vegetables for their health-giving properties.\n\nRiverford says a slaw made with cabbage, beetroot or swede will offer \"10 times more nutrients\" than an iceberg lettuce - which it says aren't known for their nutritional value.\n\nIf you are really keen on iceberg lettuces, you can probably pay a bit more for one from Peru or South Africa, says Lord Haskins.\n\nBut imported vegetables can clock up a lot of air miles before they land on your plate - making them worse for the environment.\n\nHatty Richards, from the Community Farm in Chew Magna, Somerset, says buying local is better.\n\n\"We have such a range on our doorsteps already, it's fresher, it's really good for the environment - it reduces air miles - and it supports local business which is crucial.\"\n\nLord Haskins agrees, and suggests your tastebuds may also be grateful:\n\n\"We all buy stuff from far parts. They don't taste nearly as good: strawberries at this time of year from Egypt don't taste anything like as good as a British strawberry in May, June, July.\"\n\nKale is a hardy winter leaf that can withstand frosty weather\n\nA leafy salad is nice - but there are plenty of alternative dishes to try.\n\nRiverford's Guy Watson thinks the UK's more bitter winter salad leaves and root vegetables can provide \"a far superior substitute\" which will easily make up for a lack of lettuce.\n\nVibrant winter coleslaws and cauliflower salads \"bring British veg to life\", he says, adding that one of the Riverford Field Kitchen's most popular winter dishes is a kale caesar salad.\n\nKale, which was originally used to feed cows, is a robust, hardy winder leaf that can withstand frosty weather. It can also be used in soups, stews, stir fries, gratins or just wilted with butter.\n\nMs Robinson suggests embracing winter comfort food with a \"good old fashioned winter stew with plenty of root vegetables with tender meat\".\n\nIf you're still not convinced you can do without leafy salads, try growing your own.\n\nThose who do want to eat lettuce need not despair. According to the campaign group Eat Seasonably, lettuce, rocket and other crunchy salad leaves are some of the easiest things to grow at home, all year around - on a seed tray indoors, on your window sill or in the garden.\n\nSpinach is easily grown, even in window boxes, says Ms Robinson\n\nMs Robinson says: \"As well as the cress there are many great veg that can be easily grown in window boxes such as leaf lettuce, radishes, spinach, green onions and of course a good selection of herbs.\"\n\nAnother easy win is beetroot, Eat Seasonably says, which can be grown in a big pot. Though beetroot is harvested in October, Riverford says it can last up to four months if it's kept in a cold storage.\n\n\"Carrots are not too hard to grow either,\" Riverford's Emily Muddeman said, \"Leeks, kale - you could plant just four or five stalks of kale and it will go on sprouting.\"\n\nAny budding gardeners could start with planting onions later this month - Eat Seasonably says they are \"not even slightly difficult to grow\".\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nScotland survived a thrilling Ireland comeback at Murrayfield to record only their second opening-round victory in Six Nations history.\n\nThe hosts enjoyed a stunning start despite Ireland's scrum dominance, full-back Stuart Hogg crossing twice.\n\nKeith Earls scored in the corner but Alex Dunbar's try from a clever line-out move put the Scots 21-5 up.\n\nTries from Iain Henderson and Paddy Jackson put Ireland 22-21 ahead before Greig Laidlaw's two late penalties.\n\nIt was a remarkable conclusion to a scintillating opening match of this year's Championship, with Ireland - who took a losing bonus point - having 70% of the possession in the second half.\n\nBut, despite scoring 17 unanswered points either side of the interval, Irish hopes of a third title in four years suffered a major blow.\n\nThey must now lift themselves for next Saturday's trip to face Italy in Rome, while Scotland travel to play France the following day in buoyant mood.\n• None Never miss a Six Nations story - sign up for our rugby union news alerts\n\nThis was an absolute firecracker of a Test match, a classic of its kind. It got off to a thunderous start and rarely let up. The portents for the Scots were not good in the early minutes when their scrum came under heavy attack and started shipping penalties at an alarming rate, but their game-breakers soon came to prominence and set Murrayfield alight.\n\nScotland were clinical, seizing on uncharacteristic Irish errors. When they applied pressure in the visitors' 22 and Garry Ringrose unwisely came out of the defensive line, Hogg went outside him and through for the opening score.\n\nThe Scots weathered an Irish backlash and hit them with another score just after the first quarter.\n\nZander Fagerson forced a turnover on the floor and Scotland went from there. From a line-out, Finn Russell, standing flat to the advantage line, found Huw Jones, who sent Hogg away. The full-back dummied Rob Kearney to go over and Laidlaw made it 14-0 with the conversion.\n\nIreland responded and got reward for waves of pressure when Earls went over, but that only galvanised Scotland to get a third try. And it was a thing of wonder. A beautiful crossfield kick from Russell forced Simon Zebo into conceding the line-out.\n\nThe Scottish line-out then pulled the canniest trick in the book, front-loading it with three backs - Laidlaw, Tommy Seymour and Dunbar.\n\nIreland didn't think for one second that Ross Ford's throw was going to one of them, but it did. He threw it flat to Dunbar who, surreally, went through a gap to score.\n\nLaidlaw's conversion made it 21-5, Jackson's penalty reducing the deficit to 21-8 just before the break.\n\nThe second half was utterly extraordinary. Ireland mobilised their troops in a very major way. They owned the ball for vast sections of the half, Henderson scoring after monumental pressure finally broke through incredible Scottish resistance.\n\nIreland came again, with power and intent. Conor Murray broke free and linked with Jamie Heaslip but the outstanding Ryan Wilson, with help from a Sean Maitland interception, snuffed out the danger.\n\nNext, Maitland's tackle forced Kearney to put a foot in touch on the right wing, denying Earls a second try.\n\nIn the midst of the onslaught, Jonny Gray was a defensive rock. A total colossus. When Irishmen went down in the tackle it was normally Gray who put him there.\n\nNot even Gray and his army of heavy-hitters could stop Ireland from scoring again, however. They were making yards and finding holes against a seemingly tiring Scotland and Jackson stretched to score and then converted his own try.\n\nIreland were ahead for the first time; 21-20 after 62 minutes.\n\nScotland's goose looked cooked, but these players have learned some lessons on the road to this victory, some bitter lessons from matches that should have been won but were lost in the closing minutes.\n\nRoles were reversed here. From somewhere, Scotland summoned grunt and control and won a penalty that Laidlaw fired over to put them back in the lead. They kicked on, controlling the ball, looking after it like it was a new-born babe. Ireland couldn't get near it.\n\nThe last act was another penalty from the captain, boomed over against a backdrop of sheer delirium.\n\nThis was Scotland's biggest victory in 18 years, since they were champions in 1999. Nobody will be thinking about trophies, but Scotland have momentum - and history.\n\nParis next, with a mighty spring in the step.\n\nReplacements: Ford (for Brown, blood 5-11, then 27), Reid (for Dell, 56), Berghan, Swinson (for Strauss, 65), Barclay (for Watson, 49), Price, Weir (temp for Russell, 46-52), Bennett (for Jones, 60)\n\nReplacements: Scannell, Healy (for McGrath, 56), Ryan (for Furlong, 69), Dillane (for Henderson, 64), Van der Flier (for O'Brien, 66), Marmion, Keatley, Bowe (for Earls, 68).\n\nFor the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter.", "England overcame a disjointed first half and a resurgent France to come from behind and get their Six Nations defence off to a winning start by securing a national record 15th victory in a row.\n\nEddie Jones' men were fortunate to be level 9-9 at half-time and were four points down with time running out after a fine try from Rabah Slimani.\n\nBut, kept in touch by Owen Farrell's three penalties and one from Elliot Daly, their strength off the bench gradually seized control of a match that had been slipping away.\n\nWith their forwards at last making inroads with ball in hand and a tiring defence stretched, Ben Te'o's try finally brought Twickenham to full voice.\n• None Never miss a Six Nations story - sign up for our rugby news alerts\n• None Are Jones & Farrell the new Fergie & Keane?\n\nThe win saw the team pass the record of 14 straight victories set by Sir Clive Woodward's men in the run-up to their 2003 World Cup win, and means they are only three wins away from equalling the all-time record set by New Zealand last year.\n\nIt also extended France's dismal run in this fixture to six successive defeats on the road, yet the men in blue were transformed from the stodgy outfit of recent memory, and England will be hugely relieved to have found a way through.\n\nAfter an early exchange of penalties, Jonny May was sin-binned for a dangerous tackle on Gael Fickou, Camille Lopez making it 6-3 and the hosts again uncertain out of the blocks.\n\nFrance scrum-half Baptiste Serin was enjoying his Twickenham debut, his big runners making inroads and George Ford struggling to exert any control.\n\nEngland were grateful for Farrell's boot to be within three points half-an-hour in, and a long-ranger from Daly levelled up an uneven match at 9-9.\n\nDesperate defence kept Virimi Vakatawa and Scott Spedding out just before the break, France without a lead to show for six clean breaks and 344 metres made in those first 40 minutes.\n\nFrance came again after the interval, Vakatawa breaking down the left after a Farrell penalty came back off the post, the impressive Louis Picamoles marching it deep into England territory and Courtney Lawes producing a huge tackle to keep the blue shirts at bay.\n\nA fabulous delayed pass from Ford appeared to have put Daly into the left-hand corner only for the TMO to rule, correctly, that the winger's foot was in touch as he dived over, and a fraught contest broke further open still.\n\nFord was into his rhythm, space opening up as his dummy runners stretched the French defence, Farrell kicking his fourth penalty on 54 minutes after sustained pressure to nudge England ahead for the first time.\n\nFrance coach Guy Noves went to his bench, swapping out his props and opting for the experience of Maxime Machenaud over Serin, and it was the visitors who struck back in style.\n\nIn classic French style, offloads from first Sebastian Vahaamahina and then his fellow forward Kevin Gourdon sent prop Slimani under the posts, Lopez's conversion making it 16-12 to Les Bleus.\n\nNow it was Jones who threw on fresh legs, James Haskell and Te'o bringing the much-needed muscle, Danny Care and Jack Nowell the pace, Farrell to fly-half, Daly to outside centre.\n\nAfter a series of drives that battered holes in the French defence, Farrell took quick ball and sent Te'o smashing over for his first Six Nations try, the talismanic Saracens man adding the conversion for 19-16.\n\nAt last Twickenham had its voice, with France wearied by their earlier efforts, and England will travel to Cardiff for Saturday's encounter with Wales knowing they must improve significantly if a second Grand Slam is to follow.\n\nMaro Itoje pushed him close, while Picamoles and Spedding were a constant menace for France, but Farrell's accuracy under pressure and remorseless defence saved his side from a chastening opening-day defeat.\n\nWhat do the coach and captain think?\n\nEngland captain Dylan Hartley: \"We got through that one and a huge amount of credit needs to go to our finishers today. Ben Te'o and James Haskell gave us some go-forward at the end there.\n\n\"Week one of the tournament we'll take that win, but there's plenty to work on. It keeps us grounded, keeps us ready for next week and we'll have to be a lot better to prepare for Wales.\"\n\nEngland head coach Eddie Jones: \"I felt some players were still in their club mentality so that's something we need to work on. We were disjointed in attack and we lacked urgency in defence.\n\n\"Now we know what we've got to work on, we will get there. The finishers made a fantastic impact on the game - that is the strength of our team, we have a brilliant 23-man squad.\"\n\nWhat is the pundit's view?\n\nMatt Dawson, 2003 World Cup winner: France were better than England in a lot of areas, but the strength of this England side was in their fitness and ability to play under pressure.\n\nI have got to give huge credit to the substitutions for England because they were the difference in the end.\n\nReplacements: Te'o for Ford (69), Care for Youngs (66), Mullan for Marler (66), George for Hartley (55), Haskell for Launchbury (64), Nowell for Joseph (69)\n\nReplacements: Huget for Lamerat (72), Doussain for Lopez (72), Machenaud for Serin (57), Slimani for Baille (46), Maynadier for Guirado (72), Chiocci for Atonio (46), Iturria for Vahaamahina (72), Goujon for Chouly (64).", "Tara Reid and Ian Ziering have been ever present in the Sharknado series\n\nSharknado fans rejoiced this week at the news that the Syfy channel is pressing ahead with a fifth instalment in the trashy disaster franchise.\n\nDirected as ever by Anthony C Ferrante, Sharknado 5 will see returning stars Ian Ziering and Tara Reid travel to London to avert a global shark tornado.\n\nSince it began in 2013, the TV movie series has been met with glee by viewers - and derision by critics.\n\nHere are five critically-panned movies that audiences have grown to love.\n\nOften cited as the worst movie ever made, Tommy Wiseau's self-financed opus came and went in 2003 but has since developed an enthusiastic fan following.\n\nAudiences at special screenings regularly congregate to yell abuse, recite lines from the script in unison and throw plastic spoons at the screen (don't ask!)\n\nTommy Wiseau wrote, directed and produced the film and also played the lead role\n\nWiseau, who also appeared in the film, has taken this in good humour, appearing at screenings to take questions and even taking part in a live reading of his script.\n\nHe's since reteamed with co-star Greg Sestero for a new film called Best F(r)iends, while James Franco has made a film about The Room's production, entitled The Masterpiece.\n\nRead more about The Room from BBC Culture.\n\nMade for less than $10,000 (£8,000), this ultra low-budget attempt to replicate Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds on a shoestring had audiences flocking to revel in its awfulness.\n\nJames Nguyen's film was particularly derided for its special effects, which consisted mainly of shoddy CGI eagles interacting unconvincingly with the film's cast of unknowns.\n\nUS distribution company Severin Films saw potential in its ineptitude and took the film on a \"Birdemic experience tour\" that included a visit to London in 2010.\n\nNot to be deterred, Nguyen released a sequel, Birdemic 2: The Resurrection, in 2013 and has plans to round out the franchise with Birdemic 3: Sea Eagle.\n\nPaul Verhoeven with Showgirls stars Gina Gershon and Elizabeth Berkley in 1995\n\nRiding high on the success of Basic Instinct, Dutch director Paul Verhoeven reteamed with writer Joe Eszterhas for this torrid tale about a Las Vegas dancer stripping her way to stardom.\n\nTheir labours were met with derision by the critics, who poured scorn on the script, Elizabeth Berkley's lead performance and one particularly ill-judged swimming pool sex scene.\n\nAs is the way of these things, though, the film developed a cult following on home video and is now a staple on the midnight screening circuit.\n\nVerhoeven, incidentally, is currently getting some of the best reviews of his career for Elle, a dark drama about rape that won two Golden Globes last month.\n\nJust three years on from Return of the Jedi, George Lucas laid an almighty egg with this disastrous stab at bringing Marvel's wise-quacking alien to the big screen.\n\nBack to the Future's Lea Thompson was among Howard the Duck's human stars\n\nReleased as Howard: A New Breed of Hero in the UK, the film's crimes against cinema include putting an actor with dwarfism in an inexpressive duck suit that reportedly cost $2m (£1.6m) to make.\n\nSince its release in 1986, though, the film has come to be embraced both by lovers of bad movies and fans of the original comic book character.\n\nHoward's brief appearance at the end of 2014's Guardians of the Galaxy, meanwhile, has prompted talk that a movie comeback may be on the cards.\n\nEdward Wood Jr's status as the world's worst director is largely down to a 1959 black-and-white creature feature that languished in late-night TV obscurity for 20 years.\n\nBut after film critic Michael Medved declared it the worst movie ever made in 1980, it found a new audience among those who saw a camp value in its cheap effects and cheesy sci-fi storyline.\n\nMany were particularly impressed by Wood's billing of Bela Lugosi as the film's star, despite the fact that he barely appears and actually died three years before the film's release.\n\nThe film and Wood himself were subsequently granted the ultimate accolade when Tim Burton made a film about the director's life, starring Johnny Depp as Wood and Martin Landau as Lugosi.\n\nDepp and Landau at the Cannes Film Festival, where Burton's Ed Wood screened in 1994\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "England head coach Eddie Jones says his side weren't allowed to play \"proper rugby\" during their 36-15 Six Nations victory over Italy in which the Azzurri employed an unusual tactic at the breakdown to disrupt the game.\n\nHowever, Italy head coach Conor O'Shea insists that any criticism is \"hypocritical\" and that his team should be proud.", "One of the world's leading political scientists believes Donald Trump most likely won the US presidential election for a very simple reason, writes Hannah Sander - his name came first on the ballot in some critical swing states.\n\nJon Krosnick has spent 30 years studying how voters choose one candidate rather than another, and says that \"at least two\" US presidents won their elections because their names were listed first on the ballot, in states where the margin of victory was narrow.\n\nAt first sight Krosnick's idea might seem to make little sense. Are voters really so easily swayed?\n\n\"Most of the people that voted Republican were always going to vote Republican and most of the people that voted Democrat were always going to vote Democrat,\" says James Tilley, professor of politics at the University of Oxford.\n\n\"There is a human tendency to lean towards the first name listed on the ballot,\" says Krosnick, a politics professor at Stanford University. \"And that has caused increases on average of about three percentage points for candidates, across lots of races and states and years.\"\n\nIt has the biggest impact on those who know the least about the election they are voting in.\n\nYou are more likely to be affected, Krosnick says, \"if you are feeling uninformed and yet feel obligated to cast a vote - or if you are feeling deeply conflicted, say between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.\"\n\nWhen an election is very close the effect can be decisive, Krosnick says - and in some US states, such as Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, the 2016 election was very close.\n\nA ballot paper used in the 2016 presidential election in Wisconsin\n\n\"In the states where Trump won very narrowly, his name was also listed first on the ballot in most of those states,\" says Krosnick.\n\nSome always list parties in the same order. Some allow the state's officials to make a new choice each time. Some put the party that lost in the last election at the top of the ballot. Some list alphabetically.\n\nIn 2002, a court overturned the result of the mayoral election in the Californian city of Compton, after hearing testimony about the name-order effect. The judge decided that in this instance, the decision to list one of the candidates first had been deliberate and unfair.\n\n\"Candidates whose last names begin with letters picked near the end of the lottery have it tough,\" Krosnick explained during the Compton court case. \"They will never get the advantage that comes from being listed first on the ballot.\"\n\nThere are numerous cases where the primacy effect is thought to have influenced the result of an vote.\n\nIn January 2008, Hillary Clinton unexpectedly beat Barack Obama in the New Hampshire primary - part of the long battle to decide which of them would become the Democratic Party's presidential candidate. Professor Michael Traugott from the University of Michigan believes that name order enabled Clinton to pick up extra votes. Her name was at the top of a long list. Obama's was near the end.\n\nThe primacy effect can also affect polling.\n\nThe exit poll from the 2004 US presidential election led pundits on the night to believe that Democratic Party candidate John Kerry would win, when in fact he went on to lose to incumbent president George W Bush. The poll had listed Democrat candidate Kerry before Republican candidate Bush.\n\nWhat can be done to prevent the primacy effect? One option is to randomise the ballot papers. The states of California and Ohio have both adopted this system. An equal number of ballot papers is issued with a different candidate at the top of the list. This spreads the benefit of the name-order effect across the candidates.\n\nIn 1996, Bill Clinton received 4% more votes in the regions of California that listed him first in the ballot papers than in those where he featured lower down the list.\n\nResearch by Robert Darcy of Oklahoma State University shows that, given the choice, most election officials tend to list their own party's candidates first.\n\nIn one famous example of this, Florida's rules meant that Republican governor Jeb Bush's brother George W Bush was placed at the top of the list of candidates in his state, in the 2000 presidential election.\n\nBush went on to win Florida - which turned out to be a decisive state - by a very narrow margin.\n\nGeorge Bush was listed first in Florida in 2000 - the \"butterfly ballot\" used in Palm Beach (pictured) also led to arguments in court\n\n\"Because of the fact that different states in the US order candidate names differently and idiosyncratically, and almost none of the states do what Ohio and California do which is to rotate candidate name order across ballots to be fair, we have unfortunately had at least two recent election outcomes that are the result of bias in the name ordering,\" says Krosnick.\n\n\"If all of those states had rotated name order fairly, most likely George W Bush would not have been elected president in 2000, nor would Donald Trump have been elected president in 2016.\"\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Jose Mourinho won his first trophy as Manchester United manager, his side beating Southampton in a thrilling EFL Cup final.\n\nIn the Premier League, Chelsea maintained their surge to the title by beating Swansea, while Tottenham are looking to chase them down after thrashing Stoke.\n\nAt the bottom end, Crystal Palace picked up a priceless win over Middlesbrough to move out of the relegation zone, but bottom side Sunderland lost to Everton.\n\nDo you agree with my team of the week or would you go for a different team? Why not pick your very own team of the week from the shortlist selected by BBC Sport journalists and share it with your friends?\n\nPick your Team of the Week Pick your XI from our list and share with your friends.\n\nWhat a save from Tyrone Mings. The Bournemouth centre-half directed a sensational header towards the top corner of Ben Foster's net only for the England keeper to pull off a match-winning left-handed stop.\n\nBut how does Tony Pulis keep producing such effective teams? He always seems to leave clubs in better condition than when he arrived and currently West Brom are a pleasure to watch, which is something I can't say with all of Pulis' teams. The Baggies have 12 games left and need 10 points to achieve their best ever Premier League tally. With Foster in this form it looks like they have every chance.\n\nIt was a tremendous ball for Idrissa Gueye and Ross Barkley should have scored in the second half after another wonderful cross by Seamus Coleman. The Irishman is playing out of his skin at the moment and for my money is Everton's player of the season.\n\nAnd yet I can't understand for the life of me (and I apologise to Evertonians) how Manchester United or City haven't lured him away from Goodison Park. Coleman brings a dimension to Everton very few full-backs bring to a team. The problem for the opposition is that Coleman has been doing it for some considerable time. Coleman is an infectious player and it's a joy to watch him play.\n\nIt has been a long and somewhat distinguished career for Gareth McAuley and he couldn't have spent his 500th appearance in football better than this. West Brom's 2-1 win over Bournemouth had an element of good fortune about it. The Baggies' first goal was a deflection before McAuley was handed a celebratory gift by the Cherries' unpredictable keeper Artur Boruc.\n\nI have seen Boruc perform heroics for Bournemouth in the past and then he goes and does something that leaves you utterly puzzled. Not that McAuley wasn't grateful for the present - in fact he could have scored a second but for the intervention of the crossbar. Nevertheless, McAuley did grab his sixth league goal of the season, which is not bad for a centre-half who started his career at Linfield.\n\nI thought that referee Martin Atkinson made absolutely the right call in giving a penalty to Hull when Michael Keane was adjudged to have raised his arm above his head and gained an advantage. At that point the game looked to be running away from Burnley. It took something a bit special to get the Clarets back into the match - but who would have thought it would have been the very man responsible for putting them behind in the first place?\n\nKeane brought the ball down on his chest, allowed it to fall to the ground before dispatching the strike past the goalkeeper. You also have to bear in mind that all this happened in a crowded penalty area. Not only was it impressive it also was nothing less than Burnley deserved.\n\nI have seen Patrick van Aanholt in this mood before - looking mean and searching for goals. A useful attribute to have, particularly if you are a full-back, which is precisely why Sam Allardyce brought his former player at Sunderland to Selhurst Park.\n\nA poor signing can cripple a manager while the right one can save him. Premier League survival is by no means guaranteed for the Eagles and that is why it is imperative to have a player like Van Aanholt in your team who knows exactly what is required.\n\nAt the end of the fixture at Stamford Bridge I engaged in a debate over just how good N'Golo Kante actually was. One journalist suggested he was the best player he had ever seen without the ball at his feet, and another thought he was better than the only other Chelsea player with a similar reputation, Claude Makelele - now part of the Swansea backroom staff and arguably the best holding midfield player of his generation.\n\nI thought Kante's performance against the Swans was as effective as any he has produced this season. The 'silent force' continues to carry Chelsea through sticky periods when they carelessly lose the ball, only for the Frenchman to win it back with the minimum of fuss. To hear Swans manager Paul Clement say that Kante had a fantastic performance said it all really.\n\nThis was by no means a stellar performance from Chelsea but it was by Cesc Fabregas. Manager Antonio Conte left out Nemanja Matic against a most impressive Swansea for the one player in his squad who is a world-class passer of the ball. Fabregas may not have the running power of Matic but he can cut a defence to ribbons with a swing of his left foot.\n\nThe Spaniard could have had a hat-trick in this game but for some poor finishing, but it didn't matter in the end. Chelsea were comfortable winners after a couple of scary moments by Swansea - notably a stonewall penalty which referee Neil Swarbrick chose to ignore at a crucial time in the match. The Blues are now 10 points clear at the top of the table having played some unconvincing football recently but what they have shown is the sort of maturity and consistency some of their competitors have lacked.\n\nThis player is the nearest thing I've seen to N'Golo Kante. His ability to cover the ground is also remarkable. There are those of us who found running, unless it was absolutely necessary, tedious, but players like Gueye and Kante see it as their life support. They are the coach's dream, particularly if the coach has little to offer the team other than effort.\n\nNot so with Antonio Conte and especially Ronald Koeman. The Dutch insist that players in their country must know what to do with the ball when it arrives at their feet, and Gueye certainly does. What I like about Gueye is that when he wins the ball he almost without fail completes the pass, which makes winning the ball in the first place much more fun.\n\nAgainst Sunderland he scored his first goal for the Toffees with a delicious strike into the roof of the net. The problem with these defensive midfield players is that when they score one, rather like tasting Champagne for the first time, they tend to want another.\n\nTo see Spurs go three goals up after just 37 minutes at White Hart Lane, even against a non-existent Stoke City, was impressive, particularly after the no-show against Gent in the Europa League a few days earlier.\n\nIn a first half where everything Harry Kane touched seemed to turn to gold, the striker's best effort, struck with the inside of this right foot, screamed past the upright. Had he scored, it would have been my goal of the season.\n\nEqually, Stoke's first-half performance was so distressing I was beginning to wonder if their players had spent the entire week trawling the streets of the city campaigning in the Stoke central by-election. I can't recall seeing a more abject performance from a Premier League side. Woeful.\n\nNinety-two minutes into the game and he was still putting his body on the line for the team. His goals were brilliantly taken and he seems made for the big occasion. Zlatan Ibrahimovic was the difference in the EFL Cup final between Manchester United and Southampton who, by the way, were also fantastic.\n\nHowever, what this victory signified was that a manager is nothing without his star players and a benevolent chairman, a fact that will not be lost on Claudio Ranieri this week. Manchester United have seriously benefited from bringing Ibrahimovic to Old Trafford. He has almost single-handedly injected a presence into the United set-up that has not been seen since the departure of Roy Keane.\n\nNevertheless the reality is that Ibrahimovic is a football 'senior citizen' and cannot continue to punish himself like this indefinitely. At some stage Paul Pogba (who went AWOL again against the Saints) has to step up to the plate and start showing some true leadership, especially in the big games. Mourinho has no choice but to keep Ibrahimovic onside, at least until Pogba grows up.\n\nIt is not very often a footballer scores two goals in a cup final, one of which is worthy of winning the trophy, but leaves the arena with absolutely nothing. Well, that is the tale of Manolo Gabbiadini, who for me was sensational against Manchester United in the EFL Cup final.\n\nIn fact, Gabbiadini's evening started very badly. What should have been a perfectly good goal was disallowed by an overzealous referee's assistant. Nevertheless, everything about Gabbiadini's play was perfect. His touch and hold-up play were wonderful.\n\nYet it was his second goal that put Southampton level that did it for me. To turn on a sixpence, provide Chris Smalling no opportunity to intervene, and leave a world-class goalkeeper like David de Gea rooted to the spot to watch the ball roll agonisingly past was pure genius.\n\nI have sung the praises of Gabbiadini in my team of the week before but this performance was really of the highest quality. And a tragedy in some ways that he left with nothing to show for his exploits.", "It's got all the markings of a John Le Carre novel: the killing of the North Korean leader's brother with one of the deadliest chemical weapons created by man. But who by? And why? Many questions remain unanswered.\n\nHere's a look back at how the killing unfolded, the details that emerged, and the subsequent accusations and diplomatic row.\n\nHe was waiting at a budget departure hall inside Kuala Lumpur international airport when the attack happened. Leaked CCTV footage would later show the 45-year-old man loitering in the budget terminal, a rucksack slung over his shoulder, ahead of his return flight to the Chinese territory of Macau at 10:00.\n\nSuddenly a woman in a long-sleeve white top approaches him from behind. Her hands grab his face, before she walks away. It's not clear if she uses a cloth or her bare hands to touch his face.\n\nThe attack is over in a matter of seconds.\n\nCCTV footage appears to show a woman accosting Mr Kim in the airport\n\nThe man reportedly told airport staff that \"someone had grabbed him from behind and splashed a liquid on his face\".\n\nHe sought medical help at the airport, but later died en route to hospital.\n\nA day later, he was confirmed to be Kim Jong-nam, the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.\n\nReports on the attack first start to emerge in South Korean media, who name the man as Kim Jong-nam - it's not until two days later that Malaysia confirms his identity.\n\nTo complicate matters, he was travelling on a passport under the name Kim Chol. It was not the first time Mr Kim had travelled under an assumed identity: he was caught trying to enter Japan using a false passport in 2001. He told officials he had been planning to visit Tokyo Disneyland.\n\nMany believe it was this incident that led to his father's decision to pass him over for leadership, forcing him to live a life in exile. During a time of estrangement from his family, Mr Kim became one of the regime's highest-profile critics.\n\nTheories abound that North Korea might have been involved in his murder - what some are already calling an assassination - despite a lack of proof.\n\nSouth Korea was one of the first to point the finger at its northern neighbour.\n\nMalaysian authorities begin the autopsy, ignoring demands from North Korea to send the body back for investigation.\n\nMeanwhile, the first person suspected of involvement in the attack is arrested: a 28-year-old Vietnamese woman named Doan Thi Huong. Police say she was identified from CCTV footage taken at the airport, where she was seen wearing a white top emblazoned with the letters \"LOL\".\n\nThis CCTV image has been broadcast by South Korean and Malaysian media\n\nFour days after the airport attack, Malaysia's deputy prime minister officially confirms the dead man is Kim Jong-nam.\n\nAnother female suspect, Siti Aisyah, a 25-year-old Indonesian, is named and arrested. Her Malaysian boyfriend, Muhammad Farid Jalaluddin, is briefly questioned by police.\n\nEvents take a bizarre turn when Siti Aisyah tells police she thought she was taking part in a bizarre TV prank with Mr Kim.\n\nIndonesia's most senior policeman, Tito Karnavian, said Ms Aisyah and Doan Thi Huong had performed the prank on other men - persuading them to close their eyes before spraying them with water.\n\nSiti Aisyah was the second suspect to be named\n\n\"She was not aware that it was an assassination attempt by alleged foreign agents,\" Mr Karnavian told reporters.\n\nTensions between Malaysia and North Korea also start to simmer after North Korea's ambassador to the country says Pyongyang will reject the results of the autopsy - he does not trust the inquiry, he says.\n\nMalaysia also refuses to hand over the body until it receives a DNA sample from Mr Kim's next-of-kin.\n\nMalaysian police arrest the first North Korean person over Mr Kim's death - a 46-year-old man called Ri Jong Chol.\n\nA day later, Malaysian police widen their search to include four more suspects, all men from North Korea.\n\nThey are named as: Ri Ji Hyon, 33; Hong Song Hac, 34; O Jong Gil, 55, and Ri Jae Nam, 57.\n\nTwo of the suspects wanted by Malaysian police: Hong Song Hac, 34, and Ri Ji Hyon, 33\n\nThe deputy police chief said the men had left Malaysia on 13 February, the day Mr Kim was killed, after arriving on different days within the previous fortnight.\n\nInternational police agency Interpol are later requested to issue an alert for the suspects.\n\nAt the same time, South Korea explicitly states it believes its northern neighbour was behind the killing of Kim Jong-nam.\n\nTensions between North Korea and Malaysia threaten to turn into a full-blown diplomatic row as the latter recalls its ambassador from the North Korean capital Pyongyang and summons the North Korean ambassador \"to seek an explanation\".\n\nFuji TV airs grainy CCTV footage of the attack for the first time. The lady with the white top emblazoned with the letters \"LOL\" is seen lunging at Kim Jong-nam.\n\nMalaysian authorities say they are unable to formally identify the body because no family member has come forward. Security is high at the Kuala Lumpur mortuary, amid widespread speculation Mr Kim's son, Kim Han-sol, might travel to Malaysia.\n\nMalaysia and North Korea continue to trade harsh words as the situation escalates.\n\nA senior North Korean embassy official is named as one of two men wanted in connection with the killing as the investigation widens.\n\nThe men are Hyon Kwang Song, 44, the second secretary of the North Korean embassy in Kuala Lumpur and Kim Uk II, 37, who works for North Korean airliner Air Koryo.\n\nMalaysian police also confirm Mr Kim died after two women wiped a toxin on his face while he was waiting for his flight to Macau.\n\nNorth Korea appears to blame Kim Jong-nam's death on Malaysia, without actually naming him.\n\nThe state news agency KCNA said only that \"a citizen of the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea]\" travelling on a diplomatic passport had died due to \"a heart stroke\".\n\nReports of poisoning were false, it said, slamming Malaysia for holding an autopsy without North Korea's permission.\n\nIt is the first time North Korean state media have referred to Mr Kim's killing.\n\nOne of the deadliest chemical weapons created by man is confirmed by Malaysia to have been the nerve agent that killed Kim Jong-nam.\n\nJust a small drop of VX, which is classified as a weapon of mass destruction by the United Nations, can kill a person within minutes.\n\nOne of the woman who attacked Mr Kim suffered symptoms of vomiting, which Malaysian officials say was probably due to exposure to the agent.\n\nWeapons expert Bruce Bennett says a small quantity of VX was likely to have been put on cloths used by the attackers to touch his face, with a separate spray possibly used as a diversion.\n\nMalaysian police chief Khalid Abu Bakar previously said the fact the woman who accosted Mr Kim immediately went to wash her hands showed she was \"very aware\" that she had been handling a toxin.\n\nIt would have begun affecting his nervous system immediately, causing first shaking and then death within minutes.\n\nVX is not available commercially, which experts say points to some kind of government involvement. There are a number of North Korean organisations capable of directing such an attack, including the exclusive Guard Command.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChelsea stretched their lead at the top of the Premier League table to 11 points after victory over battling Swansea City at Stamford Bridge.\n\nCesc Fabregas marked his 300th Premier League appearance by firing the Blues ahead, poking the ball through the legs of Jack Cork and into the net.\n\nThe hosts were stunned when Swansea equalised from their first serious attempt on target on the stroke of half-time - Fernando Llorente heading in Gylfi Sigurdsson's free-kick.\n\nFabregas hit the bar before Pedro's curling effort restored the lead and Diego Costa netted the third from close range.\n\nSwansea were denied a penalty when Cesar Azpilicueta handled inside the area at 1-1.\n• None 'Chelsea will take some stopping now' - 5 Live's Football Daily\n• None Reaction from Stamford Bridge and Saturday's other Premier League games\n\nThis was far from straightforward for Antonio Conte's side and had referee Neil Swarbrick awarded Swansea a penalty shortly before Pedro made it 2-1 then the outcome might have been different.\n\nHowever, in the end Chelsea's sweeping forward play earned them a 10th straight home Premier League win as they took another significant step towards a second title in three seasons.\n\nOn a weekend when the first major silverware of the season - the EFL Cup - is handed out at Wembley, the Blues look unstoppable. They have 63 points from 26 games - three more than at the same stage in 2014-15 when last crowned champions of England.\n\nFabregas could have ended the game with four goals on his return to the side.\n\nThe Spain midfielder had a goal-bound shot deflected behind shortly before he opened the scoring, was denied by former Arsenal team-mate Lukasz Fabianski and also rattled the bar.\n\nWith former Blues midfielder Frank Lampard watching on, Chelsea turned on the style.\n\nWhile it required an error from Fabianski to restore the lead, Eden Hazard's exquisite timing and pass for Costa to make it 3-1 was a delight.\n\nChelsea were forced to work hard for three points thanks to a well organised and energetic Swansea side and the Swans looked a shadow of the team that was bottom of the Premier League table five weeks ago.\n\nTheir four-point safety cushion at the start of the day is down to three, but boss Paul Clement will have been pleased with the way his side frustrated the runaway leaders for long spells.\n\nLlorente's equaliser shook Chelsea who were showing signs of frustration before Pedro made it 2-1.\n\nSwansea's next four games - Burnley (home), Hull City (away), Bournemouth (away) and Middlesbrough (home) - give them a chance to stay clear of the bottom three before they entertain Tottenham on 4 April.\n\n'It was a clear handball' - what they said\n\nChelsea manager Antonio Conte: \"We played very well, it was a good performance, and we created many chances to score. We conceded at the end of the first half, after the time was finished, so in this case there was a bit of luck, but we showed great character in the second half.\n\n\"We deserved a lot to win the game, now it's important to continue in this way.\"\n\nSwansea City boss Paul Clement: \"Any game we play and don't win we are disappointed. Chelsea are a very good side, they have fantastic quality and that was the difference. We didn't have a lot of chances but we came in at 1-1 for half-time and for long periods we defended really well.\n\n\"There was a big moment with the handball, I thought Cesar Azpilicueta handled it at 1-1, it's a clear handball. That gives you a chance to go 2-1 up but three minutes later you're 2-1 down with a soft goal. Based on chances they deserved to win, but there was big moment that didn't go our way, and who knows what might have happened.\"\n\nFormer England midfielder Jermaine Jenas: \"I don't think Swansea should have had a penalty as the distance from Gylfi Sigurdsson to Cesar Azpilicueta is too close and Azpilicueta's arm is already out. His hand is there because he's trying to stop Sigurdsson's run.\"\n\nEx-England captain Alan Shearer: \"I think it was a penalty. I think it was a deliberate movement of his hand towards the ball and I think Chelsea got away with one there. It could have been very different if the ref had given it.\n\n\"We've seen in recent weeks with Swansea that they made it very difficult for Liverpool at Anfield, they were unlucky to lose at Manchester City. They are very organised. The difference between Liverpool and City with this Chelsea side is the pace with which they go forward. That's why Cesc Fabregas was in the team today. He was brilliant. He's the one that started the goal off.\n\n\"It's topical that players are not working for mangers. The irony is last season we were sat here with a large bunch of these same Chelsea players - they weren't working for their manager and we know what happened. It's such a transformation now. We saw how brilliant they were with the ball but look at them now without it. The transformation from then to now is incredible.\"\n\nAnother assist for Sigurdsson - the stats\n• None No player has more assists in the Premier League this season than Gylfi Sigurdsson (nine, level with Kevin de Bruyne).\n• None Chelsea conceded in consecutive home league games for the first time under Antonio Conte.\n• None Swansea have conceded 26 goals in their past 10 Premier League away games, an average of 2.6 per game.\n• None Pedro has been directly involved in 10 goals in his past nine games for Chelsea in all competitions (seven goals, three assists).\n• None Fernando Llorente has scored nine goals in all competitions this season for Swansea, three with his head, three with his left foot and three with his right.\n\nChelsea have nine days to prepare for their next game away to West Ham United on Monday, 6 March (20:00 GMT). Swansea entertain Burnley on Saturday, 4 March (15:00 GMT).\n• None Attempt missed. Cesc Fàbregas (Chelsea) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Willian.\n• None Goal! Chelsea 3, Swansea City 1. Diego Costa (Chelsea) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Eden Hazard.\n• None Attempt missed. N'Golo Kanté (Chelsea) right footed shot from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Nemanja Matic.\n• None Leroy Fer (Swansea City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt saved. Gylfi Sigurdsson (Swansea City) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nWales captain Alun Wyn Jones wanted to kick for goal at a crucial stage of Saturday's 29-13 defeat by Scotland, but says his kickers said \"no\".\n\nWales opted to kick for the corner when trailing 16-13 in the 51st minute.\n\nThey were penalised at the ensuing line-out as Scotland recorded their first win over Wales since 2007.\n\n\"The kickers didn't want to so we just went for the corner,\" said 107-times capped Jones, who added he \"would have liked to\" have taken the points.\n\n\"We didn't do it, did we?\" he added.\n\n\"And I got done for blocking at the back of the lift then, but, yeah, I would have liked to have gone for the three (points).\"\n\nThe incident was more remarkable as Irish referee John Lacey could be heard saying a kick at goal had been indicated while Wales fly-half Dan Biggar could be heard asking Jones if he could kick for the corner.\n\nAfter the match Jones said the referee had not been involved.\n\nThe penalty was awarded on the Scotland 22-metre line close to the touchline, so would normally be considered well within the range of place kickers Leigh Halfpenny, who kicked eight points, and Biggar.\n\nWales led 13-9 at half-time, but failed to add to their tally after the break as Scotland scored 20 unanswered points.\n\nJones felt the momentum shift started before the interval when Halfpenny missed a chance to give Wales a 10-point lead and man of the match Finn Russell cut the gap to four points with the last kick of the half.\n\n\"At the tail end of the first half they took an opportunity and then into the second half, but we coughed up possession a little too easily,\" he said.\n\nJones said he wanted Wales to improve their discipline for their next game against Ireland on Friday, 10 March in Cardiff.\n\n\"We gave away one or two soft penalties and Scotland did a good job of disrupting us at the breakdown in the second half,\" he added.", "Jose Mourinho was back doing what he does best at Wembley on Sunday - lifting silverware, as Manchester United beat Southampton in the EFL Cup final.\n\nMourinho claimed the season's first major trophy and ensured success just months after his appointment despite a largely disappointing United performance which was rescued by two-goal inspiration Zlatan Ibrahimovic.\n\nThe 35-year-old Swede and Mourinho - instrumental in bringing him to Old Trafford after the pair forged a bond at Inter Milan - are now the two central figures leading United forward.\n\nCan Mourinho and Ibrahimovic make Man Utd great again?\n\nMourinho was brought into Old Trafford as the manager who is as close to a guarantee of success and trophies as it gets after a silverware-lined career at Porto, Chelsea, Inter Milan and Real Madrid.\n\nOld Trafford's joyless existence under Louis van Gaal demanded change and Mourinho was the identikit of the sort of manager required at the 'Theatre of Dreams' - a personality who would relish its history and surroundings rather than shrink from it.\n\nMourinho was also available and had a third Premier League triumph on his CV only 12 months earlier at Chelsea. It meant United were prepared to set to one side his track record for short-term stays in exchange for a quick fix.\n\nUnited were thoroughly unconvincing at Wembley, but Mourinho and his teams invariably find a way to win trophies. And so it proved as Ibrahimovic headed home an 87th-minute winner.\n\nMourinho's move to bring the Swede in on a free transfer from Paris St-Germain was strategic and wise. He is a personality of equal stature and confidence, had a point to prove having never played in England and could provide the sort of charisma that had echoes of the great Eric Cantona.\n\nHow United needed Ibrahimovic on Sunday because for long periods they were desperately average, outplayed by Southampton and had their hand held by Lady Luck throughout.\n\nIf United are to build on this first trophy of the Mourinho era, Ibrahimovic's continued presence is essential because the EFL Cup final win is only the first building block in an edifice that requires considerable renovation after the dismal post-Sir Alex Ferguson years of David Moyes and Van Gaal.\n\nMourinho, however, is safe hands when it comes to winning trophies and United remain in serious contention for two more in the Europa League and FA Cup. This is a good start, but the success-hungry Portuguese will want more.\n\nUnited's lean years simply could not continue with Pep Guardiola arriving at Manchester City, Jurgen Klopp settling at Liverpool and Antonio Conte conducting a brilliant transformation of Mourinho's former charges Chelsea.\n\nMourinho won the Premier League twice, as well as the FA Cup and two League Cups, in his first spell at Chelsea. He won 124 games out of 185 in that period, a win ratio of 67%.\n\nHe won 80 out of 136 (59%) in his second stint at Stamford Bridge - winning the title again and the League Cup - while he has won 28 of 43 at United at an impressive 65%.\n\nThe statistics add up to exactly what is required at Old Trafford.\n\nHe will chase the Champions League prize either through the Premier League or the Europa League because this is vital to his future plans.\n\nIn the meantime, Ibrahimovic once again proved himself indispensable. He was the difference here. He made the decisive contribution to clinch a game United did not deserve to win.\n\nHe is head and shoulders - quite literally - above every other player at United. He has scored 26 goals this season, with Juan Mata next with nine. He has had 143 shots compared to Paul Pogba's 117, and 65 shots on target compared to Pogba's 39.\n\nUnited are a long way from their former greatness - but this EFL Cup final proved conclusively that if they are going to get anywhere near that status again, Ibrahimovic is the man who is integral to Mourinho's plans, even at 35.\n• None Quotes: We want Ibrahimovic to stay - Mourinho\n\nUnited winning a Wembley final equates to tangible success - but successful seasons are measured in different currency in the modern era and Mourinho will need more than this to achieve full satisfaction.\n\nVan Gaal, who led United to FA Cup success in May, was on his way out almost as soon as he placed the trophy on the same table Mourinho sat at on Sunday.\n\nIf winning the FA Cup was not enough to satisfy United's desires for success under Van Gaal then it would take a re-drawing of the boundaries to now paint the EFL Cup as fulfilling their ambitions.\n\nThere is a key difference in mood here - whereas Van Gaal's Wembley win felt like the end of a story, this victory, for all its good fortune, had the sense of new start.\n\nMourinho must now make this season feel like the full package of progress by leading United back into the Champions League, which is surely the minimum requirement after the world record transfer expenditure of £89m on Pogba and the Ibrahimovic coup.\n\nAnd United still have an excellent chance of ensuring this season can be viewed as a success as they stand among the favourites for the Europa League, which offers a Champions League place to its winners.\n\nMourinho has already painted the last-16 meeting with Russians FC Rostov as a tough tie but he also has the chance to reach the top four in the Premier League, with United only two points behind Arsenal.\n\nUnited have a potentially hazardous FA Cup quarter-final tie at Premier League leaders Chelsea to negotiate, but this is a season still moving on three fronts after securing that first major trophy.\n\nThe new reality is, though, that while the EFL Cup provides a trophy and satisfaction, United's season will only be a success if they conclude it back in Europe's elite competition.\n\nWhat now for Wayne Rooney?\n\nWayne Rooney lifted the EFL Cup and demonstrated he is the consummate team player with his wild celebration of Ibrahimovic's winner - but this was still a player on the outside looking in.\n\nThe 31-year-old, who this week confirmed he was staying at United despite speculation linking him with a move to China, was denied a piece of the action by the match-winning contribution of the elder statesman who has usurped him as the team's spiritual leader.\n\nRooney was stripped and ready for action. With the words of Mourinho ringing in his ears and assistant manager Rui Faria showing him the diagrams United hoped would lead to a defining contribution, Ibrahimovic struck.\n\nThe United and England captain was sent back to the bench with no chance to add to his 250 goals for the club as Marouane Fellaini was called in for a late lockdown. It was a symbolic moment.\n\nUnited's captain for the day, Chris Smalling, let the club's all-time record goalscorer Rooney lift the trophy and it is to his credit that there was no sense of personal denial or disappointment that he was left out then denied even the smallest part.\n\nRooney was delighted for his team-mates, which is a mark of his approach.\n\nDespite this, there was no escaping the belief the guard has changed at Old Trafford. Rooney is no longer the main man - he is now well down the ranks and this was simply another piece of evidence of his declining influence and the credits rolling on a magnificent career at United.\n\nMourinho's downbeat demeanour was a talking point throughout the EFL Cup final as he cut an unsmiling, subdued figure who barely showed any emotion even when United scored.\n\nHe insisted afterwards he was delighted: \"I am very happy. It is important for the fans, for the club and for the players. I always try to put myself in the secondary position but the reality is it is also important for me.\"\n\nUnited's performance was not designed to lighten Mourinho's mood until the moment of victory and it is likely his behaviour was shaped by concerns about how Southampton dominated his side for long periods and troubled his defence - normally his tactical strong point - throughout.\n\nVictory will, however, lighten his mood, bolster his already high standing with United's fans and release any personal pressure he may have been feeling.", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nThe American coach of Olympic champion Sir Mo Farah may have broken anti-doping rules to boost the performance of some of his athletes, says a leaked report.\n\nAlberto Salazar has been under investigation since a BBC Panorama programme made allegations about drugs use at his US training base.\n\nA leaked US Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) report, dated March 2016, has been obtained by the Sunday Times.\n\nSalazar and Briton Farah deny they have ever broken anti-doping rules.\n\nThe leaked report also alleges Salazar, head coach of the world famous endurance Nike Oregon Project (NOP), routinely gave Farah and other athletes legal prescription drugs with potentially harmful side-effects without a justifiable medical reason.\n\nThe investigation into Salazar, who is also a consultant to UK Athletics (UKA), has been under way since at least June 2015.\n\nThe Usada interim report was passed to the Sunday Times by the suspected Russian hacking group Fancy Bears.\n\nThe BBC has so far been unable to verify its authenticity with Usada, or establish whether any of its reported conclusions are out of date.\n\nIn a statement, Usada said it could \"confirm that it has prepared a report in response to a subpoena from a state medical licensing body regarding care given by a physician to athletes associated with the Nike Oregon Project\".\n\nIt said: \"We understand that the licensing body is still deciding its case and as we continue to investigate whether anti-doping rules were broken, no further comment will be made at this time.\n\n\"Importantly, all athletes, coaches and others under the jurisdiction of the World Anti-Doping Code are innocent and presumed to have complied with the rules unless and until the established anti-doping process declares otherwise. It is unfair and reckless to state, infer or imply differently.\"\n\nAccording to the Sunday Times, the leaked report claims that Salazar:\n• None risked the health of his athletes, including Farah, by issuing potentially harmful prescription medicines to improve testosterone levels and boost recovery, despite no obvious medical need.\n\nSalazar maintains that drug use has always fully complied with the Wada code and that athletes were administered with L-carnitine in \"exactly the way Usada directed\".\n\nThe Sunday Times claims the Usada report also reveals:\n• None investigators have been impeded because Salazar and several athletes have \"largely refused to permit Usada to review their medical records\";\n• None Farah received an infusion of the legal supplement L-carnitine in 2014, which Usada is continuing to investigate in case the method of infusion broke doping rules by going over the legal limit of 50ml.\n\nThe report, apparently written in March 2016, allegedly states: \"Usada continues to investigate circumstances related to L-carnitine use\" by Farah.\n\nFarah, who has won 5,000m and 10,000m gold at the past two Olympic Games, told The Sunday Times two years ago that he had \"tried a legal energy drink\" containing L-carnitine but \"saw no benefit\" and did not continue with it.\n\nThe newspaper also claims the report says Dr John Rogers, a medic for the British athletics team, told Usada in an interview that conversations he had with Salazar at a training camp in the French Pyrenees before the 2011 World Championships in Daegu gave him such \"concern\" that he wrote an email at the time to his medical colleagues at UK Athletics.\n\nIt also says Rogers told Usada that Salazar had told him about \"off-label and unconventional\" uses of the prescription medications calcitonin and thyroxine (hormones) and high doses of vitamin D and ferrous sulphate.\n\nThe revelations will pile more pressure on Britain's greatest ever endurance runner, who has steadfastly refused to end his association with Salazar.\n\nIt raises questions too for UKA, which gave the Briton the all-clear to continue working with Salazar after an inquiry was launched following the BBC Panorama programme.\n\nIn June 2015, in conjunction with the US website ProPublica, the BBC's Panorama programme Catch Me If You Can made a series of allegations about the methods at NOP, and included testimony from a number of former athletes and coaches, including Kara Goucher and Steve Magness.\n\nThe film alleged Salazar had a fixation on the testosterone levels of his athletes, and may have doped American Olympic medallist Galen Rupp with the banned steroid version when he was 16. The programme also alleged Salazar had conducted testosterone experiments on his sons to see how much of the drug he could apply to them before it triggered positive tests.\n\nThe film also alleged Salazar used thyroid medicine inappropriately with his athletes, and encouraged the use of prescription medication when there was no justifiable need.\n\nSalazar denied the wrongdoing alleged in the programme, and issued a 12,000-word rebuttal.\n\nUsada took the unusual step of confirming it had launched an investigation into NOP following the BBC and ProPublica's revelations in 2015. Earlier stories by the New York Times and the Sunday Times had also raised concerns about some of Salazar's methods.\n\nIt is not clear why the Usada report remains unpublished.\n\nThe BBC has sought comment from Alberto Salazar, Sir Mo Farah and UK Athletics.\n\nNine months ago, amid rumours Usada had dropped an investigation into his coach, Sir Mo Farah said he felt vindicated after standing by Alberto Salazar, the man who has helped him achieve so much success. This will raise more questions over that association.\n\nLast year Farah distanced himself from another controversial coach, Somalian Jama Aden. And he could now face renewed pressure to do something similar with a man who we now know Usada is still looking into.\n\nThis could also be awkward for Salazar's employers Nike, and for UK Athletics - not least how it came to clear Salazar in 2015, even though it now seems one of its senior medics, Dr John Rogers, says he had raised concerns to them over the coach's methods.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nAndy Murray says he has recovered from a bout of shingles as he prepares to return to action at the Dubai Tennis Championships this week.\n\nThe British world number one has not played since losing in the fourth round of the Australian Open five weeks ago.\n\nAlso in the Dubai draw is Roger Federer in his first tournament since winning his 18th Grand Slam title in Melbourne.\n\n\"I'm fine now, I've been training flat-out for the past few weeks,\" 29-year-old Murray said.\n\n\"I was a bit sick for 10 days, a couple of weeks, after I got back from Australia.\n\n\"I feel fresh and ready to go here. I had shingles. It's not terrible, but it's not great. I had to go easy for a little while, so I wasn't able to push that hard in training when I got back into it.\"\n\nMurray, who lost in four sets to unseeded Mischa Zverev at the Australian Open, said he was not sure if the illness had started developing while he was playing in Melbourne.\n\nMurray is the top seed in Dubai and faces Tunisian world number 47 Malek Jaziri in the first round, while Federer is in action on Monday against Frenchman Benoit Paire, ranked 41.\n\nUS Open champion Stan Wawrinka of Switzerland is seeded second and takes on Bosnia's Damir Dzumhur in the first round.\n\nBriton Dan Evans, up to a career-high ranking of 44 after reaching the last 16 in Melbourne, faces Germany's Dustin Brown in round one.\n\nMurray plays on day one in the doubles, partnering Serbia's Nenad Zimonjic against Evans and Gilles Muller of Luxembourg.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nEngland were given a huge scare by Italy before five second-half tries saw them extend their winning run to 17 matches.\n\nItaly had led 10-5 at half-time, a combination of an extraordinary tactic at the breakdown and the hosts' ineptitude threatening a huge upset at Twickenham.\n\nBut two quick tries after the break from Danny Care and Elliot Daly calmed nerves, and although Michele Campagnaro's bullocking try made it 17-15 with 20 minutes remaining, another from Ben Te'o and two from replacement Jack Nowell saved England's blushes.\n\nThose tries meant Eddie Jones' men also picked up their bonus point, which may prove critical in the final championship standings.\n\nBut this 10th successive Six Nations win felt anything but a celebration, Owen Farrell off form on the occasion of his 50th cap and Jones' replacements once again required to come to their coach's rescue.\n\nItaly left points aplenty out on the field through missed kicks, and while a second consecutive Grand Slam remains a possibility for England, the visit of in-form Scotland in a fortnight's time now represents a serious threat.\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\nEngland had been completely thrown by Italy's novel tactic of not committing any men to the breakdown beyond the initial tackler, meaning no ruck was formed and so the offside became irrelevant.\n\nIt meant Italian defenders could stand between England's half-backs, creating initial confusion both in white-shirted ranks and in the stands.\n\nCaptain Dylan Hartley and James Haskell were both left asking referee Romain Poite to explain the laws of the game to them, the Frenchman testily telling them to ask their own coach.\n\nAnd only when England began to solve that problem by putting runners up the middle did they begin to get any sort of grip on a contest they had been expected to run away with.\n\nBy the end, Jones's men were also utilising the same ploy, a strange sight on the strangest of afternoons at Twickenham.\n\nEngland were not so much slow out of the blocks as asleep, repeatedly giving away penalties at the scrum and breakdown, while Farrell, Care and George Ford all kicked poorly from hand.\n\nHad Italy kicked all their penalties - Allan missed two, and the others were sent into the corner - they could have led 12-0 after the opening quarter.\n\nCole's try from a rolling maul came as a relief to a somnolent crowd, but Italy continued to dominate possession and territory, even as they spurned further shots at the posts and failed to capitalise from their attacking line-outs.\n\nBut when Allan's penalty from bang in front on the stroke of half-time came back off the upright, wing Giovanbattista Venditti grabbed the loose ball and dived over, Allan's conversion making it 10-5.\n\nTries flow as England find a way\n\nJones had every reason to tear into his men at the interval, and within moments Care's quick tap penalty sent him slicing through the blue wall and into the corner.\n\nDaly then ran on to Te'o's well-timed pass to go over in the left-hand corner, and the danger seemed over.\n\nYet with England spluttering again, Campagnaro ran through Ford and Mike Brown down the right to bring it back to 17-15.\n\nA brilliant clearing kick by Carlo Canna denied Daly another, but from the subsequent line-out a driving maul sucked in the Italian defence and Nowell exploited vast open spaces on the right to dive into the corner.\n\nNowell then added another, punching through a weary defence, and relief mixed with the roars from the packed stands.\n\nFor the second match running it was Joe Launchbury who was offically seen as the standout performer, with the third most-carries (11), the second-most metres made (60) and the second-most lineouts won (2) on the victorious England side.\n\nA special mention goes to Mike Brown, who made a total of 110 metres with ball in hand - 41 metres ahead of his closest competition in Italy's Edoardo Padovani.\n\nEngland head coach Eddie Jones: \"Congratulations to Italy, strategically they were smart today, but it's not rugby so let's be serious about it, it's not rugby today.\n\n\"I'm not happy what happened today, I don't think that's rugby. I played rugby a long time ago, I've coached rugby. I understand what Italy did and I'm not angry with what they did, but I just don't think it's rugby.\"\n\nItaly coach Conor O'Shea: \"We have a massive job to do but we will do it and we have to think differently like we did today.\n\n\"We didn't come here to make up numbers. But you're playing against a brilliant team who are on-form and they worked their way through it.\"\n\nPaul Grayson, former England fly-half, on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra: \"From an England point of view, today will feel like a loss. They were the opposite of what everyone expected.\n\n\"If they haven't seen the ugly side of Eddie Jones yet, I've got a suspicion they'll see it this week. He will have a problem with the team being nowhere near the levels he expects.\n\n\"You've got to give credit to Italy for their tactics, it certainly upset England, but they'll be disappointed about conceding so many tries late on.\"\n\nReplacements: Nowell for May (56), Slade for Te'o (76), Youngs for Care (52), M. Vunipola for Marler (56), George for Hartley (56), Sinckler for Cole (72).\n\nReplacements: Benvenuti for Bisegni (52), Canna for Allan (62), Bronzini for Gori (36), D'Apice for Gega (65), Ceccarelli for Cittadini (52), Biagi for Fuser (75), Mbanda for Favaro (58).", "The bout has been arranged after Pacquiao's followers on Twitter voted Khan as the opponent they would like to see the Filipino fight next.\n\n\"This is what the fans wanted,\" Pacquiao, 38, said on social media.\n\nKhan, 30, also confirmed the fight but, although Pacquiao has said his next fight would be in the United Arab Emirates, no venue has been announced.\n\nSpeaking on a social media video, Khan said the UK, Dubai and US were being looked at as possible locations and that they \"should find out in the next couple of days\".\n\nThe Briton, who won silver as a lightweight at the 2004 Olympics, beat compatriot Kell Brook, Australia's Jeff Horn and American Terence Crawford with 48% of the vote carried out by Pacquiao.\n\nKhan's last fight was in May 2016 when he was knocked out by Mexican Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez.\n\nSix-weight world champion Pacquiao retired in April last year but returned to claim his belt by beating Jessie Vargas in November.\n\nKhan's typically fast work will come up against a man who - in his prime, at least - dazzled the world with his own hand speed.\n\nPacquiao of course is still a world champion, but there will be some British fight fans who would rather see Khan face off against bitter rival Kell Brook - who himself has gone elsewhere and meets Errol Spence in May.\n\nFans of trash talk may also be disappointed as a clear respect exists in the Khan-Pacquiao relationship - the pair have sparred one another under trainer Freddie Roach, whom Khan left in 2012.\n\nThere is no doubt Pacquiao's standing in the sport will give Khan the opportunity to take a giant leap forward from his brutal KO defeat by Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez last time out.\n\nOne point on the marked date - 23 April is a Sunday. So it does look like this will take place east of the UK, so the time difference will suit British and American viewers on a Saturday night.\n\nWill it happen? It's a tight turnaround for two stellar names, especially accounting for the huge promotional commitments they will also have to squeeze in. If it does of course, fans can look forward to Nicola Adams, Ricky Burns, Khan and Anthony Joshua fighting on successive weekends.", "Last updated on .From the section English Rugby\n\nEngland coach Eddie Jones said an unexpected Italy tactic \"wasn't rugby\" as they frustrated the Six Nations champions before finally losing 36-15.\n\nItaly led 10-5 at half-time as they chose not to compete at the breakdown, allowing them to step into the England line without going offside.\n\nBut the hosts found a way through with five tries in the second period.\n\n\"Well done Italy, very smart. We knew they'd come with something,\" Jones told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"But it wasn't rugby. We haven't played a game of rugby yet.\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\n\"I'm not critical of Italy, they did what they needed to do to stay in the game.\"\n\nItaly coach Conor O'Shea defended the tactic, saying: \"Everything we did was completely legal; I was incredibly proud of what the players put out there.\"\n\nAt one stage, England captain Dylan Hartley and team-mate James Haskell asked referee Romain Poite to clarify the law, but the Frenchman replied: \"I am a referee, not a coach.\"\n\nJones added: \"Did we react quick enough? It's hard when you don't play rugby, it's like playing a different game out there.\n\n\"If your half-back can't pass the ball, the game becomes difficult. It's not the way you want to play the game. We wanted to move the ball and play some good rugby.\n\n\"We scored six tries and at the end of three rounds, if we were undefeated and with a bonus points, we'd be doing handstands. So we're doing handstands.\"\n\nItaly played a novel tactic of not committing any men to the breakdown beyond the initial tackler, meaning no ruck was formed and any offside became irrelevant.\n\nItalian defenders could therefore stand between England's half-backs, creating confusion for the men in white.\n\n\"How can you have players standing in your attack line? Even when there were rucks, there were people standing in our attack line.\n\n\"You look to pass the ball and there's a blue jumper there. You look in front and there's a blue jumper there. There's blue jumpers everywhere.\n\n\"He [Poite] had a terrible day. He wasn't refereeing rugby.\"\n\nAsked if rugby's laws need to change following the game, Jones said: \"I don't think anyone wants to see a game like that. No-one likes to see rugby not played in its proper form so World Rugby will have to have a very close look at it.\n\n\"I don't think there was anything good in that today. It didn't improve the game.\"\n\nThe innovative tactics caused confusion among the spectators as well as those on the field, and former England scrum-half Matt Dawson laid the blame for a disjointed contest firmly with Italy.\n\nThe 2003 World Cup winner said on Twitter: \"Well done Italy on ruining this international. Now World Rugby have to change the laws because of your inability to compete at this level.\"\n\nO'Shea was not about to back down when Dawson's comment was put to him, saying: \"I'd like him to sit down with World Rugby to look at some of the other games we've played this year, and if he's that good in the rules, actually make a comment after we were impacted as we were in the first game of this championship - but that's not for me to talk about now.\n\n\"We came here to have a go. If they want us to lose by 100 points, why should we? Why should we be normal? We should be ourselves. Rather than having a go, have a bit of humility and respect for guys who have very little in comparison to their counterparts.\n\n\"I was expecting this, if I'm honest.\"\n\nJones went on to compare the Italian tactic to a famous one-day international cricket match between Australia and New Zealand in 1981.\n\nWith one ball remaining, New Zealand needed a six to tie the match.\n\nTo ensure this couldn't happen, Australia's captain Greg Chappell ordered his brother Trevor to bowl the last ball underarm, a legal action at the time.\n\n\"Well, obviously they've been watching Trevor Chappell with the underarm bowl along the ground to make sure they couldn't hit a six,\" said Australian Jones.\n\nEngland have a two-week rest before they take on Scotland at Twickenham on Saturday, 11 March, and another victory would see them equal New Zealand's world record of 18 Test matches unbeaten.\n\n\"We've got Scotland in two weeks and they've got belief and confidence,\" said Jones. \"We are looking forward to them coming down and I'm sure they're going to play proper rugby.\n\n\"This is our next test, and I'm sure [Scotland coach] Vern Cotter won't have those tactics. He's a New Zealander. They like the breakdown and the contest.\n\n\"I feel like I haven't coached today. Let's be serious. It wasn't rugby today.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Scottish Rugby\n\nVern Cotter hailed his Scotland side's second-half display, in which a haul of 20 unanswered points secured a first victory over Wales since 2007.\n\nIn round three of the Six Nations, the Welsh had led 13-9 at the break.\n\nBut two tries, and 10 points from the boot of Finn Russell after the interval, paved the way to a 29-13 win.\n\n\"We realised we were watching them play rather than playing ourselves,\" Cotter said after Scotland's second win of the championship.\n\n\"I'm very proud of that response. The boys went out and started taking the game to the Welsh team.\n\n\"We were more assertive and organised in the second half. We applied pressure and got over the line with well-scored tries.\n\n\"It means we're still in the competition and we can get back to work on Monday and prepare for Twickenham.\"\n\nJohn Barclay, captaining Scotland from the back row, became only the fourth of 14 Scotland skippers in the Six Nations era to have tasted victory in his first game leading the team.\n\nThe 30-year-old, who took over from the injured Greig Laidlaw, was cautiously optimistic about Scotland's chances against England at Twickenham on 11 March.\n\nHe told BBC Sport: \"We won very well against Ireland (in round one), then we didn't play particularly well (against France). We wanted to get out of that cycle of having a good win, then not backing it up.\n\n\"The second half, to go out there, no panicking and play with control and accuracy - we recovered from a poor first half to go on and beat a very good Welsh side.\n\n\"We believe within the group that we can do something. We go to England for the next game. We'll have a look at them. If we play well, we can win.\n\n\"If we play like we did in Paris, if we play like we did in the first half (against Wales), then it becomes very difficult.\"\n\nEngland can re-take top spot in the Six Nations table from Ireland with victory over Italy on Sunday.\n\nNew Zealander Cotter has only two games remaining as Scotland head coach - the penultimate being the Calcutta Cup match - before he makes way for Gregor Townsend.\n\n\"Real guts and desire, the boys threw their bodies into it,\" was Cotter's assessment of his team's battling performance.\n\n\"We were competitive at the breakdown so, all in all, I'm happy we came away with the win.\n\n\"We will enjoy the evening, it's been a few years since we beat Wales. The boys can have a couple of quiet, cold beers. Then we go down to England.\n\n\"I think these experiences for the young players are great. John (Barclay) did a great job out there and steadied the ship.\"", "A few years ago Jessy would have been stuck in hospital because there was no provision of social care in her area\n\nWith health and social care budgets feeling the squeeze, the need to find ways to care for people that are both affordable and effective is one of the country's biggest challenges.\n\nAround the UK many attempts are being made to deliver care in different ways and here are three different approaches to community-based care.\n\nKathryn Humpston, a local area co-ordinator for Derby City Council, says: \"I try to help people help themselves.\"\n\nOne of the people she visits is John, an alcoholic who was in and out of hospital because of his condition. He often spent all his money on alcohol rather than food and Kathryn has to check what is in his larder.\n\nAs he only has two tins of beans and some powdered soup in stock, she tops up his supplies, gathered by an informal community food bank operating in the Boulton area of Derby.\n\nLocal area co-ordinators were introduced into Derby five years ago, copied from an existing scheme in Western Australia.\n\nThe idea is that vulnerable older people could find a lot of the support they need from within their own communities, rather than from council services, their GPs or from hospitals.\n\nJust over half the £500,000 annual costs of the scheme are paid for by the NHS to reduce demand on those services,\n\nThe co-ordinators tap into an often hidden network of support from neighbours, friends, family, voluntary groups and churches, who all seem willing to help improve the communities they live in by looking out for people who need help.\n\n\"All this costs nothing,\" says Kathryn.\n\nThe 10 co-ordinators working in Derby's inner city have helped about 700 people, all of whom have very complex needs. Only 17 of them have actually gone on to need a taxpayer-funded package of support from social services.\n\n\"If those 700 people had just one episode of social care fewer in their lifetime that would be a system saving of some £600,000,\" explains Mick Burrows of the NHS Southern Derbyshire Clinical Commissioning Group.\n\nJessy has nothing but praise for her carer after coming home from hospital following a hip replacement operation.\n\n\"I wouldn't be here at all if it wasn't for her. I'd probably be still in hospital waiting to get home,\" she says.\n\nA few years ago she would have been stuck in hospital because there was no provision of social care in the rural area she lives in, south of Loch Ness.\n\nBoleskine Community Care was set up by the local community, who recognised that their older people were having to move away to get help if family members could not help.\n\nIn the Scottish Highlands the NHS, not local councils, is responsible for providing home care\n\nIt is run by local women who work for Highland Home Carers, an employee-owned company in Inverness. The carers manage themselves and do their own assessments of old people's needs.\n\nIn the Scottish Highlands, spending on health and social care is fully integrated, meaning the NHS, rather than local councils, is responsible for providing care at home.\n\n\"The way we're funded helps us to give you what you want and gives you more choices,\" explains carer Julie Russell. \"You can choose how you use your hours.\"\n\nThis is because of the Scottish system of Self Directed Support, or personal budgets. Once a person's needs are assessed, they can decide how their care budget is spent. It can lead to some surprising choices.\n\n\"We've cleared snow, chopped firewood, helped in the garden, as well as taken people to the GP and all the usual personal care,\" says Julie.\n\nAngela is very clear about why she agreed to live with Gill.\n\n\"When I first saw her I thought she was very nice and I liked even more because she had a horse,\" Angela explains.\n\nGill, and her partner Pete, became Shared Lives carers for Angela about six years ago. It is a much greater commitment than the usual caring duties.\n\nGill and Pete share their home with her and also with Adrian, who moved in with them 14 years ago. Both Adrian and Angela have learning disabilities.\n\nAngela and Adrian now live with Gill and her husband as an extended family\n\n\"At first I was a bit scared,\" says Angela. \"But I thought I'll meet her and get to know her. I think it's a great idea. It's nice for families to take people like us in.\"\n\nAngela and Adrian are among almost 400 people, most of them with learning disabilities, who live with their Shared Lives carers across Lancashire.\n\n\"It's the best thing I've ever done,\" says Gill. \"We get more out of it than Adrian and Angela probably.\"\n\nCarers are paid about £400 a week for each person they look after, which is a saving for the local authority compared to the alternative. For people with learning disabilities who are unable to look after themselves, the alternative would be supported living or a residential care home.\n\nShared Lives Plus, which oversees the Shared Lives schemes around the country, estimates it saves about £25,000 per person per year. The NHS is currently establishing five Shared Lives schemes to cater for people leaving hospital.\n\nIt estimates savings of £130m over the next five years by speeding up hospital discharges using the service.\n\nListen to the full series of Andrew Bomford's reports for BBC Radio 4's PM programme here.", "Great Britain's Mo Farah says he is a \"clean athlete\" after a leaked report suggested his American coach may have broken anti-doping rules to boost the performance of some of his athletes.\n\nThe leaked US Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) report, dated March 2016, was obtained by the Sunday Times.\n\n\"If Usada or any other anti-doping body has evidence of wrongdoing they should publish it and take action rather than allow the media to be judge and jury,\" said Farah, who has won 5,000m and 10,000m gold at the past two Olympics.\n\nThe coach in question, Alberto Salazar, has been under investigation since a BBC Panorama programme made allegations about drugs use at his US training base.\n\nAccording to the Sunday Times, the leaked report also alleges Salazar, head coach of the world famous endurance Nike Oregon Project (NOP), routinely gave Farah and other athletes legal prescription drugs with potentially harmful side-effects without a justifiable medical reason.\n\nThe investigation into Salazar, who is also a consultant to UK Athletics (UKA), has been under way since at least June 2015.\n\nSalazar and Farah deny they have ever broken anti-doping rules.\n\n\"It's deeply frustrating that I'm having to make an announcement on this subject,\" said 33-year-old Farah in a statement.\n\n\"I am a clean athlete who has never broken the rules in regards to substances, methods or dosages and it is upsetting that some parts of the media, despite the clear facts, continue to try to associate me with allegations of drug misuse.\n\n\"I'm unclear as to the Sunday Times's motivations towards me but I do understand that using my name and profile makes the story more interesting but it's entirely unfair to make assertions when it is clear from their own statements that I have done nothing wrong.\n\n\"As I've said many times before we all should do everything we can to have a clean sport and it is entirely right that anyone who breaks the rules should be punished.\"\n\nIn a statement UK Athletics said it stood by the findings of an investigation published in 2016 that found \"there was no evidence of any impropriety on the part of Mo Farah and no reason to lack confidence in his training programme\".\n\nThe statement said: \"Usada have not reported back to UKA on any aspect of their investigations but we remain, at all times, completely open and cooperative with them.\n\n\"L-carnitine is a legal and scientifically legitimate supplement that can be used by endurance athletes. To our knowledge, all doses administered and methods of administration have been fully in accordance with Wada-approved protocol and guidelines.\"\n\nThe Usada interim report was passed to the Sunday Times by the suspected Russian hacking group Fancy Bears.\n\nThe BBC has so far been unable to verify its authenticity with Usada, or establish whether any of its reported conclusions are out of date.\n\nIn a statement, Usada said it could \"confirm that it has prepared a report in response to a subpoena from a state medical licensing body regarding care given by a physician to athletes associated with the Nike Oregon Project\".\n\nIt said: \"We understand that the licensing body is still deciding its case and as we continue to investigate whether anti-doping rules were broken, no further comment will be made at this time.\n\n\"Importantly, all athletes, coaches and others under the jurisdiction of the World Anti-Doping Code are innocent and presumed to have complied with the rules unless and until the established anti-doping process declares otherwise. It is unfair and reckless to state, infer or imply differently.\"\n\nAccording to the Sunday Times, the leaked report claims that Salazar:\n• None risked the health of his athletes, including Farah, by issuing potentially harmful prescription medicines to improve testosterone levels and boost recovery, despite no obvious medical need.\n\nSalazar maintains that drug use has always fully complied with the Wada code and that athletes were administered with L-carnitine in \"exactly the way Usada directed\".\n\nThe Sunday Times claims the Usada report also reveals:\n• None investigators have been impeded because Salazar and several athletes have \"largely refused to permit Usada to review their medical records\";\n• None Farah received an infusion of the legal supplement L-carnitine in 2014, which Usada is continuing to investigate in case the method of infusion broke doping rules by going over the legal limit of 50ml.\n\nThe report, apparently written in March 2016, allegedly states: \"Usada continues to investigate circumstances related to L-carnitine use\" by Farah.\n\nFarah told the Sunday Times two years ago that he had \"tried a legal energy drink\" containing L-carnitine but \"saw no benefit\" and did not continue with it.\n\nThe newspaper also claims the report says Dr John Rogers, a medic for the British athletics team, told Usada in an interview that conversations he had with Salazar at a training camp in the French Pyrenees before the 2011 World Championships in Daegu, gave him such \"concern\" that he wrote an email at the time to his medical colleagues at UK Athletics.\n\nIt also says Rogers told Usada that Salazar had told him about \"off-label and unconventional\" uses of the prescription medications calcitonin and thyroxine (hormones) and high doses of vitamin D and ferrous sulphate.\n\nThe revelations will pile more pressure on Britain's greatest ever endurance runner, who has steadfastly refused to end his association with Salazar.\n\nIt raises questions too for UKA, which gave the Briton the all-clear to continue working with Salazar after an inquiry was launched following the BBC Panorama programme.\n\nIn June 2015, in conjunction with the US website ProPublica, the BBC's Panorama programme Catch Me If You Can made a series of allegations about the methods at NOP, and included testimony from a number of former athletes and coaches, including Kara Goucher and Steve Magness.\n\nThe film alleged Salazar had a fixation on the testosterone levels of his athletes, and may have doped American Olympic medallist Galen Rupp with the banned steroid version when he was 16. The programme also alleged Salazar had conducted testosterone experiments on his sons to see how much of the drug he could apply to them before it triggered positive tests.\n\nThe film also alleged Salazar used thyroid medicine inappropriately with his athletes, and encouraged the use of prescription medication when there was no justifiable need.\n\nSalazar denied the wrongdoing alleged in the programme, and issued a 12,000-word rebuttal.\n\nUsada took the unusual step of confirming it had launched an investigation into NOP following the BBC and ProPublica's revelations in 2015. Earlier stories by the New York Times and the Sunday Times had also raised concerns about some of Salazar's methods.\n\nIt is not clear why the Usada report remains unpublished.\n\nThe BBC has sought comment from Alberto Salazar and UK Athletics.\n\nNine months ago, amid rumours Usada had dropped an investigation into his coach, Sir Mo Farah said he felt vindicated after standing by Alberto Salazar, the man who has helped him achieve so much success. This will raise more questions over that association.\n\nLast year Farah distanced himself from another controversial coach - Somalian Jama Aden. And he could now face renewed pressure to do something similar with a man who we now know Usada is still looking into.\n\nThis could also be awkward for Salazar's employers Nike - and for UK Athletics; not least how they came to clear Salazar in 2015 - even though it now seems one of their senior medics - Dr John Rogers - says he had raised concerns to them over the coach's methods.", "The American coach of Olympic champion Mo Farah rejected claims he may have broken anti-doping rules to boost the performance of some of his athletes.\n\nAlberto Salazar has been under investigation since a BBC Panorama programme in 2015 made allegations about drugs use at his US training base, and a leaked report from the US Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) was obtained by the Sunday Times this weekend.\n\n\"I believe in a clean sport, \" he said. \"I do not use supplements that are banned.\"\n\nThe leaked report also alleged Salazar - head coach of the world famous endurance Nike Oregon Project (NOP) - routinely gave Farah and other athletes prescription drugs with potentially harmful side-effects without a justifiable medical reason.\n\nAccording to the Sunday Times, the leaked report claims Salazar used a banned method of infusing a legal supplement called L-carnitine.\n\n\"I have clearly and repeatedly refuted allegations directed against me and the Oregon Project,\" Salazar said.\n\n\"I believe in a clean sport and a methodical, dedicated approach to training. The Oregon Project will never permit doping and all Oregon Project athletes are required to comply with the Wada Code and IAAF rules.\n\n\"L-carnitine is a widely available, legal nutritional supplement that is not banned by Wada. Any use of L-carnitine was done so within Wada guidelines.\n\n\"In this case, to ensure my interpretation of Wada rules was correct, I also communicated in writing with Usada in advance of the use and administration of L-carnitine with Oregon Project athletes.\n\n\"I have voluntarily cooperated with Usada for years and met with them more than a year ago. The leaking of information and the litigation of false allegations in the press is disturbing, desperate and a denial of due process. I look forward to this unfair and protracted process reaching the conclusion I know to be true.\"\n\nSalazar and Farah deny they have ever broken anti-doping rules.\n\n\"It's deeply frustrating that I'm having to make an announcement on this subject,\" said 33-year-old Farah in a statement.\n\n\"I am a clean athlete who has never broken the rules in regards to substances, methods or dosages and it is upsetting that some parts of the media, despite the clear facts, continue to try to associate me with allegations of drug misuse.\n\n\"I'm unclear as to the Sunday Times' motivation towards me but I do understand that using my name and profile makes the story more interesting. It's entirely unfair to make assertions when it is clear from their own statements that I have done nothing wrong.\n\n\"As I've said many times before we all should do everything we can to have a clean sport and it is entirely right that anyone who breaks the rules should be punished.\"\n\nIn a statement, UK Athletics said it stood by the findings of an investigation published in 2016 that found \"there was no evidence of any impropriety on the part of Mo Farah and no reason to lack confidence in his training programme\".\n\nThe statement said: \"Usada have not reported back to UKA on any aspect of their investigations but we remain, at all times, completely open and cooperative with them.\n\n\"L-carnitine is a legal and scientifically legitimate supplement that can be used by endurance athletes. To our knowledge, all doses administered and methods of administration have been fully in accordance with Wada-approved protocol and guidelines.\"\n\nThe Usada interim report was passed to the Sunday Times by the suspected Russian hacking group Fancy Bears.\n\nThe BBC has so far been unable to verify its authenticity with Usada, or establish whether any of its reported conclusions are out of date.\n\nIn a statement, Usada said it could \"confirm that it has prepared a report in response to a subpoena from a state medical licensing body regarding care given by a physician to athletes associated with the Nike Oregon Project\".\n\nIt said: \"We understand that the licensing body is still deciding its case and as we continue to investigate whether anti-doping rules were broken, no further comment will be made at this time.\n\n\"Importantly, all athletes, coaches and others under the jurisdiction of the World Anti-Doping Code are innocent and presumed to have complied with the rules unless and until the established anti-doping process declares otherwise. It is unfair and reckless to state, infer or imply differently.\"\n\nAccording to the Sunday Times, the leaked report claims that Salazar:\n• None risked the health of his athletes, including Farah, by issuing potentially harmful prescription medicines to improve testosterone levels and boost recovery, despite no obvious medical need.\n\nSalazar maintains that drug use has always fully complied with the Wada code and that athletes were administered with L-carnitine in \"exactly the way Usada directed\".\n\nThe Sunday Times claims the Usada report also reveals:\n• None investigators have been impeded because Salazar and several athletes have \"largely refused to permit Usada to review their medical records\";\n• None Farah received an infusion of the legal supplement L-carnitine in 2014, which Usada is continuing to investigate in case the method of infusion broke doping rules by going over the legal limit of 50ml.\n\nThe report, apparently written in March 2016, allegedly states: \"Usada continues to investigate circumstances related to L-carnitine use\" by Farah.\n\nFarah told the Sunday Times two years ago that he had \"tried a legal energy drink\" containing L-carnitine but \"saw no benefit\" and did not continue with it.\n\nThe newspaper also claims the report says Dr John Rogers, a medic for the British athletics team, told Usada in an interview that conversations he had with Salazar at a training camp in the French Pyrenees before the 2011 World Championships in Daegu, gave him such \"concern\" that he wrote an email at the time to his medical colleagues at UK Athletics.\n\nIt also says Rogers told Usada that Salazar had told him about \"off-label and unconventional\" uses of the prescription medications calcitonin and thyroxine (hormones) and high doses of vitamin D and ferrous sulphate.\n\nThe revelations will pile more pressure on Britain's greatest ever endurance runner, who has steadfastly refused to end his association with Salazar.\n\nIt raises questions too for UKA, which gave the Briton the all-clear to continue working with Salazar after an inquiry was launched following the BBC Panorama programme.\n\nIn June 2015, in conjunction with the US website ProPublica, the BBC's Panorama programme Catch Me If You Can made a series of allegations about the methods at NOP, and included testimony from a number of former athletes and coaches, including Kara Goucher and Steve Magness.\n\nThe film alleged Salazar had a fixation on the testosterone levels of his athletes, and may have doped American Olympic medallist Galen Rupp with the banned steroid version when he was 16. The programme also alleged Salazar had conducted testosterone experiments on his sons to see how much of the drug he could apply to them before it triggered positive tests.\n\nThe film also alleged Salazar used thyroid medicine inappropriately with his athletes, and encouraged the use of prescription medication when there was no justifiable need.\n\nSalazar denied the wrongdoing alleged in the programme, and issued a 12,000-word rebuttal.\n\nUsada took the unusual step of confirming it had launched an investigation into NOP following the BBC and ProPublica's revelations in 2015. Earlier stories by the New York Times and the Sunday Times had also raised concerns about some of Salazar's methods.\n\nIt is not clear why the Usada report remains unpublished.\n\nNine months ago, amid rumours Usada had dropped an investigation into his coach, Sir Mo Farah said he felt vindicated after standing by Alberto Salazar, the man who has helped him achieve so much success. This will raise more questions over that association.\n\nLast year Farah distanced himself from another controversial coach - Somalian Jama Aden. And he could now face renewed pressure to do something similar with a man who we now know Usada is still looking into.\n\nThis could also be awkward for Salazar's employers Nike - and for UK Athletics; not least how they came to clear Salazar in 2015 - even though it now seems one of their senior medics - Dr John Rogers - says he had raised concerns to them over the coach's methods.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nHarry Kane scored his third hat-trick in nine games as Tottenham Hotspur reacted to their European exit by hammering Stoke to move second in the Premier League.\n\nThe England forward struck three times in 23 minutes before the break, his first a well-taken finish into the bottom corner as the ball dropped to him in the area before an exquisite half-volley with his left foot from Christian Eriksen's corner.\n\nKane completed his third treble of 2017 when his low drive from Eriksen's tapped free-kick took a huge deflection off Peter Crouch in the Stoke wall, leaving goalkeeper Lee Grant stranded.\n\nDele Alli then added a fourth first-half goal for the hosts, sliding in to convert Kane's cross from the right as an abject Stoke fell apart at White Hart Lane.\n\nAfter the interval, Grant made a fine save to deny Kane his fourth, while centre-back Toby Alderweireld limping off injured was the only sour note for Spurs on an otherwise perfect response to being knocked out of the Europa League by Gent on Thursday.\n\nStoke, who stay 10th, improved marginally in the second half but Mauricio Pochettino's side eased to a victory that takes them above Manchester City, although they remain 10 points behind runaway leaders Chelsea.\n• None Kane one of world's best strikers - Pochettino\n• None Relive the action as Spurs thrashed Stoke at White Hart Lane\n\nKane now has 12 goals in 11 games in all competitions since the start of 2017, having scored his second hat-trick in a week following Spurs' FA Cup fifth-round victory over Fulham last Sunday.\n\nHis three goals against Stoke were reminiscent of his treble in the 4-0 win at home to West Brom on 14 January, the 23-year-old's expert finishing helped a precise and pacy Spurs dismantle limited opponents.\n\nHe took ruthless advantage of Ryan Shawcross' inadvertent flick to fire Spurs ahead on 14 minutes, while his second showed superb technical proficiency as he hooked in Eriksen's delivery with the ball going away from him on the edge of the area.\n\nHis third was somewhat farcical as former Spurs striker Crouch provided unwitting assistance but the White Hart Lane crowd celebrated jubilantly nonetheless, a stark contract to the sombre atmosphere at their adopted European home Wembley in midweek.\n\nThat strike took Kane to 22 goals in all competitions this season, the third consecutive campaign in which he has surpassed 20 goals, remarkable consistency that makes him indispensible to Spurs' future.\n\nAlli's goal might be described as an act of redemption following his reckless red card in Thursday's Europa League exit, but it capped another fine performance by the 20-year-old midfielder.\n\nHis desire to impress characterised a Spurs side clearly looking to remind observers of their actual and potential qualities after that insipid Wembley showing.\n\nPochettino's use of Walker and Ben Davies as wing-backs stretched Stoke to breaking point, while Eriksen was at his influential best, becoming the first player to 10 assists this season in the process.\n\nThey may fall short of challenging Chelsea this year, but the manner in which Spurs can use the same formation to torment sides suggests they could go toe-to-toe with their London rivals in future campaigns.\n\nWith Stoke 11 points clear of the bottom three, Mark Hughes' side have been all but certain of avoiding a relegation fight for some time now.\n\nYet this defeat was a chastening reminder of their limitations.\n\nCentral midfielders Charlie Adam and Glenn Whelan were completely left behind by the pace of Spurs in the first half, offering no protection to their back four and having to resort to simply hacking down their midfield opponents.\n\nBoth were wisely withdrawn by Hughes before either could receive a second yellow card that often seemed imminent, while Joe Allen was ineffectual following his recent good form and at fault for not closing down Kane for the striker's third.\n\nWithout the spark provided by Xherdan Shaqiri, absent despite being declared fit for this game, Stoke were bereft of ideas going forward too.\n\nThey might look enviously at West Brom, whom former Potters manager Tony Pulis has steered to 40 points by February, perhaps suggesting Stoke have stagnated this season compared with their fellow mid-table sides.\n\nSpurs boss Mauricio Pochettino: \"[Harry Kane] is playing at a very good level. He's one of the best strikers in the world. He deserves it because he's a great professional.\n\n\"It was a fantastic performance. It was a good response from the team.\n\n\"Ten points is a big gap [to Chelsea] - but we keep going and believe. We try to put on pressure.\"\n\nStoke boss Mark Hughes: \"The game was done in the first half. The manner of the goals we conceded was not good enough at any level.\n\n\"The second half was zero conceded and I guess that's a positive but that's because Spurs didn't push.\n\n\"We were too passive and not doing enough to stop balls going to our goal. Clearly Spurs are very good but if you allow teams time and space then good players will hurt you.\"\n• None In scoring a hat-trick, Harry Kane went past 100 goals in his club career (102) - with 86 of those coming for Tottenham.\n• None Kane's hat-trick was his fourth in the Premier League for Spurs - no player in club history has registered more in the competition (Robbie Keane and Jermain Defoe both have three).\n• None Mark Hughes has won only one of his past 13 Premier League games against opponents who began the day occupying a top-six position (D2 L10) - they have conceded at least three goals in nine of those 13 games.\n• None Spurs scored four first-half goals in a Premier League match for the first time since February 2012 (v Newcastle).\n\nTottenham host Everton at White Hart Lane on Sunday 5 March, with kick-off at 13:30 GMT. Stoke play the day before, at home to Middlesbrough, kicking off at 15:00 GMT.", "Leicester striker Jamie Vardy says speculation that he was involved in manager Claudio Ranieri's dismissal is \"untrue and extremely hurtful\".\n\nRanieri was sacked on Thursday, nine months after leading the club to the Premier League title.\n\n\"Claudio has and always will have my complete respect,\" Vardy said in a post on Instagram.\n• None When Ranieri invited BBC reporters in for coffee\n\n\"There is speculation I was involved in his dismissal and this is completely untrue, unfounded and is extremely hurtful.\n\n\"The only thing we are guilty of as a team is underachieving, which we all acknowledge both in the dressing room and publicly, and will do our best to rectify.\"\n\nLast season's champions dropped into the relegation zone on Saturday following Crystal Palace's win over Middlesbrough.\n\nVardy scored 24 goals as the Foxes secured an unlikely Premier League title in 2015-16, but the striker has struggled this season.\n\nHe ended a nine-game goal drought during Leicester's 2-1 Champions League loss at Sevilla, which proved to be Ranieri's last match in charge.\n\n\"He believed in me when many didn't and for that I owe him my eternal gratitude,\" former Fleetwood striker Vardy wrote.\n\n\"I wish Claudio the very, very best in whatever the future holds for him. Thank you Claudio for everything.\"\n\nFormer England captain Alan Shearer said: \"I didn't need the sacking of Ranieri to tell me the players weren't working for him. I could see it. I've been saying it for the last two or three months, that the players just weren't working for him.\n\n\"I would say to the Leicester players, if you look in the mirror and ask yourself a question - have I worked as hard as I could and given the manager everything? I would pretty much say, for the vast majority of that Leicester squad, the answer would be no. They could do more, I'm certain of that.\n\n\"Fans will get over it, I'm sure. We saw what happened with Chelsea when Diego Costa and Cesc Fabregas were booed after half an hour and then Chelsea go and score goals and get back to winning ways. Fans soon forget. However, you will never ever forget what happened last season. That was the best thing that has happened and will ever happen, in the Premier League, a team achieving what like Leicester did.\"\n\nFormer Tottenham midfielder Jermaine Jenas said: \"The timing is ludicrous. They've just gone to Seville and in the second half they were back to their best defensively. Give Claudio Ranieri the chance to keep them in the Premier League.\"\n\n'You believed in me' - Players thank Ranieri\n\nBBC Sport understands some players were summoned to meet the chairman after the 2-1 loss to Sevilla and Ranieri's fate was sealed by the negative reaction.\n\nHowever goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel said he had \"no problem with Ranieri\" while several players, including midfielder Andy King and winger Demarai Gray thanked Ranieri on social media.\n\n\"Big respect to this great man who helped us achieve history, you helped me build myself as a player and gave me the courage I needed,\" forward Riyad Mahrez wrote on Twitter.\n\n\"You believed in me from day one. Huge thank you for everything and good luck.\"\n\n\"My Leicester career was over, he believed in me and gave me a chance. That's something else I will also never forget,\" defender Danny Simpson added.\n\n\"I wish him luck for the future and I had the opportunity to say this today, however we really need the true Leicester fans to be with us and not against us through this tough period, starting on Monday night.\n\n\"What's happened has happened and we have to move on and stay in the Premier League.\"", "Gavin McDonnell's dream of joining twin brother Jamie as a world champion was shattered as classy Mexican Rey Vargas scored a points decision to land the vacant WBC super-bantamweight title.\n\nThe 30-year-old produced a display of immense grit - landing telling blows in the ninth round - but his 26-year-old opponent's confident work throughout saw him gain a 114-114 117-111 116-112 decision.\n\nVictory would have delivered Britain's first simultaneous twin world champions, with Jamie McDonnell already in possession of the WBA bantamweight belt.\n\nBut Vargas - unbeaten in 29 bouts - was rewarded for his control of the early exchanges and left the noisy Ice Arena in Hull with his first world title.\n\nVargas, with Iganacio Beristain - who has trained Oscar de la Hoya and Juan Manuel Marquez to world titles - in his corner, took the middle of the ring early and confidently landed three-shot combinations with McDonnell visibly cautious against a man with 22 previous knockouts.\n• None Listen to the fight again on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, every hour from 06:00 GMT until 12:00 on Sunday\n• None Relive the fight as it happened\n\nIn the build-up to the fight, McDonnell's promoter Eddie Hearn said he pushed for the bout to take place at the \"down and dirty\" Hull Ice Arena in the hope the \"bear-pit\" atmosphere could do \"strange things\" to the travelling fighter.\n\nThere were moments of home hope, as McDonnell landed a stinging right in the 10th but in just his third fight outside Mexico, Vargas even had the temerity to smile back at his man after taking some punishment late on.\n\nThe younger man's confidence to switch from making the fight to boxing on the back foot near the ropes perhaps showed he knew he had built a good early lead. McDonnell's head movement was energetic throughout, while his opponent was happy to remain static at times as he waited to pick his attacks.\n\nNow 19 fights into his career, McDonnell can take great pride from the heart he showed and none of the 3,500 in the venue appeared to feel short-changed by his efforts.\n\nIn truth, he simply came up against a fighter who carried plenty of power in his 8st 10lb frame, and showed variation and a cool head to handle the occasion.\n\nAt the final bell, Vargas threw his hands into the air before slumping to the ropes and looking to the heavens. McDonnell in contrast seemed to know hopes of family history were over, for now.\n\nEarlier in the night, London 2012 Olympic champion Luke Campbell maintained his momentum as he seeks a world title shot in 2017 - \"the biggest year of my career\", according to the Hull fighter.\n\nThe 29-year-old lightweight recorded his fourth straight win following a shock defeat in 2015 to Yvan Mendy, with a series of crushing left hands to Jairo Lopez.\n\nThe Mexican, down in the first, somehow made the second round but was flattened by a left uppercut. Campbell, who began training in Miami after the Mendy defeat, showed his typically energetic style and now has hopes of a shot at WBC champion Mikey Garcia.\n\nAnother Hull fighter, Tommy Coyle - beaten by Campbell in 2015 - kept his hopes of a return to world level alive with a third-round stoppage of Rakeem Noble.\n\n'I lost by three rounds' - what they said\n\nGavin McDonnell, talking to BBC Radio 5 live, said: \"I will learn, I know where I went wrong, I am disappointed, but I will work so hard.\n\n\"I had him winning by a couple of rounds, probably three rounds in my opinion. Everyone is in with a puncher's chance - if I can improve my speed and power I will land and I can beat that kid.\n\n\"If we do have a rematch, I know how to beat him in the future.\"\n\nIn an interview with Sky Sports, he added: \"I gave it everything and I hope everyone enjoyed it. I feel like I let everyone down.\n\n\"I just fell short at the end. I felt all right in there, I was a bit too eager and I couldn't get close enough. I will come again - I have only had 18 fights and I want to show I belong at this level.\n\n\"I have no doubt I will be a world champion.\"\n\nPromoter Eddie Hearn told BBC Radio 5 live: \"I think Gavin started too slowly and he was always chasing it. Vargas was very good - he had excellent feet and confidence.\n\n\"To put in a performance like that, Gavin should be very proud but ultimately he was not good enough. I think Rey Vargas will go on to do a lot in the sport.\n\n\"Gavin has improved so much but he was not letting his hands go and that was the frustrating thing. It was a little bit of inexperience. If he did what he did in the ninth from the fifth round onwards then he would've had a chance.\"", "Anna Rowe had a whirlwind romance with Antony Ray after meeting him through the dating app Tinder.\n\nBut their 14-month relationship came crashing down when she discovered his profile was a fake.\n\nHis name was not Antony and he was not single.\n\nIn fact, he was a married dad who had initially used photos of a Bollywood actor on his profile and had lured in other women too.\n\n\"He used me like a hotel with benefits under the disguise of a romantic, loving relationship that he knew I craved,\" says Anna.\n\nThe practice of using a fake profile to start an online romance is known as \"catfishing\".\n\nNow Anna, 44, from Kent, has launched a petition calling for it to be made illegal.\n\nBut how serious is catfishing and is it practical to make it a crime?\n\nMany dating apps and sites offer advice on how to spot fake profiles\n\nMore than half of online dating users say they have come across a fake profile, according to consumer group Which?\n\nWhile the number of people defrauded in the UK by online dating scams reached a record high in 2016.\n\nThere were 3,889 victims of so-called romance fraud last year, who handed over a record £39m.\n\nIt has become so prevalent, that it led to the creation of reality TV show Catfish - which is dedicated to helping victims learn the true identity of their online romances.\n\nCurrently catfishing is not illegal but elements of the activity could be covered by different parts of the law.\n\nIf a victim hands over money, the \"catfish\" could be prosecuted for fraud.\n\nSomeone using a fake profile to post offensive messages or doctored images designed to humiliate could also face criminal action.\n\nA review of social media and the law by the House of Lords in 2014 concluded there was enough current legislation to cover crimes committed online.\n\nNew guidance was also issued by the CPS in October to help the police identify online crimes - including trolling and virtual mobbing.\n\nBut Anna thinks the law needs to go further.\n\nWriting on her petition, she said: \"I did not or would not consent to have a sexual relationship with a married man, let alone a man who was actively having relations with multiple women simultaneously.\n\n\"His behaviour was definitely premeditated showing his intent to use women, yet the current law will not find his actions a criminal offence.\"\n\nTony Neate, chief executive of Get Safe Online, recognises the devastating impact catfishing can have on victims.\n\n\"It can ruin a life. I know there have been suicides because it's affected someone badly,\" he says.\n\n\"It can affect their mental stability and lead to depression and the victims feel they can't trust anyone again.\n\n\"I do think we need to look more wisely at this in relation to how it is tackled at the moment.\"\n\nMr Neate, a former police officer, says there should be a \"discussion\" about punishing the worst catfishing offenders.\n\nBut he raises concerns about how practical a new law would be to implement.\n\n\"I really feel for that poor woman [Anna] but we have got to be realistic on how far we got and how the police would be able to enforce it,\" he says.\n\n\"Let's have the discussion because we can't have people being hurt and it's something we have got to look at.\"\n\nMany dating websites offer users advice on how to spot a scammer and tips to avoid being taken in by a fake profile. (See \"Tips to avoid catfishes\", below)\n\nPopular dating site Match.com has a team which will remove unwanted accounts and check photos and personal ads.\n\nIt also has a built-in screening system that can help identify suspicious accounts, remove them and prevent re-registration.\n\nLovestruck has a verification service that can confirm members are single and professional by checking their profiles against their other social media sites.\n\nBut the advice has not stopped many people being duped.\n\nLast month, university professor Judith Lathlean revealed how she was tricked out of £140,000 by a gang using a fake profile.\n\nIfe Ojo, 31, and Olusegun Agbaje, 43, were jailed in 2016 after conning a woman out of £1.6m using a fictional character.\n\nBut Andrew McClelland, chief executive of the Online Dating Association - the trade body for the industry - believes legislating against catfishing would be \"difficult\".\n\nHe said there could be genuine reasons why someone might not use their real details online - for example if they had been in an abusive relationship and did not want their ex-partner to find them.\n\nData protection and freedom of expression would also be an issue when it came to enforcing such a law, he added.\n\n\"The biggest problem this faces is how do you legislate against someone lying?\" says Mr McClelland.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Germany's Francesco Friedrich and Johannes Lochner both win gold in the four-man bobsleigh, after finishing with the same time after four heats at the World Championships in Konigssee, Germany.\n\nWATCH MORE: GB crash out of four-man bob\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "They are some of the best-known lines from one of the nation's favourite poems, the mantra of numerous self-help manuals and an inspiration for a range of politicians from President Franklin D Roosevelt to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.\n\n\"If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster, and treat those two imposters just the same.\"\n\nBut while the words of Rudyard Kipling's poem are familiar, the application of them is altogether more challenging. How does one live without being lifted by success or dumped by failure? How can anyone maintain such detachment from the vicissitudes of life?\n\nAfter playing in 69 international rugby matches, Ireland's wing three-quarter Andrew Trimble knows the highs and lows of professional sport. Last year, the team achieved its best ever series of results, with victories over southern hemisphere giants Australia and South Africa and then, for the first time in 111 years, Ireland beat the reigning world champions, the New Zealand All Blacks.\n\n\"There's no bigger moment than beating the All Blacks,\" Trimble explains. \"After the game, we were walking around just shaking our heads and saying, 'What have we done? We've just beaten the All Blacks!' No Irish team has ever done this before.\"\n\nAndrew Trimble says his spirituality enhances his love of rugby\n\nSo was his life suddenly and completely fulfilled by winning these important matches?\n\n\"I love the game,\" he says. \"It's a driving force and a massive part of what I want to do. But it's important to be reminded that there's something else out there, there's something more important than rugby.\"\n\nWe're seated in the wooden pews of Ballyalbany Presbyterian Church in County Monaghan, about two miles from where the international team has just completed an open training session in preparation for Saturday's Six Nations match against France.\n\nStanding on the touchline throughout the session, it's hard to imagine how rugby union professionals can do anything other than submit themselves to the demands of the game. It's relentlessly fast, consistently ferocious. It is all-consuming.\n\nOff the field, Trimble is impeccably courteous to every autograph-hunter and maintains that having \"something more important than rugby\" actually enables him to cope better with the pressures of professional sport.\n\nJust 16 months ago, after two operations on the same foot injury were followed by a stress fracture, he began to believe that his career might be over. Trimble was dropped from Ireland's squad for World Cup 2015 and, aged 29, was faced with losing something that had dominated his life since the age of seven.\n\n\"If it's over, you have to draw on something else so rugby doesn't become the be-all-and-end-all. It doesn't define me, I'm defined by something more important. It's a different mindset and perspective.\"\n\nSo what is that perspective?\n\n\"There's an eternal perspective,\" he explains. \"Rugby lasts for 10, 15 years but the perspective of having a faith, and a sincere faith, is something that doesn't end and something that lasts forever.\"\n\nTrimble believes that spirituality enhances his love for the sport.\n\n\"I'm far happier having that perspective and knowing that there is a bigger picture than putting all my trust in rugby, in a career that can be over in 10 years or a lot less than 10 years.\"\n\nHe says that his Christian faith has also enabled him to fight against the temptation to become entirely self-absorbed.\n\nLast year, he visited a camp in Tanzania. It's run by Oxfam and houses hundreds of refugees from Burundi. He was profoundly moved by the experience.\n\n\"Some of these people will live their entire lives in refugee camps. They had families, they had careers, they had hopes and dreams and they've been cut short.\"\n\nTrimble laments his own ignorance of the issue and says if he hadn't been taken to Tanzania by Oxfam, he would never have known about the refugee crisis in Africa. And his motivation to do something is shaped by his theology.\n\nAndrew Trimble during his visit to Tanzania\n\n\"Pope Francis says they're all created in the image of God. They're just like you and me, they're no less special. It's a real shame that they're forgotten about because they're considered less important.\"\n\nWith that, our time together runs out and Trimble returns to the Ireland training camp - with the French in his sights.\n\nHe certainly embodies Kipling's view that triumph and disaster should be treated \"just the same\". But in some ways, his approach is closer to that of 17th Century poet Richard Lovelace. In his poem, To Lucasta, Going to the Wars, Lovelace argues that his affections are only heightened by being answerable to a higher authority.\n\n\"I could not love thee, Dear, so much, Loved I not honour more.\"\n\nAccording to Andrew Trimble, an eternal perspective does the same for him - win, lose or draw.", "Nurdles may sound cute and often look beautiful but the small plastic pellets are a sinister presence on three-quarters of beaches in the UK.\n\nVolunteer nurdle hunters on the Great Winter Nurdle Hunt searched their local shorelines in early February and the survey has found that 73% of 279 shorelines contain the plastics.\n\nIn one 100m-stretch of beach in Cornwall, beachcombers found 127,500 of the lentil-sized pellets - but that is just a fraction of the 53 billion nurdles that are estimated to escape into the UK environment each year.\n\nThe microplastics pose a significant threat to fish and animals that ingest the plastic.\n\nExperts warn that nurdles can soak up chemical pollutants from their surroundings and then release the toxins into the animals that eat them.\n\nAfter the BBC reported the story some nurdle hunters have been getting in touch to explain why they do what they do.\n\nSarah Marshall, a 49-year-old former speech and language therapist, started collecting nurdles two years ago and says she is now addicted to finding the pellets.\n\n\"They look like tiny eggs, some are bigger than others, some are thicker, and they are all different colours,\" she says.\n\n\"They congregate on the tide line and I often use my hands to pick them up - whenever I go to the beach, I cannot help but pick them up.\n\n\"I even found some in Martinique. My daughter says 'mum let's go look for nurdles' - it's like a competition between us,\" she adds.\n\nChristine Hyland, Naomi Hyland and Sarah Marshall at Compton beach on the Isle of Wight\n\nThe threat posed by nurdles to wildlife and the marine ecosystem is the main motivation for Sarah to spend her time picking them up from beaches.\n\nShe normally throws away the collected nurdles but she has also sent samples to the International Pellet Watch who analyse nurdles for the presence of toxic chemicals.\n\nSarah Marshall has been collecting nurdles from beaches in the Isle of Wight for two years\n\nJay Lowein, who is 59 and runs a business, is a recent recruit to the Great Nurdle Hunt.\n\nShe went on her first hunt in Shanklin on the Isle of Wight in February and explained that she used tweezers to pick up the pellets.\n\nTogether with a friend, she collected over 1500 nurdles in one hour.\n\nNurdles on Shanklin beach in the Isle of Wight\n\n\"I'd never even seen them but when I went on the nurdle hunt, I was really shocked at how many there are,\" says Jay.\n\n\"I collect them because I think it's horrible that there is all this plastic floating around.\n\n\"I want to do my bit - I don't want to eat fish that has ingested plastic pellets\", she explains.\n\nDaniel Moore, a 29-year-old PhD student in Durham, found these nurdles at James Bay in March 2015.\n\nNurdles found by Daniel Moore on a beach hunt at James Bay in Millport, Cumbrae\n\nMaranda, a self-employed embroider, took part in her first nurdle hunt this year in the freezing Scottish rain by her house at Dunnet Sands at Britain's most northerly point.\n\n\"I go beachcombing every day - but on this hunt I collected 355 nurdles in 45 minutes,\" she explains.\n\n\"It is back-breaking work - my hands get cold from the freezing water and my specs are always falling down.\n\n\"I do it because I care about the environment - I want to do a bit of good for the world when I'm out there,\" she adds.\n\nA close up of nurdles collected from a beach in Caithness in January\n\nMaranda, who is 44, uses some of the refuse for craft, including twine to make pictures, and she recycles the plastic rubbish she finds.\n\nNurdles are not the only plastic material occupying beaches in the UK.\n\nEmily Cunningham, a 26-year-old marine biologist in Durham, found plastic ribbon and latex from 101 balloons on a beach in Anglesey.\n\nShe believes that they are the remains of balloons sent into the air on mass balloon releases.\n\nEmily collects nurdles almost weekly, whenever she visits the beach, and says that often she finds more plastic than seaweed on Britain's beaches.\n\nRibbon and latex from 101 balloons found by Rhosneigr on the west coast of Anglesey\n\nTina Triggs, who is 44 and works in a supermarket, found 66 plastic cotton buds on a beach in February at Barmouth in north Wales.\n• None The beaches where Lego keeps washing up", "Four weeks. Twenty-eight days. It feels like 280 days. I feel 280. If Donald Trump is exhausting even the news-hungry political journalists, I wonder what he is doing to the rest of the world.\n\nFor the first three weeks I started the day repeating a mantra, \"watch what he does, not what he says.\" I've discarded that notion. What Mr Trump says and how he says it is an important part of his presidency. His rhetoric, both in person and Twitter, appeals to his supporters. It's new and fresh and irreverent. But one day it could also be his undoing. He is increasingly losing respect among key Republicans, and he needs them to govern effectively.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThis is my fourth American administration and we've never seen anything like it for sheer non-stop drama. Lewinsky was a daily feast of slightly prudish titillation, but it was one story line, and in the end it was just sex. 9/11 was far more serious and scary, and the ramifications lasted far beyond that fateful morning. But in a way it was a more conventional (though nonetheless horrifying) story of geopolitics and ideology. We journalists knew how to cover them both.\n\nJohn McCain has been a Republican critic of Trump\n\nSometimes now, I admit, I'm at a loss. There is so much to say and think, and even feel, about the Trump administration that I find myself curiously stuck for words.\n\nWhat's the most important story here? Is the psychodrama of a president who is both fantastically confident and oddly insecure, who publicly lashes out those who offend him and rewards those who please him? Is it the hard right turn he plans for America? Is it Russia, the curious crush Donald Trump seems to have on Vladimir Putin and what that might mean for global security? Is it America's allies, floundering in the face of this unpredictability?\n\nFour long long weeks ago, we speculated that this may become a normal presidency, hemmed in by the restrictions of US institutions and the customs of US political tradition. We were wrong, again.\n\nYes, Mr Trump has seen his agenda slowed, either by the structures of government or the realities of diplomacy. On five major national and international issues. he has either rowed back or been checked.\n\nThat's how government functions. Even this White House, with its ambition of rapid change, has been forced to bow somewhat to business as normal. Especially on foreign policy, there is actually little difference today between the Obama and Trump policies.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Trump voters say US president is 'doing a fabulous job'\n\nBut in other more profound ways this administration is anything but normal - which is precisely what Mr Trump's voters wanted.\n\nFor a start, the president himself breaks the rules. He berates allies (Australia, Mexico,) praises despots (notably, and most worryingly, Putin) and he has dropped the filter of \"behaving presidentially.\" His Twitter attacks on the press, the intelligence services and individual Senators feel more schoolyard than Oval Office.\n\nThere is so much personal drama in his early morning tirades that I wake up anxious wondering who is it today and what does it all mean? But his supporters didn't send him to Washington to play nice. All the polls suggest they still really like what they see.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Where do Donald Trump supporters get their news from?\n\nThat his White House acts like some medieval court is not really so unusual. Jockeying for power has been a long tradition of US administrations. But it doesn't usually play out on the front pages of the newspaper. It also doesn't usually lead to the firing of one senior official within the first month and his potential replacement turning down the job because he fears being tainted by the dysfunction.\n\nWhatever the president may say, that is not normal and it is not a well-oiled machine.\n\nCandidate Trump met with Mexican president Pena Nieto during the campaign\n\nThen there's the issue of what to believe. We've never seen an administration where one official says one thing publicly and the president says another. On the two state solution, the firing of General Flynn and Russian interference in the election, this week alone saw a string of public contradictions.\n\nIt is hard to see how this is sustainable. A lot is not getting done because of the administration chaos. There is still no tax reform bill, no Obamacare replacement, no infrastructure spending plan - all things he planned to do immediately.\n\nIt is also hard to see how it ends. President Trump appears to like the chaos theory of government and it fits his narrative of change.\n\nFour weeks in, his approval ratings are not great but they're not disastrous. The most reliable national poll, by one of the few truly non-partisan organisations left in America, Pew Research, has him at 39%. That's lower than his predecessors at this stage but it's not through the floor.\n\nIn twenty years in Washington, I've never heard so much talk of the possibility of a President not finishing his term, even in the late 90s at the height of Clinton's Lewinsky scandal. But for that to happen there are only two options, Mr Trump would have to resign or be impeached. For the moment neither of those look at all likely.", "Last updated on .From the section Snooker\n\nJudd Trump will face Stuart Bingham in Sunday's Welsh Open final after the Englishmen enjoyed comfortable wins in the last four in Cardiff.\n\nTrump, the world number four, beat Scotland's Scott Donaldson 6-3 in the first of the semi-finals.\n\n\"It's always special when you reach the semi-finals and finals,\" said Bristol's Trump, who last won a title at the European Masters in October.\n\n\"It's a different atmosphere out there and you really thrive off it, so for me to play in the final here, in kind of my home tournament - it would be an amazing achievement to win it.\"\n\nTrump, 27, opened with a break of 131 but was pegged back from 4-1 to 4-3, making the decisive move with a 74 break in the eighth frame in Cardiff.\n\n\"I feel like I've really improved this season and it's taking people at the top of their game to beat me,\" he added.\n\n\"Every tournament I go into I'm fully prepared and give it my best shot. If I could win this and make it two ranking events in a season, it would feel like a step up to a different level.\"\n\nBingham, 40, played superbly, opening with a break of 127 and closing with a 101 as he raced through six frames.\n\n\"It all started off from a massive fluke in the first frame and to make a hundred off that settled me down and put Rob on the back foot,\" he said. \"I punished him for every mistake.\"\n\nLooking ahead to the final, Bingham added: \"We've had some great matches and I'm looking forward to it. If I play like that, it's hopefully going to be a high-quality match.\"\n\nSign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app.", "Visitors and enthusiasts photographed the Tornado locomotive at Appleby station before it pulled the first timetabled main line steam-hauled service for half a century across the Ribblehead viaduct in North Yorkshire. The service was part of a celebration of the reopening of the Settle to Carlisle line in Cumbria which had been closed after landslides had damaged the railway line.", "They formed a \"human wall\" to protest US President Donald Trump's plans for a wall between the countries.", "It's the weekly news quiz - have you been paying attention to what's been going on in the world over the past seven days?\n\nIf you missed last week's quiz, try it here\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Anna LeBaron's father, Ervil, was the leader of a polygamous cult responsible for more than 20 murders. The killings continued even after his death thanks to a hit list he had left behind. Here Anna speaks for the first time about how she escaped from the cult - and her hope to \"redeem\" the LeBaron name.\n\n\"We were taught to live in awe of him as God's prophet, as the one true prophet on Earth.\"\n\nThere is a note of incredulity in Anna LeBaron's voice as she describes her childhood. She speaks slowly and deliberately, as though she can hardly believe it herself.\n\n\"We were taught that we were celestial children, having been born from the prophet Ervil LeBaron. And we believed it. Even though we were treated so poorly we still believed we were celestial children.\"\n\nAnna says she can count on the fingers of one hand the number of times she was in the same room as her father. Yet the power Ervil LeBaron had over his followers, which included his 13 wives and more than 50 children, was absolute.\n\n\"He used fear to manipulate and control people,\" she says. \"We were absolutely afraid of not doing what we were told. And we didn't have a voice.\"\n\nAnna has found her voice now. At 48, she shows no outward sign of the traumatised childhood she vividly describes in her new memoir The Polygamist's Daughter.\n\nAnna LeBaron was born in Mexico in what she would later learn was a cult hideout. Separated at an early age from her mother, Ervil's fourth wife Anna-Mae Marston, she grew up on the run from the law.\n\nShuttled from one overcrowded safe house to the next, she slept on filthy foam mattresses and scavenged for food in dustbins with the other cult children and Ervil's \"sister wives\".\n\n\"We were taught that we were being persecuted because we were God's chosen people and that the world outside didn't understand us,\" she says.\n\n\"That was how they used to explain all the moving in the middle of the night and staying ahead of the law.\"\n\nAnna LeBaron in her early teens with brother Eddie - before she ran away\n\nThe children were used as unpaid labour in the domestic appliance repair shops that were the cult's main source of income - forced to scrub grease and grime from rusty ovens and refrigerators for 12 hours a day during school holidays.\n\n\"I watched siblings of mine receive horrific beatings for any type of attitude,\" Anna recalls. \"And these are young kids. They're kids. How much work can you really get out of a 10-year-old, or an 11-year-old, really? You can get work out of them if you are beating them.\"\n\nThe children were not cut-off entirely from the outside world. They were allowed to go to school, though they were not allowed to talk about what happened at home, and were \"taught to lie\" Anna says.\n\nThe girls were the lowest of the low in the cult's pecking order.\n\n\"It was a patriarchy, for sure. And the young girls were groomed to become wives of polygamist men that already had wives. We were groomed to accept that and to know that that's where we were headed, when we became of marriageable age.\"\n\nMarriageable age, in the LeBaron family, was 15, she says. \"So when I escaped at age 13 I escaped by the skin of my teeth!\"\n\nAnna did not know it at the time but her father - a powerful, charismatic figure, who at 6ft 4in towered over most of his disciples - was wanted by the FBI and the Mexican police for a string of murders on both sides of the border.\n\nHe rarely got involved in the violence himself but ordered his followers to kill anyone - including one of his own wives and two of his children - who challenged his position as God's representative on Earth or who threatened to leave the cult and complain to the authorities.\n\nHis followers believed he was receiving his instructions directly from God, having inherited the mantle of prophet from his father Alma Dayer LeBaron.\n\n\"When you are so convinced that someone is right, that you are willing to do anything - and even if you disagree, if you are so afraid to voice that disagreement and you just go and do it - that's the ultimate control,\" Anna says. \"And he had that. People did what he said. To their own detriment.\"\n\nBut Ervil did not have a monopoly on divine revelations. Three of his brothers had, at one time or another, claimed to be God's sole representative on Earth.\n\nErvil had initially been a follower of his older brother Joel but the pair clashed over Ervil's money-making schemes, including a plan to transform Los Molinos, the modest Mexican settlement where the sect's 200 or so followers had set up home, into a beach resort.\n\nJoel kicked Ervil out of his Church of the Firstborn of the Fullness of Time in 1970. So Ervil started his own sect, the Church of the Lamb of God, and set about eliminating his rivals - starting, in 1972, with Joel.\n\nUsing the long-abandoned Mormon doctrine of \"blood atonement\" which sanctions the killing of sinners to cleanse them of evil, Ervil could claim he was doing his ever-growing list of victims a favour by allowing them to enter Heaven.\n\nGod would reveal to Ervil the next victim and he would hand-pick a team of disciples to carry out the hit. The murder plots grew increasingly sophisticated, involving wigs and theatrical make-up, and back-up squads in case the initial plan failed. Refusing to follow Ervil's command was not an option.\n\n\"People defied it and many of them paid for that with their lives. And it wasn't until after he died that it kind of started to break up and that power was lost,\" says Anna.\n\n\"However, even from the grave, he was able to control people and their actions and that is just mind-blowing - that from the grave he was able to do that.\"\n\nAnna Mae Marston looking happy with some of her children\n\nErvil had managed to evade justice in the Mexican courts over the murder of Joel and a deadly commando-style raid on Los Molinos, where the population were stubbornly refusing to accept him as their new prophet.\n\nHe was eventually captured by Mexican police and handed over to the FBI in 1979, in circumstances that have never been fully explained. He was later jailed for life for orchestrating the murder of Rulon C Allred, the leader of a polygamous sect in Utah who had rejected Ervil's demands for money and recognition.\n\nErvil died in Utah State Prison in 1981, after suffering a seizure. But his reign of terror was far from over.\n\nA bloody battle for the succession ensued, with Ervil's chief henchman, Dan Jordan, making an early play for the mantle of prophet - a terrifying prospect for Anna, who had suffered under the tyrannical regime in his Denver repair shop.\n\nAnna was now was living in Houston with her mother, half-sister Lillian and Lillian's husband, Mark Chynoweth, who also ran an appliance store.\n\nLillian and Mark had been among the most fanatical of Ervil LeBaron's followers but after he was jailed they began to drift away from the cult, joining a Christian church and rejecting his polygamous creed.\n\nWhen Dan Jordan arrived in Houston to order Anna and her mother to return to Denver with him, the 13-year-old Anna rebelled.\n\n\"I could not believe that my mother had been talked back into going back to Denver when we were experiencing a life in Houston that was the most normal I had ever experienced.,\" she says. \"We had lived in the same house for about a year - the longest I had ever lived anywhere - and we were eating food that was purchased in grocery stores. And we were paid to work. We could save up money.\"\n\nShe realised that this might be the best chance she would get to take control of her life.\n\n\"It was now or never. And the feelings that I had inside, that bitterness and the injustices that we had experienced, left me with a very strong feeling about not wanting to go back.\"\n\nShe could not have escaped without the help of Lillian, who hid her away in a motel room until her mother had returned to Denver with Jordan.\n\nAnna describes Lillian and Mark as the \"heroes\" of her story, for taking her in and giving her a chance to change the trajectory of her life.\n\nBut their life together would not last. What they didn't know was that in prison Ervil had drawn up a hit list of 50 people he regarded as traitors, buried away in a final, rambling theological tract - The Book of the New Covenants - and that Mark's name was on it.\n\nAfter Dan Jordan was murdered in an apparent \"blood atonement\", Mark revealed that he and Jordan had been among a group of followers who had refused to carry out Ervil's orders to bust him out of prison \"guns blazing\" and so there was a good chance he would be targeted next.\n\nThe 38-year-old refused to go into hiding. He opted instead to turn his suburban home into a fortress, but it wasn't enough.\n\nAt 4pm on 27 June 1988, he was shot numerous times as he sat in his office chair at Reliance Appliances.\n\nAt almost exactly the same time, Mark's brother Duane, owner of another Houston repair shop, was shot dead, along with his eight-year-old daughter Jennifer.\n\nAnd 200 miles away in Irving, Texas, another of Ervil's former disciples, Eddie Marston - Anna's half-brother - was gunned down next to his pick-up truck within five minutes of the first three killings.\n\nThe Four O'Clock murders, as they became known, shocked America. Someone - most likely one of Ervil LeBaron's sons - was working their way through his hit list. The murders took place on the 144th anniversary of the death of Joseph Smith, the founder of the Mormon church.\n\nAnna did her best to comfort Lillian and her six children, while dealing with her own fears.\n\n\"I don't think I was a personal target, however, I knew that if something happened, and I happened to be in the way, that I could also be killed. So it was a very frightening time. We were under police protection and it was just scary.\"\n\nMark Chynoweth had been the closest thing to a father figure in Anna's life, and she is close to tears as she talks about his death. As a teenager, she read about cult atrocities he had taken part in but insists that was not the man she knew.\n\n\"Mark was a kind man. He was generous. And I don't believe for one minute that had he grown up in a normal family setting that he would have done any of the things that he was accused of, on his own.\n\n\"He was kind and loving. He was a good father to his children and losing him was very difficult, under the circumstances that we lost him.\"\n\nIn 1997, Anna's half-brother Aaron LeBaron, who had emerged from the succession battles as the One Mighty and Strong prophet, was sentenced to 45 years in prison for orchestrating the Four O'Clock murders. Four other cult members were also jailed for their part in the killings.\n\nBy this point, Anna had made a decisive break from what remained of the cult, finding the strength to go away to college and attempt to build an independent life.\n\nShe married David, her childhood sweetheart from Houston, who had joined the Marine Corps, and they started a family.\n\nShe was determined to break free from polygamy, which she believes leads women to \"numb\" their emotions.\n\n\"I don't believe it's a natural relationship,\" she says. \"Most women will struggle, having to share their husband or their significant other.\"\n\nIt is not a view shared by her mother, with whom she remains in contact, and who stayed loyal to Ervil to the bitter end.\n\n\"My Mom still believes in the practice of polygamy as taught by [Mormon founder] Joseph Smith and still lives in a group that practises that, so that is a little bit difficult to process - how that can be something she sticks with even after all the devastation and the damage that it caused to her own children.\"\n\nJacqueline Tarsa LeBaron was the final cult member to be jailed over the Four O'Clock murders\n\nAnna battled depression after the death of Lillian Chynoweth, who committed suicide following her husband's murder in 1998.\n\nAt first she coped with the trauma of losing so many loved ones by pretending it had happened to someone else. It would take years of painful therapy for her to finally \"acknowledge that these experiences are part of my past\".\n\nShe now believes her father suffered from some form of mental illness for most of his adult life.\n\n\"It is sad to me that he was experiencing these things and not able to reach out and get the help he needed. But, of course, when you are the prophet, how much help do you actually think you'll need?\"\n\nErvil's madness, if that's what it was, cast a long shadow over Anna and her siblings.\n\nThe book was only closed on the Four O'Clock Murders in 2011, when after 20 years on the run Jacqueline Tarsa LeBaron became the sixth former cult member to be jailed for taking part in the plot.\n\nBut Anna is convinced that the blood-letting is now, finally, at an end.\n\n\"I have five grown children and if me telling my story was to put me in any danger, or anybody that I loved and cared about, I would never have done this at all. I believe that is 100% in the past and there is no danger at all for me.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Anna LeBaron on how she escaped her father's polygamous cult\n\nShe hopes that by telling her story, in The Polygamist's Daughter, she can \"help restore relationships in our family, instead of continuing to bring more separation and more fear\".\n\nIn one passage, she describes a reunion with her half-brother Robert, who shot dead Duane Chynoweth and his eight-year-old daughter. Robert, who was just 17 at the time of the killings, received a reduced sentence for testifying against other family members.\n\n\"As I embraced my long-lost brother,\" she writes, \"the emotion I had held inside for years came out in floods of tears.\"\n\nAnd despite everything, Anna says she is \"very proud\" of her family.\n\n\"Even people that were involved in some of the most horrific things that happened have gone on to become caring, kind, loving, productive members of society, that just want good in the world,\" she says.\n\nShe hopes that the book's publication will help to \"redeem the LeBaron name,\" which remains one of the most infamous in American criminal history.\n\nBut it is also an attempt to reassert her own identity, for so long suppressed by the cult and her father's malevolent legacy.\n\n\"Even though that life could have crushed who I am, in my spirit, in my soul, that has not been the last story,\" she says.\n\n\"So I kind of get to have the final word here, in saying, 'This is who I am.'\"\n\nThe Polygamist's Daughter, by Anna Le Baron with Leslie Wilson, is published on 21 March\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby League\n\nWarrington Wolves achieved the first win for an English club over Australian opponents since 2012 as they beat Brisbane Broncos in the first match of the 2017 World Club Series.\n\nKevin Brown excelled on his Wire debut, scoring a try in the second minute.\n\nRyan Atkins and Matty Russell helped the hosts into a 20-0 lead and Tom Lineham also crossed before half-time.\n\nDeclan Patton added 11 points with the boot, while Corey Oates, James Roberts and David Mead replied for Brisbane.\n\nLeeds' World Club Challenge win over Manly five years earlier had been the last time a northern hemisphere side had beaten one of their NRL counterparts, and Super League clubs had lost all six matches since the expanded World Club Series began in 2015.\n\nSuper League champions Wigan Warriors host NRL Grand Final winners Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks in the World Club Challenge on Sunday (15:00 GMT).\n\nBrisbane, coached by England boss Wayne Bennett, do not begin their league season until 2 March and a lack of match practice appeared to contribute to their slow start, for which they were clinically punished.\n\nWarrington made the perfect start when Joe Westerman raced 60 metres after charging down a kick and Brown, a winter signing from local rivals Widnes, darted over after Westerman had been hauled down short of the line.\n\nLast season's beaten Super League finalists were 20-0 up after 19 minutes as Atkins powered over and Russell showed neat footwork to evade three Brisbane defenders.\n\nOates went over acrobatically in the corner for the Broncos but winger Lineham's score for Warrington, given after consultation with the video referee, helped the Wire to an 18-point lead at half-time.\n\nBrisbane improved after the break and Roberts' 80-metre dash for a try gave the Australian side some heart, but Patton's drop goal and a fifth successful kick from the tee established a three-score advantage which was rarely threatened.\n\n\"We wanted to get Super League off to a good start. Not too many people gave us a chance but we know the belief in our squad and it was good to put a good performance out.\n\n\"I felt like our ball control was good, especially in that first 20 minutes, and our kicking game was great. That's a great way to kick-start our year.\n\n\"We wish Wigan and Cronulla all the best for Sunday. I had 11 or 12 great seasons in the NRL and I love that competition. May the best team win, but hopefully people will look a little bit differently at Super League after that result.\"", "Unilever is behind some of Britain's best-known brands\n\nUK-based household goods maker Unilever has rejected a takeover bid of about $143bn (£115bn), one of the biggest in corporate history, from US giant Kraft Heinz.\n\nThe deal - if it was to eventually succeed - would be the biggest acquisition of a British company on record, based on offer value.\n\nSteve Clayton, fund manager at Hargreaves Lansdown, said such a deal would create enormous cost savings.\n\n\"Putting portfolios of brands together can create huge synergies across marketing, manufacturing and distribution, even before you think about cutting the combined HQ back to size,\" he said.\n\n\"Kraft Heinz are attempting a massive push on the fast forward button, for to acquire the sheer scale of brands that Unilever represents through one-off acquisitions could take decades.\n\n\"With debt cheap and abundant right now, Kraft have spotted their opportunity.\"\n\nGlobally, it would be the second-biggest deal behind Vodafone Airtouch's takeover of Germany's Mannesmann AG for $172bn (£138bn) in 1999.\n\nUnilever announced last month that annual pre-tax profit rose to 7.47bn euro (£6.3bn) from 7.2bn euro (£6.1bn) last year, but revenues dropped 1% to 52.7bn euros (£44.7bn), while underlying sales rose by a lower-than-expected 3.7%.\n\nUnilever clashed with supermarket Tesco in October over its attempts to raise prices to compensate for the steep drop in the value of the pound.\n\nWilliam Hesketh Lever, founder of Lever Brothers, wrote down his ideas for Sunlight Soap in the 1890s.\n\nIt was \"to make cleanliness commonplace; to lessen work for women; to foster health and contribute to personal attractiveness, that life may be more enjoyable and rewarding for the people who use our products\".\n\nIn 1887, William Lever bought the site where Port Sunlight would be built, a large factory on the banks of the Mersey opposite Liverpool with a purpose-built village for its workers providing a high standard of housing, amenities and leisure facilities.\n\nLever Brothers and Dutch business Margarine Unie signed an agreement to create Unilever in 1929.\n\nKraft merged with Heinz in 2015 to create one of the US's biggest food companies.\n• None Marmite owner: 'No merit' in US takeover\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "28 January: President Trump (left) speaks to Vladimir Putin on the White House phone\n\nFor several months, the pro-Kremlin media had nothing but praise for Donald Trump.\n\nDuring the US election campaign, Russian state TV bulletins and pro-government newspapers portrayed him as some kind of David taking on the Goliath of a \"corrupt… Russia-hating\" Washington elite. They welcomed his calls for warmer US-Russian relations. They played down some of his more outlandish comments.\n\nIt was almost as if a US presidential candidate, and subsequently a new US president, had become the golden boy of Russian politics. In January he even received more mentions in the Russian media than President Vladimir Putin.\n\nOn Friday, Russia's most popular tabloid, Komsomolskaya Pravda, accused President Trump of making \"contradictory\" statements about Nato.\n\nThe paper points out: \"(During the election campaign) Trump had called the Alliance obsolete and useless. Less than two months have passed since he moved into the Oval Office and he's already expressed full support for Nato.\n\n\"As the saying goes, you need to be drunk to understand the true position of America's president.\"\n\nFriday's edition of the Russian government paper, Rossiyskaya Gazeta, notes: \"Recently the White House has been making many contradictory and incompatible statements about the foreign policy direction of Trump's team, including issues that affect Russia's interests.\"\n\nReporting Thursday's meeting in Bonn between Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and the new US Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson, the paper emphasises \"it was obvious how tense and, at the same time, confused Tillerson looked\".\n\nUS Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (left) and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met in Bonn on Thursday\n\nAnd with President Trump under sustained pressure back home over alleged links to Russia, the business daily Vedomosti doubts he will have \"flexibility… in talks with Russia.\n\n\"Every step he takes, particularly any concessions, will be examined under a microscope. It's even hard to believe now that there ever was a window of opportunity (to improve relations) that made it seem worth raising our glasses and toasting Trump's victory.\"\n\nIn recent days there has been noticeably less Trump on Russian TV.\n\nThe resignation of the president's national security adviser Michael Flynn on Tuesday may have made headlines around the world. But it was not mentioned in Russian state TV's 45-minute evening news bulletin. That is extraordinary, considering that Russia was central to the story.\n\nDecember 2015: Gen Flynn (left) sits next to President Putin at a dinner in Moscow\n\nThere are reports that state television has been instructed to scale back its coverage of the US president. The Kremlin has dismissed these as \"rumours\".\n\n\"I was told by someone closely connected to one of Russia's main state TV companies that such instructions exist and were issued in the wake of Flynn's departure,\" says Konstantin Eggert, a political commentator for the independent channel TV Rain.\n\n\"As far as I know, the idea is not so much to present him in a negative light, but to scale down coverage of the United States in general. Inevitably I think there's going to be a scaling down of positive coverage of Trump, too. The Kremlin's idea is to reduce expectations from this much-anticipated detente between Moscow and Washington.\"\n\n\"Everything's a muddle in the White House\", says Moskovsky Komsomolets\n\nPresident Putin's spokesman told the BBC reports of Kremlin meddling were \"absolute rubbish\" and \"fake news\".\n\n\"TV channels and the Russian media have total independence to decide their own editorial policy,\" Dmitry Peskov told me.\n\nI asked him whether he thought it was odd that Russian TV channels appeared to have reduced their coverage of Mr Trump.\n\n\"To be honest, we don't study so closely the proportions in which different stories are reported,\" he replied.\n\nLast November one Russian official admitted to me having celebrated Mr Trump's victory - with a cigar and bottle of champagne.\n\nSo why has the champagne gone flat?\n\nJudging by the angry reaction of senior Russian politicians, Moscow was disappointed by Michael Flynn's departure. The Trump adviser had championed closer US-Russian ties.\n\nThen came White House comments about Crimea, making clear that President Trump expects Russia to return the annexed peninsula to Ukraine.\n\nTo Russia it seemed a sudden 180-degree turn. During the election campaign Donald Trump had told ABC television: \"The people of Crimea, from what I've heard, would rather be with Russia than where they were.\"\n\nAnd on Thursday senior members of the Trump administration sounded less than enthusiastic about the idea of a rapprochement with Moscow.\n\nUS Defence Secretary James Mattis said Washington was \"not in a position right now to co-operate on the military level… Russia's aggressive actions have violated international law and are destabilising.\"\n\nUS Secretary of State Rex Tillerson indicated that America \"will consider working with Russia\". That is hardly a ringing endorsement.\n\nYet Donald Trump has made it clear he still believes a better relationship with Vladimir Putin and Russia is good for America. Could he once again becoming the American darling of the Russian media?\n\nThat will partly depend on whether the two presidents can strike up a good relationship when they eventually meet.\n\nBut it depends, too, on how much pressure President Trump will be under by then, over his team's alleged Russian connections.", "Think fake news is a new phenomenon? Think again. Dr David Clarke from Sheffield Hallam University looks at a 100-year-old story that fooled the world.\n\nFake news, false stories that masquerade as real news are not new.\n\nIn the spring of 1917 some of Britain's most influential newspapers published a gruesome story that has been called \"the master hoax\" - and I think we finally have proof about where it came from.\n\nBritain was at the time trying to bring China into the war on the Allied side.\n\nIn February a story appeared in the English-language North China Daily News that claimed the Kaiser's forces were \"extracting glycerine out of dead soldiers\".\n\nRumours about processing dead bodies had been in circulation since 1915 but had not been presented as facts by any official source.\n\nThat changed in April when the Times and the Daily Mail published accounts from anonymous sources who claimed to have visited the Kadaververwertungsanstalt, or corpse-utilisation factory.\n\nThe Times ran the story under the headline Germans and their Dead, attributing the claim to two sources - a Belgian newspaper published in England and a story that originally appeared in a German newspaper, Berliner Lokal-Anzeiger on 10 April.\n\nThat German account by reporter Kal Rosner described an unpleasant smell \"as if lime was being burnt\" as he passed the corpse factory.\n\nRosner used the word \"kadaver\", which referred to the bodies of animals - horses and mules - not human bodies.\n\nLater, The Times carried a longer article quoting from an unnamed Belgian source who described in grim detail how the corpses were processed.\n\nA cartoon published soon afterwards by Punch presented the ghoulish story with the caption \"cannon fodder - and after\".\n\nThe German government protested loudly against these \"loathsome and ridiculous\" claims.\n\nBut their protests were drowned out by public expressions of horror from the Chinese ambassador. China declared war against Germany on 14 August 1917.\n\nHowever, until now no one has been able to discover conclusive proof that would settle the mystery of who created the story - and who authorised its transformation from a false rumour to officially-sanctioned \"fact\". I believe we now can.\n\nIt was in 1925 that Sir Austen Chamberlain admitted, in a Commons statement, there was \"never any foundation\" for what he called \"this false report\".\n\nIn the same year the Conservative MP John Charteris - who served as head of intelligence - reportedly admitted, while on a lecture tour of the US, that he had fabricated the story.\n\nThe New York Times revealed how Charteris said he had transposed captions from one of two photographs found on captured German soldiers. One showed a train taking dead horses to be rendered, the other showed a train taking dead soldiers for burial.\n\nThe photo of the horses had the word \"cadaver\" written upon it and Charteris reportedly said he \"had the caption transposed to the picture showing the German dead, and had the photograph sent to a Chinese newspaper in Shanghai\".\n\nOn his return to Britain, Charteris denied making the remarks. Since that time, no one has been able to discover the photographs or any clear documentary evidence that would prove the intelligence services connived with the press to promote the corpse factory lie.\n\nCuttings from the Times, Daily Mail and Daily Express reporting the \"corpse factory\"\n\nBut I have found what I believe to be one of the photographs mentioned by Charteris in a collection of Foreign Office files at The National Archives.\n\nThe black and white image, dated 17 September 1917, clearly shows bodies of German soldiers, tied in bundles, resting on a train behind the front line just as Charteris had described in 1925.\n\nThe covering letter, from a military intelligence officer at Whitehall, is addressed to the government's Director of Information, Lt Col John Buchan, author of The 39 Steps. The letter from MI7, the military's propaganda unit, offers the War Office \"a photograph of Kadavers, forwarded by General Charteris for propaganda purposes\".\n\nIn 1917 MI7 employed 13 officers and 25 paid writers, some whom moonlighted as \"special correspondents\" for national newspapers. One of their most talented agents was Major Hugh Pollard who combined his work in the propaganda department with the role of special correspondent for the Daily Express.\n\nAfter the war Pollard confessed his role in spreading the corpse factory lie to his cousin, Ivor Montague.\n\nWriting in 1970, Montague recalled \"we laughed at his cleverness when he told us how his department had launched the account of the German corpse factories and of how the Hun was using the myriads of trench-war casualties for making soap and margarine.\"\n\nBut lies have consequences. During the 1930s the corpse factory lie was used by the Nazis as proof of British lies during the Great War.\n\nHistorians Joachim Neander and Randal Marlin remind us how these false stories \"encouraged later disbelief when early reports circulated about the Holocaust under Hitler\".", "The Oscar-nominated film Hidden Figures tells the story of African-American women whose maths skills helped put a US astronaut into orbit in the 1960s. But the history of black women working for Nasa goes back much further - and they were still struggling to get the best jobs in the 1970s.\n\nIn 1943, two years after the US joined World War Two, Miriam Daniel Mann was 36 years old. She had three children, aged six, seven and eight - but she also had a Chemistry degree.\n\nJob opportunities for married women were limited then, especially for those with children, and even more so for African-American women.\n\nBut as men went off to war, there was a skill shortage in vital industries. The president signed an executive order allowing black people to be employed in the defence sector for the first time, and Nasa's predecessor, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), started looking for black women to work on mathematical calculations.\n\nThrough her husband, a college professor, Mann heard about the recruiters visiting black college campuses. She registered to take an exam, passed it, and became one of the first black women to work as a \"human computer\" at the NACA aeronautics research facility at Langley in Virginia.\n\nThese were the days before the machines we now know as computers were available to crunch numbers - and when they were invented, they took their name from the humans who had done the job before them.\n\nMiriam Mann's daughter, Miriam Mann Harris, wrote in 2011: \"My early memories are of my mother talking about doing math problems all day. Back then all of the math was done with a #2 pencil and the aid of a slide rule... She would relate stories about the 'colored' sign on a table in the back of the cafeteria. She brought the first one home, but there was a replacement the next day. New signs went up on the bathroom door, 'colored girls'.\"\n\nMann's granddaughter, Duchess Harris - a professor at Macalester College and co-author of Hidden Human Computers, the Black Women of Nasa - points out that Mann was born in 1907, only half a century after the end of slavery.\n\nBut there had been a big drive to educate African Americans, most of whom had been illiterate before emancipation, Harris says, so by the 1940s there was a pool of talented black women with maths and science degrees waiting to be employed.\n\nThanks to them - and to white women, who had been employed as computers since the 1930s - male engineers could spend more time theorising and writing equations.\n\n\"After the war in most industries the women were sent home again,\" says Bill Barry, Nasa's chief historian. \"But in the computing business that didn't happen. In fact, Nasa started hiring more women, in large part because of the quantity of work going on.\"\n\nOften jobs were held open for women to come back to after having a child.\n\n\"A skilled computer was an incredibly valuable resource,\" he says.\n\nAt Langley, in the 1940s and 1950s the women were split into two pools - the East computing unit for white women, and the West computing unit for black women. This segregation had been a requirement of Virginia state law, says Barry.\n\nFor most of the 50s, a woman called Dorothy Vaughan was the supervisor in charge of West Computing - she is one of the main characters in the film Hidden Figures.\n\nWhen tasks from the engineers came in, she would allocate the work and show her team what they needed to do.\n\n\"Dorothy Vaughan would take the equation and break it into sections and tell you how to solve that equation in small parts. Tell you which columns you multiply, which ones you add,\" says Christine Darden, who started working for Nasa in 1967. \"By the time you have followed all her directions across you would have the solution.\"\n\nBy the time Darden joined, the women were no longer in separate pools and had been allocated to specific engineering sections.\n\nChristine Darden learned to programme the new IBM computers\n\nShe had fallen in love with maths as a teenager, but when she told her father she wanted to study it at college, he didn't like the idea. He could not see a career path.\n\n\"My father insisted I get a degree in teacher education because during that time black females generally didn't get very many jobs in math,\" says Darden. \"He told me I had to be able to teach so I could get a job.\"\n\nDarden listened to her father, but as she was determined to follow her passion she took extra maths classes and even carried on studying for a Master's while teaching. One day at college she was handed an application form for Nasa, and a few weeks later she was offered a job in one of their computer offices.\n\nWhile most of the women were still carrying out their tasks using spreadsheets and a calculator, she was among a growing number who learned to programme the new IBM computers. These were capable of doing laborious calculations in a fraction of the time it took a human.\n\nWhen Darden was given an equation to solve, she would work out the different steps required, and then write a program telling the computer each step, by punching holes in a card that would be fed into the machine.\n\n\"We had a card punch in our office. I would punch the cards. I would take the cards over to the building that had the computer and they had people who would run the program.\"\n\nThe work that these women did from the 1940s onwards was essential for Nasa's work, but their names didn't appear on research papers.\n\nKatherine Johnson calculated the trajectory for Alan Shepard, the first American in space\n\nSlowly, however, some of these highly educated and intelligent women started to make their way into more advanced roles.\n\nThe film Hidden Figures features a woman named Katherine Johnson who helped work out the trajectories to launch the first American into orbit around the planet.\n\nAnother is Mary Jackson who fought for the right to be an engineer in her own right.\n\nMary Jackson became Nasa's first black female engineer in 1958\n\nBut years later, Christine Darden, with her Masters degree, still had to struggle to be treated as an equal to the male engineers.\n\n\"When I found out that the engineers were doing very theoretical engineering - sitting at their desk working with equations, I decided that was what I wanted to do,\" she says.\n\nHer manager told her it wasn't possible.\n\nBut in 1972, as funding for the space programme was scaled back, Christine feared she was about to be made redundant.\n\n\"That gave me the incentive to go to a higher-level boss and ask why men were assigned to engineering sections to do their own projects - write the paper, give the paper - but the females were assigned to the computer pools to do the calculating as a support role.\"\n\nIt worked - Christine was allocated to an engineering team that was studying planes flying faster than the speed of sound. She studied ways to minimise sonic booms which are caused by planes travelling at such speeds.\n\nBy the time she retired in 2007, as a Nasa senior executive, she had published more than 50 papers.\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Earlier this month posters criticising the Pope sprang up across Rome, and a spoof news story mocking the pontiff was sent to the city's cardinals. Christopher Lamb asks what it's all about.\n\nI was shocked when I saw them.\n\nI was sitting just a few rows behind a nun on a tram, when it stopped alongside some posters of a stern-looking Pope Francis. Underneath his glum, almost menacing face, was a list of complaints: he'd removed priests, ignored the concerns of cardinals and \"decapitated\" an ancient Catholic group, the Knights of Malta.\n\nThis is the opposite of what I have come to expect in Rome. The tram was winding through a part of the city where you're normally greeted by images of a smiling Pope, with arms outstretched or making a thumbs up.\n\nHere in Italy the papacy is the closest thing there is to a monarchy, so perhaps it is no surprise that the city authorities ordered the offending text to be pasted over, leaving just the grim-faced image of Francis and a sign reading: \"Illegal bill posting\".\n\nAt roughly the same time the posters were plastered around the city's walls, cardinals in Rome were opening their email inboxes to find a \"fake\" front page of the Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano. It had the traditional Latin motto which sits on the paper's masthead beneath a papal coat of arms, and a list of questions sent to the Pope by a group of conservative cardinals, with the answer, in each case, \"Sic et non!\" - \"Yes and no!\"\n\nThis is the Pope being trolled on his home turf - and what's more, in Latin.\n\nWhile Francis enjoys huge popularity among many ordinary Catholics he's facing resistance to his shake-up of the Vatican and he's infuriating believers from the Church's more traditional wing. The main source of tension has been - yes - sex. Francis wants to give communion to divorcees who have married again; his opponents say this undermines the Church's teaching on marriage, because second unions are adulterous. The questions shown on the spoof front page were all on this subject.\n\nAt the forefront of the opposition to Pope Francis is an American Cardinal, Raymond Burke, a stickler for the rules who once told John Kerry, when he was a presidential candidate, that he could not receive communion because of his previous support for abortion.\n\nCardinal Burke has dedicated much of his life to studying the church's laws, and he wants to ensure they are enforced. He believes this Pope is tinkering dangerously with Christianity's 2,000-year-old tradition and has even threatened to issue an \"act of correction\" against Francis. This would be a very bold, highly unusual move - it hasn't happened for centuries.\n\nThe cardinal lives in a large flat just off the grand thoroughfare built by Mussolini that leads into St Peter's Square from the River Tiber. It is here that he runs his operation for promoting what he calls \"doctrinal clarity\".\n\nCustom and ceremony are held in high regard. When I visited to interview him I was shown past a cardinal's red hat sitting enclosed in a glass case, as if it was a holy relic, and then into a drawing room with high-backed chairs, where we waited in anticipation for the grand entrance. Sitting alongside me was his press adviser, who greeted the cardinal by kneeling and kissing the gold ring on the ring finger of his hand, the traditional sign of respect given to a prince of the church.\n\nBy contrast, when I have met Pope Francis - as a member of the Vatican press corps - we shake hands, and I can't help noticing that he looks slightly uncomfortable when people go down on one knee before him.\n\nThe word in Rome is that the posters were the work of a right-wing group that dislikes the Pope's appeals for Europe to be more welcoming of immigrants. Once again, Cardinal Burke appears to be on the other side of the argument - he recently met the leader of the anti-immigration Northern League - but there is no evidence that he lies behind the posters, or the spoof news story. There are many conservative Catholics who are uncomfortable with some of Pope Francis's changes.\n\nThe Pope's decision to live in a Vatican guest house, carry his own brief case and be driven around in a Ford Focus has burst the balloon of papal pomp. Some regard this freewheeling approach as \"un-papal\", and resent his description of those on the traditional wing of the church as \"rigid\".\n\nSo far the Pope has shrugged off the criticisms.\n\n\"I'm not on tranquillisers,\" he joked recently. His way of dealing with the stress, he explained, is to jot down problems and place the notes under a figure of a sleeping St Joseph. St Joseph, the carpenter, is the figure Catholics turn to when facing practical difficulties. \"Now he is sleeping on a mattress of letters!\" Francis added.\n\nThe trouble is that the Pope's job is to be the rock of church unity. Alarm bells start ringing when a papacy becomes divisive. While Francis has been hugely successful in reaching out to lost sheep, he runs the risk of alienating those already in the fold.\n\nThe Pope has admitted that \"cracks\" are appearing between bishops and priests - rifts that if left untreated could develop into bigger problems. There may well be more papal trolling ahead.\n\nChristopher Lamb is Vatican correspondent for The Tablet\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Scientists are calling for more people to donate their brains to research to help find cures for mental and psychological disorders.", "The Daily Telegraph carries claims from senior Whitehall sources that Russia plotted to assassinate the prime minister of Montenegro and overthrow its government last year.\n\nMontenegro's PM Milo Djukanovic is said to have been the targeted on election day last October\n\nIt is claimed the plot was designed to sabotage Montenegro's attempts to join Nato and was foiled \"only hours\" before being carried out.\n\nThe paper says British and American intelligence agencies have gathered evidence of \"high-level Russian complicity\" - but the Kremlin has denied any involvement.\n\nA leaked document seen by the Observer suggests the EU is concerned that millions of EU nationals from other countries living in the UK will be \"stranded in a legal no-man's land\" after Brexit because of weaknesses in Britain's immigration system.\n\nThe report - drawn up by MEPs - argues the Home Office doesn't have the information or systems in place to select who can stay once Britain leaves.\n\nThe lead story in the Mail on Sunday claims the head of the police force investigating allegations of historical sexual abuse against Sir Edward Heath is convinced the former prime minister was a paedophile.\n\nWiltshire's Chief Constable Mike Veale is said to regard the claims as \"120% genuine\" and plans to publish a report in June.\n\nSir Edward died in 2005, and the Sir Edward Heath Charitable Foundation has previously said it is confident he will be cleared of any wrongdoing.\n\nWiltshire Police declined to comment on the story but said its chief constable had previously stated it was his job to ensure the probe was \"proportionate, measured, legal and necessary\".\n\nA head teacher in Oldham has raised fears of a new \"Trojan Horse plot\" to take over her school, according to the Sunday Times.\n\nShe is said to have emailed her local authority in December to report a campaign of intimidation against school staff, and to highlight concerns about the activities of a Muslim former parent governor.\n\nThe lead story in the Sunday Express says children as young as five are calling a helpline to be read bedtime stories because their parents are too drunk to tuck them in at night.\n\nThe paper's editorial argues it's a \"national scandal\" that so little has been done to help the estimated two-and-a-half million children who live with an alcoholic parent.\n\nIt says it is \"even more tragic\" that no local authority appears to have a strategy to deal with the problem.\n\nThe Sunday Mirror claims a convicted rapist who is alleged to have won a lottery jackpot of £2.5m with a fraudulent ticket carried out a \"dry run\" of the suspected scam.\n\nHe is said to have shown friends a faked ticket in 2009 - five months before he claimed the prize money.\n\nThe Mirror says he has refused to comment on the fraud allegations that have been made against him, and police investigated the case but decided to take no action.\n\nThe Mirror's editorial argues the Gambling Commission probe into the payout was covered up, and calls for this latest evidence to be investigated as part of an inquiry by MPs because, it says, \"a parliamentary report cannot be covered up\".\n\nMeanwhile, Justice Minister Liz Truss has told the Sun on Sunday that prisons must stop acting as offender warehouses and rehabilitate inmates instead.\n\nShe says she is determined to get a grip of the \"epidemic of reoffending\" so will change the law this week to make reforming offenders a \"key aim\" of prison.\n\nAccording to the paper, seven months in the job \"have convinced Ms Truss of the enormity of the task\", after violence in prisons hit a 10-year high under her watch.\n\nAnd Lincoln City's win in the FA Cup yesterday - making them the first non-league side to reach the quarter final stage of the competition for over a century - allows the headline writers to come up with a plethora of puns, using the club's nickname, The Imps.\n\nThe Sunday Telegraph says Lincoln's feat will have repercussions \"long beyond this season\" as the club's financial future is now secure \"for many years to come\".", "Father-of-three Ray Woodhall survived 27 heart attacks in 24 hours. He first became ill during a game of \"walking football\".\n\nHe was taken to hospital, where two stents were put in his main artery, but then he began to suffer multiple heart attacks.\n\nThe 54-year-old told 5 live he thought he had been asleep but had actually gone into arrest and had to be resuscitated: “I was apologising to the staff for falling asleep and they said ‘you’ve not been asleep, we had to arrest you, you’d gone.’”\n\nThis clip is originally from 5 live Breakfast on Saturday 18 February 2017.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. \"My own darling boy\" - a greeting in one of the letters\n\nWhile on military training during World War Two, Gilbert Bradley was in love. He exchanged hundreds of letters with his sweetheart - who merely signed with the initial \"G\". But more than 70 years later, it was discovered that G stood for Gordon, and Gilbert had been in love with a man.\n\nAt the time, not only was homosexuality illegal, but those in the armed forces could be shot for having gay sex.\n\nThe letters, which emerged after Mr Bradley's death in 2008, are therefore unusual and shed an important light on homosexual relationships during the war.\n\nWhat do we know about this forbidden love affair?\n\n... I lie awake all night waiting for the postman in the early morning, and then when he does not bring anything from you I just exist, a mass of nerves...\n\nInformation gleaned from the letters indicate Mr Bradley was a reluctant soldier. He did not want to be in the Army, and even pretended to have epilepsy to avoid it.\n\nHis ruse did not work, though, and in 1939 he was stationed at Park Hall Camp in Oswestry, Shropshire, to train as an anti-aircraft gunner.\n\nHe was already in love with Gordon Bowsher. The pair had met on a houseboat holiday in Devon in 1938 when Mr Bowsher was in a relationship with Mr Bradley's nephew.\n\nMr Bowsher was from a well-to-do family. His father ran a shipping company, and the Bowshers also owned tea plantations.\n\nWhen war broke out a year later he trained as an infantryman and was stationed at locations across the country.\n\nThere is nothing more than I desire in life but to have you with me constantly...\n\n...I can see or I imagine I can see, what your mother and father's reaction would be... the rest of the world have no conception of what our love is - they do not know that it is love...\n\nBut life as a homosexual in the 1940s was incredibly difficult. Gay activity was a court-martial offence, jail sentences for so-called \"gross indecency\" were common, and much of society strongly disapproved of same-sex relationships.\n\nIt was not until the Sexual Offences Act 1967 that consenting men aged 21 and over were legally allowed to have gay relationships - and being openly gay in the armed services was not allowed until 2000.\n\nThe letters, which emerged after Mr Bradley's death in 2008, are rare because most homosexual couples would get rid of anything so incriminating, says gay rights activist Peter Roscoe.\n\nIn one letter Mr Bowsher urges his lover to \"do one thing for me in deadly seriousness. I want all my letters destroyed. Please darling do this for me. Til then and forever I worship you.\"\n\nMr Roscoe says the letters are inspiring in their positivity.\n\n\"There is a gay history and it isn't always negative and tearful,\" he says. \"So many stories are about arrests - Oscar Wilde, Reading Gaol and all those awful, awful stories.\n\n\"But despite all the awful circumstances, gay men and lesbians managed to rise above it all and have fascinating and good lives despite everything.\"\n\nFor years I had it drummed into me that no love could last for life...\n\nI want you darling seriously to delve into your own mind, and to look for once in to the future.\n\nImagine the time when the war is over and we are living together... would it not be better to live on from now on the memory of our life together when it was at its most golden pitch.\n\nBut was this a love story with a happy ending?\n\nProbably not. At one point, Mr Bradley was sent to Scotland on a mission to defend the Forth Bridge. He met and fell in love with two other men. Rather surprisingly, he wrote and told Mr Bowsher all about his romances north of the border. Perhaps even more surprisingly, Mr Bowsher took it all in his stride, writing that he \"understood why they fell in love with you. After all, so did I\".\n\nAlthough the couple wrote throughout the war, the letters stopped in 1945.\n\nHowever, both went on to enjoy interesting lives.\n\nMr Bowsher moved to California and became a well-known horse trainer. In a strange twist, he employed Sirhan Sirhan, who would go on to be convicted of assassinating Robert Kennedy.\n\nMr Bradley was briefly entangled with the MP Sir Paul Latham, who was imprisoned in 1941 following a court martial for \"improper conduct\" with three gunners and a civilian. Sir Paul was exposed after some \"indiscreet letters\" were discovered.\n\nMr Bradley moved to Brighton and died in 2008. A house clearance company found the letters and sold them to a dealer specialising in military mail.\n\nThe letters were finally bought by Oswestry Town Museum, when curator Mark Hignett was searching on eBay for items connected with the town.\n\nHe bought just three at first, and says the content led him to believe a fond girlfriend or fiancé was the sender. There were queries about bed sheets, living conditions - and their dreams for their future life together.\n\nGilbert Bradley was stationed at Park Hall Camp in Oswestry in 1939\n\nWhen he spotted there were more for sale, he snapped them up too - and on transcribing the letters for a display in the museum, Mr Hignett and his colleagues discovered the truth. The \"girlfriend\" was a boyfriend.\n\nThe revelation piqued Mr Hignett's interest - he describes his experience as being similar to reading a book and finding the last page ripped out: \"I just had to keep buying the letters to find out what happened next.\"\n\nAlthough he's spent \"thousands of pounds\" on the collection of more than 600 letters, he believes in terms of historical worth the correspondence is \"invaluable\".\n\n\"Such letters are extremely rare because they were incriminating - gay men faced years in prison with or without hard labour,\" he says. \"There was even the possibility that gay soldiers could have been shot.\"\n\nWork on a book is already under way at the museum, where the letters will also go on display.\n\nPerhaps most poignantly, one of the letters contains the lines:\n\n\"Wouldn't it be wonderful if all our letters could be published in the future in a more enlightened time. Then all the world could see how in love we are.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLincoln achieved a \"football miracle\" as they knocked out Burnley on a dramatic day of FA Cup fifth-round action, with 10-man Millwall beating Premier League champions Leicester.\n\nThe Imps became the first non-league side in 103 years to reach the last eight with their win over the Clarets.\n\n\"Football at our level is not romantic and this moment in the limelight is special,\" Imps boss Danny Cowley said.\n\n\"It was a one in 100 chance and thankfully we got that opportunity.\"\n\nIt is the first time in Lincoln's 133-year history that they have reached the quarter-finals.\n\n\"It's a football miracle for a non-league team to be in the last eight. The boys were excellent, playing against a Premier League team,\" Cowley said after the 1-0 win.\n• None Reaction and coverage of the FA Cup fifth round\n• None Don't miss out on the FA People's Cup 2017\n• None Listen - Lincoln win 'will go down in history of The FA Cup'\n\n\"The last eight of the FA Cup sounds pretty good. We work hard and we are mightily proud of the players.\"\n\nCowley appeared as a guest on Match of the Day on Saturday night and said: \"It is a great day for us and the football club. I am immensely proud of the players and they probably do not understand what they have achieved.\n\n\"We are in North Ferriby on Tuesday night. It becomes a harder game on the back on this win. It will be good to go back to proper football.\"\n\nCowley's assistant manager, his brother Nicky, was also on the show and said: \"It has not sunk in. I definitely think the magic of the cup is still alive where we live. If it's a football miracle, then we will take that.\"\n\nThe quarter-final draw will take place at 18:30 GMT on Sunday and can be seen on the BBC News channel and the BBC Sport website, with commentary on BBC Radio 5 live.\n\nHow big an achievement is this?\n\nLincoln are the National League leaders but there are 81 places between them and Burnley in the football pyramid.\n\nThis is the first time that two non-league teams have reached the FA Cup fifth round since 1888.\n\nTheir determination and ability to frustrate Burnley ensured that Sean Raggett's 89th-minute header saw the side become the first non-league team since Queens Park Rangers in 1914 to make the quarter-finals.\n\nThe historic victory, celebrated jubilantly by the players and travelling fans, means the Imps are the first non-league side since Telford in 1985, and only the third ever, to knock out four league clubs in a single season.\n\n\"It is a game that will go down in history. Every Lincoln player is a hero,\" former Chelsea winger Pat Nevin told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"Lincoln are deservedly through, not just for effort but the skill and bravery. They knew they were good enough and didn't give up.\"\n• None Lincoln win 'will go down in history of The FA Cup'\n\n'We took inspiration from Lincoln'\n\nLeague One side Millwall followed in Lincoln's footsteps and added to Leicester's woes as they consigned the Foxes to their first FA Cup defeat by a side from the third tier or lower since they were knocked out by Wycombe Wanderers in 2001.\n\nThe reigning Premier League champions, who were beaten 1-0 and face Sevilla in the Champions League on Wednesday, are in danger of relegation after five successive defeats left them one place and one point above the bottom three.\n\n\"When a team from League One beats the champions we say 'why?' and have to react as soon as possible,\" Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri said. \"We are better than Millwall but Millwall deserved to win.\"\n\nMillwall had already beaten Premier League sides Bournemouth and Watford on their way to the fifth round and victory secured their place in the last eight for the third time in 32 seasons.\n\n\"We took inspiration from what Lincoln have done. What they achieved today outshines us,\" Millwall manager Neil Harris said.\n\n\"I thought the atmosphere was electric. The noise was phenomenal. These are special days for us.\"\n\nMatch of the Day pundit John Hartson said: \"Millwall actually improved when they went down to 10 men. Neil Harris made a good change, bringing on another striker Lee Gregory, and he set up the winner. It was a really, really brave substitution.\"\n\nIt was a strong day for sides facing Premier League opposition, with Huddersfield Town forcing a replay against Manchester City despite the Terriers making seven changes to their side.\n\nCity's starting line-up included Sergio Aguero but they were forced to settle for a goalless draw.\n\nFellow Premier League side Middlesbrough were also pushed by League One's Oxford United. Boro made six changes to the side that drew with Everton last time out but it took substitute Cristhian Stuani's strike four minutes from time to ensure their place in the quarter-finals.\n\nChelsea had the most comfortable win, beating Championship side Wolves 2-0 with second-half goal from Pedro and Diego Costa.\n\nIn a scrappy and, at times, tense game, it was Raggett's header that beat Tom Heaton to secure Lincoln's place in the last eight.\n\nThe 23-year-old, who said in 2012 that he one day hoped to play against Burnley's Joey Barton, has scored five times in 30 appearances for the Imps this season.\n\n\"It's crazy, a non-league side in the quarter-finals in modern football, it's unheard of,\" Raggett told BT Sport.\n\n\"They're a top quality side, drew with Chelsea last week, it's amazing. We had massive belief, we didn't come to draw, we came to win the game.\"\n\n\"Thank god for goalline technology. We don't have it at our level so I'm not sure the goal would have been given in the National League,\" Cowley added, after seeing Raggett's header marginally cross the line.\n\nLincoln frustrated Burnley throughout the game, with striker Matt Rhead and Barton often outmuscling one another as tensions grew in the final minutes.\n\n\"It is something you dream of as a kid. We went toe-to-toe with a Premier League team,\" Rhead said.\n\n\"It is unbelievable. When we started back in October it was a dream. I enjoyed every minute of it. The lads have done unbelievable.\"\n\n'We're unfortunately part of their fairytale'\n\nBurnley have not progressed to the sixth round of the FA Cup since 2002-03 and they were left frustrated at the final whistle.\n\nThey had the majority of possession in the first half but Raggett's header consigned them to only their fourth home defeat in their past 30 matches at Turf Moor.\n\n\"You have to work, be diligent and believe you will get another chance - I think they only had one chance, credit to them,\" Burnley manager Sean Dyche told BBC Sport.\n\n\"My team were nowhere near the level they can show. No excuses. We're unfortunately part of their fairytale.\"", "BBC TV presenter and lifelong Fulham fan Richard Osman reveals a number of fascinating facts about his beloved club, but are they truthful or 'fake news'?\n\nWatch live coverage of the FA Cup fifth round across BBC Sport this weekend - including Fulham v Tottenham live on BBC One on Sunday 19 February.", "Schools have been warning the prime minister that the sums for school budgets do not add up\n\nAfter the NHS and social care, is the next funding crisis going to be in England's schools?\n\nLike a snowball getting bigger as it rolls downhill, momentum is gathering around the warnings of school leaders about impending cash problems.\n\nHead teachers have said a lack of cash might force them to cut school hours.\n\nMinisters were forced by a Parliamentary question to reveal that more than half of academies lacked enough income to cover their expenditure.\n\nAnd school governors - the embodiment of local civic worthies - have threatened to go on strike for the first time, rather than sign off such underfunded budgets.\n\nPetitions and protest letters have been sent to MPs about cuts to jobs and school services - and warning letters from head teachers will have been sent home to alert parents.\n\nGrammar school head teachers have gone a step further and warned that parents might to have to pay to make up the shortfall.\n\nSchool leaders see themselves rather like look-outs on the Titanic shouting out that there's a great big iceberg ahead - backed by the National Audit Office's finding that schools face 8% real-term spending cuts, worth £3bn, by 2020.\n\nThe spending watchdog says costs for schools are outstripping the budgets allocated by the government.\n\nThe spending watchdog says schools will have to find £3bn in budget cuts\n\nThe missing piece in this debate has been any real sign of movement from the government - other than to keep repeating that school funding is at record levels.\n\nBut plenty will be going on behind the scenes, and there is no shortage of \"insiders\" with views on what's happening.\n\nIt's claimed that ministers can't sign a birthday card without getting clearance from 10 Downing Street.\n\nSo education ministers are unable to give any indication of funding changes, in part because a consultation is still taking place and more particularly because it isn't in their gift to decide.\n\nBut there are options thought to be under discussion.\n\nThe government has announced a new formula for allocating funding to schools, responding to years of complaints about regional inequalities.\n\nBut a number of Conservative MPs in rural and suburban areas have been energetically lobbying that this slicing up of the cake is still too much in favour of the inner cities.\n\nIf the formula was shifted around a little, such as putting less emphasis on deprivation, it could shift funding from London and the big cities towards the shires.\n\nThis would not have much electoral cost for the Conservatives as their support is not in these inner-city areas.\n\nBut it would be a big call in terms of political purpose to cut funding from areas of deprivation.\n\nAnother approach would be to start including pupil premium money - targeted at deprived children - into the general funding equation.\n\nThis really would mark the formal detonation of the last pillars of the Cameron and coalition era, for which the pupil premium was a moral touchstone.\n\nThere are other more creative possibilities.\n\nIt was revealed that of the money earmarked for the ill-fated plan turn all schools into academies, £384m had been taken back by the Treasury.\n\nHeads have protested to MPs at the decisions they face in making cuts\n\nThis £384m has been claimed as being enough to make sure that there are no losers in the funding formula shake-up.\n\nIf this cash could be \"rediscovered\" in a virtual shoebox in the Treasury, it could come back into play, getting the government off a funding hook - without actually having to find new money.\n\nThe apprenticeship levy, about to be introduced, has also been seen as a potential pot of money. The Institute for Fiscal Studies says by 2019-20 it will be raising £2.8bn from employers - but only £640m is set to be spent on apprenticeships.\n\nThe Department for Education has so far not been able to explain where the rest of this money might be heading.\n\nOf course, another option is that the government refuses to move and schools have to operate within their budgets.\n\nWhat would this mean in practice?\n\nTo take a real-life example shown to the BBC, what happens when a secondary school faces a shortfall of £350,000.\n\nThe only way to make such savings is to cut staff - heads and governing bodies will be making such tough decisions.\n\nWhich subject should they stop teaching? Which teachers should they make redundant? Should they get rid of counsellors for mental health problems? Should they merge classes? And who gets to lose out on the quality of their education?\n\nThere has always been a well-developed moaning culture in education, but there is no escaping the outrage among school leaders about the lack of political response to funding worries.\n\nThey were even more livid when they found that the government had found money to expand grammar schools - and have written angry letters asking which services they should cut in their own schools.\n\nThey see ministers and MPs rather like untrustworthy children who won't take responsibility for their decisions.\n\nThere is also brinkmanship on both sides. Will schools really send home children because of a lack of cash?\n\nAnd the government will worry that if they crack over schools, it would start a feeding frenzy of other demands on public spending.\n\nA Department for Education spokesman said that school funding is already at its highest level - more than £40bn for 2016-17.\n\nAnd the department says that it has grasped the nettle of introducing a long overdue national funding formula.\n\n\"Significant protections have also been built into the formula so that no school will face a reduction of more than more than 1.5% per pupil per year or 3% per pupil overall.\n\n\"But we recognise that schools are facing cost pressures, which is why we will continue to provide support to help them use their funding in cost effective ways, including improving the way they buy goods and services, so‎ they get the best possible value.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nCeltic restored a 27-point advantage at the top of the Scottish Premiership with victory over Motherwell.\n\nSubstitute Zak Jules, who had replaced Stephen McManus early on, fouled Moussa Dembele and the Frenchman scored the resulting penalty.\n\nDembele and Scott Sinclair threatened with further efforts for the hosts in the second half as they moved to within five wins of the title.\n\nBrendan Rodgers' side could have their lead cut to 24 again when nearest challengers Aberdeen visit Kilmarnock on Sunday but, with a far superior goal difference, Celtic could effectively win the league and secure a sixth straight title with 15 more points after clinching a 20th straight Premiership win.\n\nMotherwell slip to 10th - three points above the relegation play-off place.\n\nMotherwell's last visit to Celtic Park saw them frustrate the champions for long spells of the first half and so it was again in the east end of Glasgow.\n\nThe visitors had to suffer early frustration of their own, though, losing two experienced defenders from their starting XI before the game really got going.\n\nSteven Hammell pulled up with a hamstring problem before kick-off and was replaced by former Celtic youth player Joe Chalmers. And, five minutes into the game, Jules replaced McManus in central defence after the former Celtic captain had pulled up with what looked like a groin problem.\n\nIn response to their own adversity, the men in claret and amber packed their defence and Celtic struggled to create meaningful chances.\n\nManager Mark McGhee, sent to the stand during his side's 7-2 thumping at the hands of Aberdeen on Wednesday, sat passively but pleased as his men held Rodgers' side at bay.\n\nHis head was in his hands just after the half-hour, though, when his side gifted Celtic the lead.\n\nJules needlessly brought down Dembele inside the box and the striker duly sent goalkeeper Craig Samson the wrong way from the spot. The familiar roar from the Celtic Park stands signalled the home side were on their way.\n\nIt was only going one way after that and Forrest doubled the lead when his dancing run on the right ended with him firing low inside Samson's right-hand post. Celtic now looked in the mood.\n\nSeeing it out\n\nLiam Henderson's replacement Stuart Armstrong provided another boost for the league leaders by playing the whole of the second half after four games out.\n\nDembele and Sinclair both passed up good chances but the match settled into a bitty affair with Celtic dominating rather than demolishing Motherwell.\n\nThe visitors started to sneak forward as the game progressed knowing there was nothing to lose but Louis Moult and Scott McDonald were denied by a home defence keen to make it 12 clean sheets in 14 matches.\n\nCeltic's usual intensity was missing but they never looked like dropping points against a side who were up against it before a ball was even kicked.\n\nCeltic manager Brendan Rodgers: \"The players were technically very good on a very, very difficult surface.\n\n\"Moussa gets the penalty, uses his body really well, draws in the foul. The second one's a great bit of play. I thought [Forrest] was outstanding. He gets a really good second goal.\n\n\"We were much better second half, used the sides better. [We] maybe could've scored two or three more goals.\n\n\"In the main, very pleased. Another clean sheet. Defensively we were strong. Another good victory.\"\n\nMotherwell manager Mark McGhee: \"Given Celtic's recent form, to come out of here with a decent performance and a 2-0 defeat, in the scheme of things, is not a bad performance and not a bad result.\n\n\"Zak Jules has come up on loan from Reading and he made a mistake for the penalty but other than that I think he was excellent.\n\n\"James Forrest tore Joe [Chalmers] apart at the goal but James Forrest is unplayable for anyone in the country when he's playing like that, so we can't be too upset about that. He stuck to his task and overall I'm quite pleased with the young players.\n\n\"It's not so much put to bed [the midweek 7-2 defeat at Aberdeen] as you never forget a result or performance like that. But what it does do is give you optimism and the belief that what we thought about them is true. For instance, the two Rangers games and the Hearts game that we ended up losing we could just as easily have won.\n\n\"The reality is we'd have rather not come here after that result [at Pittodrie] but we had to come here and we stood up to it, which I think is really important in the run-in.\"\n• None Attempt blocked. Moussa Dembele (Celtic) right footed shot from the right side of the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt missed. Stephen Pearson (Motherwell) right footed shot from very close range is too high following a corner.\n• None Attempt missed. Scott Brown (Celtic) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high.\n• None Attempt missed. James Forrest (Celtic) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the left.\n• None Attempt missed. Scott Sinclair (Celtic) right footed shot from the centre of the box is too high.\n• None Attempt missed. Ben Heneghan (Motherwell) header from the centre of the box misses to the left following a set piece situation. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "A disused and forgotten platform beneath Glasgow Central station offers a glimpse of the past.\n\nGuided tours of the tunnels have attracted thousands of people over the past couple of years.\n\nBut plans are afoot to try and restore part of the platform to how it looked in its heyday.\n\nPaul Lyons of Glasgow Central Tours took BBC News on a tour of Glasgow's ghost station.", "You cannot drink alcohol between 09:00 and 17:00 if you work at Lloyd's of London\n\nSome expat Bolivians and Peruvians are prepared to pay $30 for a guinea pig that they eat on special occasions\n\nVicious Valentine's cards were more popular than romantic ones in Victorian England\n\nA typical Tupperware party in the US will yield about $400 (£320) worth of sales.\n\nHoneybees let out a \"whoop\" when they bump into each other\n\nThe price of a minimum \"basket of goods\" has risen by up to 30% since 2008.\n\nEating a lot of fat is worse for men than women\n\nUK families spend an average of £11.40 a week on alcohol and cigarettes.\n\nSeen a thing? Tell the Magazine on Twitter using the hashtag #thingididntknowlastweek\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho says he has learned from \"throwing away\" FA Cup games in the past and will not make that mistake at Blackburn Rovers in the fifth round on Sunday.\n\nIn 2005, Mourinho's Chelsea went out to Newcastle in the same week as wins in the League Cup final over Liverpool and Champions League against Barcelona.\n\n\"I gambled too much, I focused too much on Barcelona and Liverpool,\" he said.\n\n\"It was good because we beat Barcelona and we won the final against Liverpool, but the feeling I threw it away was not good, so I don't throw it away.\n\n\"If I lose, I lose because the opponent was better or because we didn't play well, but I'm not going to throw it away.\"\n• None Watch two games on the BBC this weekend - full coverage details\n\nThe Portuguese faces a similarly busy schedule this time around, with the Europa League last-32 second leg against Saint-Etienne to come on Wednesday and the EFL Cup final against Southampton a week on Sunday.\n\n\"I'm going to Blackburn with that respect,\" he added. \"I go serious.\n\n\"I am going to change a few players, but am going with a good team because I respect the competition a lot and Manchester United demands that you go serious to every game.\"\n\nThere have already been several upsets in this year's competition, with Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool the highest-placed Premier League side to get knocked out when they lost to second-tier Wolves in the fourth round.\n\nMourinho, who arrived at Chelsea for the first time before the 2004-05 season, says foreign managers may not understand the culture of the FA Cup like their English counterparts.\n\n\"In my case, I had immediately the first time that situation at Newcastle, so for me that was a lesson,\" added the United boss, whose only success in the FA Cup came in 2006-07 during his first spell at Stamford Bridge.\n\n\"With Chelsea, we lost against a League One team [Bradford in 2015], but I never threw it away, we lost because we lost.\n\n\"Normally it is because of attitude because you think it is easy and it is not easy.\n\n\"The lower-league teams, they are getting better and better and sometimes we have to give some rest to some players, other times we need to give some players football.\n\n\"We try to go serious. I like Wembley, I like the FA Cup, so I have to try to get the second one.\"", "More than 100 people have been killed across Pakistan since Sunday in a series of deadly militant attacks\n\nAs Pakistan picks up the pieces from Thursday evening's devastating bomb attack at the 800-year-old shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, the country's managers are looking for scapegoats abroad.\n\nAnd the military has openly taken charge of the proceedings, relegating pretentions of political propriety to the background.\n\nSoon after the bombing, army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa vowed that \"each drop of [the] nation's blood shall be avenged, and avenged immediately\".\n\nThere would be \"no more restraint for anyone\", he said.\n\nThe object of his remark was clear an hour later when the military announced that Pakistan had closed its border with Afghanistan to all traffic, including pedestrians.\n\nOn Friday morning, Afghan embassy officials were summoned to the army's headquarters in Rawalpindi. They were handed a list of 76 \"terrorists\" said to be hiding in their country, with the demand that they be arrested and handed over to Pakistan, the military says.\n\nThe fiery reaction came after a series of deadly militant attacks in five days from Sunday killed more than 100 people across Pakistan, including civilians, the police and soldiers.\n\nThis is the worst spell of violence since 2014, when Pakistan launched an operation to eliminate militant sanctuaries in its north-western tribal region.\n\nThe numerous militant attacks this week have raised questions about the authorities' security strategy\n\nViolence decreased considerably as a result, with Pakistani leaders claiming the militants had been defeated. But this week, that sense of security has been blown away.\n\nThe latest surge in attacks comes amid reports of the reunification of some powerful factions of the Pakistani Taliban. Some of them have links with the Afghanistan-Pakistan chapter of the so-called Islamic State, which itself emerged from a former faction of the Pakistani Taliban.\n\nMost of these groups have hideouts in border areas of Afghanistan, where they relocated after Pakistan launched its anti-militant operations.\n\nPakistan now accuses Afghanistan of tolerating these sanctuaries. It also blames India for funding these groups.\n\nOfficials say India and Afghanistan want to hurt Pakistan economically and undermine China's plans to build a multi-billion dollar \"economic corridor\" through the country.\n\nAt least 80 people were killed in the Sufi shrine attack on Thursday in Sehwan, Sindh province\n\nBut many in Pakistan and elsewhere don't buy that argument. They believe that militancy in Pakistan is actually tied to the country's own covert wars that sustain the economy of its security establishment.\n\nIn Kashmir, for example, the BBC has seen militants living and operating out of camps located close to army deployments. Each camp is placed under the charge of an official from what locals describe as the \"launching wing\" of the intelligence service.\n\nIn Balochistan, which has been under de-facto military control for nearly a decade, state agencies have allegedly been promoting Islamist militants to counter an armed separatist insurgency by secular ethnic Baloch activists.\n\nLast year the regional police compiled a report on militant sanctuaries across several parts of Balochistan, but an operation recommended by the police in those areas was never launched.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Amateur footage from inside the shrine shows people fleeing the scene\n\nLikewise, the world knows about the safe havens which the Afghan Taliban continue to enjoy in the Quetta region and elsewhere in Balochistan province, as well as in some parts of the tribal region in the north-west, from where they continue to launch raids inside Afghanistan.\n\nMany observers believe that the Pakistani military uses militant proxies to advance its wars in Afghanistan and Kashmir, and takes advantage of the domestic security situation to control political decision making.\n\nThis is important, they say, if the military is to sustain a vast business, industrial and real estate empire which they believe enjoys unfair competitive advantages, state patronage and tax holidays.\n\nBut with such a cocktail of militant networks in the border region, many find it hard to buy the Pakistani line that India and Afghanistan are to blame.\n\nAll militants on the ground - from disputed Kashmir to Quetta and Afghanistan - come from the same stock. They are the second-generation standard bearers of an armed Islamist movement that was formed on Pakistani soil during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1980s.\n\nThey may have regional affiliations or partisan loyalties, but all have been raised under the influence of Wahhabi Islam and its various ideological offshoots, imported here by Arab warriors who came to help liberate Afghanistan.\n\nAs such, they are capable of forming complex group-alliances and cross-border linkages with each other. And they are all united in considering Shia Muslims and Sunni adherents of native Sufi Islam as misguided and heretical.\n\nThis may also partly answer the riddle as to how these groups manage to survive and operate even though they do not command popular support in any part of Afghanistan or Pakistan.", "In a heated exchange between Newsnight's Evan Davis and an aide to President Trump, both the presenter and the BBC were accused of \"fake news\".\n\nFirst broadcast on Thursday 16 February - watch the full interview here", "Paris suburbs have seen violent protests after Theo's alleged sexual assault\n\nIn the Paris suburbs, youth sits idle. Young men chat and smoke. Some deal drugs. Most days are spent like this.\n\nBut today the talk is still about the alleged sexual assault on one of their friends, 22-year-old Theo, a young black man, who was brutalised by police.\n\nA truncheon, they say, was rammed into his backside, leaving him hospitalised for two weeks.\n\nEleanor says she was in disbelief when she heard the details of what had happened to her brother\n\nI meet his sister Eleanor, behind the graffiti-covered building where the assault is said to have taken place.\n\n\"They pulled him around the side to make sure the cameras couldn't see it,\" she says.\n\n\"Everyone here knows where the CCTV cameras are, and he tried to get to a place where they could see him. But the police - there were four of them - they pulled him back.\n\n\"I was afraid. I was afraid to see how he is and what they had done.\"\n\nEleanor says she was in disbelief when she heard the details of what had happened. Her elder brother told her it was rape.\n\n\"'Rape?' I said. 'What are you talking about?'\n\n\"I started to cry because I was so shocked. But after that I knew I had to be strong.\"\n\nAttacks by police, residents here say, are pretty common.\n\nBut this provoked real anger. Protests erupted across the French capital - cars were burned and property destroyed.\n\nTheo (left) was last week visited in hospital by French President Francois Hollande\n\nMejdi is 27 and was born on the estate. He rides up and down on his BMX, but is keen to stop and talk.\n\n\"If there is no charge for rape,\" he warns, \"people here will go mad.\"\n\n\"Nothing changes here. I was here in 2005 during the massive protests - they came back and tried to clean the place up. But you don't change anything with a coat of paint. Work, hope. We have none of that.\"\n\nHe - like many here - is bright and well informed. He knows what the problems are - but is despondent that no-one seems to want to solve them.\n\nAn air of boredom and hopelessness hangs over this place.\n\nFor the young men here, the state is the enemy.\n\nPolice cars drive up and down the roads, through column after column of social housing. Groups of young men shout \"rapists\" as they go by.\n\nFranco says banlieue youths \"have to fight\" for justice\n\nLocal activist Franco, from the anti-negrophobia league, says the anger is justified.\n\n\"The expression of their anger is the consequence of this first violence against Theo. This violence is a system, and this keeps us in a place where we cannot progress.\n\n\"When there is no justice, we have to fight to have it.\"\n\nTheo's ordeal is part of a bigger cycle of violence that keeps on spinning. Youth vs police; black vs white; haves vs have nots. And communities left behind.\n\nFabien is also from the anti-negrophobia group.\n\n\"What the police are trying to do right now is not protecting us,\" he says.\n\n\"They want us to just shut up. They don't want us to express in any shape or form. They are just here to shut us down.\n\n\"We have to come and ask for justice. We have to acknowledge that this injustice is particular to a certain type of people. Coloured, minority, black, Arab - whatever you want. We are the most exposed to the systemic racism of the French state.\"\n\nTheo himself appealed for calm from his hospital bed. His sister is also keen to stress her commitment to peace.\n\n\"We speak because we trust in justice,\" she says. But she knows what's in store if that justice isn't seen to be done.\n\n\"If not, there will be more anger, for sure,\" Eleanor says.", "The claim: More businesses will win than lose as a result of business rates revaluation.\n\nReality Check verdict: More businesses will see their bills fall than will see their rates rise.\n\nOn 1 April 2017, the amount that businesses have to pay in rates will change to reflect a revaluation of premises that has been carried out by the government.\n\nThe changes will be relatively large because it has been seven years since the last one. The government has now said that it will have revaluations at least every three years.\n\nThere have been loud complaints from business owners who will have to pay more, but on the Today Programme, Chief Secretary to the Treasury, David Gauke, said: \"Across the country as a whole, far more businesses are benefiting from these changes than are losing out.\"\n\nMr Gauke is only talking about England because, while there are also revaluation processes underway in Scotland and Wales (Northern Ireland did it in 2015), he has no power over them.\n\nBusiness rates are a tax on non-residential property such as pubs, restaurants, warehouses, factories, shops and offices, but not farms or places of worship.\n\nThe amount they pay is based on how much annual rent could be charged on the premises, which is known as the rateable value.\n\nThere have been objections, from some business groups, to changes in the regime for appealing against the rateable value attached to particular premises.\n\nOn average, all areas are seeing their rates fall, except London, where bills will rise an average 11% this year.\n\nIn the 2016 Budget, the government said it would spend £6.7bn on reducing business rates by 2020-21.\n\nAmong the changes, premises with a rateable value of £12,000 or less do not have to pay any rates at all - they previously had to pay 50%.\n\nThe government says that covers about 600,000 businesses.\n\nThe proportion of business rates that must be paid increases gradually, between a rateable value of £12,000 and £15,000, affecting another 50,000 businesses.\n\nThere will also be an increase in the amount businesses can earn before they go from the standard rate to the higher rate.\n\nThe government has also changed the measure of inflation that it uses to increase rates every year - it has switched from the retail prices index (RPI) to the consumer prices index (CPI), which will usually mean smaller increases for businesses.\n\nAnd it has introduced transitional arrangements to protect businesses from seeing their rates increasing too much straight away.\n\nIn order to fund this, it has also prevented businesses' rates from falling more than a certain amount.\n\nThe Department for Communities and Local Government says that 520,000 ratepayers will see their bills increase as a result of the revaluation, while 920,000 will see their bills fall and 420,000 will see no change.\n\nThe government says that the revaluation will not earn it any extra money.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Dick Bruna (above) was still writing Miffy stories in his old age\n\nThe Dutch creator of Miffy the cartoon rabbit has died aged 89, his publishers have announced.\n\nWriter and illustrator Dick Bruna died peacefully in his sleep on Thursday night in the Dutch city of Utrecht.\n\nHe created the much loved character in 1955 as a story to entertain his young son. More than 80 million Miffy books have been sold globally.\n\nOver the years, Bruna wrote more than 100 books but Miffy was by far his most popular and enduring character.\n\nAt first, he was uncertain whether the rabbit was a boy or a girl, but settled the matter by putting her in a dress for the sixth book, Miffy's Birthday, in 1970.\n\nMourners gathered outside the Nijntje Museum, or Miffy Museum, in Utrecht as news of Mr Bruna's death spread\n\nMiffy's success was in part due to the simplicity of Dick Bruna's design\n\nBruna's characters were adored by adults and children alike\n\nDick Bruna was all about doing more with less. Economy of line was the key behind the much loved Miffy character.\n\nThrough only a few simple shapes, heavy graphic lines and primary colours, Bruna was able to capture and convey a huge amount of personality and character.\n\nMiffy delights adults and children alike and we hope that her innocent and loving personality will continue to resonate - she is such a great example of the universal language of illustration.\n\nIn the Netherlands, she is called Nijntje (\"little rabbit\" as a Dutch toddler might say it). It was her first English translator, Olive Jones, who christened her Miffy.\n\nBruna was still writing Miffy stories in his old age and his books have been translated into more than 50 languages.\n\nDutch publisher Marja Kerkhof told the AP news agency that he used \"very clear pictures, almost like a pictogram\".\n\nShe said his illustrations were often best characterised by what he left out, allowing him \"to go to the essence of things\" while simultaneously using \"very strong powerful primary colours\".\n\n\"Even today if you see it in a store you would think, 'hey this looks different to a lot of other things out there',\" she said. \"There is no clutter, it's all very clear.\"\n\nStories about Miffy are enjoyed by children all over the world\n• None Miffy books to be updated in UK\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "One of the most popular reality TV programmes in the US has cast an African-American lead. People are asking: what took so long?\n\nIt was no huge surprise that Monday night's announcement of the latest lead in America's most popular reality TV dating show franchise, The Bachelorette, got Twitter excited. But this announcement was, in the words of its producer Mike Fleiss, \"historic\".\n\nThat's because after 16 years and 33 seasons, the ABC franchise cast 31-year-old lawyer Rachel Lindsay as its first black Bachelorette. There has only been one previous minority lead. In 2013, Juan Pablo Galavis, a Venezuelan-American, was cast as the Bachelor.\n\nThe reveal of Lindsay resulted in the trending hashtag #BlackBachelorette and a doubling of her Twitter following. Twitter told BBC Trending that the micro-blogging site \"went wild hearing the news\" when it was revealed on the Jimmy Kimmel show, and that within moments there were \"more than 36,000 Twitter mentions of Rachel (@therachlindsay)\".\n\nThe vast majority of the tweets expressed support for Lindsay.\n\nThe first season of the Bachelor premiered on ABC in 2002. A group of women competed for the affection of one man. The programme involved extravagant dates in exotic locations as contestants were eliminated week-by-week during a \"rose ceremony\" (you guessed it, the unsuccessful contestants do not get a rose).\n\nThe traditional aspects of a relationship all took place on camera - like hometown dates, and meeting each other's families. Then there were overnight \"Fantasy Suite\" dates for the final three contestants. The cameras were not allowed in the room.\n\nThat first season witnessed all the tears and tantrums you'd expect as as twenty-odd women simultaneously dated the same man. That first series ended with a proposal (but not, in the end, a marriage).\n\nThe runner up, Trista Rehn, was named the Bachelorette - and she went on to lead in the following series, with two dozen men competing for her affections. Rehn married her chosen beau Ryan Sutter in 2003, and the two remain together. In all but two seasons, the show has concluded with a marriage proposal.\n\nThe formula, with male and female leads switching off each series, proved to be gold - the show has consistently been one of America's most popular, averaging more than 7 million viewers per episode, according to market research company Nielsen.\n\nLindsay has been the only black female contestant on the franchise to have made it to the top four.\n\nThat in itself has been a subject spoofed on satire shows like Saturday Night Live.\n\n\"Tell me about yourself,\" asks the male lead.\n\n\"I'm the Black One,\" replies the woman.\n\n\"Like horror movies in which loose women and black characters are killed off quickly, the fate of the shows' non-white cast members has become a recognisable trope,\" wrote the Los Angeles Times.\n\nFleiss, the show's creator, addressed the issue in a 2011 interview with Entertainment Weekly, claiming that he would like to cast more people of colour on the show, but \"for whatever reason, they don't come forward.\"\n\nHowever another reality TV producer Shawn Ryan tweeted his suspicion that the show's producers \"just don't think America will watch black bachelor or root for mixed-race marriage.\"\n\nIn 2012, two would-be black contestants brought a lawsuit against the franchise for under-representing minorities. The suit alleged that ABC deliberately cast fewer people of colour in the pool of contestants - and that the show was nervous that interracial romance may \"create controversy among its audience.\"\n\nThat suit was dismissed, but some tweeters felt that due to her race, the next Bachelorette was set a higher bar in order to qualify in the lead role than other previous contestants.\n\nLindsay, who is a civil ligation lawyer, is the daughter of Sam Lindsay, who was nominated by President Bill Clinton to be a federal judge in Texas.\n\nPrior to Monday's announcement about Lindsay, former Bachelorette contestant Wells Adams speculated that a black Bachelorette might not be a successful move for the show.\n\n\"I think the franchise wants to so badly break out of its cookie-cutter, white-person shell, but I don't think that America will embrace it, sadly enough,\" he said.\n\nAnd after the announcement, others online seemed to echo this thought.\n\nAnd the timing of the announcement surprised many. Traditionally, ABC announces the next Bachelorette or Bachelor after the season's final episode. Lindsay is a yet-to-be-eliminated contestant on the current season of the show. Some fans, who call themselves \"Bachelor Nation\", called the reveal a \"premature spoiler\".\n\nFormer Bachelorette Ali Fedotowsky told Access Hollywood that the announcement had come so soon in order to take the discussion over diversity into account.\n\n\"They needed to let people of all different backgrounds and races and cultures that we're mixing it up this season,\" she said.\n\nBachelor Nick Viall shared an Instagram photo of the two of them after the announcement, writing that \"no one is better prepared to show Bachelor Nation, and the world, the beauty of embracing diversity. Good luck Rachel, not that you'll be needing it.\"\n\nMeanwhile, Lindsay told People magazine, \"I'm obviously nervous and excited to take on this opportunity but I don't feel added pressure being the first black Bachelorette, because to me I'm just a black woman trying to find love. Yes, I'm doing on this huge stage, but again my journey of love isn't any different just because my skin colour is.\"\n\nNext story: 'Fake news city' is now pumping out odd Facebook videos\n\nFake news writers are producing strange, static videos that appear designed to boost pro-Donald Trump Facebook groups.READ MORE\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "Alec Jones aspires to one day work for 'exciting' tech giants\n\nIt's been nearly a year since Microsoft's Satya Nadella proclaimed \"bots are the new apps\".\n\nYet despite the promise of a revolution in how we interact with services and companies online, progress has been utterly miserable - the vast majority of chatbots are gimmicky, pointless or just flat out broken.\n\nBut this week I was given great cause for optimism, in the form of Alec Jones, a 14-year-old from Victoria, Canada.\n\nFor the past six months, Alec been working on Christopher Bot, a chatbot that helps students keep track of homework they've been given over the course of a week.\n\nTo set things up, a student shares his or her schedule with Christopher Bot, and from then on it will send a quick message at the end of each lesson asking if any homework had been set.\n\n\"Do you have homework for maths?\" it asked 30-year-old me pretending to be a child for the sake of this piece.\n\n\"Your teacher needs to chill out on the homework,\" came the auto-response, adding, \"what homework do you have?\"\n\nThe chatbot takes answers in from messages and adds it to a homework schedule\n\nThrough this interface, I'm able easily insert \"algebra\" - urgh - into a weekly schedule that I can then refer back to at any point to see what I need to get done.\n\nOnce I complete a piece of homework, I tell Christopher Bot, and it congratulates me, automatically removing the homework from my list of things to do. The best bit? The bot keeps quiet during the holidays.\n\nWhat makes me so impressed by this is that, of all the experiments I've seen so far, it is the first time a chatbot has genuinely been the best way to tackle a problem.\n\nOther chatbots are a lesser experience of something else. The CNN news chatbot, for example, is worse at giving you the news than any of CNN’s other products.\n\nAnd popular weather bot Poncho, while cute and well-branded, has a habit of telling me it's about to rain five minutes after water started falling on my head.\n\nBut Christopher Bot shows the potential for producing a service that is completely at home within chat - removing the need for students to access some extra tool to keep track of what needs doing, and interacting in a way that (slightly) lessens the unavoidable chore of homework.\n\n\"I wanted it to not just sound like a robot,\" Alec told me.\n\n\"I wanted it to sound kind of like my friends would. If you get homework, everyone always just shakes their heads and says 'that sucks'.\"\n\nAnd it does this within an app his friends are already likely using (though perhaps Snapchat would be a more useful place for it, one day).\n\nIn short, it's a product those companies banking on chatbots being a winner should seek to emulate.\n\nIt's extremely difficult, for now, to measure the success of chatbots. Ad industry magazine AdAge noted that: \"Bot analytics and bot-building software companies all have shortcomings, largely because this technology is in its infancy.\n\n\"Few benchmarks exist, especially when trying to compare data across platforms.\"\n\nSo without data, we can't say what's working just yet - though there are some clues to what isn't.\n\nGoogle's AI-powered messaging app Allo, since being launched to much fanfare last year, has failed to make even a minor dent in a messaging app market dominated by Whatsapp and Facebook Messenger.\n\nAnd that's because there's no compelling reason to bother with Allo. None of its features - like asking it for directions - provide enough of a benefit beyond what you'd get from just tapping in your request the \"old fashioned\" way. Users have an incredibly short fuse for chatbots not working exactly as we expect.\n\nMost big companies are missing the point, Alec told me. \"There are a lot of chatbots made by these big companies that are supposed to help you interact with their service more and give you more functionality,\" he said.\n\n\"But it feels like they just saw this new platform, bots, and thought 'oh that's cool, people are looking at these now, let's build a bot'.\n\n\"It feels like they've just made a compromised version of what they're actually trying to build.\"\n\nEarlier this week, Alec's bot was shared on Product Hunt, a website I profiled recently, where it gained rave reviews and a fair share of feature requests.\n\n\"You're solving a problem many students have,\" read one reply.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Mark Zuckerberg said bots offered advantages over using dozens of specialised apps\n\n\"Fellow 14 year old here,\" began another. \"Great job man! That's sick that you’re my age and made such a cool and useful product. Awesome!\"\n\nLike any good developer, Alec has aspirations to build on the what he’s made - he wants to make it work for people in the working world, too.\n\nBut first he feels Facebook and others must do more to prove the usefuless of chatbots to people.\n\n\"I think that the real problem is that not enough people on Facebook who aren't 'techies' don't know what a bot is, and then they don't use it. More people need to know what a bot is,\" he said.\n\nWhen Mark Zuckerberg took to the stage in front of his developers last year, he said he was opening up Messenger so that anybody could make great apps. I bet he didn’t think it would be a 14-year-old who would show him how it’s done.\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook", "At a different time, in another country, it was effectively a death sentence.\n\nBeing branded an \"enemy of the people\" by the likes of Stalin or Mao brought at best suspicion and stigma, at worst hard labour or death.\n\nNow the chilling phrase - which is at least as old as Emperor Nero, who was called \"hostis publicus\", enemy of the public, by the Senate in AD 68 - is making something of a comeback.\n\nIn November, the UK Daily Mail used its entire front page to brand three judges \"enemies of the people\" following a legal ruling on the Brexit process.\n\nThen on Friday, President Donald Trump deployed the epithet against mainstream US media outlets that he sees as hostile.\n\n\"The FAKE NEWS media (failing New York Times, NBC News, ABC, CBS, CNN) is not my enemy, it is the enemy of the American People!\" he wrote on Twitter.\n\nThe reaction was swift. \"Every president is irritated by the news media. No other president would have described the media as 'the enemy of the people'\", tweeted David Axelrod, a former adviser to President Barack Obama.\n\nGabriel Sherman, national affairs editor at New York magazine, called the phrase a \"chilling\" example of \"full-on dictator speak\".\n\nSteve Silberman, an award-winning writer and journalist, wondered whether the remark would prompt Trump supporters to shoot at journalists.\n\nAnd that might not be a far-fetched concern. Late last year, a Trump supporter opened fire in a pizza restaurant at the centre of a bizarre conspiracy theory about child abuse.\n\nThe US president's use of \"enemies of the people\" raises unavoidable echoes of some of history's most murderous dictators.\n\nUnder Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, out-of-favour artists and politicians were designated enemies and many were sent to hard labour camps or killed. Others were stigmatised and denied access to education and employment.\n\nAnd Chairman Mao, the leader of China who presided over the deaths of millions of people in a famine brought about by his Great Leap Forward, was also known to use the phrase against anyone who opposed him, with terrible consequences.\n\nThe president was widely criticised for his choice of words.\n\n\"Charming that our uneducated President manages to channel the words of Stalin and fails to hear the historical resonance of this phrase,\" tweeted Mitchell Orenstein, a professor of Russian and East European studies at the University of Pennsylvania.\n\nCarl Bernstein, a reporter who helped to bring down Richard Nixon with his reporting on the Watergate scandal, tweeted: \"The most dangerous 'enemy of the people' is presidential lying - always. Attacks on press by Donald Trump more treacherous than Nixon's.\"\n\nMr Trump is not the first US president to have an antagonistic relationship with the media - Nixon is known to have privately referred to the press as \"the enemy\" - but his latest broadside, with all its attendant historical echoes, is unprecedented.", "Facebook's new bereavement leave policy was announced by Sheryl Sandberg\n\nFacebook last week doubled its bereavement leave allowance for its staff. Employees can now take up to 20 days off with pay to mourn the death of an immediate family member.\n\nThe new policy was announced by Facebook's chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, who has spoken publicly about mourning her husband, Dave Goldberg, who died in 2015.\n\n\"We need public policies that make it easier for people to care for their children and aging parents and for families to mourn and heal after loss,\" Ms Sandberg posted on Facebook.\n\nShe added that companies that stand by the people who work for them do the right thing and \"improve their bottom line by increasing the loyalty and performance of their workforce\".\n\nThe move has sparked huge debate on social media and has been lauded as extremely generous. Is it enough? We asked the views of four people dealing with grief in the workplace.\n\nChad Andrews and his family returned home from an Alaskan cruise three years ago when his eight-year-old son, Connor, was rushed to hospital a few days later.\n\nConnor had mild flu symptoms that suddenly worsened. He was placed in intensive care but deteriorated rapidly.\n\nIn June 2014, he died of myocarditis - an inflammation of the heart stemming from a virus.\n\nMr Andrews told the BBC that his life became a blur. He had lost an \"exceptional, brilliant and beautiful\" son and was left in shock.\n\nBut he forced himself to return to work a fortnight later even though he admits he wasn't very productive.\n\n\"When you're paralysed by grief and it's all your mind can absorb, the last thing you care about is work,\" he says. \"I had no capacity to be in control or function in the everyday world.\"\n\nMr Andrews works at IBM where he builds technology platforms for video content. Officially, the company gives staff three days of bereavement leave but he says there was never any pressure for him to return.\n\nAfter many stops and starts, it took him seven weeks to resume work full-time.\n\nWhile he believes there is no magic formula, he says Facebook's 20 days bereavement leave \"seems like a good best effort to set an effective benchmark\".\n\nBut he adds that it depends on when the individual can function again.\n\nChad Andrews and his family on holiday in Alaska. His son Connor (right) died a week later\n\nChan Lay Lin has been a social worker and family therapist for more than 20 years.\n\nShe is a principal medical social worker at Singapore's Institute of Mental Health and says most organisations in Singapore will allow about three days of compassionate leave when a staff member suffers a bereavement.\n\nIn her experience, this is adequate when the circumstances are not overly traumatic. But she says in exceptional cases experienced by around one in seven people, a longer grieving period may be needed, with the approval of a doctor or therapist.\n\nThe factors considered, she says, include the relationship with the deceased, the level of attachment and dependency and the nature of the death. Sudden and unexpected deaths are all the more traumatic.\n\nMs Chan says in severe cases some people may never feel like they get back to normal and can fall into depression, making them unable to go back to work for a long time.\n\nFor those people the grief may never end, even if it gets easier to bear. But she stresses these are very rare and extreme cases.\n\nPeter Wilson believes 20 days bereavement leave would be \"excessive\" if it became law\n\nPeter Wilson has been a boss working in human resources for 33 years, and is the chairman of the Australian Human Resources Institute.\n\nAccording to him, the standard for bereavement leave in democratic, Western cultures is between two and five days.\n\nWhen his own parents died he used compassionate leave to take one day off for the funeral and another to grieve with his family. He took an extra week of annual leave in each instance, which he describes as a \"fair balance\".\n\nMr Wilson believes Facebook's bereavement leave policy is unusual and doubts it will be adopted widely. Twenty days amounts to nearly 10% of the working year, which he says would be \"excessive\" if it became law.\n\nHis concern is that it would put pressure on employers to increase other categories of leave too. \"This could have a knock-on effect which could make companies uncompetitive,\" he says.\n\nHe favours a \"sensible, minimum standard which the government prescribes and the discretion to give more leave on a case-by-case basis\".\n\nTen years ago, he granted three months' paid leave to an indigenous employee on cultural grounds.\n\nMr Wilson says most employers will extend leave provisions where there's a good case for it.\n\nA company's compassionate leave policy can give an insight into its ethics, says headhunter Dan Clements\n\nDan Clements is the managing director of the technology executive recruitment firm, Identify, and says most people probably do not factor in bereavement leave when they are deciding whether to join a company.\n\nHowever, he believes a firm's compassionate leave policy could give potential employees insight into its culture and ethics. Firms that take a mature and humane approach stand to attract great talent because employees want to be treated fairly and with kindness, he says.\n\nMr Clements surveyed the compassionate leave policies of 10 multinational companies. They all offered between three and 10 days, with five days being the most common.\n\nOne firm went further, giving its managers discretion to grant staff more days off for a bereavement.\n\nBut he says companies can do more by offering flexible working arrangements such as remote or part-time working, as well as job sharing to help staff in need of more time to grieve.", "Sean Raggett heads Lincoln City ahead in the 89th minute against Burnley in the FA Cup fifth round at Turf Moor.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Watch the best of the goals from the FA Cup fifth round, including Rudy Gestede's acrobatic volley for Middlesbrough, a cheeky free-kick from Oxford's Chris Maguire and a lovely finish from Blackburn's Danny Graham.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nEmily Nelson won silver for Great Britain in the omnium at the Track Cycling World Cup in Colombia.\n\nThe race includes scratch, tempo, elimination and points races, with Nelson third going into the last of those events.\n\nIn her first omnium at world level, the 20-year-old was third in the points race to earn silver behind winner Lotte Kopecky of Belgium.\n\nNelson will next race in the team pursuit qualifying on Saturday in Cali.\n\nShe will line up with team-mates Manon Lloyd, Emily Kay and Neah Evans in the event.\n\n\"Extremely happy with a silver medal in the Omnium!,\" Nelson wrote on Twitter. \"On to the Team Pursuit now with qualification tomorrow.\"\n\nFind out how to get into cycling with our special guide.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nTottenham Hotspur will win the Premier League within the next four years, says former manager Harry Redknapp.\n\nSpurs made the Champions League for the first time during Redknapp's four-year tenure at the club, reaching the quarter-finals in 2011.\n\nThe 69-year-old says he would not swap manager Mauricio Pochettino's starting XI for any other side in the division.\n\n\"They have been fantastic under Pochettino,\" Redknapp told BBC Radio 5 live's Friday Football Social.\n\n\"I have absolutely loved the way they have played - their football, the pace of the full-backs.\n\n\"Tottenham will go on and win the Premier League in the next three or four years.\"\n\nSpurs sit third in the Premier League, 10 points behind leaders Chelsea, but lost to Liverpool on Saturday and at Gent in the first leg of their Europa League last-32 tie on Thursday.\n\nThey have not won the title since 1961 and finished third last year after looking like champions Leicester's main challengers for long periods.\n\nBut Tottenham expect to have a new 61,000-seater stadium completed in time for the 2018-19 season, which Redknapp, who left the club in 2012, believes will play a big part in any future success.\n\n\"They've not been up there with the big spenders,\" he added. \"Now with the new stadium the crowds are going to nearly double.\n\n\"The man who owns the club, Joe Lewis, is up there with the richest men in the world. So there's certainly no shortage of money.\n\n\"Maybe they do run out of steam, maybe he [Pochettino] hasn't been able to rotate and could do with another three or four top players to give him the strength in depth.\n\n\"If you said to me 'go and manage any team you want', I would take Tottenham's best XI.\"", "Late drama as Shaun Cummings puts 10-man Millwall ahead in the last minute against Leicester City in their FA Cup fifth-round tie.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nFA PEOPLE'S CUP: Sign up for free five-a-side competition – entries close midnight on Sunday!\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Mark Clemmit is shown around the away dressing room at Sutton United by manager Paul Doswell, which Premier League side Arsenal will be using during their FA Cup fifth-round match on Monday.\n\nWatch live coverage of Sutton v Arsenal, Monday 20 February, 19:30 GMT on BBC One and the BBC Sport website.", "Two cars have fallen down a sinkhole in Studio City, a Los Angeles neighbourhood in the US.\n\nThe drama of the second one, teetering on the edge and then tumbling down, was shown on live television.\n\nOne of the strongest storms in years - dubbed a \"bombogenesis\" or \"weather bomb\" - has hit California.", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nMo Farah took victory in the 5,000m at the Birmingham Grand Prix to win the final indoor race of his career.\n\nThe 33-year-old, who will retire from the track this year, set a European record of 13 minutes 9.16 seconds.\n\nLaura Muir won the 1,000m in a British record of 2:31:93, taking over a second off Dame Kelly Holmes' 2004 mark.\n\nJamaica's 100m and 200m Olympic gold medallist Elaine Thompson stormed to victory in the women's 60m in 6.98 seconds, the eighth-fastest time ever.\n\nFour-time Olympic champion Farah plans to focus on road racing after the World Championships in London in August.\n\nHe was pushed hard by Bahrain's Albert Rop, who held on as Farah kicked away from the majority of the field, but was defeated in a sprint finish.\n\n\"I had amazing support from the crowd today and I can't quite believe it's my last indoor race,\" said Farah.\n\n\"I've had a great career indoors and particularly on this track.\n\n\"I knew I needed to do some work after Edinburgh, I had to leave my family but hard work pays off.\"\n\nFarah had finished seventh last month at the Great Edinburgh Cross Country.\n\nScotland's Muir has already broken two records this year - the European 3,000m indoor record and the British 5,000m indoor record, the latter held for 25 years by Liz McColgan.\n\nThe 23-year-old demolished the field in Birmingham and her time was just one second shy of Maria Mutola's world indoor record of 2:30.94.\n\nMuir will head to Belgrade for the European Indoor Championships from 3-5 March as favourite in both the 1500m and 3,000m.\n\n\"I wanted to come away with a win on home soil but to break Kelly's record, I'm so chuffed, and I was not far away from the world record, so I am really pleased,\" said the Dundee Hawkhill Harrier.\n\n\"The crowd were huge, I couldn't hear myself breathing they were so loud.\n\n\"It is every athlete's dream to be injury free and running as well as I am. Hopefully I can carry this sort of form into the summer.\n\n\"I'm in the best shape I can be so I'm hoping to win some medals in Belgrade.\"\n\nWhen you're in amazing shape as Laura is right now, and setting record after record, what you really want to do is capitalise on that and come away with two gold medals in Belgrade to underline that form; particularly when next year she'll be going back to her veterinary studies and will have to pick and choose with the calendar a little more.\n\nShe's got Belgrade not too far away now [in two weeks], the timetable works really well to double up there, it fits in perfectly and can be a real confidence boost going into the summer.\n\nIn Saturday's other events, Andrew Pozzi ran a personal best and world leading time of 7.43secs in the 60m hurdles to beat fellow Briton David King and Aries Merritt of the United States.\n\nGreat Britain took first and second place in the women's long jump, as Loraine Ugen jumped a season's best 6.76m ahead of Jazmin Sawyer's 6.71m.\n\nIn the women's 800m, British Champion Shelayna Oskan-Clarke came third in a personal best time of 2:01:71 and secured automatic selection for the European Indoor Championships.\n\nUSA's Ronnie Baker won the men's 60m in 6.55 as 40-year-old Kim Collins took second place and Britain's Richard Kilty came third.\n\nIn the women's 400m, GB's Laviai Nielsen almost held off Czech Republic's Zuzana Hejnova, but the 20-year-old was beaten into second place in the final few metres.\n\nEilidh Doyle, who has already qualified for Belgrade, finished fourth, while Laviai's twin sister Lina Nielsen came fifth.", "The man who came up with \"demonetisation\" on whether India did it right.", "Tony Blair's rallying cry to people who want to defy Brexit goes down like a lead balloon in many of Saturday's papers.\n\nAccording to the Daily Express, \"yesterday's man has no place in modern Britain\".\n\nThe paper cites a poll which, it says, demonstrates that more than two-thirds of voters now want the government to press ahead with implementing Brexit.\n\nThe Daily Mail brands the former prime minister \"messianic\". The paper's leader column accuses Mr Blair of hypocrisy, having \"twice promised a referendum on the EU and reneged both times\".\n\nMr Blair, says the Guardian, is facing a backlash from Labour MPs for \"fuelling the party's divisions over Brexit\" with his speech.\n\nBut in the same paper, John McTernan, who was Mr Blair's political secretary for part of his period in office, says his former boss is offering a \"principled and optimistic argument for a better future for Britain\".\n\nHowever, commentator Rafael Behr tells the paper that while Mr Blair has a reasonable argument, he cannot be the \"trusted messenger\" who he says is needed to deliver it.\n\nAnd most of the papers continue to be exercised by the government's forthcoming shake-up of business rates.\n\nThe Sun has spoken to the owner of the pie shop opposite Arsenal's stadium in north London.\n\nWhile his rates are doubling, the paper reports, those of the football club are getting a 2.3% cut.\n\n\"This isn't fair,\" says the owner. \"Go tax someone else.\"\n\nIn the Daily Mirror, Lord Sugar writes that the rate revaluation will put a lot of small traders out of business.\n\nHe wants the government to scrap business rates for traders with a turnover below a figure yet to be defined, and \"whack the deficit on the giant retailers that dominate the major high streets\".\n\nThe Daily Telegraph says it has spoken to three former trade secretaries - Lord Tebbit, Sir Vince Cable and Dame Margaret Beckett - who have all voiced concerns about the changes.\n\nUnder the headline \"shopkeeper who spoke for Britain\", the Daily Mail carries a letter written by a wine merchant in the Welsh borders to the chief secretary to the Treasury, David Gauke, which warns the plans risk turning \"the whole of Britain into a retail wasteland\".\n\nThe lead story in the Times warns of a slump in the housing market, with homeowners in some areas reportedly waiting an average of 10 months to sell their properties.\n\n\"Inflated asking prices and economic uncertainty cause the housing market to stall,\" it reports.\n\nParts of southern England, where prices have risen rapidly, and the north-east, where the economy is slow, are worst affected. The paper says that \"real pain\" will be felt if the slowdown in the number of sales translates into tumbling prices.\n\nThe Sun features the imminent sale of what it says is one of the cheapest homes in the country.\n\nThe two-bedroom mid-terrace at Trimdon, in County Durham, is going for auction with a guide price of £10,000, though it needs some work.\n\nThe paper says a similar property in London would cost 64 times as much.\n\nElsewhere, the front page story in the i says there is a looming staff crisis in the NHS in England. An investigation by the paper suggests government plans to recruit more GPs are struggling to keep pace with retirement, while figures show nurse recruitment levels have fallen.\n\nDonald Trump continues to be a rich source of copy.\n\nThe Financial Times says it is clear that, however \"finely tuned\" Mr Trump's administration may be, it is \"leaking prodigiously\".\n\nThe paper believes it will be hard for the president to \"plug the leaks\" of the sort that cost the job of his short-lived national security adviser, Mike Flynn.\n\nHowever, the FT argues that Mr Trump made himself \"fair game\" on the campaign trail, by celebrating the publication of thousands of Hillary Clinton's hacked emails.\n\nFinally, the Daily Mail has details of a study that suggests parents should let children play with their food.\n\nResearchers at De Montfort University in Leicester found that youngsters who were allowed to touch, handle and even squash their fruit and veg were more inclined to snack on them later.\n\nThe scientists think touch and feel - rather than taste - may be the catalyst to healthier eating.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nViolinist Gaelynn Lea chose her musical craft over surgery which might have changed her life, but it is a decision she does not regret.\n\nShe now tours America and Europe with her haunting electro-folk music, but at just 3ft tall she plays her violin like a cello, enhanced by haunting electronic loops.\n\n\"When I was in fourth grade I saw an orchestra which came to school and I remember being blown away by the sound,\" she says. \"I actually wanted to play the cello because it's beautiful, but it's obviously really big.\"\n\nLea from Duluth, Minnesota, who has Osteogenesis Imperfecta - or Brittle Bone Disease - settled for the much smaller, musical sister of the cello - the violin - after she scored 100% in a music aptitude test at school.\n\nIt was a decision which would see her travel the world.\n\n\"Because I did so well in the test, my teacher was really determined, and we experimented a lot until we worked out I could play the violin like a cello.\n\n\"She could have said 'this isn't going to work' or 'you should have done choir' but she was really encouraging. We made a good team and I'm very grateful that she was so open minded.\"\n\nThe duo developed a technique which involved Lea holding the bow \"like a baseball bat\" with the body of the instrument placed in front of her, like a cello, and attached to her foot so it wouldn't slip when she played. There were a few other workarounds which also had to be developed.\n\n\"I can't use my fourth finger because of the angle of my right hand, so I had to re-write a lot of classical music. It makes it a little harder to do some stuff, but I practice a lot,\" she says.\n\nLea turned to Celtic and American folk music when she was 18, after finding her busy schedule precluded her from joining the college orchestra.\n\nGaelynn Lea in the studio before recording her Christmas album\n\nThe haunting sound which is her trademark was developed when she started experimenting with a loop pedal which enabled her to build and repeat several layers of sound.\n\n\"Looping fiddle music is one of my favourite concepts to play and it meant I could start doing solo shows,\" she says.\n\n\"I have a set loop that I start with but its never the same twice because I improvise a lot.\"\n\nThe inspiration for her songs and music comes from the people she knows or cares about and is often about the human condition. Lea says people \"never have the same life experiences or outlook\".\n\n\"Usually the songs come into my mind with a melody and I'll play my violin to figure it out, but it's all in my head,\" she says. \"Nothing is written down, except the odd chord.\"\n\nLea released her debut solo album All the Roads that Lead Us Home in 2015, and last year won NPR Music's Tiny Desk Contest - a name which does not reflect the height of the musicians - with her song Someday We'll Linger in the Sun which defeated more than 6,000 other submissions.\n\n\"I didn't expect to win but it's meant playing in a few places including New York which was a dream of mine, but I really want to play Paris.\n\n\"The thing that I love about performance is the energy in the room, when you're connected to the audience and that can happen anywhere - the pizza shop, a cafe, busking - I've had some moments where I've connected with the audience and it's like a spiritual experience.\"\n\nDespite the apparent ease with which she plays Lea has to contend with the continual challenges of Brittle Bone Disease - a genetic defect in the collagen in the bones.\n\nShe has \"only\" broken 16 bones since she was born and is proud to say she hasn't had a fracture in the last five years.\n\nOne of her arms is twisted which can make things more difficult, but she decided against a potentially life-changing operation for fear it could hamper her music career.\n\nKnown in America as \"rodding\", the operation would have seen her arm and leg bones threaded onto a metal rod which would act as a splint and keep the bone aligned if it fractured. It could also have improved her mobility.\n\n\"I actually chose not to walk and I'm happy,\" she says. \"I could have had operations to put rods in my arms and my legs but there was no guarantee how well they'd work. I'd already started playing the violin so I didn't want to have my arms operated on and have my nerves damaged.\n\n\"I use an electric wheelchair so I didn't feel I needed to walk to make my life more fulfilling. And I don't think I'd even be who I am without brittle bones so I don't regret the decision.\"\n\nWhen Lea is not on the road she works as a violin teacher and has 15 students on her books.\n\n\"I teach them the regular way - with the violin up on their shoulder,\" she says. \"I watched some videos so I knew how it should be held and I understood the physics but it was trial and error to begin with.\"\n\nHer students cover a vast age spectrum, and her main hope for them is that they always remain involved in music. \"Music is such an important part of peoples' lives,\" she says.\n\nThroughout her own musical development Lea says she has come across some people who see her disability as an obstacle, but many others have been supportive.\n\n\"If you think about it - I just play the violin at a different angle. It's still the same music but some people cant' get over the fact it's not regular.\n\n\"I'm sure there'll be other challenges, but it's not impossible. And I don't want to be limited by my disability.\"\n\nMeet the NHS mental health director who was hospitalised for depression and hear about her open letter which went viral.\n\nFor more, follow on Twitter and Facebook, and subscribe to the weekly podcast.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The apparent killing of Kim Jong-nam raises tricky questions for China\n\nBeijing needs to do more to rein in North Korea: that's the view of US President Donald Trump and his new team. But how much leverage does China really have there and what are the chances of it being used, asks the BBC's Stephen McDonell in Beijing.\n\nChina and North Korea seem to be heading into yet another tense period in their recently rocky relationship.\n\nOnce brothers-in-arms fighting against \"imperialist aggression\" during the Korean War, now Beijing accuses Pyongyang publicly of breaching United Nations sanctions in the pursuit of its missile and nuclear weapons programmes.\n\nAnd the apparent assassination of Kim Jong-nam - the half brother of North Korea's brutal leader - is being seen as a fresh point of tension between these official allies.\n\nIn fact, some view it as direct slap in the face for China.\n\nIt appears Mr Kim was murdered in Kuala Lumpur airport, on his way back to Macau, by female killers using of some type of poison.\n\nKim Jong-nam died at Kuala Lumpur airport as he prepared to board a flight\n\nKim Jong-nam spent much of the past decade in a type of self-imposed exile inside the former Portuguese colony. There he was seen to have the protection of China.\n\nThe eldest son of North Korea's late leader Kim Jong-il, he said time and again that he had no interest in becoming involved in his country's politics.\n\nWhat's more, whenever he was cornered by reporters in the Asian casino city, with his shirt unbuttoned to number three and sporting a three-day growth, you could really believe him when he said it. After all, why would he want to?\n\nThere has been speculation that he operated some sort of North Korean sanction-busting slush fund out of Macau and that this was the reason that Beijing and Pyongyang tolerated his hedonistic life style.\n\nBut for China there was something else too. He was an ally inside the North Korean elite: somebody who thought the best way forward for his homeland was a Chinese-style opening up.\n\nFor years, China has been trying to promote this style of thinking with its isolated, impoverished neighbour.\n\nBefore he died, Kim Jong-il was shown around the prosperous Chinese city of Dalian. The message: \"You too could have some of this at home with a bit of opening up!\"\n\nBut the Kim dynasty has appeared petrified by the prospect of such openness, and that Kim Jong-nam would side with the Chinese.\n\nSo despite his apparent lack of interest in political power, the fact that he could be seen hanging around down in Macau as a possible leader to be called on by Beijing in the event of regime collapse in Pyongyang made him a threat to the paranoid figure in power there today.\n\nIf this was a political assassination, then most North Korea observers think the order came right from the top.\n\nThis will not go down well with the government of Xi Jinping in Beijing. In recent days the two countries' relationship has become even more murky.\n\nSouth Korea's Yonhap news agency has reported that China turned back a $1m (£800,000) coal shipment from North Korea.\n\nChina has long been criticised for turning a blind eye to North Korean coal exports, in violation of UN sanctions, but maybe not this time.\n\nIn the wake of last weekend's North Korean ballistic missile test, 16,295 tonnes of its coal were denied entry to Wenzhou Port in Zhejiang Province.\n\nYou see the sequence of events: Sunday 12 February missile test, next morning an ally of China is murdered, later that afternoon Beijing criticises the test, two days later the coal shipment is turned back. What's next?\n\nWhen asked about the death of Kim Jong-nam, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Geng Shuang said his government had \"seen the media reports\" and that that they were \"following the developments\". I'll bet they are.\n\nCoal had been one of North Korea's main exports with most going to China\n\nAt a social function run by the Chinese military recently, I was speaking to a Chinese officer about the US demand that they do more to bring pressure on North Korea.\n\nHe shrugged his shoulders. He said they didn't know what the North Koreans would do next and that they had no idea what China could do to change their minds.\n\nYet by far and away the vast majority of trade in and out of the DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of Korea), as the country prefers to be called, is with China. If you take Chinese trade out of the equation there's not much left.\n\nSo why would Beijing put up with all this? Why put up with the waves of instability flowing out of Korean peninsula?\n\nIt's often said that a meltdown in North Korea could lead to millions of refugees pouring into China but, even if this did happen, it would likely only be a temporary problem.\n\nNo. The real fear is that a complete collapse of the North Korean regime could lead to Korean unification, with American soldiers based in a country with a land border with China.\n\nBeijing will not let that happen and Pyongyang's current ruler, Kim Jong-un, knows it.\n\nSo no matter how many times North Korea drives its powerful protector to distraction, in the end, Beijing believes it doesn't have much choice but to put up with its weirdness, with its basket-case economy, with its erratic behaviour and probably also with its pursuit of nuclear weapons.", "Five objects, each worth at least £2,500, have been hidden around Scunthorpe, and the deal is finders keepers.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nSaracens suffered a second straight Premiership defeat but fit-again prop Mako Vunipola staked a claim to rejoin England as he played 70 minutes of their loss at an inspired Gloucester.\n\nVunipola, returning after nine weeks out, proved his fitness in a game won by Richard Hibbard's late try.\n\nIt was level at 23-23 after tries from Sarries' Schalk Brits and Will Fraser plus Gloucester' Tom Marshall and Jeremy Thrush.\n\nA Billy Twelvetrees penalty seven minutes from the end had edged Gloucester ahead for the third time in the enthralling top-flight battle before the hosts' third try denied Saracens a losing bonus point.\n\nSarries, who lost back-to-back first-team games for the first time since May 2015, missed the chance to close the gap on leaders Wasps at the top.\n\nThings had looked ominous for Gloucester - who have lost just once at home in all competitions since October - when Saracens crossed early on through South Africa hooker Brits after clever play from Richard Wigglesworth.\n\nBut David Humphreys' side settled into a bruising game and eventually earned themselves a three-point half-time lead thanks to Marshall's try and Billy Burns' accurate boot.\n\nAfter the break, lock Thrush collected a loose Saracens pass to extend the hosts' lead with only his second try for the club, before Alex Lozowski's penalty cut the deficit for Sarries.\n\nA gripping game was then interrupted by a worrying injury to Gloucester fly-half Burns, who went down after a try-saving tackle in the corner and received lengthy treatment before being taken off on a stretcher with an oxygen mask, with the medical staff taking care not to move the 22-year-old.\n\nSaracens then drew level when Will Fraser crossed after a driving maul from a line-out and Lozowski converted to make it 23-23, and the visitors looked set for a late comeback.\n\nBut then, after Twelvetrees had kicked Gloucester back in front from the tee, David Halaifonua broke quickly and almost crossed in the corner before the match-clinching try finally came from the resulting line-out, as Hibbard's strength saw him over.\n\n\"We had a terrible game last week and we asked for a reaction. It was all about us this week.\n\n\"The scrum was a big positive for us tonight. It was something we worked on this week. Now we need to build on this win and push on.\n\n\"It is a massive win. They are the champions. We can really take positives from this game and go to Wasps confident.\"\n\n\"We're disappointed that we couldn't get something from the game. We were not as composed as we normally are in our half.\n\n\"We had an open mind as to how Mako Vunipola was going to go and he felt pretty good. He did well.\n\n\"I'm assuming he's going to play against Italy now in some form.\"\n\nFor the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter.", "Ray Johnstone flew across Australia to join his new \"fishing mate\" for a trip\n\nTwo weeks ago, lonely Australian grandfather Ray Johnstone decided to try his luck at finding a \"fishing mate\" online, on the suggestion of a care nurse.\n\nNow the 75-year-old pensioner finds himself on the other side of Australia with a new friend and a haul of fish.\n\nAn age difference of more than 50 years hasn't got in the way of a blossoming friendship between Mr Johnstone and Mati Batsinilas, a carpenter who lives in Brisbane.\n\nMoved by the online post, in which Mr Johnstone explained that his former fishing companion had died, Mr Batsinilas, 22, paid for the widowed pensioner to fly from his home in South Australia to Brisbane, more than 1,600km (995 miles) away.\n\nThey are now on a special trip off the Queensland coast.\n\nMr Batsinilas was just one of many people who said they wanted to go fishing with Mr Johnstone after his original post went viral.\n\nAccording to the Courier Mail newspaper an 80cm (31in) mulloway fish was among the grandfather's haul on Tuesday, the first day of a two-day trip with Mr Batsinilas.\n\nThe pair had planned to camp overnight on the picturesque North Stradbroke island.\n\nOne of the pair's haul off the Queensland coast\n\n\"This has been more of an adventure than a trip for Ray,\" Mr Batsinilas said.\n\nAnd Ray's verdict? \"It was a really good day,\" he told the newspaper from Amity Point, on the island.\n\nMr Johnstone's online ad, which was posted on 19 January\n\nMore than 115,000 people have now seen the original post.\n\nExplaining his love for fishing, Mr Johnstone told the BBC last week that he just liked \"getting out in the fresh air\" and keeping active.\n\n\"I don't want to end up as a vegetable like some old people do,\" he said.\n\nYou might also be interested in:", "Tiredness and 'brain fog' are common symptoms of the condition\n\nHypothyroidism - or an underactive thyroid - affects one in 70 women and one in 1,000 men according to the NHS. But it can be a tricky disease to diagnose and treat. Dr Michael Mosley, of Trust Me I'm a Doctor, asks if sufferers are slipping through the net.\n\nSomeone emailed me the other day to ask me if I had ever considered the possibility that I might have hypothyroidism; an underactive thyroid. The reason he contacted me is because he had seen me on television and noticed that I have quite faint eyebrows, which can be a sign of this disorder.\n\nI have none of the other symptoms such as weight gain, tiredness and feeling the cold easily, so I've decided not to go and get myself tested.\n\nBut if you do - and you think you could you have it - what should you do about it?\n\nTo get some answers I've been talking to Dr Anthony Toft, who is a former president of the British Thyroid Association.\n\nHe tells me that the thyroid gland is a bit like the accelerator pedal on your car. It produces hormones which help control the energy balance in your body. If it's underactive, then your metabolic rate will be slower than it should be. This means that you are likely to put on weight. Other symptoms can include feeling too cold or too hot, lacking in energy, being constipated, low mood, poor attention or \"brain fog\".\n\nDr Mosley's 'faint eyebrows' led one doctor to contact him about hypothyroidism\n\nThe main hormones involved are thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), T4 and T3. TSH is released by the pituitary gland and tells your thyroid to get going.\n\nIn response your thyroid should release the hormones T4 and T3. T4 is converted in your body into T3, the active hormone that revs up your cells.\n\nIf you have symptoms of hypothyroidism then your GP will probably test your blood. The signs they're looking for are high levels of TSH, together with low levels of T4.\n\nIf your TSH is higher than normal this suggests that the gland that produces this hormone - the pituitary gland - is working hard to tell the thyroid gland to produce more hormone, but for some reason the thyroid gland is not listening.\n\nThe pituitary then ups its game and produces more and more TSH, but T4 levels stay low.\n\nSo if you have a high TSH coupled with a low T4, it's likely that the body is saying \"I need more thyroid hormone!\" but the thyroid gland isn't doing what it's being told. The result is hypothyroidism.\n\nWhen this happens patients are often prescribed levothyroxine (T4). Symptoms diminish and patients are happy.\n\nScans can be carried out for more serious thyroid problems\n\nSo if it's so straightforward, why are there so many forums full of dissatisfied patients? Why do we at Trust Me get so many emails about this subject?\n\nOne of the issues with the blood tests is that there are no standard international reference ranges. In the UK, for example, we set the bar rather higher than many other countries. Certainly Dr Toft thinks that current UK guidelines are sometimes interpreted too rigidly.\n\n\"If the T4 is right down at the lower limit of normal,\" he says, \"and the TSH is at the upper limit of normal, then that is suspicious. It doesn't often arouse suspicion in GPs, but it should.\"\n\nHe is also concerned that when a GP does diagnose an underactive thyroid, then patients are almost always prescribed a synthetic version of T4.\n\nThis works most of the time but in some cases the symptoms don't improve. This might be because with some patients the problem is not an underactive thyroid, but the fact that they can't convert enough T4 into the active hormone T3.\n\nOne way round this is to take T3 hormone in tablet form, but here price is a problem.\n\n\"The cost of T3 has escalated incredibly,\" says Dr Toft. \"It's now about £300 for two months' supply of T3, whereas it costs pennies to make.\"\n\nTrust Me, I'm A Doctor is on BBC Two at 20:00 GMT, Wednesday 8 February - catch up on BBC iPlayer\n\nSo if you have been put on T4 and it doesn't work, what about asking for a trial of T3? Because it is so expensive your GP may well say no.\n\nSo instead some patients are going online and buying T3 from foreign websites. But it's important that if you are taking T3 you are being properly monitored, because it can cause serious side effects, including heart problems.\n\nA slightly less expensive hormone supplement taken from the glands of cows and pigs is available. It contains both the T3 and T4 hormones, and there is a growing call to prescribe it for patients who don't respond to T4 alone. So does Dr Toft think patients should be offered this combination?\n\n\"I suspect that in time that's what will happen,\" he says. \"The trouble is the evidence base is not as strong as we would wish it to be, and I suspect it will be a long time before we have sufficient evidence.\"\n\nDealing with thyroid problems can be complicated. If you've had a blood test and the results have come back normal, then you can ask to look at the actual numbers. But you may also have to accept that medication is not for you and lifestyle changes may be more appropriate.\n\nJoin the conversation on our Facebook page", "This video contains distressing scenes from the start.\n\nThe United Nations has launched an emergency appeal for Yemen, warning that its population is on the brink of famine after two years of war.\n\nThis BBC's Our World filmed and first broadcast this report in September 2016, and shows some of the suffering endured by children in the country.", "Philip Hammond knows all about the government's attempts to \"get the public finances in order\" following the financial crisis of 2008.\n\nHe was the man, as shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, credited by many for the tough detail of the austerity plan laid before voters in the run up to the 2010 election.\n\nGeorge Osborne was the architect, Mr Hammond the foreman, ensuring there was a plan that might actually have a chance of working, public sector cut by public sector cut.\n\nNow Mr Hammond is the man in charge of the public finances - his dream government job and, a relatively rare occurrence for the resident of Number 11, said authoritatively to be the high water mark of his ambitions.\n\nWhatever his relations with the Prime Minister, and they are better than often reported, the fact that he doesn't want to move his sofas next door is a useful salve to any scratchiness between Downing Street's most important neighbours.\n\nMr Hammond expected to take a \"steady-as-she-goes\" approach to his first Budget\n\nToday sees the publication of the Institute for Fiscal Studies' (IFS) annual Green Budget, its analysis of Mr Hammond's room for manoeuvre as he prepares for the real Budget, on 8 March.\n\nThere is one clear message.\n\nIf you thought the era of cuts is over, think again.\n\nDay-to-day spending, officially known rather more prosaically as the Resource Departmental Expenditure Limit (which excludes investment spending), is set to fall by 4% over the next three years.\n\nThe IFS says that a \"particularly sharp cut\" has been loaded onto the last year of the parliament, 2019-20, never a particularly comfortable time for a government to be squeezing the public sector pips even more aggressively.\n\nAlongside that, the IFS says the overall tax burden is set to rise as a proportion of national income to the highest level since 1986.\n\nThat is not a function of actual tax rises - taxes for many millions of people have fallen as income tax thresholds have risen - but a function of a relatively high tax take throughout an era of pretty stagnant growth.\n\nWill Mr Hammond change course on 8 March, and further loosen the government's austerity strictures as he did in the Autumn Statement last year - pushing the deficit reduction target into the conveniently indistinct long grass of \"during the next parliament\"?\n\nThe government has, after all, promised an economy that works for all.\n\nI am told not - and that Mr Hammond is approaching his first Budget as a \"steady-as-she-goes affair\" with no major yanks on the national rudder, particularly given the economy's robust performance since the Brexit referendum.\n\nIt has been pointed out to me that, just ahead of the triggering of Article 50 - the official mechanism for leaving the European Union - the last thing Britain needs is a reset of fiscal policy.\n\nIn 2010, the Conservatives were elected as the party that would bring public income and public expenditure into balance.\n\nMr Hammond still cleaves to that view. \"He is a Conservative,\" as one official close to him says.\n\nGeorge Osborne's economic approach is alive and well.\n\nYes, there are criticisms by some economists that there is no need to run a country like a household budget where pennies in and pennies out matter - governments are able to borrow at very cheap rates on the international markets and put that money to economically valuable use.\n\nYes, there are criticisms that debt costs as a percentage of national income are low by historic standards and so the room for manoeuvre is rather greater than the national debt headline figures suggest.\n\nBut those close to Mr Hammond argue that, OK, borrowing may be cheap now but servicing Britain's £1.7 trillion debt is still expensive, costing around £34bn a year, or 4.6% of all government spending.\n\nCut out the deficit and start dealing with the debt and those costs can be brought down.\n\nCertainly, since the referendum, the cost of government debt has increased as rising inflation risk pushes up yields - the interest rate on government bonds issued to investors.\n\nMr Hammond is briefing the Cabinet for the first time this week on the broad parameters of next month's Budget.\n\nHe will talk about Britain's historic productivity problem and how to solve it, he will talk about skills, he will talk about research and development support and he will talk about infrastructure spending.\n\nSupporting the private economy is his priority, not reversing public sector cuts.\n\nMr Hammond will also say that the new world of work - the gig economy - is affecting the way the Treasury has to approach complicated issues such as tax receipts as the number of self-employed - who tend to pay a lower proportion of their income to the state - grows.\n\nA lot of it will be rhetoric at this stage.\n\nFor Mr Hammond wants to keep his powder dry.\n\nDry for the bigger fiscal event of the year, the autumn Budget (as we should now call it) in November or December.\n\nAs he said last year, he only wants one major tax and spend \"moment\" a year.\n\nAnd it's not going to be next month.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The Apple boss answered questions from university students and staff\n\nApple chief executive Tim Cook has repeated his opposition to US President Donald Trump's travel ban.\n\nHe was speaking after he collected an honorary doctorate at the University of Glasgow.\n\nEarlier Mr Cook visited an Apple store in Glasgow, where staff gave him a tartan scarf and a drawing.\n\nHis comments on the presidential decree targeting seven predominantly Muslim countries came in a Q&A session at the university.\n\nResponding to questions from students and staff, Mr Cook said: \"I wrote this letter, you probably read about it unless you're living underground, about the most recent executive order that was issued in the US.\n\n\"We have employees that secured a work visa, they brought family to the US, but happened to be outside the US when the executive order was issued and all of a sudden their families were affected.\n\n\"They couldn't get back in. That's a crisis. You can imagine the stress.\n\n\"If we stand and say nothing it's as if we're agreeing, that we become a part of it. It's important to speak out.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nMr Cook has taken a strong stance on user privacy and other issues which have at times brought him into conflict with the US authorities.\n\nSince taking the helm of the company, Mr Cook has led the introduction of new products such as the iPhone 7, iPad Pro and Apple Watch.\n\nHe is also leading a company-wide effort to use 100% renewable energy at all Apple facilities.\n\nIn 2015, the 56-year-old became an honorary patron of Trinity College Dublin's Philosophical Society and gave a talk to students.\n\nThe embroidered picture presented by the Apple store staff shows Mr Cook waving and the words: \"Welcome Tim.\"\n\nIt also features saltire flags and the Loch Ness monster.\n\nHe said: \"That's great. I recall looking for the Loch Ness monster in 1984.\n\n\"Everything is right but the colour of the hair.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Canada's Erik Guay wins super-G gold at the Alpine World Ski Championships in St Mortiz with a time of 1:25.38.\n\nFollow the Alpine World Ski Championships across the BBC from 7 February - 19 February.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Hayange is not a place of metaphors, but the relics of its shuttered steel furnaces seem to signal something unresolved. They stalk the landscape around France's north-eastern villages, looming over a new political age.\n\nThis was once the thriving heart of France's steel industry. In the past decade, unemployment has risen by 75%, and around a quarter of the working population now crosses the border to Luxembourg each day for work.\n\nThis was once staunch left-wing country; communists and socialists ran this place together. But the past few years have seen left-wing votes shrivel, while those for the National Front (FN) have more than doubled, pushing it into the lead.\n\nIn the market, there are many who are happy to say they vote FN, though not always to give their name.\n\n\"I'm for the National Front. I'm not afraid to say it,\" one woman told me. \"I'm not totally in favour of them but it's my way of saying that I'm not happy with today's politics.\n\n\"I think we've left the door open to too much immigration. Employment is in decline. We give, we give, we give to everyone. And I think that's why you chose Brexit, and I absolutely approve of that.\"\n\nThe National Front is promising France its own referendum on \"Frexit\" or exit from the EU, if it wins power in May. It's also promising to clamp down on immigration and give French people priority when it comes to jobs and housing.\n\nHayange is one of a number of towns controlled by Marine Le Pen's National Front\n\nThe National Front has never managed to win power at the regional or the national level, but now controls a dozen towns in France, including Hayange. And the man elected as FN mayor here, Fabien Engelmann, was once himself a union man from the far left.\n\nThe party presents itself as defending France's \"forgotten ones\" - against crime, immigration, and economic change.\n\n\"The left betrayed its voters, betrayed the workers, the middle class, the shop owners,\" Mr Engelmann told me. \"There's also mass immigration today, and I think that after a while you can't welcome the poor from across the world. We have to stop this immigration and take care of our own.\"\n\nBut the election of Mayor Engelmann has been divisive here, partly because political loyalties themselves are dividing more sharply.\n\nAfter years of trying to boost the economy by pushing through liberal reforms, the Socialist Party is deeply unpopular with many blue collar workers, who say they feel abandoned and ignored, as industries close and jobs become less secure.\n\nIt didn't help that, before he became president, Francois Hollande visited Hayange during his election campaign to promise that the blast furnaces here wouldn't close. They did.\n\nAfter that, votes for the Socialist Party began to plummet, as supporters turned towards the political margins for answers - both the far left, and the far right.\n\nPatrice Hainy was one of those converts. Fed up with the attitudes of France's more established parties, he responded to a National Front leaflet pushed through his door, and ended up joining the party, as a deputy mayor.\n\nPatrice lives on one of the old steel-workers' estates, built here in the 19th Century by the wealthy family who built the industry from scratch. According to local historians, it was part of a new vision back then to provide workers with everything they might need from cradle to grave: hospitals, schools, canteens, even holiday camps.\n\nNow Patrice, living in a relic of that industrial heyday, says it's the sense of being ignored that leaves left-wing voters open to the FN.\n\n\"I was attracted to them because the other parties don't listen to the people, and I believed the FN was listening to me,\" he explained. \"It attracts weak members from the left. I was from the left and I was angry with our politicians who are sacrificing French people.\"\n\nBut within a year of joining the party, Patrice had left, disillusioned by what he describes as the National Front's \"repression\", and anti-Muslim views.\n\nHe's planning to vote for a left-wing candidate in the presidential elections this year, but says voters should not underestimate the appeal of FN leader Marine Le Pen.\n\n\"I think she might have a chance, because what is happening at a national level is what's already happened in my town,\" he said. \"The FN voters go and vote, the others don't because they're so disgusted with politics.\"\n\nDespite all the changes, the boxing club in Hayange remains open\n\nThe FN's fiercest critics, like nurse Gilles Wobedo, are trying to draw together opposition voices, to protest against what they see as divisive and partisan policies by the mayor.\n\n\"The National Front attacks democracy in this town,\" he told me. \"For the past three years, they have divided people: young against old, Muslims against Catholics, workers against the unemployed. The mayor has divided the population and maintains his grip with a small majority.\"\n\nBut, he says, it's hard to build momentum because the opposition parties here are so divided - each hoping to win back power for themselves. Not too dissimilar to the problems the left is facing at the national level, with left-wing votes divided between three different figures in the presidential campaign: the socialists' Benoit Hamon, the far-left leader Jean-Luc Melenchon and the independent centrist Emmanuel Macron.\n\nOne relic of Hayange that has survived is its boxing club. A place for its young men to forget France's politicians, and learn how to win - and lose - for themselves. One of the boxers there, Frank, says a vote for the FN is still a vote of protest and desperation for many people here.\n\n\"On the left, we've had the Socialist Party in the past; but it doesn't work,\" he said. \"So now, we would like to try something different. I think it's a last solution.\"\n\nWhat if that solution also fails, I ask him?\n\nHe shrugs. In the ring, it's easy to judge promises against performance. In politics, it's often past performance that loses elections; and promises that win.", "The \"seven-day NHS\" was a key pledge of former Prime Minister David Cameron, and has been taken on by Theresa May.\n\nHer government envisages people having access to local GPs seven days a week. It also wants patients to receive the same level of urgent and emergency care in hospitals in England at weekends, as on Mondays to Fridays.\n\nBut is this feasible?\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Mums Abigail Tumfo, Sheila Navacroft and Shakeria Wright have told BBC Newsnight about the difficulties of raising their children in one room.\n\nThey are all living in a 45-room development in Welwyn Garden City, after being forced to leave private rented accommodation in Waltham Forest in London, where council housing is sparse.\n\nWaltham Forest council has said it does all it can to house people in the borough, and is working to repair any sub-standard housing.", "Over the last three decades, governments of various stripes have promised radical change to solve England's housing crisis and today's White Paper is no exception.\n\nThe problem is that so many of the initiatives and ideas sold to the country as ground-breaking prove to be business as usual.\n\nSo the Communities Secretary Sajid Javid went out of his way to sound no-nonsense and tough today. He accused some English councils of \"fudging\" the numbers on housing need in their area and warned them that he was not going to allow that to happen anymore.\n\nBut the response to the government's proposals has been decidedly mixed.\n\nLabour's shadow housing minister John Healey described them as \"feeble beyond belief\".\n\n\"Re-treading old ground\" was how the National Association of Commercial Finance Brokers described the White Paper. \"Kicking the can down the road,\" one big investment fund said.\n\nThe chief executive of the housebuilder Inland Homes, Stephen Wicks, bemoaned the failure to relax rules on green belt development.\n\n\"Brownfield in itself can't possibly sustain the long-term housing requirements of the UK,\" he said. \"It can go an awful long way but there needs to be a relaxation of some green belt to enable us to deliver the numbers that we are required to do.\"\n\nThe White Paper does include measures to encourage developers, housing associations and councils to build more affordable homes more quickly, both to rent and to buy.\n\nBut this government seems to speak with two voices on housing: the communities department wants to shift the balance of power firmly towards new development in places people want to live, but Number 10 and some influential Tory backbenchers are sympathetic to the passionate concerns of those who wish to protect the countryside and particularly the green belt.\n\nThe real question that lies behind all the rhetoric and policy bullet-points is whether the balance of power between development and local opposition has fundamentally changed.\n\nMinisters now accept England needs 250,000 new homes every year, they have described the housing market as \"broken\" and they agree that radical change is the only way to mend it.\n\nBut many have yet to be convinced that this White Paper amounts to a \"realistic plan\" to achieve that.", "Watch Cleveland Cavaliers star LeBron James score a \"jaw-dropping\" three-pointer in the last second to force overtime against the Washington Wizards, with his side going on to win 140-135.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Sunlight fills central Melbourne during the event on Tuesday\n\nIt may not rival \"Manhattanhenge\", but the Australian city of Melbourne has enjoyed its own spectacular solar phenomenon.\n\nAt 20:27 local time on Tuesday, the setting sun perfectly aligned with the city's east-west streets to cast a golden light between skyscrapers.\n\nDubbed \"Melbhenge\" in reference to the famous New York spectacle, the event happens biannually, but it gained greater attention this year because of a social media campaign calling for photographs led by Alan Duffy.\n\n\"It's similar in concept to Stonehenge,\" said the Swinburne University astronomer, referring to England's monument where the sun lines up with vertical stones on each of the solstices.\n\n\"The example in Melbourne is on a slightly bigger scale, and it has more to do with efficient town planning, rather than anything spiritual.\"\n\nMelburnians posted images of the phenomenon, which trended on social media\n\nMelbourne's grid system, designed by surveyor Robert Hoddle in 1837, affords several potential viewing points in the city centre.\n\nBut Dr Duffy said trees, trams and low-lying buildings make the choice difficult - not to mention the weather.\n\nLocal man David Brewster said he had an excellent view from central William St.\n\n\"The Melbourne grid is perfect for this sort of thing,\" he told the BBC. \"It was just a very clear night. You get a nice good view with the tram tracks.\"\n\nDavid Brewster also photographed the event last year\n\nManhattanhenge has become an attraction for photographers hoping to capture the perfect sunset.\n\nDr Duffy admitted Melbourne could not match New York for its corridors of towering skyscrapers. But he hoped his campaign, asking photographers to post their favourite locations, would make it easier to enjoy Melbhenge in the future.\n\n\"I've been astounding by the response,\" he told the BBC.\n\nSimilar \"henge\" phenomena also occur in other cities with large numbers of skyscrapers and long straight streets - such as Chicago, Montreal and Toronto.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Twice a year the Sun sets in alignment between skyscraper corridors, illuminating all east-west streets\n\nThe term Manhattanhenge was coined by astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson in 1996.\n\nMelbourne will next enjoy the display on 3 November, Dr Duffy said.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nJoe Root is the \"obvious candidate\" to be named as England Test captain - but the role must not affect his batting, says pace bowler James Anderson.\n\nBatsman Root is the favourite to take over from Alastair Cook, who stepped down on Monday after a record 59 Tests.\n\nThe Yorkshire player had been Test vice-captain to Cook since May 2015.\n\n\"Root is fairly quiet but he has got that fire in his belly. He's a really impressive young man,\" Anderson told The Tuffers and Vaughan Cricket Show.\n\nShould he be named captain aged 26, Root would be a year younger than Cook was when he took on the Test role on a full-time basis in August 2012.\n\nNo batsman has scored more Test runs than Root's 4,594 since he made his debut on 13 December 2012, and only India captain Virat Kohli (8,536) has scored more runs than Root's 8,469 in all three forms of international cricket.\n\nAnderson, England's leading Test wicket-taker, has played under five full-time Test captains since making his debut in May 2003.\n\nThe 34-year-old has served Nasser Hussain, Michael Vaughan, Kevin Pietersen, Andrew Strauss and Cook, as well as Andrew Flintoff who deputised for several Tests in 2006 and 2007.\n\n\"Root gets into situations, one-on-ones, with people. He speaks a lot of sense when he does speak and he's a really impressive young man,\" explained Anderson.\n\n\"He's the obvious candidate. The decision is a big one because he's our best player, so you obviously don't want that to be affected.\"\n\nWhile they do not play another Test until July, England then play seven home Test matches - against South Africa and West Indies - in three months, before travelling to Australia in November for the Ashes.\n\nRoot scored 1,477 Test runs in 2016, making centuries against South Africa, Pakistan and India, as well as scoring 796 runs in one-day internationals and 297 in Twenty20 internationals.\n\n\"He loves cricket. It's very rare you see a player that's had the success he's had and he's not like that,\" Anderson said.\n\n\"In the brief period Alastair Cook's been off the field - for bathroom breaks - Root's been in there making changes. He's been good.\n\n\"It can be a difficult situation for a vice-captain when the captain goes off, you're in charge and myself and Stuart [Broad] might not make it that easy to go up and talk tactics. However he's done that and he's been good.\"\n\nAre there any other candidates?\n\nRoot has led Yorkshire four times in the County Championship, taking charge when the county secured the 2014 County Championship title after then-captain Andrew Gale was suspended.\n\nHe was also the on-field captain when Middlesex, led by Australian batsman Chris Rogers, made a record 472-3 to beat Yorkshire by seven wickets in the same year.\n\nAll-rounder Ben Stokes, who was vice-captain on the recent limited-overs tour of Bangladesh which regular ODI skipper Eoin Morgan missed, was described as a \"natural leader\" by his Durham skipper Paul Collingwood.\n\n\"Ben has got a natural draw to him and he would be an excellent vice-captain for Root,\" former England limited-overs captain Collingwood said on the Tuffers and Vaughan show.\n\n\"The captain will have leaders underneath him that he knows he can go to - I think Ben Stokes would be the perfect man for that.\"\n\nFast bowler Stuart Broad has also been mooted - he captained the Twenty20 side between 2011 and 2014 - and Anderson said: \"I wouldn't be against a fast bowler but one issue could be fitness.\n\n\"Bowlers get injured a lot more so are they going to play every game? The international schedule is hectic so it can be difficult.\"\n\nWicketkeeper Jos Buttler, who led the one-day side in Bangladesh in Morgan's absence and remains the official limited-overs vice-captain, has also been suggested as a possible candidate.\n\nHowever, the Lancashire player's Test place is not guaranteed given current keeper Jonny Bairstow's good form - although Buttler played as a specialist batsman in the last three Tests of the recent India series.\n\n'You don't need any captaincy experience'\n\nEx-England spinner Graeme Swann told BBC Radio 5 live he felt the pressure of potential Test captaincy was already affecting Root's batting.\n\n\"I think we should leave Joe Root to be the best batsman this country has ever produced, which he would be without the burden of being the captain,\" he said.\n\nHowever, Kohli, along with Australia's Steve Smith and New Zealand's Kane Williamson, have each raised their games since becoming captains of their respective countries.\n\nSmith and Kohli are the two top-ranked Test batsmen, while Williamson is one of 13 men to have scored a Test century against all of the other nine Test-playing nations.\n\n\"It's very English to assume the captaincy will affect him. The other three have got captaincy of their country and gone to a different level with it,\" said ex-England skipper Michael Vaughan, who came through the same Sheffield Collegiate club side and Yorkshire academy ranks which produced Root, and has been a long-term mentor to the young right-hander.\n\n\"I don't think there's an issue with him captaining, he's too good a player. I think he'd be a good one.\n\n\"To captain any team you have to be loving the game, love the difficult moments and prove people wrong. He is that kind of character.\"\n\nEngland and Yorkshire batsman Gary Ballance, who was named captain of the county in December 2016, said that his team-mate Root's inexperience was not an issue in him assuming the captaincy.\n\nThe pair lived together in 2011 during their early years in the Yorkshire first team and Ballance took Root's place when he was dropped for the final Test of England's Ashes whitewash in Australia in 2013-14.\n\n\"I think both of us have probably matured a bit more as cricketers and people. He's ready as a leader now in that England changing room,\" Ballance told BBC World Service's Stumped programme.\n\n\"I think Rooty's a natural born leader. He's done it from a young age. People follow him.\n\n\"He speaks well, he's got a great cricket brain. I don't think inexperience is too much of a problem. He'll be ready if he gets the opportunity.\"", "President Donald Trump has again lambasted the judicial rulings keeping him from enforcing his travel ban - but this time his tweet had a curious turn of phrase.\n\n\"Big increase in traffic into our country from certain areas, while our people are far more vulnerable, as we wait for what should be EASY D!\" he wrote at 12:41 Washington time.\n\nIt was just one of a string of tweets defending his executive order, which banned entry to the US from citizens from seven countries deemed a high risk for terrorism. It has been put on hold while judges across the country assess its legality.\n\nBut the use of \"EASY D\" left the Twitterati scratching their heads.\n\n\"I think the one thing uniting the country rn [right now] is that none of us, regardless of political affiliation, knows what \"Easy D\" is,\" wrote Teen Vogue's Lily Herman.\n\nSome were certain they knew: \"Spoiler alert: D means decision,\" wrote CNN's Jon Ostrower. (Others argued that it meant \"defence\", a commonly used abbreviation in sports.)\n\nMost were less concerned about the meaning and more interested in the opportunity to make a quick joke.\n\n\"Don't make him switch out Easy D for Hard D,\" warned frequent Trump critic Arthur Chu.\n\nThe single-theme joke account @TrumpDraws got into the act with a new image playing on the Easy D reference.\n\n\"The media never wants to talk about the people Easy D slaughtered at Bowling Green,\" quipped Vox writer Matt Yglesias, referring to the non-existent massacre mistakenly mentioned by Trump strategist Kellyanne Conway.\n\nScreenwriter Randi Mayem Singer joked about Trump's earlier tweet, jeering the retailer Nordstrom for dropping his daughter Ivanka's fashion line. \"I just got measured at Nordstrom. Was wearing an Easy D, but I should be an Easy DDD.\"\n\nStill, while the anti-Trump crowd had fun laughing it up on Twitter, they have had less success stopping Trump's cabinet appointments.\n\nSo far all of his picks remain on track to confirmation, and even the most hotly-contested nomination, Betsy DeVos, was approved by the Senate.\n\nMeanwhile, Trump supporters say their man is doing exactly what they elected him to do - keep the country safe and disrupt government business as usual.", "June Lord, 82, is one of those helped home from hospital under the Wakefield project\n\nEvery Monday morning, in a meeting room within earshot of the bells of Wakefield cathedral, a group of healthcare workers help to stage a mini-revolution.\n\nNothing that you read in the next few minutes may strike you as particularly surprising.\n\nYet the experimental manner in which they are working together in this corner of Yorkshire is being seen as a possible way to improve healthcare across the country, and save the NHS money.\n\nAt the table is a healthcare assistant, called Kay, Karen the physiotherapist, then Jane the occupational therapist.\n\nOn the other side sit two mental health nurses both called Rachel, and finally Sue Robson - another mental health nurse who's been with the NHS for 37 years.\n\n\"I've seen many, many changes, and this is one of the most exciting,\" smiles Sue.\n\nEach Monday, they sit together and plan the care that will be offered to the mostly elderly people they are working with in a number of care homes in the Wakefield district.\n\nBecause each here brings a different specialism to the table, they can, as a group, build up a complete picture of how best to help each patient.\n\nThere is one woman they are especially worried about this week. She has fallen quite a few times, but as they talk it begins to look less like a purely physical problem.\n\n\"I carried out a physio session last week,\" says Karen.\n\nShe was \"very anxious. It was difficult to engage with her,\" adds Kay.\n\n\"So today if things don't seem to be improving we may look at discussing with the psychiatrist whether she needs a review,\" concludes Sue.\n\n\"As professionals we are linking up,\" Sue continues. \"We're discussing the case between ourselves. We have links to the GP. We have links to the mental health services and we are all working together rather than in isolation.\"\n\nMental health nurse Sue Robson says they have seen good results in Wakefield\n\nAcross the board this project in Wakefield - which at its most basic aims to get the different parts of the health service and the care system working together - is easing the pressures on the NHS and on care homes.\n\nThey have seen a sizable reduction in the number of patients who've had to go to hospital from the care homes they work in. A reduction in the use of ambulances. A reduction in the number of days patients who do go to hospital end up spending in a hospital bed.\n\nIt's both about keeping patients out of hospital in the first place, and getting them home as quickly as possible if they do need to go.\n\nIn the first nine months of 2016-17, phase one of the Wakefield Vanguard Care Homes scheme recorded:\n\nThe project has involved NHS workers training up care home staff beyond the basic first aid most already have. That gives care homes the skills they need to better diagnose what is wrong with a resident who falls ill. It is resulting in better care for patients and fewer 999 calls for an ambulance.\n\nThere are also efforts to improve people's health in the first place. A lot of work is going into making the men and women who live in care homes and \"independent living\" flats (they used to be known as sheltered accommodation) feel less isolated.\n\nSharon Carter runs one project that aims to stop the elderly feeling lonely. It's called Portrait of a Life. Essentially it's a photo and memory book that residents like 91-year-old Marjorie Smith receive.\n\nMarjorie Smith is a resident at the Croftlands independent living scheme\n\nIt helps them reminisce, it helps other older people living in the same accommodation get to know their neighbours, and it helps care staff learn about what makes the people in their care tick.\n\n\"We're finding they have a better sense of well-being as opposed to ill-being,\" says Sharon.\n\nAlong with everything else the project is doing, she says it's led to fewer people going into hospital and residential care.\n\nMany of course still do end up in hospital. And when they do Louise Lumley works at the \"getting them home\" end of the process.\n\nShe's part of Age UK's Wakefield District team, and outside Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield she's securing 82-year-old June Lord's wheelchair in the back of an adapted car. It will be a 20-minute journey home.\n\nWhen they arrive, Louise goes through a list of questions. Does June have someone who can help her in the coming days? Does she have the medicine she needs? Is there anything at home that's particularly dangerous that might need to be made safe, to prevent future injuries?\n\nThe answers will go into a database that can help tailor June's care in the coming months.\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.\n\nThere is plenty of other work besides. A local not-for-profit Housing Association sits in meetings with health staff to work out how best to improve the lives of the elderly people who rent flats from them.\n\nThey're trying to join up all the parts of the system as much as they can.\n\nEveryone here stresses it's about improving patient care. But there are savings to be made. They estimate that if they roll this project out across the whole district, by 2021 they will make a net saving of £5.3m a year.\n\nYou can download the podcast containing Matthew Price's full report for BBC Radio 4's Today programme here.", "Dates: Coverage: Live across BBC One, BBC Radio 5 live, BBC Red Button, Connected TV and online.\n\nWorcester Warriors are the epitome of a modern, professional rugby union club.\n\nIn a purpose built stadium, near a motorway, players from a dozen different nations train on an artificial pitch so new it uses the very latest organic infill (carbon neutral, derived from defibration of woody plants, according to the Italian manufacturer).\n\nBetween the New Zealanders, South Africans, Pacific Islanders and Englishmen there is Jaba Bregvadze. He is a Georgian rugby player. A hooker with 40 caps for his country and club career which took him to one of Europe's most famous sides, Toulouse, before Worcester.\n\nBut his rugby education was in Tblisi and he knows exactly what the sport means to Georgia.\n\n''The tradition of Georgians is physical. Unfortunately, we had a lot of wars. Rugby is the same, like war. You are playing against someone, maybe he is your friend but for 80 minutes he is your enemy,\" he says.\n\n\"You must hurt him, but not give penalties, there are some rules (he laughs). I think this is the Georgian tradition. That's why the scrum is easier for us, driving the mauls is easier for us, we are playing with the heart, with big heart but everyone knows our skills are not in the top, that is the Georgian tradition.''\n\nThat ethos sits with the legend of Lelo - a Georgian folk sport which is the source of the national team's nickname - which pitted village against village battling over a ball in a field. Georgia has a unique version of rugby history.\n\nThe problem, though, is the future. How to develop those missing skills?\n\nResults suggest Georgia have outgrown their status. They've won the European Nations Cup - the Six Nations 'B' competition, now renamed the Rugby Europe Championship - for each of the past six seasons.\n\nAt the last World Cup they won two games and defended bravely in defeat against New Zealand. As the Six Nations began they were officially world ranked 12th, that's one place above Italy.\n\nPromotion to - and relegation from - the Six Nations has been ruled out by chief executive John Feehan, at least in the near future. In reality Georgia are well aware of that position, and as much as they would like to be in the tournament they have another idea.\n\nThe head of operations at Georgia's Rugby Union told BBC Sport he would like to see a \"show match\" between the bottom-placed team in the Six Nations and the Rugby Europe winner. That team, for almost all of the past decade, has been Georgia.\n\nThe Georgians suggest this match would take place on a neutral venue. It would not be a promotion relegation game. Just a match that - as Georgia puts it - \"really can attract big interest\".\n• None 'Angry man Brown on his 'passion for England'\n• None Comparing England with All Black is fair - Warburton\n\nIt was a suggestion I put to John Feehan, the Six Nations chief executive.\n\n''I'm sure it would be interesting but we've got to look at it from the integrity of our competition and what's good for us and not necessarily what's good for Georgia,\" he told BBC Sport.\n\n\"And I don't mean that in any nasty way - other than to say that my role is to make sure that the six unions which are involved in the Six Nations maintain the credibility of the tournament. And a game like that could involve all sorts of speculation that wouldn't necessarily be helpful.''\n\nSince they joined in 2000, Italy have finished bottom of the Six Nations table on 11 occasions - and they were well beaten at home by Wales in their opening game in this year's championship.\n\nBut in individual matches they have beaten all the other nations teams, apart from England. Mr Feehan's standpoint is to support Italy's status in the competition. But he does admit to some disappointment.\n\n''Have Italy progressed as much as we'd like? Probably not,\" he said.\n\n\"But the reality is; it's very hard. And part of that is that everybody else's standards have improved as well. It's not like the others have stood still and Italy hasn't. Italy have developed and made progress, but it's a relative progress, if you like.\n\n\"Are they going to catch up? Of course they are. And they are in the process of doing that and [new Italy boss] Conor O'Shea's going to be a very important part of that happening.''\n\nThis will be O'Shea's first Six Nations tournament in charge of Italy. He comes with a strong reputation in the game, both as a player for Ireland and a coach in English club rugby. He understands there is a need for developing nations to have some meaningful incentive.\n\nHe told me: ''We can't let Italian rugby wither - Italian rugby needs to be supported - we need the extra investment in Italian rugby because Italian rugby has a history and a tradition, like Romanian rugby, if you think back to the 1970s in Romania [when they were beating the likes of France]. So we have to nurture all teams, all nations.\n\n\"I look around at the young players and the youth system in Italian rugby - there are more players in Italy than there are in Wales - lots of young players. Do you want to lose that? No, you don't, you have to incentivise it.\n\n\"Do we expand? Do we have another system? But by the time those decisions are made be careful what you wish for, because it might not be Italy who are bottom of the pile.''\n\nLater this year Georgia will host the under-20's World Cup for the first time. Jaba Bregvadze believes interest in the sport there has grown significantly.\n\nGames against Russia - which carry enormous political and cultural significance - attract sell-out crowds of 50,000 in Tblisi. But Bregvadze says tens of thousands of fans are now coming to watch them play other sides too.\n\n''At the weekend there is not too much happening at Georgia. When you are winning a game at the weekend, the people are coming, it's like a positive atmosphere,\" he said.\n\n\"The people are hearing something new; the Georgia team wins by 20 points or 40 points or five points, it doesn't matter. I think they're getting proud of their team and happy. I think it's a big thing for the whole country.''\n\nIn November 2016, Georgia played Scotland in Kilmarnock and were well beaten 43-16. But Bregvadze desperately wants more exposure to these kind of games.\n\n''It would be great if we had the chance to play in the Six Nations but the most important thing for us is to play as much against the good teams, the better teams than we are, because if you want to grow as a team, you need to play against better teams than you are.''\n\nThe Georgian rugby union has suggested to BBC Sport that, if they are barred from the Six Nations indefinitely, they will be \"looking to participate in other competitions as a franchise, whatever chance there will be we will explore this possibility\".\n\nThe prospect of relegation adds a crucial dimension to many sporting competitions, it is exactly the fate Worcester are trying desperately to avoid in English rugby's Premiership this season.\n\nThe Six Nations may have ruled it out, for now. But if Georgia keep winning, if their crowds keep coming and if their players keep being hired in England and France then their presence will remain whilst the Six Nations carries on without them.", "Former US President Barack Obama has enjoyed a spot of kitesurfing with Richard Branson.", "Christie Brinkley has proved age is just a number by appearing on the cover of Sports Illustrated's annual Swimsuit Issue.\n\nThis year's cover sees the 63-year-old posing alongside her two daughters - Sailor Brinkley Cook, and Alexa Ray Joel.\n\nWriting on Instagram, Brinkley said: \"Thank you Sports Illustrated for sending the powerful message that good things come in packages of every size and we do not come with an expiration date!\"\n\nChristie appears to be literally walking on water in the photo - something she referred to in her Instagram post.\n\n\"My kids think I walk on water, so let's not mention the apple box concealed just under the surface,\" she joked.\n\nAlexa Ray is the only child of Christie Brinkley and singer Billy Joel\n\nChristie shot to fame after appearing in Sports Illustrated in the late 1970s and went on to become well known as an actress and TV personality.\n\nShe continued to be a successful model, appearing on the cover of Playboy and Men's Health.\n\nIn 1985, she married Uptown Girl singer Billy Joel, who is Alexa's father. The couple divorced eight years later.\n\nChristie has appeared on three previous Sports Illustrated covers\n\nIn its editorial, Sports Illustrated said Brinkley was \"out to prove that age is nothing more than a number\".\n\nSpeaking to People, the model said: \"When I turned 30, I was like, 'This is the last time I'm posing in a bathing suit!'\n\n\"When this issue comes out, I'll be 63. I thought, 'those days are over'. But to get to do it with my girls, I thought, 'one last go!'.\"\n\nHer daughter Sailor, 18, said appearing in Sports Illustrated \"has been my dream since I popped out the womb\" in a post on Twitter.\n\nThe images received a warm response on social media - although some questioned whether posing at an older age should be considered an achievement.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n• None Serena Williams is Sportsperson of the Year. Not everyone agrees\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The Dodge Ram 1500 - made in the USA? Not entirely\n\nFew places have \"Made in America\" written all over them like the Warren Truck Assembly Plant.\n\nThey have been making trucks at the factory, outside Detroit, since 1938, and you don't get much more American than the chunky, no-nonsense, big-tyred Dodge Ram 1500s that roll out from the 87-acre site every day.\n\nSo if I want to buy American, surely I can do no better than buy a Ram?\n\nWell, no. Actually you'd be better off buying a Honda.\n\nThe Kogod School of Business at American University in Washington DC compiles an annual index of the cars Americans drive - and where they are made.\n\nThe Dodge Ram 1500 turns out, according to this index, to be only 59.5% made in America.\n\nThe Honda Accord, says Kogod, is 81% American.\n\nNow this is partly because some of the Ram 1500s are made not in Detroit at all, but in Saltillo, Mexico.\n\nAnd then there is the fiendishly complicated issue of components.\n\nThe Honda Accord is 81% American, according to the Kogod School of Business\n\nFiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA), which makes the Ram, has a huge supplier network that buys in parts and manufacturing from around the world from Cordoba in Argentina to Serbia and South Korea.\n\nIt's not just FCA, globalisation is in the lifeblood of the car industry, and its supply lines have become possibly the most complex and finely tuned of any business on the planet.\n\nNow this model is under threat.\n\nIn the US, President Trump has pledged to hike tariffs on US cars made abroad, or as he succinctly tweeted: \"Make in U.S.A. or pay big border tax!\" This, he believes, will save American jobs.\n\nMr Trump may well have caught hold of a global zeitgeist. Before the US election, the World Trade Organization (WTO) reported a spike in trade-restrictive measures imposed by members, averaging 22 per month, the highest since 2011.\n\n\"In the current environment, a rise in trade restrictions is the last thing the global economy needs,\" director-general Roberto Azevedo said.\n\nBut the carmakers appear to be buckling under, and scrambling to polish up their Made in America badges. Ford, for instance, scrapped a plan to build a plant in Mexico and got tweeted a pat on the back from the president.\n\nDespite the hype, Ford's decision to build in Michigan is a minor tweak in its global strategy. But if border taxes on car imports work their way from angry tweets to real legislation, the global motor industry is in trouble.\n\nOne firm ignoring President Trump's criticism is German car giant BMW, who recently announced plans to retool its factory north of Pretoria in South Africa to produce the X3 sport-utility vehicle outside the US for the first time. BMW is also building another Mexican plant in San Luis Potosi.\n\nIan Robertson, head of sales and marketing at BMW, points out that its Spartanburg plant in South Carolina in the US is the biggest of all its factories, and says its decision to build the San Luis Potosi plant simply reflects how the industry works.\n\n\"This is part of the normal business development of a company like BMW which has nearly 30 production facilities in 14 countries. And the Mexican investment is one in a plant which will produce a capacity that will ultimately supply many markets.\"\n\nIn the UK, the making and selling of cars is similarly global. Last year, which was not untypical, the majority of cars made in the UK were exported, while most of those sold (86%) were imported.\n\nFew UK politicians are making Trump-like calls for protectionism, but if the Brexit process ends up with the country pulling out of the EU single market, as Prime Minister Theresa May has indicated, it could still lead to tariffs on imports and exports, and hobble the car industry's cross-border supply chains and sales.\n\n\"Year-on-year exports have driven the car industry, and with so much content sourced internationally, we are massively dependent on zero tariffs and a customs union,\" says Tamzen Isacsson, communications and international director at the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).\n\nIf tariffs based on WTO rules were applied to cross-border car and car part sales, the SMMT estimates the price of an average imported car would rise by £1,500, while overall costs would rise by at least £4.5bn ($5.6bn) a year.\n\nBut possible tariffs are not the only problem.\n\nModern car manufacturing is built around just-in-time manufacturing (JIT), developed over the last 60 years under various names like \"lean manufacturing\" and \"quality circles\".\n\nThey all have the same core purpose - to minimise waste by keeping inventory at very low levels, alerting suppliers at exactly the point when new parts are needed.\n\nThe flipside of JIT is that a delay can wreak havoc on the whole operation.\n\nWhen a fire closed the Channel Tunnel in 2015, UK car plants, starved for just a few hours of their supplies, were forced to hire private jets to intercept trucks en route to the UK to make sure components arrived on time.\n\n\"Many manufacturers carry stock to last them no more than four hours, so they are utterly dependent on rapid, fast-flowing content from the EU,\" says Ms Isacsson. \"If you have delays with tariffs and cross-border checks the costs mount up and in an intensely competitive environment you suddenly find you cannot compete.\"\n\nWhile the possibility of doing a free trade deal with the EU for the car industry would keep the wheels of trade turning, identifying which imports and exports were for the car industry and which weren't would be difficult.\n\n\"It would be easy to identify an engine, a turbo-charger, but we also buy in steel, we buy chemicals, we buy glass, we buy engine control units. How would you be sure that those particular products are going to go into the automotive sector, rather than another sector?,\" says SMMT chief executive Mike Hawes.\n\nUltimately, unwinding the labyrinthine supply chain of the car industry to work out what to tax and where could prove the biggest deterrent to new tariffs.", "In this spectacular section of The Joy Of Stats, broadcast by the BBC in 2010, he tells the story of the world in 200 countries over 200 years using 120,000 numbers - in just four minutes.", "Forensic artist Hew Morrison used specialist computer software for his reconstruction of St Magnus\n\nA facial reconstruction has been made of Orkney's St Magnus to help mark the 900th anniversary of his death.\n\nForensic artist Hew Morrison's research included studies of photographs taken in the 1920s of what is said to be the skull of the 12th Century Norse earl.\n\nBefore sainthood, Magnus Erlendsson shared the earldom of Orkney with his cousin, Hakon.\n\nHakon's jealousy of his cousin's popularity on the islands led to Magnus being put to death.\n\nAlthough the date of his martyrdom is uncertain - they range from days in the years 1115 to 1118 - Orkney's annual St Magnus International Festival has chosen 2017 to mark the anniversary.\n\nUniversity of Dundee graduate Mr Morrison, whose other reconstructions include that of a Bronze Age woman buried in the Highlands, hopes his work on St Magnus will be displayed during the festival.\n\nA photograph taken in 1925 of the skull found in a wooden box in Kirkwall's St Magnus Cathedral\n\nSt Magnus' life and death are a feature of the Orkneyinga Saga, an interpretation of Orkney's early history, including the conquest of the isles by Norway and the islands' earls.\n\nThe saga, written between the late 12th and early 13th centuries, tells of the collapse of the cousins' shared earldom. Hakon turned against Magnus and eventually betrayed him and had him executed.\n\nThe doomed earl's head was split in two by an axe, according to the saga. Miracles were said to have happened where Magnus was buried, including rocky ground changing into a grassy field.\n\nCenturies later, in 1919, a wooden box with a skull showing a wound and an assortment of bones inside was discovered during renovations to St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall on Orkney.\n\nA University of Aberdeen professor and an Aberdeen church minister examined the bones and determined that they must be Magnus' remains. The relics were interred in a pillar of the cathedral.\n\nMr Morrison said he first heard the story of the bones when he was a boy.\n\nHe said: \"I had forgotten about it until I visited Orkney back in 2015 whilst working on another facial reconstruction project.\n\n\"Understanding that the bones are permanently inside a pillar of the cathedral, thus inaccessible, I wondered whether there had ever been decent enough photographs taken of the remains that could be used to recreate a two-dimensional facial reconstruction.\n\n\"I managed to track down through Orkney Archives excellent photographs taken in 1925 that were suitable to use.\"\n\nThe relics of St Magnus are held in the care of Kirkwall's cathedral\n\nA wooden box found in 1919 is believed to have held the relics of St Magnus\n\nMr Morrison has used computer software to create his reconstruction, drawing on what is shown in the vintage photographs to help guide the shape of skull.\n\nHe said: \"The photographs from 1925 were fortunately of a good quality, but most importantly a scale ruler was photographed alongside these photographs, which allowed me to scale the skull up to life size.\n\n\"The missing jaw was re-created using a formula from the fields of anthropology and orthodontics.\n\n\"For this part of the reconstruction, I worked alongside my friend Keli Rae who is also a forensic artist and had previously used this method for replacing missing jaws prior to reconstructions.\"\n\nMr Morrison's other work has included a facial reconstruction of a Bronze Age woman who was buried in the Highlands\n\nThe reconstruction of the Bronze Age woman also involved research of a skull\n\nMr Morrison also drew on modern data of male European tissue measurements to gauge the skin depth for his reconstruction.\n\nBut he said: \"An individual's hair and eye colour cannot be determined from the anatomy of a skull.\n\n\"No DNA/isotopics from samples of bone were available that would have helped to determine hair and eye colour.\n\n\"Although there were no visual records such as illustrations or paintings of St Magnus created during the time of his life, there are depictions of him in the form of stained glass windows and statues, but these were created many years after his death.\"\n\nHe added: \"Taking into regard St Magnus's Scandinavian ancestry, light-coloured hair and blue eyes were added to the face.\"\n\nOrkney's St Magnus festival will be held in June.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The claim: The green belt is safe from an increase in development.\n\nReality Check verdict: The rules for developing green belt previously said that it was allowed only in exceptional circumstances. The government has now specified what would count as exceptional circumstances. It is not clear whether the new rules will be more or less strict than just letting councils decide what counted as exceptional circumstances.\n\nThe government has described the housing market as broken, promised more affordable homes and said it would help people to buy and rent.\n\nA big question in discussions of increasing the supply of homes is whether planning regulations will be changed to make it easier to build on green belt land.\n\nGreen belts were introduced after World War Two to stop cities from sprawling and countryside being spoilt. About 13% of England is now covered.\n\nThis covers scenic sites open to the public, such as the Chiltern Hills and North Downs, but it also covers a lot of land that has limited public access and may not be particularly beautiful.\n\nIn the House of Commons, Communities Secretary Sajid Javid said: \"In 2015, we promised the British people that the green belt was safe in our hands and that is still the case.\"\n\nThere has been little variation in the amount of green belt land since 1997, although data is not available for every year.\n\nThe Housing White Paper says the current planning regulations allow building on the green belt only \"in exceptional circumstances\" but that there is no detail given of what would amount to exceptional circumstances.\n\nThe government has now specified that before allowing development on green belt land, councils would need to rule out options including:\n\nThe White Paper also says that councils allowing the boundaries of green belt land to be changed would have to make up for it by improving other bits of green belt.\n\nIt also asks for suggestions of other things councils should take into account before doing so.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A family has been rescued from their truck that was dangling over a cliff-edge in southern China.\n\nThe father, who was driving, said the road was slippery.", "The New York Times has referred to President Trump wearing a bathrobe and his press secretary Sean Spicer has come out to refute that, calling it 'fake news'.\n\nSocial media, meanwhile, has been flooded with photos of a younger Mr Trump clad in a robe.", "Great Britain should be excited about its medal chances at the 2018 Winter Olympics, according to chef de mission Mike Hay.\n\nIt would be a record-breaking Games for Team GB in Pyeongchang if they win more than the four medals they have taken home on two occasions, in 1924 and 2014.\n\nUK Sport has doubled its investment in Olympic winter sports from £13.5m for the four-year cycle to the 2014 Sochi Games to £27.9m for the South Korea event.\n\nAnd with a year go until the 2018 Games begin, UK Sport has agreed a total target of between four and eight medals across the various Winter Olympic disciplines at their respective World Championship events this year.\n\n\"The money that UK Sport have put in is a real confidence boost to our winter athletes,\" Hay told BBC Sport.\n\n\"We've got to go in with high hopes and there are some early indicators that our athletes are going to be competing for podium places.\"\n\nGreat Britain may have won 67 medals in one Games at the 2016 summer Olympics in Rio but Winter Olympic medals have been harder to come by because of a lack of natural facilities and smaller talent pools to select from.\n\nIn the 97-year history of the Winter Olympics, Great Britain have won only 26 medals but Hay believes the country is becoming more accepted on the world stage, especially in freestyle skiing and snowboarding, short track speed skating, curling and skeleton.\n\n\"It's very difficult to challenge the alpine nations but we're making progress into that second tier, if you like, and getting credibility,\" Hay said.\n\nMeanwhile, to mark a year to the event, British Ski and Snowboard has announced it plans to become one of the world's top five skiing and snowboarding nations by 2030.\n\nGreat Britain will send about 60 athletes to the Games.\n\nSki and snowboard: It took 90 years for Britain to win a first Winter Olympic medal on snow, courtesy of Jenny Jones' snowboard bronze in 2014 but in Pyeongchang there could be podium ambitions for athletes in freestyle skiing, snowboarding and even alpine skiing.\n\nSnowboarder Katie Ormerod has been a model of consistency on the World Cup stage, winning the Moscow big air and claiming two other podiums as well as an X Games bronze medal. Her cousin Jamie Nicholls, Billy Morgan and Aimee Fuller have also won World Cup medals and could threaten the podium in slopestyle and big air in 2018.\n\nJames Woods finished fifth in ski slopestyle in Sochi and will be a medal contender in South Korea. He won the season-opening World Cup slopestyle in New Zealand and just missed out on an X Games slopestyle medal, coming fourth. Woods did win the big air title in Aspen but only snowboard big air will make its debut in the Winter Olympics.\n\nIn the alpine world, slalom specialist David Ryding became the first Briton for 36 years to claim a World Cup medal when he finished second in Kitzbuhel, Austria, in January and has backed that up with three other top 10s this season.\n\nBritish Ski and Snowboard has an ambitious target of being a top-five performing nation by 2030. It says it has a strategy to raise more funds and put a world-class coaching structure in place.\n\nShort track speed skating: After the heartbreak of being penalised in all her races in Sochi, Elise Christie will be determined to leave Pyeongchang with a medal. She is leading the world 500m standings this season and has also won World Cup medals in 1000m and 1500m. Charlotte Gilmartin could also claim a medal.\n\nSkeleton: Since skeleton was reintroduced into the Winter Olympics in 2002, Great Britain have won a medal at each of the four Games. Lizzy Yarnold won gold in Russia and is aiming to become the first Briton to retain a Winter Olympic title. She took the 2016 season off but is back and building up to South Korea. Laura Deas has had World Cup success and will also be in contention.\n\nCurling: Great Britain won silver and bronze in Sochi and will again be challenging for the medal matches in 2018. The introduction of mixed doubles boosts GB's chances even more.\n\nSnowboard big air: Snowboarders will head down a ramp and perform a trick off a large jump called a kicker. The new addition is great news for Britain's medal aspirations as there are podium potential athletes in the men's and women's competitions. Meanwhile, it is goodbye to snowboard parallel slalom, which has been dropped from the Games.\n\nCurling mixed doubles: Each team is made up of a man and a woman and they play with six stones, rather than the usual eight and there are only eight ends, instead of the traditional 10. Great Britain finished fourth at the 2016 World Championships and compete in the 2017 competition at the end of April. Performances from the 2016 and 2017 World Championships will be taken into account with the top seven ranked nations, plus hosts South Korea, qualifying for the Games.\n\nSpeed skating mass start: This will take place on the long track and will be a 16-lap race where all skaters start simultaneously. There will be four sprints where points are awarded. The first three athletes to cross the finish line will be awarded the medals.\n\nAlpine skiing team event. Teams will consist of two men and two women and they will compete against other nations in head-to-head slalom races.\n\nWhat will Pyeongchang be like?\n\nThe 2018 Winter Olympics will be held between 9 and 25 February and it is the third time Asia has held a Winter Olympics after Japan hosted both the 1972 Games in Sapporo and Nagano in 1998.\n\nPyeongchang will be split between the coast and the mountains, similarly to Sochi. The coastal cluster will host curling, ice hockey, figure skating, short track and speed skating, while the mountain area will host skiing, snowboarding, bobsleigh, skeleton and luge.\n\nThe winter Paralympics will run from 9 to 18 March.", "For the Times, MPs have been given a \"concession\" after they were promised the chance to vote on Theresa May's deal with EU negotiators six months before the UK leaves the EU.\n\nThe paper says Number 10 was \"forced into the move to avoid defeat\" at the hands of Labour and Tory rebels.\n\nBefore the government's move to head off a rebellion, there were 20 Conservative MPs who were ready to defy Downing Street and vote against the government on Article 50 amendments, the paper says.\n\nAccording to the Guardian, however, the prime minister successfully \"faced down a Conservative rebellion over Brexit\".\n\nA potential Tory rebellion was \"virtually cancelled out\" by six pro-Brexit Labour MPs who voted with the government, it says.\n\nThe government remains relatively confident the Brexit bill will pass its third and final Commons reading on Wednesday without changes, before heading to the Lords, the paper adds.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph warns the European Union is facing a new Greek debt crisis.\n\nIt claims the state of the government finances in Greece could destabilise the whole eurozone, and quotes the International Monetary Fund as saying a new bailout is needed.\n\nThe paper notes that the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, is unwilling to send funds directly to Athens as she faces a tough re-election battle in the autumn.\n\nIt predicts the Greek debt problems will come to the fore as soon as July, when the country is due to repay around 7bn euros to its creditors.\n\nThe Guardian considers the government's white paper on the housing market in England and concludes it does nothing to confront what it calls the country's \"housing crisis\".\n\nThe paper says the government is not addressing the obsession of buyers in extending themselves to own a home.\n\nIt says there needs to be an honest admission that there is no chance of building the extra 250,000 new homes a year that the government says are required.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph reflects on the news that the Institute for Fiscal Studies thinks tax rises and cuts to public services are set to continue well into the next decade.\n\nIn an editorial, the paper says the British state has regressed 30 years, threatening to reverse the direction of travel Margaret Thatcher struggled so hard to establish.\n\nIt says that while it is admirable that the government wants to reduce the deficit, taxes have risen for seven years in a row - and another way of raising cash would be by reducing our foreign aid budget.\n\nThe Times says teachers are using police-style body cameras to record misbehaving pupils.\n\nThe paper says at least two comprehensives in England - both with a history of unruly pupils - are using the cameras to tackle \"constant low level disruption\".\n\nThe Information Commissioner's Office - which regulates privacy issues - said that schools were free to use the technique as a \"self-reflection\" tool for students.\n\nIn its editorial, the Times says that Commons Speaker John Bercow over-reached his office when he tried to pre-emptively bar US President Donald Trump from addressing Parliament.\n\nThe paper says that while the speaker is entitled to his personal opinions, his comments smell of hypocrisy - having already invited the presidents of China, Kuwait and Indonesia to address MPs and peers.\n\nIt says that while Mr Bercow has done a reasonable job as speaker, his desire for personal publicity has \"blighted his record\".\n\nIn his column in the Daily Mail, Quentin Letts says Mr Bercow's criticism of the president is all the more surprising given the fact that he is a \"mini\" Trump himself.\n\nHe says Mr Bercow is as greedy for attention as the president and has the same inflated self-regard.\n\nThe Guardian though says Mr Bercow did not over-reach his powers.\n\nThe paper says he was right to intervene because, if Britain is truly pro-American, it cannot want Mr Trump's presidency to succeed.\n\nIt says the president's temperament does not tolerate \"democratic restraint\" and he wants his whim enacted as law.\n\nThey are the photos that show former US President Barack Obama \"as you've never seen him before\", according to the Sun.\n\nThe photographs show Mr Obama learning to kitesurf while on holiday at Sir Richard Branson's luxurious Necker Island in the Caribbean.\n\nThe \"worries of the White House are clearly far from Obama's mind\", says the Daily Mail.\n\nThe Guardian says US presidents \"don't get to have very much fun\", however, \"whatever Barack Obama might be missing about the Oval Office, those restrictions don't appear to be one of them\".\n\n\"Branson challenged the ex-president to learn how to kiteboard before Branson himself could learn to foilboard, another young watersport that resembles water skiing.\n\n\"According to Branson's post, it was a challenge Obama easily won,\" the paper says.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One Wales, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nWales flanker Sam Warburton says Six Nations rivals England are justifiably regarded as being the equal of world champions New Zealand.\n\nEddie Jones' side will arrive in Cardiff seeking a 16th successive win, three away from a world record.\n\nThe All Blacks and South Africa share the tier-one nations' 18-match winning run record.\n\n\"England are deservedly tagged as the best team in the northern hemisphere,\" said Warburton.\n\n\"It's a fair judgement to compare them to the All Blacks right now - that's how good they are.\n\n\"It is going to take a huge game out of us to get a win, and it will be one of the biggest games of the championship for sure.\"\n\nWhy everyone wants to beat England\n\nWarburton also explained the reasons he believes fire up every opponent England meet in the Six Nations.\n\nThe ex-Wales captain insists it is down to England's recent successful record.\n\n\"Chatting to [different countries'] players, that's how they feel, they really prioritise that and everyone just wants to beat England,\" he said.\n\n\"That's due to the success in the past and the success they're going through now. It's always a big scalp.\"\n• None Never miss a Six Nations story with BBC alerts\n\nInternational rugby began with Scotland and England meeting in 1879.\n\nFour years later the Home Nations tournament began with Wales and Ireland taking on England and Scotland.\n\nSince then, the Celtic nations have traditionally revelled in their rivalries with England.\n\nEngland are unbeaten under Jones, who succeeded Stuart Lancaster after their group-stage exit from the 2015 World Cup.\n\nWales contributed to England's downfall in the tournament they hosted with a win at Twickenham, but lost twice to them in 2016.\n\n\"If you're Wales, the biggest game you play in in the Six Nations is England,\" said Warburton.\n\n\"If you're Scotland, it's England. If you're Ireland, it's England. Or if you're France or Italy, it's England,\" said Warburton, whose father was born in England.\n\n\"We know as players that's the one game the fans look forward to most and you sense that in the build-up. It's a huge occasion for everyone in Wales.\n\n\"But for me, I always cherish any win against any opposition in the Six Nations and in the last three years [since Wales' 2013 title win] I've realised how difficult it is to win a championship.\"\n\nCardiff Blues' Warburton predicts selection headaches if Bath number eight Taulupe Faletau has recovered from a knee injury for Saturday's match.\n\nGloucester's Ross Moriarty played at eight in the opening victory in Italy and could rival Warburton for the blind-side flanker's role if Faletau is risked for a starting place.\n\n\"The back-row competition is so fierce at the minute, I don't want to put pressure on him, but Toby [Faletau], when he's playing well, is one of the best players in the world. I think he's fantastic,\" Warburton added.\n\n\"If he did come back I'm sure there would be a few selection headaches in the back-row because Ross and Justin [Tipuric] went extremely well against Italy.\"", "Thousands of slum dwellers in Manila have lost their homes after a fire raged overnight.", "Sheridan Smith plays Julie Bushby, the mother who led the community search for missing Shannon\n\nThe first episode of BBC One drama The Moorside, which stars Sheridan Smith, has been warmly received by critics.\n\nThe series tells the true story of the disappearance of Shannon Matthews and the repercussions on the local community.\n\nShannon was found 24 days after she went missing from her home in Dewsbury in 2008.\n\nThe first episode of the two-part series was watched by an average of 7.2 million viewers on Tuesday evening.\n\nRead some of the reviews below:\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nGreat Britain made a winning start to their Fed Cup campaign with victory over Portugal in Tallinn, Estonia.\n\nSingles wins for Heather Watson and Johanna Konta, and a doubles victory for Jocelyn Rae and Laura Robson, gave Britain a 3-0 win in Group C.\n\nThey go on to face Latvia on Thursday and Turkey on Friday, with the group winners earning a play-off against the Group B winners on Saturday.\n\nThe winners of that tie will progress to a World Group II play-off in April.\n\nBritain are seeded third among the 14 nations in Tallinn and first in their group, and Portugal were unable to overcome the gap in rankings.\n\nWatson, the world number 72, began with a 57-minute 6-1 6-1 win over Ines Murta, ranked 546th.\n\nWorld number 10 Konta then saw off 246th-ranked Michelle Larcher de Brito 6-2 6-4 to clinch the tie.\n\nRae and Robson beat De Brito and Murta 6-2 6-3 in the concluding doubles match.\n\n\"I'm really happy to have got the match under my belt,\" said Konta. \"It was a high-level match, and it got better and better as the match went on. She made me work for it in the end and I'm really happy to have come through for the team.\n\n\"We'll try to come back stronger every day.\"\n\nAsked about new captain Anne Keothavong, who replaced Judy Murray in the role at the end of last year, Konta added: \"I think she is doing a tremendous job of bringing us together as a team.\n\n\"It's always a tricky one because we spend most of the year as individuals, so for her to do such a good job with us, it says a lot about her.\n\n\"We've got lots of team bonding in the evenings, lots of funny things going on.\"\n\nWatson added: \"It's my first match since the Aussie Open so I'm really happy with the way I played and also to get the first win under the belt for GB.\n\n\"It was great having Annie there and she'll continue to do a great job. So far I've really been enjoying the trip with her as captain.\"\n\nBritain are likely to face the toughest test of the group stage on Thursday when they take on Latvia, led by world number 35 Jelena Ostapenko, who beat Turkey 2-1 in Wednesday's other Group C tie.\n\nUnlike the men's Davis Cup, which has a World Group of 16 nations, the Fed Cup divides its top teams into two groups of eight - World Group I and World Group II.\n\nThe 91 nations outside the top tiers are divided into three regional zones and Britain have one chance per year to escape - a format that hugely frustrated former captain Judy Murray.\n\nThe Europe/Africa Group I event, which this year takes place in Estonia, sees 14 teams divided into groups, with Poland, Croatia, Britain and Serbia the seeded nations.\n\nFour group winners will progress to promotion play-offs on Saturday, and two nations will then qualify for World Group II play-offs in April - which could see Britain given a home Fed Cup tie for the first time since 1993.\n\nThey fell at the same stage in 2012 and 2013 - away ties in Sweden and Argentina - under the captaincy of Murray.", "As the 'last Concorde' made its final journey, we look back at the iconic plane's history.\n\nIt will be the centrepiece of the £16m Bristol Aerospace Centre, which has been built around a listed WW1 hangar.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLeicester secured a first home win of 2017 as Demarai Gray's superb solo goal sealed an extra-time victory over Derby in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.\n\nAndy King headed the hosts, who made 10 changes, ahead after Gray's clever cross was nodded back across goal by Marc Albrighton.\n\nAbdoul Camara's free-kick forced extra time for Championship Derby only for substitute Wilfred Ndidi to restore the Foxes' lead with a fantastic strike.\n\nGray sealed a deserved win with an angled finish after a fine run.\n\nPremier League Leicester will now face League One Millwall in the last 16 on 18 February (15:00 GMT).\n\nSmiles for Ranieri - at last\n\nClaudio Ranieri has not had too much to cheer about lately as last season's champions have been plunged into a fight for Premier League survival.\n\nYet the Italian was all smiles and applauded home fans as they chanted his name around the King Power Stadium soon after King's opener.\n\nLeicester, 16th in the table and one point above the relegation zone, face a battle to climb away from trouble but their first win since 7 January will at least provide them with some momentum.\n\nA spirited Derby display - and a poor performance from the officials - made sure it was anything but a straightforward win.\n\nThe hosts should have won a first-half penalty when Ben Chilwell was sent sprawling inside the area by Richard Keogh but referee Mike Jones was not interested.\n\nThere was more controversy in the 85th minute when Derby keeper Jonathan Mitchell clearly handled outside his area but Leicester's Ahmed Musa was booked for protesting after Jones dismissed the home team's appeals.\n\nAlthough there was disappointment from Rams boss Steve McClaren, his team gave Leicester two tough games.\n\nDerby led until four minutes from the end in the original game and forced Leicester into extra time on their own ground before running out of steam.\n\nIt might have been a different story had Ron-Robert Zieler not palmed away Jacob Butterfield's low drive on the stroke of half-time. By the time McClaren reached the dugout for the second half, his side were behind - King giving Leicester the lead in the opening minute of the second half.\n\nThe Rams responded well to falling behind. Camara had a free-kick beaten away before the Guinea international found the net with a 25-yard set-piece that deflected off Chilwell's thigh on its way into the net.\n\nDerby's Max Lowe chested against his own post while attempting to guide the ball back to his keeper before two sublime finishes took the tie away from the visitors.\n\nNdidi fired home via the post from 25 yards then Gray, energetic and dynamic throughout, made it 3-1 after avoiding several challenges before his clinical finish allowed Leicester fans to celebrate a welcome victory.\n\nAll change - cup gets second billing\n\nBoth teams seemed to have their eyes on this weekend's games as they made 18 changes between them.\n\nMusa was the only survivor from the Leicester side that started last weekend's match with Manchester United even though the Foxes are not in action again until Sunday.\n\nDerby, despite bringing 5,000 travelling fans, made eight changes, as they also rested players to aid their play-off push.\n\n\"I didn't want to make eight changes. If the game was last night the team would have been totally different,\" said McClaren.\n\nHowever, pundit and former Leicester midfielder Robbie Savage was critical of the number of changes made by both managers.\n\nHe said: \"If Derby County were playing three Championship games in a week and chasing promotion would they put this team out? It's absolute nonsense. Play your best team.\"\n\n'This fresh air is good for us'\n\nLeicester boss Claudio Ranieri: \"Derby played good football and we won. This is what we needed and I wanted.\n\n\"We want to do well in all competitions. We want to go forward in the FA Cup. The Premier League is not so good but we have to stay in the Premier League. This fresh air is good for the players.\"\n\nDerby County boss Steve McClaren: \"There are some very tired players in the dressing room. It was always going to be hard work.\n\n\"We had a go and I can't fault the players. We ran out of steam in the end. We missed our opportunity in the first game.\"\n\nSunday's Premier League game at fellow strugglers Swansea City (16:00 GMT) is a huge match for Leicester. Derby will look to strengthen their Championship play-off bid with a home victory over Bristol City (15:00 GMT) on Saturday.\n• None Attempt missed. David Nugent (Derby County) header from the centre of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Cyrus Christie with a cross.\n• None Goal! Leicester City 3, Derby County 1. Demarai Gray (Leicester City) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the top right corner. Assisted by Marc Albrighton.\n• None Attempt saved. Wilfred Ndidi (Leicester City) header from the right side of the six yard box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Riyad Mahrez with a cross.\n• None Attempt saved. Andy King (Leicester City) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Riyad Mahrez.\n• None Attempt missed. Johnny Russell (Derby County) header from the centre of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Cyrus Christie with a cross. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nNorwich missed the chance to climb into the Championship's top six after Omar Bogle's second-half double earned struggling Wigan a point.\n\nNelson Oliveira's looping header from Alex Pritchard's set-piece had given Norwich a deserved first-half lead.\n\nBut Bogle's near-post header from a corner and cleanly struck free-kick put the hosts ahead as they battled back.\n\nMitchell Dijks then nodded level from a Norwich corner and both sides searched for a late winner that would not come.\n\nWigan remain 23rd, five points below 21st-placed Burton with a game in hand, while Norwich stay seventh but move to within two points of sixth-placed Sheffield Wednesday.\n• None Relive Wigan's 2-2 draw with Norwich as it happened\n\nThe Canaries had put the ball in the net on 25 minutes when Russell Martin headed in on the rebound after a Jonny Howson effort bounced off the woodwork, but the linesman's flag was already raised for offside.\n\nHowever, not long after the visitors - bidding for a fourth straight win - did take the lead as Oliveira netted his eighth league goal of the season.\n\nAfter the break, Wigan sprung to life and former Grimsby striker Bogle's quickfire brace on his first start for the Latics turned the game around.\n\nBut Dijks' header soon had the visitors back on level terms to deny Wigan a seventh league win of the season.\n\nThe hosts, who had failed to scored in nine of their past 12 home league games, could have won it late on but Norwich keeper John Ruddy saved well from Jake Buxton.\n\nWigan Athletic boss Warren Joyce: \"I'm disappointed we did not end up winning the game, because I felt we deserved the three points.\n\n\"I was happy with the whole team - the effort, the commitment, the work-rate, the desire.\n\n\"We were good value to have taken the lead, and it's disappointing not to see it through.\"\n\nNorwich City boss Alex Neil: \"We were the better side in the first half and we controlled the game - we should have been more than 1-0 up.\n\n\"The frustration for me is that the goal that Russell Martin scored was onside, having watched it back.\n\n\"We were frustrated tonight as a group. We feel we should have won it. We made it difficult for ourselves.\"\n• None Attempt missed. Nélson Oliveira (Norwich City) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the left. Assisted by Cameron Jerome.\n• None Sam Morsy (Wigan Athletic) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt missed. Nélson Oliveira (Norwich City) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high from a direct free kick.\n• None Attempt saved. Jake Buxton (Wigan Athletic) right footed shot from very close range is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Callum Connolly with a headed pass. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Abdoul Camara's deflected strike brings Derby level against Leicester in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.\n\nWatch all the best action from this season's FA Cup here.\n\nFA PEOPLE'S CUP: Free five-a-side competition returns for 2017 - sign up now!\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Miriam Gonzalez Durantez, whose husband is former Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, has complained after being invited to an International Women's Day event in her married name.\n\nPosting a picture of a letter addressed to \"Mrs Clegg\" on Instagram, she noted the \"irony\" of the situation.\n\nThe event, on 8 March, is designed to \"celebrate women's success\", she added.\n\nMs Gonzalez Durantez is a lawyer specialising in international and EU trade law.\n\nMiriam Gonzalez Durantez says she does not want to be known by her husband's surname\n\nShe wrote: \"The irony of being invited to speak at an International Women's Day event to celebrate women's success, addressed to me as 'Mrs Clegg'.\"\n\nMs Gonzalez Durantez set up the Inspiring Women group, which recruits women with successful careers to visit and speak to girls at state schools in England.\n\nThis is not the first time she has criticised the way she is perceived or described.\n\nLast year she told Marie Claire magazine: \"I find people say of me 'She wears the trousers' and as you can see, it is true, I have very nice trousers.\n\n\"Or if my husband and I share the school run, it's me who has forced him, dragged him away from his work.\n\n\"But when people, or in my case the media, are using that label on you, they are not saying you are strong, they are saying you should get back in your box. You should make the dinner and have his slippers ready with a gin and tonic.\"", "Karen Matthews came out of her house to talk to Mark Simpson\n\nShannon Matthews's disappearance in a 2008 hoax-kidnapping is being recounted in a BBC drama. BBC News's Mark Simpson, who reported on the case, looks back at the deception.\n\nKaren Matthews made a fool out of me.\n\nI looked into her sunken eyes, saw that she was petrified and gave her the benefit of the doubt.\n\nMaybe my judgement was coloured by the fact that she chose to give me her first interview.\n\nMaybe it was clouded by seeing inside her small semi-detached house, and the grim conditions in which she and her seven children were living.\n\nMaybe I was so cold at the time, my brain froze.\n\nKaren's daughter Shannon, nine, disappeared on the coldest night of the year in February 2008.\n\nPolice divers who searched a lake near her home in Dewsbury Moor in West Yorkshire had to break through ice to get into the water. The air temperature had dipped to -4C.\n\nThe night Karen agreed to talk to me, I was shaking with cold after spending hour after hour talking live on the BBC News Channel (or BBC News 24 as it was then).\n\nKaren spotted me out of her front window and came out to talk. She was shaking too, but out of fear.\n\nShe was scared - scared of being found out.\n\nShe gave me no eye contact. She looked down the barrel of the BBC camera and said; \"Shannon if you're out there, please come home. We love you to bits, we miss you so much. Please, I'm begging you baby, come home.\"\n\nKaren Matthews appeals for information on her daughter's disappearance\n\nWhen the police saw her interview on the BBC Ten O'Clock News, they were annoyed.\n\nThey had advised her not to talk to the media. They were as surprised as me that she agreed to give me an interview.\n\nSo was this erratic behaviour the first sign that all was not what it seemed?\n\nIn hindsight, it may seem so, but at the time, it seemed simply a desperate act by a desperate mother.\n\nFresh in my mind were the Soham murders of schoolgirls Jessica Chapman and Holly Wells. When children disappeared for more than 48 hours, the outcome was usually not good.\n\nThat is why there was such a huge community effort to try to find Shannon. People realised that time was short.\n\nYes, I did wonder if Karen Matthews was telling the truth. Everyone did.\n\nHowever, I believed her. And I was not alone.\n\nAs well as searching hedges and parkland, the police drew up a map showing where convicted paedophiles lived in the Dewsbury area.\n\nThey checked, and double-checked. There was no sign of Shannon.\n\nAs days turned to weeks, the more convinced detectives became that Shannon would not be coming home.\n\nHowever, Karen's friends and neighbours never gave up, and neither did the police.\n\nAbout 10% of the force's officers were put on the case and more than £3m was spent in what was one of the largest search operations since the hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper.\n\nKaren Matthews was jailed for eight years\n\nShannon was eventually found, 24 days after she disappeared. A BBC colleague got a tip-off and phoned me.\n\nI was shopping in Ikea in Leeds at the time, and nearly dropped my phone on a multi-coloured Swedish rug when I heard the news.\n\nAs I drove down the A6110 to Dewsbury, I wondered if Karen would give me an interview again.\n\nWe could do it in the same spot where we had first spoken.\n\nThe only difference would be that this time she would be with Shannon beside her.\n\nThe tears would turn to cheers. For once, it would be a story with a happy ending.\n\nIt later emerged that Shannon had been kept drugged and hidden in the base of a divan bed by the very people appealing for her safe return.\n\nThat September Karen, and Michael Donovan, the uncle of Karen's partner, went on trial for kidnap, false imprisonment and perverting the course of justice. They were jailed for eight years after the court heard about their plot to hide the child and claim a £50,000 reward that subsequently had been offered by the Sun.", "Emilie Telander (right) says she is more tired now she is back on eight-hour days\n\nSweden has been experimenting with six-hour days, with workers getting the chance to work fewer hours on full pay, but now the most high-profile two-year trial has ended - has it all been too good to be true?\n\nAssistant nurse Emilie Telander, 26, cheers as one of the day patients at Svartedalen's elderly care home in Gothenburg manages to roll a six in a game of Ludo.\n\nBut her smile fades as she describes her own luck running out at the end of the year, when after 23 months of six-hour shifts, she was told to go back to eight-hour days.\n\n\"I feel that I am more tired than I was before,\" she reflects, lamenting the fact that she now has less time at home to cook or read with her four-year-old daughter.\n\n\"During the trial all the staff had more energy. I could see that everybody was happy.\"\n\nGothenburg has been experimenting with shorter working days - but the policy isn't cheap\n\nMs Telander is one of about 70 assistant nurses who had their days shortened for the experiment, the most widely reported of a handful of trials in Sweden involving a range of employers, from start-ups to nursing homes.\n\nDesigned to measure well-being in a sector that's struggling to recruit enough staff to care for the country's ageing population, extra nurses were brought in to cover the lost hours.\n\nThe project's independent researchers were also paid to study employees at a similar care home who continued to work regular days.\n\nTheir final report is due out next month, but data released so far strongly backs Ms Telander's arguments.\n\nGothenburg's move has put a shorter working day \"on the agenda both for Sweden and for Europe\", says Daniel Bernmar\n\nDuring the first 18 months of the trial the nurses working shorter hours logged less sick leave, reported better perceived health and boosted their productivity by organising 85% more activities for their patients, from nature walks to sing-a-longs.\n\nHowever, the project also faced tough criticism from those concerned that the costs outweighed the benefits.\n\nCentre-right opponents filed a motion calling on Gothenburg City Council to wrap it up prematurely last May, arguing it was unfair to continue investing taxpayers' money in a pilot that was not economically sustainable.\n\nSaved from the axe at the eleventh hour, the trial managed to stay within budget, but still cost the city about 12 million kronor (£1.1m; $1.3m).\n\n\"Could we do this for the entire municipality? The answer is no, it will be too expensive,\" says Daniel Bernmar, the Left Party councillor responsible for running Gothenburg's elderly care.\n\nBut he argues the experiment still proved \"successful from many points of view\" by creating extra jobs for 17 nurses in the city, reducing sick pay costs and fuelling global debates about work culture.\n\nSweden's 40-hour working week is likely to remain\n\n\"It's put the shortening of the work day on the agenda both for Sweden and for Europe, which is fascinating,\" he says.\n\n\"In the past 10, 15 years there's been a lot of pressure on people working longer hours and this is sort of the contrary of that.\"\n\nYet while work-life balance is already championed across the political spectrum in Sweden, the chances of the Nordic country trimming back its standard 40-hour week remain slim.\n\nOn a national level, the Left Party is the only parliamentary party in favour of shortening basic working hours, backed by just 6% of voters in Sweden's last general election.\n\nNevertheless, a cluster of other Swedish municipalities are following in Gothenburg's footsteps, with locally funded trials targeting other groups of employees with high levels of illness and burnout, including social workers and hospital nurses.\n\nCleaners at Skelleftea Hospital will begin an 18-month project next month.\n\nThere's also been an increase in pilots in the private sector, with advertising, consulting, telecoms and technology firms among those testing the concept.\n\nYet while some have also reported that staff appear calmer or are less likely to phone in sick, others have swiftly abandoned the idea.\n\n\"I really don't think that the six-hour day fits with an entrepreneurial world, or the start-up world,\" argues Erik Gatenholm, chief executive of Gothenburg-based bio-ink company.\n\nHe is candid enough to admit he tested the method on his production staff after \"reading about the trend on Facebook\" and musing on whether it could be an innovative draw for future talent.\n\nBut the firm's experiment was ditched in less than a month, after bad feedback from employees.\n\n\"I thought it would be really fun, but it felt kind of stressful,\" says Gabriel Peres, as he slots a Petri dish inside one of the 3D printers he's built for the company.\n\n\"It's a process and it takes time and when you don't have all that [much] time it kind of feels like skipping homework at school, things are always building up.\"\n\nMore research is being done on Sweden's shifting work patterns\n\nOn the other side of the country, his concerns are shared by Dr Aram Seddigh, who recently completed his doctorate at Stockholm University's Stress Research Institute and is among a growing body of academics focusing on the nation's shifting work patterns.\n\n\"I think the six-hour work day would be most effective in organisations - such as hospitals - where you work for six hours and then you just leave [the workplace] and go home.\n\n\"It might be less effective for organisations where the borders between work and private life are not so clear,\" he suggests.\n\n\"This kind of solution might even increase stress levels given that employees might try to fit all the work that they have been doing in eight hours into six - or if they're office workers they might take the work home.\"\n\nBack in Gothenburg, Bengt Lorentzon, the lead researcher for the Svartedalen care home project, argues that the concept of six-hour days also jars with the strong culture of flexible working promoted by many Swedish businesses.\n\nImproving your working life is not just about how long your day is, says Bengt Lorentzon\n\n\"A lot of offices are already working almost like consultancies. There's no need for managers to have all their workers in the office at the same time, they just want to get the results and people have to deliver,\" he says.\n\n\"Compare that to the assistant nurses - they can't just leave work to go to the dentist or to the doctors or the hairdressers.\"\n\n\"So I don't think people should start with the question of whether or not to have reduced hours.\n\n\"First, it should be: what can we do to make the working environment better? And maybe different things can be better for different groups.\n\n\"It could be to do with working hours and working times, but it could be a lot of other things as well.\"\n\nListen to Maddy Savage's report on Sweden's experiment with six-hour days on The World Tonight.", "Dr Cope believes new ways of working have been a success\n\nA GP practice in Plymouth has reduced the time it takes to get a routine appointment with a doctor from three-to-four weeks to under seven days.\n\nThe Beacon Medical Group cares for more than 30,000 patients and was formed in 2014 after three practices merged.\n\nDr Jonathan Cope, GP and managing partner at Plympton Health Centre, one of the Beacon practices which has 10 doctors, says, at present, there are 30 unfilled GP posts in Plymouth.\n\nThree years ago, his practice was unable to recruit the equivalent of one-and-a-half full-time GPs.\n\n\"We made a conscious decision to look elsewhere, to work differently. So we decided to looks at what skills clinical pharmacists, paramedic practitioners and nurse practitioners could offer. We converted that budget to two-and-a-half full-time equivalents.\"\n\nPatients registered at Plympton who feel they need same-day care from their family doctor call the reception team at the surgery.\n\nDepending on the problem, they will then be called back by an advanced paramedic, pharmacist, nurse practitioner - or a doctor.\n\nBeacon Medical Group has started to offer new services\n\nDr Cope said: \"Because of the extra capacity, we have freed up the GPs' time. So we are offering more appointments for routine problems, and the waiting times are now shorter.\"\n\nThe advanced paramedic practitioner, Simon Robinson, responds to any emergency medical problems in the practice, as well as doing, on average, four home visits a day.\n\nHe says he is often called out to see the more complex cases and his daily schedule allows him to spend more time than the GPs with patients. Simon was keen to point out that if he does have any queries he just has to knock on the GPs' door.\n\nProf Helen Stokes-Lampard, chair of the Royal College of GPs, said while paramedics are highly valued and trusted, they have different skills and training.\n\n\"GPs are highly trained to take into account the physical, psychological and social factor - this unique skill set cannot be replaced by another healthcare professional, however well meaning the intention is.\n\n\"We do not have enough GPs in the NHS - and actually we don't have enough paramedics either. This transference of workload pressures from one area of the health service to another is not going to benefit our patients in the long term.\"\n\nIn an effort to understand the pressures on the Beacon Medical Group, the 100 most frequent attendees were analysed.\n\nDr Cope expected the list to be dominated by frail, elderly patients but instead the typical patient was a 37-year-old woman, often with mental health problems, multiple prescriptions and referrals to hospital.\n\nFrom March, a psychiatrist will do a weekly clinic from the surgery for these patients and provide additional training on mental health care to staff.\n\nIt is part of a parallel drive to offer specialised new services more commonly found in a hospital setting.\n\nDr Helen Frow, a GP with a special interest in dermatology, has provided care to patients registered to the group in the last two years. \"Onward referrals to the hospital have reduced by 85%,\" she said.\n\nThe model of working with between 30,000 to 50,000 patients in a multi-specialty community provider model is known as a Primary Care Home.\n\nThere were 14 other sites working to this structure across England in the last year.\n\nThe National Association of Primary Care is working closely with NHS England to explore how they can continue to expand working in this way.\n\nA BMA spokesperson said: \"Many GP practices are increasingly becoming hubs where nurses and other professionals work together to deliver services to patients.\n\n\"However, while this is encouraging, England is suffering from a drastic and worsening shortage of GPs that is damaging patient care and restricting the number of appointments on offer to the public.\n\n\"The government needs to address this workforce crisis urgently.\"\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One Wales, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nWales number eight Taulupe Faletau is available for Saturday's Six Nations match against England in Cardiff.\n\nThe 26-year-old Bath back-rower has not played since Christmas Eve after suffering a knee injury.\n\nGeorge North and Dan Biggar will be given time to prove their fitness after suffering injuries during the 33-7 win in Italy.\n\nBiggar injured ribs and North played on after taking an early blow to the thigh in Sunday's win in Rome.\n\nLock Luke Charteris is also a doubt for Saturday's game at the Principality Stadium having missed the opening match because of a slight fracture to his hand.\n\n\"We are giving Dan Biggar and George North as long as possible to make the game,\" defence coach Shaun Edwards said.\n\n\"They're two vital players for us, it's no pulled muscles or anything, just bruising so it's whether they can handle the pain.\n\n\"There's really bad bruising on George's leg and the flight home didn't help. We are worried about both of them.\"\n\nBiggar's replacement, Ospreys team-mate Sam Davies, played a part in two of Wales' second-half tries.\n\nIt was his adventure deep in Wales' own 22 which set up North's score and took Howley's team within touching distance of the tournament's first try bonus point.\n\n\"We had the ball when he came on,\" Edwards added.\n\n\"He put in some lovely sublime touches that contributed to creating tries. Sometimes the best attacking players are best in the last 20 minutes.\"\n\nWales will announce the team to face England on Thursday at 13:00 GMT.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Barack Obama is on holiday learning to kitesurf with Richard Branson\n\nWhether after four years or eight, all US presidents must eventually confront the question: What happens when I leave the Oval Office?\n\nFor Barack Obama, the answer was a five-star Caribbean holiday - and a seemingly endless grin.\n\nThe former commander in chief has been pictured beaming on a beach in a backwards cap, flanked by an equally cheery Michelle.\n\nThe venue for this masterclass in chilling? Moskito island in the British Virgin Islands, owned by British billionaire Sir Richard Branson.\n\nSir Richard posted pictures on his blog of Mr Obama learning to kite-surf, and engaging in a play-fight with the businessman.\n\nBarack Obama has been enjoying his newfound freedom on Sir Richard Branson's private island\n\nThe airline mogul said he invited the Obamas \"for a complete break\" on his private island after they left the White House.\n\nNot every president wants a sunshine stay after the West Wing doors swing shut, however.\n\nSo which leaders picked elephant hunting, marrying a relative, and a sideline in oil painting...?\n\nWhen the 43rd president left office in January 2009, he ditched Washington for a quiet life between a house in Dallas, Texas, and his 1,500-acre Prairie Chapel Ranch.\n\nKeen to enjoy his retirement, the sexagenarian took weekly painting lessons. His subjects included Russian President Vladimir Putin, Tony Blair, and the Dalai Lama - as well as his pets.\n\nHis inspiration was his great hero Sir Winston Churchill, who turned to art in his forties as a refuge from the tumult of politics.\n\n\"When I get to heaven I mean to spend a considerable portion of my first million years in painting, and so get to the bottom of the subject,\" the wartime leader reportedly said.\n\nMr Bush was less patient, telling his art teacher: \"There is a Rembrandt trapped in this body. And your job is to find it.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. George W Bush said he could only paint these portraits because he got know the leaders so intimately\n\nDespite being nicknamed 'Teddy' and famously refusing to shoot a bear, the 26th president took a year-long African hunting trip with his son, Kermit, in 1909.\n\nThe duo were accompanied by more than 200 porters, and scientists from the Smithsonian Institution.\n\nThey made their way round Africa dispatching over 11,000 animals - including elephants, rhinos, hippos, snakes, zebra, and monkeys among others - before shipping the carcasses home for scientific study.\n\nAnother exotic trip followed for Mr Roosevelt (and Kermit) in late 1913, when they joined Brazil's most famous explorer Candido Rondon to chart the course of the River of Doubt.\n\nThe 760km (472 mile) stretch was ultimately renamed Roosevelt River in his honour.\n\nTheodore Roosevelt visited Africa and South America when his presidency was over\n\nThe aforementioned Teddy Roosevelt had no time for Benjamin Harrison, president from 1889-93, branding him \"a cold-blooded, narrow-minded, prejudiced, obstinate, timid old psalm-singing Indianapolis politician\".\n\nBut none of that stopped the 23rd president from wedding a woman 25 years his junior, who also happened to be his niece by marriage.\n\nMr Harrison's first wife, Caroline, had died of tuberculosis in 1892.\n\nWhen he wed Mary Dimmick four years later, his two adult children refused to attend the ceremony.\n\nBenjamin Harrison, the 23rd US president, married his widowed niece\n\nAmerica's first president lived only two years after leaving the job - and spent them making whiskey.\n\nIn 1799, the year of his death, his distillery in Mount Vernon, Virginia, produced nearly 11,000 gallons - making it the largest in the US at the time.\n\nAlso a livestock farmer, the founding father used leftovers from the whiskey-making to fatten his pigs.\n\nAs for the distillery - it's still going, selling its golden product to tourists at the Mount Vernon Estate and museum.\n\nThe distillery at Mount Vernon is still churning out single malts", "Almere began as a city in 1976 and now has 200,000 residents\n\nWhen Dutch populist Geert Wilders promises to stop Islam and make the Netherlands great again, his message finds a ready audience in the country's newest city of Almere.\n\n\"It's too easy for people to come here,\" says Joost, a 60-year-old market trader. \"Too many guys from Turkey and Morocco, economic migrants. I have three small children, what kind of world will they grow up in?\"\n\nDutch voters go to the polls on 15 March and Mr Wilders' Freedom Party (PVV) may win the biggest number of seats.\n\nAlmere means \"all lake\", which it was until the 1960s. Then it became a concrete conurbation with affordable homes for people leaving Amsterdam. For several years it has been Geert Wilders territory.\n\nImmigrants now make up about 30% of the population and that ethnic diversity is reflected at the market, where you can find steaming bowls of spicy Surinamese brown beans and headscarves displayed in rainbow fashion.\n\nBehind a thick rack of winter jackets, a woman with dyed-blond hair backs the UK's decision to leave the EU and says the Dutch should do the same.\n\nRia also complains about a Muslim neighbour. \"At New Year I tried to shake his hand and he said he didn't shake hands with non-Muslim women.\"\n\nOften described as the Dutch Donald Trump, Mr Wilders shares the US president's opposition to Muslim immigration, his distrust of the media and his love of Twitter.\n\nHe sparked a \"fake news\" row on Tuesday by tweeting a photo-shopped picture of a liberal political rival surrounded by radical Islamists, and then accused him of being a \"drama queen\" when he objected.\n\nBut watching Mr Wilders praise Mr Trump's policies has made Ria change her mind about voting for him: \"When Trump brought in the travel ban and Wilders said 'Oh yeah we must do that in Holland too', I thought, no, he's crazy, that's not the way.\"\n\nGeert Wilders was convicted of incitement by a Dutch court last year\n\nOpinion polls suggest support for a Dutch \"Nexit\" in the months after the Brexit vote fell by 8% to 25%. Pollsters say people have realised that leaving the EU would be more complicated than they thought.\n\n\"If you sell to other countries and we're not in the EU anymore it's difficult,\" says Richard as he sells slabs of Edam cheese.\n\nWith the financial crisis over in the Netherlands, the economy is growing and has faded as an election issue. Instead, immigration is expected to dominate the campaign.\n\nThe pragmatic prime minister, Mark Rutte, launched his election campaign with an open letter warning that anyone who wasn't prepared to \"be normal\" and accept Dutch culture should get out of the country.\n\nRights groups accused the prime minister of undermining the constitution. \"It's like PVV-light,\" says Anna Timmerman, director of Human Rights Watch in the Netherlands.\n\nNewspaper columnist Folkert Jensma is concerned his country is losing its \"moral compass\".\n\n\"In my opinion a politician should be very careful and try to keep telling the truth. Is their fear based in reality? If everyone heads off to la-la-land where everyone is scared, we all end up with a president like Donald Trump.\"\n\nThe Hague suburb of Duindorp is another Wilders stronghold, where 90% are white and 35% voted PVV at the last election. A few years ago, the low-rise red-brick flats here were daubed with racist graffiti including a swastika.\n\n\"It's an old fisherman's village. People feel like other people are moving on to their turf,\" says Linda, who surprised her friends and family by marrying a Muslim from Morocco called Mostafa.\n\nMostafa (pictured with Linda) doubts the Dutch will back a proposal to deport repeat offenders\n\nThe couple were so concerned about discrimination, they considered giving their son Linda's maiden name to protect him from prejudice.\n\n\"Groups don't mix. They're afraid of each other because they don't know each other.\"\n\nMostafa is in the Dutch army and believes his religion is perfectly compatible with Dutch culture, \"because if God, if Allah, did not want homosexuality to exist it would not exist\".\n\nHe does not think Mr Wilders would be able to push through some of his policies. \"I am totally totally convinced that most of the people in the Netherlands are in their heart decent people.\"\n\nGeert Wilders' party may well top the vote on 15 March but only his most ardent followers think he will become the next prime minister.\n\nThe Dutch political system always produces a coalition government, and most other parties have vowed not to team up with him.\n\nBut if his popularity encourages enough liberal politicians to adopt his signature policies, Mr Wilders may claim victory even without winning the election.\n\nCorrection 8 March 2017: This story has been amended to clarify Mr Wilders' policy on elderly care.", "The Sochi Olympics were historic for Team GB. They won a record-equalling four medals, including a first ever medal on snow in Jenny Jones' snowboard slopestyle bronze.\n\nHalfpipe skier Rowan Cheshire was also being talked about as a medal prospect in Russia having won a World Cup a month earlier. But her Games ended dramatically before her event began.\n\nThe then 18-year-old was training on the Olympic halfpipe at the Rosa Khutor Extreme Park, when she made a mistake. Cheshire landed on her head, knocking herself unconscious and breaking her nose.\n\n\"I don't remember anything, just waking up in hospital and wondering what the hell was going on,\" she told BBC Sport.\n\nIt resulted in a severe concussion and was the first of three head injuries over the next 18 months, which Cheshire said caused \"severe side-effects\" that changed her life and almost saw her leave the sport.\n\n\"It's not just a headache or a little bruise to the head, there's a lot of backlash - I couldn't even look at my phone without getting migraines,\" said the skier.\n\n\"As well as the physical stuff, there was the emotional side - I'd get anxious and have a breakdown or a panic attack at just little situations and have to come home.\n\nAll the complications started in Sochi with the horrendous crash\n\n\"After the Olympics I wouldn't be able to get on the train by myself and that's weird for me as an athlete because I travel everywhere, but I wouldn't do it without my mum with me.\"\n\nBritish freestyle skiing head coach Pat Sharples has known Cheshire since she was a young teenager, trying out the sport on a dry slope in Stoke.\n\n\"All the complications started in Sochi with the horrendous crash,\" he told BBC Sport. \"The two concussions after that weren't anything like as huge as she'd had before, but it still triggered a lot of difficulties.\n\n\"It was new territory for us and a huge learning curve for everyone on the team as we'd never had to deal with anything like this.\n\n\"We were told it was 50/50 as to whether she would get back to fitness, but we just wanted her to be OK. It wasn't about her being back on skis.\"\n\nCheshire spent months working with her psychologist, Dave Collins, to overcome the anxiety of putting her body and mind on the line again.\n\n\"I did go through some doubts - I think it's only natural after a bad injury as it knocks your self-confidence and your whole thought process about the sport,\" she said.\n\n\"I was quite negative, but getting into gymnastics to go through some of the movements and seeing my psychologist really helped me be more positive about getting back on the snow.\"\n\nAfter two years out she made an impressive return, finishing fourth at the second-tier Copper Mountain Revolution Tour event in Colorado, USA in December.\n\nShe has subsequently achieved the minimum Olympic qualification standard with a top-30 finish in the season-opening halfpipe World Cup event - again in Copper Mountain - and followed that up with 14th in Mammoth, USA, earlier this month.\n\nSharples credits Cheshire's parents, Barbara and Mark, for a \"huge\" role in her recovery and believes Cheshire is now an improved athlete following her concussion battles.\n\n\"She's more determined than ever,\" he said. \"She's much stronger, focused and her work-ethic increased.\n\n\"Rowan's had to become this new athlete to get back and not only has she gained more experience, but she works so hard in the gym as well as when skiing and is a better all-round athlete than before.\"\n\nIn Molly Summerhayes - sister of Sochi Olympian Katie - and Youth Olympic champion Madi Rowlands, Cheshire knows she has serious competition for a place in Pyeongchang, which start in a year's time on 9 February 2018.\n\nHowever, she has been told by medical consultants that her three career concussions do not put her at any greater risk of further complications and, having overcome the odds by returning to the slopes, the 21-year-old is determined to make up for lost time.\n\n\"I'm actually feeling quite positive and have some new tricks in my head that I want to do,\" she told BBC Sport.\n\n\"It would mean the world [to qualify for Pyeonchang] because it would be a second chance to show the world what I can do, which I didn't get to do last time.\n\n\"I'm really looking forward to it and hopefully doing my best.\"", "After the infamous 2012 gang rape of a student on a bus in Delhi, the number of rape cases reported to police in India rose sharply. But one survey concluded that in Delhi, in 2013-14, more than half of these reports were \"false\" - fuelling claims by male activists that women are alleging rape in order to extort money from men.\n\nYogesh Gupta always knew he had evidence that could prove, indisputably, he was not a rapist, but getting the police to recognise his innocence was another matter.\n\nThe 44-year-old Delhi estate agent's troubles began after he caught an employee embezzling money and threatened to go to the police.\n\nThe employee reacted by coercing a woman to pose as a potential house buyer who, after viewing a property, asked Gupta for a lift to the local metro station. She later accused him of driving her to an empty fourth floor apartment and raping her.\n\n\"Thankfully I had CCTV installed in my office,\" he says.\n\n\"The whole process of taking the stairs to the fourth floor, opening the flat, taking her inside, then getting out and dropping her at the metro station would have taken at least 37 - 40 minutes.\n\n\"I could prove I was back in my office within 11 minutes.\"\n\nBut when the woman registered her complaint to the police, Gupta found himself caught up in a system that seemed to care little about the evidence and a lot about branding him a criminal.\n\n\"Nobody listened to what I had to say,\" he says. \"The police didn't even consult me. I tried everything, but I didn't get justice.\"\n\nThe gang-rape and murder of a student in Delhi in 2012 provoked mass protests\n\nFor the next eight months as the police investigation continued, Gupta had to endure the public disgrace of being accused of rape.\n\n\"I can't even begin to explain the ordeal that my wife, kids, my father and brother had to go through,\" he says.\n\n\"My children have had the toughest time. My daughter, who is just six years old, would write letters to god pleading to spare her father.\"\n\nWhen the case finally went to court, the woman confessed she had made up the accusation and Gupta was acquitted, but much damage had already been done.\n\nLawyer Vinay Sharma says he defends many clients who have been falsely accused\n\nGupta sees himself as a victim of what men's rights campaigners say is a growing problem - the false allegations of rape - and it's one that some argue stems directly from the 2012 Delhi gang rape.\n\nAs graphic details of the brutal attack were made public, protesters took to the streets to demand changes to India's deeply patriarchal society which they said ignores or even encourages violence against women.\n\nThe media responded with a spike in reports of sexual assault, particularly violent assaults by strangers, and the government widened the definition of rape, made it mandatory for police to register all complaints and introduced special fast-track courts.\n\nThis in turn encouraged more women to report sexual violence, with the number of cases registered in Delhi rising by more than 100% in the year after the 2012 gang-rape.\n\nAll these developments were widely welcomed as positive steps to tackle sexual violence.\n\nBut when a body called the Delhi Commission for Women published a report in 2014 describing 53% of rapes reported in the city the previous year as \"false\" this was seized upon by men's rights activists as evidence that the legal changes and noisy public debate had ended up making victims out of men.\n\n\"Of all the rape cases that are registered, only 1% is genuine,\" says Gupta's lawyer, Vinay Sharma, who regularly defends men accused of rape in Delhi.\n\n\"The rest are either registered to take revenge or to take advantage of the person in some financial matter,\" he says.\n\n\"The reality at that point in time was that India had enough stringent laws to curb rape and punish the offenders,\" he says.\n\n\"Today the definition of rape has changed so much and anything and everything is reported as rape.\"\n\nThe evidence from the Commission for Women is in fact far from conclusive. It classes as \"false\" all reports of rape that were dropped before they reached court, without analysing the reasons why.\n\nSo it doesn't distinguish between cases dropped because it was clear the woman was lying and those where a woman was put under pressure to withdraw her claim - or where there was simply insufficient evidence to build a strong case. Forensic evidence is rarely used in Indian rape cases, so it's often just his word against hers.\n\nOne person who decided to do her own investigation was data journalist Rukmini Shrinivasan.\n\nWhen she moved to Delhi from Mumbai to take up a post at The Hindu newspaper, she wanted to know whether Delhi's reputation as the rape capital of India was justified.\n\nInstead of counting dropped rape cases, she looked at the 460 cases that went to a full trial in Delhi district courts in 2013 and compared the initial complaint made to police with what happened in court.\n\nHer first discovery was that the media's alarm about stranger rape was overblown.\n\n\"Stranger rape, the thing that gets most highly reported in India, was an absolutely tiny category,\" she says. It accounted for just 12 of the 460 cases.\n\nOn the question of false rape, her findings were mixed.\n\nMore than one third of the 460 cases involved young people who had engaged in consensual sex outside marriage until their parents found out and used the criminal justice system to end the relationship.\n\n\"Families are more willing to have the stigma of rape rather than having the stigma of their daughter choosing her own sex or life partner,\" she says.\n\nShrinivasan found that many of these cases dealt with inter-caste or mixed-religion relationships which are considered taboo in conservative society. There was often a typical script that was used when parents filed the case with the police.\n\n\"I was repeatedly seeing stories of women being picked up in moving cars, being given a cold drink laced with sedatives which would render them unconscious, and then they would be raped,\" she said.\n\n\"But when I started reading more and more cases I realised that there are patterns to how complaints are filed. So this sedative-laced drink becomes important because it is necessary to show that consent was not given.\"\n\nAnother large category - nearly a quarter of the total - were cases where the man had broken his promise to marry the woman.\n\nAlthough this would not be considered rape in many countries, in India a man can be charged with falsely obtaining consent for sex if he promises to marry a woman and then changes his mind.\n\n\"The parents say, 'You've lost your virginity, it's going to be impossible to get you married, you file this case, he'll get scared and he'll marry you,'\" says Shrinivasan.\n\nWhat she did not find was any cases like Yogesh Gupta's, where a woman had filed a case maliciously or to extort money.\n\n\"In some cases it would be the argument of the defence that the woman was trying to abstract money,\" she says. \"But I cannot think of a case where this was proven.\"\n\nWhile Shrinivasan's study would appear to indicate that the proportion of false rape cases in Delhi is high by international standards - in more than one country, researchers have put the proportion of false rape claims at about 8% of the total - academic Nithya Nagarathinam argues that this is a distraction from a more pressing issue, the under-reporting of rape.\n\n\"Although there has been a jump in rape reporting since the Delhi gang-rape, there are still many cases that go unreported and there are so many reasons for that,\" she says, pointing to traditional patriarchal structures that mean violence against women is consistently downplayed.\n\n\"That is a more serious issue to me than a few cases where the parents have probably wrongly accused the man.\"\n\nNagarathinam cites a 2014 study using data from the Indian National Crime Records Bureau and the National Family Health Surveys that suggests only 6% of incidents of sexual violence against women are reported to the police.\n\nShe insists India needs better data, to understand the scale and nature of the problem.\n\n\"If you don't have hard data to base your arguments on, the result is the emotion-driven men's rights versus women's rights arguments that are going on now,\" she says.\n\nHowever big Delhi's false rape problem may be, Yogesh Gupta can attest to the powerful stigma of being falsely identified as sexual predator.\n\n\"The allegation of rape has affected my social status,\" he says.\n\n\"Even if one is acquitted, one cannot regain that status. You can't prove your innocence to each and every person. People are quick to judge in a rape case without even knowing whether the person is guilty or not.\"\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "The US president's spokesman has caused a bit of a Twitter storm by claiming Mr Trump does not own a bathrobe.\n\nWhite House Press Secretary Sean Spicer accused the New York Times of printing inaccuracies, specifically referring to him watching TV in his bathrobe, saying the paper owed President Trump an apology.\n\nThe president has tweeted his annoyance at what he calls poor reporting: \"The failing @nytimes was forced to apologise to its subscribers for the poor reporting it did on my election win. Now they are worse!\"\n\nUnsurprisingly, people have taken to social media to contradict Mr Spicer's bathrobe comment with various hashtags popping up, including #BathRobeGate.\n\nSome have even been delving into the presidential bathrobe archives to produce gems such as this from Avi Bueno.\n\nHe tweeted a photo of Ronald Reagan in a robe, with the caption: 'Weird to see @seanspicer and @realDonaldTrump getting all defensive about a #bathrobe when their hero wasn't shy about it.\"\n\nAnd historian Michael Beschloss tweeted a picture of President Lyndon B Johnson sitting in a robe with advisers on Air Force One in 1966.\n\nJohn Aravosis, editor of @AMERICAblog, was quick to post three photos of Donald Trump wearing a bathrobe, which had featured in a November Daily Mail article about a trove of Trump memorabilia being found in a US thrift shop.\n\nConsidering the Trump Organisation lists 37 properties, including 15 hotels, on its website, many posters are assuming that a bathrobe or two may have been worn in the Trump household.\n\nVarious robes bearing the Trump brand have been posted on social media, including this picture of American actor Mike Rowe.\n\nHe tweeted a photo in August 2016 of a bathrobe autographed by Mr Trump, along with a video in which Mike says he wore the robe \"briefly\".\n\nThere were a few robe-wearing alternatives, such as Evie the Cat, the UK Cabinet Office feline who posted this about the 10 Downing Street cat, Larry.\n\nAnd with a clever bit of editing, some have posted gifs of the president holding up a drawing of a bathrobe.\n\nEven @TrumpBathrobe, a twitter account set up in 2015 and inactive since September 2016, has reawakened amidst this robing furore.\n\nSimilar posts are appearing on Facebook under #bathrobegate, although not everyone is impressed:", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Watch: How Munther Alaskry got his family to the US\n\nAn Iraqi translator who worked extensively with the US military spent almost seven years trying to get his family to America. But with days to go before their departure, President Trump signed a travel ban that put the family's future in question.\n\nIt took seven years for Munther Alaskry to secure visas for his family. Now, they were only four days away from a new life in Houston, Texas, where friends and an apartment were waiting.\n\nBut instead of spending his final days in Baghdad celebrating and saying good-bye to family, Munther was in a panic.\n\nPresident Donald Trump was about to sign an executive order that would ban immigration from seven majority-Muslim countries for 120 days, including Iraq.\n\nMunther - a 37 year old chemical engineer and former translator for the US military - decided they couldn't wait. He told his family they were leaving Baghdad for the US immediately.\n\nHis wife Hiba protested - she hadn't finished packing, and her grandfather was about to have emergency surgery for cancer. She wanted to see him before they left. It was only four days, she told him.\n\n\"I don't think we have even one day,\" Munther said.\n\nAfter hastily selling off the last of their furniture and some jewellery, Munther was able to raise the $5,000 (£4,022.50) needed for the next-day flight to Houston, with a connection through Istanbul, Turkey. The couple crammed the last of their possessions into gigantic roller suitcases, and told their distraught family members there'd been a drastic change of plans.\n\nAs his family slept, Munther flipped anxiously between CNN, Fox News and the BBC. It was just past midnight in Iraq, but in the US, it was still Friday afternoon. Munther watched President Trump at the Pentagon signing an executive order titled \"Protecting the Nation From Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States\".\n\n\"I am establishing new vetting measures to keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the United States of America. We don't want them here,\" Trump said before placing his pen on the paper.\n\n\"We want to ensure that we are not admitting into our country the very threats our soldiers are fighting overseas. We only want to admit those into our country who will support our country and love deeply our people.\"\n\nMunther believed that he firmly belonged in the latter category. He'd always been fascinated by America, learning English from watching action movies like Rambo and The Terminator, and listening to Metallica as a teenager.\n\nMunther in 2008 after an Iraqi national football team win\n\nHe stunned a group of Marines with his knowledge of American heavy metal after he met them at a checkpoint near a relative's home in Baghdad, back in 2003. At the time, he was still a student at the University of Technology, Iraq.\n\n\"You speak good English,\" the Marines told him. \"Why don't you join us?\"\n\nMunther saw it as an opportunity to rebuild his country in the then-hopeful, post-Saddam Hussein era Iraq.\n\n\"I wanted to help the American army and the Iraqi people to understand each other. I was trying to help both of them,\" he said. \"It was the right thing to do.\"\n\nAfter the Marines left, Munther got a succession of jobs translating for the 3rd Infantry Division and 1st Armored Division. He was sent to the outskirts of Baghdad to help train the Iraqi National Guard. He manned the checkpoints. He had his own service weapon.\n\nHe developed a reputation for his punctuality and his sunny disposition. One former soldier described him to the BBC as a \"critical asset\", trustworthy with unflinching \"integrity and morals\".\n\nThe most dangerous assignment was with a unit clearing roadside bombs. His convoy was hit more than once.\n\nFellow translators were getting killed or losing limbs.\n\nThey were also getting murdered by members of al-Qaeda.\n\n\"They burned them alive. They cut their heads,\" Alaskry recalled. \"In Arabic we say, 'You are putting your spirit on the palm of your hand.' Because you don't know what will happen next.\"\n\nOne day, Alaskry found a letter on his car telling him that he would burn in hell for working for the \"infidels\".\n\nHe fled for Jordan without telling anyone, but returned to Iraq a few years later to once again work for the Americans on a health care project for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).\n\nIn 2008, Munther married Hiba, also a chemical engineer. When their daughter Dima was born the following year, Munther realized that his young family had no future in Iraq. He was a marked man, and life in Baghdad was too unstable.\n\nThe family had to move every year to keep their whereabouts a secret. When American troops began pulling out for good in 2011, Munther felt abandoned, like a trap was closing in on him - a feeling that followed him for years.\n\n\"Everyday they are bombing us. Almost everyday, we have like a car bomb,\" he said. \"It's not safe over here, especially [after] working with the Americans.\"\n\nIn 2010, Munther applied for a Special Immigrant Visa, reserved for Iraqis and Afghans who served with the US military and could prove their lives were under threatened as a result.\n\nThe programme was choked with applicants desperate to get out of the country. Delays mounted, as did the costs for doctor's exams and certificates from the local police ensuring Munther had no criminal record. Several American law enforcement agencies had to complete independent background checks on the family.\n\nFinally, in December 2016, they were cleared. Their tickets were booked.\n\n\"We said, 'There will be a light at the end of the tunnel. We will go to the states. We will secure a better life for our kids.\"\n\nIn the early morning darkness, Munther and Hiba loaded their enormous bags and two sleepy children into a relative's car and left for the Baghdad airport.\n\nIt was the middle of the night in the US. Trump's order, now eight hours old, had not been uploaded to the White House website. As the family checked in, no one questioned their visas or their Iraqi passports.\n\nAs they waited for their first flight from Baghdad to Istanbul, Munther dashed off texts to his sponsors and former colleagues from USAID. He sent an email to his contacts at No One Left Behind, a non-profit in Washington founded by American soldiers to help translators resettle in the US.\n\n\"I'm so scared ... I don't know what we will face and I don't know if the officer at Istanbul will let us board on the Airplane,\" he wrote in one message. \"Right now the only feeling i have is fear.\n\nThe three-hour flight to Istanbul was unbearable. Munther quaked in his seat. It was, he said, \"just like a horror movie - when you dream you're jumping from a high building\".\n\nIn Istanbul, the family transferred to the plane to Houston without incident. After they took their seats, Munther put on cartoons for three year old Hassan. His daughter Dima, an exuberant, chatty seven year old, threw her arms around her father's neck, proclaiming this to be the best airplane she'd ever seen.\n\nMunther started to relax. He reminded Dima of his promise to take her to Disney Land, a treat for which she'd been saving her pocket money.\n\nAbout 15 minutes after they boarded, a Turkish police officer made her way down the aisle, followed by three uniformed airport security officers. They stopped at Hiba's seat.\n\n\"Madame, your passport please,\" the officer said.\n\nAt that moment, Munther says, \"I knew our dream was lost\".\n\nThe heap of luggage in the Alaskrys' apartment after the failed attempt to migrate to the US\n\nAfter they were pulled from the Turkish flight - the children crying as they were ejected onto the tarmac in the snow - the Alaskrys spent 13 hours in the Turkish airport waiting for a flight back to Baghdad. Hiba and Munther took turns sleeping in order to keep watch over their bags.\n\nBy then, news of the executive order had reached airlines and customs officials abroad, and travellers from Syria, Sudan, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Yemen and Somalia were being pulled from their seats or barred at the gates at airports all over the world.\n\nIn New York City, flights that had been in the air when Trump signed his order had touched down, and US Customs and Border Patrol officers were beginning to hold anyone from the seven barred countries. Some people were sent back. Some signed documents presented to them that cancelled their visas. Even permanent residents - green card holders - were being told they could not return to their homes in the US.\n\nOne of the first Iraqis to be stopped at John F Kennedy International Airport was a man called Hameed Khalid Darweesh, who had come to the US on the same type of visa Munther was carrying: an SIV, which he earned after interpreting for the US military for 10 years.\n\nPeople gather for a protest at Terminal 4 of the John F Kennedy airport in New York on 28 January\n\nOver the course of the day more and more reports of detainees at airports around the country began to come in: at San Francisco International, Dulles International in Washington, and Philadelphia International Airport.\n\nAs the news spread, demonstrators began showing up to the terminals. Darweesh was eventually released, and a challenge filed in court on his behalf resulted in a US District Court judge ordering a stop to all deportations for visa-holders from the seven countries.\n\nGreen card-holders were allowed into the country, in some cases after long, intense interviews by customs officials. Lawyers in Virginia, then Massachusetts, then Washington state and Minnesota filed various motions to block Trump's executive order.\n\nMunther watched the protests swelling at JFK on television from their nearly empty house in Baghdad, their carefully packed bags now strewn in a heap across the floor.\n\n\"It was amazing,\" he said. \"Lawyers go voluntarily to help the refugees, to help the immigrants, to help the kids. I was feeling happy because other people could make it.\n\n\"American people are great people. Really. I work with them. I know them.\"\n\nBefore they left, Munther sold their car and almost all their furniture. He quit his job and had turned down other offers of employment. Because they missed their flight, the resettlement agency in Houston had to give their apartment away. There would be no refund for the aborted trip, nor for the return flight to Baghdad.\n\nIn an upstairs bedroom, Munther flipped through a stack of his old identification badges. His weapons authorisation card, his translator's badge, a pass to former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein's palace, refashioned as a US military base named FOB Prosperity.\n\nMunther Alaskry said working with the US military was \"the right thing to do\"\n\nHe had a stack of photographs of himself standing with American soldiers - playing cards, riding on top of a tank, posing with an M-16 rifle. The younger Munther looks giddy in the photos.\n\n\"They were like my brothers, you know?\" he said. \"They're really nice guys. Really nice.\"\n\nMunther pulled out another folder stuffed with letters of commendation, certificates of appreciation, and other documentation of his work history.\n\n\"Thank you for your hard work and exceptional performance,\" read one.\n\n\"We couldn't do it without you!\" said another.\n\n\"Another one. Another one,\" Munther said, flipping faster and faster, then throwing the whole pile on a heap on his bathroom counter. \"Even if I have thousands of those, it's now worth nothing, you know?\"\n\nTrump's executive order halted all immigration from Iraq for 120 days. The Alaskrys' visas were due to expire in just two months, at which point they'd be back where they started in 2010.\n\nMunther didn't believe they would ever come to the US, at least not while Trump was president.\n\n\"Losing a job, losing money, it's OK. You can survive,\" he said, \"But losing your dreams? This is the most terrible thing.\"\n\nAfter three days of chaos, confusion, and a blizzard of legal challenges from all over the country, a press conference was called in Washington with the heads of Homeland Security, US Customs and Border Protection and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.\n\n\"This is not, I repeat, not a ban on Muslims,\" said Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly.\n\nBut Kevin McAleenan, acting commissioner of US Customs and Border Protection, did have an important clarification to make.\n\n\"Lawful permanent residents and Special Immigrant Visa holders are allowed to board their flights,\" he said. The state department later confirmed that \"it is in the national interest to allow Iraqi Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) holders to continue to travel to the United States.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nSoon after, the founder of No One Left Behind posted a victory message on the group's Facebook page and sent messages to all of their clients abroad, including Munther: \"GREAT NEWS! Afghan and Iraq SIVs WILL be allowed to enter America!! We did it!!!\"\n\nIn his empty apartment, Munther watched McAleenan's comments. He checked the US Embassy's website and read the new guidance. Finally, after a representative from the embassy called and confirmed that he and his family would indeed be able to travel, Munther once again booked a flight to the US.\n\nBut almost as soon as the tickets were purchased - this time flying through Doha, Qatar, to New York City - dread set in.\n\n\"First I was happy, but now I'm scared,\" he said. \"I don't want my wife and kids to face the same situation.\n\n\"Oh my god, I cannot handle it. I barely handled it last time.\"\n\nAs they packed their bags once again, it was clear that little Dima was still traumatised by her experience in Turkey. She asked her mother to bring blankets so that when they were kicked off the flight and forced to spend another night in the airport, she would have something to cover herself with.\n\n\"I don't want to go to the America because they don't want us to go,\" she told her father.\n\nMunther tried to reassure her, but he wasn't feeling very sure himself.\n\n\"Hopefully everything will be just fine,\" he repeated over and over. \"Fingers crossed.\"\n\nMunther and family waiting for their fight to New York City in Doha\n\nAfter a sleepless night, Munther lined up the suitcases once more at the front door of their home and called Qatar Airlines to make sure they would be able to board their flight.\n\nHe was told no. No-one at the airline had heard of the new guidance.\n\nIn a panic, Munther called the US Embassy in Baghdad, which referred him to an emergency hotline and emailed him the text of the new rule to show airport officials.\n\nThe airline employees were unimpressed. Munther continued sending frantic emails and texts to the US Embassy all the way to the airport. Finally, about an hour before the flight was set to take off, Munther got a call from Qatar Airlines.\n\n\"Do you want to hear some good news?\" the man asked him.\n\nThe family was cleared, and allowed through security with just 30 minutes to make it to their gate. After a sprint through the airport, they arrived just in time for their flight to Doha.\n\nIt was at this point that Munther finally broke down.\n\n\"I don't know how to describe how I'm feeling right now,\" he said, tearing up. \"Finally. It was a struggle. But finally.\"\n\nThe flight from Doha touched down at John F Kennedy International Airport at 8:30am, and a small group of lawyers, a local rabbi and a volunteer chauffer waited by customs for the Alaskrys.\n\nAyla Yavin volunteered through her synagogue to drive the Alaskrys to their hotel\n\nAn hour passed, then two.\n\nAll of the Doha flight passengers came and went with no sign of the family.\n\n\"This is worrying,\" said Emad Khalil, a lawyer from the newly formed group No Ban JFK. He started making phone calls to the American Civil Liberties Union, who in turn began calling the border patrol and airport officials.\n\nAfter three hours, Khalil was certain that the family was being detained somewhere behind the big, white wall that separated customs from arrivals. If they did not appear soon, the lawyers said they would file a legal motion on behalf of the family.\n\nFinally, after five anxious hours, they finally emerged, Dima and Hassan holding hands, Hiba and Munther smiling from behind a roller cart stacked high with luggage.\n\nDespite the lengthy delay, Hiba said that the customs officials who interviewed them were friendly, and they never felt intimidated.\n\nHassan, Dima and Munther Alaskry emerged from customs five hours after their flight landed\n\nOne woman handed Dima and Hassan drawings from her own children that read, \"Welcome to New York!\" Dima chattered away about her plans to see Frozen's Elsa at Disney Land.\n\n\"I like it so much - it's so cute,\" she enthused about the bland, sterile airport terminal.\n\nLike her father, she also learned English in part from watching movies.\n\n\"She would like to be famous,\" said Hiba, smiling. \"She has a very strong personality.\"\n\nAt the hotel, the family was greeted by two women from No One Left Behind. They brought a basket filled with Legos, Play-Doh, blocks, a fashion drawing kit for Dima. The children unpacked and re-packed the basket over and over again, counting their new bounty.\n\nFinally, the Alaskrys were left alone to ascend to their 15th floor room, overlooking the rooftop gardens of the Upper East Side.\n\nThe children ripped open packets of mini Chips Ahoy cookies, and Dima devoured her first Pop-Tart. They scurried from one end of the room to the other. No one seemed ready for a nap, though they'd been up for nearly two days.\n\nDima digs into a blueberry Pop-Tart, a treat left in the hotel room by members of No One Left Behind\n\nThe upshot of the cancelled flight to Houston was an unexpected three-day vacation in New York City, thanks to a relative who paid for their hotel as a gift. Sitting on the plush, crisp bedspread, Munther was in disbelief.\n\n\"I've been hearing songs about New York, I've been watching New York like from the American movies,\" he said. \"You see like the yellow taxi of New York, the pizza of New York - it's amazing.\"\n\nThe Alaskrys' new, final destination was Rochester, New York, about five hours north of the city, where a host family and a group of about 40 volunteers waited to help them navigate their new lives in the US.\n\nBut before all of that, Munther said he was taking his children to the Statue of Liberty.\n\n\"Now they are in the best country in the world, in my opinion,\" he said. \"This is my dream, to bring my kids here, now. After like, maybe ten years, 20 years, I'll be able to tell my kids, 'Listen, you were in Baghdad in that situation, I brought you all the way, I did all these sacrifices for you, and you are here now.'\n\n\"I'm sure - or I hope - they will appreciate it.\"\n\nOn Sunday, Munther and his family took the ferry to the Statue of Liberty", "Tara Palmer-Tomkinson described when she realised she was living a privileged life, in an interview with Jane Garvey on BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour.\n\nIt followed the launch of her novel 'Inheritance'.\n\nThe former Sunday Times columnist, reality TV star, and goddaughter of Prince Charles was found dead on Wednesday aged 45.", "Among Grassani's subjects were a large group of Central Americans, walking hundreds of miles from homes in Guatemala and Honduras to the US:\n\n“They were very strong at the beginning, walking like crazy. I spent four days with them – day by day you could see them getting tired because they had no food, nothing with them.”", "Shirley Collins is best known for the album Anthems in Eden, which she recorded in 1969 with her sister, Dorothy\n\nFolk star Shirley Collins, who was robbed of her voice for 30 years by an emotional crisis, has been nominated for two Radio 2 Folk Awards.\n\nThe 81-year-old is up for singer of the year, while Lodestar, her first record since 1978, is up for best album.\n\nCollins was an immensely important figure in Britain's folk-rock scene in the 1960s, thanks to her pared-down singing style and strong storytelling.\n\nBut her career was cut short by the end of her marriage in the late 1970s.\n\nThe star's second husband, Ashley Hutchings, left her for a young actress who took to showing up at Collins' performances.\n\nOne night, during a performance of Lark Rise at London's National Theatre, she froze on-stage and found herself unable to sing.\n\n\"It was humiliating,\" she told BBC Radio 4's Mastertapes last year. \"Some nights when I opened my mouth nothing would come out, or just a few croaks would come out.\n\n\"It went on night after night after night, for far too long. I was trying to sing through tears. I was just in a state.\"\n\n\"I never lost the desire to sing,\" she added. \"It was really heartbreaking for me not to be able to. [But] I couldn't even sing indoors. I couldn't sing to myself.\"\n\nCollins developed a form of dysphonia, a condition often associated with psychological trauma.\n\nIn the years that followed, she wrote books while working in charity shops and a job centre \"for five ghastly years\" to support herself.\n\nBut her music was discovered by a younger generation of fans - including Blur's Graham Coxon and the Decemberists' Colin Meloy - and, eventually, she was coaxed back onto the stage, releasing her new album to wide acclaim last year.\n\nCollins is nominated for singer of the year alongside Ireland's Daoiri Farrell, Scottish musician Kris Drever, and five-time Folk Award winner Jim Causley.\n\nFarrell has the most nominations, three in all, while Songs of Separation - a project inspired by the Scottish referendum, featuring Eliza Carthy, Karine Polwart and Jenny Hill - has two.\n\nWoody Guthrie is one of the most influential figures in folk and popular music\n\nUS folk icon Woody Guthrie will be inducted to the Folk Awards Hall of Fame on the 50th anniversary of his death.\n\nThe author of classics such as I Ain't Got No Home, Pretty Boy Floyd and This Train Is Bound For Glory, his songs were a major influence on popular music, and have been covered by the likes of Van Morrison, Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan.\n\nJust this week, Lady Gaga sang a portion of his civil rights anthem This Land Is Your Land in a thinly-veiled attack on Donald Trump at the Super Bowl.\n\nBilly Bragg, who made a Grammy award-winning album with Wilco based on unused Woody Guthrie lyrics, will pay tribute to the star with a headline performance at the awards.\n\nScottish singer-songwriter Al Stewart, best known for the hit single Year Of The Cat, will also perform, after being honoured with the lifetime achievement award.\n\nMark Radcliffe and Julie Fowlis will present the awards at London's Royal Albert Hall on Wednesday, 5 April. The ceremony will be broadcast live on BBC Radio 2.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nBayern Munich were taken by surprise by the timing of captain Philipp Lahm's decision to announce his retirement.\n\nLahm, 33, joined Bayern aged 11 and has spent almost his entire career there, but will exit at the end of the season.\n\nThe German World Cup winner was under contract until 2019 and has also turned down a role as sporting director.\n\nChief executive Karl-Heinz Rummenigge said the club were \"surprised\" by the actions of Lahm and his agent, adding: \"the doors at Bayern will remain open\".\n\nLahm, one of Germany's most successful footballers, announced his intention to retire at the end of the season after his 501st game for the club, a German Cup win over Wolfsburg.\n\nShortly before Lahm made his statement, the club's president Uli Hoeness had told reporters he knew nothing of Lahm's retirement and said any announcement would be a joint one with the club.\n\nRummenigge added: \"Bayern Munich are surprised by the actions of Philipp Lahm and his advisor.\n\n\"Until yesterday we were expecting to issue a joint statement from Philipp Lahm and Bayern Munich. Uli Hoeness and myself had honest, intensive talks in the past months with Philipp about a potential involvement in the management of our club.\n\n\"Last week he informed us he was currently not available for the sports director position and that he wants to end his contract early.\"\n\nLahm made his debut for Bayern in 2002 and has remained with the cub, apart from two seasons on loan at Stuttgart between 2003 and 2005.\n\nHe has won seven Bundesliga titles, six German Cups, the Champions League, as well as captaining Germany to the World Cup in 2014.", "Wilfred Ndidi scores a spectacular goal to put Leicester 2-1 up in extra-time against Derby County in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.\n\nWatch all the best action from this season's FA Cup here.\n\nFA PEOPLE'S CUP: Free five-a-side competition returns for 2017 - sign up now!\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Sir Jon Cunliffe: \"The UK, in order to be a successful financial centre, needs robust regulation\"\n\nThe man responsible for financial stability at the Bank of England has warned against relaxing banking regulation, saying that such a move could damage the global economy.\n\nSir Jon Cunliffe told the BBC that \"lax controls\" risked undoing progress that had been made since the financial crisis.\n\n\"We've made very substantial progress since the financial crisis, increasing the resilience of the financial sector and increasing its ability to support the economy in times of stress both nationally and in Europe and globally, including the US,\" Sir Jon told me.\n\n\"Those changes were necessary.\n\n\"None of us want to see again the sorts of events we saw between 2007 and 2009 and the costs of those events are still very clear.\n\n\"In order to have a resilient financial sector and consistent regulation internationally we need international standards, we need the reforms we have had and it is important we preserve them.\"\n\nSir Jon's comments come after suggestions that if Britain did not secure a good trade deal with the European Union following Brexit, the UK could become an offshore tax haven - encouraging businesses and banks to move to the country to avoid tougher regulations elsewhere.\n\nDonald Trump, via an executive order, has also announced there will be a review of the Dodd-Frank legislation in America.\n\nIt was passed during the Obama presidency to control the use of complicated financial instruments by institutions, increase the amount of money banks are required to have available to avoid tax-payer funded bailouts and stop banks using their own money to invest in intricate equity and debt products for profit, what is called proprietary trading.\n\nAlthough it had many supporters for making banks more secure, it has also been attacked for making banks less able to lend and more risk averse, particularly smaller, regional banks which support local economies.\n\nSir Jon, who is the deputy governor of the Bank responsible for financial stability, said that it was too early to say what the outcome of the reform proposals would be.\n\nHe pointed out the executive order spoke about proportionate regulation and maintained the need to prevent bail outs which didn't seem \"out of line\" with global approaches to regulation.\n\nSir Jon said it was necessary, as the Bank had done, to investigate problems of \"regulatory conflict\" and change the rules where there had been unintended consequences.\n\nBut he warned that as the UK had a very large financial services sector - providing about 8% of the country's economic output - it was important that the highest standards were maintained.\n\n\"It is important we have proportionate, highest quality regulation - robust and in line with best international standards,\" he said.\n\n\"The UK - in order to be a successful financial centre, you need good regulation, you need robust regulation and you need regulators that have credibility and experience.\n\n\"One doesn't become successful as an international centre by having lax standards and by being open to crises and regulatory arbitrage [the use of regulatory loopholes to avoid banking costs].\"\n\nSir Jon, a member of the Monetary Policy Committee which sets interest rates, said that the next move on interest rates, whether up or down, was \"balanced\".\n\nYesterday another MPC member, Kristin Forbes, suggested that she was moving towards supporting a rate rise because growth was more robust than originally thought and inflation was rising.\n\n\"There are risks on the downside as well,\" Sir Jon said.\n\n\"That [the economy] will slow faster and that uncertainty effects will come in and have an impact. For me the risks are evenly balanced.\"\n\nSir Jon was speaking at the launch of new Bank research which showed that a third of companies surveyed admitted that they had not invested enough over the last five years.\n\nHe said that investment was important to support economic growth and better productivity.\n\nReasons for not investing included economic uncertainty, risk aversion following the financial crisis and a perception that there were still constraints on bank lending. The man responsible for financial stability at the Bank of England has warned against relaxing banking regulation, saying that such a move could damage the global economy.", "Demarai Gray produces a moment of magic as he slaloms past Derby defenders to score for Leicester in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.\n\nWatch all the best action from this season's FA Cup here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Last updated on .From the section Golf\n\nFourteen-time major winner Tiger Woods says he will \"never feel great\" again because of the number of injuries suffered during his career.\n\nWoods, 41, pulled out of the Dubai Desert Classic before the second round this month because of a back spasm.\n\nHe only returned to action in December after two back operations.\n\n\"There were a lot of times I didn't think I was going to make it back. It was tough, it was more than brutal,\" Woods told Dubai magazine Vision.\n\nWoods' first return to competitive action after a 15-month lay-off came in December at the Hero World Challenge - an 18-man tournament in the Bahamas - and he finished 15th at the PGA Tour event.\n\nHe hopes to compete in the Masters at Augusta from 6-9 April.\n\n\"There have been plenty of times when I thought I would never play the game again at the elite level,\" added Woods, who has won 79 titles on the PGA Tour.\n\n\"It was tough, it was more than brutal. There were times I needed help just to get out of bed.\n\n\"I feel good, not great. I don't think I will ever feel great because it's three back surgeries, four knee operations.\n\n\"I'm always going to be a little bit sore. As long as I can function, I'm fine with that.\"\n\nWoods has not won a tournament anywhere since 2013, while his title drought in major championships dates back to 2008.\n\n\"There is a changing of the guard,\" he said. \"My generation is getting older but if I'm teeing up then the goal is to win.\"", "Villager Alexander Batyokhtin has built a church out of snow in Sosnovka in Siberia.", "Fireman, wrestler, politician? What do footballers do in retirement? Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nFollowing ex-Liverpool and QPR striker Djibril Cisse's announcement that he is to retire to focus on a career as a DJ, BBC Sport has unearthed a few more career paths taken by former players. Play along with our gallery quiz to see how many you can remember.", "So perhaps people will pay for quality journalism after all.\n\nSubscriptions to leading British current affairs magazines, due to be published tomorrow, show a combination of Brexit, Trump and other cultural factors has led to an increase in the number of people handing over money to read smart stuff.\n\nAdvance sighting of circulation figures for two leading publications - The Spectator and New Statesman - shows a clear pattern.\n\nFor weekly or fortnightly publications that don't do general news, there is a growing willingness to pay for high-quality journalism - whether written, in the magazines, or video and audio online.\n\nThis time last year, The Spectator had combined print and digital sales of 62,718, passing a record set in 2006. Of that, 55,165 were print (though print subscribers get access to digital content) and 7,553 were digital only.\n\nNow the combined print and digital figure is 67,120. Of this, 59,923 are print sales, and 7,197 are digital subscribers. In the second half of last year alone, print circulation rose by 3,270.\n\nI pointed out earlier this week Donald Trump has been a boon to the finances of much of the mainstream media - particularly in America. In Britain, Brexit was a more significant factor.\n\nSpectator editor Fraser Nelson told me: \"Brexit seems to have been the catalyst. News events since then (Trump, etc) have led to a lot more interest in high-quality news and analysis.\"\n\nOther cultural factors are at play too. This is what really interests me - and Nelson: \"The market has changed. There's a lot more acceptance of the idea of paying for films, music and content in general.\n\n\"Netflix has helped pave the way for a change in culture. People who would not be seen dead paying for content five years ago are now in the habit of paying for Amazon Prime, music, the odd film and a subscription or two.\n\n\"We hear about Trump helping NY Times subscriptions, but I think it's more than that. The market has just turned, and is now welcoming to titles whose brand and quality is strong enough.\"\n\nThere is another factor: \"Weirdly, the phenomenon of fake news has also helped emphasise the importance of paying for edited content. Where you get your news from has never mattered more.\"\n\nNor is this phenomenon restricted to just one part of the political spectrum. People are paying for high-quality stuff regardless of their leaning.\n\nIn his time as editor, Jason Cowley has made the New Statesman much less slavishly left-wing, picking fights with some figures on the left, such as Ed Miliband.\n\nI would say that the Statesman is now a magazine of scepticism rather than leftism. Of course, some of the smartest scepticism originates on the left: Bertrand Russell's Sceptical Essays is among the most important collections published in the 20th Century.\n\nCombined circulation is now 34,025 - of which 32,098 are print and 1,927 are digital - compared with a combined figure of 32,300 this time last year, and 24,000 in 2010. This is a 35-year high.\n\nIn 2016 newstatesman.com hit 4 million monthly unique visitors and 27 million monthly page views - close to a 400% increase on 2011.\n\nCowley told me: \"In an era of fake news, people are realising that good journalism is worth spending money on. While much of the liberal media has been struggling to survive in a declining market dominated by powerful media groups, the New Statesman has not merely held its position but expanded dramatically - all achieved… with no marketing spend.\"\n\nA bright picture - but several caveats are necessary here.\n\nFirst, I don't yet have the age profile of new subscribers. It would be interesting to know a bit more about this.\n\nSecond, many magazines are succumbing to the temptation to bundle print and digital numbers together.\n\nThe attempt to conflate numbers is really a way of showing a bit of leg to advertisers. But it is a deliberate misrepresentation of the real picture.\n\nWe can hardly take magazines seriously when they call out deceitful public figures if they play fast and loose with their own numbers.\n\nThird, there is a much broader story about web traffic, whether at general newspapers or specialist magazines.\n\nFourth, the fact people are paying for high-quality magazine content does not mean that this model will necessarily work for newspapers.\n\nThe Times, which has a paywall and is growing its subscriber base, has found a business model that works.\n\nThe New York Times operates a metered paywall, but it has an editorial budget of over £300m, has a much vaster domestic target market than, say, The Independent and competes with fewer national newspapers in America. It is a curiosity of Britain that we have so many more national titles for our smaller population.\n\nThe Financial Times, which also operates a metered paywall, is both a generalist and a specialist publication, because it does so much financial news. It also has the advantage that many of its readers are either rich or, because they work for companies dependent on that financial data, able to buy subscriptions on company expenses.\n\nSo it is important not to read across from the success of weekly magazines, which deal in high-quality commentary and analysis, and say the same will necessarily work for daily newspapers.\n\nTheir meat and drink is the much more generally available commodity of daily news, and in Britain they compete with the BBC website, whose reach is huge.\n\nFinally, for many publications, the growth in subscriptions will not offset the precipitous decline in display advertising across the market, which is not far off 20% down year on year, as eyeballs migrate to the web.\n\nThe Spectator now gets two-thirds of its revenue from paying consumers rather than advertisers. The Economist magazine has argued publicly that it expects display advertising revenue to \"pretty much vanish\" by 2025.\n\nThe model for print media is being revolutionised. Those dependent solely or mainly on print advertising are in trouble, and will have to diversify their businesses.\n\nThose flaunting a generally available commodity - daily news - will have to do it better, present it more boldly, and manage costs more smartly.\n\nBut now we know: those who specialise, and publish regularly but not daily, can ask people to pay, with confidence that they will.", "Donald Trump is, by sheer force of character, destroying the mainstream media as we know it.\n\nHis relentless barrage of abuse, not least about \"fake news\", has fatally undermined the trust of the American people in their traditional sources of news; and by denying the Washington press corps access to his administration, he has neutralised a key weapon in the armoury of political journalism.\n\nMeanwhile, his use of social media, talk radio and favoured alt-right websites has allowed him to communicate directly to voters, rendering journalists an irrelevant distraction.\n\nAnd the Spicer Doctrine - the belief held by the White House press secretary that it is the job of government to hold media to account and not just the other way round - poses a mortal threat to the trade we call reporting.\n\nAny combination of the above paragraphs could appear, without much contention, in almost every appraisal of Trump's relationship with the media that I have read in the past year.\n\nThat it has limited basis in reality, and indeed is contradicted by the vast bulk of available evidence, has been no impediment to its ubiquity.\n\nIn fact, contrary to the prevailing orthodoxy, Donald Trump is not the man who will kill the mainstream media. He is the man who could save it.\n\nMichael Loccisano/Getty Images for The New York Ti Mark Thompson, of the New York Times Company, has seen revenues rise\n\nTogether with Dominic Hurst, a brilliant producer, I have been looking at Mr Trump's relationship with the media for Radio 4's PM programme. The evidence is emphatic: Trump has given many news organisations the sustainable commercial future they so desperately crave.\n\nThe New York Times, one of Mr Trump's favourite voodoo dolls, which he has repeatedly admonished on Twitter and in rallies, is doing very well out of the new president. In the three weeks after his election, it sold 132,000 digital subscriptions - a tenfold increase.\n\nThat's a lot of revenue with which to fund serious journalism. I spoke to Mark Thompson, the paper's chief executive and a former director general of the BBC.\n\nHe told me that the president's actions and words \"are causing hundreds of thousands of Americans who've never paid for news before to pay for it for the first time\".\n\nAnd he added: \"It's not a political point, it's purely a commercial point: the Trump era seems to be a very good era for quality journalism.\"\n\nCNN, the other organisation that Mr Trump has repeatedly labelled as fake news, also has plenty to thank the president for. Thanks to him, 2016 was CNN's most watched year.\n\nAs for news websites like BuzzFeed News, the Guardian, Mail Online, the Independent and others, Trump has generated phenomenal traffic - which in turn boosts revenues.\n\nTwo points about Mr Trump's benefit to the mainstream media strike me. The first is that it applies to different platforms and different business models.\n\n2016 brought more viewers than ever to CNN\n\nThe New York Times is a newspaper and website with a semi-permeable paywall - the so-called free premium, or freemium model. The Independent has a low cost base and is funded by a huge range of advertising revenue streams. CNN is a cable news network. All are thriving just now.\n\nSecond, Mr Trump has doubtless fortified the differences between the commercial and editorial departments of outlets such as these three. Take the New York Times.\n\nColumnists and leader writers on that gloriously high-minded body, the editorial board, are writing about how awful Mr Trump is, a threat to the republic, an American Putin, these are the end days, and so forth.\n\nMeanwhile, Mark Thompson is rubbing his hands with glee - not necessarily at the policies of the president, but at the ambient glow of his bottom line.\n\nThroughout my journalistic career, there have been serious questions about how journalism is funded.\n\nThere is no one or easy answer to that. But based on the evidence above, a very good answer has two words - \"Donald\", and \"Trump\". This brash reality TV star has caused no end of discomfort for the mainstream media.\n\nBut perhaps what should really make them squirm in their lofty op-ed conferences is the fact that he is doing more than any other modern politician to help them pay their mortgages and feed their families.\n\nListen to my piece on PM, BBC Radio 4 at 17:00 GMT on Monday, 6 February or later via BBC iPlayer.", "It used to have one of the best views in England - now a Devon summerhouse is a pile of splintered wood at the bottom of a cliff.\n\nThe structure had been Paul Griew's garden sanctuary where he could observe the beautiful coastline off Sidmouth. But over the years the cliff edge has been encroaching on his property.\n\nMr Griew, 69, said he was out at the time of the collapse which was caught on camera by a passer-by who said she was filming the cliff, where there have been previous collapses.\n\nMr Griew said he had lost 20m of garden since he bought his home in 1997. And at the current rate of erosion of about 1m a year, he has about another 40 years left before his house collapses.\n\nMore on the summerhouse cliff fall, and other Devon news", "The NHS has come under intense pressure this winter, with record numbers of patients facing long waits in accident and emergency units among other challenges.\n\nWe asked some of those who have fallen ill, and the families of others, to share their experiences of winter 2016-17.\n\nSue's father's life changed dramatically after he fell out of bed while in hospital in December 2016.\n\nBryan, 84, had been admitted to hospital near their house in Cornwall for a hip operation.\n\nSue says she was not told about his fall for several days, eventually she was told he would not walk again and possibly had only six months left to live.\n\n\"I am devastated - six weeks ago everything was fine, now this is not the world I imagined I'd be in.\n\n\"In December he was walking into town, doing gardening, he loved mechanics and tinkering.\n\n\"Now in hospital his mental health has really deteriorated, he does not speak and strips naked in public.\n\n\"I blame the trauma of the fall and the time he's been forced to spend in hospital.\n\n\"I'm really on edge, I feel like I'm about to fall off a cliff.\n\n\"I break down in tears at least once a day.\n\n\"He's had his life taken away too soon.\n\n\"Are we saying that because he's too complicated, our society can't care for him?\n\n\"It seems like such a big fight to just find out from the hospital what is going on.\n\n\"I just hope to God that he doesn't understand what is happening to him.\n\n\"I feel like he'll never come home again, he seems lost to us.\"\n\nJohn Perrins was on the M6 motorway, driving home from Cambridge, when he realised he was having a heart attack.\n\nAn ambulance driver himself, he had feared he would never see his wife again - so intense was the pain. But a paramedic saved his life at the side of the road.\n\n\"I was vomiting and felt like a horse was kicking me in the chest.\n\n\"My wife called an ambulance, which arrived within 10 minutes - seeing the blue lights was the most wonderful thing I've ever seen.\n\n\"I passed out, but apparently they performed three lots of heart massage - 90 compressions.\n\n\"When I came round they spoke to me and, although I was scared, the way that the paramedic spoke to me made me feel safe.\n\n\"A friend who is a paramedic came to see me and he told me that the last six heart attack patients he worked on had died - I felt so lucky that I had this particular ambulance crew.\n\n\"They have given me my life back.\n\n\"The paramedic was treating me, teaching a trainee and looking after my wife in the ambulance - I could not have asked for a better person.\n\n\"I am trying to find out the names of the ambulance crew - I want to find them so I can say thank you.\"\n\nTrevor, 58, says that the NHS has treated his diabetes and depression \"brilliantly\"\n\nTrevor Dallimore-Wright says his local GP and hospital are \"like a family\" to him, regularly providing life-saving care for his complex health conditions.\n\n\"The NHS has been absolutely brilliant,\" says Trevor, from London, who has diabetes and depression.\n\n\"My GP keeps me sane and out of hospital - I would give her 10 out of 10.\n\n\"I've had emergency admittance twice recently with sepsis - I went to A&E and was treated very quickly.\n\n\"They've had a great impact on my life.\n\n\"NHS treatment has helped me during the times that I could not get out of bed.\n\n\"My GP is extremely kind and patient. They are so patient-centred, I would put them in the luxury bracket.\n\n\"All the hospital staff are extraordinarily friendly.\n\n\"They are there despite the infrastructure problems in the NHS, and the care could not be better.\n\n\"From the moment I walk in, I know I'm being looked after.\n\n\"My only problem is that the NHS won't pay for immunotherapy drugs which are at the front line of treatment but are expensive.\"\n\nNikki, 36, had her scheduled operation cancelled twice and she is still waiting\n\nThirty six-year-old Nikki Alldis' satisfaction levels are at the other end of the spectrum, however, despite also living London. She says she has waited 15 months for a bowel operation, which has been twice cancelled.\n\nWhen the procedure was scheduled for early January, she mentally prepared her young children and rearranged her work. But Nikki has twice received a last-minute call telling her there is no bed space.\n\n\"I'd prepared mentally - I planned my whole Christmas around the operation and recovery. I prepared frozen dinners for my kids, they are seven and 13, and I said a farewell goodbye.\n\n\"Then in the morning the nurse called me and said, 'We have no bed for you.'\n\n\"I was gutted. The kids were so confused when they came home and I was still there.\n\n\"I've been waiting for 15 months now - it's hanging over me.\n\n\"I did not believe the second appointment would happen, but I packed my bags anyway.\n\n\"We didn't even bother to rearrange my husband's work that time, if he's not working we're not earning, so we can't afford these cancellations.\n\n\"I put things in place with my work for people to cover me.\n\n\"I'm still waiting, hopefully it's third time lucky.\"\n\nWhen 29-year-old Paul was feeling suicidal in January, the NHS crisis care team in west London gave him 24-hour care to keep him safe.\n\nHe has received treatment for bipolar disorder for four years and says his consultant and crisis team are outstanding.\n\n\"They helped me in my darkest and most depressive hours,\" says Paul, who asked for his surname not to be revealed.\n\n\"I came back home after New Year and went back to day-to-day life, but it kicked off a hefty depression and I was left feeling really low and suicidal.\n\n\"My partner called the crisis team, and they came to our house three or four times a day.\n\n\"They come at 02:00 or 03:00, they are really responsive.\n\n\"I don't feel like they are just doing their jobs, they have genuine care for me.\n\n\"They take away my medication to make sure I will not overdose and when they visit, they make me take the medication.\n\n\"Sometimes they just spend time with me.\n\n\"They ask how I am, what did you eat and sometimes they make me do things like go and buy some milk, which I don't always feel able to do.\n\n\"I would not be alive without them.\n\n\"But one problem I have with NHS mental health care is that they medicate but do not do counselling, there is a massive waiting list, so now I have to get counselling privately.\"\n\n\"Before she was diagnosed with cancer, my mum could run a marathon,\" says Richard Taylor, 55 from Liverpool.\n\nHe was devastated after watching her \"undignified\" death last month.\n\nThe local cancer centre did not have the capacity to give her end-of-life care.\n\n\"After she received the second diagnosis, she was sent home and we got caught in a communication loop between three hospitals. It was an emotional rollercoaster.\n\n\"Eventually I had to take her to A&E - she could not eat or drink.\n\n\"She spent 13 hours on a trolley, behind a curtain in a noisy and busy ward.\n\n\"I stayed on a chair beside her and slept on the floor - she died a week later.\n\n\"My gripe is with the lack of communication and the delays in my mum's treatment.\n\n\"The nursing staff were fantastic, but there is only so much they can do - they could not give my mum 24-hour attention.\n\n\"She was a very proud and dignified woman - but in the end she was simply scared to be alone.\n\n\"It was awful watching someone die in this extremely undignified way.\n\n\"If she was an animal, they would have put her down - she was starving and dehydrated.\n\n\"The nurses were lovely and compassionate, but they offered me no support.\n\n\"The NHS is a great thing, but it is under the hammer.\"\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nIndian cricketer Mohit Ahlawat hit an extraordinary 72-ball triple century in a local Twenty20 match in Delhi.\n\nThe 21-year-old hit 39 sixes, including five off the final over, as he posted a round 300 and his team Maavi finished on 416-2.\n\nHis total dwarfs the top-tier record of 175 scored by Chris Gayle in the 2013 Indian Premier League (IPL).\n\n\"I have put my name in the IPL auction but I am not sure if this will help people notice,\" Ahlawat told ABP Live.\n\nAhlawat played three first-class matches for Delhi in October 2015 alongside India internationals such as Gautam Gambhir and Ishant Sharma.\n\nHe was dropped after scores of 1, 4, 0, 0 and 0 in his five innings.\n\nFind out how to get into cricket with our inclusive guide.\n\nSri Lankan Dhanuka Pathirana smashed 277 off 72 balls playing for Austerlands in a Twenty20 match in England's Saddleworth League in September 2007 while Indian schoolboy Pranav Dhanawade set a new record for an officially recorded match with 1,009 not out in January 2016.\n\nHis total for KC Gandhi School broke a 117-year-old mark set by 13-year-old AEJ Collins in a house match at Clifton College in June 1899.", "While her life as a London socialite in her early 20s was being documented in her own Sunday Times column, it was accompanied by a growing problem with cocaine use. It all came to a head with an appearance on the Frank Skinner Show in 1999, in which she slurred her words, struggled to remember her host's name and asked him \"Are you married or are you single and what are you doing later?\". The TV appearance was quickly followed by a spell in rehab.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCanada's Denis Shapovalov says he would not have been able to forgive himself if the umpire he hit in the eye with a ball had been seriously injured.\n\nShapovalov was fined $7,000 (£5,600) for his actions during a Davis Cup match with Great Britain's Kyle Edmund.\n\nThe 17-year-old trailed 6-3 6-4 2-1 when he struck the ball in anger and hit Arnaud Gabas, defaulting the match.\n\n\"I know how dangerous it can be to fire a ball,\" he told the BBC. \"My first concern was that the referee was OK.\"\n\nSpeaking to BBC Radio 5 live Breakfast's Nicky Campbell, he added: \"I turned over and saw the official bending down, holding his eye. So from that moment on I was in complete shock and regret right away.\n\n\"I kind of blacked out for the next 10 minutes maybe. I remember going to the bench, asking if the ref's OK.\"\n\nShapovalov, who escaped the maximum $12,000 (£9,600) fine because it was deemed to be unintentional, said he spoke to Gabas after the match and the French umpire even managed to \"joke around a little bit\" regarding the incident in Ottawa.\n\nGabas went to hospital as a precaution but no damage to the cornea or retina was found. He was due to see an eye doctor in France for a further examination.\n\n\"I've been hit several times in the eye and other parts, so I know how dangerous it is,\" added world number 251 Shapovalov.\n\n\"I'm very lucky he is OK. If things had gone worse I don't think I would have been able to forgive myself and I don't think I would be able to move past it.\n\n\"I'm hoping I'll learn from it and move forward so that it is a lesson for me.\"\n\nThe teenager also apologised to Edmund and and the British fans, saying he was \"odds on\" to lose match before he was disqualified.\n\n\"I feel bad that I didn't allow the British team to have the celebration that they deserved,\" he added.", "We know our population is ageing and, as we live longer, many of us will need support in old age. There has also been an increase in the numbers of people living with a disability who may rely on some level of social care.\n\nNiall Dickson, the head of the NHS Confederation, which represents NHS providers, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that the system was trying to cope with \"huge amounts of extra demand\" as a result of there being \"many many more\" older people.\n\nBetween 2005 and 2015, the number of people aged 65 and over in the UK increased by 21%, while the number aged 85 and over increased by 31%.\n\nMore than a million more people were living with a disability in the UK in 2016 than 10 years earlier because people are living longer with disabilities than before. This is all good news.\n\nBut at the same time, directors of adult social services in England say they have had to cut £4.6bn from their budgets since 2010.\n\nSo who is getting care, what kind of care are they getting and who is paying for it?\n\nUnlike the NHS, in England social care is not free at the point of delivery - a lot of people have to pay for at least some of their care, and a lot of that care is delivered by private providers.\n\nThat can be anything from someone coming to your house to help you get out of bed or washed, to full-time accommodation in a care home.\n\nIt's a little different in the rest of the UK - home care is capped at £60 a week in Wales and free for the over-75s in Northern Ireland, while Scotland provides free personal care, that is help with things such as washing and dressing, in both care homes and people's own homes.\n\nThe UK Homecare Association estimates that more than 70% of homecare services in the UK are bought by local authorities, with the rest bought by people paying for their care themselves.\n\nIn 2014-15, that equated to 646,000 people being cared for in their homes with the state paying.\n\nThis doesn't necessarily mean 70% of people who need care at home are paid for by the state.\n\nIn 2015, Age UK estimated that more than a million older people in England were living with unmet social care needs (such as not receiving assistance with bathing and dressing), a rise from 800,000 in 2010.\n\nPeople not eligible for funding may just be doing without the care they really need or relying on informal care from friends and family.\n\nWhen it comes to residential care, the latest figures from 2014 suggest local authorities across the UK paid for 37% of people, while the NHS funded 10% of care home places.\n\nThe rest was made up of people who either paid for all of their care (41%), or topped it up with a contribution from their local council (12%).\n\nOn 31 March 2016, in England, there were 199,305 people in nursing and residential home places and 452,990 people accessing long-term care in the community for whom the local council had some role in funding or providing care or assessing the needs of the person receiving it.\n\nThe most recent data doesn't tell us how many people were cared for overall in England, but we can say that there were 1.8 million requests for support in 2015-16.\n\nOf those, 28% were from people aged 18-64 and the remaining 72% were aged 65 and over.\n\nBut of these requests, 57% resulted in no direct support from the council.\n\nFor the over-65 group, almost a quarter of requests for support were from people being discharged from hospital.\n\nThink tank the King's Fund says the number of older people getting state-funded help in England alone fell by 26% between 2009 and 2014.\n\nThis is in the context of an ageing population.\n\nThe government has said English councils' social care departments are getting an extra £3.5bn by 2020.\n\nAlmost £2bn of this comes from council tax, which local authorities have been allowed to raise by 3% this year and next year provided they spend it on adult social care.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Snooker\n\nWorld champion Mark Selby suffered a shock first-round defeat by world number 18 Martin Gould at the World Grand Prix in Preston.\n\nGould, who beat Selby on his way to the semi-finals two years ago, came through a tense final frame to win 4-3.\n\nThe 35-year-old from Middlesex made a career-high break of 142 in the fourth frame and goes on to face Joe Perry.\n\nAustralian Neil Robertson beat Ricky Walden of England 3-2 to set up a last-16 clash with Ronnie O'Sullivan.\n\nChina's world number five Ding Junhui saw off Yu De Lu 4-2, while England's Anthony Hamilton, winner of last week's German Open, lost 4-0 to Mark Allen of Northern Ireland.\n\nGould looked on course for a straightforward victory when he led Selby 3-1, and then 3-2 with a 58-0 lead, but the world champion hit back with a brilliant 64 clearance to force a decider.\n\nIn a final frame that required a re-rack, following an early stalemate, Selby surprisingly missed two opportunities before Gould took charge with a 54 that proved decisive.", "The comedian who pretended to be a \"rapping rabbi\" on Britain's Got Talent has told 5 live he thought Simon Cowell would be amused by his stunt.\n\nSimon Brodkin told 5 live's Afternoon Edition: \"I thought Simon Cowell would have a sense of humour about it and would find the whole thing funny\", but he has been told he is \"pretty furious\" about the prank.\n\nBrodkin, known for his comedy character Lee Nelson, has carried out similar stunts on President Trump, Sir Phillip Green and Sepp Blatter.\n\nBrodkin reveals how he does his stunts in a Channel 4 documentary called Britain's Greatest Hoaxer.", "Mark Hepburn and his partner Laura bought a house with a 5% deposit\n\nOwning a home by the age of 25 has become an unachievable dream for many over the last two decades.\n\nSoaring property prices mean just one in five 25-year-olds own a property, compared to nearly half two decades ago, according to one recent study.\n\nBut as the government unveils its Housing White Paper, there are some young people who have managed to buck the trend - without help from the bank of mum and dad.\n\nHere four young homeowners - all couples - who bought properties in 2016 - reveal just how they did it.\n\nLives with: Partner Laura Starkie, age 25. An accountant on £20,000 a year\n\nDeposit: £6,250 (5%) with the Help to Buy mortgage scheme (which ended in December)\n\nWe were sick of living at home with each of our parents and wanted our own space. I'd rather live in a house than just a bedroom. We discussed moving out and renting, but we both agreed it was dead money.\n\nThere was a lot of budgeting. I literally know where every penny goes. I had to drill it into Laura a little bit, but she got used to it after a while. Like her make-up - she had to go for a cheaper brand. We were both working at McDonald's when we were saving and if there were extra shifts, we would take them.\n\nMark and Laura say they had to change their lifestyle in order to save money to buy their home\n\nDid you make any sacrifices?\n\nThere was definitely a lifestyle change when we were saving. We would buy supermarket budget stuff instead of brands. We didn't go on holiday during the time we were saving up - and that was a massive thing for Laura.\n\nHow does it feel to be a home owner?\n\nI feel ridiculously happy. I feel proud and our friends are too because they know we worked extremely hard for it. Once you get there, you don't need to worry as much.\n\nWhat if you need to move?\n\nI recently went for a job in Bolton, which is not that close to where we are now. The salary was £27,000 per year, but I wouldn't move house for that. It would have to be significantly higher to consider jobs away from where we are now.\n\nMark says you need to watch your money if you want to save up to buy a home\n\nI can't count how many times our friends have asked us how we've done it. We just explain you need to save, watch your money and cut back. They're happy for us and we are just trying to get it into them not to leave it too long and to start saving.\n\nShould more young people be able to buy a home?\n\nI have got mixed opinions. When Laura and I were at McDonald's we were on a combined salary of £23,000 and we managed to save up £7,000 between us within a year. So I don't see how people can't do it. But then we don't have any kids. The Help to Buy mortgage scheme was a God-send. But if you're stopping something that's so good and helping young people, it's going to cause mayhem.\n\nName: Ruby Willard, age 22. A recruitment consultant on £19,000 a year plus commission\n\nDeposit: £18,220 (10%) with the Help to Buy Isa\n\nIt was a case of living at home. I moved back into the box room of my mum's house and I hated it. Sam lived with his parents too so we thought if we can, let's do it - so we decided to save and go for it. We were looking at renting but to us it was like throwing away money.\n\nBeing quite tight is probably the answer. When we decided we were going to buy, I thought I'm not going to spend money elsewhere when I don't need to. We did still have a nice holiday to Greece. I get commission and Sam gets overtime so we probably earn £55,000 overall, which meant we were in a position we could borrow maybe more than people on minimum wage.\n\nDid you make any sacrifices?\n\nWe may have not had such a big social life. We still did things, but we were conscious. What I did was save what I knew I needed to save, and lived on whatever I had left - which was usually about £200 a month. I wasn't buying lunch at work, which would save about £25 a week.\n\nHow does it feel to be a home owner?\n\nIt was weird at first. When we got the keys it was like \"are we on holiday?\" When things started to come together it felt like such an achievement. Everything we had chosen not to do, not going to the cinema one night, helped towards it.\n\nWhat if you need to move?\n\nWe would be open to the idea, but we would probably look for work closer to where we bought a house, so it probably would affect future decisions. If we did decide we wanted to go somewhere else, we would probably look to sell the house and hopefully we will have made some money on it.\n\nIt's been quite positive. I have got friends that have bought houses, but a lot of them have had big lump sums of money given to them.\n\nShould more young people be able to buy a home?\n\nNeither of us completed three years at university, so we probably established a career path earlier than those that do go. I speak to a lot of people that have graduated, and they cannot find jobs that will allow them to borrow enough. It takes years to save a deposit, and then house prices go up and they can't borrow enough. I think this is how it is now.\n\nThe couple have been told they are \"adulting hard\" because they have bought a home\n\nHouse price: £145,000 for a two-storey terraced house with two bedrooms\n\nDeposit: £21,750 (15%) with the Help to Buy Isa\n\nWe decided we wanted to get on the property ladder as quickly as possible. If we get on it now, we would be able to buy what we want by the time we are older and looking to have a family.\n\nWe started saving at the beginning of 2015 and were probably saving between £400 and £500 a month each. We did go on a couple of holidays, so although we've been saving, we've still been living. We weren't scrimping, but we do only spend about £30 a week on food. We check receipts and look for the best deals, so that is more thrifty than most people.\n\nAndrew and his partner saved around £400 a month each for their deposit\n\nDid you make any sacrifices?\n\nWe spoke about going away for three weeks to somewhere like Australia, but we thought - it's going to cost £2,000 each and we can put that towards the house now rather than waiting a few extra months.\n\nHow does it feel to be a home owner?\n\nIt feels strange. It does feel like quite a lot of responsibility - I didn't realise how much. Things like taking out mortgage protection. Our friends call it \"adulting hard\". They're renting and not really thinking about owning a place and they're like \"wow, you've bought a house\".\n\nLots of people think it's really good, other people say they're nowhere near that stage. I don't know if they're thinking I'm growing up too fast. It's generally been positive. I don't know anyone who has done it without a partner, so I think it would be difficult to do it on your own.\n\nAndrew and Kirsty bought their home with a 15% deposit\n\nWhat if you need to move?\n\nWith a big move we might give it a trial, and rent out this house while we lived somewhere else.\n\nShould more young people be able to buy a home?\n\nI do think people complain they can't afford to buy a house but they go out every weekend, they smoke or they eat out all the time. But property prices have also shot up in the last 20 years with more people buying second homes. There are also people who don't want to have the responsibility. I think it's good that the government is helping with Help to Buy schemes and it needs to do more to help first-time buyers.\n\nRebecca bought a three-bedroom home with her boyfriend Adam in Irlam, Greater Manchester\n\nName: Rebecca Thompson, aged 23. An information analyst on £21,900 a year.\n\nDeposit: £6,300 (5%) with the Help to Buy mortgage scheme and Isa\n\nWe lived in a rental flat together for 18 months and realised that the amount we were paying in rent was more or less the same as we would be paying with a mortgage. When we were renting there were a lot of things we couldn't do, like decorate or move anything around.\n\nIt was difficult. I was working part-time in my final year at university so I saved my entire wage and lived off my student loan, which wasn't much. We didn't go on holiday that year and saved as much as we could.\n\nDid you make any sacrifices?\n\nWe came straight from university, where you're living on a bit of a shoe-string anyway, so we probably sacrificed but not realised, because we've not been enjoying the extra income we've had since graduating. We would have probably gone on some more holidays or gone out more and probably bought a few more clothes.\n\nHow does it feel to be a home owner?\n\nIt's brilliant. I feel it's a really secure base while I'm going on to develop my career. It's one less thing. A lot of people are aiming towards saving a deposit while I've got past it.\n\nWhat if you need to move?\n\nIt would be really difficult, and it's definitely an attraction for staying where I am. In my career there are a lot of opportunities down south, but I wouldn't want to entertain it because of the house prices. It would take us five times longer to save up a deposit, and the amount of income you need to get for a mortgage is totally unobtainable for the average graduate.\n\nRebecca says there needs to be more affordable housing\n\nSome live in a more expensive area and I think they were surprised. It's not something that's on a lot of people's radar, owning a home at this age. Particularly if you're not in a relationship, I don't think it is affordable.\n\nShould more young people be able to buy a home?\n\nI think cultures have changed a bit. When my parents were growing up, their parents drilled into them 'sort yourself a house, get married and that's when your life begins'. Now there's not as much of an emphasis. I think homes do need to be more affordable. It's silly that the town where we live in, a lot people can afford to buy - whereas only as far south as Birmingham no-one can afford to buy a house earning what we do.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "It is a trade as old as time itself - but Iranian Kurdish smugglers say their lives are getting even tougher.\n\nKurdish human rights group say more than 100 such smugglers were shot dead by Iranian border guards in the past year, as they try to take goods to Iran to sell.", "Alan Simpson formed, with Ray Galton, one of the great television scriptwriting partnerships.\n\nTheir early work with Tony Hancock pioneered what became known as situation comedy.\n\nThey went on to create Steptoe and Son, which became the most watched comedy on TV over its 12-year run.\n\nBut, although they continued to write, they failed to replicate the success of their early work.\n\nAlan Simpson was born in Brixton, London on 27 November 1929.\n\nAfter leaving school, he obtained a job as a shipping clerk before contracting tuberculosis. He became so ill that he was not expected to live and was given the last rites.\n\nHowever, he survived, and while a patient in a sanatorium in Surrey he found himself alongside another teenage TB sufferer named Ray Galton.\n\nGalton never forgot his first sight of his future partner, 6ft 4in tall with a build to match. \"He was the biggest bloke I'd ever seen.\"\n\nThey discovered a shared love of American humorists such as Damon Runyon and had both listened to the BBC radio comedy programmes Take It From Here and The Goon Shows.\n\nTheir first work together was for hospital radio. Have You Ever Wondered was based on their experiences in the sanatorium, which was played out in 1949.\n\nWhen Simpson left hospital he was asked by a local church concert party to write a show and he roped in Ray Galton to help. They also began sending one-liners to the BBC, which secured them a job writing for a struggling radio show called Happy-Go-Lucky.\n\nThe pair also linked up with several other promising new comedy writers and performers of the time, notably Eric Sykes, Peter Sellers, Frankie Howerd and Tony Hancock.\n\nThey were quickly tiring of the format of radio comedy shows of the time which included music, sketches and one-liners, and hankered after something with more depth.\n\nThey came up with the idea of comedy where all the humour came from the situations in which characters find themselves. Tony Hancock liked the idea and Hancock's Half Hour was born.\n\nSteptoe and Son carried elements of black comedy and social realism\n\nIt is often credited as the first true radio sitcom, although two other shows of the time, A Life of Bliss and Life with the Lyons, were already using the format in 1954 when Hancock first aired.\n\nOver the following five years the writers developed the format, often taking cues from a new generation of playwrights such as John Osborne and Harold Pinter.\n\nThe pace of each show became slow and more measured, in direct contrast to the speedy wise-cracking delivery of contemporary radio comedians such as Ted Ray.\n\nSimpson himself appeared in early episodes as the unknown man who had to suffer Hancock's interminable monologues.\n\nIn 1956 the series transferred to TV and ran until 1961. The final series was just entitled Hancock and it was that run which featured the best-known shows including The Blood Donor (\"It was either that or join the Young Conservatives\") and The Radio Ham, in which Hancock proves completely incapable of responding to a distress signal from a sinking yachtsman.\n\nHancock, who was becoming increasingly self-critical and drinking heavily, sacked his writers in 1961. Unwilling to lose them, the BBC commissioned them to write scripts for Comedy Playhouse, a series of one-off sitcoms.\n\nOne play, entitled, The Offer, spawned Steptoe and Son, the tale of two rag-and-bone merchants, a father and son, living in Oil Drum Lane, Shepherd's Bush.\n\nThey remained close friends after their writing partnership ended\n\nThe script relied on the clash between the two characters; Albert, the grasping father with none too hygienic personal habits and Harold, his aspirational son who yearns for a better life but never achieves it. The show was unusual in that the two performers, Wilfrid Brambell and Harry H Corbett, were actors rather than comedians.\n\nThe original four series ran between 1962 and 1965 and the show was revived between 1970 and 1974, during which time two feature film versions were also released.\n\nIt proved to be the high point for the duo. There was further work with Frankie Howerd and, in 1977, Yorkshire TV attempted to replicate the success of Comedy Playhouse with Galton & Simpson's Playhouse, although none of the episodes produced a series.\n\nSimpson quit writing in 1978 to pursue his other business interests although he and Galton remained close friends. In 1996 they reunited to update some of their best-known scripts for the comedian Paul Merton.\n\nSimpson blamed their later lack of popularity on the fact that shows were commissioned by armies of managers rather than producers.\n\n\"Fifty years ago,\" he said in an interview with the Daily Telegraph, \"if you had an idea, it could be going out in three weeks; the time it took to build the sets. Now it has to go through committees and the process takes years.\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Jeremy Corbyn unusually had the better of Theresa May in Prime Minister's Questions, brandishing leaked texts across the despatch box, claiming evidence that the Tories had given Surrey a special deal to avoid the chance of a damaging 15% council tax rise in a Conservative safe haven.\n\nThe council, and ministers, denied there had been any stitch-up.\n\nBut hours later, the government admitted they had agreed, in theory, that Surrey County Council could, like several others, try out keeping all of the business rates they raise from 2018, which could plug the gaps in funding in future.\n\nThat change is due to be in force across in England by 2020. Technically therefore, Surrey County Council has not been offered any additional funding. But the prospect of more flexibility over their own income in future could help fill the council's coffers, and seems to have eased some of their concerns.\n\nBut as a solution to easing the pressure in social care across the country now, the idea could fall far short.\n\nWhere there is high need for care for the elderly, there is likely to be a lower local tax base. Conversely, in more prosperous areas where councils can raise a lot of tax, there is likely to be less need for financial help.\n\nOne local government leader told me \"all that would do is to lock in the existing iniquity to the system\". And major changes to how councils pay their way could make a difference in the long term. Many argue, the social care crisis is now.\n\nMedics, NHS leaders, local government leaders, MPs, former ministers, and of course many members of the public are day after day reporting concerns about the creaks in the social care system, arguing for big changes or big extra money.\n\nThere are though few signs of any extra cash on the way in the Budget next month. Privately ministers are hunting for solutions. The prime minister's allies say she is prepared to be \"radical\".\n\nA Tory council might have been appeased by a promise to change their future funding - others may not be so easily satisfied.", "If BP group chief executive Bob Dudley was paid £14m for delivering a $6.5bn (£5.3bn)* loss last year, what on earth will he get paid for delivering a profit in 2017?\n\nThe answer to this will shed a lot of light on the politically current and intense debate around executive pay.\n\nA year ago, Mr Dudley became the unwilling poster boy for angry shareholders when, at the BP annual general meeting, 59% of shareholders voted against his £14m pay award.\n\nHe got the money anyway because the vote was not binding, so the board did not have to do what the owners of the company wanted.\n\nUnder rules introduced by the coalition government and championed by then Business Secretary Vince Cable, shareholders can only reject a pay packet or the formula by which it is calculated every three years. That measure gave them more control than they had previously enjoyed but it clearly did not work or go far enough.\n\nRemember, the formula by which Mr Dudley's pay was calculated in 2016 was approved by 95% of shareholders in 2014. Two years later they did not like the answer that formula spat out.\n\nIn defence of Mr Dudley, it was not his fault that BP's Deepwater Horizon platform exploded in 2010 killing 11 people and pumping millions of barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico (that was on the watch of his predecessor Tony Hayward).\n\nThe explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig led to an environmental disaster\n\nIt was not his fault that the price of oil in 2015 came crashing down from more than $100 (£81) a barrel to around $30 (£24) during that year. Given the hand he was dealt, goes the argument, he did a pretty good job.\n\nSome of the arguments will be the same this year. It is not his fault that he had to put another $7bn (£5.7bn) in the Deepwater kitty, but it is also not to his credit that the oil price rebounded to its current price of $56 (£45).\n\nThe chairman of BP's pay committee, Dame Ann Dowling, came in for a lot of stick for not using more discretion in adjusting the final pay award down last year and I understand that she has met with dozens of shareholder groups to avoid the same howls of protest this time around.\n\nThis April's vote on 2016 pay will also be non-binding but there will be a binding vote on the formula used to calculate pay packets for the next three years. It would take a particularly tin ear for BP to settle on a formula that finds it at such odds with its shareholders in the future.\n\nMany executives are rewarded with a formula that takes a large account of relative performance. Doing badly - but less badly than the competition - means you did well. Even though the company lost money - you can often take home a hefty bonus.\n\nThe merits of this approach will be hotly debated this year as around half the companies in the FTSE 100 have binding votes on executive pay formulas. That will add real edge to a debate that has already been politically sharpened by Theresa May's warnings to corporate Britain over the rocketing disparity between bosses and workers' pay.\n\nWe are expecting new proposals on changing the manner, and in whose interests, UK companies are run when the government publishes its green paper on corporate governance in March.\n\nI have presented the economic arguments as to why high performance-related pay is actually bad for companies and the economy here before. In short, it can prioritise cost cutting over investment which damages productivity and ultimately living standards. They are arguments that are gaining currency in Whitehall and it is not only shareholders who are disgruntled.\n\nIt may be only February, but this year's shareholder spring promises to be a belter.\n\n*the headline loss of $6.5bn includes the compensation paid for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. The number reported in our news story excludes one-off items to give a better sense of the underlying economics of the company.", "This year's Oscars \"class photo\" has been released - and as usual there are several quirks and questionable outfits.\n\nThe picture sees 163 of this year's nominees gathered together and smiling away, but zoom in and there is a whole lot more going on.\n\nHere are just seven of the things we spotted in this year's photo.\n\n1. Pharrell Williams didn't exactly dress for the occasion\n\nAll of this year's male nominees are dressed smartly in tuxes and suits. Well, almost all.\n\nThe \"dress code\" memo must have gone into Pharrell's junk email inbox, because he turned up wearing a green baseball cap and grey sweater.\n\nTo be fair - the sweater does have the Nasa logo on it, a reference to best picture nominee Hidden Figures.\n\nPharrell wrote several songs for the soundtrack to the film, which tells the story of three African-American women who worked behind the scenes at the space agency in the 1960s.\n\nCasey Affleck's facial hair is fast becoming the eighth wonder of the world. It gets longer with every awards ceremony he appears at this season.\n\nIt's now on the verge of totally eclipsing poor Michelle Williams, Affleck's co-star in Manchester by the Sea, who has to peep out from behind his mane.\n\nShe must be getting used to Affleck stealing her limelight.\n\nThe actor appears in nearly every scene in the 137-minute movie, while Williams's screen time clocks in at 11 minutes.\n\n3. The writer of Moonlight wants you to know how many nominations it has\n\nTarell Alvin McCraney brightens up the back row of the photograph with his winning smile.\n\nHe's the man behind the stage play In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue - which went on to become Moonlight, one of this year's most hotly-tipped Oscars contenders.\n\nMcCraney is so pleased with the film's success he wants to let you know just how many Oscar nominations the film has received, and he is seen here holding up eight fingers.\n\nAlso - hats off to Shawn Levy (who's standing next to Tarell), who wins the award for the most delightfully bright smile of the whole photo. He is the producer of Arrival, which is nominated for best picture.\n\n4. Justin Timberlake needs to sack his tailor\n\n\"Hmmm, I don't have enough material for that. Have a 28-inch pair of trousers instead.\"\n\n5. The front row is so where we wanna be\n\nEmma Stone, Matt Damon, Natalie Portman, Octavia Spencer are all sitting together in the front row.\n\nCan someone please organise for us to join this BFF group, that'd be great, thanks.\n\nExtra respect for Octavia Spencer for wearing a pair of white trousers while so many of the other female nominees are in a dress or skirt, and for Natalie Portman, who looks like she's wearing high heels even while pregnant with twins.\n\nAlso - Manchester by the Sea producer Kimberly Steward (far right) is that sweet kid in your class who was accidentally never looking at the camera in the school photo every single year.\n\n6. Ryan Gosling needs to cheer up\n\nYou're the lead actor in the jointly most-nominated film of all time, pal. Uncross your arms for goodness sake.\n\nSlightly happier to be there is the lovely Dev Patel, in the row in front, looking every inch the Hollywood star.\n\nHe's come a long way from how he looked at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2009 when he was starring in Slumdog Millionaire.\n\nHe told the BBC: \"I first came to Toronto in my school shoes and I had a blazer and I was with Frida [Pinto, his co-star] and they said 'You can't put this guy next to her because he looks so terrible'. I think I got a free penguin suit that didn't quite fit me and they gave me shoes.\"\n\nThis year, he's nominated for best supporting actor and is seen wearing a burgundy Valentino suit. Nice.\n\n7. Is this gap for Meryl Streep?\n\nMissing nominees from the photo include Michael Shannon (nominated for best supporting actor for Nocturnal Animals) and Andrew Garfield (best actor, Hacksaw Ridge).\n\nBut of course, the most notable absentee is Her Royal Acting Highness, Meryl Streep - who is up for best actress this year for her role in Florence Foster Jenkins.\n\nMaybe this gap in the back row behind Denzel Washington was intended for her, and she got held up in traffic.\n\nAlternatively, perhaps she's been to so many of these things she's just had enough. Either way, we're pretty sure she'll be at the ceremony.\n\nThis year's Oscars, which will be hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, will take place in Hollywood, Los Angeles on 26 February.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nPremier League champions Leicester are just one point above the relegation zone after defeat at home by Manchester United left them still searching for a first league win in 2017.\n\nA dour opening half came to life just before the break when the visitors scored twice in two minutes.\n\nFirst, Henrikh Mkhitaryan latched onto Chris Smalling's flick-on and raced through on goal before beating Kasper Schmeichel with a clinical finish.\n\nZlatan Ibrahimovic then took advantage of terrible Leicester marking to side-foot home his 15th Premier League goal of the season.\n\nJuan Mata ensured there was no way back for the hosts when he finished off a one-two with Mkhitaryan early in the second half.\n\nLeicester never looked like scoring, with their only shot on target a tame Wilfred Ndidi strike just before half-time.\n\nManchester United remain in the hunt for a top-four finish. They are sixth, one point behind Liverpool and two behind fourth-placed Arsenal.\n• None Listen: Mahrez 'really is lacking in confidence'\n\nCould the champions really go down?\n\nJose Mourinho was in charge of Chelsea the last time he visited the King Power Stadium. That was in December 2015 and he was sacked the day after a defeat that strengthened Leicester's title charge.\n\nThis time it is Foxes boss Claudio Ranieri who is under pressure. Far from defending their title, they are very much in a relegation dogfight and went into Sunday's game looking to record their first league win since New Year's Eve.\n\nA pacy attack of Ahmed Musa and Jamie Vardy promised much but ultimately offered little, the latter in particular a shadow of the striker who scored in 11 consecutive Premier League games last season.\n\nThe Foxes have now failed to score a league goal in five games this year, but of equal concern for Ranieri will have been his side's defending. Ibrahimovic was left unmarked to poke home Manchester United's second and then Wes Morgan played two players onside for the third.\n\nLeicester have not won away all season in the league, so it is their home form that has kept them out of the drop zone so far - 18 of their 21 points have been collected at the King Power Stadium.\n\nThis defeat, though, was their third in six home games and Ranieri will need to get things back on track quickly if the Foxes are to avoid being the first reigning top-flight champions to be relegated since Manchester City in 1938.\n\nManchester United have been far too reliant on Ibrahimovic this season. The evergreen Swedish striker is the club's leading scorer with 10 more league goals than any other Manchester United player.\n\nIn an effort to relieve the Swede's burden, Mourinho started Marcus Rashford alongside him in a 4-4-2 formation.\n\nIt quickly became evident that Ibrahimovic was far more effective in a central role and after 20 minutes Mourinho reverted to 4-2-3-1 with Rashford, Mkhitaryan and Mata behind the former Paris St-Germain striker.\n\nThe change immediately improved the visitors' attacking strength as the pace of Mkhitaryan and Rashford, coupled with Mata's creativity, stretched Leicester's defence and left gaps for Manchester United to exploit, which they did to full effect.\n\nIn the end Leicester could not cope and although United will arguably face tougher defences this season, three different goalscorers and a convincing win will give Mourinho confidence his side can challenge for the top four, particularly with Liverpool and Arsenal's own challenge faltering.\n\nWhat they said\n\nLeicester manager Claudio Ranieri: \"When we conceded the first goal we got down. I don't understand why. It's important to be strong until the end and never give up. But the confidence is not so high.\n\n\"Last season was terrific but we are Leicester and every time we have to fight.\n\n\"We are together. I am fully confident in my players and the players are confident in me.\"\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho: \"It was really important for us. We lost two points in the last match at home and had three consecutive draws so we needed the points.\n\n\"I am happy. We don't have a league defeat since October and if we tried to transform the unlucky draws to victories, we would be in an amazing position.\"\n• None Leicester City are the first Premier League team to fail to score in the first five matches of a calendar year and the first top-flight side since Spurs in 1986.\n• None They are the only side in the top-four English tiers to have failed to score in the league in 2017.\n• None Manchester United are unbeaten in their past 15 Premier League games; their longest run since March 2013 (18 games unbeaten).\n• None The Foxes are the second reigning Premier League champions to lose successive home league games by a three-goal margin (also Man Utd in 2013-14).\n• None There were just 88 seconds between Henrikh Mkhitaryan's and Zlatan Ibrahimovic's goals for Man Utd.\n• None Ibrahimovic has reached 15 Premier League goals for Man Utd in the fourth fastest number of games (23), following Van Nistelrooy (19) Yorke (20) and van Persie (21).\n• None Juan Mata has been involved in 86 Premier League goals since his debut (44 goals, 42 assists) - the highest goal involvement rate of any Premier League midfielder in that time.\n\nAfter an FA Cup fourth-round replay against Derby at the King Power Stadium on Wednesday, Leicester have a potentially massive game in the Premier League on Sunday [kick-off 16:00 GMT]. They travel to Swansea, who are one place below the Foxes in 18th.\n\nManchester United, meanwhile, host Watford on Saturday [15:00] knowing three points could lift them into the top four.\n• None Attempt blocked. Demarai Gray (Leicester City) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Riyad Mahrez.\n• None Attempt saved. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Ashley Young.\n• None Attempt missed. Henrikh Mkhitaryan (Manchester United) right footed shot from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Antonio Valencia.\n• None Attempt blocked. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Ander Herrera. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nArsenal manager Arsene Wenger \"has some serious thinking to do\" about his future, says club legend Ian Wright.\n\nWenger has been Gunners boss since October 1996 and has won the Premier League three times, but the 67-year-old's contract expires in the summer.\n\nArsenal, who last won the league title in 2004, lost 3-1 to league leaders Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Saturday to fall 12 points behind the Blues.\n\n\"Does he still have the stomach to do this again?\" asked Wright.\n• None 5 live In Short: Arsenal have settled for fourth again - Mills\n\n\"It is a tough couple of months for Arsene Wenger, and Arsenal are doing what they do when they slip up,\" added the Match of the Day pundit, who was part of Arsenal's Premier League-winning squad in 1997-98.\n\n\"Arsenal are in the top four, but they aren't winning the league.\n\n\"Arsene Wenger has some really serious thinking to do at the end of the season.\"\n\nFormer England defender Martin Keown was part of Wenger's side in each of his three top-flight title wins and he believes the Frenchman will stay on at Arsenal.\n\nKeown told BBC Radio 5 live's Sportsweek programme: \"The way that they are sort of losing their way now, the question comes again - does Arsene Wenger remain in the seat? Do they look to make a change?\n\n\"I just feel the way the club is so pragmatic in its decision making, I don't see Arsene leaving. Whether he should or shouldn't, I don't think it will happen.\"\n\nHe added: \"He will decide when he leaves the club. I do feel that is the situation and I do feel he has earned the right, in the same way that Sir Alex Ferguson did at Manchester United, to choose when he goes.\n\n\"I feel deep down he has already made his mind up to stay. It is just the timing of that announcement. Results like against Chelsea make that difficult for him to do.\n\n\"He doesn't make spur of the moment decisions. He has to make the best decision for Arsenal and not just for himself.\"\n\nChelsea were just so much better - Mills\n\nWenger watched Saturday's game at Stamford Bridge from the stand as part of a four-match touchline ban.\n\nHe saw his side go behind to a Marcos Alonso header, before Eden Hazard's solo run and finish doubled the Chelsea lead.\n\nAn Olivier Giroud headed consolation came after former Arsenal midfielder Cesc Fabregas lobbed Petr Cech.\n\nArsenal are third in the table, a point clear of both Liverpool, who lost at Hull on Saturday, and Manchester City, who host Swansea on Sunday (13:30 GMT).\n\nThe Gunners have finished fourth in six of the past 11 seasons and former England defender Danny Mills believes they have \"settled for fourth again\".\n\n\"Chelsea were just so much better all over the pitch physically, mentally,\" said Mills on BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"That mentality has to filter down from the top,\" he added, referring to Wenger.\n\n\"It has nothing to do with him being in the stands. He's told them 30 seconds before they go out on to the pitch.\n\n\"They were weak mentally and physically. Hazard brushed away three or four Arsenal defenders on his way to scoring.\"\n• None 'Wenger out, Pochettino in' - Arsenal fan asks for Spurs boss on 606\n\nWenger was not happy with Alonso's goal, with the Spaniard's arm making contact with Arsenal defender Hector Bellerin's head as he jumped to meet the ball.\n\n\"Of course it was a foul,\" said Wenger. \"Referees are much more severe with tackles on the ground and let much more go with elbows in the face. It's not only today, but in many, many games I see.\n\n\"But it's more dangerous to hit the head than the legs.\"\n\nHowever, Chelsea boss Antonio Conte countered: \"To hear this in England, I'm surprised. I must be honest. In England, in this league, this is always a goal.\n\n\"It was a contest and Alonso jumped more than Bellerin and scored a goal.\"", "US Vice-President Mike Pence has defended Donald Trump's right to ban people from travelling to the US from seven mainly-Muslim countries.\n\nOn Friday the ban was suspended by federal Judge James Robart, who the president has since described as a \"so-called judge\".\n\nAn attempt by the White House to reinstate the ban on Sunday was rejected by the US federal appeals court.", "Gabriel Jesus scored twice as Manchester City moved up to third in the Premier League by overcoming a battling Swansea City in injury time at Etihad Stadium.\n\nJesus had an immediate impact in front of his home crowd, using his natural pace to dart forward and put his side in front with a tap past Lukasz Fabianski.\n\nThe hosts dominated the first half, but the visitors had the better of the second half, taking advantage of Manchester City's lack of intensity as Gylfi Sigurdsson picked up Luciano Narsingh's cross and steered the ball beyond a diving Willy Caballero.\n\nHowever, the goal spurred the home side on. They picked up the pace again and Jesus was on hand to slide home a winner after his header was parried by Fabianski.\n\nAnalysis: Jesus not ready to replace Aguero yet\n\nPep Guardiola has made 80 changes to his starting line-up this season, 15 more than any other Premier League manager, and he opted to keep Jesus up front in place of Sergio Aguero.\n\nFor all Swansea's recent improvement, they could not match City's pace in the first half. The hosts swamped Swansea's defence and created space, passing with a fluency that has not always been evident this season.\n\nJesus, City's £27m Brazilian signing, showed little sign of fatigue as he made his third appearance in seven days. He was on the move from the opening minutes of the game, his first shot flying over the bar, and his quick movement allowed him to tap the ball beyond Fabianski.\n\nThe challenge for Guardiola's side now is to maintain that level of intensity. When it dipped, City looked vulnerable in defence and their slick passing was lost as Swansea pressed forward.\n\nIt showed why they have not kept a clean sheet at home in the Premier League since their 1-0 win over Watford in December.\n\nThe frenetic final few minutes, which saw the hosts finally react after going a goal behind, forced them to up the pace back to their original level.\n\nBut those dips in concentration are a worrying sign for Guardiola.\n\nAfter initially winning just three of their first 19 top-flight games this season, the Swans arrived at Etihad Stadium having won three of their last four games, and with an increased confidence under new manager Paul Clement.\n\nThey were overwhelmed by the home side for the first 45 minutes but Clement's consistency with his squad, starting the game with an unchanged side for the third time before boosting them with shrewd substitutions in the second half, turned the tables for Swansea.\n\nAt one point, goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski had made more passes than any other Swansea player, and they did not have a single shot in the first half. But when Swansea pressed forward, it was Guardiola's side who were forced onto the back foot.\n\nSwansea found a fluency with their passing and defender Alfie Mawson, who worked hard in the first half to deny the home side, picked up the pace to twice outfox City's defence. The equaliser felt inevitable, with Sigurdsson moving his feet well to pick up Narsingh's cross.\n\nIf Swansea could have found an extra gear in the closing minutes they might have been able to hold on and secure a point. However, Manchester City's final burst of pace, and the scramble in front of the goal that led to Jesus' winner, showed that the visitors still have some work to do in defence.\n\nWhat the managers said\n\nManchester City manager Pep Guardiola, speaking to BBC Sport: \"It is the first time we have won a game in the last minute. The first half and second half were much different. They were better.\n\n\"Always when you go 1-0 you don't know whether to attack or wait back. At the end we won and that is important.\n\n\"Many times this season in last minute we have conceded. It was similar here and we were lucky here that Swansea scored before the last minute and we had time to recover.\"\n\n\"Gabriel Jesus is strong, fast and has really good movement. He has arrived really, really, well. He is Gabriel Jesus. We are happy to have him.\"\n\nSwansea manager Paul Clement speaking to BBC Sport: \"We deserved more. Not in the first half, we didn't play well. We were nowhere near our potential. They are a good side. We were organised and in shape but one against one we were not aggressive enough.\n\n\"The players responded very well in the second half and were the better team. We got the equaliser and at that point you think we can see the game out for a valuable point.\n\n\"The circumstances of the goal we are disappointed about. I am very proud of the players. If we can build on that we will have some more wins not far away.\"\n• None Gabriel Jesus became just the third Brazilian to score on his first two Premier League starts, with the other two also playing for Manchester City (Geovanni and Robinho).\n• None He's also the first player since Stevan Jovetic to score two goals on his first home Premier League start for Man City.\n• None Man City have now won 11 home league games in a row against Swansea - they've only had a longer such run against a side twice in their history (13 v Wolves, 12 v Grimsby).\n• None Man City's winner was the 12th scored in the 90th minute this season - just one fewer than in the whole of 2015-16.\n• None Indeed, Swansea have conceded a 90th minute winner in their last two trips to the Etihad, with Kelechi Iheanacho scoring at the death last season.\n• None Since his Premier League debut in January 2012, only Yaya Toure (16) has scored more goals from outside the box than Gylfi Sigurdsson (13).\n• None Sigurdsson has scored eight Premier League goals this season - his second best return in the competition (11 in 2015-16).\n• None Jesus' goal, and his shot immediately before the goal, were Man City's only two shots on target in the second half.\n\nManchester City travel to Bournemouth on Monday, 13 February (20:00 GMT), while Swansea host champions Leicester on Sunday, 12 February (16:00 GMT).\n• None Attempt missed. Sergio Agüero (Manchester City) header from the centre of the box is just a bit too high. Assisted by Yaya Touré.\n• None Goal! Manchester City 2, Swansea City 1. Gabriel Jesus (Manchester City) right footed shot from very close range to the bottom right corner.\n• None Attempt saved. Gabriel Jesus (Manchester City) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by David Silva with a cross.\n• None Attempt blocked. Sergio Agüero (Manchester City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Gabriel Jesus.\n• None Offside, Manchester City. Fernandinho tries a through ball, but Gabriel Jesus is caught offside.\n• None Goal! Manchester City 1, Swansea City 1. Gylfi Sigurdsson (Swansea City) left footed shot from outside the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Luciano Narsingh. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Pop star Kylie Minogue confirmed she and British actor Joshua Sasse had separated. In an Instagram post, she thanked fans for their \"love and support\" and said she and her former fiance \"wished only the best for each other\".", "The display comes amid rising tensions between Iran and the US.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nEngland coach Eddie Jones says \"it does not get much uglier\" than his side's display in the 19-16 win over France.\n\nEngland secured a record 15th straight victory but looked well below their best as they made a winning start to their Six Nations title defence.\n\n\"We weren't our usual urgent selves and maybe I've got to look at the preparation I gave the team,\" said Jones.\n\n\"The performance was ugly, but the result is beautiful.\"\n• None Are Jones & Farrell the new Fergie & Keane?\n\nEngland's campaign continues with a trip to Cardiff to face Wales next Saturday, and Jones has demanded an improvement from himself and his squad.\n\n\"I felt some players were still in their club mentality so that's something we need to work on - I don't think I prepared the team as well as I could have done,\" he added.\n\nNeither wing Anthony Watson or second row George Kruis are expected to have recovered from injury in time to face Wales, but Jones may be tempted to change his starting XV anyway after the impact made by his replacements.\n\nFront-row forwards Matt Mullan and Jamie George, flanker James Haskell and scrum-half Danny Care all impressed, with centre Ben Te'o also coming off the bench to cross for the match-winning try in the 70th minute.\n\n\"The finishers made a fantastic impact on the game, we got really good value from them and that is the strength of our team, we have a brilliant 23-man squad,\" added Jones.\n\nCaptain Dylan Hartley echoed his boss, saying \"a huge amount of credit needs to go to our finishers today\".\n\n\"Ben Te'o and James Haskell came on and gave us a good bit going forward at the end there so unbelievable impact from our subs,\" he added.\n\n\"We dug in, we found a way and we'll take something from that.\"\n\nFormer England scrum-half and World Cup winner Matt Dawson: \"France were better than England in a lot of areas, but the strengths of Eddie Jones' side is their fitness and ability to play under pressure.\n\n\"They are unbeaten for the last 15 games, so it was always going to be tough for France to take it through to 80 minutes.\n\n\"The substitutions for England were the difference in the end. The battle of the bench belonged to England.\"\n\nFormer England hooker and Grand Slam winner Brian Moore: \"France were the better team for the most part. But they could not put away the several breaks they made. With one moment of clarity, England managed to go ahead.\n\n\"They say just win your first game and England did just win their first game.\"", "When I was a child I vividly remember being marched into town at the end of the summer holidays for new shoes and a coat before autumn arrived. That was just the way it was.\n\nBut now, it seems British shoppers are doing things differently.\n\nWe are waiting for the sales and buying things out of season, holding on to them until they are needed. And this has led to a fall in sales.\n\nThe overall value of retail sales dropped by 2% in 2016 compared to 2015, according to consumer insight company Kantar Worldpanel.\n\nWith shoppers being more flexible on when they buy items, shops have leftover stock, which then has to be discounted to shift it.\n\nGlen Tooke, consumer insight director at Kantar, says many retailers have been \"left behind\" as buying patterns have changed.\n\n\"These companies are stuck in a rigid, seasonal buying cycle which no longer reflects how consumers shop,\" says Mr Tooke.\n\nThe data covered clothing, footwear and accessories sold by both High Street retailers and supermarkets.\n\nThe drop in sales was across all types of clothing, including children's, according to Kantar Worldpanel\n\n\"This is the deepest decline the market has seen since August 2009, knocking nearly £750m off its total value in the 52 weeks ending 18 December 2016,\" Kantar said in a statement.\n\nMr Tooke said the decline was a \"serious cause for concern\".\n\nRetail analyst Richard Hyman agrees that shoppers are shifting focus away from seasons when buying.\n\n\"There are twin evils at play here. The discounting going on and retailers not knowing their customers well enough to know what they want.\n\n\"In 90% of the trading weeks in 2016, more than half the retailers in the fashion market had some sort of sale going on.\"\n\nThis, Mr Hyman says, results in customers learning that if they hang on, the item they have their eye on might well end up being reduced in price.\n\nDr Dimitrios Tsivrikos, a consumer and business psychologist at UCL, says the constant discounting can lead to a \"dilution of trust\" meaning shoppers come to believe goods are overpriced to begin with.\n\nDr Tsivrikos believes there could also be something else at play - shoppers have adopted an entirely new way of thinking about their wardrobes.\n\n\"Retailers are failing to fully understand that consumers are now making modular purchases rather than single-item purchases,\" he says.\n\nFor example, rather than buying a thick winter coat, a shopper might instead invest in a lighter spring jacket, and a sports layer such as a hoodie, which can then be worn together or separately across the seasons.\n\nConsumers are increasingly looking to buy items they can layer up\n\n\"This trend is supported by key design labels, which are leaving behind the conventional fashion week presentations and shows. Such events are driven by seasons, so instead these key design labels present fewer and more versatile collections of garments that consumers can wear throughout the year,\" says Dr Tsivrikos.\n\nThere is also another train of thought, particularly for the footwear industry.\n\n\"Online purchases have already reached 25% of overall sales of footwear in the UK - this is the fastest-growing sector,\" says John Saunders, chief executive of the British Footwear Association.\n\n\"The growth of online is doing away with season as collections change on a much more regular basis and products are available all year round to reflect consumer demand.\n\n\"A good example of this is the growth of sandals and open footwear for consumers taking winter sun holidays,\" he adds.\n\nWinter sun holidays means we are buying sandals and flip-flops all year round\n\nThere were some bright spots for the retail market in Kantar Worldpanel's data - online-only retailers saw impressive growth of 7% in 2016 compared to 2015, while independent retailers improved sales by 3%. So what are they doing differently?\n\n\"It sounds obvious, but the fashion retailers that are doing well right now are the ones that are managing to keep all the balls in the air at once - having the right product, at the right price, in the right place, at the right time,\" says Graham Soult, owner of retail consultancy CannyInsights.\n\n\"It's where chains like Uniqlo and Zara benefit from controlling their own supply chains, and being really agile in getting new stock into store quickly when it's needed.\n\n\"At the same time, some of the online fashion retailers, such as Boden, are great at mixing selected seasonal pieces with timeless items that can be layered or accessorised, and sold and worn throughout the year,\" he adds.\n\nBut there's a new threat around the corner, one that will affect all retailers, big, small and online: the continuing fluctuation and downward trend in the value of the pound.\n\nWe hear forecasts of prices going up as retailers are forced to pass on the rising costs of items imported from abroad, but in a world where most of us own more items of clothing than are strictly necessary, will we continue to buy if prices rise?\n\n\"It's easy to make do. Our wardrobes are generally made up of 10% items we need, 90% items we want. Retail has to inspire desire, or we won't buy. Higher prices won't do that,\" he says.\n\nSo if retailers are paying more, but cannot pass on these increases, the future for the British High Street could be as uncertain as a shopper's whim.", "Sunday's coverage: Watch live on BBC Red Button, Connected TV and online from 17:00, plus follow text updates on the BBC Sport website.\n\nJamie Murray and Dom Inglot put Great Britain 2-1 up against Canada with victory in Saturday's Davis Cup doubles contest in Ottawa.\n\nThe British pair beat Daniel Nestor and Vasek Pospisil 7-6 (7-1) 6-7 (3-7) 7-6 (7-3) 6-3 to edge the visitors ahead in the best-of-five World Group tie.\n\nDan Evans will play Pospisil in Sunday's fourth rubber, before Kyle Edmund faces Denis Shapovalov.\n\nThe winners of the tie will travel to France for the quarter-finals in April.\n\n\"Both teams knew how important this match was to give them a lead going into Sunday,\" said Murray.\n\n\"It was 50/50 going into the match. We knew it would be a close game because of the surface, how everyone was serving on the court and because we all know how to play doubles.\"\n\nCaptain Leon Smith said: \"There's still a lot of tennis. We've been in these situations before. The good thing is it gives you two cracks at it and gives everyone a lot of confidence.\n\n\"It does feel good going into the team room, it feels like the momentum is with you, and we've got two very good players that we can prepare for Sunday.\"\n\nBoth Britain and Canada are without their leading players, as world number one Andy Murray recuperates after the Australian Open and number four Milos Raonic is injured.\n\nPospisil's surprise win over Edmund in the second singles on Friday had given Canada a huge boost, but Britain took back control of the tie over the course of three hours with a clinical performance.\n\nOn the fast indoor surface there was only one break of serve apiece, and three tie-breaks were required, but the final break-point tally stood at 10-2 in favour of the Britons.\n\nIn 44-year-old Nestor, playing his 50th Davis Cup tie, Canada had one of the most successful doubles players in history alongside Pospisil, himself a former Wimbledon doubles champion.\n\nThe Canadian pair had the edge in rankings but after the opening two sets were shared in tie-breaks, it was Scotland's Murray and Englishman Inglot who began to take charge.\n\nThree break points went begging in the third set, before they were gifted a mini-break in the tie-break thanks to a Pospisil double fault, and Inglot in particular forced home the advantage.\n\nPospisil, who had served superbly for three sets, was now the one under pressure and he succumbed in the fourth set to give Britain a decisive lead.\n\nIt was Inglot, the man of the match, who coolly served out to put Britain within sight of their fourth Davis Cup quarter-final in a row.\n\n\"As the match went on we started to start the points better and make a few returns. And I think they got a bit tired as well,\" said Murray.\n\n\"The surface was not easy, it was hard on the joints. Vasek played yesterday and Daniel is older than us, so there was no excuse for us not to outlast them.\n\n\"We did a great job, we stayed strong in the important moments. It was fine margins.\"\n\nMurray has now won seven rubbers in a row in the Davis Cup and he was very ably supported by Inglot, in what may have been his best display yet in British colours. The visitors were sharper in the key moments, and are in a strong position heading into Sunday's singles.\n\nA quarter-final in France in the first week of April beckons if Britain can win one one more point. Dan Evans has first use of the slick court against Vasek Pospisil: both have been in good form, and both will enjoy the surface.\n\nIt would be a third match in three days for the Canadian, but he is taking pain killers for a knee injury and when he spoke after Saturday's doubles did not sound overly confident about his chances of playing.", "There are many indicators against which patients can judge the performance of the NHS.\n\nBut historically, the totemic benchmark of the quality of service provided by hospitals is the number of people waiting for surgery and how long they have to wait.\n\nWaiting times for non-urgent surgery were the subject of fierce political debate for much of the last two decades, but recently they faded in importance as targets have been met.\n\nThat could now be changing as waiting lists grow longer in the different health systems across the UK and the human cost of delayed surgery becomes more apparent.\n\nMedia and political attention has focused on the four-hour benchmark for being treated or assessed in A&E.\n\nThe King's Fund think tank believes the number of patients waiting for operations in England will soon top four million - for the first time in nearly a decade - and that could prove to be the tipping point for public and political opinion.\n\nCutting waiting lists was a key promise by New Labour ahead of its election victory in 1997. Remember the pledge card brandished by Tony Blair and his colleagues?\n\nLabour delivered its policy of reducing numbers waiting for operations by 100,000, and then, in 2008, went further by introducing the 18-week target.\n\nThat established a right for patients to start consultant-led treatment within 18 weeks of being referred by a GP, with a benchmark of 92% of patients seen in that time.\n\nThe 18-week target and fines regime, which was refined in 2012, was widely seen as an effective incentive to hospitals to cut waiting times for patients.\n\nTony Blair pledged to cut waiting lists during the 1997 election campaign\n\nHospitals on average managed to hit and exceed the 92% standard, but that all changed in early 2016 when performance slipped below that target.\n\nAnalysis of NHS England data reveals that the number of patients waiting more than 18 weeks for non-urgent surgery has more than doubled in the four years to November 2016.\n\nThat is a much faster rate of increase that the number who start treatment in under 18 weeks and faster still than the rate of growth of NHS operations across the board.\n\nHospital chiefs and health experts say increasing waiting times are an inevitable consequence of NHS budgets lagging behind increases in patient demand.\n\nWhen emergency admissions are rising, and with a finite number of beds, something has to give.\n\nDelayed transfers of care make the task of finding beds even harder. Patients waiting for routine surgery and procedures are the ones who lose out.\n\nScotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have different target regimes for waiting lists.\n\nAll have seen sharp increases in the number of long waits between 2012 and 2016.\n\nWales has not hit its target since 2010 and the NHS in Scotland has been adrift since June 2014.\n\nThe pressures on resources and the ability to deliver timely routine treatment are similar across the UK.\n\nWithout an injection of more cash it is hard to see how the waiting list situation will improve, given the stresses and strains on all forms of care across the NHS.\n\nCancellations of routine surgery over Christmas and early January will contribute to the deterioration.\n\nWaiting lists are still a lot shorter than at the worst points in the 1990s and at times over the following decade.\n\nBut the question now is whether patients begin to feel that what they get from their local hospital, unless they are seriously ill, is falling well short of their expectations.", "Rugby union referee Nigel Owens tells Kirsty Young that he asked to be chemically castrated after realising he was gay.\n\nYou can listen to the full Desert Island Discs interview on BBC iPlayer", "With the Women's Big Bash League over, Heather Knight reflects on another winter down under, pays tribute to one of her predecessors as England captain, is \"put to shame by a 105-year-old\", and looks ahead to a trip to Rwanda.\n\nThe second edition of the Women's Big Bash League (WBBL) has come to an end and unfortunately for the \"Lilac Ladies\", my Hobart Hurricanes side, it's ended at the same stage as last year with a semi-final loss.\n\nWe've played some brilliant cricket but have been a little bit inconsistent through the year. Saying that, we've managed to punch above our weight for a second year in a row and make it to the semi-finals, despite many predictions to the contrary.\n\nI've really enjoyed my time in the WBBL once again. It's definitely grown since last year with more publicity, more coverage and it's great to see some bigger crowds too.\n\nThe double-headers with the men's Big Bash League are, I think, definitely the way forward until the competition grows enough to stand by itself - although it would be great to see the time gap between the end of the women's matches and the start of the men's games reduced, in order to get more people to come to both.\n\nThe live online streaming of every WBBL match, outside of the TV broadcast fixtures, has been a very good addition, with highlights of every game available freely, and the social media presence has also been great.\n\nUnfortunately I got roped into embarrassing myself with my woeful singing, featuring in the Hurricanes' rendition of Taylor Swift's \"Shake It Off\" on the WBBL Pitch Perfect show with Aussie comedian Bobby. Note: the costumes were to try to mask our dreadful voices!\n• None Watch the Hurricanes' cover version of \"Shake it Off\" on Facebook\n\nI think there is a lot that can be learned from the WBBL to take into the ECB's second season of the Kia Super League this summer.\n\nHaving two expanding domestic competitions in Australia and England will only help the global development of the women's game, so hopefully the Super League will bounce off the back of the second WBBL, and of course the ICC Women's World Cup on home soil in June and July.\n\nI was deeply saddened to hear the news about Rachael Heyhoe Flint passing away, as she was an incredible lady who I was lucky enough to have met on several occasions.\n\nShe managed the MCC team that I played in against the Rest of the World back in 2014 at Lord's, and I remember her being thrilled that the game was being played - for obvious reasons, after she had fought so hard to play at the home of cricket herself.\n\nOn that day, she brought along her old England blazer and she was massively chuffed it still fitted her, 50 years later! The things she has done for women's cricket are remarkable, and as a current group of players, we owe her a massive amount.\n\nTalking of past England players, I had the absolute privilege of meeting Eileen Ash, the oldest living Test cricketer (male or female) for some filming before I left for Australia, and she is easily one of the most extraordinary ladies I've ever met.\n\nShe's 105, does yoga every week and I've met teenagers who have a lot less energy than she does! It was amazing to hear some of her experiences of playing cricket for England, especially the boat trips they used to have to take to play in Australia, and she also took me through her yoga routine.\n\nMy pride, and a number of my muscle groups, are still in tatters after being put to shame by a 105-year-old...\n\nLooking back at how the lives of Rachael and Eileen were as England cricketers, compared to where we are now, there's certainly a stark difference.\n\nThe addition of the Big Bash and the Super League to the calendar, alongside increased international commitments, has made the women's game today truly an all-year-round operation. It's amazing to be involved in, but it also means a lot more time on the road.\n\nThis Christmas was my third in a row away from home, but it was great to spend it with some of the Hurricanes girls and a stray Melbourne Renegade for an \"orphans' Christmas\".\n\nThe England team has a tradition of a Christmas Day run, and I was able to drag along Hurricanes team-mates Erin Burns and Amy Satterthwaite to join me this year.\n\nHaving played pretty much non-stop since April, I'm looking forward to a few weeks' break and I'm massively excited to be heading to Rwanda again for a few days to link up with the Rwanda Cricket Stadium Foundation, the charity of which I'm a trustee.\n\nThe building of the ground in Rwanda is now in progress and is starting to look a lot like a cricket pitch.\n\nIt's been an eye-opener, seeing how much work and detail goes into this sort of project - I now know a lot more about types of soil than I ever thought I would.\n\nThe charity still needs to raise £250,000 to complete the pavilion and develop into a community hub where cricket is forging ties and building hope in a place that desperately needs it following its chequered history.\n\nYou can read more BBC columns from Heather during 2017, when the BBC Sport website will show video highlights of the Women's World Cup in June and July. BBC Radio will have increased coverage of the Super League, with commentaries on every round of games.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nAlfred N'Diaye scored on his Hull City debut as Liverpool's terrible start to 2017 continued with a fourth defeat in five league and cup games.\n\nSenegal forward N'Diaye, signed on loan from Villarreal, tapped home unmarked after Simon Mignolet dropped the ball at his feet.\n\nDespite striker Sadio Mane's first start since 2 January, Liverpool failed to force a single save in the first half and were poor throughout.\n\nHull, who have won all four home games under new manager Marco Silva, sealed victory when Oumar Niasse, on loan from Everton, kept his composure after the Reds defence had been carved open.\n• None Reaction: 'Unacceptable' Liverpool 'need to wake up'\n• None Relive the action from the KCOM Stadium\n• None Reaction from the KCOM and the rest of Saturday's Premier League games\n\nHull were bottom of the table and three points from safety when former Sporting Lisbon and Olympiakos boss Silva took charge on 5 January.\n\nFast forward four weeks and the Tigers have a win over Liverpool and a draw at Manchester United, as well as an EFL Cup semi-final home win over United under their belt.\n\nHull are an organised and well-drilled unit at the back while the arrival of N'Diaye, as well as Poland winger Kamil Grosicki, has provided them with an added threat.\n\nThey overcame the loss of captain Michael Dawson, who was injured in the warm-up, to produce their most complete performance so far under Silva.\n\nHull are 18th in the table - one point from safety - and now have seven points from a possible 12 under Silva's reign.\n\nWith Arsenal losing earlier in the day and Tottenham kicking-off late, Liverpool would have climbed to second in the table with victory.\n\nYet they ended the day 13 points behind leaders Chelsea. In the last 14 days Jurgen Klopp's side have been knocked out of the FA Cup and the EFL Cup, and seen their hopes of a first league title since 1990 all but vanish for another season.\n\nWhile Jurgen Klopp remains unbeaten in seven games against the top-six, the German has now seen his side lose to Burnley, Bournemouth, Swansea City and Hull City.\n\nThis was as bad as any of them; an abject, disjointed performance sprinkled with individual errors and a lack of cutting edge.\n\nLiverpool's defenders were as much to blame for the first goal despite Mignolet's mistake, leaving N'Diaye completely unmarked when he steered the hosts ahead.\n\nThe Reds enjoyed 72% possession but as Klopp said afterwards: \"Possession is only good when you create something from it.\"\n\nHull manager Marco Silva: \"It is a fantastic afternoon for us. Our supporters were fantastic, we need them and they support our team always.\n\n\"I am sure in the future we will play better, but at these moments we need to keep our focus and our organisation, because every game it is possible to get valuable points.\n\n\"In the Premier League it is fantastic to get clean sheets, to do that against Manchester United and Liverpool is fantastic.\"\n\nLiverpool manager Jurgen Klopp: \"I don't want to find excuses, it is hard to think of intelligent things to say after a match like this.\n\n\"It is not the time to talk about these things [qualifying for the Champions League], we have to show our best and then people can judge us.\n\n\"We all know how good we can be, and it's still there, but not if we play like we did in the first half today.\"\n• None Marco Silva has now taken seven points from his first four games in the Premier League, as many as Hull City managed in their 18 league games prior to his arrival.\n• None The Tigers kept their first home clean sheet in the Premier League this term, having conceded in each of their previous 11 league games at the KCOM Stadium in 2016-17.\n• None Jurgen Klopp has now lost five of his past eight games in all competitions; as many as he had in his previous 32 games in charge of Liverpool beforehand.\n• None Klopp has also gone five consecutive league games without winning for the first time since February 2015 (with Borussia Dortmund in the Bundesliga).\n• None Alfred N'Diaye netted on his Premier League debut for Hull; this after scoring just two goals in 134 appearances within the top five European leagues beforehand (PL, La Liga & Ligue 1 combined).\n• None Liverpool have conceded the opening goal in each of their past three Premier League games - only between May and August 2016 have they suffered a longer such run under Jurgen Klopp (four games).\n\nHull will make the journey to face Arsenal next Saturday (12:30 GMT) with confidence sky high. Liverpool need to find some confidence for their home game with Tottenham on the same day (17:30) in a game which could go a long way to deciding who qualifies for the Champions League.\n• None Offside, Liverpool. Sadio Mané tries a through ball, but Roberto Firmino is caught offside.\n• None Attempt saved. Daniel Sturridge (Liverpool) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Jordan Henderson.\n• None Attempt saved. Jordan Henderson (Liverpool) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top left corner.\n• None Attempt blocked. Roberto Firmino (Liverpool) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Jordan Henderson.\n• None Goal! Hull City 2, Liverpool 0. Oumar Niasse (Hull City) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the centre of the goal. Assisted by Andrea Ranocchia with a through ball following a fast break.\n• None Offside, Hull City. Oumar Niasse tries a through ball, but David Meyler is caught offside. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nSubstitute Moussa Dembele scored a hat-trick as Celtic came from behind to beat St Johnstone and go 27 points clear at the top of the Premiership.\n\nLiam Henderson's goal for the visitors was cancelled out by Keith Watson's header and David Wotherspoon's effort went in off Celtic's Dedryck Boyata.\n\nDembele converted a controversial penalty to equalise and then fired the visitors ahead.\n\nAnd further strikes by Scott Sinclair and Dembele followed.\n\nBrendan Rodgers remains unbeaten by domestic opponents as Celtic manager and his side have now won 19 league games in a row.\n\nSt Johnstone trail fourth-placed Hearts by three points but remain 10 ahead of Motherwell.\n\nSt Johnstone boss Tommy Wright was determined to snuff out the danger posed by Celtic youngster Kieran Tierney and so pushed Richard Foster into the midfield to keep him company but it was another Celtic youngster who helped the champions draw first blood.\n\nLiam Hendreson, Patrick Roberts and Gary Mackay-Steven all started with real drive and intent for the visitors and after Zander Clark pulled off two good saves from Roberts and Mackay-Steven, Henderson curled the ball beautifully past the Saints number one.\n\nIt was just reward for a sizzling start and at that stage the home side were struggling to deal with Celtic's energy in midfield.\n\nBut this St Johnstone side, the last to beat the champions way back at the end of last season, rarely buckles and that is down to belief.\n\nAs expected, Celtic were enjoying most of the possession, but after the goal they were wasteful with their chances and the home side started to venture out with the odd probing counter attack and were rewarded from a set play.\n\nDanny Swanson curled in a sumptuous corner from the right and Watson's sheer will took him above the Celtic defence where he bulleted a header past goalkeeper Craig Gordon, with the ball taking a nick of Celtic captain Scott Brown's head.\n\nThe champions were rocked but there was worse to come for them before the break as Saints sensed some rare vulnerability.\n\nAgain Swanson was the man who provided the inch-perfect cross, this time from the left on the counter attack. His ball found the head of Wotherspoon inside the box and he deftly flicked it backwards where it bounced off Boyata and into the net.\n\nThey got the breaks they needed but it was no more than their efforts deserved in the first half.\n\nFearing for their unbeaten run, Celtic came out in the second half determined to turn the screw and poured forward in waves. Saints were holding them at bay, though, until a penalty award that infuriated Wright and his St Johnstone players.\n\nTierney left Foster on the floor with some trickery at the edge of the box but his cross was cut out at close range by Watson, who twisted his body away as he fell, and referee Craig Thompson immediately pointed to the spot for handball.\n\nIt looked harsh but despite the protests, Dembele, just on for Mackay-Steven, stepped up and blasted high past Clark to level.\n\nThe home side knew they now had a mountain to climb as Celtic sensed the tide turning - and turn it most certainly did.\n\nTop scorer Dembele's low drive from 16 yards after fabulous build-up play put them ahead before Sinclair made it four after good running from Roberts.\n\nWith the game won it was showboating time and the fifth was simply sublime.\n\nMikael Lustig's rabona inside the box found sub Callum McGregor, who had a flick of his own into the path of Dembele and the Frenchman smashed in his hat-trick and 23rd goal of the season.\n\nIt was hard to take for the St Johnstone fans who thought for a time that the seemingly impossible might just be possible but it was a thing of beauty to seal Celtic's 29th unbeaten domestic game since the start of the season.\n• None Liam Craig (St. Johnstone) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Mikael Lustig (Celtic) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt blocked. Moussa Dembele (Celtic) right footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt missed. Nir Bitton (Celtic) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high from a direct free kick.\n• None Goal! St. Johnstone 2, Celtic 5. Moussa Dembele (Celtic) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Callum McGregor.\n• None Goal! St. Johnstone 2, Celtic 4. Scott Sinclair (Celtic) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Patrick Roberts.\n• None Attempt saved. Kieran Tierney (Celtic) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Goal! St. Johnstone 2, Celtic 3. Moussa Dembele (Celtic) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Mikael Lustig. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "The Pentagon has shared footage from a seized computer, which turned out not to be as valuable as it first thought.", "Black Sabbath, the British band credited with inventing heavy metal, have played their final gig.\n\nA capacity crowd of 16,000 watched the performance in the band's home city, Birmingham.", "He is lucky with the talent he has in key positions, he is lucky with the funds and facilities created for him and he is lucky that no other nation save New Zealand has the same strength in depth sitting on their replacements' bench.\n\nBut there is nothing lucky at all about how he utilises all of those to forge an England team that has already set new records and may yet set more impressive ones still.\n\nIt wasn't hard to see where England were going wrong in the first half against France. It was everywhere you looked.\n\nA first line-out so bad it hit the back of Dan Cole's head. A yellow card for a tackle that was unnecessary and illegal. An inability to dent the blue defensive wall with ball in hand, a problem stopping the waves of French runners coming at them from deep and wide and fast.\n\nThe difficulty lay in working out what to do about it and how to make that plan work.\n\nNo Vunipolas to add muscle and metres made. No Chris Robshaw to slow the progress of a French back row charging and offloading like a French back row of old. An opposition liberated from the stylistic straightjacket of recent torpid years, and a Twickenham crowd silenced by unexpected uncertainty and fear.\n\nAny coach could have torn into their team after a first 40 minutes as scrambled as that. Not so many could have sent them out again after half-time clear of mind and confident in their ability to turn that slump into success. Fewer still could have made not just the right changes to personnel but customised the positional and tactical ones so shrewdly too.\n\nWith 18 minutes to go, England were much improved but still four points down, Rabah Slimani's offload-inspired try threatening to end France's 12-year wait for a win in south-west London and mark the Six Nations' opening day with a second shock to match that of Scotland's thrilling win over Ireland.\n\nOff came Joe Launchbury. On came James Haskell into the back row, forward went Maro Itoje into the second row. More pace. More power.\n\nFive minutes later, George Ford and Jonathan Joseph off, Ben Te'o and Jack Nowell on, Owen Farrell to fly-half, Elliot Daly to inside centre. More power still, now pace spilling out everywhere, now a dynamism and drive and the sound from the stands of belief and excitement too.\n\nQuick ball, sharper minds. Farrell found Te'o, Te'o found a soft opposition shoulder and the try-line opened up in front of him.\n\n\"I always thought we were going to win,\" said Jones afterwards. \"I thought we were awful, but I always thought we were going to win.\"\n\nThere were not many others so sure in the moment, fewer yet who could have prevented even subconscious anxiety and anger from transmitting itself to the players on the pitch.\n\nFrance had three men - Scott Spedding, Virimi Vakatawa and Louis Picamoles - who all made over 120 metres with ball in hand. Northampton number eight Picamoles, not content with being as hard and lumpy and slippery to stop as an iceberg, also carried the ball 15 times, beat seven defenders, made five tackles, offloaded four times and won a turnover too.\n\nFrance made 591 metres to England's 383, made 10 line breaks to their opponents' five and beat 24 defenders to England's 13.\n\nThose are hard numbers to turn your way.\n\nTough too was the blocking tackle Farrell put in on Picamoles as the number eight thundered into the England half with the game still in the balance, and harder still does it become with each passing performance not to see Farrell as not just Jones' epitome on the pitch but his skipper in waiting too.\n\nJamie George is putting his own pressure on Dylan Hartley, even if the incumbent captain and hooker is still understandably rusty after his most recent lengthy suspension. Farrell, four from five from the tee on Saturday, hitting the post with his other pot, is increasingly making an unarguable case either way.\n\nThe best coaches have a leader on the pitch who shares their outlook, intensity and approach. Legendary Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson had it best in outstanding midfielder Roy Keane: never a backward step, always pushing for better, intimidated by no-one and no situation.\n\nJones loves Hartley's obduracy. He appreciates his aggression, when it is focused and snarling just the right side of illegality.\n\nIn Farrell's goal-kicking he sees a weapon that keeps better teams within reach and turns tight games his way. In the 25-year-old's youth he sees a man who will be at his physical peak at the next World Cup. In the apparent absence of self-doubt he sees a reflection of his own confident character.\n\nFarrell is not as instinctive with ball in hand as his childhood friend and team-mate George Ford. He is not infallible with the boot, although he can sometimes make it look mighty close.\n\nIn a match like this, described afterwards by Jones as an ugly performance but a beautiful result, he is the backbone and the brains too: implacable, unshakeable, the on-field general who drags others along with him.\n\nJones isn't perfect. \"I take full responsibility,\" he told the BBC on Saturday after the sub-par performance. \"I didn't prepare them well enough.\"\n\nNeither are his team, even if they have won more matches in a row - 15 - than any other England side in history. If he can solve problems, he must also be growing sick of the slow starts that cause them.\n\nAnd he is certainly lucky. But so too are England, to have a coach who can take what he has been given and turn it into something better, who has set new standards and is still nowhere close to being satisfied.", "Belgium's Steve Darcis celebrates too early in a dramatic fourth set tie-break against Germany's Alexander Zverev but eventually wins 2-6 6-4 6-4 7-6 (10-8) on his fourth match point.\n\nWATCH MORE: 5 best shots as Inglot and Murray win doubles\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "In eastern Ukraine, one woman has told the BBC she cannot tell her grandson his mother is dead after another night of heavy shelling.\n\nGovernment forces and Russian-backed rebels have accused each other of attacking civilians as fighting intensifies, with some of the heaviest clashes just over 10 miles from rebel-held Donetsk.\n\nTom Burridge reports from the city of Avdiivka.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nCameroon came from behind to beat Egypt 2-1 and seal a fifth Africa Cup of Nations in a thrilling, edgy final.\n\nSubstitute Vincent Aboubakar swept in the winner two minutes from time, flicking the ball over defender Ali Gabr and thumping it home.\n\nNicolas Nkoulou had earlier equalised for Cameroon, rising highest to power in a header on the hour mark.\n\nThe equaliser cancelled out Mohamed Elneny's opener on 22 minutes with a beautifully taken near-post strike.\n\nThe wild celebrations for Aboubakar's winner announced Cameroon's return to the continental summit, after a 15-year wait.\n\nIt also makes them the second most successful nation in the competition's history - behind Egypt - and marks the first time they have beaten the Pharaohs in the final in three attempts.\n\nBesiktas striker Aboubakar ran towards the triumphant Cameroon fans in the Stade de l'Amitie stands in Libreville to celebrate, pursued by delirious team-mates and coaching staff.\n\nUnderdogs Cameroon had already upset the odds to reach the final and stunned the much-fancied Egyptians with a late dramatic strike, after fellow substitute Nkoulou had drawn them level.\n\nDespite being beset by pre-tournament problems, including the withdrawal of key players such as Joel Matip and Eric Choupo-Moting, coach Hugo Broos managed to assemble a squad that got their reward for being strong, adaptable and resilient in equal measure throughout.\n\nThe Pharaohs - bidding for an eighth title after seven years in the international wilderness - started comfortably and Elneny's opening strike capped a wonderful fluent move down the right.\n\nThe Gunners midfielder started the move and finished it - receiving the ball from Mohamed Salah in the box and sweeping it past Fabrice Ondoa into the roof of the net at the near post.\n\nBut Egypt invited the Indomitable Lions to come at them in the second half and they paid a heavy price.\n\nThe excellent Cameroon forward Benjamin Moukandjo whipped in a dangerous cross and substitute Nkoulou muscled his way through the Egyptian defence to beat Ahmed Hegazy to the ball and bury it past 44-year-old Essam El Hadary in the Egyptian goal.\n\nThe contest developed into a fascinating cagey final, with Cameroon, inspired by Christian Bassogog and Jacques Zoua up front, pinning Egypt back and limiting them to long balls to Salah and substitute Ramadan Sobhi.\n\nFatigue soon set in in the Egyptian ranks and Cameroon got their reward for increasing the pressure on the experienced Pharaohs defence.\n\nAboubakar controlled a long ball forward with his chest at the edge of the box, flicked it over the stranded Gabr, before gathering, taking a step and smashing home off his right foot for a fitting winner.\n\nThe Egyptians - featuring the tournament's oldest and most experienced player - El Hadary, were left stunned after looking comfortable for much of the first half.\n\nAs they had done for much of the tournament, Egypt relied on a well-marshalled defence, led by Ahmed Hegazy, Gabr and Hull City's Ahmed Elmohamady. They also had the formidable Elneny and Salah leading the line.\n\nThe Pharaohs more than played their part in an entertaining final, but it was Cameroon's energy that would light up the occasion and provide a thrilling end to a thoroughly entertaining tournament for the near-capacity crowd of more than 38,000 in the Gabonese capital.\n\nBelgian coach Broos reflected the unity in his squad's ranks, as he celebrated the first Nations Cup title of his career.\n\n\"I am happy for the players,\" he said. \"This is not a group of football players, they are a group of friends.\"\n\nEgypt coach Hector Cuper was left to dwell on another defeat in a major final, having lost two European Champions League finals with Spanish club Valencia.\n\n\"The sadness I have is not because I lost another final,\" he said.\n\n\"It's because there was so much hope especially among the people in Egypt and I am sorry for the players who put in so much effort.\"\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Christian Bassogog (Cameroon) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt missed. Mohamed Elneny (Egypt) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses the top right corner. Assisted by Abdallah El Said from a direct free kick.\n• None Collins Fai (Cameroon) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt blocked. Benjamin Moukandjo (Cameroon) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Christian Bassogog.\n• None Vincent Aboubakar (Cameroon) is shown the yellow card for excessive celebration.\n• None Goal! Egypt 1, Cameroon 2. Vincent Aboubakar (Cameroon) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Sébastien Siani.\n• None Offside, Egypt. Abdallah El Said tries a through ball, but Ali Gabr is caught offside. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Scotland coach Vern Cotter says his players are shaking off their habit of defeats in close games after the \"best win\" of his tenure against Ireland.\n\nThe Scots suffered heartbreaking single-point losses to Australia at the 2015 World Cup and again in November, but beat Argentina in the last minute.\n\nAnd two late Greig Laidlaw penalties saw them overcome Ireland in their Six Nations opener after trailing 22-21.\n\n\"The players are finding ways to win games,\" Cotter told BBC Sport.\n\n\"When there was one point in it towards the end, I imagine everyone thought it was going to be a similar scenario.\n\n\"But they have obviously learned and improved and we managed to claw our way back into it.\n\n\"It is a great win for the players. It will validate a lot of the work they have been doing. I am just really happy and it is quite a nice feeling to be honest.\n\n\"I thought for a while we had managed to get ourselves in trouble again.\n\n\"We dominated the first half, and Ireland dominated large parts of the second half. But there was composure in the end and they managed to get out of it.\n\n\"It has been a while since we won the first game of the Six Nations so that will change the dynamic. I think the players will decide what they want to do from here.\"\n\nIt was Scotland's first opening-round win since they beat France in 2006, and only their second since the Six Nations started in 2000.\n\n\"We know we haven't won the first game here for 10 years but Vern sat us down this week and told us we were going to win,\" said captain Greig Laidlaw.\n\n\"We were just bloody-minded. This team is coming on leaps and bounds with every week and we are over the moon with this win.\"\n\nA brace of tries from Stuart Hogg, who became his country's leading Six Nations try-scorer with nine, and a third from Alex Dunbar after barely half-an-hour put them 21-5 up.\n\nBut Paddy Jackson's penalty, and tries from Iain Henderson and Jackson - adding to Keith Earls' earlier effort - put one of the title favourites 22-21 ahead inside the final quarter before Scotland came again.\n\n\"We're a changed group,\" Laidlaw added. \"We want to drive this whole thing forward, especially when we pull those jerseys on at home, we don't want to be getting beaten anymore. It's so pleasing to see.\n\n\"The messages were pretty simple - hold onto the ball, that was the game plan, it really worked in the first half, and that's how we were able to score 21 points.\n\n\"We maybe never adjusted as well just after half-time when Ireland came up a bit harder and we coughed up a couple of balls. But to pull ourselves out of that hole and hold onto the ball and get some penalties was the winning of the game.\"\n\nHogg, who was named man-of-the-match, cemented his status as favourite for the British and Irish Lions number 15 jersey on this summer's New Zealand tour with two dazzling early tries.\n\n\"I was put in some good positions by the team and I just had to finish it off,\" Hogg told BBC Sport.\n\n\"The boys gave us a good platform and we have some excellent backs. I was just in the right place at the right time thankfully.\n\n\"Credit to Ireland, they were outstanding in that second half. Defensively we had to be on the money the whole time and the boys are absolutely delighted to come away with a win.\"", "The government is planning tougher penalties for people who shine laser pens at transport operators.", "Oliver the police horse carried the weight of Britain's top cop at Stamford Bridge\n\nBritain's most senior police officer has saddled up to join mounted officers patrolling a Premier League derby match.\n\nMetropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe kept an eye on Chelsea and Arsenal fans while perched on police horse Oliver.\n\nThe top of the table clash attracted 41,490 fans to Stamford Bridge.\n\nA spokesman said Sir Bernard has attended patrols \"quite a lot\" since being appointed in September 2011.\n\nHe is due to retire next month, after five years in the role.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "Just months after the Olympics, a dispute over the condition of Brazil's Maracana stadium has erupted.\n\nThe building has been damaged by looters and has lain empty as clubs and authorities argue over who should manage it.", "A letter listing mundane items dated October 1633 has been discovered during renovations of Knole House, a stately Tudor home in Kent.\n\nJan Cutajar, the man responsible for the renovations, tells BBC World Service about the rare find.", "Last updated on .From the section Netball\n\nAustralia retained the Quad series title after a dramatic 47-46 win over a much-improved England at Wembley.\n\nThe Roses recovered from going seven goals behind to lead the world number one side in the third quarter.\n\nWith 10 seconds to go, England needed only one goal to take the game to extra time, but Diamonds captain Sharni Layton produced a match-winning interception at the death.\n\nAustralia finish the series with three wins from three matches.\n\nEngland won their opener against South Africa in extra time, before being comprehensively beaten by New Zealand in Liverpool.\n\nBut coach Tracey Neville was pleased with the turnaround in their performance against the world and Commonwealth champions.\n\n\"I'm so proud of them. I said to them they had to back each other on court,\" Neville told BBC Two.\n\n\"There were some of the critical moments where we could have got ahead but we have to look at positives.\n\n\"They fought from the start to the end. We made them make changes and you have to challenge the coaches as well as the players.\"\n\nEngland defender Geva Mentor, who was named player of the match, added: \"We turned it around from the lousy performance in the week.\n\n\"The Wembley crowd got us over the line. I'm so proud of the team.\"\n\nIn the final game of the series New Zealand beat South Africa 70-39 to leave the Proteas winless with three defeats.", "Olympian Jessica Ennis-Hill has taken part in her first park run in her home city of Sheffield.\n\nThe retired athlete ran two laps of Endcliffe Park, with dozens of other runners in the morning 5km event, to mark a new sponsor for the series of events.\n\nShe later posted online: \"Loved my first park run this morning! 5km is a little bit further than the 800m I'm used to.\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. \"I remember... looking at Roger Dodds with his big bunch of keys, locking the door, and that was horrifying\", one victim said\n\nPredatory sex offender Roger Dodds was left free to abuse his victims by Sheffield City Council despite bosses having known about his offending for years, BBC News has found.\n\nDodds, who was jailed earlier for 16 years after pleading guilty to four counts of indecent assault, was allowed to operate as an employee of the council \"without sufficient challenge, accountability or consequences\", a council-commissioned report found.\n\nCouncil officials not only knew about his behaviour, but also failed to report his activities to police and gave him early retirement with an enhanced pension.\n\nKenny Dale, who was abused by Dodds in the early 1990s and has waived his right to anonymity, said: \"I was the victim of a horrible man and the council are to blame for that.\"\n\nSheffield City Council said it \"accepted responsibility\" and was \"deeply sorry\" Dodds had been allowed to commit these offences while in its employment.\n\nDodds abused at least one man while heading up the council's Grants and Awards Department\n\nDodds, now 81, was employed in 1975 to head the council's Grants and Awards Department.\n\nThe unit was responsible for providing financial support to students attending college or university. However, Dodds used his position to sexually abuse young men, typically in their late teens.\n\nOne victim, who did not want to be named, said he was assaulted during their very first meeting.\n\nHe told the BBC: \"Dodds was asking me things about my studies, and, very gradually, his left hand started to feel its way into my right jeans pocket. When that started to happen, I just became frozen and unable to move.\"\n\nAccording to former colleagues, Dodds was part of a club that operated within the council swapping hardcore pornographic magazines in internal envelopes and screening adult films in a basement room.\n\nHe was first investigated by Sheffield City Council in the early 1980s after a series of allegations were made against him.\n\nThe complaints gave one employee the courage to tell managers about the abuse he had been subjected to.\n\nRichard Rowe said he grew to fear turning up for work as a result of his abuse at the hands of Dodds\n\nRichard Rowe, who has also waived his legal right to anonymity, said he was subjected to \"terrifying\" assaults over an 18-month period.\n\nHowever, he said when he told bosses what was happening, he was told to stay quiet.\n\n\"They asked for specifics and I gave them as much details as I could bring myself to voice. But they knew, they knew exactly,\" he said.\n\n\"At the end of the interview it was, 'there is nothing more to tell us, so go back to the office and you do not speak about this inside or outside the building'. I clearly remember that warning.\"\n\nFollowing the investigation, Dodds was moved to a position working with schools.\n\nAn investigation carried out for Sheffield City Council, and seen by the BBC, said he was given \"substantial unregulated and unsupervised access to schools\".\n\nThe report continues that \"there appears to have been no disciplinary consequences to his behaviour at the time\".\n\nNor was his transfer a chastening experience for Dodds.\n\nKenny Dale said he blamed the council for failing to stop Dodds\n\nMr Dale began working at the council in the early 1990s and, despite warnings from colleagues, applied for a post working alongside Dodds.\n\n\"Everyone told me not to go for it,\" he said, \"[but] I didn't think that kind of behaviour would be allowed\".\n\nHe said Dodds began touching him inappropriately almost immediately and continued to do so despite his objections and the lack of challenge from managers.\n\nAnother investigation by the local authority was launched and in 1993 Roger Dodds left the council.\n\nHowever, despite Mr Dale's insistence Dodds should not be given a payoff, he was given an early retirement package that included an enhanced pension.\n\nMr Dale said he blames the council for the abuse he suffered.\n\n\"The council are so responsible, more responsible than he was,\" he said.\n\nRoger Dodds was the subject of two internal investigations while working for Sheffield City Council\n\nFollowing the second internal investigation officials concluded a criminal investigation should have been launched.\n\nIn 2008, one of Dodds' victims went to South Yorkshire Police with his allegations.\n\nHowever, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) decided not to prosecute at the time - a CPS spokesman said its files did not contain details on why that decision was taken.\n\nDodds was eventually charged in 2016 after another complainant came forward in 2014.\n\nThe police investigation prompted the council to commission consultants to investigate how it had handled Dodds.\n\nThe 2008 review concluded: \"It was clearly wrong that Dodds should receive early retirement. He was not subject to any official sanction by the council for his alleged behaviour.\"\n\nThe 28-page dossier also revealed repeated failures by the council, describing the authority's action as clearly unacceptable not just by present-day standards but by the policies and legislation in place at the time.\n\nIt conceded the council did not know how many other victims there might be.\n\nIts conclusion was damning, stating: \"The actions of Roger Dodds have caused enormous distress to his victims, and the city council has been complicit in allowing Dodds to operate apparently without sufficient challenge, accountability or consequences.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Some of the most famous English phrases use people's names to convey a meaning, from the Bob of \"Bob's your uncle\" to the Gordon Bennett we call upon when we must not swear. But are these expressions, and others like them, based on real people? And if so, how did they become household names?\n\nThe phrase \"all my eye and Betty Martin\" is used to declare something as nonsense.\n\nThere are a number of theories as to who the mystery woman - or indeed man - was, says Benjamin Norris, assistant editor of the Oxford English Dictionary.\n\n\"One idea is that it stems from Latin words used to call on the goddess of Crete 'O mihi Britomartis', or St Martin of Porres 'O mihi, beate Martinehe',\" he said.\n\nEric Scaife from the Yorkshire Dialect Society said: \"St Martin was the patron saint of innkeepers, so if you had had a few it may sound different - you would be talking rubbish!\"\n\nCould it be that British soldiers or sailors abroad heard locals uttering these Latin words in disbelief and anglicized them?\n\nCould Betty Martin be versions of the Latin for St Martin or the goddess of Crete Britomartis?\n\n\"I suspect she was a character of the lusty London of 1770s and no record of her exists,\" wrote lexicographer Eric Partridge in his Dictionary of Catchphrases (1977).\n\nMr Norris said in northern England the phrase is sometimes uttered as \"all my eye and Peggy Martin\".\n\n\"It seems relatively unlikely that we will be able to discover the identity of the individual in question for sure,\" said Mr Norris.\n\nThe term is used to mean \"and there you have it\" or the equivalent of the French \"et voilà\".\n\nIts origin could have been a satirical swipe at Conservative prime minister Lord Salisbury's controversial decision in 1887 to appoint his nephew Arthur Balfour as chief secretary for Ireland, wrote journalist Fraser McAlpine, in his BBC America Anglophenia blog.\n\nMr Norris agreed: \"In light of Lord Salisbury's Christian name being Robert - 'Bob', of course, being a familiar form of this name - and the appointment being seen by many at the time as nepotistic this theory is an appealing one.\n\n\"Though, if it is true, it does not easily explain why the phrase is first recorded in the 1930s.\"\n\nIs Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, the third Marquess of Salisbury the inspiration for the phrase \"Bob's your uncle\"?\n\nMcApline and Mr Scaife have also both questioned whether the phrase could have something to do with Sir Robert Peel, who created the Metropolitan Police Force - where officers were commonly known as \"bobbies\".\n\n\"Perhaps he had a roguish nephew who was believed to have been kept from prison by his uncle,\" McAlpine wrote.\n\n\"Then there's the name itself, which appears to have been used as a catch-all name for someone you don't know, in much the same way that Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and that lot constantly referred to, well, anyone, as Clyde,\" he wrote.\n\nThis expression conveys the sense that \"if anything can go wrong it will go wrong\".\n\nIt was created by aerospace engineer Captain Edward A Murphy while he was working on a series of US Air Force studies to test human tolerance to acceleration and deceleration, according to Brewer's Dictionary of Irish Phrase & Fable.\n\nHe coined the phrase after he observed someone setting up an experiment that required the attachment of 16 accelerometers, according to Brewers.\n\nCaptain Edward A Murphy is thought to be behind his eponymous \"law\"\n\nEach consisted of a sensor that could be attached to its mount in two different ways - and the subject had attached all of them the wrong way round.\n\n\"It is quite widely accepted as true and it also fits the chronology of our evidence for the phrase, with the earliest recorded use of Murphy's law in Genetic Psychology Monographs: 1951,\" said Mr Norris.\n\nThe expression \"to go to Davy Jones's locker\" means to be drowned at sea.\n\n\"This item of nautical slang is shrouded in mystery, though we do know that the figure of Davy Jones was seen to represent the spirit of the ocean, sometimes even being interpreted as essentially a sea-devil,\" said Mr Norris.\n\nDavey Jones's locker is a nautical phrase meaning to drown at sea\n\nThe use of Davy Jones's locker to refer to the depths of the sea, frequently considered as the graveyard of those who have drowned, has been around since 18th Century, he said.\n\nFor instance, in his 1751 work Peregrine Pickle, Tobias Smollett refers to Davy Jones as \"the fiend that presides over all the evil spirits of the deep\".\n\nThis man's name is often used in place of a swear word when making an exclamation of anger, surprise or frustration.\n\nThere were two famous Gordon Bennetts who might have been the source - a father and son.\n\nJames Gordon Bennett senior (1795-1872) was a Scottish-born journalist, famous in the US for founding the New York Herald and conducting the first ever newspaper interview.\n\nHis son, of the same name, was something of an international playboy. Mr Scaife described him as \"a dandy... known for driving fast cars and causing consternation and surprise\".\n\nGordon Bennett used his inheritance to sponsor the Bennett Trophy in motor racing from 1900 to 1905, and in 1906 established a hot-air balloon race that is still held today.\n\nHe holds the Guinness Book of Records entry for \"Greatest Engagement Faux Pas\".\n\nOne very drunken evening he turned up late to a posh party held by his future in-laws, and ended up urinating into a fireplace in full view of everyone. The engagement, unsurprisingly, was broken off.\n\nHowever Mr Norris said of the Gordon Bennett expression: \"It seems most likely to be a euphemistic substitution for 'gorblimey', which is itself a phonetic rendering of a colloquial or regional pronunciation of 'God blind me'.\"\n\nThis story was inspired by phrases sent in by readers of England's oddest phrases explained.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "No story dominates the headlines but the Sunday Telegraph and Sunday Times both lead on defence issues.\n\nThe Sunday Telegraph takes aim at officials in the Ministry of Defence, reporting that MPs will blame a \"rotten core\" of civil servants for allowing British soldiers to be hounded by false claims of abuse dating from the Iraq War.\n\nThe story is based on a parliamentary inquiry whose findings have not yet been published.\n\nThe Telegraph expects the report to condemn the activities of the government's Iraq Historic Allegations Team and to call for it to be shut down immediately.\n\nIHAT has said that it handles investigations with sensitivity. The Telegraph, though, calls it a \"grotesque charade\".\n\nThe MoD also finds itself under attack from the Sunday Times, which claims that equipment failures and bungled procurement deals have left gaping holes in Britain's defences.\n\nAmong a number of examples, it cites the Royal Navy's new Type 45 destroyers, which are apparently so noisy they can be detected by Russian submarines 100 miles away.\n\nIn a statement, the MoD says it is focused on delivering the equipment needed to keep Britain safe.\n\nElsewhere, the Sun on Sunday reports that the British veteran, Johnson Beharry, who was awarded the Victoria Cross for heroism in Iraq, was delayed and questioned at JFK airport in New York by officials enforcing President Trump's travel ban.\n\nLance Sergeant Beharry, who was en route to a charity event for war veterans, believes that an Iraq stamp in his passport aroused suspicions.\n\nHe complains that he felt \"humiliated\" and missed the fund-raising show because of the delay.\n\nThe Observer says that the government is to break with Margaret Thatcher's policy of supporting home ownership, with a shift in favour of people who rent.\n\nIt says the new approach, to be set out in a White Paper this week, will aim to deliver more affordable and secure rental deals, and threaten tougher action against rogue landlords.\n\nIn the Observer's view, it is a turning point for the Conservative party and an admission by Theresa May's government that home ownership is out of reach for millions of families because of sky-high property prices.\n\nThe Mail on Sunday devotes its front page and two others to news that the former UKIP leader Nigel Farage is sharing a house in west London with a French politician, described by the newspaper as \"glamorous\" and \"foxy\".\n\nThe Mail says Laure Ferrari, who moved in with Mr Farage last week, is the head of a Eurosceptic think-tank which is accused of diverting EU funding to UKIP before the general election and the referendum.\n\nMr Farage tells the Mail he is simply helping Miss Ferrari with somewhere to stay. They both deny having an affair. Mr Farage also denies any financial wrongdoing.\n\nDavid Beckham appears on a number of front pages, after the leak of private emails apparently revealing his anger at missing out on a knighthood in 2013.\n\nHis spokesman has said that the emails have been \"hacked and doctored\" and contain \"outdated material taken out of context\".\n\nThe Mail on Sunday is unimpressed by friends of the footballer explaining that he was simply \"a normal person\" who was \"extremely disappointed\" not to get a knighthood.\n\nBut the Sunday Mirror says it is understandable that Beckham feels \"miffed\" after giving so much to charity and his country. It says it is high time he was told \"Arise, Sir David\".\n\nThe story of Mary Ellis from the Isle of Wight, one of the few women who flew Spitfires during World War Two, is told in the Sunday Times and the Mail on Sunday.\n\nMrs Ellis, who turned 100 last week, joined the Air Transport Auxiliary in 1941. She and her fellow so-called \"ATA girls\" delivered planes to RAF airfields, releasing male pilots for combat duty.\n\nFor an early birthday treat, she recently took control of a Spitfire once again on a flight over the South Coast accompanied by a co-pilot.\n\nFinally, for those with a sweet tooth, the Sunday Times reports that chocolate bars are about to get 20% smaller.\n\nIt comes as manufacturers try to meet government targets for reducing sugar in their products.\n\nThey can not use artificial sweeteners, according to the paper, because this ruins the taste and can even have a laxative effect.\n\ndeclined to comment on the possible 20% cut.", "1. Johnny Depp is alleged to have spent $30,000 a month on fine wine.\n\n2. The Great Scottish half-marathon course is 150m too short.\n\n3. You can carry one falcon in economy class on a Qatar Airways flight.\n\n5. A dating app is being developed to help orangutans find a love match.\n\n6. A man sold his back tattoo to German art collector, for 150,000 Euros.\n\nSeen a thing? Tell the Magazine on Twitter using the hashtag #thingididntknowlastweek\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Coverage: Live on BBC One, BBC Radio 5 live, BBC Sport website and mobile app.\n\nThe New England Patriots and Atlanta Falcons will battle it out this Sunday for the NFL Vince Lombardi trophy in a game televised in 170 countries around the world.\n\nLady Gaga is to headline the half-time show, which more than 116 million Americans tuned in to watch last year, with a 30-second US television advertising slot to cost at least £4m ($5m).\n\nBut what about the game itself? Why should we watch it? Who are the players to look out for? Who is going to win?\n\nMore importantly - how are you going to stay awake beyond the 23:30 GMT kick-off?\n\nBBC NFL pundits Osi Umenyiora - a two-time Super Bowl winner himself - and former Houston cornerback Jason Bell joined BBC Sport to answer all of the big questions about Sunday night's showpiece.\n\nWhy should we stay up for the Super Bowl?\n\nJason: First of all, you are watching the two best teams in their sport play against each other so that's always exciting. It's also about the culture of football, it's an event and it's more than just a game - from the half-time show, all the pre-game stuff, the build-up. It's just excitement - it really is entertaining.\n\nI know how important tea is so have your tea allocation ready. It's also a good thing to watch with a friend. Have some nice food and drinks - just make it an event.\n\nWho will you be cheering for?\n\nOsi (who played for Atlanta for two seasons): 100% Atlanta - even if I hadn't played for the Falcons, I'd be cheering for Atlanta because I lived in the city since I was 17. I've been in that environment and know how they feel about the team and it's just something I'd want to see happen for them.\n\nOsi: Absolutely, they can. I know that Bill Belichick [head coach of the Patriots] is an outstanding coach who is going to come up with a gameplan to curtail the Atlanta Falcons offence - but they've proved almost impossible to stop in this entire year.\n\nJason: I'm going to agree with Osi - I'm cheering for Atlanta to win but if I look at the game and I break it down by the numbers and who is better, I think New England could pull it out and win.\n\nWhich players should we look out for?\n\nOsi: With New England, you want to start with Tom Brady. That's where it all begins - he's been an outstanding quarterback. There's wide receiver Julian Edelman - but also look out for Martellus Bennett, the tight end, as I think he might have a good game.\n\nFor Atlanta, there's the running backs Devonta Freeman and Tevin Coleman - those guys are going to be outstanding in this game. Then there's quarterback Matt Ryan and wide receiver Julio Jones. On the defence side of the ball, you want to look out for linebacker Vic Beasley and also defensive end Dwight Freeney, who could also have a major impact on this game.\n\nThe Most Valuable Player is going to be a quarterback - it usually goes down to that position.\n\nJason: To really impress your friends, look out for Patriots wide receiver Chris Hogan - he has been doing some of the plays that injured tight end Rob Gronkowski used to do. Some of the routes that Gronkowski used to get open at and create match-up problems for opposing teams, he's now doing. That's something that we just discovered recently watching films.\n\n170 countries set to tune in across the world. Americans are estimated to drink 325 million gallons of beer and eat 11.2m pounds of crisps and 1.3 billion chicken wings (which equates to four per American) - during the event. Celebrity Atlanta fans include Samuel L Jackson, Justin Bieber, Usher, boxing champion Evander Holyfield and Kenan Thompson of Kenan and Kel fame. Lady Gaga is set to headline the half-time show. In 2016, 162,000 tweets were reportedly sent in the 60 seconds after the half-time show. Facebook said 60 million people posted 200 million times about the last Super Bowl.\n\nAre you ready for half-time with Lady Gaga?\n\nOsi: I can't wait - I'm such a big fan of Lady Gaga. I can't wait to hear her sing all of her songs. I hope that she doesn't do any of her new stuff - I don't really like it, I like her old songs. I like Just Dance, Paparazzi, Poker Face - that's what I want to hear.\n\nWhat's it like playing in a Super Bowl?\n\nOsi (who won two Super Bowls with the New York Giants): You can't prepare for something of that magnitude. I think what you try as much as possible is to keep all of the emotion out of you and just wait for the game to be over. If you allow yourself to think exactly about what is going on, you won't be able to go out there and perform.\n\nYou have to go out there and think that this is just a regular game and you can enjoy all of the emotions afterwards. The coaches do a really good job of keeping things as close to normal as they would be if you were playing just a regular season or play-off game.\n\nWhat's it like playing in that stadium?\n\nJason (who played for the Houston Texans): I have great memories there and this venue was kind of the beginning of the state-of-the-art stadium. It has a retractable roof, which was something new when it was introduced, and all the facilities are great and it's in a great location.\n\nIt doesn't have a bad seat in the house so everybody attending will feel like they are right there. It's loud, exciting and really amazing - I'm excited to get back there.\n\nCan you see this game ever happening in London?\n\nOsi: In 40 or 50 years, maybe. The problem is it's such an American institution. Soccer is now getting bigger in America but could you see the FA Cup final being played in the United States?\n\nEven though we want the game to keep growing in the UK, it's so American that we would never want to remove that particular game. You could possibly see the Pro Bowl or you could see play-off games, if there is a franchise, played in the UK. But the Super Bowl itself - it's going to be tough.\n\nIf human beings figured out a way to put a man on the moon, they'll find a way to bring a franchise to the UK. The NFL is pumping a lot of money into this and fans love it - there's a huge fan base of 13 million people who are fans of the NFL in the UK. I think that the time is coming.\n• None how you can get involved in your own 'game day' this Super Bowl weekend.\n\nJason Bell and Osi Umenyiora were talking to BBC Sport's Chris Visser.", "In Cambodia's capital, motorbike taxis are everywhere - but it's extremely rare to see women drivers transporting tourists. Those who do are judged harshly. Katya Cengel meets the young entrepreneur trying to change that.\n\nWhen they show up at a Phnom Penh hotel in their tight red T-shirts and skinny jeans, people tend to get the wrong idea about Renou Chea and her fellow Moto Girl Tour guides.\n\n\"They think we're not 'good girls',\" says Renou, a slight 26-year-old with long dark hair. \"They think we're 'bad girls'.\"\n\nIt is an important distinction to make in Cambodia, where women who associate with foreigners are often assumed to be \"bad girls\" - or women who work in the sex trade.\n\n\"Sometimes they think that when we hang out with the men, it's just like for sex or something like that,\" adds her sister, Raksmey Chea, 23.\n\nThe Moto Girl Tour website doesn't help, offering motorbike tours of Cambodia's capital by \"young and beautiful lady drivers\".\n\nBecause they are all young and beautiful, Renou doesn't understand why advertising this might seem strange.\n\nWhat is strange, at least in this South East Asian country, is women driving tourists. It just isn't done, says Siv Cheng, owner of Phnom Penh-based CS Travel.\n\n\"Mostly, you see, all moto (taxi) drivers are male,\" says Cheng.\n\nLeft to right: Sreynich Horm, Raksmey Chea and Renou Chea\n\nMany women drive the little Vespa scooters and Hyundai motorbikes that zip around the city - everyone does - but they don't usually carry tourists.\n\nRenou got the idea after an aunt told her about schoolgirls offering a moto taxi service in Thailand.\n\nHaving ridden a motorbike since high school, and having studied English in college, Renou figured showing tourists around her city would be a fun way to earn money. Having also studied accounting, she no doubt saw a good business opportunity as well. In 2015 almost five million tourists travelled to Cambodia, according to the Cambodian Ministry of Tourism.\n\nRenou recruited her younger sister and Sreynich Horm, 22 - both as petite and pretty as Renou - and occasionally a fourth woman to be Moto Girl Tour guides.\n\nBut before they took their first tourists on board their bikes in early 2016, they had to convince their families that they would be safe.\n\nHorm's father worried that a foreigner riding behind her could touch her and do other things to her - things \"good\" virgin girls should not have done to them.\n\nTo make sure they kept their reputations safe, the women established a rule - no holding on to the guide, hold the handlebar on the seat behind you instead.\n\nWhen they have night tours and tours outside the city they team up. Still, friends and family often worry about the women carrying around large foreigners.\n\nAt 4ft 9in (1.45m) and 6st 5lb (40kg), Renou is the \"tall\" Moto Girl. Her Vespa is more than twice her weight, but she gets upset when people think she can't handle it or heavy loads.\n\nFor years she has been helping her father with his grocery store by making deliveries on her Vespa. Plus, as a woman, she believes she is actually a safer driver, something Hong Ly, guest relations' manager at Mito Hotel agrees with.\n\nRenou would like to see more female travellers in Cambodia\n\n\"Tourists like girls who drive slow, not weave in and out of traffic,\" said Ly, who keeps a stack of Moto Girl Tour brochures on her desk.\n\nThe Moto Girls may be on to something. In early 2016 Vespa Adventures motorbike tour-company opened a branch in Phnom Penh and began hiring both male and female drivers, says Alex Meldrum, manager of the Phnom Penh branch.\n\nAn American man founded the original Vespa Adventures in Vietnam. But a Cambodian woman who plans to hire mainly female drivers in the group's other Cambodian location of Siem Reap runs Cambodian Vespa Adventures.\n\nChanel Sinclair, a 31-year-old lawyer from Australia, was both thrilled and comforted to find female tour guides when travelling solo in Phnom Penh for the first time in spring 2016.\n\nShe was so pleased with the attentive service she received from the Moto Girls, including regular cold water deliveries and help with bartering, that she went on three tours with the group.\n\nRenou would like to see more women travellers like Sinclair, but so far the majority of the company's 50 or so customers have been male.\n\nScottish photographer Ross Kennedy, 44, took a custom tour with the Moto Girls in March 2016. To find more authentic scenes for Kennedy to shoot, Horm went to a region outside the city where her father has family and asked locals' advice.\n\nKennedy's tour began with crashing a wedding in the morning and ended with a Buddhist blessing ceremony in the afternoon. \"Those are the memories that make a trip special,\" Kennedy wrote in an email.\n\nIn addition to being female, the Moto Girls try to differentiate themselves as well-informed guides who can discuss Cambodian art, history and culture.\n\nFinding the right spots are not the only challenges they face. There are the cultural differences as well, like the Indian customer who said \"Yes\" while shaking his head in a fashion Renou mistook for \"No\", or the man from New Zealand who screamed when he saw a chicken on the road.\n\nOn one occasion Renou and her client were so absorbed in their tour of the National Museum that neither heard the alarm sounding the museum's closing. Renou finally glanced at her watch at 17:30, half an hour after closing time. As they raced to the gate, her client promised to book another tour - if she could get them out of the museum.\n\nThe locked gate proved a dead end, but some workers were able to find a security guard who let them out. Renou's customer proved true to his word and booked another tour.\n\nOther difficulties are in the driving itself. Passengers unfamiliar with riding motorbikes sometimes lean to the left when they should lean right, says Horm.\n\nThen there was the tourist who got the wrong idea and asked her out on a date. She turned him down, not wanting to confuse her work with her social life. Plus, she didn't fancy him.\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "An Iraqi family have successfully boarded a flight to the US from Turkey, following the suspension of President Donald Trump's travel ban on people from seven mainly Muslim nations.\n\nFuad Sharef and his wife and three children, who have US immigration visas, were previously prevented from boarding a flight to JFK airport from Egypt.\n\nThe US justice department has filed a court motion against the suspension which was issued by a federal judge on Friday.", "This late autumn photo - from Snowdonia National Park in North Wales - has been crowned the overall winner of the 10th annual International Garden Photographer of the Year competition.\n\nTaken by Lee Acaster, and entitled Left, this stark image won the Trees, Woods and Forests category - and then beat thousands of other entries to win the top spot.\n\nGarden designer Chris Beardshaw - one of the competition judges - says the photo \"perfectly encapsulates both the extremes of fortune and personality of these giants\".\n\nWhile Clare Foggett - who edits The English Garden Magazine - says the image \"draws the viewer in, to reveal the still surface of the lake behind. It demands closer inspection\".\n\nScroll down to see a selection of some of the best images from each category.\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"This is a classical composition with the bridge leading us into the garden and its wonderful display of October colour. The angle of view is very precisely aligned, creating the feeling of serene calm.\"\n\n\"It has a calm, almost Eastern zen-like quality. The autumn leaves on the handrail could have been artfully placed there by a stylist, but the fact that they had been spontaneously placed there by children visiting the garden earlier seems to add even more serendipity to the image.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of the International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"A dreamy midsummer scene. It is an unusual composition with the main subject near the picture's edge, but this, taken together with the empty space in the middle of the frame, heightens the faint sense of unreality that marks this photograph out.\"\n\n\"A fleeting and delicate image that encourages a holding of the breath and calm silence, for fear of disturbing the perfection.\"\n\n\"Wordsworth was right about daffodils filling the heart with pleasure and this photo of 'the stars that shine and twinkle on the Milky Way' does just that, with beautiful light from the setting sun. One look at the image and you want to be there.\"\n\n\"White Stars at Sunset is a descriptive title for this field of wild Narcissus with the beautifully backlit sta- shaped flowers. The low viewpoint chosen by the photographer has encouraged the flowers to command the stage against a dramatic evening sky.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"Texture and softening effects have been created in post-capture processing, but the strength of the image is in its very simple but accurate composition. In simplifying the still-life, the photographer has created a strong sense of romantic elegance.\"\n\n\"This charming image of Bergenia not only illustrates the character of the flower, but the added texture and softness to the palette gives it an artistic painterly feel.\"\n\n\"No-one could fault this image for not being true to its subject 'Breathing Spaces'. The glimpse of the mountainside in the break in the clouds has been very well caught and contrasts with the vibrant autumn colours of the foreground. A strong composition with the diagonal of the hillside.\"\n\n\"This anonymous person collecting fodder for his animals has a touch of humour about it. We have to assume he can see where he is going. The mountainous background with lovely soft, misty and low light adds a sense of place.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"This is a spontaneous shot that tells the story perfectly. The photographer has intuitively positioned the farmer in the frame in such a way that we can trudge along with him to the village we can see in the background.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"A clever shot. The flowers are beautifully lit and balanced with the lights of the city. There is so much activity to be seen in the background, but the photographer has succeeded in keeping the flowers in the foreground of our attention.\"\n\n\"The shallow depth of field has rendered the lights of a city purely as a glow which leaves the interpretation to the viewer.\"\n\n\"A blaze of colour brings out the true feel of summer. The shallow depth of field adds to the intrigue of the image. An accomplished image for this young photographer.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"A wonderfully exuberant image. The photographer has captured the scene very well by excluding anything that might interfere with the appreciation of colour and pattern.\"\n\nThis portfolio of microscopy images was entered as a set in the Beauty of Plants category and features sectioned and stained flower buds.\n\nA selection of the images - including some close-up details - can be seen here.\n\n\"The images are stunning - a rarely seen glimpse of the mechanics and 'insides' of a plant, normally only seen by botanists peering down microscopes. Their other-worldly quality brings a new level of intrigue to our garden plants.\"\n\n\"Well executed and inspirational in design. A very unusual way to portray these flowers, the clarity and design are stunning and a lot of worthwhile hard work has gone into this portfolio.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"One of the most attractive macro images in this year's competition. The light falling on this tiny subject is wonderfully handled and reveals the other-worldly elegance of the subject.\"\n\n\"A captivating image, glorious colours and the composition cannot be faulted. The depth of Field is perfect. The detail is beautiful and this is a very worthy winner of the macro category.\"\n\n\"A dramatic composition for this monochrome image with lighting to bring out the detail and texture in the leaves and yet maintaining the subtlety of the petals.\"\n\nPhilip Smith, founder of International Garden Photographer of the Year:\n\n\"A complex plant stripped down to its essentials of tone, form and texture. It is skilfully processed with a large amount of detail in a complex gradation of grey tones. There's a calm stillness that makes it a worthy winner.\"\n\nThe winning photos are being exhibited at the Royal Botanic Gardens, at Kew in London, from 4 February to 12 March 2017.", "England surpassed the national record set by Sir Clive Woodward's 2003 World Cup winners as they recorded their 15th win in a row by beating France.\n\nThe run began in Stuart Lancaster's final game in charge, a 60-3 win over Uruguay, before Eddie Jones took over and led the side to a Grand Slam, a whitewash victory in Australia, an unbeaten run in the autumn internationals and now victory over France in the 2017 Six Nations.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nGreat Britain reached the Davis Cup quarter-finals after Canada's 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov was defaulted from the decisive match for hitting the umpire with a ball struck in anger.\n\nKyle Edmund had just broken serve to lead 6-3 6-4 2-1 when frustration got the better of Shapovalov.\n\nA default followed, giving Britain a 3-2 victory in the World Group first-round tie in Ottawa.\n\nBritain go on to face France away in the quarter-finals in April.\n\n\"It was a strange way to finish,\" said Edmund. \"I've never been part of something like that.\"\n\nGB captain Leon Smith added: \"A bit of a surprise what happened at the end there and I feel for the young lad. He's a great talent and he's learned a harsh lesson today.\"\n\nVasek Pospisil had earlier levelled the tie at 2-2 with a 7-6 (7-3) 6-3 3-6 7-6 (7-5) win over Dan Evans that lasted three hours and 23 minutes.\n\nAfter the dramatic build-up provided by the fourth rubber, the decisive fifth looked to be heading for a relatively low-key conclusion as Edmund raced into a commanding lead.\n\nAgain, Britain had the advantage in terms of rankings, but Edmund also had five years and a growing bank of ATP experience on his side against the current Wimbledon junior champion, making his Davis Cup debut.\n\nShapovalov played much of the match in confident style, hammering down big serves and hitting flashing one-handed backhands, but his lack of experience showed with a handful of loose games.\n\nWith serve dominating, Edmund bullied the teenager with his forehand to earn the first two break points in game eight and Shapovalov offered up a double fault.\n\nEdmund sealed the set with an ace out and wide, and repeated the formula in the second set - profiting from his opponent's errors to break at 5-4 and convert the set with another ace.\n\nWhen Shapovalov framed a forehand wide to fall behind in the third set, there appeared little chance of a comeback, but that opportunity disappeared altogether when he angrily hit the ball off court.\n\nIt struck umpire Arnaud Gabas, giving the Frenchman a bruised eye, and after discussion with the team captains and match referee Brian Earley, the crowd were told that the tie was over as a distraught Shapovalov sat in his chair.\n\nCanada's Davis Cup captain Martin Laurendeau said: \"There's always a lesson to be learned from the good moments and the worst moments. If he wants to compete at this level he has to keep it together.\n\n\"Emotional control is the biggest factor in this game. He must learn the lesson and hope it serves him in the rest of his career.\"\n\nKyle Edmund has won this match but you don't want to win like this - it's a shocking way for it to finish.\n\nThis has taken a lot of gloss off for Kyle Edmund but he was going to win this match anyway. The incident looked worse the second time you saw it.\n\nIt was meant to go out of the stands, but Shapovalov got it completely wrong.\n\nUmpire Arnaud Gabas was taken to Ottawa General Hospital for a check-up suffering from bruising and swelling of his left eye. Shapovalov made an impressive apology: he spoke of his shame and embarrassment and promised he will never do anything like that again.\n\nHe struck the ball with a serious amount of force. It was reckless and will live with him, but hopefully there will be no long term effect on Gabas' ability to umpire matches.\n\nIt may even force a tightening of the rules. Too many (much more experienced) players hit balls towards officials and the crowd in frustration, and this is a reminder of the potential consequences.\n\n'Accident that can happen to anyone'\n\nHenman and Nalbandian among big names to have defaulted", "An immigrant rights campaigner took the podium at the LGBTQ Solidarity Rally in New York on Saturday.\n\nThanushka Yakupitiyage from the New York Immigration Coalition spoke at one of a number of worldwide protests over President Trump's agenda.", "James Bond director Guy Hamilton, pictured here on the set of Goldfinger, was a secret agent during World War Two\n\nThat James Bond creator Ian Fleming drew literary inspiration from his wartime work in espionage is relatively well known. But the heroic World War Two exploits of the director of Bond films including Goldfinger and Live and Let Die are less well documented.\n\nGuy Hamilton, who grew up in France but was sent to boarding school to England, made an early foray into the film industry in the late 1930s, but after fleeing France at the outbreak of war his film-making career had to be put on hold while he joined the effort to defeat Nazi Germany.\n\nIn June 1944, he found himself in the sort of dire straits that would have challenged Bond himself.\n\nOn a mission to drop French secret agents in Brittany, Lt Hamilton and his crew of two sailors became stranded in a place crawling with German soldiers.\n\nUnder cover of darkness, Hamilton and his crew had rowed to shore from his navy ship in a small surfboat to drop off the agents. But when he headed back the ship had gone. There was no way of returning home.\n\nHamilton ran covert high-speed motor gun and torpedo boats out of Dartmouth for the Royal Navy's 15th Flotilla\n\nHamilton used the Shelburne Line, one of a series of crucial Allied escape routes that crisscrossed occupied France\n\nPlymouth's Honorary French Consul Alain Sibril, who was born in Brittany and whose grandfather was part of the local Resistance, said: \"This was shortly after D-Day, it was extremely, extremely dangerous.\n\n\"You can imagine it was a terrible place to be stuck.\"\n\nSpeaking to BBC Inside Out before his death last year, Hamilton said the events of that time were still etched on his memory: \"My worries were to get rid of the surfboat and to try and get as far away form the beach as possible.\"\n\nHe spent several days on the run with two other sailors, evading German patrols and navigating minefields.\n\nThey were eventually rescued by the French Resistance and sheltered in a safe house run by Anne Ropers.\n\nHamilton (right) spent a month in Brittany pretending to be a Frenchman to avoid detection\n\nAnne Ropers hid Hamilton and two other agents for about a month\n\nIn an interview before she died last year Mrs Ropers, then 97, said: \"They stayed in my parents' room. At night, Guy was in one bed and the sailors in the other.\n\n\"By day, all three of them spent their time lying on their beds, so that they did not make any noise.\"\n\nMr Sibril said: \"Had the Germans discovered Guy Hamilton and his fellow sailors, this would have been extremely dangerous. Not only for them, but also for the whole network of Resistance fighters.\"\n\nMarguerite Pierre, 92, was another Resistance member who helped Lt Hamilton.\n\nShe said: \"We were told by our commander that we risked either deportation or being shot in the field. We knew what the risks were.\"\n\nHamilton managed to send a message back to his naval crew in Dartmouth telling them he was safe\n\nOne night Hamilton's cover was almost blown, when members of the Resistance took him for a boozy game of boules.\n\nHe said: \"They took me down the road to a cafe that had a bowling alley in the back.\n\n\"Well that was alright except that it was full of Germans all in uniform, having a drink. And the lads said 'can we have the bowling alley after you Fritz?', and they said 'yes, yes'… I was appalled and horrified.\"\n\nMrs Ropers said: \"Each team bought the other a jug of cider. The Germans bought a jug of cider for the Englishman and vice versa.\"\n\nSir Roger Moore said Hamilton \"was very much a James Bond character himself\"\n\nHamilton would recall these experiences while directing James Bond films, as 007 actor Sir Roger Moore recalls.\n\nHe said: \"He did tell me that he was once dropped into Nazi-occupied France and, being separated from his squad, found himself in a fairly sticky situation in a French village teeming with German soldiers.\n\n\"By virtue of speaking fluent French he was able to pull the wool over the Germans' eyes in a bar by pretending to be a local, and he was obviously very convincing.\"\n\nFor nearly a month Hamilton managed to avoid detection before escaping back to safety in England. Ten days later the escape route used by the Resistance was uncovered by the Nazis.\n\nAfter the war Guy Hamilton worked in the film industry training under Carol Reed\n\nThe first Bond film he directed was Goldfinger in 1964\n\nHamilton directed a series of war films including Battle of Britain in 1969\n\nHe lived in Majorca until his death last year, aged 93\n\nHamilton would be awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his gallantry.\n\nAfter the war he returned to the film industry, training under legendary director Carol Reed on movies such as The Third Man, later directing blockbusters including The Colditz Story and Battle of Britain, as well as four Bond movies - Goldfinger, Diamonds are Forever, The Man with the Golden Gun and Live and Let Die.\n\nAnd for Moore, Hamilton's experiences in the Royal Navy informed the way he helped to bring Bond to life on the silver screen.\n\n\"Guy was very much a James Bond character himself,\" the actor said.\n\n\"He always knew what was believable and how far he could take audiences - and that was based on both his film-making experience and real wartime exploits.\"\n\nGuy Hamilton's daring exploits can be relived on Inside Out South West on BBC One on Monday 6 February at 19:30 BST and on the iPlayer for 30 days thereafter", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nA groundsman uses a fire extinguisher to disperse the bees at the Wanderers A swarm of bees stopped play midway through Sri Lanka's innings in the third one-day international against South Africa in Johannesburg. The bees disrupted play twice - sending players diving to the ground - before the game was officially stopped in the 27th over, with Sri Lanka on 117-4. A groundsman used a fire extinguisher to try to disperse the bees, before a beekeeper was called to the Wanderers. Play restarted over an hour later and South Africa won by seven wickets.\n• None Scorecards from the third ODI Players and umpires dive to the ground", "Marco Hauenstein as a baby with his birth mother\n\nA man who launched an online search for his missing birth mother discovered she died years ago in Germany - but bureaucratic errors led to the family never being informed.\n\nGina Hauenstein, who came from a small village in northern Switzerland, had been listed as officially missing since 2000.\n\nIn January this year her son Marco, who spent his childhood with foster parents in another part of the country, posted a Facebook appeal for information about the mother he last saw as an infant.\n\nHis story captured attention across Europe, prompting new enquiries - until Swiss police confirmed that the remains of Gina Hauenstein had actually been found just across the border in Germany in 2013.\n\nMarco did not have an easy start in life.\n\nHe knew very little about his birth family, but he did know that his mother had been a drug addict, and is believed to have spent time during the 1990s in Zurich's then-notorious Platzspitz drugs scene, where addicts bought heroin in a city centre park and injected it openly.\n\nWhen Marco was born in 1997, he was already addicted, and had to spend the first months of his life in hospital withdrawing and recovering.\n\nAlthough his mother visited him from time to time, he never lived with her, and when Marco was just three, she disappeared.\n\nAlthough Marco describes his childhood with foster parents as happy, he says questions about his birth family were \"always on my mind\".\n\nHis search first started when he was around 16, and he began by asking local town councils in the region of Switzerland his mother had come from. He also made enquiries with the police.\n\nNo information was forthcoming. Police told him that despite a search both within Switzerland and across Europe, no trace of her had ever been found.\n\nGina Hauenstein had been missing since 2000\n\nOnly when an appeal Marco made on Facebook began to attract attention - it was shared thousands of times in just a few days - did Swiss police look again at their records.\n\nThey discovered that in 2013 they had been contacted by German police, with news that human bones had been found in a village just across the border from Gina Hauenstein's home town in Switzerland.\n\nThe results of a forensic examination by Swiss investigators confirmed the bones were Gina's.\n\nLocal police in her home town were informed in 2015, but inexplicably that information never reached either Gina's family or the German authorities investigating the remains.\n\nThis week, Swiss police visited Marco and broke the news, apologising for a mistake they admit should never have happened.\n\nMarco's social media feeds were saturated with messages during the search\n\nMarco, who patiently gave many interviews when he first launched his Facebook appeal just four weeks ago, is now taking time for himself to digest the news.\n\nHe has not posted on Facebook since January. While not quite the happy end he had hoped for, there was at least one positive development.\n\n\"Danke! Thank you! Merci!\" he wrote. \"Thanks to your help, on 20 January, I was able to meet my uncle and my grandmother for the first time. It was a very emotional moment.\n\n\"At last, I have part of my family back.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nAfter several world tours spanning five decades, heavy metal pioneers Black Sabbath are bringing it to a close in the city where it all began. How did Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and former member Bill Ward's upbringing in post-war, industrial Birmingham influence their unique sound - and is this really \"the end\" for the band?\n\nFor a group that has been widely credited with creating the sound of heavy metal, influencing thousands of bands and inspiring generations of guitarists, it was a term Black Sabbath initially wanted to have nothing to do with.\n\n\"We called it heavy rock,\" recalls Iommi. \"The term heavy metal came about from a journalist when I came back from America (in the 70s).\n\n\"He said 'you're playing heavy metal' and I said 'no, it's heavy rock - what's that?'\"\n\nWho coined the phrase is disputed, with Rolling Stone critics Lester Bangs and Mike Saunders both credited with using it first.\n\nThroughout the 1970s, many reviewers used it as an insult - a sneering description of this new wave of \"aggressive\" musicians, their loud, thrashing sounds reverberating around packed, sweaty rooms full of fans.\n\n\"At first we didn't like being called heavy metal,\" admits Butler. \"But everyone likes to put you into certain pigeon holes, so we sort of got used to it.\n\n\"And then instead of it being derogatory, it became a whole lifestyle.\"\n\nAlong with Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath were credited with 'inventing' heavy metal\n\nLed Zeppelin and Deep Purple, who, like Black Sabbath, formed in 1968, were also progenitors of the movement.\n\nBut Sabbath are credited with inventing the distinctive riffs that characterised the sound in the early days - and that was all down to a terrible twist of fate that befell a 17-year-old Iommi at a steelworks in Aston, Birmingham.\n\nIt was the last shift for the young welder at the Summer Lane factory, who was leaving to try and make his fortune as a professional musician.\n\nAs he went to cut a piece of metal, the guillotine came crashing down on his right hand, slicing off the tips of his middle and right fingers.\n\n\"I was told 'you'll never play again',\" says the lead guitarist.\n\n\"It was just unbelievable. I sat in the hospital with my hand in this bag and I thought 'that's it - I'm finished'.\n\n\"But eventually I thought 'I'm not going to accept that. There must be a way I can play'.\"\n\nHe went home and fashioned new fingertips out of an old Fairy Liquid bottle - \"melted it down, got a hot soldering iron and shaped it like a finger\" - and cut sections from a leather jacket to cover his new homemade prosthetic.\n\n\"It helped to make me play a different style because I couldn't play the conventional way - I couldn't play the proper chords like I could before the accident, so I had to come up with a different way of making a bigger sound.\"\n\nA 17-year-old Iommi fashioned his own prosthetic fingertips to enable him to carry on playing the guitar - the prosthetics he uses today were crafted by professionals\n\n\"Tony's an incredible guy,\" says Osbourne. \"He not only played again, he invented a new sound. I often say to him, 'how do you know when you're touching the strings?' - and he says 'I just do it'.\"\n\nThe bleak, factory-laden streets of Aston, where Osbourne, Iommi, Butler and Ward grew up just a few roads apart, also had an impact on Sabbath's haunting sound and ominous lyrics.\n\nThe working-class suburb hadn't benefitted from post-war regeneration in the way Birmingham city centre had, just a couple of miles away.\n\nIommi and Butler worked in factories after leaving school, Ward delivered coal and Osbourne, after stints in a slaughterhouse and car plant, turned his hand to burglary. Music was an escape for the teenagers.\n\n\"It wasn't a great place to be at that time,\" recalls Butler. \"We were listening to songs about San Francisco, the hippies were all love and peace and everything.\n\nWithin two years of forming their band in Aston, Birmingham, in 1968, Black Sabbath were touring America\n\n\"There we were, in Aston, Ozzy was in prison from burgling houses, me and Tony were always in fights with somebody, and Bill, so we had quite a rough upbringing.\n\n\"Our music reflected the way we felt.\"\n\nIt was the chance sighting of a small, oddly-written note in a Birmingham music shop - 'Ozzy Zig needs a gig' - that brought the four together.\n\nIt was spotted by Iommi and Ward, who were looking for a singer after leaving \"a band people could fight to\".\n\n\"I knew Ozzy from school, Birchfield Road in Perry Barr, and I didn't know he used to sing,\" remembers Iommi.\n\n\"His mum came to the door and we said we were answering the advert, and she said 'John, it's for you'.\n\nThe musicians all lived a few streets away from each other in Aston - Osbourne and Iommi used to attend the same school\n\nOzzy Osbourne said the band \"had to finish in Birmingham\" where it all began\n\n\"I saw him walking up the hallway and I said to Bill, 'forget it'. We talked for a bit and then we left.\n\n\"I said, 'I don't think he can sing, I know him from school'.\"\n\nA few days later, Osbourne and Butler went round to the Iommi family's grocery shop in Aston, saying they were looking for a drummer.\n\n\"Bill was with me but he said 'I'm not going to do anything without you',\" says Iommi.\n\n\"So we said let's give it a go - the four of us.\"\n\n\"I have been out of Black Sabbath longer than I've been in,\" says Ozzy Osbourne\n\nTony Iommi's much-publicised battle with cancer is among the reasons the band has finally decided to stop touring\n\nCalling themselves Earth, they started out playing blues, before turning their attention to writing their own material.\n\nButler recalls: \"It was always the hippy, happy stuff on the radio and there were we, in Aston, having to go to work in factories.\n\n\"We wanted to put how we thought about the world at the time. We didn't want to write happy pop songs. We gave that industrial feeling to it.\"\n\nAnd it was Butler and Iommi's love of horror films that gave the group its signature, stirring sound.\n\n\"We wanted to create a vibe like you get off horror films - try and create a tension within the music,\" says Iommi.\n\n\"We thought it would be really good to get this sort of vibe, this fear and excitement.\n\n\"It was a struggle. There was nothing like what we were doing. We'd taken on something because we believed in it, and loved what we were doing.\"\n\nBlack Sabbath have had many line-ups over the years, with Tony Iommi the only constant presence\n\nFollowing a mix-up with another band called Earth, the band changed their name to Black Sabbath, after the title track that took its moniker from a 1963 horror film by Boris Karloff.\n\nAnd within just two years, they were flying to the US to perform to an emerging, global fan base at the start of a career that would span the next 50 years.\n\nOver 70 million records, several line-up changes - Iommi has been the only constant presence - and one headless bat later, the band has decided to call time on touring, performing the last gig on their exhausting 81-date \"The End\" tour in their home city.\n\nIommi's much-documented cancer battle and the musicians' advancing years - Osbourne and Iommi are 68 and Butler is 67 - contributed to the decision to slow down.\n\nAll three founding members speak with a mixture of pride, excitement and sadness when talking about performing in their beloved Birmingham.\n\n\"We've toured everywhere else in the world but there's nowhere like Birmingham,\" says Butler.\n\nGeezer Butler said the band \"came from nothing\", growing up on the streets of Aston, Birmingham\n\n\"It's still the only place where I get nervous before I go on. It means the world to me. It's where our hearts are.\"\n\n\"It's where we started,\" adds Osbourne. \"The old road has gone back to Birmingham.\n\n\"I don't live there any more but most of my family live there. We started in Birmingham so why not finish in Birmingham?\"\n\nBut, like many bands before them who have announced \"the end\" before being enticed back on stage with lucrative deals, should we actually expect to see Sabbath back together again one day?\n\nIommi's certainly keen. \"We're not saying goodbye as such, as in we're never going to do it again, [but] we don't want to do any more world tours,\" he says.\n\n\"I wouldn't rule out doing a one-off show. Or even an album. I think the door's open.\"\n\n\"As far as I am concerned, this is the end,\" he insists.\n\n\"I have been out of Black Sabbath longer than I've been in. We've all had different arguments and fallings out.\n\n\"I don't know about them but I'm not doing it again. We want to end on a high note.\"\n\nFor the full interviews with Black Sabbath, watch Inside Out West Midlands on Monday at 19:30, or on iPlayer.", "The New England Patriots take on the Atlanta Falcons this Sunday at the NRG Stadium in Houstan, Texas.\n\nIt's the second largest food consumption day in America after Thanksgiving.\n\nBut, how many chicken wings will Americans eat on the day?", "Kale is used as an alternative to iceberg lettuce in Riverford's Caesar salad\n\nSome supermarkets are rationing iceberg lettuces, with experts warning it could be the, er, tip of the iceberg.\n\nBad weather in Europe has already caused a #courgette crisis, alongside a shortage of broccoli, tomatoes, salad peppers and aubergines.\n\nWith vegetable shortages expected to continue until April, what alternatives are there for shoppers?\n\nDuring the UK's winter months of December, January and February, UK farmers produce beetroot, Brussel sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, celeriac, chicory, fennel, Jerusalem artichokes, kale, leeks, parsnips, potatoes, red cabbage, swede and turnips.\n\nWe've become a \"slightly strange group\", expecting all-year-round produce, according to Lord Haskins, the former chairman of Northern Foods, which supplies Tesco.\n\n\"Thirty years ago you'd never have worried about buying lettuce in the middle of the winter - lettuces were things that grew in the summer and you ate them in the summer - you ate cauliflowers and Brussels sprouts in the winter,\" he says.\n\nAs for courgettes, they are actually \"very, very out of season\", says organic vegetable retailer Riverford. We have just got used to supermarkets supplying them all year round.\n\nEating British produce that's in season is often cheaper, as it is produced locally - and it can be healthier too.\n\nAccording to food industry campaign group Love British Food, fruit and vegetables that are in season contain the nutrients, minerals and trace elements that our bodies need at particular times of year.\n\nApples, for example, are packed with vitamin C to boost our resistance to winter colds.\n\nBeetroot is \"terrific in soups\" says Alexia Robinson from Love British Food\n\nThe group's Alexia Robinson recommends beetroot, kale, cabbages, broccoli and traditional root vegetables for their health-giving properties.\n\nRiverford says a slaw made with cabbage, beetroot or swede will offer \"10 times more nutrients\" than an iceberg lettuce - which it says aren't known for their nutritional value.\n\nIf you are really keen on iceberg lettuces, you can probably pay a bit more for one from Peru or South Africa, says Lord Haskins.\n\nBut imported vegetables can clock up a lot of air miles before they land on your plate - making them worse for the environment.\n\nHatty Richards, from the Community Farm in Chew Magna, Somerset, says buying local is better.\n\n\"We have such a range on our doorsteps already, it's fresher, it's really good for the environment - it reduces air miles - and it supports local business which is crucial.\"\n\nLord Haskins agrees, and suggests your tastebuds may also be grateful:\n\n\"We all buy stuff from far parts. They don't taste nearly as good: strawberries at this time of year from Egypt don't taste anything like as good as a British strawberry in May, June, July.\"\n\nKale is a hardy winter leaf that can withstand frosty weather\n\nA leafy salad is nice - but there are plenty of alternative dishes to try.\n\nRiverford's Guy Watson thinks the UK's more bitter winter salad leaves and root vegetables can provide \"a far superior substitute\" which will easily make up for a lack of lettuce.\n\nVibrant winter coleslaws and cauliflower salads \"bring British veg to life\", he says, adding that one of the Riverford Field Kitchen's most popular winter dishes is a kale caesar salad.\n\nKale, which was originally used to feed cows, is a robust, hardy winder leaf that can withstand frosty weather. It can also be used in soups, stews, stir fries, gratins or just wilted with butter.\n\nMs Robinson suggests embracing winter comfort food with a \"good old fashioned winter stew with plenty of root vegetables with tender meat\".\n\nIf you're still not convinced you can do without leafy salads, try growing your own.\n\nThose who do want to eat lettuce need not despair. According to the campaign group Eat Seasonably, lettuce, rocket and other crunchy salad leaves are some of the easiest things to grow at home, all year around - on a seed tray indoors, on your window sill or in the garden.\n\nSpinach is easily grown, even in window boxes, says Ms Robinson\n\nMs Robinson says: \"As well as the cress there are many great veg that can be easily grown in window boxes such as leaf lettuce, radishes, spinach, green onions and of course a good selection of herbs.\"\n\nAnother easy win is beetroot, Eat Seasonably says, which can be grown in a big pot. Though beetroot is harvested in October, Riverford says it can last up to four months if it's kept in a cold storage.\n\n\"Carrots are not too hard to grow either,\" Riverford's Emily Muddeman said, \"Leeks, kale - you could plant just four or five stalks of kale and it will go on sprouting.\"\n\nAny budding gardeners could start with planting onions later this month - Eat Seasonably says they are \"not even slightly difficult to grow\".\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nScotland survived a thrilling Ireland comeback at Murrayfield to record only their second opening-round victory in Six Nations history.\n\nThe hosts enjoyed a stunning start despite Ireland's scrum dominance, full-back Stuart Hogg crossing twice.\n\nKeith Earls scored in the corner but Alex Dunbar's try from a clever line-out move put the Scots 21-5 up.\n\nTries from Iain Henderson and Paddy Jackson put Ireland 22-21 ahead before Greig Laidlaw's two late penalties.\n\nIt was a remarkable conclusion to a scintillating opening match of this year's Championship, with Ireland - who took a losing bonus point - having 70% of the possession in the second half.\n\nBut, despite scoring 17 unanswered points either side of the interval, Irish hopes of a third title in four years suffered a major blow.\n\nThey must now lift themselves for next Saturday's trip to face Italy in Rome, while Scotland travel to play France the following day in buoyant mood.\n• None Never miss a Six Nations story - sign up for our rugby union news alerts\n\nThis was an absolute firecracker of a Test match, a classic of its kind. It got off to a thunderous start and rarely let up. The portents for the Scots were not good in the early minutes when their scrum came under heavy attack and started shipping penalties at an alarming rate, but their game-breakers soon came to prominence and set Murrayfield alight.\n\nScotland were clinical, seizing on uncharacteristic Irish errors. When they applied pressure in the visitors' 22 and Garry Ringrose unwisely came out of the defensive line, Hogg went outside him and through for the opening score.\n\nThe Scots weathered an Irish backlash and hit them with another score just after the first quarter.\n\nZander Fagerson forced a turnover on the floor and Scotland went from there. From a line-out, Finn Russell, standing flat to the advantage line, found Huw Jones, who sent Hogg away. The full-back dummied Rob Kearney to go over and Laidlaw made it 14-0 with the conversion.\n\nIreland responded and got reward for waves of pressure when Earls went over, but that only galvanised Scotland to get a third try. And it was a thing of wonder. A beautiful crossfield kick from Russell forced Simon Zebo into conceding the line-out.\n\nThe Scottish line-out then pulled the canniest trick in the book, front-loading it with three backs - Laidlaw, Tommy Seymour and Dunbar.\n\nIreland didn't think for one second that Ross Ford's throw was going to one of them, but it did. He threw it flat to Dunbar who, surreally, went through a gap to score.\n\nLaidlaw's conversion made it 21-5, Jackson's penalty reducing the deficit to 21-8 just before the break.\n\nThe second half was utterly extraordinary. Ireland mobilised their troops in a very major way. They owned the ball for vast sections of the half, Henderson scoring after monumental pressure finally broke through incredible Scottish resistance.\n\nIreland came again, with power and intent. Conor Murray broke free and linked with Jamie Heaslip but the outstanding Ryan Wilson, with help from a Sean Maitland interception, snuffed out the danger.\n\nNext, Maitland's tackle forced Kearney to put a foot in touch on the right wing, denying Earls a second try.\n\nIn the midst of the onslaught, Jonny Gray was a defensive rock. A total colossus. When Irishmen went down in the tackle it was normally Gray who put him there.\n\nNot even Gray and his army of heavy-hitters could stop Ireland from scoring again, however. They were making yards and finding holes against a seemingly tiring Scotland and Jackson stretched to score and then converted his own try.\n\nIreland were ahead for the first time; 21-20 after 62 minutes.\n\nScotland's goose looked cooked, but these players have learned some lessons on the road to this victory, some bitter lessons from matches that should have been won but were lost in the closing minutes.\n\nRoles were reversed here. From somewhere, Scotland summoned grunt and control and won a penalty that Laidlaw fired over to put them back in the lead. They kicked on, controlling the ball, looking after it like it was a new-born babe. Ireland couldn't get near it.\n\nThe last act was another penalty from the captain, boomed over against a backdrop of sheer delirium.\n\nThis was Scotland's biggest victory in 18 years, since they were champions in 1999. Nobody will be thinking about trophies, but Scotland have momentum - and history.\n\nParis next, with a mighty spring in the step.\n\nReplacements: Ford (for Brown, blood 5-11, then 27), Reid (for Dell, 56), Berghan, Swinson (for Strauss, 65), Barclay (for Watson, 49), Price, Weir (temp for Russell, 46-52), Bennett (for Jones, 60)\n\nReplacements: Scannell, Healy (for McGrath, 56), Ryan (for Furlong, 69), Dillane (for Henderson, 64), Van der Flier (for O'Brien, 66), Marmion, Keatley, Bowe (for Earls, 68).\n\nFor the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter.", "Donald Trump (R) met technology leaders when he was president-elect\n\nIt also just so happens to be the sixth largest economy in the world and home to the most influential, profitable and powerful companies on earth.\n\nIf the bubble bursts, or even just contracts a little, the whole country suffers - including President Donald Trump and his supporters. California is a so-called “donor” state, meaning it simply pays more into the US Treasury than it gets out.\n\nSo when President Trump talks about making deals, he’ll know full well that in California he faces formidable bargaining chips he can’t ignore. He may even be on the back foot.\n\nAnd that may be one of the reasons why we saw a peculiar thing happen on Friday.\n\nUber boss Travis Kalanick decided not to turn up to President Trump’s economic advisory panel, and the president said... nothing.\n\nHe didn’t call the company “failing” or “once great” or “weak” or any of those words he’s typically thrown around when he feels personally slighted.\n\nIn fact, aside from a few pre-election skirmishes with Apple, President Trump has been relatively ambivalent towards tech firms, and there’s a very good theory as to why - he really needs them.\n\nTravis Kalanick put Uber's reputation ahead of the value the company might get from a meeting with the president\n\nAnd they need him too, of course.\n\nUnder President Trump, Silicon Valley is holding out for a lower corporate tax rate - which could bring billions back into the US, a win-win for both sides.\n\nBut there’s a snag in this arrangement. For the most part, the workers at these companies are outraged, seething at the prospect of their bosses even sitting at the same table as the new president.\n\nThat’s why we saw 2,000 Google employees across the world leave their desks on Monday to demonstrate against the immigration ban.\n\nIt’s why Amazon’s own employees are calling on the company to stop advertising on right-wing news website Breitbart.\n\nIt’s why Uber’s staff wrote a lengthy “Letter to Travis”, informing their boss about how unpopular his involvement with President Trump was among the ranks. It worked.\n\n“Joining the group was not meant to be an endorsement of the president or his agenda but unfortunately it has been misinterpreted to be exactly that,” Mr Kalanick told staff in a memo announcing he was stepping down.\n\nThe tone was understanding, but a little frustrated. Would it not be better to at least have a seat at the table? Uber’s staff didn’t see it that way.\n\nAlthough he said he didn’t support President Trump’s immigration policy, people thought he did. And that’s what mattered most.\n\nHe put Uber’s reputation ahead of the value Uber might get from a meeting with the president.\n\nHe may have been extra-sensitive after a long week.\n\nLast Saturday, a misjudged tweet caused a reported 200,000 Uber users to delete their accounts - so many, in fact, the company had to create a special tool to automate the process.\n\nUber’s explanation that it was all a big misunderstanding has merit, but the furore, justified or not, underlined the fine line tech companies tread with their users.\n\nThe firms have until now acted in ways that were “good for business”, but now they are being forced to consider what is simply “good”.\n\nOne minute you can be helping the people of San Francisco get around, the next those same people are protesting outside your headquarters.\n\nAnother company tip-toeing along is Twitter, buoyed by its role as the mouthpiece for the most important man in the world, but cowed by what that man chooses to share.\n\nIt has faced calls to ban President Trump from the site on account of some feeling he has breached the network’s rules on hate speech and harassment.\n\nIt of course hasn’t done that - and to be fair, the demand didn’t gain significant traction, even amongst Trump’s opponents.\n\nBut Twitter’s employees, nervous about their role as President Trump’s megaphone, contributed a combined $1m (£800,775) to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).\n\nThe ACLU has been the benefactor of choice for companies that have one eye on public perception.\n\nMany are dealing with what can be plainly described as the “Peter Thiel problem”. Mr Thiel, an investor with an arguably unrivalled track record, has his fingers in almost every significant pie around here.\n\nAnd, uncomfortably for many, he also has the ear of the president, of whom he is an outspoken supporter.\n\nWhen Facebook’s chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg chose not to make a public statement on the Women’s March two weeks ago, people jumped to various conclusions, most of which inevitably led to the hand of Mr Thiel - who sits on Facebook’s board.\n\nThis comes despite any evidence Mr Thiel is calling any kind of shots on Facebook’s political position.\n\nSupport for President Trump in California is harder to come by than in other parts of the US\n\nMeanwhile, well-regarded start-up accelerator Y Combinator is also feeling pressure thanks to its links with Mr Thiel.\n\nThe company’s president Sam Altman said he wouldn’t sever ties with the investor. The programme has said it will take on the ACLU as one of its cohorts, offering mentorship on digital projects.\n\nIt seems for now the rank-and-file of Silicon Valley see advising President Trump as indistinguishable from supporting him.\n\nTechnology companies are perhaps paying for years of hyperbolic statements about changing the world, in a place where a minor software update gets people “super excited”.\n\nOne thing that has struck me about staff at these huge companies is the infectious, passionate loyalty. It exists because those employees believe the company stands for the same issues they do. Any wavering creates shockwaves.\n\nThe atmosphere may get less toxic as the presidency continues, but it leaves bosses extremely hesitant to get around President Trump’s table.\n\nWill President Trump need to get around theirs?\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook", "Social media updates by the Egyptian suspected of launching a machete attack at the Louvre in Paris suggested nothing untoward, says his friend.\n\nFrench authorities say a man, believed to be Abdullah Hamamy, was shot in the stomach as he lunged at soldiers with the knives at the museum on Friday.\n\nBut his neighbour in Egypt, Ibrahim Yossry, says updates to Abdullah's social media upon his arrival in France suggested nothing untoward.", "Tara Reid and Ian Ziering have been ever present in the Sharknado series\n\nSharknado fans rejoiced this week at the news that the Syfy channel is pressing ahead with a fifth instalment in the trashy disaster franchise.\n\nDirected as ever by Anthony C Ferrante, Sharknado 5 will see returning stars Ian Ziering and Tara Reid travel to London to avert a global shark tornado.\n\nSince it began in 2013, the TV movie series has been met with glee by viewers - and derision by critics.\n\nHere are five critically-panned movies that audiences have grown to love.\n\nOften cited as the worst movie ever made, Tommy Wiseau's self-financed opus came and went in 2003 but has since developed an enthusiastic fan following.\n\nAudiences at special screenings regularly congregate to yell abuse, recite lines from the script in unison and throw plastic spoons at the screen (don't ask!)\n\nTommy Wiseau wrote, directed and produced the film and also played the lead role\n\nWiseau, who also appeared in the film, has taken this in good humour, appearing at screenings to take questions and even taking part in a live reading of his script.\n\nHe's since reteamed with co-star Greg Sestero for a new film called Best F(r)iends, while James Franco has made a film about The Room's production, entitled The Masterpiece.\n\nRead more about The Room from BBC Culture.\n\nMade for less than $10,000 (£8,000), this ultra low-budget attempt to replicate Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds on a shoestring had audiences flocking to revel in its awfulness.\n\nJames Nguyen's film was particularly derided for its special effects, which consisted mainly of shoddy CGI eagles interacting unconvincingly with the film's cast of unknowns.\n\nUS distribution company Severin Films saw potential in its ineptitude and took the film on a \"Birdemic experience tour\" that included a visit to London in 2010.\n\nNot to be deterred, Nguyen released a sequel, Birdemic 2: The Resurrection, in 2013 and has plans to round out the franchise with Birdemic 3: Sea Eagle.\n\nPaul Verhoeven with Showgirls stars Gina Gershon and Elizabeth Berkley in 1995\n\nRiding high on the success of Basic Instinct, Dutch director Paul Verhoeven reteamed with writer Joe Eszterhas for this torrid tale about a Las Vegas dancer stripping her way to stardom.\n\nTheir labours were met with derision by the critics, who poured scorn on the script, Elizabeth Berkley's lead performance and one particularly ill-judged swimming pool sex scene.\n\nAs is the way of these things, though, the film developed a cult following on home video and is now a staple on the midnight screening circuit.\n\nVerhoeven, incidentally, is currently getting some of the best reviews of his career for Elle, a dark drama about rape that won two Golden Globes last month.\n\nJust three years on from Return of the Jedi, George Lucas laid an almighty egg with this disastrous stab at bringing Marvel's wise-quacking alien to the big screen.\n\nBack to the Future's Lea Thompson was among Howard the Duck's human stars\n\nReleased as Howard: A New Breed of Hero in the UK, the film's crimes against cinema include putting an actor with dwarfism in an inexpressive duck suit that reportedly cost $2m (£1.6m) to make.\n\nSince its release in 1986, though, the film has come to be embraced both by lovers of bad movies and fans of the original comic book character.\n\nHoward's brief appearance at the end of 2014's Guardians of the Galaxy, meanwhile, has prompted talk that a movie comeback may be on the cards.\n\nEdward Wood Jr's status as the world's worst director is largely down to a 1959 black-and-white creature feature that languished in late-night TV obscurity for 20 years.\n\nBut after film critic Michael Medved declared it the worst movie ever made in 1980, it found a new audience among those who saw a camp value in its cheap effects and cheesy sci-fi storyline.\n\nMany were particularly impressed by Wood's billing of Bela Lugosi as the film's star, despite the fact that he barely appears and actually died three years before the film's release.\n\nThe film and Wood himself were subsequently granted the ultimate accolade when Tim Burton made a film about the director's life, starring Johnny Depp as Wood and Martin Landau as Lugosi.\n\nDepp and Landau at the Cannes Film Festival, where Burton's Ed Wood screened in 1994\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Rex Tillerson is the antithesis of his boss, the Disrupter-in-Chief Donald Trump.\n\nHe is also, in some respects, the antithesis of his predecessor, the garrulous former Secretary of State John Kerry.\n\nFor the man who is the public face of US diplomacy, Tillerson keeps a remarkably low profile.\n\nWhich has left staff at the State Department, and the journalists who cover it, wondering how he will fare against competing power centres in the White House, and how he will represent America to the world.\n\nEarly signs have not been promising.\n\nFor the entire first month of the Trump administration the State Department has given no public briefings. It's just been announced that they're set to resume early next month after an unprecedented six-week hiatus.\n\nIt was not just the matter of being absent from the cacophony of a new order asserting itself in Washington. It was the noticeable absence of an American voice to the world, a tool of diplomacy that has regularly inserted US positions into the internal debates of allies and foes alike.\n\nTillerson himself has rarely spoken publicly. On his inaugural trip to a G20 Foreign Ministers meeting in Bonn and again in Mexico, he read prepared statements but didn't make room for reporters' questions and didn't respond when we tried to ask them anyway.\n\nThis reticence is consistent with both his corporate background as former head of Exxon Mobil, and his personal style - a lifelong Eagle Scout who values actions more than words.\n\nHe does at least avoid the pitfalls of Kerry, who thoroughly embraced the public role of top diplomat, but whose shoot-from-the-hip style sometimes left his aides backtracking after he'd departed the podium.\n\nStill, says one State Department employee, \"I think Tillerson hurts himself with this quiet diplomacy approach, because Washington is not a quiet town.\"\n\nThis reluctance is perhaps understandable given the freewheeling approach of the noisiest voice in town, the White House. It has, at best, sent mixed signals on key foreign policy issues such as Nato, Russia and China.\n\nBut Tillerson's recent absence from Donald Trump's meetings with key foreign leaders has left many questioning just how much influence he has.\n\nState department officials point out that his acting deputy Tom Shannon was in the room for the visits of the Canadian and Japanese Prime Ministers. And that Tillerson was travelling during the official part of Benjamin Netanyahu's Washington trip, so he met the Israeli leader separately before he left.\n\nYet while they were at dinner, the White House appeared to blindside him with suggestions it might depart from a long-standing insistence on a two-state solution to the Mideast conflict.\n\n\"If there's going to be a policy change, the State Department needs to know about it,\" a US official told the BBC.\n\nTo a large degree, Mr Tillerson's understated performance reflects this confusion in the administration over who's in charge.\n\nThe National Security Council - the traditional centre of influence in the White House, which usually works closely with the State Department - has been paralysed by staffing shortages and a leadership change.\n\nAs CEO of Exxon Mobile, Tillerson was awarded the Russian Order of Friendship and had dealings with Russian President Vladimir Putin\n\nMeanwhile alternative centres of power with undefined parameters have emerged: Trump's Chief White House Strategist Steve Bannon has set up a \"strategic initiatives\" thinktank to inform policy making.\n\nAnd his son-in-law Jared Kushner has been tasked with taking the lead on foreign policy issues like Middle East peace, with no formal connection to established State Department channels.\n\nTillerson has his own channel to the president, says his aide, RC Hammond: \"The secretary and the president are in frequent contact, meeting in person and speaking regularly over the phone.\"\n\nThe secretary has, however, reportedly been frustrated with the administration over staffing appointments.\n\nThe president had promised to let him pick ambassadors for many of the top-tier postings, two people close to the transition process told the BBC.\n\nBut they said White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus circumvented the arrangement by winning Trump's approval for at least 10 nominees before Tillerson was confirmed. These are still going through the vetting process.\n\nThe White House has not yet responded to BBC requests for comment.\n\nBattles between the administration and government ministries over appointments during transitions are not necessarily unusual.\n\n\"It sounds like part of the usual Washington game,\" said a senior State Department official. \"But what is unusual right now is the absence of a clear process, of who's in charge of policy formation or policy appointments.\"\n\nEven if it was clear, the State Department is not fully equipped to help make policy.\n\nThe White House did not approve Tillerson's initial choice for a deputy and almost all of the high level jobs are still vacant.\n\nJust two out of the 116 requiring congressional confirmation have been filled, according to the non-partisan organisation Partnership for Public Service: the secretary of state and the UN ambassador Nikki Haley.\n\nShake ups on the top floor are standard practice in changeovers between administrations, but this one was done \"in a manner considered highly offensive to all of us,\" said the State Department official.\n\nSome were given only 48 hours to vacate their offices and none were left to backfill until new appointments could be made, which is the normal procedure.\n\nTillerson's role in these decisions was not clear, as much of it happened before he was confirmed.\n\nAnd there is plenty of expertise on hand to run the department in the meantime. But those who are acting in senior positions do not necessarily wield the same authority as those who've been officially confirmed for the roles, especially in the uncertain policy environment.\n\nWe are \"treading water\" said one career diplomat, noting the difficulty of getting guidance on even routine policy decisions from the top floor.\n\nWith such an introduction to the Trump administration the diplomat had been \"highly sceptical\" about Tillerson's appointment but was \"pleasantly surprised\" by his debut.\n\nTillerson had wanted Elliott Abrams to serve as his deputy, but he was disqualified due to negative comments about Trump\n\nHe came in strong with an opening speech that said all the right things - promising to make full use of the expertise on hand and suggesting that he'd have an open mind about dissenting opinions.\n\nThat is what he seems to be doing, working his way through the building in methodical consultations that include not just senior officials but mid-level officers, as he navigates the steep learning curve from CEO to diplomat. This approach has been well received, although I understand there are concerns that he is not as accessible as was hoped.\n\nI have met Mr Tillerson in off-the-record settings and he seemed to me a thoughtful, deliberate man with an interest in taking a long-term strategic view.\n\nAnd while he is not anti-establishment in the iconoclastic mould of Mr Trump, he is an outsider - to diplomacy but also to the city. Perhaps that makes him less inclined to play by its rules.\n\nWhether that will work in this town, and with this administration, is too soon to say.", "One of Germany's most senior banking executives has said the vote to leave the European Union should not be taken as an excuse to \"penalise\" the City.\n\nDr Andreas Dombret, executive board member for the German central bank, the Bundesbank, said that the approach to Brexit should be \"pragmatic\".\n\nAlthough he said some jobs could be lost, London would remain \"the most important financial centre in Europe\".\n\n\"As there has been this vote, there will be a Brexit,\" he told the BBC.\n\n\"I see it as my job to make sure the transition is as smooth as possible, and we, I can promise, will be as pragmatic as possible.\"\n\nDr Dombret said he did not believe that Brexit was risk free.\n\nIn a private meeting in Frankfurt earlier this month, he said that London's position as the financial services \"gateway\" to the EU could be undermined.\n\nFurther, trillions of pounds worth of euro currency transactions and insurance products - called clearing - would be likely to move to the continent from the City.\n\nAndreas Dombret, of the Bundesbank, says the Brexit negotiations will be a \"two way street\"\n\nBut he made it clear that Germany saw Britain as an ally, particularly when it came to maintaining global regulatory standards.\n\nDr Dombret said he did not want to see either the EU or the UK engaged in a \"regulatory rush to the bottom\" to try and gain competitive advantage.\n\nAnd he admitted that any risks to financial services were \"two-way\".\n\n\"I see risks not only for London; I see risks for Germany and for the rest of Europe, should there be an impact of Brexit on economic circumstances it will not be concentrated on Great Britain it will be also in the rest of Europe,\" he said.\n\n\"I see this as a two-way street. Of course there will be costs to such a development, but it is far too early to say what these costs will be and what kind of unintended costs we will have to face.\"\n\nAsked how many jobs might relocate in the financial services sector after Britain has left the EU, Mr Dombret answered: \"It is very hard to put a number on it.\n\n\"They may not all necessarily go to Europe, maybe some of those job losses could go to the United States.\n\n\"I am not expecting those job losses from the UK point of view all to go to one city.\n\n\"[That] is also not that bad because then the risk is also diversified over several financial centres, I see some benefit in that too from a financial stability point of view.\"\n\nTurning to the chances of a free trade deal for financial services between the UK and the EU, Dr Dombret admitted that there were a number of hurdles.\n\n\"I don't have 100% confidence this will work,\" he said, pointing out that the EU had never signed a free trade deal for financial services with a non-EU country.\n\n\"You have to have some scepticism. But, again, I know the government of the United Kingdom is very sincerely trying to negotiate this and we should be open, especially from the German point of view, to the EU 27, to everything in order to help Great Britain.\n\n\"By no means does it make sense to penalise the United Kingdom for having taken this view [Brexit].\"\n\nMr Dombret says a number of banks have contacted Frankfurt about moving some services from London\n\nThe Bundesbank has recently put information on its website for banks looking to move jobs to Frankfurt, the country's financial capital.\n\n\"This is only logical, if you as a bank are thinking of relocating part of your business to a city like Frankfurt, that you speak to potential future supervisors,\" Dr Dombret said.\n\n\"That is the most logical thing to do.\n\n\"So, I am not promoting Frankfurt as a financial centre, but of course I am willing to answer all questions and willing to entertain all meetings because it is only good for the stability of the financial system that there is as much transparency as possible and that all questions are being answered.\n\n\"It is just a service because so many banks are contacting us.\"", "The moment La La Land producer Jordan Horowitz realised Moonlight had actually won the best picture Oscar.", "Jose Mourinho won his first trophy as Manchester United manager, his side beating Southampton in a thrilling EFL Cup final.\n\nIn the Premier League, Chelsea maintained their surge to the title by beating Swansea, while Tottenham are looking to chase them down after thrashing Stoke.\n\nAt the bottom end, Crystal Palace picked up a priceless win over Middlesbrough to move out of the relegation zone, but bottom side Sunderland lost to Everton.\n\nDo you agree with my team of the week or would you go for a different team? Why not pick your very own team of the week from the shortlist selected by BBC Sport journalists and share it with your friends?\n\nPick your Team of the Week Pick your XI from our list and share with your friends.\n\nWhat a save from Tyrone Mings. The Bournemouth centre-half directed a sensational header towards the top corner of Ben Foster's net only for the England keeper to pull off a match-winning left-handed stop.\n\nBut how does Tony Pulis keep producing such effective teams? He always seems to leave clubs in better condition than when he arrived and currently West Brom are a pleasure to watch, which is something I can't say with all of Pulis' teams. The Baggies have 12 games left and need 10 points to achieve their best ever Premier League tally. With Foster in this form it looks like they have every chance.\n\nIt was a tremendous ball for Idrissa Gueye and Ross Barkley should have scored in the second half after another wonderful cross by Seamus Coleman. The Irishman is playing out of his skin at the moment and for my money is Everton's player of the season.\n\nAnd yet I can't understand for the life of me (and I apologise to Evertonians) how Manchester United or City haven't lured him away from Goodison Park. Coleman brings a dimension to Everton very few full-backs bring to a team. The problem for the opposition is that Coleman has been doing it for some considerable time. Coleman is an infectious player and it's a joy to watch him play.\n\nIt has been a long and somewhat distinguished career for Gareth McAuley and he couldn't have spent his 500th appearance in football better than this. West Brom's 2-1 win over Bournemouth had an element of good fortune about it. The Baggies' first goal was a deflection before McAuley was handed a celebratory gift by the Cherries' unpredictable keeper Artur Boruc.\n\nI have seen Boruc perform heroics for Bournemouth in the past and then he goes and does something that leaves you utterly puzzled. Not that McAuley wasn't grateful for the present - in fact he could have scored a second but for the intervention of the crossbar. Nevertheless, McAuley did grab his sixth league goal of the season, which is not bad for a centre-half who started his career at Linfield.\n\nI thought that referee Martin Atkinson made absolutely the right call in giving a penalty to Hull when Michael Keane was adjudged to have raised his arm above his head and gained an advantage. At that point the game looked to be running away from Burnley. It took something a bit special to get the Clarets back into the match - but who would have thought it would have been the very man responsible for putting them behind in the first place?\n\nKeane brought the ball down on his chest, allowed it to fall to the ground before dispatching the strike past the goalkeeper. You also have to bear in mind that all this happened in a crowded penalty area. Not only was it impressive it also was nothing less than Burnley deserved.\n\nI have seen Patrick van Aanholt in this mood before - looking mean and searching for goals. A useful attribute to have, particularly if you are a full-back, which is precisely why Sam Allardyce brought his former player at Sunderland to Selhurst Park.\n\nA poor signing can cripple a manager while the right one can save him. Premier League survival is by no means guaranteed for the Eagles and that is why it is imperative to have a player like Van Aanholt in your team who knows exactly what is required.\n\nAt the end of the fixture at Stamford Bridge I engaged in a debate over just how good N'Golo Kante actually was. One journalist suggested he was the best player he had ever seen without the ball at his feet, and another thought he was better than the only other Chelsea player with a similar reputation, Claude Makelele - now part of the Swansea backroom staff and arguably the best holding midfield player of his generation.\n\nI thought Kante's performance against the Swans was as effective as any he has produced this season. The 'silent force' continues to carry Chelsea through sticky periods when they carelessly lose the ball, only for the Frenchman to win it back with the minimum of fuss. To hear Swans manager Paul Clement say that Kante had a fantastic performance said it all really.\n\nThis was by no means a stellar performance from Chelsea but it was by Cesc Fabregas. Manager Antonio Conte left out Nemanja Matic against a most impressive Swansea for the one player in his squad who is a world-class passer of the ball. Fabregas may not have the running power of Matic but he can cut a defence to ribbons with a swing of his left foot.\n\nThe Spaniard could have had a hat-trick in this game but for some poor finishing, but it didn't matter in the end. Chelsea were comfortable winners after a couple of scary moments by Swansea - notably a stonewall penalty which referee Neil Swarbrick chose to ignore at a crucial time in the match. The Blues are now 10 points clear at the top of the table having played some unconvincing football recently but what they have shown is the sort of maturity and consistency some of their competitors have lacked.\n\nThis player is the nearest thing I've seen to N'Golo Kante. His ability to cover the ground is also remarkable. There are those of us who found running, unless it was absolutely necessary, tedious, but players like Gueye and Kante see it as their life support. They are the coach's dream, particularly if the coach has little to offer the team other than effort.\n\nNot so with Antonio Conte and especially Ronald Koeman. The Dutch insist that players in their country must know what to do with the ball when it arrives at their feet, and Gueye certainly does. What I like about Gueye is that when he wins the ball he almost without fail completes the pass, which makes winning the ball in the first place much more fun.\n\nAgainst Sunderland he scored his first goal for the Toffees with a delicious strike into the roof of the net. The problem with these defensive midfield players is that when they score one, rather like tasting Champagne for the first time, they tend to want another.\n\nTo see Spurs go three goals up after just 37 minutes at White Hart Lane, even against a non-existent Stoke City, was impressive, particularly after the no-show against Gent in the Europa League a few days earlier.\n\nIn a first half where everything Harry Kane touched seemed to turn to gold, the striker's best effort, struck with the inside of this right foot, screamed past the upright. Had he scored, it would have been my goal of the season.\n\nEqually, Stoke's first-half performance was so distressing I was beginning to wonder if their players had spent the entire week trawling the streets of the city campaigning in the Stoke central by-election. I can't recall seeing a more abject performance from a Premier League side. Woeful.\n\nNinety-two minutes into the game and he was still putting his body on the line for the team. His goals were brilliantly taken and he seems made for the big occasion. Zlatan Ibrahimovic was the difference in the EFL Cup final between Manchester United and Southampton who, by the way, were also fantastic.\n\nHowever, what this victory signified was that a manager is nothing without his star players and a benevolent chairman, a fact that will not be lost on Claudio Ranieri this week. Manchester United have seriously benefited from bringing Ibrahimovic to Old Trafford. He has almost single-handedly injected a presence into the United set-up that has not been seen since the departure of Roy Keane.\n\nNevertheless the reality is that Ibrahimovic is a football 'senior citizen' and cannot continue to punish himself like this indefinitely. At some stage Paul Pogba (who went AWOL again against the Saints) has to step up to the plate and start showing some true leadership, especially in the big games. Mourinho has no choice but to keep Ibrahimovic onside, at least until Pogba grows up.\n\nIt is not very often a footballer scores two goals in a cup final, one of which is worthy of winning the trophy, but leaves the arena with absolutely nothing. Well, that is the tale of Manolo Gabbiadini, who for me was sensational against Manchester United in the EFL Cup final.\n\nIn fact, Gabbiadini's evening started very badly. What should have been a perfectly good goal was disallowed by an overzealous referee's assistant. Nevertheless, everything about Gabbiadini's play was perfect. His touch and hold-up play were wonderful.\n\nYet it was his second goal that put Southampton level that did it for me. To turn on a sixpence, provide Chris Smalling no opportunity to intervene, and leave a world-class goalkeeper like David de Gea rooted to the spot to watch the ball roll agonisingly past was pure genius.\n\nI have sung the praises of Gabbiadini in my team of the week before but this performance was really of the highest quality. And a tragedy in some ways that he left with nothing to show for his exploits.", "The claim: The government is planning to cut £3.7bn in funding for disabled people.\n\nReality Check verdict: The government is not proposing a £3.7bn cut to disability benefits but it is trying to overturn a ruling that more people should be eligible. This will not affect the claims of current claimants.\n\nLast year, the government lost two cases in what is known as the Upper Tribunal - part of the courts system - about who should receive the Personal Independence Payment (PIP) and how much they should receive.\n\nThe PIP is for people who face additional costs because of a disability or long-term illness. It has two elements: the daily living component and the mobility component.\n\nPIP assessments are based on a system of points, which are awarded to claimants according to the seriousness of their conditions.\n\nThe number of points an applicant receives determines whether they are eligible for either element of PIP and, if so, whether at the standard or higher rate.\n\nThe tribunal's rulings covered the two elements.\n\nThe first found that some claimants who require assistance to take medication or monitor a health condition should receive more points than the assessments currently give.\n\nThe second found that claimants who suffer overwhelming psychological distress when taking journeys should receive more points.\n\nThe effect of the rulings would be to increase the number of eligible applicants and increase the number of people who qualify for the higher rates.\n\nThe Department for Work and Pensions estimates that the total cumulative cost of complying with the tribunal's decisions would be £3.7bn over the next four years.\n\nDisabilities minister Penny Mordaunt released a written statement on Thursday 23 February explaining that the government would seek to overturn the tribunal's decisions.\n\nThat can be done using a statutory instrument that amends the Welfare Reform Act 2012.\n\nLabour opposes the reform and will seek to block the statutory instrument in the House of Lords and the House of Commons.\n\nIf the government succeeds in getting the reform through, it will mean fewer people will receive PIPs in the future and fewer people will qualify for the higher rates. But it will not cut the awards of current claimants.\n• None Benefits should be for 'really disabled'\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "John Elliott is a big supporter of Brexit - the UK leaving the European Union\n\nMulti-millionaire businessman John Elliott leaves little doubt about his economic patriotism as his Jaguar car nears his factory in north-east England.\n\n\"Look at this area, it once produced the world's first locomotive steam engine, and now the Japanese, Hitachi, are producing our trains,\" he says dismissively as he drives.\n\nThe straight-talking 73-year-old is the founder and boss of manufacturing business Ebac.\n\nSet up in 1972 to make dehumidifiers, in the past year it has also started producing the first British designed and built washing machine for 40 years.\n\nEbac is based in the County Durham town of Newton Aycliffe, just a few miles from where Mr Elliott was born, and he has ensured that it will remain that way - in perpetuity.\n\nInstead of his two daughters inheriting the business and his £70m fortune when he dies, in 2012 he handed ownership of the company over to a trust, the Ebac Foundation.\n\n\"The trust means the company can never be sold,\" says Mr Elliott. \"I never felt it was mine to sell.\"\n\nUnder the trust arrangement, Ebac must maintain all work in Newton Aycliffe, and any surplus profits are used to help community groups, such as the local football club.\n\nMr Elliott has ensured that Ebac will always remain in Newton Aycliffe\n\nMr Elliott, who still leads the company, and is one of the foundation's four current trustees, says that his children, who both work for the business, are happy with the arrangement.\n\nHe adds that he was particularly determined to ensure that Ebac could never be moved abroad.\n\n\"We could make more money if we started to make our products in Poland,\" he says. \"But, personally, I would rather make a smaller profit and assist the UK economy than make a bigger profit and devalue the UK economy.\"\n\nWith more than 200 members of staff, Ebac is a sizable employer in an economically deprived area, but Mr Elliott's opinions about his workforce may raise some eyebrows.\n\n\"They are not very ambitious but they're not second-class citizens, and there are a lot of them in the UK,\" he says.\n\nMr Elliott says his employees are 'not here by force'\n\n\"They are reasonably well motivated, but they're at a low skill level.\"\n\nMr Elliott, who was against the introduction of the minimum wage because he views it as a brake on productivity, says it is wrong for generations of UK politicians to think that everyone should do well in school and get lots of qualifications.\n\n\"The wrong idea was that we should make everyone in Britain very, very clever so we wouldn't need to do any hard work,\" he says.\n\n\"[Instead], half the people in the UK - or thereabouts - want to work in factories like this,\" he says.\n\nThe business is making the first UK washing machine for 40 years\n\n\"It's their choice, they're not here by force. If they would rather do an unskilled or semi-skilled job at a lower rate of pay then that's their preference.\"\n\nHe adds that while the UK still has a manufacturing industry it can be proud of, he is disappointed that so much of it is now in foreign hands.\n\nMr Elliott himself left school at 15 with no qualifications. Looking back on this, he says: \"My biggest regret? Two wasted years - I should have left at 13.\"\n\nBorn and raised in a coal mining village near Bishop Auckland, County Durham, Mr Elliott and his two brothers were brought up by their mother and grandparents after his father died when he was six months old.\n\nAfter leaving school he became an electrical engineering apprentice, going on to work for a number of local companies.\n\nEbac is highlighting the fact the washing machines were made in the UK\n\nHis big break came in 1972 when he was 29, a client asked him to design an industrial humidifier and he set up his own company to make it. And thus Ebac [then known as Elliott Brothers Air Control] was born.\n\nEbac has grown over the years, and today also makes water coolers and air-conditioning systems. Its annual turnover is more than £15m, with profits exceeding £3m.\n\nA keen supporter of Brexit - the UK leaving the European Union - Mr Elliott says it is a massive opportunity for the country, which the UK should embrace.\n\n\"Currently we sell to France and we sell to the US,\" he says. \"The US has tariffs and that's an inconvenience, but it's not a deal breaker.\n\n\"The way you sell stuff is to come up with things people want to buy.\n\nMr Elliott hopes to ramp up production of the washing machines\n\n\"People imagine the UK won't be able to sell anything anymore to Europe. No, no, no. The rest of the world trades with Europe, you just have to deal with tariffs.\"\n\nEmma Roberts, head of industrial strategy at the CBI business lobby group, says it is pleasing that Ebac is focusing on \"making a success of Brexit\".\n\nWhile Ebac's washing machines are currently only available at just 20 outlets in north-east England, Mr Elliott has plans to increase production.\n\nHe says that its £10m washing machine assembly line could produce more than 250,000 made in the UK washing machines per year.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Iranian-born US engineer and astronaut Anousheh Ansari read out Farhadi's statement\n\nIranian director Asghar Farhadi has condemned President Donald Trump's \"inhumane\" travel ban on immigrants, as his movie, The Salesman, won the best foreign language film Oscar.\n\nFarhadi boycotted the ceremony, with two Iranian-Americans representing him.\n\n\"Dividing the world into the US and 'our enemies' categories creates fear,\" his acceptance statement read.\n\nUS courts have blocked the travel ban but the Trump administration is preparing a new executive order.\n\nThe original ban temporarily prohibited the entry of immigrants from seven Muslim-majority countries.\n\nOne of those chosen by Farhadi to represent him, Iranian-born US engineer and astronaut Anousheh Ansari, read out his acceptance statement.\n\nThe statement read: \"My absence is out of respect for the people of my country and those of the other six nations who have been disrespected by the inhumane law that bans entry of immigrants to the US.\n\nThe Salesman was shown on a screen in London's Trafalgar Square on Sunday\n\n\"Dividing the world into the US and 'our enemies' categories creates fear. A deceitful justification for aggression and war.\n\n\"Filmmakers can turn their cameras to capture shared human qualities and break stereotypes of various nationalities and religions. They create empathy between us and others. An empathy which we need today more than ever.\"\n\nThe Salesman tells the story of a married couple who are appearing in a local production of Arthur Miller's play Death of a Salesman and whose lives are thrown into turmoil after the wife is attacked while alone at home, sparking the husband to seek revenge.\n\nAsghar Farhadi sent a recorded message to those watching the London screening\n\nAll six directors nominated in the best foreign language film category had signed a statement before the ceremony condemning a \"climate of fascism\" in the US.\n\nFarhadi, whose movie A Separation won the same category in 2012, had organised a free screening of The Salesman in London's Trafalgar Square on Sunday.\n\nLondon Mayor Sadiq Khan told the crowds: \"President Trump cannot silence me. We stand in solidarity with Asghar Farhadi, one of the world's greatest directors.\"\n\nIn a recorded message, Farhadi said: \"Despite our different religions, cultures and nationalities, we are all citizens of the world.\"\n\nDonald Trump's original executive order, signed on 27 January, said that all travellers with the nationality of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen were not permitted to enter the US for 90 days, or be issued an immigrant or non-immigrant visa.\n\nMr Trump said the order was not about religion, adding: \"This is about terror and keeping our country safe.\"\n\nThe order was suspended after the Washington State attorney general argued it violated a clause in the US constitution. Subsequent rulings have rejected reinstating the order.\n\nThe Syrian cinematographer of The White Helmets, a Netflix film that won the best short documentary Oscar, was unable to attend the ceremony because he was denied entry to the US by immigration authorities.\n\nKhaled Khateeb, who shot much of the footage of the volunteer search and rescue workers risking their lives in Syria's civil war, was prevented from flying to Los Angeles from Istanbul on Saturday.\n\nJoanna Natasegara and Orlando von Einsiedel urged the audience to applaud the White Helmets\n\nThe Associated Press reported that US officials had found \"derogatory information\" - a category that could include anything from terrorist connections to passport irregularities.\n\nDirector Orlando von Einsiedel and producer Joanna Natasegara read out a statement by Khateeb after accepting the award on Sunday night.\n\n\"We're so grateful that this film has highlighted our work to the world,\" Khateeb wrote.\n\n\"I invite anyone here who hears me to work on the side of life, to stop the bloodshed in Syria and around the world,\" he added.\n\nThe audience then gave a standing ovation as von Einsiedel made his own appeal.\n\n\"It is very easy for these guys to feel they are forgotten,\" he said. \"This war has been going on for six years. If everyone could just stand up and remind them that we all care that this war ends as quickly as possible.\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLeicester produced a superb display in their first game following the sacking of Claudio Ranieri, moving out of the Premier League bottom three as two goals from Jamie Vardy and a Danny Drinkwater strike saw off Liverpool.\n\nIt was a much-improved display from the Foxes under caretaker boss Craig Shakespeare, who took over after the departure of the man who led them to last season's remarkable title triumph.\n\nThe first strike was straight from the 2015-16 playbook as Vardy collected Marc Albrighton's precise long pass before racing clear and finishing low past Simon Mignolet to score his second goal in a week.\n\nThe second was an absolute cracker from Vardy's England team-mate Drinkwater, who showed superb technique to lash home his first goal of the campaign from outside the box following a clearance from a long throw.\n\nAnd Vardy sealed the win with a glancing header from Christian Fuchs' cross in the second half before Philippe Coutinho stroked home a consolation goal.\n\nThe goals were the first the Foxes have scored in the league in 2017 and ended a run of five straight top-flight defeats in spectacular fashion.\n\nLiverpool - who would have climbed to third with a victory - have now lost five of their past seven matches in all competitions.\n\nRanieri's name was everywhere at the King Power - in pre-game conversations, on banners and in chants - as was his face, courtesy of paper masks worn by some Foxes supporters.\n\nThe 65-year-old Italian has left an indelible imprint on the club with last season's astonishing success.\n\nHowever, the inconvenient truth for many is that he was overseeing statistically one of the worst title defences in English top-flight history - one that has left Leicester facing the prospect of become the first reigning champions to be relegated since Manchester City in 1938.\n\nAmid suggestions the players had stopped playing for their former boss, there was an element of damned if you do win and damned if you don't in this game.\n\nHowever, the need for victory was paramount and they were excellent from start to finish as Shakespeare drew a committed, energetic and ruthless display to improve his chances of steering the club to safety - and possibly succeeding Ranieri on a permanent basis.\n\nThe champions also have players in form. Vardy now has three goals in two games and Kasper Schmeichel remains an authoritative presence in goal, as he demonstrated with two big saves to deny Coutinho and Emre Can in the first half and Adam Lallana after the break.\n\nWhile Leicester have embarked on a demanding February comprising five matches, Liverpool have taken to the field just twice this month and came into this game off the back of a 16-day break, during which they took a training trip to La Manga in Spain.\n\nBut instead of looking refreshed, the Reds looked rusty throughout and were simply unable to make an impression on a night when they were always likely to be second on the bill.\n\nJust over 12 months ago, Jurgen Klopp's side were undone on this ground as a Vardy-inspired Leicester consigned them to a defeat that left them 16 points off top spot in eighth.\n\nThey are now 14 points behind leaders Chelsea in fifth but look as far away from challenging for the title as they did in 2016.\n\nGoalscorer Coutinho was their only consistent attacking threat, while the defence continues to look shaky - especially with Lucas masquerading at centre-back - and their midfield lacked the industry and bite to compete in the absence of injured captain Jordan Henderson.\n\nThey now have a real challenge on their hands if they are to finish in the top four and seal a return to the Champions League next season.\n\nWhat the managers said\n\nLeicester caretaker manager Craig Shakespeare : \"I could see in their eyes that they were up for the fight in the warm-up.\n\n\"The professionalism of the players has never been questioned by me. Having taken training with them, I know the the criticism has hurt and perhaps there was a little more fire in the belly because of that.\n\n\"They know they are guilty of underperforming - but this is only one result and we must build on that.\"\n\nLiverpool manager Jurgen Klopp: \"The language issues become a bit harder when you lose. It's hard to find the right words.\n\n\"It's not that Leicester were over-aggressive tonight, I think we were not physical enough.\n\n\"We knew how Leicester would play, go back to their roots. We could have done much better. We let them be Leicester of last year - that's our fault.\n\n\"We should get criticised. This inconsistency makes absolutely no sense.\"\n\nNdidi does Kante impression - the stats you need to know\n• None Leicester have won all six of their Premier League games in which they have scored first this season, the only 100% record in the division.\n• None Four of Liverpool's five Premier League defeats this season have been against clubs who started the match in the relegation zone (also Burnley, Swansea and Hull City).\n• None Vardy's goal was Leicester's first in the top flight since 31 December, ending a run of 637 minutes without finding the net in the competition.\n• None Coutinho's strike was his first in 12 games for Liverpool - he last scored against Watford in November.\n• None Wilfred Ndidi made 11 tackles on Monday. Only former Leicester midfielder N'Golo Kante - now at Chelsea - has made more in a Premier League match this season (14 against Liverpool in January).\n• None Only in 2012, when they picked up five points, have Liverpool won fewer points from their opening seven Premier League games of a calendar year than the six they have so far in 2017 (level with 1993).\n\nLeicester host another relegation-threatened side on Saturday when Hull visit the King Power Stadium (15:00 GMT kick-off), followed by the second leg of their Champions League last-16 tie with Sevilla at 19:45 on 14 March.\n\nLiverpool host Arsenal in Saturday's 17:30 kick-off and follow that up with another home game the following Sunday when Burnley travel to Anfield (16:00).\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Attempt missed. Christian Fuchs (Leicester City) left footed shot from more than 40 yards on the left wing is just a bit too high from a direct free kick.\n• None Attempt saved. Philippe Coutinho (Liverpool) right footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Nathaniel Clyne with a cross.\n• None Attempt blocked. Nathaniel Clyne (Liverpool) right footed shot from the right side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Roberto Firmino.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Jamie Vardy (Leicester City) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt missed. Lucas Leiva (Liverpool) header from the centre of the box misses to the right. Assisted by Nathaniel Clyne with a cross following a corner.\n• None Attempt missed. Daniel Drinkwater (Leicester City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is just a bit too high. Assisted by Riyad Mahrez. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Trevante Rhodes, Alex R Hibbert and Ashton Sanders share the lead role in Moonlight\n\nYou might have missed it amid all the hubbub, but a film about a gay black man just won the best picture Oscar.\n\nNot only that, but one of Moonlight's stars - Mahershala Ali - became the first Muslim actor to win an Academy Award.\n\nAnd best supporting actress Viola Davis, star of Fences, made history as the first black woman to win an Oscar, an Emmy and a Tony for acting.\n\nDiversity. It's a word that gets bandied around so much, and so often, it runs the risk of becoming meaningless.\n\nIt's worth remembering, though, that only 12 months ago the #OscarsSoWhite controversy was all Hollywood was talking about.\n\nTwo years of all-white line-ups in the four acting categories stung the Academy into taking concerted measures to broaden its membership's make-up.\n\nViewed in that light, this year's list of award winners makes for much more encouraging reading.\n\nYet it wasn't just the winners who reflected the \"identity rainbow\" Jodie Foster spoke about at a pre-Oscars rally.\n\nAuli'i Cravalho performed How Far I'll Go, from Disney animation Moana\n\nFrom Loving's Ruth Negga to Moonlight's Naomie Harris to Lion's Dev Patel, the losers were a pretty diverse bunch too.\n\nAuli'i Cravalho, an actress of Chinese, Irish, Native Hawaiian, Portuguese and Puerto Rican descent, sang a song on stage.\n\nAnd Lion's Sunny Pawar, an eight-year-old boy who was born and raised in a Mumbai slum, got lifted aloft by Jimmy Kimmel, the ceremony's host.\n\nMillions around the world were watching last night. President Trump, however, is not thought to be among them.\n\nYet that didn't spare him a ribbing from Kimmel, or from being taken to task both obliquely and directly.\n\nAsghar Farhadi, the Iranian director of best foreign film The Salesman, stayed away in protest at the Trump administration's travel ban on immigrants.\n\nIn his absence, a speech was read out that castigated the \"inhumane\" legislation for disrespecting his homeland and the six other countries it targeted.\n\nThere were many moments to cherish at this year's Oscars - some humorous, some moving and some downright calamitous.\n\nYet perhaps the most telling came when the stars of Hidden Figures arrived to announce the winner for best documentary feature.\n\nWith them came Katherine Johnson, the 98-year-old African-American woman who was one of the real-life inspirations behind the space race drama.\n\nCould a woman born in 1918, who has lived through Jim Crow, segregation and the fight for civil rights, have ever dreamed of a day when her presence at the Oscars would generate a spontaneous standing ovation?\n\nLa La Land may have won the most awards at this year's ceremony, but diversity was surely the biggest winner of all on Hollywood's glitziest night.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "It takes one to know one.\n\nTrue, Sir John Major is not the only former Tory leader familiar with being pressured, perhaps held hostage by the Eurosceptics in his party. Or indeed, the only Conservative leader ever to have been challenged by his party's preponderance to \"bang on\" (to use David Cameron's phrase) about Europe.\n\nBut arguably his experiences as the leader during bruising encounters with the \"bastards\" mean his words of warning might hold some value for the current prime minister.\n\nFor Theresa May, also an unflashy leader who was propelled to No 10 by a surprising political moment, Europe will be defining in a way no others could even have anticipated.\n\nIn Sir John's carefully calibrated speech tonight, there are plenty of messages for her, some of which may be welcome, some not.\n\nFirst off, having campaigned to stay in the European Union, with sober warnings particularly about the consequences for the Northern Irish peace process, it's no surprise that Sir John says that in his view, Brexit will be a \"historic mistake\".\n\nIt is notable, although again not surprising, that he cautions that the UK will be a diminished diplomatic force in the world after we walk away from the EU, with a warning too that we will be less useful to our most important ally the US as a consequence.\n\nAlso, even as the PM who lived through the Commons trauma of trying to deliver the Maastricht Treaty, it is logical that he calls for Parliament to have a full role in shaping the negotiations over our place in Europe.\n\nWhat may be harder for No 10 to dismiss is Sir John's obvious political concerns about how the public are being treated in the months after the referendum decision.\n\nDespite insisting he has no desire to be in politics now, he makes very pointed criticism of the atmosphere around the debate, warning that voters are essentially being misled saying: \"People have been led to expect a future that seems to be unreal and over-optimistic.\n\n\"Obstacles are brushed aside as of no consequence, whilst opportunities are inflated beyond any reasonable expectation of delivery.\"\n\nIn his first public comments since the vote, the former prime minister is offering what he describes as a \"reality check\".\n\nAnd he sounds alarm bells too about the tone of the debate, saying Brexit's \"cheerleaders\" have shown \"contempt\" to Remainers, shouting down dissent \"against our traditions of tolerance\".\n\nWhile he is not seeking to be unhelpful to the government, Sir John plainly has doubts about Number 10's handling of the process so far - the \"rosy confidence\" being offered to the British people.\n\nAnd in the depths of his speech there is another warning for Theresa May about the Tory MPs she has worked so hard to keep on side - \"today they may be allies of the prime minister, the risk is that tomorrow they may not\".\n\nMight Theresa May face her own \"bastards\" one day?\n\nIn recent weeks, with Theresa May determined to keep the Tory party together, and Labour struggling to stay united, the momentum has most certainly been with those celebrating our journey toward the exit door.\n\nMinisters, even those who were ardent Remainers, privately sound increasingly optimistic about the prospects of doing a deal. But Sir John Major is not alone in having fundamental concerns. And his voice is harder for the government to dismiss, as they did Tony Blair a couple of weeks ago.\n\nOne senior figure even told me some of the talks behind closed doors have been a shambles, and raised concern that the government, all of us, are a long way from understanding the full implications of the decision.\n\nYet with almost the only political pressure on her coming from the right, Theresa May has decided to emphasise the opportunity, not the risks. The government is well aware that things could go wrong, but one minister told me \"we all have to discover the reality together, when the rubber hits the road\".", "Jose Mourinho was back doing what he does best at Wembley on Sunday - lifting silverware, as Manchester United beat Southampton in the EFL Cup final.\n\nMourinho claimed the season's first major trophy and ensured success just months after his appointment despite a largely disappointing United performance which was rescued by two-goal inspiration Zlatan Ibrahimovic.\n\nThe 35-year-old Swede and Mourinho - instrumental in bringing him to Old Trafford after the pair forged a bond at Inter Milan - are now the two central figures leading United forward.\n\nCan Mourinho and Ibrahimovic make Man Utd great again?\n\nMourinho was brought into Old Trafford as the manager who is as close to a guarantee of success and trophies as it gets after a silverware-lined career at Porto, Chelsea, Inter Milan and Real Madrid.\n\nOld Trafford's joyless existence under Louis van Gaal demanded change and Mourinho was the identikit of the sort of manager required at the 'Theatre of Dreams' - a personality who would relish its history and surroundings rather than shrink from it.\n\nMourinho was also available and had a third Premier League triumph on his CV only 12 months earlier at Chelsea. It meant United were prepared to set to one side his track record for short-term stays in exchange for a quick fix.\n\nUnited were thoroughly unconvincing at Wembley, but Mourinho and his teams invariably find a way to win trophies. And so it proved as Ibrahimovic headed home an 87th-minute winner.\n\nMourinho's move to bring the Swede in on a free transfer from Paris St-Germain was strategic and wise. He is a personality of equal stature and confidence, had a point to prove having never played in England and could provide the sort of charisma that had echoes of the great Eric Cantona.\n\nHow United needed Ibrahimovic on Sunday because for long periods they were desperately average, outplayed by Southampton and had their hand held by Lady Luck throughout.\n\nIf United are to build on this first trophy of the Mourinho era, Ibrahimovic's continued presence is essential because the EFL Cup final win is only the first building block in an edifice that requires considerable renovation after the dismal post-Sir Alex Ferguson years of David Moyes and Van Gaal.\n\nMourinho, however, is safe hands when it comes to winning trophies and United remain in serious contention for two more in the Europa League and FA Cup. This is a good start, but the success-hungry Portuguese will want more.\n\nUnited's lean years simply could not continue with Pep Guardiola arriving at Manchester City, Jurgen Klopp settling at Liverpool and Antonio Conte conducting a brilliant transformation of Mourinho's former charges Chelsea.\n\nMourinho won the Premier League twice, as well as the FA Cup and two League Cups, in his first spell at Chelsea. He won 124 games out of 185 in that period, a win ratio of 67%.\n\nHe won 80 out of 136 (59%) in his second stint at Stamford Bridge - winning the title again and the League Cup - while he has won 28 of 43 at United at an impressive 65%.\n\nThe statistics add up to exactly what is required at Old Trafford.\n\nHe will chase the Champions League prize either through the Premier League or the Europa League because this is vital to his future plans.\n\nIn the meantime, Ibrahimovic once again proved himself indispensable. He was the difference here. He made the decisive contribution to clinch a game United did not deserve to win.\n\nHe is head and shoulders - quite literally - above every other player at United. He has scored 26 goals this season, with Juan Mata next with nine. He has had 143 shots compared to Paul Pogba's 117, and 65 shots on target compared to Pogba's 39.\n\nUnited are a long way from their former greatness - but this EFL Cup final proved conclusively that if they are going to get anywhere near that status again, Ibrahimovic is the man who is integral to Mourinho's plans, even at 35.\n• None Quotes: We want Ibrahimovic to stay - Mourinho\n\nUnited winning a Wembley final equates to tangible success - but successful seasons are measured in different currency in the modern era and Mourinho will need more than this to achieve full satisfaction.\n\nVan Gaal, who led United to FA Cup success in May, was on his way out almost as soon as he placed the trophy on the same table Mourinho sat at on Sunday.\n\nIf winning the FA Cup was not enough to satisfy United's desires for success under Van Gaal then it would take a re-drawing of the boundaries to now paint the EFL Cup as fulfilling their ambitions.\n\nThere is a key difference in mood here - whereas Van Gaal's Wembley win felt like the end of a story, this victory, for all its good fortune, had the sense of new start.\n\nMourinho must now make this season feel like the full package of progress by leading United back into the Champions League, which is surely the minimum requirement after the world record transfer expenditure of £89m on Pogba and the Ibrahimovic coup.\n\nAnd United still have an excellent chance of ensuring this season can be viewed as a success as they stand among the favourites for the Europa League, which offers a Champions League place to its winners.\n\nMourinho has already painted the last-16 meeting with Russians FC Rostov as a tough tie but he also has the chance to reach the top four in the Premier League, with United only two points behind Arsenal.\n\nUnited have a potentially hazardous FA Cup quarter-final tie at Premier League leaders Chelsea to negotiate, but this is a season still moving on three fronts after securing that first major trophy.\n\nThe new reality is, though, that while the EFL Cup provides a trophy and satisfaction, United's season will only be a success if they conclude it back in Europe's elite competition.\n\nWhat now for Wayne Rooney?\n\nWayne Rooney lifted the EFL Cup and demonstrated he is the consummate team player with his wild celebration of Ibrahimovic's winner - but this was still a player on the outside looking in.\n\nThe 31-year-old, who this week confirmed he was staying at United despite speculation linking him with a move to China, was denied a piece of the action by the match-winning contribution of the elder statesman who has usurped him as the team's spiritual leader.\n\nRooney was stripped and ready for action. With the words of Mourinho ringing in his ears and assistant manager Rui Faria showing him the diagrams United hoped would lead to a defining contribution, Ibrahimovic struck.\n\nThe United and England captain was sent back to the bench with no chance to add to his 250 goals for the club as Marouane Fellaini was called in for a late lockdown. It was a symbolic moment.\n\nUnited's captain for the day, Chris Smalling, let the club's all-time record goalscorer Rooney lift the trophy and it is to his credit that there was no sense of personal denial or disappointment that he was left out then denied even the smallest part.\n\nRooney was delighted for his team-mates, which is a mark of his approach.\n\nDespite this, there was no escaping the belief the guard has changed at Old Trafford. Rooney is no longer the main man - he is now well down the ranks and this was simply another piece of evidence of his declining influence and the credits rolling on a magnificent career at United.\n\nMourinho's downbeat demeanour was a talking point throughout the EFL Cup final as he cut an unsmiling, subdued figure who barely showed any emotion even when United scored.\n\nHe insisted afterwards he was delighted: \"I am very happy. It is important for the fans, for the club and for the players. I always try to put myself in the secondary position but the reality is it is also important for me.\"\n\nUnited's performance was not designed to lighten Mourinho's mood until the moment of victory and it is likely his behaviour was shaped by concerns about how Southampton dominated his side for long periods and troubled his defence - normally his tactical strong point - throughout.\n\nVictory will, however, lighten his mood, bolster his already high standing with United's fans and release any personal pressure he may have been feeling.", "Best actress nominee Ruth Negga wearing a blue ribbon on the red carpet in Los Angeles.\n\nFor celebrities and film-makers protesting against recent American political decisions, what bigger stage is there than an awards ceremony watched by millions around the world?\n\nActors and directors used the red carpet at the Oscars in Los Angeles to broadcast their views on President Trump's temporary travel ban on immigrants from seven Muslim majority countries, issued in January.\n\nUS courts have blocked the ban but the Trump administration is preparing a new executive order.\n\nSome stars pinned their politics to their (presumably quite expensive) sleeves and dresses.\n\nWriter and director Barry Jenkins wearing a blue ribbon as he accepts the award for best picture for Moonlight alongside actors Jaden Piner (centre) and Alex R Hibbert (right).\n\nBlue ribbons with the initials ACLU were seen adorning the outfits of several Oscar nominees.\n\nACLU stands for American Civil Liberties Union - the civil rights organisation that was the first to successfully challenge President Trump's travel ban in a lawsuit brought to a federal court in New York in January.\n\nShe was nominated for best actress for playing Mildred Loving in the film Loving which explored the effects of Jim Crow - the legislation that enforced racial segregation in the United States until 1965 - on a mixed-race couple in 1950s Virginia.\n\nMildred Loving's marriage in 1958 to white construction worker Richard violated legal prohibitions of mixed-race marriage in the US state.\n\nAfter being arrested and serving time in prison, Mildred secured the legal representation of an ACLU lawyer and their case eventually led to the Supreme Court ruling in 1967 that the prohibition of interracial marriage was unconstitutional.\n\nAward-winning (eventually) Moonlight writer and director Barry Jenkins also wore the ribbon, as did model Karlie Kloss and actor Lin-Manuel Miranda.\n\nThe ACLU said it was surprised that it had spawned an Oscar fashion trend.\n\nDirector Ava DuVernay took her sartorial protest to the next level by wearing a dress to celebrate the creativity of one Muslim majority country - Lebanon.\n\nShe wore an embroidered gown made by Beirut-based fashion house Ashi Studio in what she said was \"a small sign of solidarity\".\n\nDuVernay directed the critically-acclaimed film Selma, which was the subject of another Oscars controversy in 2015 when the academy was criticised for failing to nominate DuVernay and the black lead actor David Oyelowo.\n\nAva DuVernay tweeted that she wore dress made by Ashi Studio in Lebanon.\n\nOther stars protested with their feet.\n\nOne Iranian director condemned the travel ban as \"inhumane\" after he boycotted the ceremony altogether.\n\nAsghar Farhadi, who won the award for best foreign film for a second time, sent two Iranian-American representatives to pick up his award for film The Salesmen.\n\nThey were not just any representatives - one was female Nasa scientist and Mars explorer Anousheh Ansari who read his acceptance speech.\n\nHis statement read: \"My absence is out of respect for the people of my country and those of the other six nations who have been disrespected by the inhumane law that bans entry of immigrants to the US.\"\n\nIranian-born US engineer and astronaut Anousheh Ansari read out Farhadi's statement\n\nA Syrian cinematographer behind the Oscar-winning documentary White Helmets was blocked from attending the ceremony at the last minute.\n\nTwenty one-year-old Khaled Khatib, who filmed much of the footage in the documentary that follows the lives of civilian rescue workers called the White Helmets in Syria, had obtained a visa to enter the US but was prevented at Istanbul airport from travelling.\n\nHe still followed the Oscars though. As the ceremony unfolded, Khatib tweeted a picture of a child he said was the victim of a chlorine gas attack by Syrian government forces in a rebel-held part of the Damascus suburb of Harasta on Sunday.\n\nState media reported that \"terrorist groups\" had targeted residential areas of Harasta with a number of rockets, injuring 10 people, but did not mention a chemical attack.\n\nTrump's executive order was not the only immigration policy which sparked protests.\n\nMexican actor Gael Garcia Bernal, who last year appeared in American comedy show Stephen Colbert as a Hispanic man who supported the wall, spoke out against the President's plan for a border wall between the US and Mexico.\n\n\"As a Mexican, as a Latin American, as a migrant worker, as a human being, I'm against any form of wall that separates us,\" stated Bernal as he was presenting the award for best animated feature film.", "Caretaker boss Craig Shakespeare is firmly in contention for the Leicester manager's job on a longer-term basis following Claudio Ranieri's sacking.\n\nShakespeare was Ranieri's assistant and is popular with the club's players.\n\nThe 3-1 win over Liverpool on Monday boosted his chances of being given the job until at least the end of the term.\n\nAfter the win he said: \"Could I do the job? I think I can. Does it faze me? No. We have to make sure the owners do what's right for the football club.\"\n\nNo timescale has yet been set for the appointment, but if Shakespeare remains in charge for Saturday's home match against Hull City in the Premier League - a vital game for both clubs - a return of at least four points out of six and improved performances would count in his favour.\n\n\"My remit was get them ready for Liverpool and I have done that,\" Shakespeare said.\n\n\"Let's see what happens. I think it might be too early to make an appointment but the club will come to me if there are any changes.\"\n\nShakespeare represents continuity, having been at the side of previous managers Nigel Pearson and Ranieri.\n\nAnd, with just 12 games left this season, other candidates with higher profiles may not feel they have enough time left to arrest the slide.\n\nShakespeare gets on well with the players and is a highly regarded coach.\n\nFormer England coach Sam Allardyce thought enough of him to bring him into his coaching set-up with the national team, despite never having worked with him.\n\nThe Leicester hierarchy felt Shakespeare handled himself well in a difficult situation when he met the media after Ranieri's departure, showing just the right amount of steely ambition when asked if he would like the job full-time while dealing diplomatically with some tough questions.\n\nHe was also smart enough to avoid publicly shaming the players - knowing he has to work with them for at least a few more days.\n\nWhat about the other candidates?\n\nFormer Chelsea interim manager Guus Hiddink has massive experience and would command immediate respect from the Leicester players. Money would be no object in securing Hiddink, but it is arguable whether he would want the job after working at, or near, the top of the Premier League.\n\nAlthough Pearson would be a popular replacement with many senior players who worked with him until the summer of 2015, I understand it is unlikely after the circumstances that led to his departure.\n\nFormer Manchester City and Inter Milan boss Roberto Mancini, meanwhile, is seen as a potentially divisive influence, at a time when a strong team spirit is vital.\n\nWho will make the decision?\n\nA panel of three - chief executive Susan Whelan, director of football John Rudkin, and football operations director Andrew Neville - will sift through the candidates, but the decision rests with the owner and chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha.\n\nRudkin is close to the chairman, who relies on his football knowledge, but there is no doubt who will be in charge of the appointment.\n\nFundamentally, it is all down to the chairman - and having surprised so many when appointing Ranieri, and been vindicated, he will back his judgement after taking the necessary soundings.", "And so another typically one-sided England v Italy match, a 23rd win for white over blue in 23 matches, as predictable a contest as there is in international sport.\n\nOr maybe not. The scoreboard at the end might have looked familiar, and so too the championship standings: England winners 36-15, back on top of the Six Nations table, Italy with a third defeat in three, Wooden Spoon being readied once again.\n\nVery little else was, once Italy had released their version of chaos theory upon the world.\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\nIt was a simple idea. Do not commit anyone to the breakdown after the initial tackle. No ruck is therefore formed. The offside law is thus irrelevant, and you can stand anywhere you like - between opposition scrum-half and fly-half, between 10 and 12, maybe on both sides of the scrum-half while pulling faces, if you fancy it.\n\nSimple, and not actually that novel. The Chiefs have done it in Super Rugby. It can happen in Sevens. Australia captain David Pocock tried something similar against Ireland last autumn, and nearly created a try from it.\n\nEngland, however, were as ready for it as Don Bradman was for Bodyline, or Scott Styris in 2008 when Kevin Pietersen swapped hands on his bat handle and switch-hit him for six.\n\nOn the pitch they were first confused, then angry, and for a long period then neutered. In the stands it was more demonstrative yet. There are few sights in rugby as striking as Twickenham Man in full red-cheeked fury, and on Sunday his fury was both righteous and often misplaced.\n\nItaly were not acting illegally. Coach Conor O'Shea had run the tactic past referee Romain Poite on Saturday, and not only been given the all-clear but a little bit of advice too: to be within the spirit of the laws as well as the wording, do not get within a metre of the nine.\n\nChaos is the science of surprises. England were surprised. Perhaps that was why O'Shea's opposite number Eddie Jones was still shaking afterwards.\n\n\"If you paid for a ticket you should ask for your money back,\" he said, eyes glinting, mouth spitting fire. \"You haven't seen a game of rugby.\n\n\"If that's rugby then I'm going to retire. That's not rugby. You're looking to pass and all you can see is one of their players.\n\n\"I'm not critical of our side a bit because we didn't play rugby. We practised for a game of rugby all week and we didn't get it.\"\n\nJones compared it to cricketer Trevor Chappell's infamous underarm ball to New Zealand's Brian McKechnie in 1981 that won a one-day international match for Australia but cost them much more.\n\nIf that was inaccurate, not only because Chappell's gambit had not been discussed with the umpire but also because O'Shea's strategy ultimately ended in defeat, it was also a little sleight-of-hand of Jones' own.\n\nEngland had an awful first half, their kicking from hand inaccurate, their discipline poor, their energy levels on a par with those who had enjoyed a full Sunday roast before watching from their sofas.\n\nCentre Owen Farrell, on the occasion of his 50th cap, had arguably his least impressive game for his country. Nine penalties were conceded in the first 40 minutes alone. Had Italy kicked their penalties, the half-time deficit for the hosts could have been much worse than 10-5.\n\nChaos, the science of surprises. Shouldn't England have prepared for it happening, Jones was asked in his news conference?\n\n\"Prepared not to play rugby? Yeah, you're right. I should have prepared to play ten-pin bowling.\n\n\"When the nine can't pass the ball and the 10 can't see it, you can't play rugby. They brilliantly executed that game, and they got what they wanted, which was a close loss.\n\n\"I don't want to be involved in a game like that. I'd rather pick up my stumps, put them in my kit-bag and go home.\"\n\nOthers remembered his defence coach Paul Gustard being asked about Pocock's move against Ireland before England faced the Wallabies a week later. His response: \"We are aware of it, we saw it, and we will have a plan in place.\"\n\nEngland did not have a plan for the first 40 minutes. When they did find a solution - exploit that lack of defensive cover by sending your scrum-half sniping, by sending runners up that unguarded middle - they took a hold of the game.\n\nInternational sport is about being tested. It is about being tested, and it is about coming up with the answers.\n\nItaly have gone for chaos before, when Nick Mallett picked flanker Mauro Bergamasco at scrum-half for the corresponding fixture in 2009. Chaos was what ensued, although not of the sort Mallett had hoped for.\n\nThis time the idea came from defence coach Brendan Venter, the same maverick thinker who came up with the plan to drop-goal England out of their World Cup quarter-final against his native Springboks in 1999.\n\n\"We're not inventing anything,\" said O'Shea afterwards, visibly angry at Jones' response. \"It's a tackle. If it's a tackle, there's no offside there. We just occupied space.\n\n\"If that is people's take after today, that is a very sad take. Just because we took people by surprise. What do you want, us to be normal? We can't be normal. We're Italy.\n\n\"Rugby is there to do things different, and challenge people's minds. And that's what we did today - we challenged people's minds.\"\n\nInnovation to one, an insult to the other. If the contest on the pitch had been as relentlessly combative as the news conferences afterwards, no-one would have dared go to the bars to get in the mid-match pints, as plenty were doing during England's somnolent first half.\n\n\"[Jones] wanted 70. He wanted to 'take us to the cleaners,'\" said O'Shea, referencing Jones' comments in advance of the game.\n\n\"Is that respect? I was delighted when they kicked to the posts. If you think we're going to lie down, you're wrong.\n\n\"I loved it. I loved it today. We had to give hope to people, that we weren't just here to make up the numbers. Today you could say, we had enough. We're going to fight.\"", "\"Are you ready for honesty? Get constructive criticism from friends and colleagues, in total anonymity.\"\n\nThat's the promise of a new messaging service that has exploded in popularity across the Arab world.\n\nSarahah is named after the Arabic word for \"honesty\" and allows users to send and receive messages anonymously from people in their social networks.\n\nIt was created by a Saudi programmer, Zain al-Abidin Tawfiq, who says the site has garnered more than 270 million views and 20 million users in just a few weeks. Internet stats firm Alexa says the site is already one of the most popular in Egypt. It has nearly 2.5 million Egyptian users, according to Al Jazeera, along with 1.7 million in Tunisia, 1.2 million in Saudi Arabia, and sizeable followings in Syria and Kuwait.\n\nThe popularity of the site, which launched in early February, has spilled over to less anonymous social networks, where users shared screenshots from the messages they received on Sarahah. The messages include confessions of romantic attraction, scathing remarks on people's personalities, and declarations of homosexuality.\n\nUsers across the Arab world have been confessing their secrets using Sarahah\n\nThere has also been an active online debate about the site.\n\nOne Twitter user, Omar Ashraf, put the appeal of Sarahah down to hypocrisy: \"We have to hide behind anonymity to be honest with each other,\" he tweeted.\n\nBut another tweeter, Joseph Alfred, was touched by the notes being swapped: \"I wish people who have sent sincere messages could make themselves known, so we could recognise their value in our lives.\"\n\nTawfiq, the developer, said that he had the business market in mind when he first created the website. He noticed that company employees had difficulty giving their bosses feedback.\n\n\"There are several obstacles [to open discussion] such as differences in age or rank, so in some cases anonymity makes presenting criticism more comfortable,\" he told Al Jazeera.\n\nTawfiq said that though he \"did not at all\" expect the website to become so popular so quickly, he was happy with how things have turned out so far.\n\nRussia's foreign ministry has launched a website to debunk fake news, but some social media users critical of the government are unimpressed by its lack of evidence. READ MORE\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nEngland were given a huge scare by Italy before five second-half tries saw them extend their winning run to 17 matches.\n\nItaly had led 10-5 at half-time, a combination of an extraordinary tactic at the breakdown and the hosts' ineptitude threatening a huge upset at Twickenham.\n\nBut two quick tries after the break from Danny Care and Elliot Daly calmed nerves, and although Michele Campagnaro's bullocking try made it 17-15 with 20 minutes remaining, another from Ben Te'o and two from replacement Jack Nowell saved England's blushes.\n\nThose tries meant Eddie Jones' men also picked up their bonus point, which may prove critical in the final championship standings.\n\nBut this 10th successive Six Nations win felt anything but a celebration, Owen Farrell off form on the occasion of his 50th cap and Jones' replacements once again required to come to their coach's rescue.\n\nItaly left points aplenty out on the field through missed kicks, and while a second consecutive Grand Slam remains a possibility for England, the visit of in-form Scotland in a fortnight's time now represents a serious threat.\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\nEngland had been completely thrown by Italy's novel tactic of not committing any men to the breakdown beyond the initial tackler, meaning no ruck was formed and so the offside became irrelevant.\n\nIt meant Italian defenders could stand between England's half-backs, creating initial confusion both in white-shirted ranks and in the stands.\n\nCaptain Dylan Hartley and James Haskell were both left asking referee Romain Poite to explain the laws of the game to them, the Frenchman testily telling them to ask their own coach.\n\nAnd only when England began to solve that problem by putting runners up the middle did they begin to get any sort of grip on a contest they had been expected to run away with.\n\nBy the end, Jones's men were also utilising the same ploy, a strange sight on the strangest of afternoons at Twickenham.\n\nEngland were not so much slow out of the blocks as asleep, repeatedly giving away penalties at the scrum and breakdown, while Farrell, Care and George Ford all kicked poorly from hand.\n\nHad Italy kicked all their penalties - Allan missed two, and the others were sent into the corner - they could have led 12-0 after the opening quarter.\n\nCole's try from a rolling maul came as a relief to a somnolent crowd, but Italy continued to dominate possession and territory, even as they spurned further shots at the posts and failed to capitalise from their attacking line-outs.\n\nBut when Allan's penalty from bang in front on the stroke of half-time came back off the upright, wing Giovanbattista Venditti grabbed the loose ball and dived over, Allan's conversion making it 10-5.\n\nTries flow as England find a way\n\nJones had every reason to tear into his men at the interval, and within moments Care's quick tap penalty sent him slicing through the blue wall and into the corner.\n\nDaly then ran on to Te'o's well-timed pass to go over in the left-hand corner, and the danger seemed over.\n\nYet with England spluttering again, Campagnaro ran through Ford and Mike Brown down the right to bring it back to 17-15.\n\nA brilliant clearing kick by Carlo Canna denied Daly another, but from the subsequent line-out a driving maul sucked in the Italian defence and Nowell exploited vast open spaces on the right to dive into the corner.\n\nNowell then added another, punching through a weary defence, and relief mixed with the roars from the packed stands.\n\nFor the second match running it was Joe Launchbury who was offically seen as the standout performer, with the third most-carries (11), the second-most metres made (60) and the second-most lineouts won (2) on the victorious England side.\n\nA special mention goes to Mike Brown, who made a total of 110 metres with ball in hand - 41 metres ahead of his closest competition in Italy's Edoardo Padovani.\n\nEngland head coach Eddie Jones: \"Congratulations to Italy, strategically they were smart today, but it's not rugby so let's be serious about it, it's not rugby today.\n\n\"I'm not happy what happened today, I don't think that's rugby. I played rugby a long time ago, I've coached rugby. I understand what Italy did and I'm not angry with what they did, but I just don't think it's rugby.\"\n\nItaly coach Conor O'Shea: \"We have a massive job to do but we will do it and we have to think differently like we did today.\n\n\"We didn't come here to make up numbers. But you're playing against a brilliant team who are on-form and they worked their way through it.\"\n\nPaul Grayson, former England fly-half, on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra: \"From an England point of view, today will feel like a loss. They were the opposite of what everyone expected.\n\n\"If they haven't seen the ugly side of Eddie Jones yet, I've got a suspicion they'll see it this week. He will have a problem with the team being nowhere near the levels he expects.\n\n\"You've got to give credit to Italy for their tactics, it certainly upset England, but they'll be disappointed about conceding so many tries late on.\"\n\nReplacements: Nowell for May (56), Slade for Te'o (76), Youngs for Care (52), M. Vunipola for Marler (56), George for Hartley (56), Sinckler for Cole (72).\n\nReplacements: Benvenuti for Bisegni (52), Canna for Allan (62), Bronzini for Gori (36), D'Apice for Gega (65), Ceccarelli for Cittadini (52), Biagi for Fuser (75), Mbanda for Favaro (58).", "Even if the best picture announcement had happened smoothly and to plan, Moonlight's win would still have been regarded as one of the biggest Oscar stories and upsets of recent times.\n\nWhat could have helped it to victory over La La Land, the favourite heading into the ceremony? Well, there are various factors that might, just might have come into play.\n\nFirstly, of course, Moonlight is an exceptional piece of film-making. And it may well be that its coming-of-age theme, sumptuous photography and nuanced performances simply ended up resonating more strongly with voters than any of the rival films that were also nominated for best picture.\n\nIn 2016, after two years of #OscarsSoWhite, the Academy invited a large number of individuals from ethnic minority backgrounds to join and take part in voting. The Academy remains overwhelmingly white and male, although slightly less so than before.\n\nIf it was a very close race, a somewhat more diverse membership may have been a factor.\n\nJenkins on the Moonlight set with actor Mahershala Ali\n\nThe Academy operates a preferential voting ballot. This means that one film could potentially receive the most votes as members' favourite film - which would give it victory in a first-past-the-post system of the kind employed by others, including Bafta - but still be beaten to the award by another film which had gained a significant proportion of second-favourite choices across the board.\n\nLa La Land has led the race since it premiered at the Venice Film Festival last August to rave reviews. By the time many Oscar voters saw the movie, some may have felt that after months of superlative after superlative being heaped up on it, it had been excessively hyped.\n\nWith the current political atmosphere in the United States, many Oscar voters may have thought that this was a time to honour a film that felt like a particularly important piece of work. Excellent as La La Land is, a win for the singing, dancing love letter to Los Angeles may have felt too frothy and self congratulatory.\n\nMoonlight tells the story of a boy struggling with poverty and his sexuality in Miami\n\nMoonlight, a film about acceptance and struggle, certainly feels like a movie that is more than a simple piece of entertainment.\n\nThe Academy has around 6,500 members, and the reasons they will have voted the way that they did, of course, could and probably did vary wildly from voter to voter.\n\nThe Academy doesn't release voting figures, so there's no way of knowing how emphatic Moonlight's victory was. It could have come down to one vote, it could have won by a landslide.\n\nBut Moonlight winning against a film that seemed to be a runaway favourite is a huge achievement. And there's no doubt that Barry Jenkins' story following a character from childhood to manhood is a more than worthy winner of cinema's biggest prize.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Teams sweep Kuala Lumpur airport for VX traces after the killing\n\nOnly a few people know why VX was chosen - presumably by North Korea - as the chemical agent of Kim Jong-nam's assassination, and they're not talking.\n\nThe (perhaps unwitting) women who smeared his face with the highly toxic oil are unlikely to know much about the substance.\n\nAnd the men who left the terminal in Kuala Lumpur for Dubai even as the victim staggered around seeking medical help are not about to share their secrets with anyone far from Pyongyang.\n\nBut in South Korea, there is much speculation. Was it a deliberate signal from the North that nuclear isn't the only weapon of mass destruction just over the border?\n\nOr was it simply an effective way of killing a reclusive man in a public place?\n\nIt has certainly raised the temperature in South Korea. Monday's Joongang Daily says: \"The government must take steps immediately to protect the country from chemical weapons dangers.\"\n\nThe editorial raises the spectre of North Korea supplying terrorists with the substance (in the same way it may have helped Pakistan with nuclear technology and Syria with missile development).\n\nThe editorial continues: \"North Korea is known to have chemical weapons from 3,000 tonnes to 5,000 tonnes. It could threaten the world if Pyongyang sells any of these weapons to Islamic militants or other extremists to secure hard cash.\"\n\nThere is no doubt that the attack has sent a tremor of fear through the defector community in South Korea.\n\nFugitives who were previously easy to contact have gone to ground. Thae Yong-ho, the diplomat who defected from the London embassy last year, already had bodyguards as he went incognito around Seoul but they would not have been able to protect him against a seemingly innocent member of the public just coming up and smearing him with a speck of VX.\n\nSouth Korean TV coverage of the killing is watched intently at a restaurant in Pyeongchang\n\nTwo years ago, the American ambassador in Seoul was lucky to survive when his face was slashed with a blade in public. How much easier it would be to kill someone with a mere trace of a chemical.\n\nThe great advantage of poisoning for the assassin is that it can be perfectly targeted and it kills with little immediate fuss. Only scientific examination afterwards reveals the cause.\n\nThose behind Kim Jong-nam's killing watched, then left.\n\nAlexander Litvinenko, a fugitive spy from Russia, took tea with two former KGB agents in London in 2006 and died three weeks later of poisoning by radioactive polonium-210, believed to have been administered in the cup.\n\nThe BBC producer, Georgi Markov, was murdered at a bus stop in central London in 1978 but his killer vanished in the crowd seconds after the victim felt the pin-prick from an umbrella used like a syringe to inject the fatal poison. He had been a thorn in the side of the Bulgarian communist government but so simple and bloodless was the killing that nobody was ever identified as the perpetrator.\n\nThe efficiency of poison as a means of assassination is leading North Korea watchers in South Korea to think that there was no great intention to send a signal by using VX specifically.\n\nKoh Yu-hwan, of Dongguk University, thinks that VX was chosen because of its efficiency; North Korea - or at least leader Kim Jong-un - allegedly wanted Kim Jong-nam dead and VX offered certainty.\n\nIt also offered the possibility that the death would pass as being from natural causes, at least for the time before a serious post-mortem scientific examination could take place.\n\nChang Yong-seok, of Seoul National University's Institute for Peace and Unification Studies, adds: \"North Korea was already under immense pressure over its efforts to develop nuclear weapons and intercontinental ballistic missiles, and also its human rights issues. Things will get even more complicated for Pyongyang if its chemical weapons issues are thrown into the mix.\"\n\nThere are benefits and costs to Pyongyang of being caught red-handed. On the one hand, it would send a signal to dissidents that there will be no escaping the regime's ruthlessness.\n\nOn the other, it also says to North Koreans that the regime at the top is insecure and fratricidal.\n\nNews from outside does get into North Korea and the revelation that one ruling Kim was allegedly having his half-brother bumped off could scarcely strengthen the regime in the people's eyes.\n\nThere is speculation in the South about the role of the women involved\n\nAs a columnist in Daily NK puts it: \"With the influx of information pouring into North Korea, more of its citizens are learning for the first time of Kim Jong-nam's existence, prompting them to speculate on the motive for the assassination.\"\n\nThere is some speculation in South Korea about the role of the two women suspected of carrying out the hit job. One researcher told the Associated Press news agency that the theory VX had been mixed from two innocuous chemicals into a deadly combination on the victim's face was unlikely.\n\nThe expert said that VX could be produced in this way but not reliably. It is more likely that it was applied in its deadly form by people wearing protective gloves.\n\n\"The security camera footage shows one of the women heading to the bathroom to wash her hands after attacking Kim. If she touched VX with her bare hands, she wouldn't have had the time to do even that,\" the researcher told AP.\n\nIf the means of murder is causing debate, the motive is not. In dynasties with hereditary rule, brothers are rivals. The plot reads like a John le Carre novel or a Shakespeare history play, where those who share blood, spill blood.", "Last updated on .From the section English Rugby\n\nEngland coach Eddie Jones said an unexpected Italy tactic \"wasn't rugby\" as they frustrated the Six Nations champions before finally losing 36-15.\n\nItaly led 10-5 at half-time as they chose not to compete at the breakdown, allowing them to step into the England line without going offside.\n\nBut the hosts found a way through with five tries in the second period.\n\n\"Well done Italy, very smart. We knew they'd come with something,\" Jones told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"But it wasn't rugby. We haven't played a game of rugby yet.\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\n\"I'm not critical of Italy, they did what they needed to do to stay in the game.\"\n\nItaly coach Conor O'Shea defended the tactic, saying: \"Everything we did was completely legal; I was incredibly proud of what the players put out there.\"\n\nAt one stage, England captain Dylan Hartley and team-mate James Haskell asked referee Romain Poite to clarify the law, but the Frenchman replied: \"I am a referee, not a coach.\"\n\nJones added: \"Did we react quick enough? It's hard when you don't play rugby, it's like playing a different game out there.\n\n\"If your half-back can't pass the ball, the game becomes difficult. It's not the way you want to play the game. We wanted to move the ball and play some good rugby.\n\n\"We scored six tries and at the end of three rounds, if we were undefeated and with a bonus points, we'd be doing handstands. So we're doing handstands.\"\n\nItaly played a novel tactic of not committing any men to the breakdown beyond the initial tackler, meaning no ruck was formed and any offside became irrelevant.\n\nItalian defenders could therefore stand between England's half-backs, creating confusion for the men in white.\n\n\"How can you have players standing in your attack line? Even when there were rucks, there were people standing in our attack line.\n\n\"You look to pass the ball and there's a blue jumper there. You look in front and there's a blue jumper there. There's blue jumpers everywhere.\n\n\"He [Poite] had a terrible day. He wasn't refereeing rugby.\"\n\nAsked if rugby's laws need to change following the game, Jones said: \"I don't think anyone wants to see a game like that. No-one likes to see rugby not played in its proper form so World Rugby will have to have a very close look at it.\n\n\"I don't think there was anything good in that today. It didn't improve the game.\"\n\nThe innovative tactics caused confusion among the spectators as well as those on the field, and former England scrum-half Matt Dawson laid the blame for a disjointed contest firmly with Italy.\n\nThe 2003 World Cup winner said on Twitter: \"Well done Italy on ruining this international. Now World Rugby have to change the laws because of your inability to compete at this level.\"\n\nO'Shea was not about to back down when Dawson's comment was put to him, saying: \"I'd like him to sit down with World Rugby to look at some of the other games we've played this year, and if he's that good in the rules, actually make a comment after we were impacted as we were in the first game of this championship - but that's not for me to talk about now.\n\n\"We came here to have a go. If they want us to lose by 100 points, why should we? Why should we be normal? We should be ourselves. Rather than having a go, have a bit of humility and respect for guys who have very little in comparison to their counterparts.\n\n\"I was expecting this, if I'm honest.\"\n\nJones went on to compare the Italian tactic to a famous one-day international cricket match between Australia and New Zealand in 1981.\n\nWith one ball remaining, New Zealand needed a six to tie the match.\n\nTo ensure this couldn't happen, Australia's captain Greg Chappell ordered his brother Trevor to bowl the last ball underarm, a legal action at the time.\n\n\"Well, obviously they've been watching Trevor Chappell with the underarm bowl along the ground to make sure they couldn't hit a six,\" said Australian Jones.\n\nEngland have a two-week rest before they take on Scotland at Twickenham on Saturday, 11 March, and another victory would see them equal New Zealand's world record of 18 Test matches unbeaten.\n\n\"We've got Scotland in two weeks and they've got belief and confidence,\" said Jones. \"We are looking forward to them coming down and I'm sure they're going to play proper rugby.\n\n\"This is our next test, and I'm sure [Scotland coach] Vern Cotter won't have those tactics. He's a New Zealander. They like the breakdown and the contest.\n\n\"I feel like I haven't coached today. Let's be serious. It wasn't rugby today.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nZlatan Ibrahimovic said he will \"see what happens\" about extending his stay at Manchester United - but did reveal his children pleaded with him to join the Old Trafford club last year.\n\nIbrahimovic, 35, left Paris St-Germain in July, signing a one-season deal with an option for a second year.\n\nUnited boss Jose Mourinho believes the Swede will stay - but added: \"I never beg for a player to sign a contract.\"\n\n\"We have another two months of the season to go,\" Ibrahimovic said.\n\n\"Let's see how I feel, the situation. Somebody made up a story that if we don't qualify for the Champions League I will not extend. It has nothing to do with that.\"\n\nAfter Ibrahimovic scored the winner in Sunday's 3-2 EFL Cup final victory over Southampton, Mourinho said \"the fans can go to the door of his house and stay there all night\" to convince the striker to stay.\n\nIbrahimovic said his \"special relationship\" with the Portuguese, who also managed him at Inter Milan, was key to his decision to join United - but was not the only factor.\n\n\"My mind was not here, then my kids started to bump my head - even they wanted to see me play at United,\" he said of the months leading up to his departure from French champions PSG.\n\n\"Then Jose called. When he called, it was basically: 'Tell me what number I should wear.' My kids are satisfied with what I am doing, but this time I am the boss, not them.\"\n• None Why Man Utd must keep Ibrahimovic - Alan Shearer\n\nIbrahimovic collected the 32nd trophy of his career after heading an 87th-minute winner at Wembley, having earlier given his side the lead with a brilliant 19th-minute free-kick.\n\nJesse Lingard put United 2-0 in front before Manolo Gabbiadini scored twice for the Saints to level, after having an 11th-minute effort contentiously ruled out for offside.\n\nEighteen years on from making his professional debut for Malmo, the former Ajax, Juventus, Inter Milan, Barcelona and AC Milan striker was asked whether he has thought about retirement.\n\n\"I came here when people thought it was impossible for me to do what I am able to do. It feels good. I am enjoying it,\" he added.\n\n\"I always want more. This is my 32nd trophy. I've been in five different countries, I've been in the best clubs in the world and I'm repeating every year what I am doing.\n\n\"I will stop on top. If I don't perform, I will not play. I will not be like others, still playing because they are who they are. I will play as long as I can bring results.\"\n\nIbrahimovic has scored 26 goals in 38 games this season and is United's top scorer. Midfielder Juan Mata is behind him in second, with nine goals.\n\n\"Zlatan won the game for us because he was outstanding,\" Mourinho said after Sunday's win secured his first major trophy as United boss.\n\n\"When he went to Barcelona [from Inter, in 2009], I was very sad. I know the potential. Only a silly player comes to England if he doesn't feel he can do it. Who better to know? Him. Not me or you.\n\n\"When he decided to come here it is because he feels ready. It is not my credit. It is him. Nothing for me.\"\n\nQuestion from journalist: Is your fitness a natural fitness?\n\nWhy are you like a lion?\n\n\"I am a lion. I don't want to be a lion.\"\n\nDo you mean you have the hunger of a lion?\n\nWhat does that mean?\n\n\"It means I'm a lion! I never talk so much with journalists. I never stopped so long even for the French people.\"\n\nYou say you've got 32 medals what do you do with them?\n\n\"It is in the museum. I have a house only for the medals.\"\n\nMourinho's move to bring Ibrahimovic in on a free transfer from Paris St-Germain was strategic and wise. He is a personality of equal stature and confidence, had a point to prove having never played in England and could provide the sort of charisma that had echoes of the great Eric Cantona.\n\nHow United needed Ibrahimovic on Sunday because for long periods they were desperately average, outplayed by Southampton and had their hand held by Lady Luck throughout.\n\nIf United are to build on this first trophy of the Mourinho era, Ibrahimovic's continued presence is essential because the EFL Cup final win is only the first building block in an edifice that requires considerable renovation after the dismal post-Sir Alex Ferguson years of David Moyes and Van Gaal.\n• None Ibrahimovic has scored six goals in his past five domestic cup finals (adding to four goals in four with PSG)\n• None He has scored more than any Premier League player this season - 26 goals in all competitions\n• None His opening goal was the first Southampton conceded in this year's EFL Cup - after 468 minutes of football", "Best actress winner Emma Stone has said she feels like she is on 'another planet' after this year's Academy Awards.", "Mercedes and Ferrari had impressive starts to pre-season testing as Red Bull and McLaren hit trouble.\n\nLewis Hamilton was fastest as Mercedes completed 152 laps with both their drivers at Circuit de Catalunya.\n\nHamilton was 0.113 seconds faster than Sebastian Vettel's Ferrari, which also ran reliably and used the slower medium tyre with the Mercedes on the soft.\n\nBy contrast, the mileage of Red Bull and McLaren was limited by recurring reliability problems in Barcelona.\n\nHamilton's team-mate Valtteri Bottas, a replacement for the now-retired world champion Nico Rosberg, was sixth fastest.\n\n\"It has been a good day, a positive day for the team,\" Hamilton said. \"Lots of laps and information gained so we can try to improve the car.\"\n\nAsked whether the new rules - designed to make the cars up to five seconds a lap faster and demand more of the drivers - had made a difference, he said: \"The G forces are definitely higher. The load on the drivers is a considerable amount more than before. It is a lot more physical.\n\n\"I was always trying to pick up the speed through the corners and you have to drive a little bit different. It is a beast. It is so much better than last year.\"\n\nAnd he added that the new tyres, which have been designed to allow drivers to push flat-out for much longer, seemed to be working as planned.\n\n\"Normally you have a lot of degradation in these tyres but these ones don't,\" he said. \"But there is not a lot of performance at the beginning of the tyre. They are very consistent, hard tyres. There is not a big difference from early on to later. There is a bit of a drop-off but not massive.\"\n\nNot a good start for some\n\nThe first day of pre-season testing is all about ironing out problems and beginning to understand how the cars work.\n\nAs such, no team begins by trying to set the fastest possible lap times.\n\nAt this stage, mileage is key, which is why the truncated days suffered by Red Bull and McLaren are bad news with only eight days of running before the start of the season.\n\nAlonso suffered an oil system problem after just a single installation lap, which cost him the whole morning session.\n\n\"We are disappointed, we are sad to not be able to run,\" Alonso said. \"We are aware of the time we lost. We have four days for each driver before the championship starts so it is not ideal. But it is the way it is and all we can do is learn from it and concentrate and try to recover the time.\"\n\nHonda changed the engine for the afternoon and the double world champion from Spain was able to get out on track for a few runs with two hours of the day remaining - but still managed less than a quarter of the laps achieved by Mercedes.\n\nHonda has fundamentally revised its engine design for this season, effectively following the same route as Mercedes have used since the start of the turbo hybrid formula in 2014, and there are clearly still issues to resolve.\n\nMcLaren racing director Eric Boullier said Alonso was \"not very happy\" about the problems.\n\nRed Bull, who have hopes of challenging Mercedes this year, blamed problems with a sensor for Daniel Ricciardo managing only five laps in the morning.\n\nHe did a further three early in the afternoon before another lengthy visit to the pits because of a battery problem. He did finally get in some running and ended the day with 50 laps.\n\nRicciardo ended up with fifth fastest time and team boss Christian Horner said the problems were \"not major issues\".\n\nIn contrast to their rivals, Mercedes made a typically strong start to their preparations for the season.\n\nNew signing Bottas completed 79 laps - more than a grand prix distance - in the morning, ending up second fastest to Vettel at the time.\n\nHamilton took over in the afternoon, with Mercedes fitting a 'shark-fin' engine cover for the first time, and was quickly up to speed, completing more than 60 laps himself.\n\nFerrari and Williams also had good days, both completing more than 100 laps.\n\nVettel stuck to the 'medium' compound of tyre for most of the day before a brief run on the 'hard', so on the face of it his lap time looks impressive.\n\nHowever, the German was also quickest for Ferrari on the first day of pre-season testing last season - and the Italian team ended the campaign winless for the second time in three years.\n\nFelipe Massa, persuaded to come out of retirement to fill former team-mate Bottas' seat at Williams, was third fastest.\n\n* time set on 'soft' tyres; all others set on medium tyres", "The English language contains an alphabet soup of swear words. Those of a sweary disposition can draw upon the A-word, the B-word, the C-word, the F-word, the S-word, the W-word and many more. So here's a puzzle - if you see the F-word spelled out with all four letters, are you more offended than when you read F with asterisks?\n\nIt seems many people are. But why? After all, you presumably know what F with asterisks stands for. It has the same meaning as the non-asterisked version.\n\nThe BBC tries to avoid swear words whenever possible, but on the rare occasions that they are considered integral to the story, they are used without the asterisks. Some other news outlets, such as The Times do adopt the asterisk convention and only print swear words when they are quoting other people. This reflects the view that using swear words is more offensive than merely mentioning them. The paper's journalists mention the swear words used by others, but do not use them themselves.\n\nBut to understand why the full-frontal swear word might be considered worse than its pale asterisked imitator, we first need to define what a swear word is.\n\nBy definition, swear words are offensive. If a word, over time, ceases to be offensive, then it falls out of use as a swear word. Offence alone is not enough, though, for we can offend with language without swearing. The N-word, for example, is what is called a slur: it is a derogatory term about an entire group. It is profoundly offensive, but it is not a swear word.\n\nPhilosopher Rebecca Roache says that as well as the ingredient of offence, swear words tend to have a cluster of other characteristics. We will often use swear words \"to vent some emotion\", she says. \"If you're angry or particularly happy, swearing is a catharsis. Swearing also centres on taboos. Around the world swear words will tend to cluster around certain topics: lavatorial matters, sex, religion.\"\n\nThere's also a paradoxical component to swearing, says Roache. \"As well as being taboo-breaking, swear words are taboo-breaking for the sake of taboo-breaking. The whole point is that you're not allowed to use them, but they exist just for that rule to be broken.\"\n\nListen to the Philosopher's Arms on BBC Radio 4 at 20:00 on Monday 27 February\n\nWords develop their power over time; it's a historical process. In the past, many swear words were linked to religion. But as countries like Britain have become increasingly secular, imprecations such as \"Damn\" and \"Jesus Christ\", have begun to lose their force. The Times leader writer, Oliver Kamm, author of Accidence Will Happen: The Non-Pedantic Guide to English, says that the swearing lexicon now draws less from religion and more from body effluvia. \"There's a hierarchy of effluvia, according to how disgusting we find them in public. 'Shit' is worse than 'piss' which is worse than 'fart' which is worse than 'spit' which is not a taboo word at all. It's an interesting linguistic hypothesis that the taboos relate to how disease-ridden or dangerous or disgusting we find the effluvia themselves.\"\n\nThe emotional release from swearing has been measured in a variety of ways. It turns out that swearing helps mitigate pain. It is easier to keep an arm in ice-cold-water for longer if you are simultaneously effing and blinding. And those who speak more than one language, report that swearing in their first language is more satisfying, carrying, as it does, a bigger emotional punch.\n\nCatharsis aside, swearing can boast other benefits. The claim has been made that swearing is bonding: a few blue words, uttered in a good-natured way, indicates and encourages intimacy. A very recent study suggests that people who swear are perceived as more trustworthy than those who are less potty-mouthed.\n\nBut back to the conundrum. If writing F with asterisks alleviates the offence of the full word why should this be? Roache says swearing is best viewed as a breach of etiquette. It is a little like putting your shoes on a table when you are the guest in someone's house. If you know it would offend, and do it anyway, you are guilty of showing insufficient respect.\n\n\"It doesn't matter that it's a swear word. Imagine meeting someone who has a fear of crisps, and who finds references to crisps traumatic. If you carry on talking about crisps in their presence, even after discovering about their phobia, you are sending a signal that you don't respect them, you don't have any concern for their feelings.\"\n\nUsing the F-with-asterisks version acknowledges that we are taking the feelings of others into account. By censoring the word we show respect. It's a view shared by Oliver Kamm, who endorses his newspaper's policy on asterisking swear words. Readers cannot help, he says, finding the full word \"involuntarily off-putting\".\n\nLike most people, I find exposure to too many swear words disconcerting. So I'm off to wash my mouth out with soap.\n\nDavid Edmonds (@DavidEdmonds100) is the producer of The Philosopher's Arms.\n\nThe programme on swearing can be heard here\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nHuddersfield boss David Wagner has been given a two-match touchline ban and a £6,000 fine after his altercation with Leeds counterpart Garry Monk.\n\nWagner sprinted to join his players in celebrating their late winner on 5 February before clashing with Monk.\n\nHe will be in the stands for the FA Cup replay at Manchester City and the home Championship game against Newcastle.\n\nMonk has been given a one-match touchline ban and fined £3,000, while both clubs have been fined £10,000.\n\nThe Leeds boss, whose side are fourth in the Championship table, will serve his ban at Birmingham City on Friday.\n\nIn a statement, the FA said Wagner admitted breaking the rules by going onto the pitch but had \"denied a further breach that his behaviour upon his return to the vicinity of the technical area amounted to improper conduct\".\n\nThe Terriers held Premier League Manchester City 0-0 in the FA Cup fifth round earlier this month and travel to Etihad Stadium on Wednesday for the replay.\n\nThey are currently third in the Championship table, four points ahead of Leeds and five points behind second-placed Newcastle, who travel to leaders Brighton on Tuesday.", "Fashion expert Alex Eagle casts her eye over the best dressed stars on the red carpet at the Academy Awards.\n\nThis is my standout look of the night. We've all been so excited to see Raf Simons' first work with Calvin Klein, and this white dress just perfectly encapsulates his directional take on femininity and glamour. Here his signature cool clean lines, with unexpected details like the cut out and the squared off train, are heightened by the stunning crust of sequins. And Naomie hasn't gone overboard with the details - simple hair, asymmetric crystal suede sandals, also by Calvin Klein, and Bulgari jewellery.\n\nWe often imagine that Oscar dresses should look like an old-fashioned fairy tale princess fantasy, and I love the idea that the modern fairy tale princess ideal is more pared back. Naomie looks amazing, and also entirely like herself - not over the top but incredibly glamorous.\n\nI also love that Raf reached out to dress not just Naomi but her Moonlight co-stars, having seen the film and been blown away by it. It's a great example of fashion and Hollywood being inspired by each other.\n\nObviously it's great that Emma Stone won an Oscar while dressed a bit like an Oscar, but this dress is also just perfect - for her, the film she is nominated for and for the ceremony.\n\nOne of Riccardo Tisci's last designs before he stepped down from Givenchy, it exudes gilded era old-school glamour, just like La La Land, and the ombre fringing brings a playfulness that fits with Emma's whole vibe. Great jewellery too from Tiffany & Co, and a dash of politics with the addition of a gold Planned Parenthood pin.\n\nPharrell is a guy who is always having fun with fashion, but after years where his style has been dominated by the big hat, it was really nice to see him graduate to looking unquestionably stylish - while still pushing the envelope.\n\nThis look is head-to-toe-to-necklace Chanel - not a brand you often see men wearing on the red carpet - but entirely in keeping with Pharrell's creative energy.\n\nNicole looks beautiful in this Armani Privé gown - she really is the master of what works for her and always looks exquisite. The shape reminds me of the vivid yellow John Galliano for Dior dress she wore to such acclaim in 1997.\n\nTwenty years on, she has pared back the colour, but the glamour remains high octane, with the all-over embroidery and streamlined silhouette. I love her Harry Winston jewels too.\n\nDev really stood out for me. I love that he's a young British guy in the definitive British brand, Burberry. And that he's been brave enough to play with the classics, with the white jacket that fit so perfectly.\n\nIt's rare that you get excited about what the guys wear as they do so often stick to a formula - either boring or a little too much creativity - so seeing Dev combining creativity with cool was great. Also, having his mum as his date was classy as anything.\n\nI love how French Isabelle looks, while still taking the glamour of the Hollywood red carpet seriously. She often wears trouser suits and tailoring for award shows, so it's interesting that she's chosen to go down the dress route.\n\nThis is by Armani Privé, which she has worn before and obviously trusts, and which is known for playing with a more androgynous style for women. It's demure but elegant, adding drama with the sequins. But the best bit for me is how she's styled it - adding edge with the Repossi ear cuff, laid back hair, deep lipstick and dark nail varnish.\n\nSuch a wonderful moment for Davis winning her Best Supporting Actress award, and also a great moment of true, old-school Oscars glamour from her on the red carpet. Another one from Armani Privé, who were one of the most popular designers this year. While the gown is quite restrained in cut, the details bring it bang up to date - from the vivid red tone to the cutaway neckline and shoulder draping.\n\nI love her hair too - really fresh and elegant.\n\nLast year, Brie was a vision in blue Gucci when she won the Best Actress award. This year, she's gone a little darker and more grown up in this stunning ruffled Oscar de la Renta gown, designed by his successors Fernando Garcia and Laura Kim.\n\nIt's sleek but dramatic, without looking overdone at all. The Aquazzura shoes are a great touch, as is keeping everything else really simple - the ruffled hair and just earrings and a ring by Neil Lane.\n\nI think she's making a statement with this ensemble, that's she's no longer an ingénue - and black velvet is a great way to say it.\n\nI always look forward to seeing what Tom Ford wears on the red carpet, but in his absence Andrew Garfield nailed the dress code in this fantastic piece of Tom Ford tailoring.\n\nThe fabric, the texture, the cut - the combination is totally classic but feels fresh. In short, this is exactly what you want from a man in a tux.\n\nThis dress was probably the most fashion forward of the night - coming from designer of the moment Alessandro Michele at Gucci. I love the delicate champagne shade which offset the va va voom ruching and bow detail at the front. It's a great choice for a young starlet, sensual without being overtly sexy, considered without being laboured.\n\nShe's also kept everything else quite simple - aside from some staggering Cartier jewels.\n\nIt's great to see relationships between actors and designers develop. Michelle and Nicolas Ghesquiere at Louis Vuitton have been collaborating for years now, and the dresses she wears always seem to express their mutual understanding. This is quite a radical look - the low plunge of the neckline is a bit more revealing than what we are used to from Michelle, but it is beautifully offset by her gamine haircut and jewel-encrusted skirt.\n\nGhesquiere is great at forging relationships with some of the most interesting actresses - he's been working closely with Alicia Vikander for a couple of years now, and she looked great in a black lace Spanish-infused gown by him. In fact, both Michelle and Alicia prove how creative it can be to remain loyal to one designer. Neither of them ever look formulaic in Louis Vuitton - they always look like the dress has been designed specifically for them, to make them feel the most comfortable and chic. What more could you want?\n\nAlex Eagle is owner, creative director and designer at Alex Eagle Studio", "The American coach of Olympic champion Mo Farah rejected claims he may have broken anti-doping rules to boost the performance of some of his athletes.\n\nAlberto Salazar has been under investigation since a BBC Panorama programme in 2015 made allegations about drugs use at his US training base, and a leaked report from the US Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) was obtained by the Sunday Times this weekend.\n\n\"I believe in a clean sport, \" he said. \"I do not use supplements that are banned.\"\n\nThe leaked report also alleged Salazar - head coach of the world famous endurance Nike Oregon Project (NOP) - routinely gave Farah and other athletes prescription drugs with potentially harmful side-effects without a justifiable medical reason.\n\nAccording to the Sunday Times, the leaked report claims Salazar used a banned method of infusing a legal supplement called L-carnitine.\n\n\"I have clearly and repeatedly refuted allegations directed against me and the Oregon Project,\" Salazar said.\n\n\"I believe in a clean sport and a methodical, dedicated approach to training. The Oregon Project will never permit doping and all Oregon Project athletes are required to comply with the Wada Code and IAAF rules.\n\n\"L-carnitine is a widely available, legal nutritional supplement that is not banned by Wada. Any use of L-carnitine was done so within Wada guidelines.\n\n\"In this case, to ensure my interpretation of Wada rules was correct, I also communicated in writing with Usada in advance of the use and administration of L-carnitine with Oregon Project athletes.\n\n\"I have voluntarily cooperated with Usada for years and met with them more than a year ago. The leaking of information and the litigation of false allegations in the press is disturbing, desperate and a denial of due process. I look forward to this unfair and protracted process reaching the conclusion I know to be true.\"\n\nSalazar and Farah deny they have ever broken anti-doping rules.\n\n\"It's deeply frustrating that I'm having to make an announcement on this subject,\" said 33-year-old Farah in a statement.\n\n\"I am a clean athlete who has never broken the rules in regards to substances, methods or dosages and it is upsetting that some parts of the media, despite the clear facts, continue to try to associate me with allegations of drug misuse.\n\n\"I'm unclear as to the Sunday Times' motivation towards me but I do understand that using my name and profile makes the story more interesting. It's entirely unfair to make assertions when it is clear from their own statements that I have done nothing wrong.\n\n\"As I've said many times before we all should do everything we can to have a clean sport and it is entirely right that anyone who breaks the rules should be punished.\"\n\nIn a statement, UK Athletics said it stood by the findings of an investigation published in 2016 that found \"there was no evidence of any impropriety on the part of Mo Farah and no reason to lack confidence in his training programme\".\n\nThe statement said: \"Usada have not reported back to UKA on any aspect of their investigations but we remain, at all times, completely open and cooperative with them.\n\n\"L-carnitine is a legal and scientifically legitimate supplement that can be used by endurance athletes. To our knowledge, all doses administered and methods of administration have been fully in accordance with Wada-approved protocol and guidelines.\"\n\nThe Usada interim report was passed to the Sunday Times by the suspected Russian hacking group Fancy Bears.\n\nThe BBC has so far been unable to verify its authenticity with Usada, or establish whether any of its reported conclusions are out of date.\n\nIn a statement, Usada said it could \"confirm that it has prepared a report in response to a subpoena from a state medical licensing body regarding care given by a physician to athletes associated with the Nike Oregon Project\".\n\nIt said: \"We understand that the licensing body is still deciding its case and as we continue to investigate whether anti-doping rules were broken, no further comment will be made at this time.\n\n\"Importantly, all athletes, coaches and others under the jurisdiction of the World Anti-Doping Code are innocent and presumed to have complied with the rules unless and until the established anti-doping process declares otherwise. It is unfair and reckless to state, infer or imply differently.\"\n\nAccording to the Sunday Times, the leaked report claims that Salazar:\n• None risked the health of his athletes, including Farah, by issuing potentially harmful prescription medicines to improve testosterone levels and boost recovery, despite no obvious medical need.\n\nSalazar maintains that drug use has always fully complied with the Wada code and that athletes were administered with L-carnitine in \"exactly the way Usada directed\".\n\nThe Sunday Times claims the Usada report also reveals:\n• None investigators have been impeded because Salazar and several athletes have \"largely refused to permit Usada to review their medical records\";\n• None Farah received an infusion of the legal supplement L-carnitine in 2014, which Usada is continuing to investigate in case the method of infusion broke doping rules by going over the legal limit of 50ml.\n\nThe report, apparently written in March 2016, allegedly states: \"Usada continues to investigate circumstances related to L-carnitine use\" by Farah.\n\nFarah told the Sunday Times two years ago that he had \"tried a legal energy drink\" containing L-carnitine but \"saw no benefit\" and did not continue with it.\n\nThe newspaper also claims the report says Dr John Rogers, a medic for the British athletics team, told Usada in an interview that conversations he had with Salazar at a training camp in the French Pyrenees before the 2011 World Championships in Daegu, gave him such \"concern\" that he wrote an email at the time to his medical colleagues at UK Athletics.\n\nIt also says Rogers told Usada that Salazar had told him about \"off-label and unconventional\" uses of the prescription medications calcitonin and thyroxine (hormones) and high doses of vitamin D and ferrous sulphate.\n\nThe revelations will pile more pressure on Britain's greatest ever endurance runner, who has steadfastly refused to end his association with Salazar.\n\nIt raises questions too for UKA, which gave the Briton the all-clear to continue working with Salazar after an inquiry was launched following the BBC Panorama programme.\n\nIn June 2015, in conjunction with the US website ProPublica, the BBC's Panorama programme Catch Me If You Can made a series of allegations about the methods at NOP, and included testimony from a number of former athletes and coaches, including Kara Goucher and Steve Magness.\n\nThe film alleged Salazar had a fixation on the testosterone levels of his athletes, and may have doped American Olympic medallist Galen Rupp with the banned steroid version when he was 16. The programme also alleged Salazar had conducted testosterone experiments on his sons to see how much of the drug he could apply to them before it triggered positive tests.\n\nThe film also alleged Salazar used thyroid medicine inappropriately with his athletes, and encouraged the use of prescription medication when there was no justifiable need.\n\nSalazar denied the wrongdoing alleged in the programme, and issued a 12,000-word rebuttal.\n\nUsada took the unusual step of confirming it had launched an investigation into NOP following the BBC and ProPublica's revelations in 2015. Earlier stories by the New York Times and the Sunday Times had also raised concerns about some of Salazar's methods.\n\nIt is not clear why the Usada report remains unpublished.\n\nNine months ago, amid rumours Usada had dropped an investigation into his coach, Sir Mo Farah said he felt vindicated after standing by Alberto Salazar, the man who has helped him achieve so much success. This will raise more questions over that association.\n\nLast year Farah distanced himself from another controversial coach - Somalian Jama Aden. And he could now face renewed pressure to do something similar with a man who we now know Usada is still looking into.\n\nThis could also be awkward for Salazar's employers Nike - and for UK Athletics; not least how they came to clear Salazar in 2015 - even though it now seems one of their senior medics - Dr John Rogers - says he had raised concerns to them over the coach's methods.", "Nantwich isn't the kind of place that sees many demos.\n\nOn Monday morning, on a bitterly cold, damp day, more than 300 people gathered in the town's square to protest about school funding.\n\nMost were parents who turned up with their children and homemade banners.\n\n\"Am I worth less?\" read one damp cardboard placard clasped by a small girl.\n\nThe parents I spoke to told me they wanted an amount spent on their children's education similar to that in other areas around the country.\n\nUntil recently, many weren't aware this area was one of the lowest funded for schools.\n\nThe protest in Nantwich shows just how politically difficult it is for ministers to embark on the biggest shake-up of school funding in England for a generation.\n\nThere are limits to how much any school can gain or lose in the first couple of years - but that's barely taking the edge off the campaigns and protests bubbling up in areas such as this.\n\nNantwich is in the relatively affluent local authority of East Cheshire, a low-funded area where many schools hoped to do slightly better under a new formula.\n\nAs it turns out, some will get less in cash terms if the changes go ahead, because the new formula looks at deprivation at a local council area level.\n\nNot far away is Crewe, also in East Cheshire.\n\nIt is a poor town where schools have coped with a growing number of children whose parents have moved from Poland and Slovakia.\n\nLike other schools across England, Sir Thomas More academy in Crewe will have to find money for extra pay, pensions and national insurance costs in the next few years.\n\nDespite school funding being at record levels, the bills are going up, so in real terms schools are feeling poorer.\n\nHead teacher Clare Hogg, tells me the combined effect in the next couple of years of the background financial pressures and the new funding formula will be a hole in her budget of £450,000 - roughly equivalent to 11 staff.\n\nThe noise here is being echoed in some other counties, where every councillor is up for election in May and many of them are Conservative.\n\nCheshire East has four Conservative MPs, who are all being lobbied intensely by their local parents and schools.\n\nAs the Institute for Fiscal studies points out, this is also the first time schools in England have faced a real-terms funding squeeze for 20 years.\n\nWhether your local school is starting from the top of the funding pile or the bottom just depends on where you live.\n\nThere is no easy solution, as it is the big cities that have received the most money over the past few decades.\n\nThat is in recognition of some of the intense poverty and social challenges that exist within them.\n\nThe new formula proposed would see cities such as Liverpool, Manchester, Nottingham and Leeds losing, as some money is shifted towards counties such as Lincolnshire and Somerset.\n\nLondon is a big loser too, but starting from some of the highest levels of funding.\n\nThe Core Cities Group, which speaks for big urban areas outside London, has already expressed concerns about the effect on schools.\n\nBut there are no local elections in the cities this year.\n\nThe political pressure from the counties may lead the government to tweak some of the finer details of the planned formula.\n\nThe Education Secretary for England, Justine Greening, has been having a series of regional meetings with MPs, so she will be in no doubt that some are unhappy.\n\nAgainst the background pressures of funding per pupil going down, this was never going to be an easy ride.\n\nAnd after decades of campaigning for change, the counties also fear destroying the best chance they've had of getting some redistribution of money from the cities.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland Lions lost their second four-day match with Sri Lanka A, but batsman Liam Livingstone matched a feat only Kevin Pietersen had achieved before.\n\nLivingstone joined Pietersen as the second batsman in the 35-year history of England B, England A and England Lions cricket to score a century in each innings of a first-class match.\n\nThe Lancashire 23-year-old scored 140 not out, following a first-innings 105.\n\nBut Sri Lanka squared the two-match series with a three-wicket victory.\n\nAfter Sri Lanka followed England's 353 with a score of 548, the visitors were bowled out for 284, leaving the hosts requiring 90 to win from the final day's evening session.\n\nMalinda Pushpakumara, who took 13 wickets in the match, hit the winning runs, while Surrey wicketkeeper Ben Foakes claimed his 10th dismissal - five in each innings - which broke the previous record for the Lions and their predecessors, set by Steve Rhodes against Transvaal in 1993.\n\nLions head coach Andy Flower said: \"They were good dismissals - it's not like they were all straightforward nicks. A number of them were standing up to the wicket, both stumpings and catches, and Ben took one of the best catches I've seen from a wicketkeeper diving to his right - and that was in the 128th over.\n\n\"The other stand-out was Livingstone. Some of the things he's been working on in the training camps seem to have come to the fore in his play of spin. It was a really great performance on a typical sub-continental wicket.\"\n\nEngland Lions' five-match one-day series with Sri Lanka A starts in Dambulla on Friday.", "Last updated on .From the section Boxing\n\nDavid Haye and Tony Bellew were physically kept apart at a heated news conference for Saturday's heavyweight bout at London's O2 Arena.\n\nThe British pair entered through separate corridors at a Liverpool hotel on Monday and were divided by security for the traditional pre-fight face-off.\n\nHaye, 36, threw a punch at Bellew at a November media gathering and had warned they would need a barrier between them.\n• None Read: Bellew v Haye - in their own words\n\nWBC cruiserweight champion Bellew will fight at heavyweight for the first time, completing a two-division jump after competing at light-heavyweight as recently as 2013.\n\nFormer WBA heavyweight champion Haye has had two routine wins since returning from over three years out of the sport.\n\nThe London fighter seemed frustrated as fans in attendance drowned out his comments with songs on Monday - and he responded by insulting those in the crowd and said Liverpudlian Bellew would \"need all the support he can get\".\n\nAn agitated Haye told the crowd: \"Deep in all of your tiny minds you know this guy is getting drilled to the canvas pretty fast.\"\n\nBellew said: \"I am going in with a man who was absolutely fantastic. When he was in his prime, an immense athlete - but the tank is very, very low and it does not last very long.\n\n\"When the gas runs out, the big fat Scouser is going to steam through him.\"\n\nHowever, Haye's trainer, Shane McGuigan, predicted WBC cruiserweight champion Bellew would be \"cannon fodder\".\n\nHaye's wins since returning - both inside two rounds - prompted Dave Coldwell, Bellew's trainer, to question if the shoulder surgery he had in 2013 could hamper him in a longer contest.\n\n\"When you've had major surgery as an athlete, you are never the same man, you have doubts in your mind,\" said Coldwell, who once worked for Hayemaker promotions.\n\n\"Your surgeon advised you to retire, you come back but you don't know how you will perform on the night.\"\n\nAddressing his opponent, Bellew added: \"I've seen people have the operations you have had. Reconstructive shoulder surgery is a big thing, your right hand becomes a looping right hand.\"\n\nBellew holds a record of 28 wins and a draw from 31 fights, with Haye boasting the same number of wins from 30 contests.\n\n'I've never seen hatred like that'\n\nBoxing commentator Steve Bunce on 5 live Boxing with Costello and Bunce\n\nIt was unnecessary and unedifying but it was gripping for all the wrong reasons.\n\nIn all my years covering the sport, it was the oddest press conference. I've never seen hatred like that ever in my life between two fighters.\n\nI saw it at the Dorchester [at the first press conference in November] and it disturbed me, and I saw it again in Liverpool.\n\nI think they are going to have to have a cordon of security people dividing them like they did when Lennox Lewis and Mike Tyson fought each other.", "The Brexit debate in the UK is focusing on the rights of EU migrants in the country, among them about 300,000 Germans. Many people are worried about what will happen to them after Brexit. But how are the 100,000 Brits in Germany feeling? The BBC's Damien McGuinness says many are hurrying to apply for citizenship.\n\n\"So, when are you becoming German?\" It's one of those questions that always seems to crop up when I'm chatting to British friends here in Berlin these days. Most are either applying for German citizenship or counting the days until they've spent enough time here to be eligible.\n\nThat's because no-one knows what will happen to them once Britain leaves the EU. These are not the bronzed \"expats\" of the tabloid imagination - living it up in the sun, glass of gin in one hand, golf club in the other. They are young freelancers worried that if they need visas their work will dry up. Or pensioners living in rented flats, surviving on fixed incomes tied to a shrinking pound.\n\nEsme was the most organised of any of us. She made her first appointment with the German authorities the week before the referendum. She took the citizenship test, submitted all the documents, and a few weeks ago became German in a ceremony in her local town hall, in the Berlin district of Neukoelln.\n\nWhat surprised her was how emotional she felt about it. About 50 people, of 22 different nationalities were being granted German citizenship: Syrians, Americans, Iraqis, Turks, Italians, French - even a few other Brits.\n\nThe local mayor gave a speech welcoming everyone, and reflected on the meaning of Heimat, or homeland. And as she quoted from the German constitution, and talked about how all people were equal, regardless of gender, origin or ethnicity, Esme felt tears in her eyes.\n\nA cellist and a pianist played the 22 different national anthems of those present - by then, Esme was almost sobbing. And finally a singer came in to give a moving rendition of the European anthem, Beethoven's Ode to Joy - by which time Esme was in pieces.\n\nNot bad for an out-and-out liberal, who's usually pretty sceptical about flag-waving.\n\n\"It was the thought of the journeys that everyone had taken to get here,\" Esme explained to me afterwards. \"The wars that people had escaped from. And the efforts they had made to start a new life in Germany.\" Some people had learned, off by heart, the declaration of allegiance to the German constitution, especially for the ceremony. Esme said it put her own worries into perspective.\n\nFor Esme, and I suspect for a lot of the Brits who are now becoming German, what started out as a practical decision about visas and passports, is unexpectedly raising deeper questions about identity. Can you really be both German and British? And what does it mean to be German anyway?\n\nNot so very long ago, saying to other Brits that you're becoming German would almost inevitably lead to some tired gag about Nazis or towels on sun loungers. And although some British headlines might still use those cliches - and you can expect a few more if Brexit talks get nasty - today, modern Germany is seen more often as a bastion of tolerant values: international, democratic and open to immigrants.\n\nOf course, there are people outside and inside Germany who criticise Angela Merkel's decision to allow so many foreigners in. But for those new British-Germans, themselves migrants, a country that welcomes foreigners is attractive.\n\nTwo new migrants learn German in Berlin\n\nIn fact, being a German with a hyphen is a relatively new concept here. Traditionally German identity was an ethnic idea, related to bloodline rather than where you were born. So it used to feel as if Britain and America were rather better at accepting that people had layered identities - enabling you to be originally from one country, but a citizen of another.\n\nBut over the past few decades Germany has been going through a difficult, and largely successful, process of redefining what it means to be German. Angela Merkel now refers to Germany as \"a country of immigration\" - an unimaginable statement for a centre-right chancellor until very recently. And today 20% of Germans are described as having a migrant background.\n\nBrexit-Britain and Trump's US, meanwhile, seem to be heading in the opposite direction. At least, that's what it looks like from here.\n\nAs for me, my own citizenship status is a bureaucratic muddle. It's no doubt my own fault for moving around too much, but growing up in a globalising world I had thought passports, borders and notions of citizenship were losing their importance.\n\nToday though, as I scrabble together previously unheard of documents to avoid suddenly becoming an illegal alien, I can see I was wrong.\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nJust when you think you have the Six Nations pegged, it confounds expectations once again.\n\nScotland beating Wales was not a shock as such, but doing so with plenty to spare was a surprise.\n\nItaly were expected to be fodder for Eddie Jones' England at Twickenham on Sunday, but exploited the intricacies of the laws to throw a spanner in the works as the hosts spluttered to victory.\n\nIreland's win over France was one for the purists, but keeps Joe Schmidt's side in contention for the title shake-up on the final day.\n\nTwo simple things impressed me most in Scotland's win over Wales.\n\nFirstly, the mere fact that they won.\n\nThere has been a lot of talk about how this young Scotland side stacks up against the teams of the past that won Five Nations titles and Triple Crowns.\n\nPreviously, they have produced promising performances without the results. Now, though they are heading into the final two rounds still with a chance of lifting the title and completing a clean sweep of the home nations.\n\nSecondly, was the manner in which they won.\n\nIt was not a nail-biting finish. Instead there were choruses of Flower of Scotland rolling around Murrayfield in the final 10 minutes, as the home team went away with the match.\n\nThey scored 20 unanswered points in the second half. In any hemisphere, at any level, that is a phenomenal performance.\n\nThe forwards made up for the loss of the injured Josh Strauss' heavy-duty ball carrying though sheer industry though.\n\nJohn Barclay led through deed as captain and Hamish Watson was an absolute bundle of energy, while Huw Jones was elusive and quick in the centres, keeping the Wales midfield honest and allowing the wings space to score their tries.\n\nAnd Stuart Hogg stood out once again.\n\nHe has superb acceleration, an eye for the gap and then the top-end speed to exploit it.\n\nBut against Wales it was his game-awareness - the ability to invariably do the right thing - that was key.\n\nFor Tommy Seymour's try he recognised that Huw Jones run had drawn the attention of the Wales defence and should be used as a decoy.\n\nFor Tim Visser's, he realised that George North was coming up fast and that he had to get that pass across his body as fast as possible.\n\nAfter that win, talk inevitably turned to the Calcutta Cup match against England in a fortnight's time.\n\nTheir best chance of attacking England is out wide. The catch is that they can't go there immediately.\n\nYou have to keep the opposition defence narrow with big runners or decoy angles to create the space.\n\nScotland have to put together a more complete performance than they have managed yet in the tournament.\n\nThey have to play as well as they did in the first half against Ireland across a whole match. If not, they won't win.\n\nThis was an incredibly disappointing weekend for Wales.\n\nTheir performance was wonderful against England a fortnight ago, even if the result was not what they wanted.\n\nBut they backed it up with very little at Murrayfield.\n\nBy interim coach Rob Howley's own admission their title hopes have gone.\n\nHis selection for the next round against Ireland will show whether he is prioritising World Cups or saving face.\n\nFly-half Sam Davies came on as a replacement and is the sort of player who suits an adventurous, ambitious style.\n\nBut six minutes before he arrived on the pitch, Jamie Roberts had come on in the centres.\n\nRoberts brings great experience and can dominate the gainline and guarantee quick ball.\n\nBut he is not the player to help Davies spread the ball wide.\n\nWe don't know if Davies could work alongside the starting midfield of Jonathan Davies and Scott Williams.\n\nNow is the time to drop Dan Biggar and find out.\n\nItaly's tactics - not engaging at the breakdown, not providing England with an offside line to work with and putting players into the channel between Danny Care and his runners - were really well thought out and executed.\n\nHowever if Conor O'Shea's side had tried it against New Zealand, the All Blacks still would have sussed it out straight away.\n\nFirstly because it is a tactic that their provincial Chiefs side have employed in Super Rugby , but secondly because their on-the-field problem-solving and mental agility is what sets them apart from the rest of world rugby.\n\nA better team than England would have adapted to it a lot quicker and I think England were embarrassed by the fact that it took until the second half for them to sort it out.\n\nWe didn't get a look at what impact coach Eddie Jones' changes had.\n\nHe brought Ben Te'o into the centres, gave Danny Care a chance to start at scrum half, but they never really got a chance to implement the patterns that they had been running in training.\n\nThere were plus points. James Haskell was strong and industrious from his open-side flanker berth. Elliot Daly always seems to have time on the ball and that is a quality that sets good players apart. Second rows Joe Launchbury and Courtney Lawes were outstanding in their workrate.\n\nBut there were concerns as well.\n\nOwen Farrell had an uncharacteristically poor game by his standards and Ireland and Scotland will have earmarked George Ford's fly-half channel as a potential weakness.\n\nAfter France attacked him and made metres in round two and Michele Campagnaro ran through him for Italy's second try at Twickenham.\n\nHowever getting heavy traffic through on collision course with Ford, with James Haskell patrolling a similar area, is harder in reality than in theory.\n\nAs tight and competitive as this Test was, it was a defensive struggle that was not easy on the eye.\n\nFrance seemed to have more power, but lacked the collective team cohesion that Ireland have built over a number of years under Joe Schmidt.\n\nIreland did what was required to win and France, for all their power, never really threatened to wrestle the game from them.\n\nWhat Schmidt will have been disappointed by is that Ireland should have made it easier.\n\nThey had a few multi-phase passages of play near the France line which they failed to convert into scores. Good teams make those count.\n\nThat is a big coaching challenge of modern rugby.\n\nIt can become so frenetic and hectic. Nobody seems to be able to take the game by the scruff of the neck, have the clarity of thought to see where the opportunity is and have the skills to seize it.\n\nCentre Garry Ringrose looked promising again, making a few half breaks and cutting back against the drift defence.\n\nI would like to see him in a game and a backline with more fluency though to assess his ability to straighten though a hole and turn half-breaks into full ones.\n\nThis is my third-round Lions XV, based on the form shown over the weekend.", "Vanity Fair's party is the one to go to after the Oscars, and the invitees are letting their hair down before they get through the door.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nIt is \"too early to speculate\" on potential rule changes after Italy used controversial tactics against England, says the sport's world governing body.\n\nThe Azzurri refused to engage in rucks as the home side won Sunday's Six Nations match 36-15 at Twickenham.\n\nEngland boss Eddie Jones criticised Italy's tactics, and said law-makers should have a \"very close look at it\".\n\nA spokesperson for World Rugby told the BBC it could 'clarify' the law, rather than drastically change it.\n\nItaly's plan, masterminded by defence coach Brendan Venter, left no offside line after a tackle.\n\nThe Azzurri's half-backs then crowded an unsettled England backline.\n\nEngland were 10-5 down at half-time but recovered in the second half to secure a bonus-point win.\n\n\"We challenged people's minds and a lot of credit must go to Brendan for doing what he did,\" said Italy head coach Conor O'Shea.\n\nFollow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\nHow Italy's plan almost failed before it started\n\nO'Shea has revealed Italy's plan was almost scuppered the day before the match.\n\nHe said referee Romain Poite told Italy's coaching team there had been a change in the laws during the week, which they were not aware of.\n\nTheir original idea was to target England scrum-half Danny Care directly after rejecting any notion of forming a ruck, and they worked on that in training.\n\nBut Poite told them they could no longer legally challenge the scrum-half.\n\n\"It meant we had to adapt even between Saturday's meeting and the match,\" said O'Shea.\n\nInstead of chasing Care, Italy counterpart Edoardo Gori blocked his running and passing lines by standing in what would have been offside positions had any rucks formed.\n\nO'Shea said: \"There was an offside in our game against Ireland that was clarified as being onside.\n\n\"Brendan came to me and said: 'Please listen and don't think I'm mad.' We talked as a group of coaches and said: 'OK, will we go for this?'\n\n\"A lot of thought has gone into it. We didn't come up with this overnight.\"\n\nO'Shea, a former director of rugby at London Irish and Harlequins, said he was \"incredibly proud\" of his players.\n\nHe said: \"We did not come here to lose, and we are gutted to lose.\n\n\"We have to change in Italy and I am sick and tired of people having a pop and having a go. We came to win.\"\n\n'Fury was righteous and often misplaced' - analysis\n\nEngland were as ready for it as Don Bradman was for Bodyline, or Scott Styris in 2008 when Kevin Pietersen swapped hands on his bat handle and switch-hit him for six.\n\nOn the pitch they were first confused, then angry, and for a long period then neutered. In the stands it was more demonstrative yet.\n\nThere are few sights in rugby as striking as Twickenham Man in full red-cheeked fury, and on Sunday his fury was both righteous and often misplaced.\n\nCoach Conor O'Shea had run the tactic past referee Romain Poite on Saturday, and not only been given the all-clear but a little bit of advice too: to be within the spirit of the laws as well as the wording, do not get within a metre of the nine.", "Castle View on Canvey Island hit the headlines in 2013 for banning triangular flapjacks after a student was injured by one\n\nA school is letting pupils who behave well during the day go home before those who do not, it has emerged.\n\nCastle View School on Canvey Island, Essex, said some pupils could finish at 14:50 if they had made \"the right decisions, every lesson of the day\".\n\nOthers finish 10 minutes later in what the school calls a \"second dismissal\".\n\nAn NUT official said he had not heard of a school doing this before, but that it was \"not that innovative\" if it was just another way of giving detentions.\n\nThe academy trust school, which hit the headlines in 2013 after banning triangular flapjacks, has about 1,100 students aged 11 to 16.\n\nPupils at the school begin their day at 08:30 with first lessons starting by 08:50.\n\nIn a letter to parents explaining the system, the school, rated \"good\" by Ofsted, said: \"Our second dismissal system is designed to ensure students have an instant consequence that can be put right at the end of the day and start afresh the next day.\"\n\nThe BBC has asked the school whether the introduction of the new system had caused any issues for parents, but the school has yet to respond.\n\nJerry Glazier, general secretary of the Essex branch of the National Union of Teachers (NUT) said he had not heard of schools having split-time endings before.\n\n\"Then again, perhaps it is not that innovative if most pupils are leaving at the normal time and the rest are getting detentions,\" he said.\n\n\"It is up to schools to determine what rewards or sanctions they want to use to motivate pupils.\"\n\nMichelle Doyle Wildman, policy and communications director at PTA UK, which represents parents and teacher associations, said: \"PTA UK's position would be that its really important that parents are fully informed and preferably consulted on any changes to arrangements to the beginning and end of the school day.\n\n\"The best schools do see parents as key partners and will consider how they approach things from a parent and family perspective.\n\n\"This is especially relevant to parents juggling work and additional caring responsibilities.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Plans to allow councils to opt out of key legal duties to vulnerable children have been labelled a \"serious danger\" by a former government adviser.\n\nProf Eileen Munro, whose social work review inspired the Children and Social Work Bill, said the opt-outs create \"more dangers than benefits\".\n\nUnder the bill, children's rights and checks on care could be set aside by councils trying new ways of working.\n\nMinisters said it was wrong to say that children would be at risk as a result.\n\nInstead they argue the Bill is a bold approach to removing red tape and allowing innovative ways of working.\n\nThe Bill, which is going through Parliament, has been described as \"a bonfire of child protection rights\", with many campaigners arguing that to allow councils to opt out of these long-standing duties would be risky and unnecessary.\n\nIf it becomes law, local authorities would be able to apply to the secretary of state to be exempted from one or more legal duties for a period of three years so it could try out new ways of working.\n\nThis could then be extended for a further three years.\n\nMinisters have regularly cited Prof Munro as a supporter of what the government refers to as \"innovation powers\", referring to a statement issued last year in which she supported the plans.\n\nHowever, the professor of social policy has now signalled her opposition to the Bill in an email to children's rights campaign group Article 39.\n\n\"I have reached the conclusion that the power to have exemption from primary and secondary legislation creates more dangers than the benefits it might produce,\" she said.\n\n\"While I understand and respect the motivation of the current government, there is a serious danger in having such wide-reaching powers in statute.\n\n\"Some future secretary of state might use them in ways that are completely contrary to the current intentions and consequently subvert the will of Parliament.\"\n\nThe legal duties affected by the Bill relate to nearly all the social care services children receive from local authorities, which have been laid down in numerous acts of Parliament.\n\nThese include statutory rights on child protection, family support, children's homes and fostering, support to care leavers and services for disabled children.\n\nAbout 50 organisations publicly oppose the proposed exemptions, including the British Association of Social Workers, the Care Leavers' Association, Women's Aid, Liberty and the National Association of People Abused in Childhood.\n\nArticle 39 director Carolyne Willow said: \"The death knell has finally sounded for this appalling attack on children's law and parliamentary sovereignty.\n\n\"From the start, ministers claimed their dangerous plan to test out the removal of legal protection from vulnerable children and young people had the backing of Prof Munro. Well now she has walked away.\n\n\"Peers rejected these clauses, more than 50 organisations oppose them, social workers and others with long careers helping children reject them and more than 107,000 members of the public have signed a petition against them.\n\n\"Nobody wants our child protection and welfare system to lose its legal infrastructure.\n\n\"Ministers must do the decent thing for children and young people and withdraw these hated clauses.\"\n\nA Department for Education spokeswoman said: \"We know that over-regulation can get in the way of good social work practice, and the power to innovate will allow local authorities to test new approaches in a carefully controlled and monitored way.\n\n\"We have amended these clauses to strengthen the safeguards - to suggest the power to innovate would place children at risk is simply wrong.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nLondon 2012 gold medallist Mariya Savinova has been stripped of her 800m title and banned until 2019 after being found guilty of doping.\n\nShe has had her results from July 2010 to August 2013 annulled but has 45 days to appeal against the decision.\n\nThe Russian beat South Africa's Caster Semenya into second at the London Olympics and the 2011 Worlds in Daegu.\n\nSavinova, 31, also beat Britain's Jenny Meadows into to bronze at the 2010 European Championships.\n\nBoth Semenya and Meadows could now have their medals upgraded.\n\nSavinova has also lost her 800m silver from the 2013 Worlds and her four-year suspension will be backdated to 2015.\n\nThe case against Savinova was brought by the IAAF based upon her biological passport, which the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas) has used to make its decision.\n\nA Cas statement read: \"On the basis of clear evidence, including the evidence derived from her biological passport (ABP), Mariya Savinova is found to have been engaged in using doping from 26 July 2010 (the eve of the European Championship in Barcelona) through to 19 August 2013 (the day after the World Championship in Moscow).\n\n\"As a consequence, a four-year period of ineligibility, beginning on 24 August 2015, has been imposed and all results achieved between 26 July 2010 and 19 August 2013, are disqualified and any prizes, medals, prize and appearance money forfeited.\"\n\nSavinova was one of five Russian athletes named in a World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) report into doping.\n\nShe has not raced since 2013 after being suspended during an investigation sparked by the release of undercover footage filmed by whistleblower Yuliya Stepanova.\n\nShould the International Olympic Committee decide to reallocate the medals from the London 2012 final, Semenya would be awarded a second gold after she claimed the 800m title in Rio last summer.\n\nSavinova is now the second Russian finalist from that race to have been retrospectively banned - after Yelena Arzhakova - while a third - bronze medallist Ekaterina Poistogova - is also under investigation for doping.\n\nSavinova is one of Russia's best known middle-distance athletes - she is now one of Russia's best known drugs cheats.\n\nIt means in effect Savinova loses her London 2012 gold medal and Caster Semenya will likely be promoted from silver to gold.\n\nSo while there are consequences for Savinova, the world of sporting detection is once again showing it will catch up with athletes if they have cheated even if it is some years after the event.", "An Egyptian woman, believed to be the world's heaviest woman at 500kg (78.5 stone), has arrived in Mumbai, India, for weight reduction surgery.\n\nThe family of 36-year-old Eman Ahmed Abd El Aty said it was the first time she had left home for 25 years.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby League\n\nCastleford highlighted their Super League title ambitions with a convincing seven-try victory over new-boys Leigh Centurions.\n\nLeigh, in their first top-flight game since 2005, were blown away by four first-half scores and a Luke Gale penalty to trail 26-0 at the break.\n\nGale and Greg Minikin both picked up two tries apiece as the Tigers continued to exert their dominance.\n\nLeigh rallied with three scores, but it came too late to challenge Cas.\n\nDaryl Powell's Tigers are among the contenders in 2017 despite the loss of Denny Solomona, who scored 42 tries last season, in a high-profile defection to rugby union.\n\nThey showed they can cope without him with plenty of strike options - notably from Minikin, Jake Webster and Greg Eden.\n\nThe Centurions had dominated the second tier Championship over the past three seasons and were impressive in the Qualifiers with three wins against Super League opposition to book their top-flight place last term.\n\nHowever, having survived a tight opening quarter, they could not live with Cas' movement, fluid handling and pace - particularly after Gale had crossed for the opening try.\n\nCaptain Gale kicked eight goals to add to his two tries, while there were debut scores for Jesse Sene-Lefao and boyhood fan Eden.\n\nLeigh coach Neil Jukes will have been heartened by his side's refusal to give in on a tough introduction to Super League life, characterised by tries from former Tigers Ryan Hampshire and Danny Tickle as well as Matty Dawson.\n\nCastleford head coach Daryl Powell told BBC Radio 5 live extra: \"Once we got to grips with the game we were excellent, I was really happy with large parts of our attack and defence.\n\n\"It was always going to be a dangerous game, it was 0-0 for a while and it took a bit to break them down, the conditions are difficult. It's not summer rugby.\n\n\"We scored some smart tries, we looked dangerous and inventive and there were a lot of things to admire about our defence.\"\n\nLeigh head coach Neil Jukes told BBC Radio 5 live extra: \"We didn't get ourselves a chance to win the game, our kicking game was poor and three or four times we had seven tackle restarts, soft penalties with poor errors and some individual ones.\n\n\"If you defend your tryline as much as we did, certainly after 21 to 63 minutes, as good as you think your defence is, Cas are going to score points.\n\n\"Ultimately, we gave them too many opportunities. Across the board some individuals did some really good stuff and we did some poor stuff from 1-17. It's about getting the deficiencies out of us.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nArsene Wenger has told Ian Wright his time as Arsenal boss is \"coming to the end\", claims the Gunners legend.\n\nWenger has managed Arsenal since October 1996 and won the last of his three Premier League titles in 2004.\n\nThe 67-year-old's contract expires at the end of the season.\n\n\"I get the impression that that's it,\" ex-Arsenal striker Wright told BBC Radio 5 live. \"He looks tired. You just feel that he looks winded. I feel that he will go at the end of the season.\"\n\nArsenal's hopes of winning the championship this season took a huge blow when Saturday's 3-1 loss at league leaders Chelsea left them 12 points behind the Blues.\n\nWright says he spoke with Wenger on Thursday night.\n\n\"He actually mentioned that he is coming to the end. I have never heard him say that before,\" said the 53-year-old.\n\n\"I was with him for a few hours. He didn't say to me, 'I'm leaving at the end of the season', but I get the impression, looking at him, that that's it.\"\n\nWright added: \"The players have let him down badly.\n\n\"If he does leave at the end of the season, there will be a lot of changes. They should have a long, hard look at themselves. He has been so faithful to his team, it has been misplaced.\"\n\nSome fans have called for Wenger to leave, with one holding up a poster at Stamford Bridge telling the Frenchman: \"Enough is enough. Time to go.\"", "Christian Matlock grew up in Brechin in Angus but is now a bounty hunter in Virginia\n\nChristian Matlock is a bounty hunter who spends his days and nights tracking down fugitives who have skipped bail in the US state of Virginia.\n\nWith his dark sunglasses, his gun and his tattoos, he looks every inch the movie stereotype of the maverick American law enforcement officer, but until seven years ago Christian lived in Brechin.\n\nHe swapped the east coast of Scotland for the eastern seaboard of the US when he was 21.\n\nHe worked briefly as a bouncer in Washington DC before obtaining a licence as a bail enforcement agent, often referred to as bounty hunters.\n\nThey are contracted by bondsmen, money lenders who offer to cover bail money for those who can't afford it in exchange for a 10% commission.\n\nIf the accused fails to show in court the bondsman loses the entire sum unless a bounty hunter can track down the fugitive.\n\nIn Virginia, like most US states, it is not only police who get to carry guns and chase criminals.\n\nChristian says: \"Every boy, every man wants to have the gun and go kicking in doors.\n\n\"It's exciting being like that but I prefer being the undercover detective kind of guy.\"\n\nHe says he is not a typical bounty hunter and has a low opinion of some others who seem to delight in the macho violence of the job.\n\nChristian moved to the US seven years ago to track down his American father.\n\nHe had been getting into a lot of trouble at home and could not get a job.\n\n\"Plus I thought Americans always looked a lot cooler in movies so I thought I'd give it a try,\" he says.\n\nIn the BBC documentary - The Scottish Bounty Hunter - Christian tells how he felt the need to escape his home town because he was taking \"a lot of ecstasy\" during \"week-long parties\".\n\n\"There was bugger all else to do,\" he says.\n\n\"I feel like in Scotland I was supposed to die there.\"\n\nHis mother tells the programme she is pleased he left.\n\nShe says: \"They were getting into trouble with the police and drinking and hanging around with the wrong people.\n\n\"Brechin doesn't have anything going for it really. There's not a lot of work in the area. It's like some place to sleep now.\n\n\"There's no potential here for young people.\"\n\nAbout 80% of the jobs he gets as a bounty hunter are drugs related.\n\nHe says he wants to help offenders and their families get back to a normal life but he gets paid for finding and putting people back in jail.\n\nHe says: \"I can't feel sorry for anyone or I'd just end up taking handcuffs off everybody.\n\n\"I've thought about taking them off many times and letting folk go but I can't do that. This is what I signed up for.\"\n\nChristian can use lots of different methods to track people down but his first port of call is Facebook, which can give him clues to where people like to go and who they might be with.\n\nHe says he caught a woman in Maryland because she used Facebook \"check in\".\n\nChristian says he knew she was going to a beauty school but didn't know which one.\n\n\"She would 'check in' at this coffee shop every single morning,\" he says.\n\n\"Every morning she was there at the same time 'Getting coffee on my way to school' - on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.\n\n\"On the Thursday - no check in. Because I checked her into Winchester jail.\"\n\nAs well as getting paid to put people in jail, Christian makes money getting people out.\n\nFour years ago he started lending bail money as a bondsman himself.\n\nIn an average week he'll track down five or six people and bail even more out of jail.\n\nHe says the job is stressful, dangerous and exhausting.\n\n\"Bounty hunters don't last very long,\" he says.\n\n\"I only know of three or four who have been in it as long as I have.\n\n\"They either can't handle the hours or can't handle the stress.\"\n\nBut Christian says he keeps doing it because it is a chance to help people turn their life around.\n\nHe says: \"I've got a lot of relationships with people who might end up going off the rails if I left.\n\n\"This is a job you can't do half-arsed.\n\n\"You are either going to be a bounty hunter full time or you are not going to be one at all.\n\n\"I've tried to get out of it two or three times but I just can't seem to stop doing it.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nSadio Mane lifted Liverpool's recent gloom by scoring twice in two first-half minutes to see off top-four rivals Tottenham Hotspur at Anfield.\n\nThe forward put the Reds ahead when he ran onto Georginio Wijnaldum's pass, holding off Ben Davies to fire in.\n\nHe doubled the lead 138 seconds later, pouncing on a loose ball from close range after keeper Hugo Lloris denied Adam Lallana and Roberto Firmino.\n\nThe visitors' best chance fell to forward Son Heung-min, whose fierce, angled shot was blocked by Reds keeper Simon Mignolet shortly after Mane's second.\n\nSpurs remain nine points behind leaders Chelsea ahead of the Blues' trip to Burnley on Sunday.\n\nLiverpool, who had not won in their five previous matches, move back up to fourth.\n\nLiverpool's downturn in form since New Year coincided with the absence of Senegal forward Mane, who missed seven matches when he represented his country at the Africa Cup of Nations.\n\nThe Reds managed just one win in his absence, slipping from Chelsea's nearest title challengers to fifth place and going out of both domestic cup competitions.\n\nHere Mane, who failed to shine in last weekend's defeat at Hull City, showed just why Liverpool lamented his loss.\n\nMane impressed in the first half of the season following his £34m arrival from Southampton - his pace, energy and clinical finishing contributing heavily to Liverpool's success.\n\nWithout him, they struggled to break down opponents. With him, they tore apart Tottenham in the opening quarter.\n\nSpurs could not handle the speed of thought, or the speed of movement, of the home side.\n\nMane - who scored the fastest hat-trick in Premier League history in two minutes and 56 seconds in May 2015 - almost came close to another quickfire treble, only to be denied again by the over-exposed Lloris.\n\nWhile Spurs stemmed the tide after the break, the damage was already done.\n\nFormer Arsenal and England striker Ian Wright on Match of the Day\n\n\"They couldn't win without him. Mane is the one with that bit of pace to get in behind and I didn't think they were doing that recently and that's because he wasn't there.\n\n\"He is phenomenal. He senses the danger. Spurs couldn't deal with him.\"\n\nSpurs' struggles continue away from the Lane\n\nWhile Liverpool had not won in five games, Tottenham were playing with confidence and fluency in a 15-match streak which had seen them beaten just once.\n\nThe formbook was torn up at Anfield.\n\nSpurs had conceded just twice in their previous five league games, but were uncharacteristically porous without injured pair Danny Rose and Jan Vertonghen.\n\nHarry Kane was isolated up front, while midfielders Dele Alli and Christian Eriksen were virtually anonymous in the opposition half.\n\nSpurs managed just two shots on target as Reds keeper Simon Mignolet was largely untroubled, their frustration becoming evident after the break as four players picked up yellow cards.\n\nWorryingly for boss Mauricio Pochettino, his side failed to turn up again in a potentially-pivotal trip to one of their top four rivals.\n\nSpurs have won just twice on the road since 24 September, including defeats at Chelsea and Manchester United in addition to draws at Arsenal and Manchester City.\n\n\"We were poor. They were better. No complaints,\" said Pochettino.\n\n\"It was how we have to play against Tottenham. We had to show a reaction and it was perfect. It was an outstanding performance offensively in the first half, and defensively in the second half.\n\n\"We could have scored again. It was difficult to defend against us in the first half, we had four or five players in the area, it was like the early part of the season.\"\n\n\"We started the game very sloppy. It is difficult to understand, I am very disappointed in our first-half display. Second half we reached their level but it is really late.\n\n\"We are in a position that is up to us. But if you show like today that you cannot cope with the pressure to play to win the league than it is difficult to challenge and fight for the Premier League.\n\n\"In the first 45 minutes you saw a team that is not ready to fight for the Premier League.\"\n• None Liverpool have won more Premier League games at Anfield against Tottenham than any other current top-flight side they have faced (16 wins)\n• None The Reds are unbeaten in their last nine Premier League encounters with Spurs, winning six and drawing three\n• None Tottenham have conceded eight goals from open play in their last 13 Premier League games after conceding just one in their opening 12 matches of the season\n• None Spurs conceded eight shots on target; their most in a first half since 2003-04\n• None Spurs have failed to score in successive Premier League away games for the first time since April 2015\n• None Toby Alderweireld received his first Premier League yellow card since March 2016, after a run of 26 games without a booking\n\nA two-week break from the Premier League for Tottenham. Pochettino's side turn their attentions back to the Europa League when they face Belgian side Gent in a two-legged tie either side of a FA Cup fifth-round trip to Fulham on Sunday, 19 February.\n\nThey return to top-flight action when Stoke City visit on Sunday, 26 February (13:30 GMT), while Liverpool have a 16-day break before they visit champions Leicester City on Monday, 27 February (20:00).\n• None Attempt missed. Toby Alderweireld (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the left.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Adam Lallana (Liverpool) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt missed. Georginio Wijnaldum (Liverpool) left footed shot from more than 40 yards on the left wing misses to the right.\n• None Attempt blocked. James Milner (Liverpool) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Toby Alderweireld (Tottenham Hotspur) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Substitution, Liverpool. Ragnar Klavan replaces Lucas Leiva because of an injury.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Lucas Leiva (Liverpool) because of an injury.\n• None Eric Dier (Tottenham Hotspur) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "It's the weekly news quiz - have you been paying attention to what's been going on in the world over the past seven days?\n\nIf you missed last week's quiz, try it here\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Ireland's Garry Ringrose scores a blistering try in the 63-10 victory over Italy in the Six Nations.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Winter pressures: A detailed look at how the NHS is coping Winter is the busiest time of year for the health service. The BBC looks at how hospitals are coping across the UK.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nHead coach Eddie Jones said England had used up all of their \"get-out-of-jail-free cards\", after Elliot Daly's 76th-minute try secured a 21-16 Six Nations victory over Wales in Cardiff.\n\nThat followed a 19-16 win over France in their opening match, when the winning try came in the 71st minute.\n\n\"We don't want to be in that position again,\" said Jones.\n\n\"We are a gritty team with characters in there that don't know how to get beaten, and that was evident here.\"\n\nEngland, who have won a national record 16 Tests in a row, play Italy next.\n\nThe defending champions are yet to secure a bonus point in their first two games, and Jones said he wanted to \"put Italy to the cleaners\" at Twickenham in a fortnight's time.\n\nAfter Ben Youngs' early try for England, Liam Williams' slicing first-half try and 11 points from the boot of Leigh Halfpenny looked to have given Wales a deserved victory.\n\nBut Owen Farrell's penalties had kept them within two points, and with time running out his long flat pass put Daly away down the left to score.\n\nJones said the match-winner - who features in the centres for Wasps - was being deployed in a position that suited the team rather than the player.\n\n\"The boy's got gas and he's got that X-factor about him and that's what we like about him,\" Jones said.\n\n\"I don't necessarily think wing is his best position, but it suits us at the moment.\"\n• None 5 live In Short: England's backs 'more talented than Wilkinson era'\n\nThe Australian also returned to a topic that had featured heavily in the build-up to the match - the Principality Stadium roof.\n\nJones used the away team's veto to frustrate Wales' wishes and keep the match open to the elements.\n\nEngland have now won five out of six matches at the ground with the roof open, and lost four out of five when it has been closed.\n\n\"They can close the roof now,\" he said. \"The roof should be open unless the conditions are going to be absolutely terrible. That's how rugby should be played because it's a winter sport, so you play the conditions.\"\n\nCaptain Dylan Hartley, who was replaced by Saracens' Jamie George after 47 minutes, paid tribute to the influence of England's bench.\n\n\"I would have preferred to wrap it up a bit earlier. The finishers came on for us and showed great composure,\" he said.\n\nHow did the pundits view it?\n\nFormer England hooker Brian Moore: \"It shows again that if you do not put this England side away when you are on top they will make you pay.\n\n\"They were outplayed for long periods but when it came down to taking the opportunity from a poor Welsh kick, they found a way to win.\"\n\nFormer Wales fly-half Jonathan Davies: \"I felt that England looked far more threatening with ball in hand. When the opportunity came, they took it.\n\n\"They were so clinical in the opportunities they had. Wales had a lot of possession, a lot of territory and scored a great try in the first half, but unfortunately they couldn't turn that pressure into points.\"\n\nFormer England scrum-half Matt Dawson: \"I've never watched an England side with only 40-60% territory, under that much pressure, win a game. They didn't even nick it, they worked it.\n\n\"That game was absolutely superb. On that evidence, there is no gap now between the southern hemisphere teams.\"", "The injured boy was taken to hospital for urgent treatment but later died\n\nA 16-year-old boy has died after he was stabbed in a busy Leeds street, prompting a murder inquiry.\n\nPolice were alerted to the stabbing in Harehills Lane, Harehills, at about 15:40 GMT.\n\nThe wounded teenager was taken to hospital for treatment, but died a short time later.\n\nA 15-year-old boy has been arrested on suspicion of murder, West Yorkshire Police said. He remains in custody for questioning.\n\nPolice have appealed for witnesses to come forward\n\nDet Supt Pat Twiggs, of West Yorkshire Police, said: \"This tragic incident happened in a busy area at a busy time of day with large numbers of people going about their daily business.\n\n\"I am appealing directly to anyone who witnessed the incident or has information that could help our inquiries to come forward.\"\n\nThe force is hoping to speak to anyone who saw a person running in the area or those who have mobile phone footage.\n\nThe scene remains cordoned off, with police forensic examinations expected to continue over the weekend.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Parks are seeing playgrounds removed in a spending squeeze, MPs say\n\nPublic parks are at risk of falling into neglect as funding to maintain them comes under pressure, says a report by a committee of MPs.\n\nThe squeeze has resulted in reduced opening hours, the removal of play equipment, toilets closing and more litter, vandalism and rats, MPs said.\n\nThey urged councils to find new ways to fund and manage parks.\n\nThe Local Government Association said councils have to balance spending on parks against other priorities.\n\nThe report by the Commons Communities and Local Government (CLG) Committee argued housing demand was also putting parks at risk, with new homes \"nibbling away\" at green spaces in some areas.\n\nUnless parks were recognised as \"much more than just grass and tulips\", there was a risk of turning the clock back to an era of neglect of 20 to 30 years ago, the MPs warned.\n\nLocal authorities have no statutory duty to fund and maintain public parks, and a 2014 report by the Heritage Lottery Fund found 86% of park managers had seen cuts to their budgets since 2010.\n\nThe UK has about 27,000 public parks attracting 2.6 billion visits a year.\n\nThe MPs argued that parks play an important role by:\n\nCouncils should publish strategic plans that recognise parks' wider value and consider a range of alternative models for looking after parks, they said.\n\nHowever, the MPs added, they should remain owned by local authorities and be freely available to everyone.\n\nParks needed recognising as more than just tulips and grass, the MPs said\n\nThe MPs also entered the debate over the free use of parks by organisations such as Parkrun, which hit the headlines when a parish council tried to charge for its weekly runs in a Bristol park last year.\n\nCommunity organisations, such as Parkrun, which do not charge for participation or raise revenue, could be encouraged to contribute volunteer time to help maintain parks or undertake fundraising, the report said.\n\nHelen Griffiths, chief executive of Fields in Trust, a charity that seeks better statutory protection for recreational spaces, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that parks can help to get more people active, tackle obesity and address anti-social behaviour.\n\n\"I think it is really important that we shouldn't see parks as a drain on our services, not as a budget just for cutting the grass, but as an area that can make a real contribution to tackling some of those very important issues,\" she said.\n\nPeter Fleming, deputy chairman of the Local Government Association, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: \"Many councils are saying actually the park is an asset that can help things around public health, but also around how we bring open spaces for families who live in urban areas as well.\n\n\"But we have to try and balance that spending against those other priorities that councils have, so it is a difficult thing.\"\n\nParkruns, such as this one in Sheffield joined by Jessica Ennis-Hill, take place across the country\n\nClive Betts, Labour chairman of the Commons committee, said: \"Parks are treasured public assets, as the overwhelming response to our inquiry demonstrates, but they are at a tipping point and, if we are to prevent a period of decline with potentially severe consequences, then action must be taken.\"\n\nHe said the government had a leadership role to play and volunteers did \"fantastic work\" but the primary responsibility lay with local authorities.\n\nThe vast majority of councils have cut budgets for parks and were likely to cut further, with Newcastle City Council's parks management budget slashed from £2.589m in 2011/12 to £0.253m in 2016/17, the report found.\n\nThe government should help councils find innovative ways of managing public parks and green spaces should also be at the heart of planning, the report added.", "Mr Trump's travel ban caused chaos at US airports and sparked protests across the country\n\nDonald Trump is considering a new executive order to ban citizens of certain countries from travelling to the US after his initial attempt was overturned in the courts.\n\nMr Trump told reporters on Air Force One that a \"brand new order\" could be issued as early as Monday or Tuesday.\n\nIt comes after an appeals court in San Francisco upheld a court ruling to suspend his original order.\n\nIt barred entry from citizens from seven mainly Muslim countries.\n\nIt is unclear what a new US immigration order might look like.\n\nMr Trump said that it would change \"very little\", but he did not provide details of any new ban under consideration.\n\nDespite his suggestion on Friday, Mr Trump's administration may still pursue its case in the courts over the original order, which was halted a week ago by a Seattle judge.\n\n\"We'll win that battle,\" Mr Trump told reporters, adding: \"The unfortunate part is it takes time. We'll win that battle. But we also have a lot of other options, including just filing a brand new order.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. President Trump speaking on Air Force One: \"We need speed for reasons of security\"\n\nAn unnamed judge from the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, which on Thursday upheld the stay on the original order, has called on all 25 judges of that court to vote on whether to hear the appeal again.\n\nTechnically known as an en banc review, a second hearing of the case would involve an 11-judge panel, rather than the three who initially heard the appeal.\n\nMr Trump's travel ban, which was hastily unveiled at the end of his first week in office, caused chaos at US airports and sparked protests across the country.\n\nOn Thursday, the appeals court said the administration failed to offer \"any evidence\" to justify the ban, which the president said was necessary to keep the US safe from terror attacks.\n\nHowever Mr Trump insisted that the executive order was crucial for national security and promised to take action \"very rapidly\" to introduce \"additional security\" steps in the wake of the court's decision.\n\nHe spoke as Virginia state lawyers argued in court that his policy \"resulted from animus toward Muslims\".\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The US state with a deep fear of refugees\n\nTheir challenge focuses on the travel restrictions imposed by the ban, rather than the four-month suspension of refugee admissions.\n\nBut lawyers for the US government in Virginia wrote that \"judicial second-guessing\" amounted to \"an impermissible intrusion\" on Mr Trump's constitutional authority.\n\nThe appeals court ruling means that visa holders from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen can continue to enter the US, and refugees from around the world, who were also subject to a temporary ban, are no longer blocked either.\n\nBut the ruling does not affect one part of Mr Trump's controversial executive order: a cap of 50,000 refugees to be admitted in the current fiscal year, down from the ceiling of 110,000 established under his predecessor, Barack Obama.", "Arsene Wenger says he did not give any indication on his future as Arsenal manager to Ian Wright, after the Gunners legend claimed the Frenchman was \"coming to the end\".\n\nWenger, 67, was appointed as Arsenal manager in September 1996.\n\nWright told BBC Radio 5 live on Friday: \"He looks tired. I feel he will go at the end of the season.\"\n\nBut Wenger said: \"We had a little dinner, not the two of us. I appreciate you want me to rest but I'm not ready.\"\n\nHe added he could look tired because \"I get up early in the morning\".\n\nWright, who played under Wenger for two seasons between 1996 and 1998, reiterated during his analysis on Saturday's Match of the Day that he believes Wenger will go.\n\n\"We were at a question and answer session and the way he was speaking and his demeanour... it's my opinion. I could be wrong,\" said the 53-year-old.\n\n\"I still think he has some massive decisions to make and think it could be his last season.\"\n\n'My job is to make these people happy'\n\nWenger is the Premier League's longest-serving manager and his contract expires at the end of the season.\n\nThe Frenchman last won the Premier League title in 2004 and has been under pressure at the Emirates following league defeats by Watford and Chelsea.\n\nHowever, after his side's 2-0 win against Hull, he added: \"I focus on what is important: winning football games and getting the team to perform. The rest, I cannot influence.\n\n\"I have big respect for this country and this club, and I am grateful because I have worked here for 20 years. My job is to make these people happy and when I don't do that I feel guilty - that's why it's important for us to win.\"\n\n'It's too soon for Wenger to leave'\n\nFormer Arsenal defender Martin Keown on Match of the Day 2 Extra:\n\n\"What Wenger has to decide is, 'has he come to end of road in terms of his managerial qualities?'. I do feel if he was to go now, without a success plan, it would be too soon.\n\n\"I don't think the board and the club are ready for him to go.\n\n\"That end is coming but maybe it needs another one or two years. Wenger should be part of the decision around the next manager who comes in - who should be in the same mould.\n\n\"Everyone is thinking that the grass is greener but will it be any better under another manager? While you have got such a good man there I believe they will hang on to him.\n\n\"I am disappointed in what has been done on the pitch but also, we are realistic.\n\n\"Chelsea came in with their millions, Manchester City did it and they both changed the landscape.\n\n\"Leicester showed that to win the league you don't need money and that will hurt Wenger. He can't quite get the recipe right and that is the biggest mystery for me.\"", "In the world of viral news, it's a relative baby - but it's already become so controversial that a Nato spokesperson told BBC Trending that Sputnik is an agent of Russian misinformation.\n\nSputnik was set up in 2014 and puts out podcasts, radio shows and text stories which are shared thousands of times a day on Twitter and Facebook. It's recently been adding international bureaux, including a UK headquarters in Scotland.\n\nBut at the same time Sputnik has also been on the receiving end of criticism - by US intelligence agencies, the British defence secretary, and now by Nato, who says it is part of a \"Kremlin misinformation machine.\"\n\n\"Outlets like Sputnik are part of a Kremlin propaganda machine which are trying to use information for political and military needs,\" Nato spokesperson Oana Lungescu told BBC Trending. \"It is a way, not to convince people, but to confuse them, not to provide an alternative viewpoint, but to divide public opinions and to ultimately undermine our ability to understand what is going on and therefore take decisions if decisions need to be made.\"\n\n\"It's extremely unfair but we've been on the receiving end of other similar accusations in the past, without any substantive evidence being provided,\" says Nikolai Gorshkov, Sputnik's UK editor. \"We prefer to leave those inclined towards this kind of conspiratorial thinking to it.\"\n\nSo what's the truth about Sputnik?\n\nMany stories on Sputnik, whose motto is \"Telling the Untold\", are news items. Like other international broadcasters, it sees itself as a gift to the world to diversify the media diet - in this case, funded by the Russian government.\n\nBut Western officials and outside observers say that Sputnik follows an anti-West, pro-Russia, pro-Trump line in its selection of stories, in the way it frames them, and its choice of commentary. On Friday evening, for instance, Sputnik's top story was headlined \"Americans 'Don't Buy' Media Criticism of Trump Following Years of Pro-Obama Bias\".\n\nA recent US intelligence report on alleged Russian interference in the American election described the editorial line of Sputnik and the TV station RT, which like Sputnik is funded by the Russian government-owned news agency Rossiya Segodnya. \"RT and Sputnik consistently cast President-elect Trump as the target of unfair coverage from traditional US media outlets that they claimed were subservient to a corrupt political establishment,\" the report said.\n\n\"The question of balance is really important - particularly if you're a public service broadcaster,\" says Ben Nimmo, a research fellow at the Atlantic Council, an international affairs think tank based in Washington DC. \"Balance is where so much of the time I see Sputnik falling down. It will quote one side but it won't give an appropriate screen time, column inches or airtime to the other side and that's the big difference.\"\n\nNimmo and others suggest that Sputnik's UK base in Edinburgh - rather than London, where most international media companies set up shop - is an attempt to encourage Scottish independence and stoke up discontent towards the British government.\n\nThat's just not true, according to Sputnik themselves. Gorshkov says the reason for the Scottish base is more pragmatic. He cites the high cost of property prices in London and says he'd rather invest in journalists.\n\n\"We're not trying to influence Scottish thinking, because being based in Edinburgh, we do now realise how fiercely independently minded the Scots are,\" he says. \"You can't influence a Scot.\"\n\nHear this story in full on the BBC World Service, or download our podcast\n\nIn addition to its news coverage, Sputnik's sharply opinionated blogs have also been the subject of criticism.\n\n\"If you look at the byline of people who write commentaries for Sputnik or RT, a lot of them are extremely obscure individuals connected to the far right or the far left, or so-called specialists or experts who nobody's heard of,\" says Lungescu, the Nato spokesperson. \"You can always find somebody to say anything, but that doesn't make it journalism.\"\n\nOne of the bloggers heavily featured on the site, Angus Gallagher, specialises in pro-Russia, pro-Donald Trump pieces sharply critical of the West, with headlines such as \"7 ways the EU-NATO Axis is Sabotaging Western Civilisation\" and \"Sacrificed for the EU-NATO Axis: Europe's Women Branded Whores and Liars\". The latter article accuses Western think tanks of conspiring to play down reports of sex attacks by migrants, in an anti-Russian plot.\n\nAmmon Cheskin, a professor in Central and Eastern European studies at Glasgow University, says the posts are typical of the \"paranoid perspective\" of commentators on the site.\n\n\"No one is quite sure who this individual is or if he actually exists,\" he says.\n\nBut Sputnik's UK editor Gorshkov told us that bloggers, including Gallagher, aren't members of staff, but rather are volunteers who use the Sputnik platform to write their opinion pieces. He says he's never met Gallagher and doesn't oversee the blogs section of the website. But he insisted that he is indeed a real person.\n\n\"He reflects the views of a good chunk of the audience,\" Gorshkov says. BBC Trending left Facebook messages left for Gallagher himself, but they went unanswered.\n\nThe Russian embassy in London denied the accusations that the Kremlin is behind a misinformation machine.\n\n\"In our view, the claims of perceived 'Russian misinformation campaign to undermine the West' are a way to avoid an open and reasoned debate of the issues raised in British and American societies,\" the embassy press office wrote in an email. \"Obviously, sticking labels of 'fake news' and 'misinformation' testifies to the lack of [a] positive agenda.\"\n\nGorshkov says the criticisms against Sputnik have cascaded down from governments and think tanks because the establishment in Western countries feels threatened.\n\n\"They don't like the emergency of a mass media outlet which is giving more context, more background, more angles to stories. They probably think it's a threat to their view of the world,\" he says.\n\nAnd he hopes that Sputnik will reach Westerners disaffected by the mainstream media.\n\n\"Are they all Russian stooges who voted for Brexit or for Trump? Are they all useful idiots? That's really preposterous,\" he says. \"I think that's really an offence against them, all those millions.\"\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.\n\nNext story: The alt-right's war on Netflix and Trump court memes\n\nWhy are some followers of the alt-right cancelling their Netflix accounts? READ MORE\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "There is much rejoicing that the unit handling claims of abuse against British troops in Iraq is to be scrapped.\n\nThree papers believe their campaigns against the Iraq Historic Allegations Team (Ihat) played important parts in its downfall.\n\n\"At last, an end to the witch-hunt,\" says the front-page headline in the Daily Mail.\n\nThe paper believes what it calls the \"ruthless hounding of hundreds of innocent soldiers\" has been \"one of the most shameful chapters\" in the annals of British justice.\n\nIt says the exercise has been a \"nice little earner\" for lawyers, agents, Iraqi civilians who received compensation and the Ihat investigators, while troops had their reputations \"smeared\".\n\nThe Mail describes a separate inquiry - into killings carried out by British soldiers during the Troubles in Northern Ireland - as \"another, politically motivated witch-hunt\".\n\nThe Sun condemns Ihat for \"blackening the Army's name\".\n\nIt features the testimony of a former sergeant who says he was \"left to rot\" while lawyers investigated him for shooting an Iraqi who had been threatening his colleagues with an assault rifle.\n\nWhile the sergeant was cleared of unlawful killing, the ordeal left him with post-traumatic stress disorder.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph also campaigned for Ihat to be shut down.\n\nIts leader column congratulates the government for taking action, but insists that ministers still need to explain why they endorsed the \"unfounded pursuit\" through the courts of people serving Queen and country.\n\nThe paper believes the Iraq investigations amounted to an \"abuse of process\" which should have been abandoned much earlier.\n\nThe Guardian leads on court documents that suggest Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson called for British arms sales to Saudi Arabia to continue, even after last October's bombing of a funeral in Yemen, which killed more than 140 people.\n\nThe letters were disclosed this week during a judicial review of the decision to continue licensing weapons exports to Saudi Arabia.\n\nThe case was brought by the Campaign Against Arms Trade.\n\nThe paper argues that since Saudi airstrikes have hit hospitals, schools and weddings in Yemen, they are at the very least \"reckless\" and in many cases \"deliberate\".\n\nThe Guardian concludes that arms sales to the kingdom are immoral and ministers should halt them immediately.\n\nThe Daily Express says there has been an angry reaction to reports that Brussels is preparing to hit the UK with a £49bn bill for leaving the EU.\n\nThe paper says that figure is too much - in fact, at least £49bn too much.\n\nIt argues that since the UK is one of only a handful of net contributors to the EU, \"they should be paying us\".\n\nThere is potentially bad news for great crested newts in the Financial Times, and it is down to - what else? - Brexit.\n\nThe paper says the amphibians are facing a less certain future once Britain leaves the EU.\n\nIt says it has been told by government sources that the EU habitats directive is to be repealed, as it gives \"excessive\" protection to great crested newts.\n\nThe FT cites the example of the newt colony that held up the building of a railway station in Derbyshire.\n\nDespite attempts to catch and re-home the creatures, more just kept on turning up.", "The authorities at a national park in India protect the wildlife by shooting suspected poachers dead. But has the war against poaching gone too far?\n\nKaziranga National Park is an incredible story of conservation success.\n\nThere were just a handful of Indian one-horned rhinoceros left when the park was set up a century ago in Assam, in India's far east. Now there are more than 2,400 - two-thirds of the entire world population.\n\nThis is where David Attenborough's team came to film for Planet Earth II. William and Catherine, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, came here last year.\n\nBut the way the park protects the animals is controversial. Its rangers have been given the kind of powers to shoot and kill normally only conferred on armed forces policing civil unrest.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Entire villages are being destroyed to make way for extended national parks\n\nAt one stage the park rangers were killing an average of two people every month - more than 20 people a year. Indeed, in 2015 more people were shot dead by park guards than rhinos were killed by poachers.\n\nInnocent villagers, mostly tribal people, have been caught up in the conflict.\n\nRhinos need protection. Rhino horn can fetch very high prices in Vietnam and China where it is sold as a miracle cure for everything from cancer to erectile dysfunction. Street vendors charge as much as $6,000 for 100g - making it considerably more expensive than gold.\n\nIndian rhinos have smaller horns than those of African rhinos, but reportedly they are marketed as being far more potent.\n\nBut how far should we go to protect these endangered animals?\n\nI ask two guards what they were told to do if they encountered poachers in the park.\n\n\"The instruction is whenever you see the poachers or hunters, we should start our guns and hunt them,\" Avdesh explains without hesitation.\n\n\"Yah, yah. Fully ordered to shoot them. Whenever you see the poachers or any people during night-time we are ordered to shoot them.\"\n\nAvdesh says he has shot at people twice in the four years he has been a guard, but has never killed anybody. He knows, however, there are unlikely to be any consequences for him if he did.\n\nThe government has granted the guards at Kaziranga extraordinary powers that give them considerable protection against prosecution if they shoot and kill people in the park.\n\nCritics say guards like Avdesh and Jibeshwar are effectively being told to carry out \"extrajudicial executions\".\n\nGetting figures for how many people are killed in the park is surprisingly difficult.\n\n\"We don't keep each and every account,\" says a senior official in India's Forest Department, which oversees the country's national parks.\n\nGuards like Avdesh and Jibeshwar have considerable powers\n\nThe director of the park, Dr Satyendra Singh, is based at the park's impressive colonial-era headquarters.\n\nHe talks about the difficulties of tackling poachers in the park, explaining that the poaching gangs recruit local people to help them get into the park but that the actual \"shooters\" - the men who kill the rhinos - tend to come from neighbouring states.\n\nHe says the term \"shoot-on-sight\" does not accurately describe how he orders the forest rangers to deal with suspected poachers.\n\nOur World: Killing for Conservation is broadcast at 21:30 GMT on Saturday 11 February on the BBC News Channel and this weekend on BBC World News\n\n\"First we warn them - who are you? But if they resort to firing we have to kill them. First we try to arrest them, so that we get the information, what are the linkages, who are others in the gang?\"\n\nDr Singh reveals that just in the past three years, 50 poachers have been killed. He says it reflects how many people in the local community have been lured into the trade as rhino horn prices have risen. As many as 300 locals are involved in poaching, he believes.\n\nFor the people who live around Kaziranga the rising death toll has become a major issue.\n\nKaziranga is densely populated, like the rest of India. Many of the communities here are tribal groups that have lived in or alongside the forest for centuries, collecting firewood as well as herbs and other plants from it. They say increasing numbers of innocent villagers are being shot.\n\nIn one of the villages that borders the park live Kachu Kealing and his wife. Their son, Goanburah, was shot by forest guards in December 2013.\n\nThe only picture they have of him is a fuzzy reproduction of the young man's face.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Kaziranga National Park in India is home to rhinos, elephants and tigers\n\nGoanburah had been looking after the family's two cows. His father believes they strayed into the park and his son - who had severe learning difficulties - went in to try and find them. It is an easy mistake to make. There are no fences or signs marking the edge of the park, it just merges seamlessly into the surrounding countryside and fields.\n\nThe park authorities say guards shot Goanburah inside the forest reserve when he did not respond to a warning.\n\n\"He could barely do up his own trousers or his shoes,\" his father says, \"everyone knew him in the area because he was so disabled.\"\n\nKachu Kealing does not believe there is any action he can take now, especially given the unusual protection park guards have from prosecution. \"I haven't filed a court case. I'm a poor man, I can't afford to take them on.\"\n\nKachu Kealing says his disabled son was only looking after the family's cows\n\nConservation efforts in India tend to focus on protecting a few emblematic species. The fight to preserve them is stacked high with patriotic sentiment. Rhinos and tigers have become potent national symbols.\n\nAdd to this the fact that Kaziranga is the region's principal tourist attraction - its 170,000 or more annual visitors spend good money here - and it is easy to see why the park feels political pressure to tackle its poaching problem head on.\n\nIn 2013, when the number of rhinos killed by poachers more than doubled to 27, local politicians demanded action. The then head of the park was happy to oblige.\n\nMK Yadava wrote a report which detailed his strategy for tackling poaching in Kaziranga. He proposed there should be no unauthorised entry whatsoever. Anyone found within the park, he said, \"must obey or be killed\".\n\n\"Kill the unwanted,\" should be the guiding principle for the guards, he recommended.\n\nHe explained his belief that environmental crimes, including poaching, are more serious that murder. \"They erode,\" he said, \"the very root of existence of all civilizations on this earth silently.\"\n\nAnd he backed up his tough words with action, putting this uncompromising doctrine into practice in the park.\n\nThe numbers of people killed rose dramatically. From 2013 to 2014 the number of alleged poachers shot dead in the park leapt from five to 22. In 2015 Kaziranga killed more people in the park than poachers killed rhinos - 23 people lost their lives compared to just 17 rhinos.\n\nAnd, as the park's battle against poaching gathered in intensity, there were to be other casualties.\n\nIn July last year, seven-year-old Akash Orang was making his way home along the main track through the village, which borders the park.\n\nHis voice falters as he recounts what happened next. \"I was coming back from the shop. The forest guards were shouting, 'Rhinoceros! Rhinoceros!'\" He pauses. \"Then they suddenly shot me.\"\n\nThe gunshot blasted away most of the calf muscle on his right leg. The injuries were so serious he had to be rushed to Assam's main hospital five hours away.\n\nHe was there for five months and had dozens of operations but, despite the hospital's efforts, Akash can still barely walk.\n\nHis father, Dilip Orang, bends down and removes the bandage from the boy's leg to display the wound. His leg appears to be stripped of its skin - the calf muscle is bunched into tight ball. It doesn't flex. \"They took the muscle from here and grafted it here,\" he says. \"But it hasn't worked very well. Just look at it.\"\n\nAkash has not fully recovered and has to be carried to the shop by his brother\n\nIt is clear just how terrible his injuries are when Akash gets up to move out of the sun. He can barely limp the few feet into the shade. His older brother now has to carry him to the local shop.\n\n\"He has changed,\" Dilip says. \"He used to be cheerful. He isn't any more. In the night he wakes up in pain and cries for his mother.\"\n\nThe park admits it made a terrible mistake. It paid all his medical expenses and gave the family almost 200,000 rupees ($3,000; £2,400) in compensation. Not much given the scale of Akash's injuries, says his father, who worries whether his son will ever make a living.\n\nThe crippling of Akash led to a huge outcry from villagers. It was the culmination of long-simmering disquiet over the mounting death toll in the park. Hundreds marched on the park headquarters.\n\nIn a house a short walk from the park HQ, human rights campaigner Pranab Doley, himself a member of a local tribe, pulls out a bag stuffed with paperwork. He has made a series of requests under India's Right to Information Act and says the replies show that many cases aren't followed up properly.\n\n\"In most cases you don't have things like the magisterial inquiry, the forensic report, the post mortem reports,\" he says, rifling through the stacks of paper.\n\nThe park says that it's not responsible for investigating the killings, and whatever action it does take follows the law. Even so, some of Mr Doley's documents reveal a surprising lack of information. He pulls out a table listing deaths in one of the park's four districts. It shows nine suspected poachers killed in one year, six of whom are recorded as unidentified.\n\nThe Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have visited the park\n\nAnd there are other indications that careful investigation is not a priority when it comes to wildlife crime in Assam. The park says that in the last three years just two people have been prosecuted for poaching - a striking contrast to the 50 people who were shot dead in the park in the same period.\n\nThe park justifies the number of deaths, saying the figures are so high because the heavily armed poaching gangs engage guards in deadly shoot-outs. However, the statistics indicate that these \"encounters\" are more one-sided than the park suggests. Once again, firm figures are hard to come by, but according to the reports we can find just one park guard has been killed by poachers in the past 20 years, compared with 106 people shot dead by guards over the same period.\n\nMr Doley argues the high number of deaths is because, at least in part, of the legal protection the park and its guards enjoy. \"This kind of impunity is dangerous,\" he says. \"It is creating animosity between the park and people living in the periphery of the park.\"\n\nThat animosity is deepened because so many of the local community are tribal people who claim they and their ancient way of life are - like the animals the park is trying to protect - also endangered.\n\nTheir cause has been taken up by Survival International, a London-based charity. It argues that the rights of tribal people around the park are being sacrificed in the name of wildlife protection.\n\n\"The park is being run with utmost brutality,\" says Sophie Grig, the lead campaigner. \"There is no jury, there's no judge, there's no questioning. And the terrifying thing is that there are plans to roll [out] the shoot at sight policy across [the] whole of India.\"\n\nHer strong language is testimony perhaps to the concern felt by activists like her that traditional communities might be sacrificed in the name of wildlife protection.\n\nShe says some of the biggest animal conservation charities in the world, including the World Wildlife Fund, have turned a blind eye to the activities of the park.\n\n\"WWF describes itself as a close partner of the Assam Forest Department,\" says Ms Grig. \"They've been providing equipment and funds to the forest department. Survival has repeatedly asked them to speak out against this shoot-on-sight policy and extrajudicial executions which they have so far failed to do.\"\n\nAccording to the WWF India website, it has funded combat and ambush training for Kaziranga's guards and has provided specialist equipment including night vision goggles for the park's anti-poaching effort.\n\n\"Nobody is comfortable with killing people,\" says Dr Dipankar Ghose, who helps run much of WWF's conservation programme in India. \"What is needed is on the ground protection. The poaching has to stop.\"\n\nThe bulk of WWF's funding comes from individual donations. So how would the WWF's donors feel about the organisation's involvement with a park facing allegations of killing, maiming and torturing? Dr Ghose does not answer the question directly.\n\n\"Well, as I said, we are working towards it. We want the whole thing to reduce - we don't want poaching to happen, and the idea is to reduce it involving all our partners. It is not just the Kaziranga authorities but also the enforcement agencies, also the local people. So I think the main thing is to work with the local people.\"\n\nThe park is popular with both Indian and foreign visitors\n\nAnd there are plenty of conservationists that accept that, in some circumstances, there must be a tough response to poachers. \"No park would exist in India without having regular anti-poaching operations,\" says naturalist and writer Valmik Thapar. \"Anti-poaching is an essential element of conservation.\"\n\n\"There are some that do it well. There are some that fail miserably… and they don't have any tigers. So there are some tiger reserves in India, that actually don't have any tigers at all because they have all been poached.\n\n\"In some exceptional cases you can use the gun against the gun, but in other places in India you need to use community intelligence, because the local community are the eyes and ears of the forest.\"\n\nThree months after Akash was shot and villagers marched on park headquarters once again - this time to protest allegations of torture.\n\nMono Bora was sitting at a roadside cafe when he was picked up by forest guards. He claims he was punched in the face repeatedly as he was driven to park headquarters. Once inside the offices the questioning became even more violent.\n\n\"They gave me electric shocks here on my knees, and here on my elbows. And here on my groin too.\" Mr Bora describes how he was tied in a stress position to bamboo staves.\n\n\"They kept on hitting me,\" he says. The ordeal lasted for three hours until finally his assailants became convinced they had the wrong man.\n\nKaziranga confirmed it did bring Mono Bora in for questioning but categorically denies any harm came to him, adding that it \"never uses electric shock during interrogation\".\n\nThe chief of Mono Bora's village picked him up from the park headquarters. Biren Kotch says he did not believe Mr Bora had any involvement in poaching. \"How can they justify torture?\"\n\nBut it isn't just the anti-poaching effort that threatens local people. Big wild animals like tigers and rhinos need lots of space.\n\nTo accommodate them India is planning a massive expansion of its network of national of parks. It is great news for conservation, but the plans involve relocating 900 villages. More than 200,000 people will have to leave their homes, it is estimated.\n\nKaziranga will double in size and an eviction order has been issued. State police recently evicted two villages amid chaotic scenes in which stone-throwing villagers were beaten with batons and fired on by police. Two people - a father of two and a young female student - were killed.\n\nSophia Khatum’s husband was shot dead by police in the demonstration against the evictions\n\nDiggers were brought in and the national park provided a team of elephants to help raze every home to the ground.\n\nIn the wreckage of the village critics might see more evidence of a brutal approach to conservation. The problem is the park's tactics appear to have worked. Since the crackdown in the park began in 2013 the numbers of rhinos poached has fallen back. Last year just 18 rhinos were killed.\n\nBut the important question is what the long term cost will be, says Pranab Doley, the tribal rights campaigner. He believes the park's behaviour betrays a misguided attitude to conservation. \"That's what their policy and philosophy is - move the people out of here and create pure pristine forest.\"\n\nHe says the park is on a collision course with local tribal people. If it gets its way, he says, it will destroy the ancient culture of tribal people like him, but could also end up frustrating its own efforts to protect its animals.\n\n\"Without the people taking care of the forest, no forest department will be able to protect Kaziranga. It's the human shield which is protecting Kaziranga.\"\n\nOf course, there's no arguing that endangered species must be protected and preserved, but the costs on the human community need to be taken into account too.\n\nOur World: Killing for Conservation is at 21:30 GMT on Saturday 11 February on the BBC News Channel and this weekend on BBC World News", "Lady Gaga rocked the half-time show at the 2017 Super Bowl in Houston. Her first song of the night was a cover of an American folk song called This Land is My Land by Woody Guthrie.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nGreat Britain qualified for the Fed Cup World Group II play-offs with a 2-1 victory over Croatia.\n\nThe tie was decided in the final doubles contest, with Johanna Konta and Heather Watson beating Ana Konjuh and Darija Jurak 4-6 6-4 6-3.\n\nEarlier, British number two Watson beat Donna Vekic 6-2 6-4 to give GB the lead in Tallinn, Estonia.\n\nBut leading Briton Konta lost 6-4 6-3 to Konjuh in the following singles match as the tie went to a decider.\n\nCaptain Anne Keothavong said she was \"absolutely ecstatic\" with her team's victory.\n\n\"It's been a real emotional rollercoaster, but the way the girls performed today and throughout the whole week, I'm just so proud of them,\" she said.\n\n\"It was so tight, everyone was on the edge of their seats. But they fought their hearts out and played with so much passion. I'm so proud of them.\"\n\nKonta and Watson were broken twice in the opening three games of their doubles match as they lost the first set 6-4.\n\nThere was cause for concern when Australian Open quarter-finalist Konta needed treatment on her ankle early in the second set. But the world number 10 overcame the problem as the British pair levelled.\n\nThe opening four games of the deciding set went against serve before Konta and Watson secured the decisive break en route to victory.\n\nKeothavong's team will now play one of the four losers from the World Group II matches.\n\nThe first big selection decision of Keothavong's captaincy proved successful, as Konta and Watson recovered from a set down, and twice a break of serve down in the decider, to wrap up the tie.\n\nLaura Robson and Jocelyn Rae were Britain's first-choice doubles pair in the group matches in Tallinn, but were asked to make way for the higher-ranked singles players.\n\nBritain crave a first home Fed Cup tie for 24 years, but depending on what happens in other ties this weekend, could end up heading to Australia or Chinese Taipei in April.\n\nUnlike the men's team competition, the Davis Cup, which has a World Group of 16 nations, the Fed Cup divides its top teams into two groups of eight - World Group I and World Group II.\n\nThe 91 nations outside the top tiers are divided into three regional zones and Britain have one chance per year to escape - a format that hugely frustrated former captain Judy Murray.\n\nThe Europe/Africa Group I event, in Estonia, was made up of 14 teams divided into groups, with Poland, Croatia, Britain and Serbia the seeded nations.\n\nFour group winners progressed to the promotion play-offs, with Britain one of the two nations to qualify for World Group II play-offs in April - which could see them given a home Fed Cup tie for the first time since 1993. Poland and Serbia are competing for the other place.\n\nGB fell at the same stage in 2012 and 2013 - away ties in Sweden and Argentina - under the captaincy of Judy Murray.", "Last updated on .From the section Golf\n\nEngland's Melissa Reid carded a six-under-par 67 to take a two-shot lead going into the final round of the Oates Vic Open in Victoria, Australia.\n\nReid, 29, sank five birdies and also eagled the fifth to move to 15 under overall after the third round.\n\nUnited States' Angel Yin and Australia's Su-Hyun Oh are tied for second on 13 under.\n\nEngland's Holly Clyburn shot a 72 to move to 11 under and compatriot Florentyna Parker is a stroke behind.\n\nFind out how to get into golf with our special guide.\n\nVeteran Laura Davies, who equalled the course record with a 65 in the opening round but followed it with a 76 to slip out of contention, is nine shots off the lead after a 73 in her third round.", "CCTV shows the dramatic moment a slurry tank crashes through the garden wall of a house in County Antrim.\n\nIt missed the house itself, in Glenavy, by less than a metre.\n\nThe homeowner, who was in the property at the time, said he was just glad no-one had been hurt.\n\nThe Belfast Road was closed for a time while the car, tractor and slurry tank involved in the crash were removed.\n\nOil also had to be cleaned up - but the road has reopened.\n\nThe homeowner said he now wants a reinforced wall to protect his family home.", "The health secretary said he didn't want to make excuses about very long waiting times in A&E\n\nMy interview with the Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt struck an interesting note after a day of bleak news from NHS England.\n\nOfficial figures showed the worst performance in A&E units in December since records began in 2004.\n\nThe number of patients waiting on trolleys for more than four hours because beds were not free rose nearly 50% year on year.\n\nRather than hitting back with a raft of statistics on extra investment by the government, Jeremy Hunt acknowledged that progress had not always lived up to expectations.\n\nMr Hunt accepted the reality of the situation in some of England's hospitals, highlighted by images of patients waiting more than 13 hours for beds and a six-month delay discharging an elderly woman because of care shortcomings.\n\nThese were \"unacceptable\", he said, and \"bad for the NHS\".\n\nHe volunteered that \"it's incredibly frustrating for me\" and he \"didn't want to make excuses\".\n\nThis sounded like a health secretary who knew only too well that the NHS was under immense strain and there was no denying the real challenges facing staff and patients every day.\n\nI repeatedly asked Mr Hunt what he was doing about it. He emphasised the government's long-term moves to get health and social care working together and the \"big transformation programme\" aiming to treat more people in their local community rather than in hospitals.\n\nBut on the pressures right now in hospitals, Mr Hunt had little new to say apart from noting that some were a lot better than others at managing the flow of patients.\n\nSo what can the government do? Ministers are now focused on social care, where successive spending cuts have made it harder to look after the frail elderly at home. Mr Hunt told me the government recognised there was a problem and it was being addressed.\n\nAll roads for a move on social care now lead to the Budget on 8 March. Rumours that the Chancellor, Philip Hammond, will announce a new financial package on social care have been rife in Whitehall.\n\nThe sudden scrapping of Surrey County Council's referendum on a 15% council tax rise fuelled suspicions that its leader had been quietly tipped off about an impending announcement on social care funding.\n\nIntriguingly, when I asked the health secretary about what might happen in the Budget he said that was up to the prime minister and the chancellor. It sounded like a plea to Downing Street to come up with new money for social care.\n\nMr Hunt added, though, that a quick fix on its own was not enough and that a long-term answer was needed as well.\n\nThere is a danger in building up expectations which cannot be met on Budget Day.\n\nBut it feels like the health secretary and other ministers are resting their hopes on the chancellor. There is not much they can do about this winter's A&E pressures except to wait and hope.\n\nMost worryingly for the health secretary is the knowledge that this was supposed to be the \"year of plenty\" for NHS England with a \"frontloaded\" financial settlement. Even with a relatively generous allocation for this year, the hospital system is in trouble.\n\nMr Hunt knows that funding in the next couple of years will tail off. He will hope that promised and planned efficiency savings start to materialise soon.\n\nAn intervention by his former adviser, the American health guru Don Berwick, has lent weight to calls for more funding for the NHS.\n\nIn a BBC interview, Mr Berwick, commenting on the government's current financial plans for health, said: \"I have serious doubts whether you can have a healthcare which is universal, not rationed and responsive to needs at that target level - I am concerned.\"\n\nHe may also be alarmed that even with intense winter preparations in each area of England between local health and local care chiefs, some A&E units have struggled under the weight of patient numbers.\n\nThere were orders from on high for routine operations to be cancelled for four weeks but, even so, many hospitals had very few spare beds.\n\nUnderstandably, Mr Hunt stressed that the NHS was not alone in experiencing pressures of rising patient numbers and that French and German hospitals were under strain this winter.\n\nBut he knows he will be judged only on the performance of the NHS. He will hope the chancellor has something to offer.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nJordan Rhodes and Sam Winnall's first goals for Sheffield Wednesday saw them boost their play-off hopes with a 3-0 victory over mid-table Birmingham City.\n\nRhodes met Ross Wallace's early free-kick to give the hosts the lead.\n\nBirmingham then hit the woodwork three times as they searched for a leveller.\n\nWinnall's close-range, diving header from an inch-perfect Jack Hunt cross put the game beyond the Blues' reach, before Adam Reach showed good pace and composure to add a late third goal.\n\nThe defeat was Gianfranco Zola's seventh in 12 games in all competitions in charge of Birmingham, who have now lost five of their past seven away games, while the in-form Owls have won five of their past six at home.\n\nThe hosts could have gone ahead as early as the second minute when Tomasz Kuszczak denied Sam Winnall from close range, before Rhodes rose to nod home Wallace's expert right-wing set-piece delivery soon afterwards.\n\nBut after a disjointed start, the visitors then settled into the game and struck the woodwork twice in quick succession, firstly when Wednesday's Sam Hutchinson inadvertently diverted Craig Gardner's cross onto his own post, before Blues right-back Emilio Nsue struck the other upright with a crisp half-volley.\n\nAfter the break, Birmingham midfielder Maikel Kieftenbeld was fortunate to only receive a yellow card for a rash challenge on Morgan Fox, but Zola's side began to control possession and cause problems with Gardner's set-pieces.\n\nThe game's decisive twist then came when Gardner's fierce strike hit the crossbar moments before Winnall - against the run of play - got in between two Birmingham defenders to head in Hunt's outstanding cross for his fourth goal of this season against the Blues, having netted three times in two games against them for Barnsley before his January move to Hillsborough.\n\nBirmingham, who were in seventh place and level on points with Wednesday when former manager Gary Rowett was surprisingly sacked on 14 December, are now 12 points below the Owls, who remain sixth.\n\n\"We know that was not perfect, but there are a lot of things that I like.\n\n\"Even in the first minute, we could have achieved a goal, and after that we had three or more clear chances.\n\n\"I think the score was very heavy to Birmingham, but I think with the opportunities that we created and the goals that we scored, I think we deserved to win this game.\"\n\n\"The second goal was a fantastic cross and a good piece of football. The disappointing bit for me was the beginning, the first 10 minutes.\n\n\"After that I saw only one team on the pitch. We played good football and created chances. But that is not enough. We have to be stronger and more hungry.\n\n\"We controlled the midfield and controlled the game so, other than the result, I thought it was one of the best performances, after the first few minutes.\n\n\"The bottom line is that we play good football but we don't score enough.\"\n• None Attempt blocked. Greg Stewart (Birmingham City) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Lukas Jutkiewicz.\n• None Paul Robinson (Birmingham City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Goal! Sheffield Wednesday 3, Birmingham City 0. Adam Reach (Sheffield Wednesday) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Sam Winnall.\n• None Attempt blocked. Nsue (Birmingham City) left footed shot from the right side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Craig Gardner.\n• None Attempt blocked. Che Adams (Birmingham City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt missed. Adam Reach (Sheffield Wednesday) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Assisted by Almen Abdi.\n• None Goal! Sheffield Wednesday 2, Birmingham City 0. Sam Winnall (Sheffield Wednesday) header from very close range to the centre of the goal. Assisted by Jack Hunt with a cross.\n• None Craig Gardner (Birmingham City) hits the bar with a right footed shot from outside the box. Assisted by Kerim Frei. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. 'This American carnage stops right here,' Donald Trump said at his inauguration\n\nDuring his presidential campaign, and since taking office, Donald Trump has repeatedly warned of the dangers facing the United States.\n\n\"I have learned a lot in the past two weeks,\" he told a meeting of police officers in Washington DC on Wednesday.\n\n\"Terrorism is a far greater threat than the people of our country understand. I'm going to take care of it.\"\n\nHis comments came as the legal battle continued over his travel ban on people from seven Muslim-majority nations. Not putting the ban in place would mean the US \"can never have the security and safety to which we are entitled\", he said on Twitter.\n\nOn Wednesday, he also lamented inner-city violence, as well as the killing of police officers.\n\nIt is a vision of an America full of danger, with multiple threats on many fronts, encapsulated by the new president's inaugural address referencing \"American carnage\". But is it correct?\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. In July 2016, the BBC's More or Less programme investigated the unreliable numbers around police shootings in the USA.\n\n\"The number of officers shot and killed in the line of duty last year increased by 56% from the year before,\" President Trump said on Wednesday. And the statistic is accurate, unlike some others he has quoted in the past.\n\nThe number of officers shot and killed in the line of duty did indeed jump 56%, from 41 in 2015 to 64 last year - that's according to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund.\n\nIt is a stark statistic. Starker still is the fact that 21 of those officers were killed in ambush-style shootings, a 163% increase on the previous year.\n\nHowever, it would be incorrect to read from this that a wave of police shootings has swept the country. Eight of those killings were in two assaults in 10 days in July 2016, in Dallas, Texas and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and occurred in the context of protests against police killings of African-Americans.\n\n\"Last year in Dallas, police officers were targeted for execution - think of this, whoever heard of this?\" President Trump told the meeting of police officers.\n\nBut the targeting of police officers is not in itself a new phenomenon - it is only that 2016 had higher numbers than before. And statistics show that officers are still more likely to be shot dead responding to a domestic disturbance than any other incident.\n\nIn fact, if you look at the bigger picture, police deaths on duty have been dropping for some time.\n\nThe worst year for police deaths was 1930, when 307 died. More recently, there was a peak of 241 in 2001, largely due to the 11 September attacks.\n\nBut between 2011 and 2013, there was an almost 40% drop in police fatalities - from 177 to 109. The numbers have crept up again in the years since - up 10% in 2016 to 135 - but there is an overall pattern of decline, with the numbers now down to the levels of the 1950s.\n\nHaving said that, the likelihood of a police officer being shot dead is far higher than that of a member of the public being killed by the police.\n\nRead more: How many police die every year?\n\n\"Right now, many communities in America are facing a public safety crisis,\" President Trump told police in Washington on Wednesday. \"Murders in 2015 experienced their largest single-year increase in nearly half a century.\n\nHis statement is factually correct (though he has often, wrongly, said that the murder rate was the highest it has been in nearly half a century, and even attacked the press on Tuesday for not reporting this falsehood.)\n\nThere was a 10.8% jump in nationwide murder rates from 2014 to 2015, and that represents the biggest year-to-year increase since 1970-71, according to the fact-checking website Politifact.\n\nBut it is again important to look at the longer-term trend.\n\nThe number of reported murders and rapes across the country did indeed increase from 2014 to 2015, as did robberies.\n\nBut all are still below the levels they were at 10 years ago - and are respectively 13%, 6% and 34% lower than 20 years ago (even though the population of the US has increased by 55 million in that time).\n\nThe picture is more mixed in large cities, however.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. In September 2016, Donald Trump said some US inner cities were more dangerous than Afghanistan - the BBC's More or Less programme investigated his claim.\n\nLast month, The Economist magazine, having obtained an early look at the 2016 FBI data for violence in 50 US cities, showed that there were four broad trends in play.\n\nMurder rates are stable in 13 of the 50 cities, including Los Angeles and New York, which saw 11 days without a murder in 2015.\n\nIn 15 other cities, including Houston and Las Vegas, murder rates are low but increasing. In another nine, including Philadelphia and Detroit, they are high but stable. And in 13, including Indianapolis and Chicago, they are high and rising. (You can read The Economist's analysis here).\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Life and death on the lost streets of Chicago\n\nIn Chicago, murders rose sharply last year, with more than 760 last year compared with 473 the year before. Up to then, there had been a steady fall in the number of murders since a peak of the early 70s.\n\nMr Trump has repeatedly used the city as an example. \"In Chicago, more than 4,000 people were shot last year alone and the rate so far this year has been even higher. What is going on in Chicago?\" he said on Wednesday.\n\nLast month, he even threatened to send federal agents into the city if the violence did not subside.\n\nBut again, worrying though recent increases in violence in some cities may be, it is critical to look at how those increases fit in to a longer-term trend.\n\nAmes Grawert, of the Brennan Center for Justice, co-authored a report into crime rates in US cities, and spoke to the BBC's More or Less programme. \"If you look at crime rates in American cities in the past 30 years, even with the recent uptick in murders in some cities, we are very far below where we used to be with murder rates in big cities like New York and Los Angeles.\"\n\nRead more (from 2015): Why have cities' murder rates increased?\n\nPresident Trump, when he announced the travel restrictions last month, said it was to \"keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the US\". The restrictions, now in legal limbo, affected citizens from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen - the measures also blocked Syrian refugees from arriving in the US.\n\nSo how big a problem is terrorism in the US? First of all, Mr Trump, like other presidents before him, measures the danger of terrorism to the US according to what could happen, rather than what has happened. His comment \"I have learned a lot in the past two weeks\" indicated he had specific information on the threat to the US.\n\nAnd secondly, it all depends on what your definition of what terrorism is (more on that later on).\n\nRead more: Trump says terror attacks 'under-reported': Is that true?\n\nOne study, by the libertarian Cato Institute, details 3,432 murders committed on US soil between 1975 and late 2015 that it says can be classified as terrorist attacks. Of those, 88% were committed by foreign-born terrorists who entered the country (the 2,977 deaths in the 11 September attacks make up a large chunk of these fatalities).\n\nBut does this mean Americans should be worried about being caught up in a terror attack caused by a foreign-born national? Take a look at the numbers the Cato Institute came up with to provide context:\n\nThe report's author, Alex Nowrasteh, concluded the number of Americans killed in a terror attack by someone from one of the seven countries on Mr Trump's list, between 1975 and 2015, was zero.\n\n(He does point out that six Iranians, six Sudanese, two Somalis, two Iraqis, and one Yemeni were convicted of attempting or carrying out terrorist attacks on US soil in that time).\n\nOnly three deaths were attributed to refugees in the 40 years spanned by the report - and those were caused by three Cuban terrorists in the 1970s.\n\nFor some perspective, here are some other causes of death in the US in 2015 alone:\n\nFar more dangerous than terrorism to Americans are painkillers.\n\nThe leading cause of accidental death in the United States is now overdoses from painkillers - opioid medicines kill 60 people a day, or 22,000 a year, according to the National Safety Council.\n\nBut it is impossible to discuss the threat from terrorism without looking at how the US defines terrorism itself - and therein lies the problem. Even the FBI says there is \"no single, universally accepted, definition of terrorism\". The State Department defines terrorism as \"premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against non-combatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents\".\n\nIn that case, there is an argument that shootings should be defined as terrorism: those such as the racially-motivated killing of nine black worshippers in South Carolina by a self-avowed white supremacist, the murder of 26 people including children in Newtown, Connecticut, and the murder of 12 people in a Colorado cinema.\n\nIf the number of people killed in shootings in the US were considered terrorism - at least 15,055 people were shot dead last year, according to the Gun Violence Archive - then the likelihood of an American being killed in an act of terrorism would increase substantially.", "Schoolchildren in England will be offered lessons in cyber security in a bid to find the experts of the future to defend the UK from attacks.\n\nIt is hoped 5,700 pupils aged 14 and over will spend up to four hours a week on the subject in a five-year pilot.\n\nClassroom and online teaching, \"real-world challenges\" and work experience will be made available from September.\n\nA Commons committee last week warned that a skills shortage was undermining confidence in the UK's cyber defences.\n\nThe risk that criminals or foreign powers might hack into critical UK computer systems is now ranked as one of the top four threats to national security.\n\nRussia in particular is suspected of planning sustained attacks on Western targets.\n\nCyber security is a fast-growing industry, employing 58,000 experts, the government says, but the Public Accounts Committee has warned it is proving difficult to recruit people with the right skills.\n\nThe Department for Culture, Media and Sport is providing £20m for the lessons, which will be designed to fit around pupils' current courses and exams.\n\nDigital and Culture Minister Matt Hancock said: \"This forward-thinking programme will see thousands of the best and brightest young minds given the opportunity to learn cutting-edge cyber security skills alongside their secondary school studies.\n\n\"We are determined to prepare Britain for the challenges it faces now and in the future and these extra-curricular clubs will help identify and inspire future talent.\"\n\nThe government is already providing university funding and work placements for promising students.\n\nAn apprenticeship scheme has also begun to support key employers to train and recruit young people aged 16 or over who have a \"natural flair for problem-solving\" and are \"passionate about technology\".\n\nSteve Elder, 20, who is a cyber security apprentice with BT, told BBC Radio 5 Live that educating young people about the risks and vulnerabilities of the cyber security world would help the UK prepare for the future.\n\nHe added: \"Getting young people involved and getting them taught from a young age will allow them - even in their home environment - to protect themselves, before it has to come to people at a specialist level.\"\n\nMr Hancock told the BBC he wanted to ensure the UK \"had the pipeline of talent\" it would need.\n\nCyber security expert Brian Lord, a former deputy director at GCHQ, told BBC Breakfast that the scheme was an \"essential initiative\" to recruit more people into the profession.\n\nHe added: \"There is perception that cyber security is all about techno geeks who have long hair, glasses, wear heavy metal t-shirts and drink red bull.\n\n\"There are those, and they do an extraordinarily good job. But there is a whole range of other activities... that can appeal to a wide cross section of children, graduates and apprentices, and at the moment they don't know what [is on] offer.\n\n\"The more exposure [children] can get [the more it will] prepare them for a future career and, as that generation needs to understand how to be safe online, you get a double benefit.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Demonstrators spell out \"No Muslim Ban\" at a protest in Boston\n\nFederal circuit courts usually toil in anonymity. They are a legal rest stop for landmark cases on the way to the Supreme Court.\n\nBut this week it was different. All eyes were on three judges of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, who, for a brief moment, had the fate of Donald Trump's immigration order in their hands.\n\nThey were considering whether to sustain a temporary injunction preventing implementation of Mr Trump's sweeping travel ban on seven predominantly Muslim nations.\n\nOn Thursday night they gave their ruling. Mr Trump's order stayed on ice.\n\nHere are three things we learned from the ruling - and two questions that remain unanswered.\n\n1. The immigration ban is going nowhere fast\n\nThe Ninth Circuit was the Trump administration's best chance to get the president's immigration order up and running again quickly.\n\nThe three judges could have re-instated the order and closed the borders as early as Thursday night.\n\nInstead, the order remains in limbo and it's likely to take time to resolve. The Supreme Court could hear an appeal, but the chances of more than four justices agreeing to reverse the Ninth Circuit ruling seem slim.\n\nIs Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor, Stephen Breyer or Elena Kagan going to side with Mr Trump? Not likely.\n\nIf this goes back down to the district court in Seattle, where it began, the gears of justice will grind even more slowly. A trial on the merits - which is slated to happen next, pending Supreme Court action - is a slow process. Briefs need to be filed. Evidence has to be submitted. Oral arguments will be scheduled. These things can take months or even years.\n\nThat's a painful lesson Barack Obama learned in 2015, when a district court judge blocked implementation of some of his immigration reforms and the Supreme Court didn't hear the case for more than a year.\n\n2. The case will be no slam-dunk for Trump\n\nThis may seem obvious now, but on Thursday the president was fairly certain that his case was open-and-shut when he read what he viewed as the governing immigration statute to a gathering of law enforcement officers.\n\n\"You can be a lawyer, or you don't have to be a lawyer; if you were a good student in high school or a bad student in high school, you can understand this,\" he said. \"And it's really incredible to me that we have a court case that's going on so long.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Bob Ferguson: Travel ban was adopted with \"little thought, little planning, little oversight\"\n\nSome conservatives, as well, wrote that the governing laws were clear that the president has broad powers when dealing with immigration issues.\n\n\"For all except the most partisan, it is likely impossible to read the Washington state lawsuit... and not come away with the conclusion that the Trump order is on sound legal and constitutional ground.\"\n\nIn the end, however, the three justices - two appointed by Democrats and one nominated by Republican George W Bush - saw things differently. While they acknowledged the president's authority on immigration matters, they said the statute Mr Trump cited was not the final word on the matter.\n\n\"Although our jurisprudence has long counselled deference to the political branches on matters of immigration and national security, neither the Supreme Court nor our court has ever held that courts lack the authority to review executive action in those arenas for compliance with the Constitution,\" the judges wrote.\n\nIn other words, federal immigration law may have been on Mr Trump's side, but the Constitution wasn't.\n\nAt the heart of the Ninth Circuit's decision to uphold the injunction against Mr Trump's order was that it violated the constitutional due process rights of all persons in the US, regardless of their citizenship or immigration status. And time and time again the judges pointed to how the order was initially implemented as reason for keeping it on hold.\n\nThey wrote that permanent residents and lawful visa holders were not given \"constitutionally sufficient notice and an opportunity to respond\". While they noted that the Trump administration had since interpreted the order as allowing all permanent residents into the US, they were unconvinced that this new interpretation would be uniformly followed or safe from reversal.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThey said that the travel ban caused considerable harm, including the separation of families, stranding of US residents abroad and prevention of students and employees from travelling to American universities.\n\nA more measured, orchestrated rollout of the immigration order may have avoided these complications, weakening the case against it.\n\nMr Trump said on Wednesday that speed was necessary in implementing the ban because otherwise a \"whole pile of bad people, perhaps with very evil intentions\" would enter the country before border restrictions tightened.\n\nHere, however, haste may have killed his legal case.\n\nShortly after the Ninth Circuit issued its opinion, Nevada Democratic Senator Catherine Cortez Masto released a statement saying that the court \"reaffirms that President Trump's hateful and divisive executive order amounts to religious discrimination against Muslims\".\n\nWhile the decision was certainly a blow for the Trump administration, the judges were notably restrained in discussing the religious issue.\n\n\"The states' claims raise serious allegations and present significant constitutional questions,\" the judges wrote. Then they said they wouldn't consider the question further, since they had already decided the case on due process grounds.\n\nThey did offer one clue as to how they might eventually rule, however. The Trump administration had insisted that the order must be judged on its own, without taking into consideration past remarks made by Mr Trump and his supporters touting a \"Muslim ban\". The judges disagreed.\n\n\"It is well established that evidence of purpose beyond the face of the challenged law may be considered in evaluating Establishment and Equal Protection Clause claims.\"\n\nIn other words, when it comes time to consider whether the order amounted to a de facto Muslim ban, everything is on the table - Trump tweets, Rudy Giuliani diatribes and all.\n\nNow that the Ninth Circuit has rendered its decision, the ball is firmly in the Trump administration's court. They could appeal to the US Supreme Court, where the eight justices - four liberal, four conservative - can consider as much, or as little, of the ruling as they see fit.\n\nMr Trump certainly seemed to hint that this was the next step, tweeting: \"SEE YOU IN COURT, THE SECURITY OF OUR NATION IS AT STAKE!\" shortly after the ruling.\n\nThe administration could also decide to let the circuit court's decision stand and fight out the case in a full trial back in the Seattle district court. This would buy the president time to get his Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch, confirmed by the Republican-held Senate. Then, when the case eventually made its way to the high court, his chances of victory could be markedly improved.\n\nWhatever happens, it's clear that this case will be a political football. The fight will be personal, and it will be ugly.", "Qatar is spending $500m (£400m) a week on building projects for the 2022 World Cup.\n\nOne British man survived eight different concentration camps during the Holocaust.\n\nMinecraft is being used to pitch business ideas to big companies.\n\nThere are hundreds of ancient earthworks in the Amazon rainforest resembling Stonehenge\n\nFish-scale geckos rip off their scales and skin to escape from predators.\n\nFilipinos make up about a third of all cruise ship workers.\n\nHumanity is yet to run out of a single fossil fuel.\n\nLungfish usually live for more than 100 years.\n\nSeen a thing? Tell the Magazine on Twitter using the hashtag #thingididntknowlastweek\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "The mass stranding of whales on a remote beach in New Zealand has taken a turn for the worse as 240 more arrived.", "Former Wales flanker Martyn Williams heads to the woods to catch up with Sam Warburton to talk about dogs, fatherhood, captaincy and his future plans amongst other things.\n\nWatch Wales v England live on BBC One, the BBC Sport app and this website from 16:15 GMT on Saturday, 11 February.", "In most western armies women are taking a more and more prominent place on the front line, and in Israel, there are already mixed gender infantry battalions.\n\nThe BBC travelled to a training base in southern Israel and spoke to some of the soldiers being recruited.", "Hat-tricks from CJ Stander and Craig Gilroy help Ireland to a 63-10 victory over Italy in the Six Nations.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "President Donald Trump's senior aide Kellyanne Conway is under fire for promoting Ivanka Trump's products live on air from the White House press briefing room.\n\nHer comments followed a tweet by the president which criticised retailer Nordstrom for dropping the US first daughter's clothing line.", "Does rice really contain harmful quantities of arsenic? Dr Michael Mosley of Trust Me, I'm A Doctor investigates.\n\nMany of us are regular consumers of rice - UK consumption is on the rise, and in 2015 we ate 150m kg of the stuff. But there have been reports about rice containing inorganic arsenic - a known poison - so should we be worried?\n\nArsenic occurs naturally in soil, and inorganic arsenic is classified as a category one carcinogen by the EU, meaning that it's known to cause cancer in humans.\n\nClick here for detailed information about arsenic levels in rice and what experts say is safe to eat .\n\nTrust Me, I'm A Doctor is on BBC Two on Wednesdays at 20:00 GMT - catch up on BBC iPlayer\n\nThe consequences of arsenic poisoning have been seen most dramatically in Bangladesh, where populations have been exposed to contaminated drinking water.\n\nThe result has been described as a \"slow burning epidemic\" of cancers, heart disease and developmental problems.\n\nBecause arsenic exists in soil, small amounts can get into food, though in general these levels are so low that they're not a cause for concern.\n\nRice is grown under flooded conditions, which contributes to arsenic content\n\nRice however, is different from other crops, because it's grown under flooded conditions. This makes the arsenic locked in the soil more readily available, meaning that more can be absorbed into the rice grains.\n\nThis is why rice contains about 10-20 times more arsenic than other cereal crops. But are these levels high enough to do us any real harm?\n\n\"The only thing I can really equate it to is smoking,\" says Prof Andy Meharg of Queen's University Belfast, who has been studying arsenic for decades. \"If you take one or two cigarettes per day, your risks are going to be a lot less than if you're smoking 30 or 40 cigarettes a day. It's dose-dependent - the more you eat, the higher your risk is.\"\n\nHe believes that the current legislation isn't strict enough, and that more needs to be done to protect those who eat a lot of rice.\n\nEating a couple of portions of rice a week isn't putting an adult like me at high risk, but Prof Meharg is concerned about children and babies.\n\n\"We know that low levels of arsenic impact immune development, they impact growth development, they impact IQ development,\" he says.\n\nBecause of this, the legislation is stricter around products specifically marketed at children - but many other rice products that they may also eat, such as puffed rice cereals, can contain adult levels of arsenic.\n\nIt sounds quite scary, even if you don't eat lots of rice, but there's an easy solution - a way to cook rice that dramatically reduces the arsenic content.\n\nNow, some ways of cooking rice reduce arsenic levels more than others. We carried out some tests with Prof Meharg and found the best technique is to soak the rice overnight before cooking it in a 5:1 water-to-rice ratio.\n\nThat cuts arsenic levels by 80%, compared to the common approach of using two parts water to one part rice and letting all the water soak in. Using lots of water - the 5:1 ratio - without pre-soaking also reduced arsenic levels, but not by as much as the pre-soaking levels.\n\nSo, while I would now think twice about feeding young children too much rice or rice products, I'm not going to stop eating rice myself. I will, however, be cooking it in more water and, when I remember, leave it to soak overnight.\n\nJoin the conversation on our Facebook page\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nHat-tricks from CJ Stander and Craig Gilroy helped Ireland regroup from their Scotland defeat to earn a nine-try Six Nations win over Italy in Rome.\n\nScrum domination helped the Irish take immediate control with the bonus point secured by the 35th minute as Stander and Keith Earls both notched two tries.\n\nItaly scored a first-half penalty try but for the most part were outclassed.\n\nAfter Stander completed his hat-trick on 46, replacement Gilroy repeated the feat with Garry Ringrose also scoring.\n\nSouth African-born Stander's third try meant he became the first Ireland player to score a Six Nations hat-trick since Brian O'Driscoll achieved the feat against Scotland in 2002.\n• None Get latest Six Nations news from\n\nUlster wing Gilroy then got in on the hat-trick act as he notched his three scores in an 11-minute period in the closing stages at the Stadio Olimpico.\n\nIreland's victory was their biggest ever Six Nations win as the margin exceeded the 60-13 win over the Azzurri in 2000.\n\nJoe Schmidt's side achieved the victory despite being without skipper Rory Best who had to be replaced by debutant Niall Scannell because of a stomach upset.\n\nConor O'Shea's Italy side contained Wales for over an hour in Rome last weekend before eventually succumbing 33-7 as Ireland's dreadful start at Murrayfield contributed massively to their defeat by the Scots.\n\nHowever, it was a very different story a week on as Ireland came out fired up and the Italians had no answer.\n\nA huge early shove by Cian Healy to force an early penalty off an Italian scrum set the tone as Ireland immediately attacked the opposition line.\n\nSensing their superiority, Ireland opted for scrums off a series of penalties and the Italian dam inevitably burst in the 12th minute as Jackson's impressive long pass set up a simple finish for Munster wing Earls.\n\nThe Munster man's try meant that he joined Denis Hickie and Hugo McNeill in becoming the only Irish players to score tries in four successive internationals.\n\nWith Earls' Munster team-mate Simon Zebo's dancing feet making him an even bigger threat on the opposite wing, the Irish continued to attack in waves.\n\nZebo showed impressive passing skills to set up Stander's first try on 18 minutes and another change from the left winger laid the foundations for Earls' second try eight minutes later.\n\nWhile Sergio Parisse's line-out drive saw referee Glen Jackson award a penalty try in the 32nd minute, as Ireland lock Donnacha Ryan was sin-binned, it was a brief respite for the home side with Stander securing the first ever Six Nations winning bonus point five minutes before half-time.\n\nIreland finish with a flourish after brief lull\n\nThe second half was largely a tale of two hat-tricks as Stander completed his haul on 46 minutes by running unhindered from just outside Italy's 22, before replacement Gilroy's late salvo.\n\nWith Gilroy among several Irish replacements in the third quartet, the visitors' play became disjointed for a time although the Italians were not good enough to profit.\n\nA dreadful Giovanbattista Venditti clearance was punished by Gilroy charging in from distance in the 69th minute for his third international try.\n\nWith Italian resolve long gone, Ringrose then sped right through the middle to score under the posts before Gilroy ran in two more touchdowns to complete his first international hat-trick.\n\nCJ Stander was the standout performer in a dominant display from the Ireland back row and his carrying was immense as he notched Ireland's first Six Nations hat-trick in 15 years.\n\nHis performance came after criticism of Ireland's back-row display at Murrayfield.\n\nWhat does the coach think?\n\nIreland coach Joe Schmidt: \"We showed we can start well and that gives a platform to build on.\n\n\"We know how good they can be. It was probably a bit of confidence to go out and do it.\n\n\"There were a few guys making Six Nations and Test debuts so it's good for them to get those performances under the belt.\"\n\n\"It's an open championship and people will be excited.\"\n\nReplacements: Gega for Ghiradini (47), Panico for Lovotti (64), Chistolini for Cittadini (41), Biagi for van Schalkwyk (47), Steyn for Favaro (57), Bronzini for Gori (61), Allan for Canna (71), Campagnaro for Benvenuti (49).\n\nReplacements: Tracy for Scannell (63), McGrath for Healy (51), J Ryan for Furlong (54), Dillane for Toner (60), Van der Flier for O'Brien (69), Marmion for Murray (69), Keatley for Zebo (75), Gilroy for Henshaw (48).\n\nFor the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter.", "A largely forgotten Victorian has emerged as the female artist with the largest number of works in the UK's oil painting collection.\n\nMarianne North travelled the world in the late 19th Century to produce hundreds of botanical works - her position was revealed in analysis of Art UK's digital archive.\n\nMiss North has a gallery, which she designed herself, devoted to her works at Kew Gardens in London.", "Donald Trump told reporters on Air Force One that a new executive order could be issued as early as Monday or Tuesday.\n\nIt comes after an appeals court in San Francisco upheld a court ruling to suspend his original order that barred entry by citizens from seven mainly Muslim countries.", "The Harry Potter painting took artist Hannah Weston \"several days over the course of two months\" to complete\n\nA 4ft-high painting of Harry Potter worth £700 has \"vanished\" in the post - leaving its creator short of a few Galleons.\n\nHannah Weston, 26, said it took her several days to complete the 4ft by 3ft (1.2m by 0.9m) homage to the boy wizard.\n\nBut the painting never made it to the Parcelforce depot near her Norwich home.\n\nThe firm said it was \"unable to locate\" it and offered £125 in compensation.\n\nTattoo artist Ms Weston, 26, said the situation was \"incredibly disheartening\".\n\n\"I poured days of my time, energy and passion into that huge painting,\" Ms Weston told the BBC.\n\n\"I painted Harry out of pure adoration for stories that have brought me joy and I hope that it ends up in the hands of someone who truly appreciates it.\"\n\nShe sold the painting to a woman who planned to give it to her daughter, who was \"obsessed with the Harry Potter books\", as a birthday present.\n\nParcelforce came to pick up the parcel from Ms Weston's home, but when the buyer called to say she had not received the painting, the artist found out it had never arrived at the depot.\n\nA nationwide depot search was carried out but the painting was never found.\n\n\"The compensation I was offered - £125 - was ridiculous given that it wasn't an error or damage,\" Ms Weston said.\n\n\"The claims process was near impossible and I ended up having to borrow money to cover everything.\"\n\nMs Weston said she had not reported the incident to police as she had been told a missing parcel was not counted as a stolen item.\n\nIn a statement, a Parcelforce spokeswoman apologised to Ms Weston \"that she has not received the service she expected and deserved from Parcelforce\".", "Two parliamentary by-elections, two weeks away.\n\nIs Labour a sitting duck in its own heartland territory?\n\nA quick road-trip to the West Midlands and the Lake District was enough to conclude that Labour can look forward to a sweaty, and quite possibly a painful night on 23 February.\n\nBoth seats would normally be considered \"safe\" for Labour.\n\nBut \"normal\" now seems a long time ago. Stoke voted 70% to 30% to leave the EU. In Copeland the margin was 60% to 40%. That would be enough to give Remain-supporting Labour sleepless nights.\n\nBut add to that the fact that, in 2015, UKIP came second in Stoke - 5,000 odd votes behind Labour.\n\nThrow in Labour's long term deficit in the polls, which suggests former Labour voters have turned away from Jeremy Corbyn.\n\nThen, chat to people in Hanley town centre - in the Stoke-on-Trent Central constituency - before travelling north and doing the same in Whitehaven, the large coastal town in the sprawling, and beautiful, Copeland constituency in the Lake District.\n\nIf you don't hear enough cause for Labour to fear losing one or both of these seats, you're not listening.\n\nIn Copeland, the biggest employer by far is the Sellafield nuclear power plant.\n\nIn Whitehaven, where Sellafield has a large office block, Jeremy Corbyn's past opposition to nuclear power - which has since softened - comes up in almost every conversation.\n\nThe local grocer - whose family have run Kinsella's since the turn of the last century - told me customer after customer was switching allegiance away from Labour for that reason.\n\nCould UKIP leader Paul Nuttall win the party's second seat?\n\nThat, and the doubts about Mr Corbyn's fitness to lead which have handed him a quite dismal personal rating of minus 40.\n\nThat's 46 points behind Theresa May who was the only national leader with a positive rating in the survey conducted by Yougov last week.\n\nIn Stoke, the UK Independence Party's new leader, Paul Nuttall, is standing as a candidate. UKIP has a great deal invested in this fight.\n\nIt's not clear whether the perception of an outsider parachuting into the seat - a charismatic Scouser seizing his chance in an area with a strong identity of its own - will count against Mr Nuttall and his party.\n\nIf UKIP fails it will hurt, and suggests the party lost its way when it lost Nigel Farage as leader.\n\nSo Labour will throw everything into both campaigns. Jeremy Corbyn's visited both, and will visit again.\n\nVictory in both seats will buy time and space to try to regain ground, to try to recover from the visible splits which opened up so glaringly during debate and voting on the bill to begin Brexit.\n\nBut if Labour loses in either or both seats - each of which has been held by the party since 1935 - it means talk of existential crisis for the party.", "The changes give sweeping new to powers Mr Erdogan\n\nA new draft constitution that significantly increases the powers of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been approved by voters in a referendum. Here, the BBC's Turkey correspondent, Mark Lowen, explains why this was such a bitterly-contested process.\n\nIn one brawl, a government MP alleged an opponent bit into his leg. In another, a plant pot was hurled across parliament. A microphone was stolen and used as a weapon. An independent MP handcuffed herself to a lectern, sparking another scuffle. The parliamentary debate on changing Turkey's constitution wasn't a mild affair.\n\nOn the surface, it might seem a proposal that would enjoy cross-party consensus: modernising Turkey's constitution that was drawn up at the behest of the once-omnipotent military after the coup of 1980.\n\nBut instead it's arguably the most controversial political change in a generation, giving sweeping powers to the country's powerful but divisive President Erdogan.\n\nThe plan turns Turkey from a parliamentary to a presidential republic. Among the numerous changes:\n\nThe government - and, principally, President Erdogan - argue that the reforms streamline decision-making and avoid the unwieldy parliamentary coalitions that have hamstrung Turkey in the past.\n\nSince the president is no longer chosen by parliament but now elected directly by the people, goes the argument, he or she should not have to contend with another elected leader (the prime minister) to enact laws.\n\nThe current system, they say, is holding back Turkey's progress. They even argue that the change could somehow end the extremist attacks that have killed more than 500 people in the past 18 months.\n\nHundreds of people have been killed in attacks in Turkey in the past 18 months\n\nA presidential system is all very well in a country with proper checks and balances like the United States, retort critics, where an independent judiciary has shown itself willing to stand up to Donald Trump and a rigorous free press calls him out on contentious policies.\n\nBut in Turkey, where judicial independence has plummeted and which now ranks 151 of 180 countries in the press freedom index of the watchdog Reporters Without Borders, an all-powerful president would spell the death knell of democracy, they say.\n\nMr Erdogan's opponents already decry his slide to authoritarianism, presiding over the world's biggest jailer of journalists and a country where some 140,000 people have been arrested, dismissed or suspended since the failed coup last year.\n\nGranting him virtually unfettered powers, said the main opposition CHP, would \"entrench dictatorship\".\n\nSince the failed coup 140,000 people have been arrested, dismissed or suspended from their jobs\n\nAhmet Kasim Han, a political scientist from Kadir Has University, said before the vote: \"It doesn't look as bad as the opposition paints it and it's definitely not as benevolent as the government depicts it.\n\n\"The real weakness is that in its hurry to pass the reform, the government hasn't really explained the 2,000 laws that would change. So it doesn't look bright, especially with this government's track record.\"\n\nHow did the referendum come to happen? The governing AK Party had to rely on parliamentary votes from the far-right MHP to lead the country to a referendum.\n\nOpposition to the reform was led by the centre-left CHP and the pro-Kurdish HDP parties, the latter of which had been portrayed by the government as linked to terrorism. Several of its MPs and the party leaders are now in prison.\n\nDevlet Bahceli, leader of the far right MHP, now supports the proposed constitutional changes\n\nAKP and MHP voters who opposed the reform might have felt pressured into voting in favour, so as not to be tarnished as supporting \"terrorists\", especially since the referendum took place under the state of emergency imposed after the attempted coup.\n\n\"Holding the vote under this state of emergency makes it susceptible to allegations that people don't feel free to say no,\" says Dr Kasim Han. \"It casts a shadow over the outcome.\"\n\nWith the detail of the constitutional reform impenetrable to many, the referendum became focused around Mr Erdogan himself: a president who elicits utmost reverence from one side of the country and intense hatred from the other.\n\nThe result will now determine the political fate of this deeply troubled but hugely important country.", "One of Germany's most senior banking regulators has warned London that it is likely to lose its role as \"the gateway to Europe\" for vital financial services.\n\nDr Andreas Dombret, executive board member for the German central bank, the Bundesbank, said that even if banking rules were \"equivalent\" between the UK and the rest of the European Union, that was \"miles away from access to the single market\".\n\nMr Dombret's comments were made at a private meeting of German businesses and banks organised by Boston Consulting Group in Frankfurt earlier this week.\n\nThey give a clear - and rare - insight into Germany's approach as Britain starts the process of leaving the European Union.\n\nAnd that approach is hawkish.\n\n\"The current model of using London as a gateway to Europe is likely to end,\" Mr Dombret said at the closed-door event.\n\nMr Dombret made it clear that he did not support a \"confrontational approach\" to future relations between the UK's substantial financial services sector and the EU.\n\nBut he argued there was \"intense uncertainty\" about how the Brexit negotiations would progress and significant hurdles to overcome.\n\nThe Bundesbank executive, who is responsible for banking and financial supervision, said he was concerned that the trend towards internationally agreed standards was under pressure.\n\nAnd that Britain might try to become the \"Singapore of Europe\" following Brexit, by cutting taxes and relaxing financial regulations to encourage banks and businesses to invest in the UK.\n\n\"Brexit fits into a certain trend we are seeing towards renationalisation,\" he said.\n\n\"I strongly believe that this negatively affects the well-being of us all.\n\n\"We should therefore invest all our efforts in containing these trends.\n\n\"This holds for the private sector as well as for supervisors and policymakers in the EU and the UK.\n\n\"Some voices are calling for deregulation after Brexit,\" he continued.\n\n\"One such example is the 'financial centre strategy' that is being discussed as a fallback option for the City of London.\n\n\"Parts of this recipe are low corporate taxes and loose financial regulation.\n\n\"We should not forget that strictly supervised and well-capitalised financial systems are the most successful ones in the long run.\n\n\"The EU will not engage in a regulatory race to the bottom.\"\n\nAt present, London operates as the financial services capital for the EU.\n\nMore than a third of all wholesale banking between larger businesses, governments and pension funds takes place in Britain.\n\nNearly 80% of all foreign exchange transactions in the EU are carried out in the UK.\n\nThe business is valued in trillions of pounds, with billions of pounds being traded every day to insure companies, for example, against interest rate changes, currency fluctuations and inflation risk.\n\nIf there were significant changes to the present free-trading relationship between Britain and the EU, that could have a major impact on the value of the financial services to the UK and on the one million people employed in the sector.\n\nMr Dombret said it would also have an impact on German businesses which use London as a source of funding.\n\nSome banks are hoping that, with the government looking to fully leave the single market, an \"equivalence regime\" can be agreed where the UK and the EU recognise each other's regulatory standards.\n\nThat would allow cross-border transactions to continue with few regulatory hurdles.\n\nBut Mr Dombret said that equivalence had \"major drawbacks\" and was not an \"ideal substitute\".\n\n\"I am very sceptical about whether equivalence decisions offer a sound footing for banks' long-term location decisions,\" he said.\n\n\"Equivalence is miles away from single market access.\n\n\"Equivalence decisions are reversible, so banks would be forced to adjust to a new environment in the event that supervisory frameworks are no longer deemed equivalent.\n\n\"These lead to the overall conclusion that equivalence decisions are no ideal substitute for passporting [which allows banks in one EU country to operate in another as part of the single market].\"\n\nWhatever the arrangements, Mr Dombret said that a \"transition period\" would ease the pressure of change and reduce what he described as the \"earnings risk\".\n\n\"Let me say that I expect London to remain an important financial centre,\" Mr Dombret told the audience.\n\n\"Nevertheless, I also expect many UK-based market participants to move at least some business units to the EU in order to hedge against all possible outcomes of the negotiations.\"\n\nOne of the biggest EU-focused businesses in the UK is euro-denominated clearing - insurance products called derivatives, which allow companies to protect themselves from movements in currencies, interest rates and inflation.\n\nThree-quarters of the multi-trillion-pounds-a-day market is executed in London and a recent report from the accountancy firm EY estimated that nearly 83,000 jobs could be lost in Britain over the next seven years if clearing has to move to an EU member state following Brexit.\n\nMr Dombret said it was difficult to see how euro-clearing could remain in London, as it depended on the \"acceptance of the European Court of Justice\" as the arbiter of the thousands of legal contracts signed between counter-parties, many of which last for years.\n\nBritain has made it clear that it does not want to be bound by ECJ judgements once it has left the EU.\n\n\"I see strong arguments for having the bulk of the clearing business inside the euro area,\" Mr Dombret said.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nSix Nations 2017 on the BBC Coverage: Live across BBC TV, radio and online, with live text commentary and scores from every game on the BBC Sport website and app (\n\nWales welcome England to Cardiff in the Six Nations on Saturday with visiting coach Eddie Jones warning his team to expect all manner of \"shenanigans\" from the hosts.\n\nIn Saturday's earlier game Ireland travel to Italy determined to bounce back after their opening defeat by Scotland, while on Sunday Vern Cotter's buoyant Scots travel to Paris, where they have not won since 1999.\n\nBut the undoubted highlight of the weekend is the 130th edition of Wales and England, a fixture that was first played in 1881.\n\nWales v England, Sat 11 Feb, 16:50 GMT - live on BBC One, connected TV and online France v Scotland, Sun 12 Feb, 15:00 GMT - live on BBC One, connected TV and online\n\n\"You go to the hotel and unless you take steps, players get rung incessantly through the night. Those things happen,\" Jones said.\n\n\"You go to the ground and the traffic controller drives slower than the traffic's going to make sure you're late.\n\n\"You get to the ground and there's something wrong with your dressing room - there's lights off or the heater's switched off.\n\n\"You can't check because they traditionally tell you one thing and something else happens. It happens regularly in South Africa and it happens regularly in Wales.\"\n\nEven before Jones aired his concerns the occasion was always likely to be a high-octane affair as, given their long-standing history and neighbourly rivalry, Wales playing England in Cardiff is among the most emotive occasions in world sport.\n• None Wales v England is make or break for Howley\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n• None News alerts put you at the centre of the Six Nations\n• None \"It's not different water or different air\" - Jones\n\nWales' assistant coach Robin McBryde believes that the fierce rivalry is an inevitable consequence of the shared history and proximity of the two nations.\n\n\"We are neighbours, aren't we? I have got two English brothers-in-law,\" he said\n\n\"It is that English-Welsh rivalry, and wanting to get the better of your neighbour. It's as simple as that.\"\n\nEngland have 60 victories to Wales' 57 in the teams' 129 matches with nine draws. However, Wales have a 60% winning record against England in Cardiff.\n\nJones, whose side have won a national record 15 Tests in a row, has been merrily making mischief since the narrow opening win over France last weekend, suggesting earlier this week that the Welsh are \"a cunning lot\".\n\nSaturday's match is the sort of occasion which prompts week-long debates about whether the roof on the Principality Stadium will be open or closed.\n\nWales wanted it closed, to ramp up the noise inside the 72,000-capacity stadium which is renowned for its vertiginous stands and electric atmosphere.\n\nEngland, as the away side, had the final say under Six Nations rules and - having said he was not bothered one way or the other earlier in the week - Jones has opted for it to be left open.\n\nWhile the Australian has been stoking the flames, the hosts have been more circumspect - although Wales defence coach Shaun Edwards was moved to compare Jones to legendary former Nottingham Forest manager Brian Clough.\n\nAnd despite his barbs the England head coach has not been short of compliments, praising the Principality Stadium's \"amazing atmosphere\".\n\nHe added: \"How could you not want to play rugby there?\n\n\"It is one of the greatest rugby countries in the world, so to play Wales in Cardiff with that sort of atmosphere is one of the great delights of rugby.\"\n\nWales have injury worries about winger George North - who is chasing a new record of scoring a try in six championship games in a row - and fly-half Dan Biggar and both will have fitness tests on matchday.\n\nBut there is some good news for them, with world class number eight Taulupe Faletau back in action, although he only makes it as far as the bench after injury.\n\nEngland have made two changes from the team that edged past France, with winger Jack Nowell recalled and back rower Jack Clifford handed just his second England start as Jones searches for more ball carrying options.\n\nScotland looking for first Paris win of the millennium\n\nScotland have lost nine successive games on French soil since they won 36-22 at the Stade de France in 1999 on the final weekend of their triumph in the last Five Nations championship.\n\nHow their forwards match up against a formidably physical French pack could be key to halting that losing run.\n\nScotland flanker Hamish Watson, who weighs in at a relatively lightweight 15st 12lb, says he is confident that he and his team-mates can meet the challenge.\n\n\"They are a big pack and will pose us a different threat to Ireland, We know they are going to scrum well and have been concentrating on that,\" he said.\n\n\"But it's nothing we can't deal with, so I think it will go well.\"\n\nFrance coach Guy Noves believes that counterpart Vern Cotter's work is bearing fruit as he approaches the end of his stint with Scotland. Gregor Townsend will take over in June.\n\n\"We will mainly adapt to the Scottish rugby that you have seen evolve for four years - a game based on commitment, speed, aggression, with players who have gained confidence in a highly organised collective,\" he said.\n\nScotland have made one change with the starting line-up that beat Ireland with John Barclay coming in at blind-side flanker to replace Ryan Wilson, who is out with an elbow infection.\n\nIreland coach Joe Schmidt will make sure his side are at Rome's Stadio Olimpico in plenty of time for the weekend's opening fixture as he feels that their late arrival at Murrayfield last week contributed to their lacklustre start to the match.\n\nIreland, whose team bus turned up about 15 minutes late after its police escort reportedly guided it away from an agreed route, conceded three tries in the first half hour to trail by 16 points.\n\n\"I don't think it was apathy, there was a bit of anxiety at not having had the full period to warm up,\" said Schmidt.\n\n\"Players get anxious, they get very routine-based and I do think it's a challenge for a professional player that they can be adaptable in different circumstances, so they can still start well and cope.\"\n\nSchmidt has kept faith with fly-half Paddy Jackson at 10 with Johnny Sexton still returning to fitness after a calf injury picked up playing for Leinster in January.\n\nItaly, led by former Ireland international Conor O'Shea, have beaten Ireland four times in 26 meetings, with their latest success coming in 2013.\n\nSign up for rugby union news alerts and get Six Nations news the moment it breaks\n• None How to follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n• None Bright lights and big hitters - take our rugby quiz", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nEngland women hammered Wales at Cardiff Arms Park, running in 11 tries in a 63-0 victory.\n\nThe visitors scored most of their tries through the back three with wing Lydia Thompson running in a hat-trick.\n\nFellow wing Amy Wilson Hardy and full-back Danielle Waterman crossed twice apiece in a dominant display.\n\nAmy Cokayne, Natasha Hunt, Kate McLean and Sarah Hunter all touched down with Emily Scarratt converting four tries, with Wales unable to find a reply.\n\nEngland's confident all-round display will make them Six Nations favourites and World Cup contenders.\n\nThe Red Roses, who unlike the hosts are professional, got the scoreboard moving inside three minutes when wing Wilson Hardy was worked clear with an overlap, and they continued to get outside the Welsh defence regularly.\n\nThe bonus point took just 22 minutes to arrive, and Wales scarcely had their hands on the ball in the first-half with Scarratt's goal-kicking extending the lead to 38-0 by the interval.\n\nWaterman, Thompson and Wilson Hardy continued to run riot in their third quarter.\n\nWales managed more possession and territory as the game broke up in the final quarter with all the replacements coming on, but Thompson's third in the 67th minute was the last score as Wales were unable to breach a sturdy English defence.\n\nEngland fly-half McLean, who finished the game at full-back, was player of the match for her controlling performance.\n\nEngland next host Italy at the Stoop Memorial Ground on Saturday 25 February, while Wales face Scotland in Cumbernauld the previous night.\n\nEngland beat France 26-13 in their opening contest after trailing 13-0.\n\nWales beat Italy 20-8 in their opening game of the tournament in Jesi on 4 February.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One Wales, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nCoach Rob Howley said he was \"proud and delighted\" about Wales' performance against England - until the visitors grabbed victory in the closing stages.\n\nThe hosts led until wing Elliot Daly finished off a counter-attack, after Jonathan Davies failed to find touch with a clearance kick, and Owen Farrell converted to seal a 21-16 victory.\n\n\"In the last five minutes we lacked a bit of composure,\" said Howley.\n\n\"Unfortunately, England know how to win. They've got a lot of confidence.\"\n\nDefeat was Wales' second during Howley's second stint as stand-in for British and Irish Lions coach Warren Gatland.\n\nThey lost heavily to Australia in November and were criticised for their style of play in wins over Argentina, Japan and South Africa.\n\nHowley's men opened their Six Nations campaign with a 33-7 victory over Italy in Rome, and produced a vastly improved display in defeat by England.\n\n\"I'm proud and delighted with the performance... up to about 75 minutes,\" said Howley.\n\n'You have to applaud England'\n\nDaly dived over under pressure from Alex Cuthbert, who was promoted into the team in the build-up to the match when George North failed to recover from a dead leg.\n\nNorthampton Saints player North says he will be fit to face Scotland in round three on Saturday, 25 February.\n\nHowley added: \"I felt England were getting on top in the last 10 to 15 minutes and they took their chance.\n\n\"You have to applaud them for that.\n\n\"International rugby is about taking your chances and keeping discipline.\"\n\nHowley said fly-half Dan Biggar's display was one of the highlights for Wales.\n\n\"Dan Biggar delivers that level of performance whether it's in training or in a Test match,\" he said.\n\n\"He's one of the key players in the unit and he's matured to become a class player.\"\n• None Never miss a Six Nations story - sign up for our rugby news alerts\n\nWales captain Alun Wyn Jones said: \"Hopefully we answered some of the critics.\n\n\"We had a great first half. Yes we are disappointed, but the performance was there for 76 minutes. We will take huge belief from this.\"", "The NHS is under unprecedented pressure. Demand is rising and hospitals, in particular, are struggling to cope.\n\nBut how exactly do patients flow round the system and what happens to hospitals when they cannot cope?\n\nThe BBC has produced an animated video to help you understand more about the health service and the strain it is under.", "HTC Vive has been outselling the Oculus Rift\n\nI first tried the Oculus Rift virtual reality headset in the corner of a drab conference room in Las Vegas. I was convinced within seconds - despite feeling a little dizzy - that the device, held together by duct tape and hope, was destined for big things.\n\nA year or so later, I met the same company, Oculus VR, in a (slightly) fancier room at the E3 gaming event in Los Angeles. \"Hold this,\" I said, abruptly thrusting an audio cable into the hands of a young man who I thought was helping out - but was in fact the company's chief executive, Palmer Luckey. Again, I was blown away by the technology.\n\nThe next time I'd meet Luckey he'd be many, many millions of dollars richer, and Oculus would be a Facebook-owned company. But despite that very real marker of success, our topic of conversation each time we met remained the same: How are you going to convince people it's worth it? And isn't it going to be way too expensive?\n\n\"It isn't,\" he said the last time I asked him - but he's wrong.\n\nAt around $600 (plus a powerful PC) to get started, it is too expensive.\n\nBut money isn't the problem. The price of the technology will come down, and I'm still convinced virtual reality can be a success - but will it be Facebook's success? The company's strategy in this blossoming market is under question.\n\nThis week we learned that demo stations set up in Best Buy - the huge US technology retail chain - are being rolled back due to poor foot traffic.\n\nFacebook has described the move as a \"seasonal\" change, but suffice it to say, if they were shifting units they'd still be there. Instead, 200 of the 500 stations across the US are being shut down.\n\nIt's a potentially troubling moment for the company. Those who back virtual reality - myself included - always subscribed to the view that the key to selling them would be to get people to try it out. Once you've been in VR, we all assumed, you'd be hooked, and your wallet would follow soon after.\n\nGoogle's Daydream VR system could be a threat to Facebook's budget VR success\n\nBut that doesn't seem to have been the case. For whatever reason, too few people were bothering to even try the demo, let alone buy the product. There are a few theories for this, but the most likely, in my mind, was suggested by NPR's Molly Wood. The problem, she observed recently, might be the \"pink-eye factor”.\n\nShe said: \"It could be as simple as - and I have said this a million times - not wanting to go into a store and put something on your face that has been on a bunch of other people's faces.\"\n\nBut that wouldn't explain why the Oculus Rift is apparently performing poorly against its closest rival.\n\nAt the high-end of the virtual reality market, Oculus is up against HTC's Vive, an extremely capable device which has the involvement of Valve, the revered games publisher.\n\nUnofficial data (which I'm using as the companies themselves haven't shared sales figures with us) suggest that the Vive, despite being more expensive, is trouncing Oculus. Games research firm SuperData estimated that 420,000 Vive headsets were sold in 2016, compared to 250,000 sales for the Oculus Rift.\n\nThe lower end of the market is far more positive for Facebook. The Samsung Gear VR runs the Oculus VR experience, and that is by far and away the most popular device for VR on the market today, according to SuperData. But the hardware is all Samsung's and, for the most part, the headset itself (a simple plastic frame with lenses) has been given away with many smartphones.\n\nThe hope that the Gear VR might act as a kind of gateway drug into pricier VR experiences has yet to come to fruition.\n\nOr maybe it has, just not for Oculus: the middle ground in VR is Sony's PlayStation VR, $399 and works with the PlayStation 4. It's more powerful than the Gear VR, but less powerful than the high-end headsets. But here's where Facebook should be worried - it seems to be good enough for most gamers.\n\nAnd it's \"good enough\" that makes Facebook's strategy all the more precarious. Who is the Oculus Rift for, exactly? Super serious gamers are gravitating to the HTC Vive. Moderately serious gamers are happy with PlayStation VR. And at the budget end, the Gear VR, while popular now, faces a clear and present threat from Daydream, Google's new VR ecosystem which is far more open.\n\nWhile Gear VR insists you have a Samsung smartphone, Daydream is designed to eventually work with any sufficiently powerful Android device (and it wouldn't be too tricky to make it work with Apple's iOS, either).\n\nThis compatibility comes at a price, mind - the Daydream View headset is far less comfortable, in my experience, than the Gear VR. But it's comfortable enough, and the little handheld controller provides a far more intuitive way of navigating the VR world than tapping blindly at the side of your head, a la Gear VR.\n\nSo what are the next steps if Facebook is to get on top of this? I'd ask Palmer Luckey, but he's hard to reach at the moment - hidden away from public view after controversy surrounding his support of Donald Trump which involved funding a hateful trolling group.\n\nHe still works at the company, but Facebook and Oculus have repeatedly refused to tell me what his job actually is. (Palmer, if you're reading... my Twitter direct messages are open!)\n\nThe only public appearance he has made since that debacle has been to turn up in court where Facebook (unsuccessfully) defended against claims Oculus illegally used intellectual property belonging to games publisher Zenimax in the early days. A $500m bill for damages awaits, unless Facebook can win on appeal.\n\nIn a recent earnings call, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who is still incredibly enthusiastic about VR and what it means for his network's future, called for patience from his investors. \"It's not going to be really profitable for a while,\" he said.\n\nHe's never claimed otherwise, it has to be said. VR appears on Facebook's 10-year strategy, a slow burner with potentially big rewards.\n\nBut falling behind now would be a serious blow, which is why Zuckerberg has brought in Hugo Barra, a man most recently at Chinese firm Xiaomi, but before that, a major name at Google. He'll be in charge of Facebook's efforts in virtual reality from here on in.\n\nIn Barra, Oculus gains both a visionary and a safe pair of hands. He having worked on Android, today's most popular smartphone platform.\n\nAt Xiaomi, his role was to help the company expand globally - and while the company didn't, as some had expected, break into the US under Barra's watch, it did cement a reputation as making good quality devices.\n\nHe hasn't started his new role at Facebook just yet - he'll be at the company in a month or so, apparently excited to be back in California after a few years away.\n\nWhen he starts his first day - I feel those two questions I've been asking Palmer Luckey still stand: Isn't it still too expensive? And more importantly - how are you going to convince people it's worth it?\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook", "Ron Haviv started his career as a photojournalist in 1989 in Panama and there he took a photo showing the country's future vice-president being beaten by a paramilitary.\n\nUS President George Bush used it to justify the US invasion.\n\nAfter Panama he went to Bosnia, where in 1992, he took another iconic photograph, which shows Serbian paramilitary soldiers kicking the bodies of civilians they had just killed. That photograph was used to indict their leaders for war crimes.\n\nA quarter of a century later, Ron is working on a documentary about the lives that these two photographs took once they left his camera.", "A tribunal found courier Maggie Dewhurst should be classed as a worker\n\nWhat is the so-called \"gig\" economy, a phrase increasingly in use, and seemingly so in connection with employment disputes?\n\nAccording to one definition, it is \"a labour market characterised by the prevalence of short-term contracts or freelance work, as opposed to permanent jobs\".\n\nAnd - taking opposing partisan viewpoints - it is either a working environment that offers flexibility with regard to employment hours, or... it is a form of exploitation with very little workplace protection.\n\nThe latest attempt to bring a degree of legal clarity to the employment status of people in the gig economy has been playing out in the Court of Appeal.\n\nA London firm, Pimlico Plumbers, on Friday lost its appeal against a previous ruling that said one of its long-serving plumbers was a worker - entitled to basic rights, including holiday pay - rather than an independent contractor.\n\nLike other cases of a similar nature, such as those involving Uber and Deliveroo, the outcome will now be closely scrutinised for what it means regarding the workplace rights of the millions of people employed in the gig economy in the UK.\n\nIn the gig economy, instead of a regular wage, workers get paid for the \"gigs\" they do, such as a food delivery or a car journey.\n\nIn the UK it's estimated that five million people are employed in this type of capacity.\n\nProponents of the gig economy claim that people can benefit from flexible hours, with control over how much time they can work as they juggle other priorities in their lives.\n\nWorkers in the gig economy may be delivering meals\n\nIn addition, the flexible nature often offers benefits to employers, as they only pay when the work is available, and don't incur staff costs when the demand is not there.\n\nMeanwhile, workers in the gig economy are classed as independent contractors.\n\nThat means they have no protection against unfair dismissal, no right to redundancy payments, and no right to receive the national minimum wage, paid holiday or sickness pay.\n\nIt is these aspects that are proving contentious.\n\nIn the past few months two tribunal hearings have gone against employers looking to classify staff as independent contractors.\n\nLast October Uber drivers in the UK won the right to be classed as workers rather than independent contractors.\n\nThe ruling by a London employment tribunal meant drivers for the ride-hailing app would be entitled to holiday pay, paid rest breaks and the national minimum wage.\n\nUber is appealing against the tribunal finding against it\n\nThe GMB union described the decision as a \"monumental victory\" for some 40,000 drivers in England and Wales. In December, Uber launched an appeal against the ruling that it had acted unlawfully.\n\nAnd in January this year, a tribunal found that Maggie Dewhurst, a courier with logistics firm City Sprint, should be classed as a worker rather than independent contractor, entitling her to basic rights.\n\nAnd, also towards the end of last year, a group of food takeaway couriers working for Deliveroo said they were taking legal steps in the UK to gain union recognition and workers' rights.\n\nOne difference worth noting is that workers in the gig economy differ slightly from those on zero-hours contracts.\n\nThose are the - also controversial - arrangements used by companies such as Sports Direct, JD Wetherspoons and Cineworld.\n\nLike workers in the gig economy, zero-hours contractors - or casual contractors - don't get guaranteed hours or much job security from their employer.\n\nChancellor Philip Hammond is looking for effective ways to tax workers\n\nBut people on zero-hours contracts are seen as employees in some sense, as they are entitled to holiday pay. But, like those in the gig economy, they are not entitled to sick pay.\n\nMeanwhile, the Department for Business is holding an inquiry into a range of working practices - including the gig economy.\n\nThe department says it wants to ensure its employment rules are up to date to reflect \"new ways of working\".\n\nThe status of gig economy workers is of importance to the government, as last November's Autumn Statement showed for the first time how it is cutting into the government's tax take.\n\nThe Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimated that in 2020-21 it will cost the Treasury £3.5bn.\n\nChancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond said then he would look to find more effective ways to tax workers in the UK's current shifting labour environment.\n\nFor more on the gig economy listen to In The Balance: Precarious Future on BBC World Service at 09:30 GMT on Saturday, 11 February.", "It was Diplomats' Day in Russia on Friday and the country's Diplomacy For Peace choir, made up of newly qualified diplomats, has been singing the praises of their diplomacy.", "Rebecca was anorexic and bulimic for 12 years.\n\nShe explains what helped her and what didn't, as well as some of the signs people can look for if they're worried someone they know may have an eating disorder.\n\nRebecca's story was featured on Trust Me I'm A Doctor on BBC Two - @BBCTrustMe on Twitter\n\nJoin the conversation - find BBC Stories on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Moussa Dembele scores a hat-trick as Celtic thump Inverness CT to reach the Scottish Cup quarter-finals. Commentary from Liam McLeod and Steven Thompson.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "England captain Dylan Hartley says Cardiff is one of the \"rugby capitals of the world\" as his side prepare to play Wales in the Six Nations.", "The watch has a tiny, hidden microphone for a spy to secretly record conversations\n\nA vintage collection of secret service gadgets including a dagger disguised as a pen and a watch with a hidden microphone are to go on sale.\n\nThe items - designed for British spies and troops caught behind enemy lines - date from World War Two onwards.\n\nThe anonymous seller claims he was never a spy himself, simply a historian with a passion for anything from WW2.\n\nThe objects are expected to fetch a total of thousands of pounds when they are sold at auction in Kent on Tuesday.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This fountain pen concealed a dagger and could be worth up to £500\n\nThe James Bond-style collection of sinister yet ingenious items includes a badge which unscrews to reveal a compass, which is expected to fetch up to £120.\n\nThere is also a key with a secret compartment for hiding things such as cyanide pills, which could be worth up to £200.\n\nMatthew Tredwin of C&T Auctioneers said: \"Most people that buy this stuff are historians who want to keep the story of these people alive.\"\n\nThe vendor said he would be \"over the moon if they fetched the estimates placed on them\".\n\nBut he added: \"Money is not the concern. I would like to think they will go to a collector who will cherish them as much as I have over the years.\"\n\n\"I have had the pleasure of owning them and feel it is time that another collector or museum has the opportunity,\" he added.\n\nThe collection includes a button with a compass inside and a key with a secret compartment\n• None Spy gadgets up for auction. Video, 00:00:43Spy gadgets up for auction\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "England broke Welsh hearts with a late try from Elliot Daly snatching an unlikely victory in Cardiff and stretching their winning run to 16 matches.\n\nLiam Williams' slicing first-half try and 11 points from the boot of Leigh Halfpenny looked to have sealed a merited home triumph, the Principality Stadium awash in song and celebration.\n\nDefending Six Nations champions England had led through Ben Youngs' early try but were then bullied for much of a pulsating contest, their callow back row outmuscled and their attack imprecise.\n\nBut Owen Farrell's penalties kept them within two points and with time running out his long flat pass put Daly away down the left to escape Alex Cuthbert's despairing tackle and dive over in the corner.\n\nIt was a poor clearing kick from Jonathan Davies that gifted England that final chance, and Wales will be left ruing that lapse, just as the visiting supporters celebrated it with glee.\n\nWith home matches against Italy and Scotland to come Jones's men have a realistic shot at setting up another Grand Slam tilt, disappointing though they were for much of this contest.\n\nWales were better in most of the key areas, their back row of Sam Warburton, Justin Tipuric and Ross Moriarty exposing England's comparative lack of experience.\n\nDan Biggar out-shone his opposite number George Ford, as impressive with ball in hand as he was with his kicking game, and picked off an interception deep into the match that appeared to have been pivotal.\n\nYet again it was England's bench that saved them, although the men Jones has called his finishers were more rescue squad on this freezing Cardiff night.\n\nJust as those replacements had changed the face of the narrow win over France at Twickenham a week ago, so they wrestled late control of a game that Wales had in their grasp.\n\nWales left points on the pitch in the first half, twice spurning kickable penalties, once to take a five-metre scrum which England then won, shortly afterwards kicking for the corner when the impeccable Halfpenny would surely have bagged the three points.\n\nSkipper Alun Wyn Jones then knocked on with only the comparatively diminutive Youngs in front of him and with an overlap left, and in a game as tight as this it will be one more regret on a night of what ifs and should have beens.\n\nThe streak goes on - just\n\nEngland's opening try had spoken of initial superior precision and control, the men in white going through 26 phases before Youngs burrowed over.\n\nOnly Farrell's missed conversion and Daly's penalty miss from long range kept them from enjoying a more comfortable lead.\n\nThat superiority was short-lived. Williams cut a sweet inside line off Rhys Webb's pass, England's defence suckered by decoy runners.\n\nAnd sustained Welsh pressure in the second half really should have brought reward, Jones so concerned he replaced his skipper Dylan Hartley on 46 minutes and threw on James Haskell shortly afterwards.\n\nEngland still could not find their rhythm, Mike Brown wasting one attack by kicking the ball out on the full under little pressure, Jonathan Joseph ending another with a pass sent straight into touch.\n\nBut as Hymns and Arias rang out around the steep stands, Ford fielded Davies' kick 30 metres out, Farrell spotted Daly outside him and the winger accelerated past the unhappy Cuthbert to keep Jones's record-breaking streak alive.\n\nJoe Launchbury's 20 tackles helped keep England alive, but Dan Biggar's best game for Wales since the 2015 World Cup should have ended with greater reward.\n\nWales captain Alun Wyn Jones speaking on BBC Radio 5 live: \"Hopefully we answered some of the critics. We had a great first half. Yes we are disappointed, but the performance was there for 76 minutes. We will take huge belief from this.\"\n\nEngland head coach Eddie Jones speaking on BBC Radio 5 live: \"I think we have used all of our get out of jail cards. I never think we are going to lose, but we don't want all our games to be that tight.\"\n\nWhat did the pundits make of it?\n\nEx-Wales fly-half Jonathan Davies on BBC One: \"I felt that England looked far more threatening with ball in hand. When the opportunity came, they took it. They were so clinical in the opportunities they had.\"\n\nEx-England hooker Brian Moore on BBC One: \"It shows again that if you do not put this England side away when you are on top they will make you pay. They were outplayed for long periods but when it came down to taking the opportunity from a poor Welsh kick, they found a way to win.\"\n\nReplacements: Roberts for S Williams (71), G Davies for Webb (65), Smith for Evans (53), Baldwin for Owens (60), Lee for Francis (53), Hill for Tipuric (78), Faletau for Moriarty (53).\n\nReplacements: May for Nowell (71), Te'o for Joseph (65), Care for Youngs (65), Mullan for Marler (71), George for Hartley (46), Sinckler for Cole (71), Haskell for Clifford (49).", "A collection of items used by British spies during the Second World War is going up for auction.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nRangers have replaced Mark Warburton as manager with under-20 coach Graeme Murty before Sunday's Scottish Cup tie with Greenock Morton.\n\nThe Scottish Premiership club say they have accepted the resignations of Warburton, assistant David Weir and head of recruitment, Frank McParland.\n\nBut Warburton, who took charge in 2015, told BBC Scotland he has not stood down and was unaware of the statement.\n\nAnd the 54-year-old Englishman is consulting his legal team.\n\nThe BBC has learned that Warburton had contact with Nottingham Forest around 10 days ago and was high on the English Championship club's list of possible managers.\n\nHowever, he was not offered the job and they decided to retain their interim team of Gary Brazil and Jack Lester until the end of the season.\n\nWarburton, who had a contract at Ibrox until 2018, had taken Rangers' training on Friday as normal before Sunday's fifth-round tie.\n\nHe had earlier in the morning defended McParland's record of signings after media criticism of the Glasgow club's recruitment.\n\n\"At a meeting with the management team's representative earlier this week, the club were advised that Mr Warburton, Mr Weir and Mr McParland wished to resign their positions and leave the club on condition that Rangers agreed to waive its rights to substantial compensation,\" said Rangers' statement.\n\nAlthough born in England, Graeme Murty qualified to play for Scotland and won four caps between 2004 and 2007 The 42-year-old played for York, Reading, Charlton Athletic and Southampton in a career lasting 17 years and 437 games He won the Football League Championship with Reading in 2005/06. He has coached at Southampton and Norwich City, both at youth level\n\n\"Rangers' agreement to waive compensation would assist the management team to join another club.\n\n\"This compensation amount was agreed when Rangers significantly improved Mr Warburton and Mr Weir's financial arrangements before the start of this season.\n\n\"The board urgently convened to consider the offer made on behalf of the management team and its ramifications and agreed to accept it and release the trio from the burden of compensation, despite the potential financial cost to the club.\"\n\nRangers claim that Warburton's representative attempted to alter the the terms.\n\n\"A further board meeting was held this afternoon to discuss this and it was decided not to agree to this additional request but to hold with the original agreement,\" he said.\n\n\"Mr Warburton, Mr Weir, and Mr McParland have therefore been notified in writing that their notices of termination have been accepted.\"\n\nRangers lie third in the Scottish top flight, but they are a distant 27 points behind city rivals and reigning champions Celtic and their statement went on to suggest that the management team have not reached the targets set.\n\n\"The board is very appreciative of the good work previously done by the management team but believes it had no alternative,\" it added.\n\n\"Our club must come first and absolute commitment is essential.\n\n\"It is important that Rangers has a football management team that wants to be at the club and that the board believes can take the club forward to meet our stated ambition to return to being the number one club in Scotland.\n\n\"We are clearly short of where we expected to be at this time.\"\n\nRelations between Mark Warburton and the Rangers board have been strained for some time. The manner of the departure could never have been predicted, but the departure itself had been coming. Recent results have been poor, but the former Brentford boss was unhappy with the financial backing he received from owner Dave King - a man who he hasn't spoken to in person, on a one to one basis, for months. For his part, King had grown disillusioned by Warburton's signings and what he perceived to be a lack of progress. It was a relationship well beyond repair. Some will believe Warburton was agitating to get out, others will say the board turned on him. Whatever the truth, it's another mess this club could well do without.\n\nWarburton's reign at Ibrox suffered a blow in November, when high-profile summer signing Joey Barton was sacked after a training ground disagreement with team-mate Andy Halliday and the manager following a 5-1 defeat by Celtic.\n\nIt called into question his signing policy, but Warburton gave another ringing endorsement to McParland, who was with him at Brentford, before Sunday's game.\n\n\"I've said time and again - his track record is outstanding,\" he said. \"There would be no shortage of takers for someone of his quality.\"\n\nWarburton also quoted a former Rangers manager in pointing out the pressures that come with the post.\n\n\"Walter Smith said to me that you are never more than two or three games away from a major crisis,\" he said. \"That is life at Rangers.\n\n\"That is the nature of it. You just get on with it.\"\n\nWarburton was in charge of Rangers for 82 games, winning 55, drawing 14 and suffering 13 losses.\n\nHis 67% win rate was more than Stuart McCall, who took charge at the end of the 2014-15 season, and had a 41% win rate, but less than his predecessor, Ally McCoist, with 72%.\n\nMark Warburton attempted to explain away his team's - or former team's - dreary draw against Ross County by saying a series of random events conspired against his players.\n\nIt was, he said, football's strange ways that denied them on the day, as if some cosmic force was to blame for the failings rather than his own players and his own management.\n\nWarburton's comments were bizarre but nowhere near as surreal as the nonsense that took hold of Rangers on Friday evening as the club said that Warburton was leaving and Warburton said that he wasn't.\n\nRangers have known dysfunction in recent years, but those times are not as distant as some chose to believe.\n\nThey're just dysfunctional in a different way now. Rudderless, leaking like a sieve and now embarrassed in a way that surely took their supporters back to the dog days of Charles Green and chums.", "Jeremy Corbyn imposed a three-line whip on his MPs in the Brexit vote\n\nLabour frontbenchers who defied Jeremy Corbyn in this week's Commons Brexit vote will be sent a formal written warning but will not be sacked.\n\nMr Corbyn had imposed a three-line whip on his MPs to vote to back Brexit.\n\nBut 52 Labour MPs rebelled in Wednesday's vote, including 11 junior shadow ministers and three whips, whose job it is to impose party discipline.\n\nClive Lewis, who quit the shadow cabinet over the vote, said rumours of a leadership bid by him were \"fantasy\".\n\nMr Corbyn imposed the three-line whip after vowing his party would not seek to obstruct the implementation of the EU referendum result.\n\nConvention dictates that members of the leader's shadow cabinet team should resign or be sacked if they defy such an order.\n\nSome did resign but the remaining rebels are to receive only a letter insisting that they must comply with the whip in the future.\n\nThe decision not to sack them leaves Labour facing the prospect of three whips trying to persuade their colleagues to vote with a leader who himself rebelled against Labour more than 400 times - when they have defied him themselves, BBC political correspondent Chris Mason says.\n\nMr Lewis has since been replaced as shadow business secretary by Rebecca Long-Bailey.\n\nSpeaking to the Eastern Daily Press, Mr Lewis, who is MP for Norwich, said his resignation was not the beginning of a bid to challenge Mr Corbyn for the party leadership, adding that he was \"working hard\" to support him from the back benches.\n\nA string of resignations from the Labour front bench mean there are still a \"couple of vacancies\" to be filled but it is not expected there will be any further announcements until next week.\n\nNew appointments announced on Friday include Ian Lavery and Andrew Gwynne, who become joint national elections and campaign coordinators.\n\nJon Trickett has become shadow minister for the Cabinet Office and will remain shadow Lord President of the Council.\n\nThe draft Brexit legislation was approved by 494 votes to 122 in Wednesday's vote and now moves to the House of Lords.\n\nPrime Minister Theresa May wants to trigger formal Brexit talks by the end of March.\n\nShe will do this by invoking Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty but requires Parliament's permission before doing so.", "Pimlico Plumbers boss Charlie Mullins says his firm is \"very likely\" to appeal after losing a significant court case.\n\nIt comes after the Court of Appeal agreed with a tribunal that Garry Smith was entitled to basic workers' rights, following a heart attack, even though he'd been technically self-employed.\n\nCharlie Mullins told the BBC that Mr Smith had chosen to be self-employed, meaning he was paid twice as much, but then would not receive worker benefits.", "Keira Knightley and Hugh Grant will reprise their original roles\n\nRomantics rejoice - the cast of Love Actually is reuniting for a short sequel to raise money for Comic Relief.\n\nRed Nose Day Actually will be written by Richard Curtis and star Hugh Grant, Keira Knightley and Colin Firth.\n\nLiam Neeson, Bill Nighy and Rowan Atkinson will also appear in the film, which sets out to discover what the original characters are doing in 2017.\n\nThe 10-minute sequel will be shown on 24 March on BBC One as part of the Red Nose Day appeal.\n\nIt comes 14 years after Love Actually was released.\n\nLove Actually scriptwriter Emma Freud, Curtis's partner, has asked for ideas for the plot, saying the follow-up is still being written.\n\nMany have suggested a tribute to the late Alan Rickman, who starred in the original.\n\nAnother suggestion tweeted to Freud involved Atkinson's character, who was seen in the original as a shop assistant.\n\nAnd one fan wanted a happy ending for Emma Thompson's character, after the hard time she had in the first film.\n\nCurtis said: \"I would never have dreamt of writing a sequel to Love Actually, but I thought it might be fun to do 10 minutes to see what everyone is now up to.\n\n\"We hope to make something that'll be fun - very much in the spirit of the original film and of Red Nose Day.\"\n\nThe writer said he was \"delighted\" that so many of the original cast could take part, adding: \"It'll certainly be a nostalgic moment getting back together.\"\n\nMartine McCutcheon, Andrew Lincoln, Lucia Moniz, Thomas Brodie-Sangster and Olivia Olson will also reprise their original roles.\n\nThe original film, set at Christmas time, followed an extensive cast of characters, whose lives intertwined in various ways.\n\nAmong them was Hugh Grant's character, David - the prime minister at the time - who was seen getting together with Natalie, played by McCutcheon, at the end of the original film.\n\nSam (played by Game of Thrones star Brodie-Sangster, who was 13 at the time), was seen chasing Joanna, played by Olivia Olson, through the airport at the end of the last film to declare his love.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Donald Trump's willingness to build better relations with Russia is threatening to turn US foreign policy on its head. His openness towards Vladimir Putin has dismayed most of the foreign policy establishment in Washington. But it's now shared by some European politicians, not all of them far-right extremists, in France, Italy, Hungary, the Czech Republic and elsewhere. They can't all be Kremlin agents - so what's the new pull of Putin for some in the West?\n\nThe two politicians, one American, one Russian, put down their drinks and clasped hands across the pub table. Then they both pushed. But there was no real contest.\n\nThe arm-wrestling match was over in a second and the winner was the deputy mayor of St Petersburg, a man who'd built up his strength through years of judo training. Few outside Russia had ever heard of him. But five years later he would become its president.\n\nUS Congressman Dana Rohrabacher still laughs when he recalls his brief duel with Vladimir Putin in 1995, when the Russian came over in an official delegation. He hasn't met Mr Putin since. But for many years he's been the most consistent voice for détente on Capitol Hill, often effectively in a minority of one.\n\n\"I don't see Putin as a good guy, I see him as a bad guy. But every bad guy in the world isn't our enemy that we have to find ways of thwarting and beating up,\" Congressman Rohrabacher says.\n\n\"There are a lot of areas where this would be a better world if we were working together, rather than this constant barrage of hostility aimed at anything the Russians are trying to do.\"\n\nMr Rohrabacher doesn't condone Russian hacking during the US election campaign or the Kremlin's military incursions into Ukraine. But he believes Russia is the victim of Western double standards.\n\nUS Congressman Dana Rohrabacher believes the West should co-operate more with Russia\n\nAnd that view is shared by some Western experts on Russia, though the vast majority stress how aggressive the country has become under President Putin.\n\nRichard Sakwa, Professor of Russian and European politics at the University of Kent, in the UK, is in the minority camp. \"We are living in a huge echo chamber which only listens to itself,\" he says. \"The key meme is 'Russian aggression' and it's repeated ad nauseam instead of thinking.\n\n\"When we have national interests, that's good. But when Russia tries to defend its interests, it's illegitimate, it's aggressive, and it's dangerous for the rest of the world.\"\n\nRussia's 2014 takeover of Crimea and military support of separatists in eastern Ukraine is widely taken as evidence that Mr Putin seeks to extend his country's borders.\n\nBut Prof Sakwa sees the Ukrainian crisis as a symptom of the failure after the Cold War to establish a new international security system that would have included Russia.\n\nMeanwhile Stephen Cohen, Professor Emeritus of Russian Studies at New York University, argues that the \"vilification\" of President Putin in the West stems originally from disappointment that the Russian leader turned his back on some of the Western-inspired reforms of his predecessor, Boris Yeltsin: reforms that many Russians blame for the lawlessness and falling living standards of that period.\n\n\"Putin is a European man trying to rule a country that is only partially European,\" Cohen says. \"But we demand that the whole world be on our historical clock.\"\n\nDid President Putin turn his back on Boris Yeltsin's reforms?\n\nProf Cohen is a rare liberal voice for detente. Most Americans who want better relations with Russia are on the political right.\n\nSome are neo-isolationists who dislike what they see as their country's attempts to \"export democracy\", whether to Iraq, Syria or Russia. In that, they're at one with the Kremlin, which opposes any outside interference in the affairs of sovereign states.\n\nOthers are \"strategic realists\" who argue that great powers, including Russia, will always have \"spheres of influence\" beyond their borders.\n\nAmerica's Monroe Doctrine sought to prevent outside military and political involvement in the New World.\n\nThe opposite argument is that independent states have the right to belong to whatever alliances they like. Most former Soviet-bloc countries in Eastern Europe joined NATO and the EU after the Cold War.\n\nAnd some present and former leaders of those states have warned Trump that any attempt to strike a grand bargain with Mr Putin would endanger the region's security.\n\nBut one central European government - Hungary's - takes a different view. \"We don't see Russia as a threat to Hungary,\" its foreign minister Peter Szijjarto says. \"If Russia and the US cannot work together on global issues, then that undermines security in Eastern Europe.\"\n\nHungary's Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto says his country doesn't regard Russia as a threat\n\nHungary also wants to end the Western sanctions imposed on Russia following its annexation of Crimea. It says they've been counter-productive, leading to Russian counter-sanctions which have damaged European export industries.\n\nPeter Toth, head of the Hungarian association of breeders of mangalica pigs - whose fat is much prized in Russia - says his members are among those now suffering.\n\nBut the Hungarian government, which has been widely criticised for curtailing some democratic checks and balance, also shares other interests with Russia. Prime Minister Viktor Orban has said Europe must keep its \"Christian values\" in the face of immigration from Muslim countries.\n\nThe Kremlin has also made much of the need to preserve national identity and Christian values in its rhetoric, leading nationalists in the West to see Moscow as an ally.\n\nMany, particularly on the right, believe the threat from mass immigration, and terrorism, is now greater than that from Russia.\n\nCongressman Rohrabacher says: \"To say Russia is the enemy, when they too are threatened by radical Islamic terrorism, is exactly the wrong way to go.\"\n\nArguments like that, reinforced by President Trump, seem to be swaying some Americans. By the end of last year, more than a third of Republican voters viewed President Putin favourably, according to a YouGov poll, compared to only a tenth in 2014.\n\nIt found however that Democrats dislike Mr Putin more than ever. Prof Stephen Cohen believes Donald Trump will have great difficulty selling a new policy on Russia.\n\n\"If Trump says we need a detente with Putin for the sake of our national security,\" he explains, \"it's going to be very hard to get people in the centre and the left to support it, because they'll be called apologists for Putin and Trump. It's a double whammy.\"\n\nTim Whewell's BBC Radio 4 programme, The Pull of Putin, is available to listen to via BBC iPlayer.", "Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has met President Donald Trump for the first time and discussed issues including trade and refugees.\n\nPresident Trump has become known for his rather dominant handshake - but it seems Mr Trudeau found a way of dealing with it, as this video demonstrates.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nAsylum seekers are illegally crossing from the US into Canada in growing numbers hoping to receive refugee status. One small prairie town in southern Manitoba has become the nexus point for migrants who have lost hope in the US.\n\nIt was a cold Seidu Mohammed and Razak Iyal could barely comprehend.\n\nOn Christmas Eve, they found themselves struggling through a waist-deep field of snow in a rash night-time bid to sneak across the Canada-US border.\n\nThe two men had met just few hours before at a Minneapolis bus station and both faced deportation back to Ghana after being denied refugee status in the US.\n\nThey had heard through a network of other refugees and African expats that if they could get into Canada, they had a second shot at asylum in the north.\n\nThe view towards the US from Emerson, Manitoba\n\nThe path was straightforward: find a ride to the border from Minneapolis, MN or Grand Forks, ND, avoid patrols until you reach Canadian soil, and then turn yourself into Canadian authorities as an asylum seeker.\n\nIyal and Mohammed decided to make the trek together, and paid US$200 each to a cab driver who dropped them near the international boundary.\n\nThey kept to the road until they neared the border.\n\n\"That's where we saw the big farm with the snow. Snow everywhere. We were seeing the light of the border far from us, but we are seeing the light,\" Iyal recalls.\n\nSoon they had lost their gloves in the snow. The wind stole Mohammed's baseball cap.\n\n\"There is wind and cold,\" he says \"And the wind is blowing the snow into our face. So I can't see nothing.\"\n\nBy the time they reached Highway 75 in Manitoba, their hands had frozen into claws. They could not reach the phones in their pockets to dial 9-1-1 as planned. Mohammed's eyes had frozen shut.\n\nThe only vehicles on the road before dawn on Christmas were transport trucks ferrying cargo between the US and Canada. Many passed, flashing their high beams at the two before blowing by, until one stopped to give them assistance.\n\nThey have been receiving treatment at a specialised burn unit in a Winnipeg hospital since that 10-hour journey. Both had most of their fingers amputated due to the severe frostbite.\n\nIyal says nurses had to chip away at the snow and ice between Mohammed's fingers.\n\nTheir story has brought attention to a phenomenon that is not new but has been growing steadily in recent years. And it has not deterred others from making the cross-border trip. Record numbers of people have crossed near Emerson in the past few weeks.\n\nIt is not just Manitoba. Quebec and British Columbia are also seeing more and more people illegally crossing the border to make refugee claims.\n\nIn the prairie province, the influx is centred on Emerson, a municipality of about 700 people that borders Minnesota.\n\nThe rural town, surrounded by farm fields, is about 625km (390 miles) up the Interstate from Minneapolis, which has the largest Somali population in North America. Word about the Emerson crossing has spread within the expat community, as far as down to Brazil.\n\nJanzen and other officials held an emergency meeting\n\n\"We've always had people jumping the borders, for, I don't know, 30, 40, 50 years. Back then, it was people running away from something - usually the law,\" says town official Greg Janzen.\n\nBut in recent years it has been mostly asylum seekers, hailing mainly from Somalia but also Ghana, Djibouti, and Ethiopia, who are finding their way across. Community workers say most have been denied refugee status in the US.\n\nMany have been met with generosity.\n\nYahya Samatar, a former human rights worker in Somalia, fled threats from Islamist al-Shabab militants and sought refugee status in the US, where he spent seven months in an immigration detention centre.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThe US denied his status but said it was too dangerous to deport him back to war-torn Somalia, and released him with a warning that he could be sent back anytime.\n\nLike Iyal and Mohammed, he heard about the backdoor into Canada, and found himself in August 2015 on the banks of the Red River, which runs through Manitoba and between North Dakota and Minnesota.\n\nHe stripped to his underwear and swam across. Shivering and covered in mud, he then walked into Emerson, where a resident gave him a sweater and called border services.\n\n\"I was given clothes, I was given food, everything\" by border agents, says Samatar, who has since received refugee status and lives in Winnipeg.\n\nBut now in Emerson, a wariness is emerging.\n\nThe municipality that has opened its doors to those seeking refuge is wondering how far town resources will be stretched and what happens if someone who comes across poses a danger.\n\nThere are also concerns that someone will die trying to make the trek across frozen fields in temperatures that can easily fall to -20C (-4F). Many also expect the number of attempts to cross will increase with warmer weather.\n\nFor now, they do not see what other option there is except to do what they can to help.\n\n\"If we don't they'll freeze and starve, and it would be on our conscience wouldn't it?\" says resident Walter Kihn, who lives on the eastern edge of Emerson.\n\nMr Janzen says \"most people in town are more concerned than scared\" about the strangers wandering into town.\n\nIn the last three weeks, almost 60 people made the trek, including 21 who crossed in the hours before dawn on Saturday morning.\n\nA group of 16 people, including women and children, rang doorbells in town seeking help.\n\n\"They went to the neighbours and got everybody riled up there,\" said resident Ernie Neufeld. One house took in the women and children, while \"the RCMP tried to decide what to do with\" the men.\n\nThe Manitoba-US border runs 500km (310 miles) along Minnesota and North Dakota.\n\nAuthorities from the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), which oversees the official border points, and the Mounties, which polices the rest, say they are confident in the border's integrity.\n\nAnd they say those coming are quickly spotted or turn themselves so they can submit refugee claims.\n\nOnce apprehended, they are identified, searched and screened. If they are eligible to make an asylum claim, they are allowed entry and referred to the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada.\n\nRefugee claimants arrive at the Welcome Place in Winnipeg\n\nA refugee claimant arrives at Welcome Place settlement agency in Winnipeg\n\nSettlement workers assisting with the newest claims are pointing to the political rhetoric south of the border for the recent spike.\n\nRita Chahal, executive director of the Manitoba Interfaith Immigration Council, has opened over 300 files since April 2016 for refugee claimants crossing near Emerson.\n\n\"Anecdotally, many people do express that they are concerned about what they saw at the airports, what they are seeing in the US,\" she says.\n\nIn fact, in a November speech in Minnesota, then-presidential candidate Donald Trump singled out the state's Somali community.\n\n\"Here in Minnesota, you've seen first hand the problems caused with faulty refugee-vetting, with very large numbers of Somali refugees coming into your state without your knowledge, your support or approval,\" he said.\n\nMohammed says he once viewed the US as a beacon for human rights and a place that welcomed newcomers but \"when we came, we didn't see that\".\n\nHe and Iyal have hearings in March to determine whether they can stay in Canada.\n\nTheir lawyer has told them not to divulge too many details about the specifics of their refugee claims but Iyal says he left Ghana for personal and political reasons.\n\nMohammed left because of his sexuality - being gay is illegal in the African country.\n\nThey say in the meantime they will continue to heal from their injuries and learn how to live with their disability.\n\n\"We just wait, impatiently, for what is coming next,\" Iyal says.\n\nPrime Minister Justin Trudeau has spoken about how important it is for Canada to welcome refugees", "As with any resignation there are a thousand small, but nevertheless important questions. Most are of the who-knew-what-and-when variety. But with this astonishing fall from grace there is one big overarching question. I'll save that best bit for last.\n\nThe small questions concern whether Donald Trump knew about the calls Mike Flynn was making to the Russian ambassador, and what the substance of their conversations were.\n\nWhat happened to the advice given by the acting attorney general to the White House counsel cautioning that Gen Flynn had not been entirely honest. Was the president aware of this? Were there different factions operating within the White House yesterday with different agendas on the embattled national security adviser's future?\n\nThen we can go a sub-section of those questions which revolve around management at the White House. The seemingly dull-sounding process questions: What are the lines of communication? Who reports to whom?\n\nKellyanne Conway and Sean Spicer had very different public reactions to stories about Flynn on Monday\n\nIf that all sounds rather trivial, ask this - how was it possible that within a single hour yesterday afternoon Kellyanne Conway, counsel to the president, said Mr Flynn enjoyed the full support of Mr Trump, and then shortly afterwards, Communications Director Sean Spicer said the president was evaluating Mr Flynn's position?\n\nThose just aren't reconcilable statements. Who was speaking on whose authority? This is not good communications strategy; this is what shambles looks like.\n\nAnd let's deal with one bit of smoke that has been thrown up since the resignation. Kellyanne Conway was across the US networks this morning with a simple and tempting argument - what sealed Flynn's fate was his misleading of the vice president over the nature of his conversations with the Russian ambassador.\n\nThat resulted in Mike Pence going on TV in the middle of January and saying: \"It was strictly coincidental that they had a conversation. They did not discuss anything having to do with the United States' decision to expel diplomats or impose censure against Russia.\"\n\nOf course, you can't lie/mislead/deceive/inadvertently misreport to (delete as appropriate) the vice president. But, if you draw yourself a little timeline of what happened then, what is striking is this - it is not the lie/misleading/deception/inadvertent misreporting that cost General Flynn his job, it is the lie/misleading/deception/inadvertent misreporting being made public by the Washington Post that cost him his job.\n\nWe now know the acting attorney general went to the White House weeks before to say voice intercepts of Gen Flynn's call proved that lifting of sanctions was discussed. But no action was taken then.\n\nOnly when it blew up did this become an issue. This conforms to the little discussed 11th Commandment that Moses handed down on his tablets of stone: Thou Shall Not Get Found Out.\n\nBut let us move on to the really big question. What does this say about President Trump's relationship with Russia? For a man who at the drop of a hat will freely spray insults on Twitter to anyone and anything, the one person he stubbornly refuses to say a bad word about is Vladimir Putin. Not ever.\n\nWhite House staff in the Oval Office as Donald Trump speaks by phone to Vladimir Putin in late January\n\nIn one recent interview he seemed to suggest that America as a state had no greater moral authority than Russia. It was the doctrine of American Unexceptionalism, if you like.\n\nMichael Flynn had sat with the Russian president not that long ago at a dinner honouring the pro-Moscow TV network Russia Today. Extraordinary that a former three star US general would be there. A dossier drawn up by a former MI6 officer - that was flatly denied - alleged all manner of Russian involvement in President Trump's businesses and presidential campaign.\n\nMake no mistake, the Trump base love what they've heard about the migrant ban, the eviction of illegal immigrants, the jobs pledges and a lot more besides.\n\nBut what causes a lot of people to scratch their heads is why the love-in with Putin? What is driving this? Even if the most lurid things in the dossier were untrue, are there other things that are? Does Putin have some kind of leverage over the new American president?\n\nThe smaller questions, like they often do, will fade away with the next news cycle. These huge ones won't.", "Stefan spends up to half an hour a day on Tinder\n\nIt's Valentine's Day - and for many single people it may be difficult to find a date. But not for Stefan - the most coveted man on dating app Tinder. He receives more \"swipe-rights\" than any other man on the app, as he explains to the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme.\n\nJob: Fashion model. Previously worked as a toy demonstrator in Hamleys and Harrods.\n\nClaim to fame: The most swiped-right man on Tinder.\n\nPopularity: I get around 40 matches a day. The number's doubled in the last month alone - I've had to turn my notifications off.\n\nRelationship status: I've been single for around seven months now. I was seeing someone, but it didn't really work out.\n\nDo you enjoy being single? When I find the right girl, I'm more than happy to settle down - I want someone who will be my best friend as well as a partner. But as I get older, there is a bit more added pressure to find someone. My mum drops little hints here and there that she wants to be a grandma.\n\nStefan has a piloting licence, having been in the RAF Air Cadets\n\nTime spent on Tinder: Quite often half an hour a day, sometimes just 10 minutes.\n\nTips for success: Have a bit of character on your bio, definitely. There's no point in just being good looking in photos if you're bland to talk to. I always look for personality - someone who can have a laugh. One of my own previous bios was simply \"Model. Too stupid to write a bio,\" playing on the idea that models aren't supposed to be clever.\n\nAnd when it comes to starting the conversation: I'm looking for someone who has a good opening line, something funny or that makes them stand out. One match recently started with \"so what gives you the privilege of me swiping right?\". That's been one of the best.\n\nWhat are your interests? I'm really into aviation. I used to be in the RAF air cadets, so I have a pilot's licence to fly the Cessna 152, a fixed-wing plane.\n\nHow often do you date? I don't get a lot of time because of my job. I've probably only been on five or six while on Tinder, but I have also met people at events with my work - so it's not just dating apps.\n\nWhat are you like on a date? I'd say I'm shy to start off with, and then I warm up and become more confident. I like to think I'm good at getting the conversation flowing, but I think everyone finds first dates can become a bit like an interview with all the questions!\n\nWhat's your worst Valentine's Day date? There was one time when I made lots of effort, with my girlfriend at that point. I bought lots of little gifts for her, and we went to a really nice restaurant - but I just got nothing back in return. Not even a card.\n\nDo you have a Valentine's date this year? Yes, I'm going on a second date with a girl I met on Tinder - to a nice restaurant in Knightsbridge in London.\n\nAre you paying? Of course! It would be rude not to.\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nAngel di Maria scored twice as Paris St-Germain stunned Barcelona to leave the Spanish side in danger of failing to reach the Champions League quarter-finals for the first time in a decade.\n\nPSG dominated this last-16 first-leg tie throughout and took the lead through Di Maria's curled free-kick.\n\nJulian Draxler added a second with an angled drive before Di Maria curled an effort into the top corner.\n\nA lacklustre Barcelona - with Lionel Messi, Luis Suarez and Neymar largely anonymous - did not produce an effort of note until seven minutes before the end when Samuel Umtiti headed on to the post.\n\nThe defeat leaves Luis Enrique's side with an almighty task to stay in the competition when they host PSG in the return leg on 8 March.\n\nNo side has managed to overturn a four-goal first-leg deficit in the Champions League.\n• None Listen: 'Barcelona have been vulnerable all season'\n\nA brutal beating for Barca as Messi goes missing\n\nBarcelona breezed into the knockout stage by topping Group C, winning five of the six games they played.\n\nTheir one defeat was also the only time they conceded three goals in a group-stage game, when they lost 3-1 at Manchester City.\n\nAt least in that match they managed to score - Messi putting them ahead at Etihad Stadium - but at the Parc des Princes on Tuesday they barely troubled Kevin Trapp in the PSG goal.\n\nThe visitors regularly squandered possession and looked lethargic throughout. When they have not been at their best in the past, their star players have stepped up. But on this occasion they offered nothing.\n\nMessi, so often capable of creating something from nothing, made uncharacteristic mistakes and was at fault for PSG's second when he lost the ball to Draxler, who then played a one-two with Marco Verratti to slice through a static defence and put the French side in control.\n\nIt was one of the worst Barcelona performances in recent memory but PSG were also at their absolute best and, in truth, could have won by an even bigger margin.\n\nThey finished the game with 16 shots on goal, 10 of those on target.\n\nPSG have long been the dominant force in French football, winning their domestic league title every season since 2013, but they are yet to transfer that form into Europe.\n\nThey have never progressed beyond the quarter-finals but dominant wins home and away against Chelsea at this stage of the competition last year suggested they had finally joined the continent's elite, only for them to then lose against Manchester City.\n\nUnai Emery, PSG's Spanish manager, had faced Barcelona 23 times before in his coaching career and won just once.\n\nBut Emery has form in Europe. He led Sevilla to three successive Europa League titles from 2014, getting the best of the players at his disposal and that is proving to be the case at PSG.\n\nCavani now has 34 goals in 32 matches while Di Maria is producing consistently what he only managed in flashes at Manchester United. Draxler, who underperformed at Wolfsburg, has excelled since his January move to the French capital.\n\nAll three were key to Barcelona's downfall and this could prove to be a watershed moment for both PSG and Emery.\n\n\"I think this makes PSG a threat in the competition,\" former Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand told BT Sport.\n\n\"Mentally they will go on again and they will believe now they are capable of winning this tournament by beating one of the best teams.\"\n\nBarcelona were one of the favourites to win the Champions League at the start of the season but will now need to produce one of the greatest comebacks in football to stay in the competition.\n\nThey are more than capable of scoring goals for fun at the Nou Camp, having hit three or more in six of their previous seven games.\n\nBorussia Monchengladbach were the last side to visit Barcelona in the Champions League and they lost 4-0 in December.\n\nBut PSG possess much more quality, with Di Maria and Cavani more than capable of scoring an away goal that would surely put the tie beyond Barcelona.\n\nIt is sure to be one of the toughest tests of Enrique's Barcelona career to date.\n• None Paris St-Germain became the sixth team to score four goals in a Champions League game vs Barcelona (after Milan, Dynamo Kiev, Valencia, Chelsea and Bayern Munich).\n• None Indeed, this was Barcelona's joint-heaviest defeat in the competition (0-4 vs Milan in 1994, Dynamo Kiev in 1997 and Bayern Munich in 2013).\n• None Angel di Maria has scored four goals in the Champions League this season - his best return in a single campaign.\n• None Only Lionel Messi (10) has scored more goals in the Champions League this season than Edinson Cavani (seven).\n• None No side has ever turned round a 4+ goal deficit to progress in a Champions League knockout tie.\n• None Barca faced 10 shots on target vs PSG - their joint-highest in a Champions League match since 2003-04 (also vs Bayer Leverkusen in December 2015).\n• None Attempt missed. Neymar (Barcelona) right footed shot from outside the box is too high from a direct free kick.\n• None Lucas Moura (Paris Saint Germain) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Attempt missed. Ivan Rakitic (Barcelona) header from the left side of the box is high and wide to the left.\n• None Samuel Umtiti (Barcelona) hits the left post with a header from very close range. Assisted by Gerard Piqué with a headed pass following a corner. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Women's Football\n\nEnglish league champions Manchester City Women have signed World Cup-winner and Fifa World Player of the Year Carli Lloyd on a short-term deal.\n\nThe United States midfielder, 34, has scored 96 goals in 232 international appearances, including a 13-minute hat-trick in the 2015 World Cup final.\n\nShe joins the Women's Super League One club for the 2017 Spring Series, which begins in April and ends on 3 June.\n\nHer deal also includes City's Women's Champions League and FA Cup campaigns.\n\nNick Cushing's side face Danish champions Fortuna Hjorring in March's Champions League quarter-final, after entering the FA Cup at the fifth-round stage on 19 March.\n\nUS captain Lloyd becomes the third American player to move to an English club this winter, after winger Crystal Dunn's move to Chelsea Ladies and midfielder Heather O'Reilly's switch to Arsenal.\n\n\"This facility [at Manchester City] is unbelievable. I don't think anything compares to it,\" Lloyd told BBC Sport. \"I am always looking to improve my game.\n\n\"It is another challenge for me, to be able to come over here, train with some of the world's best players, be at the world's best facility, playing in the Champions League and hopefully win an FA Cup and the Spring Series.\n\n\"I've had a lot of different offers from various clubs and none of them really panned out, but this one was going in the right direction.\"\n\nOn joining the WSL, Lloyd - who most recently played for American side Houston Dash after a spell with Western New York Flash - added: \"It is definitely the next up-and-coming league.\n\n\"It is going to be fun to be able to play a few months with some of these players and get a better understanding of how this league operates. I can help promote the [American] NWSL and help see how they run things here and make our league back home a bit better as well.\"\n\nLloyd also stated her ambition to help City win the Women's Champions League this season, a competition that no English side has won since it was rebranded from the Uefa Cup in 2009.\n\n\"Not too many people get to say they have taken part in the Champions League,\" she continued. \"It is huge.\n\n\"I have experienced a lot; World Cups, Olympics and being at the Fifa World Player of the Year Awards. A Champions League win would totally top that off.\n\n\"That's what I'm going after. That's the next challenge set in front of me. I'm just looking to get after it and do anything I can to help.\"\n\nThe final of this season's Women's Champions League takes in place in Cardiff on Thursday, 1 June.\n\nCity would face either defending champions Lyon or last year's runners-up Wolfsburg in April's semi-finals if they overcome Fortuna Hjorring in the last eight.", "Valentine's Day is sweet for some, but not everyone sees it through rose-tinted spectacles\n\nFor the cynics among us, Valentine's Day is an annual nightmare: everything turns pink and heart-shaped, restaurants slap a premium price on a sub-par \"special menu\", and Hallmark shareholders are laughing all the way to the bank.\n\nBut beyond the cuddly toys and red roses, the tradition draws mixed reactions around the world.\n\nFrom the hardline to the downright bizarre, here are just some of the ways Valentine's Day is embraced - or spurned like an unwanted lover...\n\nAuthorities in some parts of Indonesia have banned students from celebrating Valentine's Day, saying it encourages casual sex. In the city of Makassar, police raided shops and dismantled condom displays.\n\nThe mayor told the BBC that condoms were removed from sight after customers complained, but would still be sold discreetly.\n\nValentine's Day has its roots in a Roman fertility celebration, but later evolved into a Christian feast day - a fact that worries conservatives in some Muslim-majority countries.\n\nIn Indonesia's second-largest city, Surabaya, pupils were told to reject the festival as it runs against cultural norms.\n\nNext door to Indonesia, Malaysia has also seen a Valentine's backlash.\n\nA group called the National Muslim Youth Association has urged women and girls to avoid using emoticons or overdoing the perfume, in a pre-Valentine's Day message.\n\nThe group's guidance included advice on how to combat the celebration of romance by making anti-Valentine posters and shunning Valentine-themed outfits.\n\nThe group made its anti-Cupid views clear through its Facebook picture\n\nRobben Island will forever be associated with the infamous prison that held Nelson Mandela - but since 2000, it has hosted a mass celebration of love on 14 February.\n\nThe tradition was started by South Africa's Department of Home Affairs and the Robben Island Museum, and now attracts couples from across the globe.\n\nThis year, 20 pairs are planning to say \"I do\" in the island's little white chapel.\n\nThe service is offered for a small fee, and includes a tour of the island.\n\nOrganisers say 2017's couples were \"chosen by the department based on their diversity and interesting romantic stories\".\n\nA bride and groom laugh during their Robben Island ceremony\n\nThailand's civil servants are handing out free pre-natal pills on the streets of Bangkok on Valentine's Day, hoping to boost the country's falling birth rate.\n\nAround 1 million baht ($28,600; £22,900) has been spent on the pills, for prospective mothers aged 20 to 34.\n\nThe \"very magical vitamins\" (to use the government's words) contain folic acid and iron.\n\nIn 1970, Thai couples had an average of six children, but the figure now stands at 1.6.\n\nThe High Court in Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, has banned public celebrations of Valentine's Day, saying it is not part of Muslim culture.\n\nThe festival has gained a foothold in recent years, but local critics say it is a decadent Western invention.\n\nThe court order bans the media from covering Valentine's events, and bans festivities in public places and government offices.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. A court in Pakistan has banned public celebrations of Valentine's Day in Islamabad\n\nSaudi Arabia's religious police are on alert at this time of year for love-themed merchandise, including flowers, cards and suspicious \"red items\".\n\nFlorists have been known to deliver bouquets in the middle of the night to avoid detection, as determined lovers flout the countrywide ban.\n\nA black market in roses and wrapping paper helps some broadcast their feelings.\n\nBut for others, it's the perfect time of year for a romantic break - to nearby Bahrain or the UAE, where celebrations are more tolerated.\n\nHolidays to Dubai are one way for Saudi couples to dodge the crackdown\n\nAs Japan geared up for the 14th, a group of Marxist protesters unfurled a giant \"Smash Valentine's Day\" banner in Tokyo.\n\nThe \"Kakuhido\", or Revolutionary Alliance of Men that Women find Unattractive, want an end to public displays of love that \"hurt their feelings\".\n\nMembers have been known to chant slogans including \"public smooching is terrorism\".\n\n\"Our aim is to crush this love capitalism,\" said Takayuki Akimoto, the group's PR chief.\n\n\"People like us who don't seek value in love are being oppressed by society,\" he added.\n\n\"It's a conspiracy by people who think unattractive guys are inferior, or losers - like cuddling in public, it makes us feel bad. It's unforgivable!\"\n\nThe protests came as Japan's family planning association revealed that \"sexless marriages\" in the country are at a record high.\n\nNearly 50% of married Japanese couples had not had sex for more than a month and did not expect that to change in the near future, it said.", "It's generally agreed that eating too much fat is bad for you, but exactly how much damage it can do depends on whether you are a man or a woman, writes Dr Zoe Williams.\n\nEating too much fat can make you put on weight and lead to heart disease - especially if you eat too much of the wrong kind of fat, such as the omega-6 fats found in many processed foods. But now it seems sausages, pastries and cakes are even worse for men than they are for women.\n\nA recent study measured how the two sexes responded when they spent a week eating large amounts of these foods and how it affected their ability to control blood sugar levels. I wanted to test this diet myself, and in order to compare my response to that of a man I persuaded the person behind the research, Dr Matt Cocks of Liverpool John Moores University, to join me.\n\nBefore we started, our body fat was measured and our blood sugar levels recorded. We were given glucose monitors to wear to keep track of our blood sugar throughout the week.\n\nThe food which Zoe had to eat during the week\n\nIn order to have an impact in just one week, our diet contained about 50% more calories than we would normally eat. A typical evening meal included a couple of sausages, some hash browns, a few slices of bacon, and a lump of cheese.\n\nTwice during the week, Matt and I also drank a sugary drink to introduce sugar into our blood stream. This mimics what happens when we eat carbohydrates which our bodies break down into sugars. The glucose monitors would be able to show us whether the diet was affecting our ability to clear this sugar from our blood.\n\nWhen we looked at the results we saw that, like the women in Matt's study, my ability to control my blood sugar levels didn't get any worse on the diet. Matt, however, got 50% worse at clearing glucose from his blood.\n\nThe same trend was apparent in Matt's research, where on average men got 14% worse at controlling their sugar levels.\n\n\"One of the first steps towards type 2 diabetes is poorer control of glucose,\" says Matt. \"So what we're seeing here, is that I've really lowered my control of sugar, and if I continued with that for a long time, that would probably progress me to type 2 diabetes.\"\n\nTrust Me, I'm A Doctor is on BBC Two at 20:00 GMT, Wednesday 15 February - catch up on BBC iPlayer\n\nThe diet Matt and I undertook was extreme but in the real world the same processes will be happening to a lesser extent in people who regularly over consume unhealthy fats.\n\nSo what can men do about it?\n\nThe best advice is to eat a balanced diet but exercise can also help.\n\n\"If you have a meal and then you exercise, then you're going to start to burn that meal,\" says Matt. \"So say you eat a very high fat meal or a sugary meal, you can start to remove the negative effects by going for a walk afterwards.\"\n\nJoin the conversation on our Facebook page", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nAdam Rooney hit a hat-trick as Aberdeen cruised three points clear of third-placed Rangers following a mauling of a woeful Motherwell side.\n\nThe Dons cashed in on terrible defending as Jonny Hayes, Andy Considine and Rooney made it 3-0.\n\nRyan Christie curled in a sublime fourth before the break and Rooney added a penalty and a tap-in.\n\nRyan Bowman and Stephen Pearson hit back for Well and Aberdeen substitute Peter Pawlett rounded off the scoring.\n\nAs well as moving three points and 19 goals clear of Rangers in the battle for second place, Aberdeen also reduced the gap on leaders Celtic to 24 points.\n\nMotherwell, meanwhile, are in ninth spot.\n\nThe home side were utterly ruthless and exuded attacking threat. Well were simply atrocious at the back and their late rally did little to disguise their obvious deficiencies on the night.\n\nWhen Hayes drilled home a left-foot effort after two minutes it looked ominous.\n\nMotherwell briefly suggested they would not fold but fold they did - and much of it was self-inflicted despite Aberdeen's brilliance.\n\nConsidine nodded the second at the back post from Niall McGinn's corner, after Well keeper Craig Samson came and failed to get near the delivery. The big defender rejoiced in celebrating his goal and his recently extended contract.\n\nThe third goal was simply ludicrous.\n\nStevie Hammell knocked the ball towards the bye-line as he tried to deal with a cross into the area and in a moment of madness for an experienced player, Keith Lasley attempted to keep it in but fluffed it. It fell to Hayes, who squared to Rooney for an easy finish.\n\nOn-loan Celtic attacking midfielder Christie started in place of the suspended Graeme Shinnie and he excelled, with his strike proving the pick of the bunch.\n\nFrom a well-worked corner, Considine laid the ball off to Christie who found a pocket of space and guided a delightful finish into the top corner.\n\nRooney's penalty, after Shay Logan was clipped by Elliott Frear, added to Motherwell's misery and the Irishman completed his treble soon after from close range following another McGinn corner.\n\nThe home side were in imperious form with Hayes, McGinn, Kenny McLean and Ryan Jack among the top performers in a side that was motoring for most of the night.\n\nDespite Aberdeen's dominance, Motherwell did manage to get two goals, but they were no consolation to the dejected players.\n\nBowman nodded their first after home keeper Joe Lewis inexplicably misjudged a high ball and Stephen Pearson volleyed home from close range to make it 6-2.\n\nKeeping count? Well, it was a five-goal cushion again in 82 minutes, 60 seconds after Pearson's goal.\n\nThis time it was Pawlett who showed great pace and a cool head to beat keeper Samson.\n\nMotherwell manager Mark McGhee was also sent to the stand, to the delight of the home fans, on a night to forget for the Fir Park men.\n\nThey will hope this a one-off. The problem is they travel to table-topping Celtic on Saturday.\n• None Attempt saved. Jayden Stockley (Aberdeen) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Attempt saved. Ash Taylor (Aberdeen) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner.\n• None Attempt saved. Miles Storey (Aberdeen) right footed shot from the left side of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Goal! Aberdeen 7, Motherwell 2. Peter Pawlett (Aberdeen) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the centre of the goal. Assisted by Jonny Hayes.\n• None Goal! Aberdeen 6, Motherwell 2. Stephen Pearson (Motherwell) right footed shot from the right side of the six yard box to the top right corner. Assisted by Louis Moult following a corner.\n• None Attempt missed. Jayden Stockley (Aberdeen) right footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the right.\n• None Attempt saved. Kenny McLean (Aberdeen) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the bottom right corner.\n• None Attempt missed. Ryan Bowman (Motherwell) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high.\n• None Goal! Aberdeen 6, Motherwell 1. Ryan Bowman (Motherwell) header from the centre of the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Richard Tait following a set piece situation. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Wales\n\nDefending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan blew a 3-0 lead to lose to Mark Davis in the Welsh Open second round.\n\nWorld number 31 Davis looked to be heading out as O'Sullivan established a commanding lead in the best-of-seven contest.\n\nDavis took the next four frames to complete a remarkable comeback on a day of shocks at the tournament.\n\nLee Walker pulled off a surprise as he came from 3-1 down to beat world number seven Neil Robertson 4-3.\n\nFormer world champion and 2016 finalist Robertson made 143 - the highest break of the tournament - on the way to a two-frame lead before Walker came back.\n\nThe Welshman, ranked 94, won the next three straight frames to seal victory.\n\nMeanwhile, 15-year-old Welsh schoolboy Jackson Page reached the last 32 with a 4-3 win against John Astley.\n\nIt is the teenage amateur's second win in the tournament after beating Jason Weston 4-3 in round one.\n\nPage will now play world number four Judd Trump, who edged past Malta's Alex Borg 4-2.\n\nElsewhere, Northern Ireland's Mark Allen eased past Thailand's Boonyarit Keattikun 4-1, Ross Muir thrashed Marco Fu 4-0 while Anthony Hamilton beat Jamie Cope 4-1 to set up a third-round tie against Craig Steadman, who defeated Sam Baird.\n\nWorld Grand Prix finalist Ryan Day was knocked out by Thailand's Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, who reached the third round of the tournament for the first time.\n\nSign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app.", "Students at Concordia University in Montreal, the top ranked world city for students\n\nMontreal has been named as the best city in the world for students.\n\nThis international ranking of university cities has seen Paris slip from first place - a position the French capital has held for four years.\n\nThe Canadian city has come top of the QS Best Student Cities, a spin-off from the annual QS World University Rankings.\n\nIt will add to suggestions that Canada will attract a bigger slice of the lucrative international student market, particularly if there are concerns about changes to entry rules under President Trump.\n\nIt also has the benefit of being able to offer degree courses in two big international languages - with English-speaking universities such as McGill University, and French-speaking, such as the Université du Québec à Montréal.\n\nEntry to this league table requires cities to have at least a population of 250,000 and to be home to at least two universities in the World University Rankings.\n\nThe rankings are based on a basket of measures - including the quality of universities, facilities for students, affordability, the \"desirability\" of the city for students, access to employers, the international nature of a city, levels of tolerance, pollution and safety.\n\nCanada is seen as high on desirability for international students - with Montreal in top place and Vancouver in 10th and Toronto in 11th place.\n\nBen Sowter, head of the QS Intelligence Unit which produces the ranking, forecasts that Canada's growing popularity will be part of an increase in \"alternatives to the traditionally dominant study destinations, both in Europe and North America\".\n\nCanada could attract students from the US, and the UK could lose students to Ireland, the Netherlands and the Scandinavian countries, he says.\n\nMore stories from the BBC's Global education series looking at education from an international perspective, and how to get in touch.\n\nYou can join the debate at the BBC's Family & Education News Facebook page.\n\nA spokeswoman for the city of Montreal says there has already been a surge of international students - with big rises in student numbers from China, India, France and Iran.\n\nFigures from admissions services in the UK have already shown a 7% fall in applications from EU students - and UK universities have been worried that the backwash of Brexit will leave the UK looking less welcoming to overseas students.\n\nBut there are no signs of an adverse impact on London in this year's rankings, moving up from fifth place to third.\n\nLondon continues to have a strong appeal for students, according to this ranking\n\nThe two great world cities of London and Paris are in the top three best places to study - able to offer both a rich cultural as well as academic experience.\n\nAlong with Boston, which can claim Harvard, MIT and Boston University, London and Paris are boosted by the strength and number of top universities.\n\nThe slip from first to second place for Paris is attributed to cost and a loss in desirability, including safety.\n\nMr Sowter rejects a link to terror attacks in the French capital - saying that when students are surveyed only a handful of cities are seen as more attractive than Paris.\n\nHe says students seem to be resilient to accepting there are no \"zero risk\" cities - whether it is Boston, Berlin or Paris, all of which have maintained their attraction.\n\nLondon's universities rate highly on quality - \"no city has a superior variety and quality of universities to London\" - and the falling value of the pound after the EU referendum has improved their affordability for overseas students.\n\nApart from Canada, the only other country with two cities in the top 10 is Germany, with Berlin and Munich. This reflects Germany's financial advantages for overseas students - who do not have to pay any tuition fees.\n\nMontreal and other Canadian universities have been offering an alternative to the US\n\nThe most affordable cities of all, taking into account living costs, were Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia and Surabaya in Indonesia. Stockholm in Sweden and New York in the US were the most expensive.\n\nAsian countries - particularly China and India - provide the biggest cohorts of overseas students. But Asian countries are becoming big magnets in their own right, with five cities in the top 20, headed by Seoul, which has risen to fourth place.\n\nShanghai is the highest rated city in China in 25th place, with Mumbai the highest in India in 85th place.\n\nThe competition for attracting international students is big business.\n\nThe US remains the biggest market and annual figures show that for the first time more than a million overseas students were at US universities - with almost 330,000 from China alone.\n\nApart from the benefits from international research partnerships - and the long-term influence of soft power - such international students are officially estimated at being worth almost $36bn (£29bn) to the US economy.\n\nBeing able to attract more of these valuable students makes these rankings much more than a civic beauty contest.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nMark Warburton says Rangers have yet to supply him with an explanation for announcing his departure.\n\nOn Friday, the club said they had accepted the resignations of the manager, assistant David Weir and head of recruitment, Frank McParland.\n\nHowever, Warburton insists this is not the case.\n\nA statement released on his behalf says Rangers have not responded to \"key questions\" put to them by the League Managers Association (LMA).\n\n\"We would like to formally place on record, that at no stage did we resign from our positions at Rangers,\" said Warburton.\n\nFollowing Friday's club announcement, chairman Dave King issued a statement of his own saying the the trio had come to an agreement to leave via their joint representative.\n\nKing also suggested Warburton lacked commitment to the Ibrox club.\n• None Director of football right for Rangers - Smith\n\nYouth coach Graeme Murty assumed control of the first team for Sunday's Scottish Cup win over Morton.\n\nWarburton, Weir and McParland added via Wednesday's statement: \"At this stage, for legal reasons, it is inappropriate for us to comment in any great detail on our departure from the club.\n\n\"It is a matter of surprise to us, and to the LMA, which is advising all three of us, that despite its detailed public statements, the club has not answered key questions put to it by the LMA, in writing, requesting an explanation of why it suggested that we resigned from our positions.\"\n\nThe LMA statement went to say that it had been \"an absolute privilege to work at a club that is so rich in tradition and history\".", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nBritain's Olympic champions Jason and Laura Kenny are expecting their first child, the couple's agent confirmed.\n\nFour-time Olympic gold medallist Laura Kenny, 24, revealed the news with a post on Instagram of two adult bikes lined up alongside a child's bike.\n\nHusband Jason added his own post on Twitter, while Great Britain team-mate Dani King tweeted \"best news ever\".\n\nAgent Luke Lloyd-Davies said the couple and their families are \"absolutely thrilled and delighted with the news\".\n\n\"They very much appreciate all the kind wishes and messages of support that they have received already,\" he added.\n\nThe couple, who married in September in a private ceremony, went public with the news following their 12-week scan.\n\nJason, 28, has won six track cycling Olympic gold medals, including three at last summer's Games in Rio.\n\nLaura pulled out of last month's National Track Championships after injuring a hamstring, but said at the time she hoped to be fit for April's World Championships in Hong Kong", "A police job candidate was arrested for drinking and driving after he turned up for a interview smelling of alcohol.\n\nA Greater Manchester Police employee noticed an \"overpowering smell\" on the man's breath during an interview for an IT management role.\n\nAndrew Jackson, 48, then disclosed he had had trouble parking, was breathalysed and arrested.\n\nIn court, he admitted drinking and driving and was banned for a year, police said.\n\nThe IT worker appeared at Bury and Rochdale Magistrates' Court on Friday, was fined £120 with a £30 victim surcharge and ordered to pay £85 costs.\n\nMr Jackson, of Barlow Moor Road, Didsbury, Manchester was told his ban would be reduced to seven months on completion of a drink-driving awareness course.\n\nHis hour-long interview took place on 25 January at a training centre in Prestwich, Greater Manchester, but he fell foul of the law when he revealed his travel arrangements.\n\nThe interviewer, a civilian worker, said: \"I asked if he had any trouble in finding us. As soon as he began to speak I could smell something on his breath which I thought was stale alcohol.\n\n\"He mentioned that he did have a little trouble in finding somewhere to park, which immediately raised concerns.\n\n\"Shortly after he arrived in the small office, the smell of alcohol became overpowering.\"\n\nThe job hopeful was arrested and taken to Bury police station\n\nThe interviewer then made his excuses at the end of the interview and left the room to ask a police officer's advice.\n\nA traffic officer quizzed the man over whether he had been drinking but he was adamant that not a drop had touched his lips that morning.\n\nHowever Mr Jackson did admit to sharing a bottle of wine with his wife the night before during a meal out.\n\nThe traffic officer then marched him out of the building to a nearby patrol car and gave him a breathalyser test, which he duly failed.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Phoebee Bambury survived toxic shock syndrome (TSS) by spotting the symptoms early - and she wants others to learn from her experience.\n\nThe rare condition, which can be fatal, is caused by bacteria getting into the body and releasing harmful toxins.\n\nIt's usually associated with using a tampon for too long.\n\nThe 19-year-old now wants more young people to be taught about the dangers of TSS in school.\n\nPhoebee explains that she began with a headache and a fever, both symptoms that sound like the common cold.\n\nIt was the beginning of two weeks spent in hospital.\n\n\"The first symptom I had was the headache one evening while I was at university,\" she tells Newsbeat.\n\nBut later that night Phoebee's condition got worse, she developed muscle pains and started vomiting.\n\nPhoebee had been spending the night at her boyfriend's house when her symptoms got worse\n\n\"Just like anyone would normally think, I thought maybe I'm ill and I'm just going to have a few bad days.\n\n\"You don't want to think 'oh no toxic shock', but in my head I thought those are the symptoms - I need to check this out.\"\n\nAlthough there are many ways you can get toxic shock syndrome, it is often associated with the use of tampons.\n\nThe symptoms of TSS can be found on tampon packets.\n\n\"I thought [the symptoms] all matched so I phoned 111 and they said I was spot on and needed to get to a hospital ASAP,\" she said.\n\nPhoebee's condition deteriorated and within 10 minutes of being in A&E she was hooked up to a drip, with an industrial-sized fan by her side to try and bring down her body temperature.\n\nShe also tells Newsbeat how the infection caused her body to swell.\n\nDoctors confirmed that Phoebee's toxic shock syndrome was caused by her use of tampons but she insists that she followed the guidelines.\n\n\"I've never left a tampon in for longer than eight hours and at the time I started to feel very ill I didn't even have one in,\" she explains.\n\nShe adds that her degree in pharmacy and personal experiences had made her more aware of the infection.\n\n\"My friend's mum died of toxic shock so I'd always been aware of it,\" she said.\n\nBut cases like this are extremely rare.\n\nThere are no exact figures on how many women get TSS from using tampons but of the 40 people estimated to be diagnosed in the UK every year - on average only two people will die from the infection.\n\n\"To raise awareness in more young people, I genuinely believe toxic shock needs to be a part of sex education,\" Phoebee said.\n\n\"You get talks about tampons, periods and condoms at school and TSS should be a part of that.\n\n\"It's an associated risk with tampons and I know it's rare but it is serious,\" she added.\n\nPhoebee has now been out of hospital for two weeks, and during her recovery she's been encouraging her university to do more to raise awareness about the infection.\n\n\"If you know the symptoms and take all the precautions then your chances of getting TSS are so slim.\n\n\"I know the best advice for women would be to just not use tampons but that's not possible for everyone, we just need to educate more people to take precautions.\"\n\n\"High-quality education on sex and relationships is a vital part of preparing young people for success in adult life,\" a Department for Education spokesman said.\n\n\"It is compulsory in all maintained secondary schools and, as the education secretary said recently, we are looking at options to ensure all children have access to high-quality teaching in these subjects.\"\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "Things not to say to a single person\n\nWith Valentine's Day upon us, we ask a group of singletons to reveal some of the most irritating questions they get asked about their relationship status.", "When Jen found out her husband needed a kidney transplant she wanted to give him one of hers but they weren't a match.\n\nThen they heard about a scheme that could save his life.\n\nJen and Elliot's story is featured in #Hospital at 21:00 on Wednesday 15 Feb on BBC Two.\n\nJoin the conversation - find BBC Stories on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Churchill wrote the first draft in 1939, as Europe headed towards war\n\nA newly unearthed essay by Winston Churchill reveals he was open to the possibility of life on other planets.\n\nIn 1939, the year World War Two broke out, Churchill penned a popular science article in which he mused about the likelihood of extra-terrestrial life.\n\nThe 11-page typed draft, probably intended for a newspaper, was updated in the 1950s but never published.\n\nIn the 1980s, the essay was passed to a US museum, where it sat until its rediscovery last year.\n\nThe document was uncovered in the National Churchill Museum in Fulton, Missouri, by the institution's new director Timothy Riley. Mr Riley then passed it to the Israeli astrophysicist and author Mario Livio who describes the contents in the latest issue of Nature journal.\n\nChurchill's interest in science is well-known: he was the first British prime minister to employ a science adviser, Frederick Lindemann, and met regularly with scientists such as Sir Bernard Lovell, a pioneer of radio astronomy.\n\nThis documented engagement with the scientific community was partly related to the war effort, but he is credited with funding UK laboratories, telescopes and technology development that spawned post-war discoveries in fields from molecular genetics to X-ray crystallography.\n\nIn the essay, Churchill outlines the concept of habitable zones - more than 50 years before the discovery of exoplanets\n\nDespite this background, Dr Livio described the discovery of the essay as a \"great surprise\".\n\nHe told the BBC's Inside Science programme: \"[Mr Riley] said, 'I would like you to take a look at something.' He gave me a copy of this essay by Churchill. I saw the title, Are We Alone in the Universe? and I said, 'What? Churchill wrote about something like this?'\"\n\nDr Livio says the wartime leader reasoned like a scientist about the likelihood of life on other planets.\n\nChurchill's thinking mirrors many modern arguments in astrobiology - the study of the potential for life on other planets. In his essay, the former prime minister builds on the Copernican Principle - the idea that human life on Earth shouldn't be unique given the vastness of the Universe.\n\nChurchill defined life as the ability to \"breed and multiply\" and noted the vital importance of liquid water, explaining: \"all living things of the type we know require [it].\"\n\nMore than 50 years before the discovery of exoplanets, he considered the likelihood that other stars would host planets, concluding that a large fraction of these distant worlds \"will be the right size to keep on their surface water and possibly an atmosphere of some sort\". He also surmised that some would be \"at the proper distance from their parent sun to maintain a suitable temperature\".\n\nChurchill also outlined what scientists now describe as the \"habitable\" or \"Goldilocks\" zone - the narrow region around a star where it is neither too hot nor too cold for life.\n\nChurchill supported the development of game-changing technologies such as radar\n\nCorrectly, the essay predicts great opportunities for exploration of the Solar System.\n\n\"One day, possibly even in the not very distant future, it may be possible to travel to the Moon, or even to Venus and Mars,\" Churchill wrote.\n\nBut the politician concluded that Venus and Earth were the only places in the Solar System capable of hosting life, whereas we now know that icy moons around Jupiter and Saturn are promising targets in the search for extra-terrestrial biology. However, such observations are forgivable given scientific knowledge at the time of writing.\n\nIn an apparent reference to the troubling events unfolding in Europe, Churchill wrote: \"I for one, am not so immensely impressed by the success we are making of our civilisation here that I am prepared to think we are the only spot in this immense universe which contains living, thinking creatures, or that we are the highest type of mental and physical development which has ever appeared in the vast compass of space and time.\"\n\nChurchill was a prolific writer: in the 1920s and 30s, he penned popular science essays on topics as diverse as evolution and fusion power. Mr Riley, director of the Churchill Museum, believes the essay on alien life was written at the former prime minister's home in Chartwell in 1939, before World War II broke out.\n\nIt may have been informed by conversations with the wartime leader's friend, Lindemann, who was a physicist, and might have been intended for publication in the News of the World newspaper.\n\nIt was also written soon after the 1938 US radio broadcast by Orson Welles dramatising The War of the Worlds by HG Wells. The radio programme sparked a panic when it was mistaken by some listeners for a real news report about the invasion of Earth by Martians.\n\nDr Livio told BBC News that there were no firm plans to publish the article because of issues surrounding the copyright. However, he said the Churchill Museum was working to resolve these so that the historically important essay can eventually see the light of day.", "Hungary are looking for 3,000 new recruits to defend the Hungary-Serbia border fence.\n\nNick Thorpe has been to see some of them in training.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nNorwich City and Newcastle United had to settle for a draw after a frantic Championship game at Carrow Road.\n\nNewcastle had led after just 23 seconds thanks to Ayoze Perez's placed effort.\n\nJacob Murphy's far-post finish made it 1-1 before goalkeeper Karl Darlow gifted Norwich the lead as he scuffed a clearance and Cameron Jerome tucked in.\n\nMatt Ritchie hit the bar for Newcastle before they deservedly levelled through Jamaal Lascelles' sweet finish, keeping them top after Brighton also drew.\n\nThe draw saw seventh-placed Norwich slip further behind sixth-placed Sheffield Wednesday, who won to move themselves four points clear of Alex Neil's side with a game in hand.\n\nThe hosts were stunned when Perez had time and space to tuck in a right-footed shot in the opening minute, and a lively Newcastle could have doubled their lead but John Ruddy saved well from Aleksandar Mitrovic.\n\nA fine throw from keeper Ruddy then led to Norwich levelling from an exquisite team move, with Murphy applying the close-range finish at the far post after Jerome had shown good strength to get to the byeline and square the ball.\n\nThe former Birmingham and Stoke forward then capitalised on Darlow's howler to score the simplest of his 10 league goals so far this season and the Canaries were on course for what would have been a fifth win in six games.\n\nBut the visitors began to dominate after half-time and Ritchie's shot struck the underside of the crossbar as they controlled possession and created the greater number of chances.\n\nLascelles' crisp, left-footed effort from the far post after a neat team move was enough to earn the Magpies a point, though they could have won it late on when Jonjo Shelvey scuffed a shot wide and Perez was denied by Ruddy.\n\n\"To be honest, there are mixed emotions after that. Obviously, you are not expecting to concede a goal in the first minute and we were really nervy in the first five minutes.\n\n\"But once we got our goal and then got ahead, I thought we were excellent - the response from the players was top class.\n\n\"In the second half, we started okay and then we started to drop deeper and deeper to protect what we had and the frustrating thing from our point of view is that we didn't see it out.\"\n\n\"I thought we responded brilliantly to going behind - the character of the players, and their reaction to the setbacks, was the most positive thing for me tonight.\n\n\"We had a lot of supporters in the corner and I am sure they will have enjoyed the effort the players put in.\n\n\"It was a very open game - good for the fans but perhaps not for the managers. Norwich might think differently but I think we had enough chances to have won it - but you can't always take three points and if we can take four points every two games we will go up.\"\n• None Attempt saved. Jonjo Shelvey (Newcastle United) right footed shot from long range on the left is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Jonny Howson (Norwich City) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt saved. Ayoze Pérez (Newcastle United) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Christian Atsu with a through ball.\n• None Attempt missed. Jonjo Shelvey (Newcastle United) left footed shot from the centre of the box misses to the right. Assisted by Ayoze Pérez.\n• None Offside, Newcastle United. Jamaal Lascelles tries a through ball, but Christian Atsu is caught offside.\n• None Goal! Norwich City 2, Newcastle United 2. Jamaal Lascelles (Newcastle United) left footed shot from a difficult angle on the left to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Ayoze Pérez with a cross following a set piece situation. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Alicia Keys and John Legend appear in the new series\n\nApple Music has delayed the launch of the new Carpool Karaoke TV series.\n\nIt had originally been due to premiere this month but the company told Reuters it will now be \"later this year\".\n\nThe delay seems a little odd as we know most of the series has already been filmed.\n\nBut, let's be honest, judging by the first trailer, which was released in February, it will probably be worth waiting for.\n\nNo reasons were given for the delay, which will see two celebrities paired up for a singalong session in each of its 16 episodes.\n\nThe show was commissioned as a series in its own right after the regular Carpool Karaoke segments on The Late Late Show with James Corden proved hugely popular.\n\nHere are eight things we can expect from the show (when it arrives), judging by the trailer.\n\n1. Carpool Karaoke no longer needs to be in a car. Or even on the ground\n\nCarpool Karaoke is no longer confined by silly little details like, you know, actually being in a car.\n\n\"This is the next level,\" says Will Smith, as he guides James Corden towards a waiting helicopter at one point in the trailer. Gravity schmavity.\n\nAppropriately, the first song they sing once they are in said aircraft is, of course, R Kelly's I Believe I Can Fly.\n\nReports that they also belted out a rendition of Westlife's Flying Without Wings could not be immediately confirmed.\n\n2. Ariana Grande and Seth MacFarlane have zero time for parking restrictions\n\nAt one point, Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane and singer and all-round awesome person Ariana Grande are shown standing by the parked car.\n\nEarlier in the trailer, they had been seen beautifully singing a song from The Little Shop of Horrors. All sweet and innocent and lovely.\n\nBut look a little closer - and the plot takes a much darker turn. They appear to have pulled up across TWO disabled parking spaces.\n\nAriana is going to have to give us at least six new masterpieces of Side To Side-level quality to redeem herself.\n\n3. It's strange not having James Corden in the driver's seat\n\nSince the dawn of time, James Corden has been a ubiquitous presence in the driver's seat of the Carpool Karaoke automobile.\n\nWhich is fair enough, since he basically came up with the idea when he first climbed into a car with George Michael for Comic Relief in 2011.\n\nBut he's now allowed someone else to get behind the wheel, which gives us the extremely exciting prospect of episodes with five-piece bands. Or in this case, four-piece bands, plus a guest.\n\nThe previous application form was limited to a maximum of four people, which allowed us Carpools featuring Red Hot Chili Peppers and One Direction 2.0.\n\nBut behold, now we have comedian Billy Eichner able to hitch a ride with Metallica (pictured).\n\nWe're trying not to get our hopes up but this could technically pave the way for Little Mix giving Ozzy Osbourne a lift to Sainsbury's.\n\n4. They may need a bigger car\n\n\"You're going to need a bigger boat,\" said someone once in some famous movie or other.\n\nIn this case, the production team are perhaps going to need a bigger car for two of their more well-built guests.\n\nBasketball player Shaquille O'Neal and wrestler John Cena just about managed to squeeze in.\n\n5. Blake Shelton and Chelsea Handler are keen to get their five a day\n\nA slice of orange, a chunk of pineapple, a quarter of lime - it's fair to say country singer Blake Shelton and comic Chelsea Handler are fans of fruit.\n\nOf course, they could be hoping to become the faces of a new fruit and veg campaign, judging by this segment in the trailer.\n\nBecause a slice of lemon in your drink counts towards your five a day. Doesn't it. Doesn't it?\n\nJohn Legend takes Alicia Keys and Hidden Figures actress Taraji P. Henson on a little spin in the new Carpool series, with the two singers seen belting out Alicia's Fallin'. (Tune.)\n\nBut they also have a nice little chat, during which John Legend reveals that people often mistake him for somebody else.\n\n\"Old white women think I'm Pharrell [Williams] sometimes,\" he explains.\n\nHe even briefly belts out the hook of Happy so as not to disappoint this particular fanbase.\n\nMaybe it goes both ways and Pharrell is regularly stopped by members of the public and asked for a quick blast of All of Me.\n\n7. Wait. Go back a sec. Is that... a BRASS BAND?\n\nBeing conducted from a sun roof by Will Smith.\n\nWho is leading them in a rendition of his 1997 treasure Gettin' Jiggy Wit It.\n\n8. Heavy metal sounds better in the dairy aisle\n\nFirst Blake and Chelsea hit the pub, and look, there's John Legend and Alicia Keys in a laundrette.\n\nStraight in at number one in the Look We Can Be Normal chart, however, is Metallica in a supermarket.\n\nIf you haven't experienced Enter Sandman being performed next to the free range eggs, you've not heard Mozart the way it was meant to be played.\n\nA version of this story was first published in February.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nMost people see them as fluffy adorable pets, but in Peru guinea pigs - or \"cuy\" as they are known locally - are a delicacy.\n\nIn the past few years their popularity has really taken off and a boom in guinea pig farming is helping many peasant farmers living below the minimum wage to get out of poverty.\n\nYou can hear them as soon as you walk into the dusty barn. The open cages are filled with hundreds of squeaking brown and white guinea pigs, waiting for their owner, Maria Camero, to fill up their red water buckets and give them corn.\n\n\"In the past it was only people living in the mountains who bred guinea pigs but now we've realised it's a good business,\" says Maria.\n\n\"You can start with something like $100 (£80) and that money quickly grows because by three months the guinea pigs can start breeding and they will have up to five babies, so the business grows fast.\"\n\nMaria and her family produce guinea pigs on a much larger scale now thanks to her son-in-law Alessio Cresci. The Italian fell in love with Shelia, Maria's daughter, and decided to move to Peru and build up their business.\n\nMaria went from looking after a few guinea pigs to being part of a team breeding hundreds.\n\nPreviously only farmers in the Andes ate guinea pigs, but they are now popular throughout Peru and Bolivia\n\nAs well as supplying to local restaurants, they also sell and sometimes donate start-up kits to local farmers who want to get involved, consisting of a breeding pair of guinea pigs and the food and pens that they need.\n\n\"I have a daughter who is 13 and I can afford to pay for her to go to a better school, I have also paid for my son to go to university and study to be a graphic designer. This business lets me do that,\" says Maria.\n\nMaria's daughter and son-in-law, Shelia and Alessio, have helped build up the business\n\nThirty dollars a month is the average wage for a peasant farmer. Many of them are now earning $130 a month, according to Lionel Vigil, the regional director of World Neighbours, a charity that helps them get started.\n\nThe key to their success is the restaurant business, which can't get enough of cuy. Farmers can sell them to local restaurants for about $8 and to high-end restaurants in Lima for up to $13.\n\n\"The Incas have eaten cuy for centuries, but in the past it was only farmers in the Andes still eating them,\" says Mr Vigil.\n\n\"When they migrated to Lima they carried on, and little by little other Peruvians from different backgrounds started to get a taste for it and restaurants started to buy guinea pigs.\"\n\nFarmers can quadruple their monthly incomes by breeding guinea pigs, says Lionel Vigil of the charity World Neighbours\n\nProducers are even looking to the US as a market. Ex-pat Bolivians and Peruvians are prepared to pay $30 for a guinea pig that they eat on special occasions, chopped up and deep fried a bit like chicken.\n\nAt first it was hard to get permission for officials to let frozen guinea pigs into the US where, like most of the world, they are regarded as pets.\n\nBut with the support of academics and anthropologists, one exporter, Mega Business, has persuaded authorities that this is part of Andean culture and guinea pigs also have a very important nutritional value.\n\nIn fact, Peruvians have never seen cuy as pets. And although they accept they are small and sweet, their culinary value trumps their cuteness.\n\nTraditional baked guinea pig - though not all visitors to Peru are keen to eat it this way\n\nJaime Pesaque is the owner of Mayta, a high-end restaurant in upmarket Lima. He buys about 200 organically fed guinea pigs a month. He says they are high in protein and low in fat.\n\nTraditionally guinea pigs were served teeth, claws and all as a kind of kebab on the local streets - a method that put many people off. Jaime has found a more user-friendly recipe.\n\n\"We take out all the bones and cook it the whole night, then we press it for a couple of hours and cook it.\"\n\nI was dreading trying this national delicacy. I remember those fangs and claws thrust up at me through a train on my way to Machu Picchu. I vowed never to try it. But things change…\n\nAnd Jaime's version is delicious. The meat is sweet and juicy, a bit like rabbit and pork, and the skin is crispy. He has a new convert.\n\nMany of the people eating in high-end restaurants are tourists who are eager to try something different - provided it is served in the right way.\n\nAlthough they will always be seen first and foremost as pets for the majority of people in the world, in Peru guinea pigs are offering a way out of poverty.\n\nFor more on this story, listen to BBC World Service's World Business Report", "Former Trump adviser Michael Flynn - fired after three weeks - set a record, but he's not alone when it comes to short political tenures.", "Much of Facebook’s recent growth can be attributed to the spread of video on its network - and the company told investors recently it planned to aggressively monetise that success.\n\nToday, it announced some ideas to get things moving - starting with a change many users may not appreciate.\n\nVideos have autoplayed on Facebook’s News Feed for some time, leading to a curious rise of “silent movies” as publishers adapted to knowing that the majority of viewers would be watching, but not listening, to their work.\n\nBut between now and the end of the year Facebook’s News Feed will be enabling sound on your News Feed by default, a move the company has been testing out on a limited number of users for a short while.\n\nThe firm said it had received “positive feedback” so far.\n\n\"With this update, sound fades in and out as you scroll through videos in News Feed, bringing those videos to life,” the company explained in a blog post on Tuesday.\n\n\"As people watch more video on phones, they’ve come to expect sound when the volume on their device is turned on.”\n\nThankfully - for those who don’t want videos to suddenly play out on the bus - if your phone is set to be completely silent, Facebook will not override that. You can also turn it off completely in the Facebook app’s settings.\n\nBut data shows us that when something is thrust upon users as the default, they will mostly stick to it.\n\nIt will likely change the style of many of the videos we see on the network. For some time now, publishers have realised that because viewers were probably not listening to clips, but just watching them, they needed to add subtitles as a way to draw people in.\n\nPublishers may well relish the chance to do away with that legwork. Subtitling is time-consuming and costly. Facebook’s analytics tools go into great detail about how videos are performing, and so expect companies to be watching closely to see if they can now give up on subtitles.\n\nIf that’s the case, it could potentially be terrible news for accessibility. One welcome side effect of viewing habits on Facebook has been that impaired viewers were benefitting from subtitling becoming good business sense as well as just the right thing to do for accessibility.\n\nEarlier this week in the UK, disability groups cheered the arrival of a new amendment to the Digital Economy Bill that would push broadcasters to improve subtitling for on-demand content. It is intended to bring existing laws over TV subtitling into the modern age - giving media regulator Ofcom the ability to set quotas and minimum standards for subtitling online.\n\nBut that, as it stands, would not apply to Facebook - and even if it did, the majority of video posted to Facebook originates overseas.\n\nThere is, however, potential good news on the horizon: Facebook has also been tentatively rolling out voice recognition software designed to automatically transcribe clips and add subtitles. But, I’m yet to see software truly up to that massive task.\n\nToday’s announcement by Facebook was just one part of several plans the company shared about its video ambitions. Vertical videos will be displayed in full, and therefore appear larger in your feed. And you’ll also be able to carry on watching a video while scrolling down your feed - a feature already found in YouTube’s app.\n\nThe plans also include new efforts to reach viewers through their televisions.\n\nThe company is launching an app on Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV and Samsung Smart TV with more platforms to come, it said.\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook", "The top tips from the most swiped man on Tinder.", "Tupperware parties are no longer polite gatherings over tea and cake, but have been updated to \"a girls' night out\"\n\nWhen I meet Tupperware Brands boss Rick Goings there's a funny moment. He's just finished his lunch, but wants to pack the remainder away for later.\n\nHe looks expectantly at his colleague, expecting her to magic a box out of thin air. \"What, you think I've got some in my handbag?\" she scoffs.\n\nYou can tell Mr Goings is slightly disappointed. The King of Tupperware hasn't got any at just the moment he needs some.\n\nYet, despite being in Switzerland, thousands of miles away from the firm's headquarters in Orlando, Florida, it's not an unreasonable expectation that Tupperware's products may indeed be available.\n\nFor while Tupperware may, in the UK at least, be forever associated with a bygone era when women stayed at home and men went to work, it's now a thriving international juggernaut.\n\n\"We do not look at ourselves as a US company,\" says Mr Goings.\n\nRick Goings says the firm now targets countries \"where most of the people in the world live\"\n\nAnd you can see why. Sales last year were $2.2bn (£1.8bn) with Asia-Pacific responsible for almost a third of these, while the biggest sales growth was seen in Brazil.\n\nThe firm's products - which now include not only Tupperware, but also several beauty brands - are sold in more than 80 countries, and for the past five years, more than 90% of sales have come from non-US markets.\n\nIt's a revolution Mr Goings has driven. When he became chief executive in 1997, the firm had already expanded overseas, but was failing. In his first week at the helm he had to write off $100m of bad debt.\n\n\"So much was broken,\" he says about the company, founded in 1946 by inventor Earl Tupper.\n\nHis solution was to ramp up the firm's expansion overseas, in particular focusing on Latin America, Asia and Africa and eventually taking the firm to more than 20 additional countries.\n\nHe says this shift in focus was obvious, given that Europe and the US combined account for just a tenth of the world's population overall.\n\n\"We didn't have to make major changes to our business model and it's where most of the people in the world live,\" he says.\n\nA recommendation from a friend is always likely to be more persuasive than one from a company, according to McKinsey\n\nMany big consumer brands from Coca-Cola to Procter & Gamble have followed similar paths into emerging markets, tapping into a growing middle class and strong demand for well-known US brands.\n\nYet Tupperware's model of direct selling - the famed suburban housewives' gathering of the 1950s and 1960s - is exactly the thing that has given it an edge.\n\nWhile easy to mock - do modern women really get excited about plastic boxes? - it's enabled the firm to get around all the problems of trying to sell in regions where infrastructure is less developed and shops can be a long distance away.\n\nThe firm hasn't had to invest in shops, and instead of travelling into town, people can nip over to a friend's house to buy things.\n\nAnd while the party attendees may start off as housewives, they're unlikely to stay that way, according to Mr Goings. For many of the firm's 3.1 million casual sales consultants, it has provided their first chance of an independent income.\n\nTypically a party will yield about $400 (£320) worth of sales, of which the sales consultant will earn 30%.\n\n\"It's a heck of a lot of money,\" Mr Goings says.\n\nWorking for Tupperware has enabled Indonesian Ng Chiu Gwek to educate her three children overseas\n\nNg Chiu Gwek, one of Tupperware's most successful Indonesian sales force members, who joined the company in 1997, says she loves the firm.\n\n\"I have changed my own life into a better life, going from nothing into something,\" she says.\n\nPreviously a full-time housewife, Ms Gwek - who was introduced to the firm by her mother-in-law - now runs a distributorship, responsible for a team of several thousand sales consultants in her hometown of Pontianak and the surrounding small cities.\n\nThe job has enabled her to educate all three of her children overseas.\n\n\"Tupperware is my life and I have not seen any other company like Tupperware that has changed so many lives for the better,\" she says.\n\nA Tupperware party is held somewhere in the world every 1.3 seconds, the firm claims\n\nA shake-up of the party format has also helped drive growth. They are no longer polite gatherings over tea and cake, but have been updated to \"a girls' night out\", says Mr Goings with a conspiratorial nod.\n\nThemes include Mexican night with tequila, and decadent and delicious desserts and meals, with one such party held every 1.3 seconds globally, the firm claims.\n\nIn some countries, where small homes mean space for hosting gatherings is limited, the firm has opened so-called \"experience studios\", where would-be customers can see the products in action. In China it has 5,600 such spaces, but reckons there's capacity for 20,000.\n\nThe firm's sales model has another advantage. A recommendation from a friend is always likely to be more persuasive than one from a company, but in emerging markets this is particularly so, according to McKinsey.\n\nThe management consultancy found consumers in Africa and Asia were far more dependent on word of mouth, than their developed counterparts. It said this was because with few brands around long enough to have built a loyal following, seeing a friend use a product was reassuring.\n\nIt's also tough for counterfeiters - and those making cheaper imitations of the products - to imitate this kind of sales network.\n\nThe firm's airtight storage boxes that wowed Western consumers in the postwar years now account for just a third of sales\n\nNeil Saunders, managing director at consultancy Globaldata Retail, says while in developed markets like the UK the firm's long history means Tupperware is seen as a bit old-fashioned compared to more modern rivals such as Joseph Joseph, in emerging markets it doesn't carry this \"baggage\".\n\n\"For consumers there it's a modern innovative brand. It's a challenger and innovator,\" he says.\n\nAnd as Mr Goings is at pains to point out while handing me the firm's brochure, the airtight storage boxes that wowed Western consumers in the postwar years now account for just a third of sales.\n\nInstead it is now brightly coloured microwaveable pressure cookers, mini food processors and water bottles that are driving sales.\n\n\"The party has changed, the product has changed. We're not just a plastic box company,\" he says.", "The Archbishop of Canterbury was certainly the highlight of the opening day at general synod.\n\nLess an address, more a sermon, he appealed to Christians to turn away from self-indulgence and toward self-sacrifice in order to contribute positively at a time of uncertainty and fear… a climate that he said had been brought about by populist movements across Europe and the election of Donald Trump.\n\n\"It is a moment of challenge, but challenge that as a nation can be overcome with the right practices, values, culture and spirit,\" explained the archbishop. \"Which is where we come in. Let's not be too self-important. I don't mean we, the Church of England, are the answer.\n\n\"But we can be part of the answer, we have a voice and a contribution and a capacity and a reach and above all a Lord who is faithful when we fail and faithful when we flourish.\"\n\nBut while these comments were made in the context of post-Brexit uncertainty, it was obvious to everyone gathered in the assembly hall of Church House in Westminster that the archbishop was also thinking of Wednesday, when synod will debate the bishops' report on same-sex marriage.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nGS2055, as it is known, was published last month and provoked an immediate outcry. Members of the LGBTI community expressed anger that, after engaging in three years of so-called \"shared conversations\", the bishops decided not to recommend any change to church practice. Marriage in church would remain the lifelong union of a man and a woman; there would be no facility to bless same-sex marriages.\n\nWednesday has therefore become the focal point for both traditionalists and those who want the church to mirror a change in the law of the land, which has allowed same-sex marriage since March 2014.\n\nMr Tatchell, anticipating the protest, said: \"The bishops' report defends heterosexual superiority and opposes same-sex blessings and marriages. The church blesses dogs and cats but it refuses to bless loving, committed same-sex couples. It treats LGBTI clergy and laity as second class, both within the church and the wider society.\"\n\nThe bishops' report says marriage in church will remain the lifelong union of a man and a woman\n\nThe debate inside, which begins at 17:30 GMT and is scheduled to last for 90 minutes, will be no less accusatory. It is likely to expose the fractures and fissures that exist within the heart of Christian unity.\n\nEvangelical christians, like Ed Shaw, a member of synod and a trustee of Living Out, a charity that exists to support same-sex-attracted Christians who have chosen to remain celibate, are relieved that the bishops have upheld what they say is the biblical position on marriage.\n\n\"I think the Church of England has carefully listened,\" he said. \"I think the Church has also come to the settled view of what Christians have always believed down the centuries and what most Christians believe around the world.\"\n\nFor the moment, this remains the official position of the Church of England.\n\nAs the Archbishop of Canterbury drew his opening address to a close, he did make one explicit reference to same-sex marriage. He described \"the painful discussions\" that will take place on Wednesday. That phrase may yet prove to be the understatement of the year.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Philip Pullman talks exclusively to Radio 4's Today about the release of the \"equel\" to His Dark Materials\n\nAuthor Philip Pullman has announced the publication of the long-awaited follow-up to his best-selling His Dark Materials series of novels.\n\nThe new trilogy is called The Book of Dust and the first novel will come out in October, 17 years after the last instalment.\n\nHe says the books are an \"equel\", rather than a prequel or sequel.\n\nThe His Dark Materials trilogy sold more than 17.5 million copies and was translated into 40 languages.\n\nThe series will return to the story of Lyra Belacqua, and will begin when the heroine is a baby, and move on to when she is 20 years old.\n\n\"People say, 'Is it prequel? Is it a sequel?' Well, it is neither,\" said Mr Pullman, speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today Programme.\n\n\"It's an 'equel'. It's a different story which begins roughly 10 years before His Dark Materials and ends roughly 10 years after.\"\n\nActress Dakota Blue Richards played Lyra Belacqua in the 2007 film The Golden Compass, based on the first book in the His Dark Materials series\n\nIn a separate interview Mr Pullman said: \"I know from their letters and tweets that my readers have been waiting patiently (mostly) for The Book of Dust for a long time.\n\n\"It gives me great pleasure and some excitement at last to satisfy their curiosity (and mine) about this book.\n\n\"At the centre of The Book Of Dust is the struggle between a despotic and totalitarian organisation, which wants to stifle speculation and inquiry, and those who believe thought and speech should be free.\"\n\nThe writer is not giving away any plot details, but has dropped some hints about what the new books could contain, saying that \"an ordinary boy\" featured in an early part of the story would return as a key character.\n\nMr Pullman's last His Dark Materials book was published in October 2000, and the first volume of the new series will come out on Thursday 19 October.\n\nThe original trilogy - Northern Lights, The Subtle Knife and The Amber Spyglass - is currently being adapted by the BBC.\n\nThere was also a 2004 National Theatre adaptation and a 2007 film, The Golden Compass, which was adapted from first book Northern Lights, and starred Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig.\n\nThe first book was retitled The Golden Compass in North America.\n• None His Dark Materials to be TV drama", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nSacked tennis commentator Doug Adler is to sue broadcaster ESPN, claiming he compared Venus Williams' tactics to a \"guerilla\", rather than a \"gorilla\".\n\nAccusations of racism were made by viewers, who alleged he used the word \"gorilla\" to describe Williams during her Australian Open second-round match against Stefanie Voegele in January.\n\nAdler apologised but insisted he had said: \"Venus moved in and put the guerilla effect on.\"\n\nHowever he was later dismissed by ESPN.\n\nAdler's lawyer David M Ring said that \"guerilla tennis\" was a common phrase in the sport to describe an aggressive match, citing a Spike Jonze-directed advert featuring Andre Agassi and Peter Sampras that was named after the term.\n\nAdler had worked for ESPN since 2008 and was a professional tennis broadcaster for six years prior to that.\n\nHe claims he suffered \"emotional distress\" after the accusations of racism.\n\nAn ESPN spokesman told BBC Sport: \"We have not been served and are declining further comment.\"", "Barcelona are on the verge of failing to reach the Champions League quarter-finals for the first time since 2007 after a humiliating 4-0 thrashing at Paris St-Germain, and the manner of the defeat has sent shockwaves through Spain.\n\nAs well as PSG played, the majority of the post-mortem is focussing on just how bad Barca were, with their players and especially manager Luis Enrique facing intense criticism.\n\nThe game's stats speak for themselves: PSG had 10 shots on target against just one from Barca, with the French team also collectively covering far more ground (112.1km against 104km) and working harder to win back the ball (46 recoveries against Barca's 36).\n\nEven Lionel Messi, so often his team's saviour, was powerless to intervene, failing to touch the ball inside the PSG penalty box once.\n\nFor a club which has such expectations of success, such awful performances do not pass by without ramifications. The tie might be effectively over, but the storm has only just started.\n• None Barcelona have been vulnerable all season - Sid Lowe\n\nWhat went wrong for Barca?\n\nEverything. They were outworked in midfield, overrun in defence, and the superstar forward line of Messi, Luis Suarez and Neymar had virtually no impact, although the Brazilian at least made a handful of dangerous runs.\n\nFrom a tactical point of view, the first of those points is the most significant, because PSG's outstanding midfield trio of Marco Verratti, Adrien Rabiot and Blaise Matuidi completely controlled the centre of the field and the flow of the game.\n\nTheir dominance was plainly evident in the second, third and fourth goals, all of which saw PSG players breeze unchallenged through the heart of midfield, with no opponents putting any pressure on the ball whatsoever, before calmly delivering passes for Julian Draxler, Angel di Maria and Edinson Cavani to convert.\n\nIndeed, it could have been even worse, with Barca keeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen the only visiting player to emerge with any credit after making some decent saves to repel similarly rampaging PSG attacks as his defence offered next to no protection.\n\nA team like Barca repeatedly being so easily carved open was a shocking sight, and the disconnect between their defence and attack - with nothing in between as PSG enjoyed the Parc des Princes' wide open spaces - was the main factor behind the vast gulf between the teams.\n\nHad anyone seen this coming?\n\nOf course, nobody was predicting that Barca would lose so heavily in Paris.\n\nBut although the scale of the defeat was unexpected, many fans are now bitterly saying \"I told you so\" after a season which has regularly threatened to fall apart at the seams.\n\nDespite the success he enjoyed during his first two seasons in charge, many observers have remained unconvinced by Luis Enrique's abilities as a coach, claiming that his only tactical plan is to let Messi do what he wants and hope for the best.\n\nThat is an exaggeration, of course, but the fact Enrique did not even use all his available substitutions in Paris despite a horrendous collective performance suggests he is desperately lacking a back-up if his Plan A - relying upon the MSN forward line - fails to prosper.\n\nAlthough they possess enough individual talent to brush aside inferior opposition, throughout the season Barca have routinely struggled whenever they come up against top-quality teams - with the 3-1 group-stage defeat at Manchester City offering just one example.\n\nBarca were also poor in last week's Copa del Rey semi-final against Atletico Madrid, only sneaking through after Atletico missed several clear chances (including a penalty) and had a goal wrongly disallowed, and the Catalans have dropped points in La Liga against Real Madrid, Atletico, Real Sociedad and Villarreal.\n\nIndeed, the only team in La Liga's top six they have beaten so far this season is Sevilla, and that was only thanks to a remarkable performance from Messi - the prototype Enrique win, according to his many detractors.\n\nHow did the Spanish media react?\n\nAlthough the players have not escaped criticism, manager Luis Enrique has been well and truly placed in the firing line.\n\nThe Barca boss conducted a particularly feisty post-match interview with Catalan broadcaster TV3, firing back \"You can tell you didn't watch the game\" after it was suggested he had not made any tactical changes during the course of the match.\n\nThere were even suggestions that Enrique was later restrained from accosting the reporter, Jordi Grau, because he was so upset by the negative tone of the interview.\n\nIf that was the case, Enrique will be awfully unhappy with a lot of members of the media because he has faced widespread and fierce criticism.\n\nAn opinion piece in Sport, a newspaper published in Barcelona, described the team as \"shipwrecked without a manager\", handing Enrique possibly the worst insult imaginable in that particular city by likening him to Jose Mourinho in his treatment of the media (\"inventing enemies which don't exist\").\n\nAnd naturally, Spain's pro-Real Madrid publications were more than happy to stick the knife in, with Marca describing the game as a \"catastrophe\" and calling it Barca's \"biggest debacle of the 21st century\",\n\nIs this the beginning of the end for Enrique?\n\nLuis Enrique will probably leave the Nou Camp at the end of the season - and not just because of this result.\n\nThe former Spain international has never really looked like he enjoys many aspects of his job, regularly stating he does not envisage staying in charge for very long because of the relentless pressures of the position.\n\nHe is out of contract at the end of the season, and has always been extremely evasive over whether he intends to sign a new one (although he is evasive about most things, so that is no surprise).\n\nWhether or not he really intends to agree a new contract is a genuine secret - he even kept Barca hanging after winning the treble in 2015 - but now he will probably end up having little choice.\n\nBarca are also adrift in La Liga, with Real Madrid one point ahead and boasting two games in hand, and although they have reached the Spanish cup final, that is unlikely to be enough to keep Enrique in charge - especially considering the nature of what now seems an almost certain Champions League exit.\n\nResults are not the only thing that matter at Barcelona, though, and Enrique is regularly accused of dismantling the possession-based style of play which was initially instilled by Johan Cruyff and later continued by Frank Rijkaard and Pep Guardiola, instead imposing an unattractive and disjointed style which bypasses midfield and relies exclusively on the talents of three players.\n\nThe combination of poor results and unpopular playing methods will be tough to survive.\n\nWith Enrique's future uncertain, several possible replacements have been touted in the last few weeks.\n\nFor many fans, the most popular option would be Jorge Sampaoli, the fashionable Argentine coach who has taken La Liga by storm in leading Sevilla's unlikely title challenge with a daring and versatile tactical approach.\n\nThe passionate and intense Sampaoli is rapidly becoming the most highly-rated emerging coach in the world, and Sevilla is unlikely to be a big enough stage for him.\n\nOther candidates are current assistant Juan Carlos Unzue, Borussia Dortmund's Thomas Tuchel, PSG's Unai Emery and Real Sociedad boss Eusebio Sacristan, who has the benefit of being an insider after playing for the club and - like Enrique and Guardiola - previously managing the B team.\n\nIn the long run, probably the best bet to bring the \"Barca DNA\" back to the Nou Camp is the man whose playing career best embodied that style: Xavi. But this summer is almost certainly too soon for the legendary midfielder, who is still playing for Al Sadd in Qatar.\n\nNext time, the job might be his, but for now Barca's board will have to choose between the increasingly unlikely option of keeping Enrique, or taking the plunge for a new man.\n\nDoes the squad need an overhaul?\n\nNo. Their performance on Tuesday may have been abysmal, but do not forget these are largely the same players who won the treble two seasons ago and the double last year.\n\nSome positions do require reinforcements, especially right-back where last summer's departure of long-serving Dani Alves is being keenly felt.\n\nIn the longer term, a major issue will be filling the gap left by Andres Iniesta, who is nearly 33 years old. As with Xavi, directly replacing such a unique player will be practically impossible, but current squad members Andre Gomes, Denis Suarez and Rafinha have not yet convinced.\n\nNevertheless, Barca's squad remains stacked with players of the highest quality, and the continuity of the front three of Messi, Suarez and Neymar is particularly unlikely to be questioned.\n\nThe bigger question is not whether the players are good enough, but how to get the most out of them. Several are significantly under-performing, with midfielders Sergio Busquets and Ivan Rakitic - both undoubtedly world-class players - probably enduring the worst seasons of their careers.\n\nAnd, indeed, their struggles can be seen as indicative of a team which possesses brilliant individuals but lacks a solid collective structure, something which critics are laying firmly at the feet of Enrique.\n\nBefore long, somebody else may well have a chance to put that right.", "The new £5 note will not be withdrawn, despite concerns that it contains traces of animal fat, the Bank of England says.\n\nThe Bank said it had concluded it would be \"appropriate\" to keep the £5 polymer note in circulation.\n\nIt will also issue the £10 polymer note as planned in September, it added.\n\nVegans and some religious groups had voiced concerns, as the note contains a small amount of tallow, which is derived from meat products.\n\nA petition to ban the note attracted more than 100,000 signatures.\n\nThe Bank said it treated \"the concerns raised by members of the public with the utmost seriousness\".\n\nHowever, the central bank also emphasised that \"an extremely small amount of tallow\" was used at an early stage of producing the polymer pellets, which were then used to create the notes.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Five facts about the new Winston Churchill fiver\n\nThe Bank is still working with its polymer supplier to \"determine what alternatives might be available\" for the current £5 note and the Jane Austen £10 polymer note.\n\nIt said it had spent £46m on printing the £5 note, and £24m so far on printing 275 million of the new £10 notes.\n\n\"Reprinting these notes on a new substrate would mean incurring these costs again. It would also require a further £50,000 for the secure destruction of the existing stock,\" the Bank added.\n\nThe petition against the £5 note, hosted on the change.org website, stated that tallow was \"unacceptable to millions of vegans, vegetarians, Hindus, Sikhs, Jains and others in the UK\".\n\nA number of Sikhs and Hindus have also called for the notes to be banned from temples, where meat products are forbidden.\n\nHindus believe cows are holy and sacred, and many do not wear shoes or carry bags made from the skin of cattle that has been slaughtered. Practising Sikhs are strict vegetarians.\n\nThe new plastic £5 note was introduced in September 2016 and is expected to last an average of five years - compared to two years previously.\n• None Five facts about the new fiver", "Women who survived breast cancer hit the catwalk at New York Fashion Week in alternative lingerie, to raise money for the charity Cancerland.\n\nThe AnaOno Intimates show was the brainchild of US designer, and breast cancer survivor, Dana Donofree.\n\nModel Paige Moore, 24, said: \"I felt sexy, I felt beautiful, and I was proud.\"", "Nato members will want to be reassured by General Mattis\n\nThis meeting of Nato defence ministers is the first formal alliance get-together since the arrival of the Trump administration in Washington. Mr Trump's initial suggestion that Nato was in some sense \"obsolete\", along with his stated desire to do deals with Moscow, set alarm bells ringing in many capitals, where Russia is seen as a re-emerging strategic threat.\n\nMany in Europe see elements in the Trump administration as having an in-built antipathy towards multilateral institutions. There were also fears about certain officials' closeness to Moscow - a worry that the US might seek a strategic dialogue with Russia over Europeans' heads. Accordingly, the resignation of the president's controversial National Security Adviser Michael Flynn will not prompt many tears in Europe.\n\nAmerica's European allies will, though, at least to some extent, have been reassured by the subsequent noises that have come out of Washington. But they will want to hear direct reassurance from Gen James Mattis - Mr Trump's new defence secretary - that the alliance retains its centrality in US security thinking.\n\nThey will also want confirmed that all of the steps that the Obama administration took to reinforce deterrence in Europe - the deployment of additional combat brigades and an intensive series of exercises - will continue under the new man in the White House.\n\nPoland is one of just five Nato members to meet spending the spending benchmark in 2016\n\nOf course Gen Mattis will come with some messages of his own. President Trump - indeed the US Congress - wants to see the European allies shoulder more of the cost of their own defence.\n\nWashington has shown that it is willing to stump up troops and equipment, but while collective Nato expenditure is rising, too many Nato governments have been sluggish in bringing their expenditure up to the agreed target of 2% of GDP. According to the latest Nato figures only five allies, Estonia, Greece, Poland, the UK and the United States met or exceeded the 2% benchmark in 2016.\n\nThe demand from Washington that its allies spend more on their collective defence has been a consistent one over recent years. As a former Nato commander, Gen Mattis knows the alliance well and he has heard all of the excuses before. He will deliver the familiar message with more punch and with a clear implication that this time the US administration expects to see prompt action.\n\nGen Mattis also wants to see Nato become more agile and better at decision-making especially at times of crisis. Washington wants to see the alliance playing a greater role in international efforts to defeat terror and to help prop up failing states.\n\nThis is a difficult area which causes divisions among the alliance's European members as much as between European capitals and Washington. Iraq - where Nato has already agreed to conduct a small amount of training - could become a test case.\n\nThe Americans are already thinking about what will happen after Mosul is fully re-captured. As the situation on the ground transitions from all-out war-fighting, there will be a continuing need to build Iraqi capabilities. Here there are lots of things that the US believes Nato countries could do - training for border patrolling, instituting defence reforms and so on. So far the response among allies to the small-scale effort in Iraq has been, shall we say, limited.\n\nAs far as Washington is concerned, Nato countries don't just need to spend more - they need to significantly enhance their capabilities and be relevant to the sort of real-world tasks in which the US wants its partners to be engaged.\n\nNato's response to a more assertive Russia is all very well but it threatens to open up fissures between northern and eastern allies, on the one hand, who directly face Russia's modernising forces and countries on Nato's Mediterranean flank, on the other, who confront a very different set of challenges.\n\nThe alliance is faced with a more militarily assertive Russia\n\nAs the paroxysms in Syria and Libya have shown, the migrant or refugee crisis has repercussions throughout the Middle East and much of Europe.\n\nAt this meeting, Nato ministers want to apply a small corrective to enhance the focus on threats from the south. It's a modest start - a small command hub at the joint forces headquarters in Naples whose job will be to explore what Nato can contribute to dealing with the complex security challenges on its southern flank.\n\nBut as well as a demand for a more dynamic Nato agenda the US is eager to reassure its allies. A senior US Congressional delegation is visiting the Nato headquarters this week. The Nato meeting is followed by Europe's premier annual security event - the Munich conference - after which the US vice-president himself will also be stopping by at Nato.\n\nIt is all something of a curtain-raiser for the US president's own first visit to the alliance which will take place in late May. That looks set to be a fairly brief event - little more than a lunch - in Nato's brand new headquarters building, which inconveniently will not be finished in time for the summit.\n\nBy then it is hoped that Mr Trump will have fully made his peace with Nato. If not, a reduced scale summit in an unfinished building holds risks as well as opportunities. The headline writers could have a field day.\n\nThe hope is that this Nato ministerial meeting will set the course for more harmonious relations between the alliance and its most important, albeit mercurial member.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The story of a sniffer dog who was retired from the front line in Afghanistan after becoming scared of loud noises will be used to inspire those who struggle to read.\n\nVidar, a Belgian Malinois, hunted out roadside bombs and weapons with the Army in Helmand Province.\n\nMedic Angie McDonnell, from the Vale of Glamorgan, adopted him and wrote Gun Shy about his exploits.\n\nAfter two years of service, five-year-old Vidar suddenly became \"gun shy\" - a term used in the Army to describe dogs who are scared of loud noises.", "President Trump told Israeli PM Netanyahu there will be a need to compromise with Palestinians on a peace plan.", "BBC Sport takes a look at the two-time reigning Fifa World Player of the Year Carli Lloyd's career following her arrival at Manchester City Women.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "The death of Kim Jong-nam, the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, dominates the front pages of the day's papers.\n\nThe Metro leads with the story of how the exile was apparently murdered by a woman pressing a cloth to his face at an airport in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph carries a grim rundown of how Kim Jong-un has \"silenced his enemies\", employing a range of weapons from flame-throwers to anti-aircraft guns to have his enemies dispatched.\n\nIn its obituary, the paper also reports that Kim Jong-nam had a lonely childhood and was allowed only one, much older friend. His large playroom is said to have been restocked each year with toys bought overseas by members of his father's personal security staff.\n\nKim Jong-nam (left), the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (right), was living in exile in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia\n\nIn an analysis piece, the Guardian says the death of Kim Jong-nam fits well into the \"comic-book\" depiction of North Korea as a \"bizarre hermit kingdom, ruled by a murderous, whimsical, paranoid and overweight tyrant\".\n\nBut it says Kim Jong-un's dictatorship is no joke.\n\nThe paper believes he may have been emboldened to take action against a relative when Donald Trump described Vladimir Putin as a \"killer\" whom he nevertheless respected.\n\nThe Times leads with a warning that the first overhaul of business rates for seven years is likely to bring a tax cut for the internet giant, Amazon, while leaving high-street stores facing large increases.\n\nThe paper says the review will create big winners and losers because the revaluations of premises are linked to property prices. That means internet-based retailers like Amazon will benefit, as they have many vast warehouses in low-growth regions.\n\nIn contrast, firms which have shops in booming urban areas are more likely to suffer.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph has a different focus on the business rates review.\n\nIt says the changes will leave NHS hospitals and GP surgeries in England and Wales facing a rates rise of £635m over five years.\n\nThe Nuffield Trust think-tank tells the paper that hospitals will struggle to absorb the increases, and may have to look at their staffing levels.\n\nThe UKIP leader, Paul Nuttall, has more questions to answer about the Hillsborough disaster, according to the Guardian.\n\nMr Nuttall apologised yesterday when it emerged that his own website had incorrectly quoted him as saying he'd lost close friends when fans were crushed in the stadium.\n\nThe Guardian says UKIP leader Paul Nuttall has more questions to answer about the Hillsborough disaster\n\nThe paper carries interviews with the families of some of the 96 fans who died as a result of Hillsborough.\n\nOne accuses the politician of using one of the dead \"for his own personal publicity\". Another urges Mr Nuttall to provide further evidence that he was in the crowd at Hillsborough, as he has long said.\n\nGovernment ministers are to reject plans for a deposit scheme for plastic bottles, according to the Daily Mail, despite evidence the initiative could \"slash litter and boost recycling\".\n\nThe paper says it's dismayed by the news, after fighting to get rid of single-use plastic bags.\n\nIt says similar initiatives in other countries have given children a strong incentive to pick up litter, instead of dropping it.\n\nThe Mail argues that the time for a deposit scheme has come - and the environment secretary, Andrea Leadsom, should take note.", "There is a theory in politics that times of upheaval and uncertainty present opportunities as well as problems.\n\nIt's best summed up in the saying that you should never let a good crisis go to waste - an aphorism so seductive that it has been attributed to all the usual historical suspects, from Machiavelli to Winston Churchill.\n\nIt is perhaps in this spirit that the European Parliament has been debating how the EU is going to work in future, in the looming shadow of Brexit.\n\nThe UK's vote to leave the EU, last June, came as a seismic shock to most MEPs. And many are quite open in their view that it amounts to a self-destructive decision by the British to uncouple themselves from one of modern history's primary drivers of peace and prosperity.\n\nBritish Eurosceptics of course would cast the Brexit vote in an entirely different light, and now foresee a future in which the UK will be free to make its fortune - and make its own new global trading relationships - unfettered from the dead hand of stifling Brussels bureaucracy.\n\nIt will be years of course - perhaps many years - before we know who is on the right side of that debate.\n\nBut one consequence of Brexit is already with us - the EU is now free to debate how it might work in the future without any input from the UK.\n\nIn theory that should leave Europe's federalists freer to dream than they have been in the past. Britain's voice has generally been raised to question the wisdom and value of further integration that would give EU institutions greater powers at the expense of individual national governments.\n\nYou would expect such dreams to be articulated best by Guy Verhofstadt - the former prime minister of Belgium, who now leads the liberal bloc in the European Parliament and who will represent that body in Brexit negotiations.\n\nGuy Verhofstadt rejects claims that European voters have turned against the EU\n\nIn the debate on future reform Mr Verhofstadt said: \"The union is in crisis. The European Union doesn't have much friends: not at home, not abroad.\n\n\"The Union does not deliver anymore. Rather than to talk about an 'ever closer union', we have a union of 'too little, too late'.\n\n\"That's why people are angry: they see all these European institutions, all these summits, all these empty words, but they don't see enough results.\"\n\nMr Verhofstadt has a long list of suggested fixes for this continental malaise, including reducing or ending the right of individual members to opt out of collective decisions - something no British government would ever have countenanced.\n\nHe has other ideas for how the EU should respond to Brexit too - including moving out of London the headquarters of two EU agencies: the European Banking Authority and the European Medicines Agency.\n\nUKIP's Nigel Farage - an anti-EU MEP in the vanguard of Brexit\n\nBut for now, at least, it seems radical visions for reform will be quietly kicked into touch.\n\nThe vice-president of the EU Commission, Frans Timmermans, politely welcomed the display of \"vision\" in the proposals, but noted that most of the suggestions would require EU treaty change. He said simply: \"We have to acknowledge that treaty change is not on the top of the political agenda now, in member states in particular.\"\n\nThere are plenty of true believers in the European project who would see in the Verhofstadt proposals the start of a kind of counter-revolution against events which have dismayed them - including Brexit, the US election of Donald Trump and the strong opinion poll showing of insurgent parties in a number of European countries.\n\nBut for now a more cautious and pragmatic approach will prevail - partly because there is a general sense in Strasbourg and Brussels that the European institutions will have enough on their plates negotiating Brexit, without kicking off a parallel process of structural reform which would also take years.\n\nThat takes us back to the idea that every crisis is an opportunity that shouldn't go to waste.\n\nThere are, no doubt, those in Strasbourg who take that view - but it seems for the moment they are outweighed by those who feel that when you find yourself in the middle of a crisis - as they would see Brexit - the smartest course of action is to fix the crisis first and worry about the future later.", "Last updated on .From the section Sport\n\nUsain Bolt and Simone Biles claimed the top accolades at the Laureus World Sports Awards in Monaco.\n\nEight-time Olympic sprint champion Bolt and four-time Olympic gold gymnast Biles were named sportsman and sportswoman of the year for their 2016 achievements.\n\nBritain's Rachel Atherton won the action sportsperson of the year award for her downhill mountain biking feats.\n\nLeicester City won the spirit of sport award for winning the Premier League.\n\nAtherton, 29, became the first rider in history to complete a perfect downhill World Cup season and then won a fourth World Championship title a week later.\n\nLeicester boss Claudio Ranieri and captain Wes Morgan were in Monaco to collect the spirit of sport prize, awarded after the Foxes, 5,000-1 outsiders, won the Premier League by 10 points last season.\n\nIs this the greatest ever sporting selfie?\n\nBolt won three gold medals at Rio 2016 in the 100m,200m and 4x100m relay.\n\nThat took his all-time Olympic medal tally to nine but last month he was asked to hand one back after Jamaican team-mate Nesta Carter tested positive for a banned substance.\n\nCarter was part of the Jamaican quartet that won the 4x100m in Beijing in 2008.\n\nBiles' four gold medals at Rio were in the team, all-around, vault and floor exercise events.\n\nNico Rosberg, who quit Formula 1 in December five days after being crowned world champion, received the breakthrough of the year prize.\n\nTeam of the year: Chicago Cubs, who ended a 108-year wait to win Major League Baseball's World Series.\n\nComeback of the year: American swimmer Michael Phelps, who won his 23rd Olympic gold in his final Games in Rio.\n\nSportsperson of the Year with a disability: Beatrice Vio, Italian wheelchair fencer who won gold at the 2016 Paralympics.\n\nSport for Good Award: for Sporting Inspiration: The Refugee Olympic Team, who competed at the Rio Olympics.\n\nBest Sporting Moment: Barcelona Under-12 team whose players consoled their distraught Japanese opponents at the end of the Junior Soccer World Challenge in a touching show of sportsmanship.\n\nThe Laureus Sport for Good Award: Waves for Change.", "The London Dungeon tourist attraction has apologised for a promotional Twitter campaign that backfired.\n\nA graphic joking about a murdered sex worker, and another about infecting a partner with a sexually transmitted disease were posted on the attraction's Twitter feed.\n\nCritics said the collection of images was sexist and offensive.\n\nMerlin Entertainment said it was \"very sorry\" for the campaign and has deleted the tweets.\n\nThe group said it had wanted to run a \"dark Valentine campaign\" to promote the London Dungeon, in which visitors are taken on a tour through London's dark history.\n\nOther messages in the series joked about sex acts, sex workers and body-shamed women\n\nBut many Twitter users complained that many of the images tweeted were in poor taste and inappropriate for a family tourist attraction.\n\nRebecca Reid, a columnist for the Telegraph, said: \"The biggest issue here is taking violence against women and turning it into a joke or a cheap marketing ploy.\"\n\nShe told the BBC: \"Just because these rapes and murders happened in the past doesn't mean they are fair game.\n\n\"Violence, rape and murder are all still a very brutal reality of life for modern day sex workers and these flippant tweets show no awareness or respect for that.\"\n\nMerlin Entertainment said: \"Our brand tone of voice tends to divide audiences. However, we recognise that we've upset some people and for that we're very sorry.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nLondon will host the 2017 Women's Tour final stage, with the race to open on 7 June in Daventry.\n\nThe five-stage event, won by Britain's Lizzie Deignan last year, will conclude in the capital on Sunday, 11 June.\n\nIts fourth edition will also include stages in Northamptonshire, Warwickshire, Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire and Derbyshire.\n\nAll of the world's top 15 teams will take part in the race, which is a part of the UCI Women's WorldTour.\n\n\"This year's route will combine testing climbs and beautiful scenery in the heart of England with the London finish, which will be an undoubted highlight of the sporting calendar,\" race director Mick Bennett said.", "Last updated on .From the section Wales\n\nFifteen-year-old Jackson Page says it will be \"great to miss more school\" after reaching the Welsh Open last 32.\n\nPage beat world number 78 John Astley on Wednesday, having already overcome world 123 Jason Weston in the first round of his debut professional event.\n\n\"No English, most importantly, and no history,\" said the Ebbw Vale teenager. \"I am doing GCSEs, but the school know this could be a career for me.\"\n\nPage has already won £3,500 and will play world number four Judd Trump next.\n\nIt is great to miss some more school. No English, which is the most important thing, and no history\n\n\"I remember watching Judd Trump when I was a kid, he was at Newport and played Ronnie O'Sullivan on one of the TV tables,\" Page told BBC Wales Sport.\n\n\"I knew I could come here and get far and I looked at the draw and saw Judd and knew I could play him so my eyes were on that.\"\n\nPage, who attends Ebbw Fawr Learning Community in Blaenau Gwent, won £2,500 for reaching the second round and another £1,000 for progressing to the third.\n\nAnother win to reach the last 16 would earn him £6,000.\n\nPage trailed Weston 3-1 in round one, but recovered to win a tense deciding frame.\n\nThe youngster also held his nerve superbly to beat Astley with a break of 36 in the decisive frame.\n\n\"I am over the moon with the win,\" Page said. \"It is good to beat a player ranked so highly. But I just focus on potting the balls.\"\n\nWhen I saw Jackson play, it reminded me of when I was 15 years of age and how I thought about playing. He just loves to be there.\n\nHe takes on shots that other people turn down because he's excited at that age and to win two matches as he has done is exceptional.\n\nHe's a tremendous potter, he's got no fear at all.\n\nSign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app.", "The long-awaited public inquiry into allegations of wrongdoing by undercover police could be delayed for years amid a growing legal row with Scotland Yard.\n\nNewly-published documents reveal the Metropolitan Police is questioning the unprecedented size of the probe.\n\nIt says it needs months to assess which former officers need their identities protected - and does not believe all of them should give evidence.\n\nPublic evidence hearings may not now start before 2018.\n\nSir Christopher Pitchford, the inquiry's chairman, says he needs to hear from all the officers.\n\nThe new delays have emerged a week after the Independent Police Complaints Commission said it was investigating whether a Metropolitan Police unit shredded a large number of files that were relevant to the inquiry.\n\nTheresa May, then home secretary, ordered the inquiry in 2015 after serious allegations against undercover officers.\n\nShe told Sir Christopher to report back by July 2018, something that is now impossible.\n\nDocuments published by the inquiry on Wednesday reveal months of tension building between its team and the Metropolitan Police over what the force should hand over.\n\nScotland Yard says it has so far disclosed one million pages and identified 116 surviving former undercover officers from the Special Demonstration Squad, the disbanded unit at the heart of many of the allegations.\n\nThe inquiry wants all of them to give evidence but Scotland Yard says that is unworkable because of the \"immense\" pressures it is under.\n\nIn detailed submissions to the inquiry, it says that the demands for evidence dating back 40 years are unprecedented. It is already spending the equivalent of 80 police constables' salaries on the inquiry and may need to have more than 100 officers and staff working full time.\n\n\"The Metropolitan Police Service recognises that a number of deployments [undercover operations] will be properly subjected to close scrutiny by the inquiry,\" says one of the force's letters. \"This does not mean however that each deployment will need to be subject to the same depth of review. Many officers are reluctant to engage with the inquiry process.\"\n\nIn a further twist, the documents reveal Scotland Yard proposed that an unnamed detective sergeant would explain to the inquiry how it was managing secret documents even though the officer had been accused of destroying files on the Green Party peer Baroness Jenny Jones.\n\nThe officer has since been cleared of wrongdoing but the inquiry has insisted the individual cannot give evidence.\n\nIn his response to the Met's plea for a delay, Sir Christopher said the Metropolitan Police would need to explain at a special hearing in April how the inquiry could work if it did not hear from all the former undercover officers.\n\n\"Their evidence is clearly relevant,\" he says. \"The Inquiry needs to see that evidence... it might have been otherwise if the Inquiry could be confident that the documentary records of the Special Demonstration Squad were fully preserved, but they were not.\n\n\"It seems to me clear that there is no reasonable prospect that the Inquiry will complete its work within the three year period originally envisaged in July 2015, and that it is unlikely that evidence hearings will take place in 2017.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A violent government war against drugs in the Philippines has left thousands dead.\n\nThough it has been suspended, many people living in Manila's impoverished \"promised land\" district are still suffering the effects. The BBC's Jonathan Head reports.", "Youth worker Solomon Smith says his salary of £9,000 means he can not afford to pay his rent, bills and children's school meals.\n\nNearly a third of the population of Britain is living on an \"inadequate\" income, according to research by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF).\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nNew England captain Joe Root says he will seek the advice of his predecessors before taking charge for the first time in July.\n\nThe 26-year-old has replaced Alastair Cook despite only leading in four previous first-class matches.\n\n\"It would be silly not to talk to people who have been in this position before,\" Root told BBC Sport.\n\n\"Maybe I'll also speak to a few people away from cricket to get different perspectives on things.\"\n\nThe Yorkshire batsman added: \"The opportunity to do that comes with a great deal of time before our next Test, hopefully I can be smart about things and use that time wisely.\"\n• None Is Root the right man for the job?\n\nThe Yorkshire batsman takes over from Cook, who resigned on 6 February after a record 59 Tests in charge.\n\nCook has stated his intention to remain in the team, with Root keen to tap into the experience of the opening batsman and other senior players like pace bowlers James Anderson and Stuart Broad.\n\n\"You shouldn't be scared of asking for help,\" said Root, who has had limited opportunities to lead in county cricket since making his international debut at the age of 21.\n\n\"I will want to do things my way as well because I would like to think I can put my own stamp on the job.\n\n\"I like to think I'll be instinctive, I want us to always to look to win and be a tough side to play against.\"\n\nSpeaking before Cook resigned, Root likened becoming captain to being a new father, his first son Alfie having arrived in January.\n\nAnd he was performing a fatherly duty when he asked to become captain on Sunday evening.\n\n\"On Sunday afternoon I took Alfie for a nappy change and got a nice call from Andrew Strauss saying this is that one call in your life when you get offered the England captaincy.\"\n\nRoot will lead England in home series against South Africa and West Indies before the defence of the Ashes in Australia next winter.\n\nHis task is to reverse the fortunes of a side that have lost six of their past eight Tests.\n\n\"I can't for the Ashes,\" he said. \"We should all be very excited about that.\n\n\"We have a great blend of experience and raw talent and there's a core group of players that have played 20 or 30 games.\n\n\"It's a great time for them to become more consistent and to make this side really tough to beat.\"", "The BBC's Jonathan Beale reports from the Arctic circle in Norway, where Russia is building up its forces - causing concern for the US, which has called its conduct there \"aggressive\".\n\nMeanwhile, US Defence Secretary James Mattis is expected to call on European nations to spend more on defence, when he attends a meeting of the NATO alliance in Brussels.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nBasil Kirchin was a maverick musician and pioneering composer who is credited as a founding father of ambient music. Yet despite being hailed by acts such as Brian Eno and St Etienne, he remains an obscure figure. Now a festival in Hull is casting a light on a man regarded by many musicians as a genius.\n\nIn the early 2000s, in a recording studio in Hull, saxophonist Alan Barnes found himself engaged in a particularly odd performance.\n\n\"One day Basil said 'I want you to do a duet' and I said 'who with?',\" he recalled. \"He said 'with Hitler'.\"\n\nLo and behold, one week later he found himself \"screaming on the bass clarinet at Hitler coming out of a speaker at me\" with Kirchin recording it.\n\n\"Dueting with Hitler is the weirdest thing you can get really,\" added Barnes. \"But anything could happen with Basil.\"\n\nKirchin, who died in Hull in 2005, was an eccentric. He was also a radical innovator whose 1971 record Worlds Within Worlds is often cited as the first ambient album - a genre characterised by its focus on mood and atmosphere rather than traditional song structures.\n\nHe pioneered techniques which are now commonplace but were considered radical at the time. These included recording sounds he came across and then cutting, splicing, slowing down or stretching the tape to create strange, new noises.\n\nPerhaps predictably, this radical approach did not lead to commercial success. Worlds Within Worlds only sold a few hundred copies upon its release on Columbia Records.\n\nHowever, Richard Williams, who subsequently signed Kirchin to Island Records in the early 1970s for a follow up, was not put off by this.\n\n\"It wasn't going to be a chart album... but I thought it was worth doing because it was pioneering, experimental and a product of a really interesting man,\" he said.\n\nBrian Eno wrote the sleeve notes for Kirchin's Worlds Within Worlds volume two album\n\nWhen Kirchin released another Worlds Within Worlds record in 1974, Williams asked a young Brian Eno to write the liner notes. Eno, who would later popularise the ambient genre with his 1978 album Ambient 1, was more than happy to oblige.\n\n\"He was always interested in the new and the experimental so I played him Basil's music and said would you like to write something for the sleeve of the album,\" he said.\n\n\"He was very, very enthusiastic and keen and did indeed write something.\n\n\"I know that Basil's music certainly affected the way he was thinking, and it was interesting to hear that somebody else was thinking in the same direction that he was.\"\n\nBut while Eno achieved fame through his work with Roxy Music and later collaborations with David Bowie, Kirchin continued operating on the edges of the music industry.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Basil Kirchin explains his controversial use of autistic children's voices\n\nHis subsequent projects and albums, including Abstractions of the Industrial North, Quantum and Particles, all characterise his unique approach and his eccentric personality, but achieved precious little commercial success.\n\nKirchin's musical career began in 1941 when, aged 13, he joined his father's big band as a drummer. The Blackpool-born youngster took to London's Paramount Theatre, where the Ivor Kirchin band had a long-term residency.\n\nHe spent many nights sleeping in a Tube station as the Blitz erupted above. After the war he continued his jazz career, leading the Kirchin band and touring the UK with singer Sarah Vaughan. The band garnered a number of famous fans - including Sean Connery - but Kirchin grew tired of that scene and decided to travel to India in search of spiritual fulfilment.\n\nThe Ivor Kirchin Band, with Basil on drums, toured the UK and had long-term residencies in London and Hull\n\nIn the 1950s, he spent time at the Ramakrishna Temple on the banks of the River Ganges, 10 years before The Beatles' famous trip to the subcontinent.\n\n\"He turned his back on the music business in the late 50s because he was on a spiritual quest really,\" said Matt Stephenson, director of Nova Studios, which has made a feature-length documentary on Kirchin.\n\n\"He got ideas about music and sound and about life that he wanted to find out more about, they mattered to him more than fame and success.\"\n\nKirchin's travels ended when, on a trip to Australia, the tapes containing the Kirchin Band's entire back catalogue fell from a luggage net into the sea.\n\nAfter that traumatic experience, he returned to England, shuttling between London and Hull, where his father's band had a permanent residency.\n\nIt was here that Kirchin met sound engineer Keith Herd in a music shop.\n\n\"He had a black Mackintosh, he had very long hair and beard and it was 'blimey who's this?',\" recalls Herd.\n\nKeith Herd became lifelong friends with Kirchin after first meeting in the 1960s in a music shop in Hull\n\nTogether, working in Herd's studio, they helped develop the techniques that would produce Kirchin's radical new sound.\n\nHe created a series of soundtracks for imaginary films before film producer David Greene recruited him to provide scores for The Abominable Dr Phibes, I Start Counting and The Shuttered Room.\n\nAt around the same time Kirchin delved deeper into the foray of tape manipulation and sound experimentation, giving birth to his innovative Worlds Within Worlds series.\n\nAmong the sounds he recorded - and manipulated - were those of autistic children. He was living in Switzerland with his Swiss wife Esther, who was a teacher at a school which catered specifically for autistic pupils.\n\nKirchin explained his reasons in a BBC Radio 3 interview in 2003, describing how he was \"fascinated by the sounds these children make when they're trying to communicate\".\n\n\"No normal, with the greatest respect, human mind could think of such intervals as they pitch and sing... it's emotional,\" he said.\n\nKirchin's wife Esther worked as a teacher at a school for autistic children in Switzerland where he taped their voices, which he later manipulated\n\nThe school was in the Swiss valley of Zermatt\n\nMany years later, a new wave of musicians and artists began discovering his work.\n\nTim Gane, of Stereolab, said his thirst for the experimental and avant-garde led him to Kirchin's records in the early 1980s.\n\n\"To me it's experimental, it's also groovy, very wistful, a flowing kind of melodicism which is really unusual, unique to Basil Kirchin's music and it has an identifiable kind of charm about the chords and about the instruments chosen - harpsichord and flutes...\n\n\"It's quite exotic, very nice arrangements and very modern melodies. It doesn't sound really like it was done in the mid-60s.\"\n\nSean O'Hagan and Tim Gane say they have both been left inspired by Kirchin's music\n\nFormer Stereolab stalwart Sean O'Hagan, now of The High Llamas, describes Kirchin's music as being \"very instinctive\".\n\n\"It felt very real, very odd and slightly dangerous.\n\n\"It brought me to very odd areas - noisy experimental, totally unmusical forays but also very lyrical songs and some absolutely beautiful film music.\"\n\nBob Stanley, of St Etienne, recalls first coming across Kirchin's music in the mid-1990s with a track titled Mind on The Run.\n\n\"It's a terrific bit of music. It sounded like possibly something from the Avengers, like a chase scene or something, there's that really frenetic drumming and organ work. It's a great piece of music.\"\n\nFor Kirchin, his unusual sounds and recording techniques were linked to his spiritual beliefs.\n\n\"He believed there are several universes going on at the same time,\" said Stanley, who interviewed Kirchin in 2003.\n\n\"So, like a fly's world is completely different to our world, it moves at a completely different speed.\n\n\"And therefore if you speed up or slow down sound you can find a way into these parallel universes.\"\n\nBasil Kirchin lived in a council house off Hessle Road in Hull, where he spent the latter years of his life\n\nBy the end of the 1990s, Kirchin was living an impoverished lifestyle in a two-up-two-down council house with his wife in Hull.\n\nHowever, he continued to produce music with the help of Iain Firth, a young engineering graduate, and paid session musicians with his dole money and royalties.\n\nAt the same time, his material had been rediscovered by jazz enthusiast Jonny Trunk, who released a number of Kirchin's tracks on his eponymous record label at the turn of the millennium.\n\nBut by this point Kirchin had become very ill with cancer.\n\n\"It was difficult to see him deteriorating and it was sad to see,\" recounts Firth. \"It made me really determined to do my best for him.\"\n\nEngineer Iain Firth worked with Basil Kirchin from the early 2000s until his death in 2005\n\nThree months before he lost his battle with cancer, Trunk interviewed Kirchin in his kitchen in Hull.\n\n\"He was great, he was thrilled to be rediscovered,\" he said.\n\n\"He had cancer of everything: he had one eye, he was in a very poor, physical state.\n\n\"He was full of the most extraordinary energy and passion, [it was] really amazing to experience that sort of raw energy that he had, even in that state where most people would've given up.\"\n\nFor Barnes, Kirchin's last days were difficult to witness.\n\n\"He had this horrible tumour behind his eye so he was visually quite startling,\" he recalls.\n\n\"Later on he had it removed. Me and Bruce Adams went to do a session, he answered the door and half his face wasn't there, which was a hell of a shock. It was terrifying and nothing had prepared us for that.\n\n\"But typical of him he was just carrying on as if nothing had happened... that was the last time, it was just before he died.\"\n\nBruce Adams and Alan Barnes (right) were among a number of session musicians who worked with Kirchin. Others included the legendary Jimmy Page and Mick Ronson, before they became famous\n\nMore than 10 years after his death, Kirchin's achievements are now being publicly recognised at a festival in Hull celebrating his life and work.\n\n\"Some of his music's pretty difficult,\" says Trunk. \"Worlds Within Worlds is possibly one of the most radical, hardcore records you could ever, ever hear in your life.\n\n\"When I first heard Quantum I thought the house was on fire. No one ever did anything like that until him.\"\n\nWriter and BBC broadcaster Stuart Maconie, also a Kirchin enthusiast, echoes Trunk's sentiments, saying Kirchin was very much \"operating on the margins of music\".\n\n\"I think there are people out there whose palates are a bit jaded and are looking for something more interesting.\n\n\"Basil's stuff will sometimes frighten you, unsettle you.\n\n\"Some of the stuff with the autistic kids - it makes you feel slightly unsettled for all kinds of reasons. You think is this exploitative almost, you think 'what's going on here?'.\n\n\"But that's good I think.\"\n\nBob Stanley and Pete Wiggs of Saint Etienne are among the musicians performing at the Basil Kirchin festival, which runs from 17 to 19 February\n\nFor Stanley, Kirchin's musical philosophy and innovative techniques made him \"without a doubt the most inspiring person I'd ever met\".\n\n\"When he was doing it, it was almost impossible. He had to use special equipment made in Switzerland to try and do it.\n\n\"It's something obviously anybody can do now, just get a laptop these days, but it was a lot more difficult in the 60s and 70s.\n\n\"So yeah he was very inspirational to me.\"\n\nMind On The Run: The Basil Kirchin Story runs at the Hull City Hall in Hull from 17-19 February.", "Abandoned because of his bizarre looks, Fester the boxer dog, who is blind in one eye and has a protruding lower jaw, has finally been found a new home.\n\nThe one-year-old was handed in to the Dogs Trust near Darlington in December after being found wandering the streets as a stray.\n\nFollowing an appeal on social media, the canine with \"a heart of gold\" has found a new forever family.\n\nThe trust said Fester would be leaving the charity's kennels early next week.\n\nFester was born with a narrow jaw which causes his lower teeth to stick out - creating some \"unique features\", a trust spokeswoman said.\n\n\"We were concerned that fun-loving Fester may have ended up being over-looked by potential new owners due to his unusual eye-catching appearance,\" she added.\n\n\"He is a gorgeous boy with an amazing character, so we couldn't imagine why anyone wouldn't want to have him as part of their family.\n\n\"He's had a rough time and it is fantastic news he will have a new home where he can settle and hopefully his character will shine through.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The days of the three-hour, five-bottle City lunch appear to be well and truly over after Lloyd's of London introduced a booze ban.\n\nThe insurance market has told its 800 employees that they are not allowed to drink alcohol between 09:00 and 17:00.\n\nLloyd's said it had been considering the move for some time to bring it into line with \"industry norms\".\n\nThe ban applies to Lloyd's staff, not brokers and underwriters doing business in the historic insurance market.\n\nBut angry staff have called the new measures \"heavy-handed\".\n\nWorkers took to Lloyd's intranet to air their grievances, with one asking: \"Will we be asked to go to bed earlier soon?\"\n\nAccording to the London Evening Standard, another asked: \"Did I just wake up from my drunken induced slumber to find we are now living in Orwell's 1984?\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Last orders for \"boozy lunches\" in The City?\n\nThe boozy lunch had long been a staple of City life when deals were done and contacts made.\n\nA spokesman for Lloyd's said: \"There is no denying that it has traditionally been part and parcel of this type of business.\"\n\nIn an internal memo to staff, Lloyd's said an examination of grievance and disciplinary cases over the last two years found that about half were related to alcohol.\n\nA Lloyd's spokesman said that the market had changed and that Lloyd's wanted to attract younger people to the industry.\n\nHe added that Lloyd's wanted to bring its employee guide into line with other companies, such as QBE, which advises staff not to drink as opposed to an outright ban.\n\nHe said that if someone was found to have broken the rule, their manager will decide on the best course of action to take.", "Last updated on .From the section Boxing\n\nFloyd Mayweather has denied reports he has already agreed a bout with Conor McGregor, but called on the UFC champion to \"get the fight done\".\n\nIn a Twitter post, Mayweather wrote: \"There haven't been any deals between myself and any other fighters.\n\n\"If any changes are to come, I will be the first to let the world know.\"\n\nIn reply, McGregor posted a photo of himself sitting on a throne with the caption: \"I am in Las Vegas. Floyd has retired on my arrival.\"\n\nAnd later Mayweather added: \"Listen Conor McGregor, if you really want to get this fight done... take care of your business with the UFC and have your people get in touch with my people.\"\n\nMayweather, 39, retired from boxing for a second time in September 2015 after defending his WBC and WBA welterweight titles with a 49th win from his 49th fight, a victory that equalled Rocky Marciano's career record of 49-0.\n\nThe American, widely considered to be the best fighter of his generation, also retired in 2008 after 39 fights. In January he told ESPN he had offered McGregor $15m (£12m) to face him in the ring.\n\nMcGregor, 28, has never fought a professional boxing match and has said he wants $100m (£80m) to fight Mayweather.\n\nThe Irishman became the UFC's first dual-division champion in November and has previously challenged Mayweather to a fight under mixed martial arts rules.\n\nHis boxing licence was granted by the California State Athletic Commission in December, allowing him to box in the US state.\n\nHowever, he is under contract with the UFC and any potential fight with Mayweather would require approval from the body.\n\nUFC president Dana White has said he would pay each fighter $25m (£20m), but on Tuesday he told the Los Angeles Times: \"No deal is even close to being done.\"\n\nSpeaking in February of last year, Mayweather said he had been offered \"crazy numbers\", \"nine-figure\" sums to fight again.\n\n\"If I do get the itch to come back, it really won't be for the money but I have to get paid. That's why the nickname is Floyd 'Money' Mayweather,\" he added.", "Shahab Hosseini and Taraneh Alidoosti play a couple at odds in The Salesman\n\nAn Iranian Oscar contender affected by President Donald Trump's controversial travel ban is to have an open-air London premiere just hours before the ceremony.\n\nThe Salesman, up for the best foreign language film award, will be screened in Trafalgar Square on 26 February.\n\nIts director has said he will not go to the Oscars due to President Trump's attempts to bar people from seven Muslim-majority countries, including Iran.\n\nIt is not yet known if Asghar Farhadi will attend the event in London.\n\nThe director - whose earlier work A Separation won the foreign film Oscar in 2012 - said the free screening had \"a great symbolic value\".\n\nFarhadi won a prize for his screenplay at last year's Cannes Film Festival\n\n\"The gathering of the audience around The Salesman in this famous London square is a symbol of unity against the division and separation of people,\" he said.\n\nThe afternoon event will include a programme of readings and speeches from actors and directors, including Mike Leigh.\n\nThe Salesman, which opens in the UK on 17 March, tells of a couple whose relationship suffers as they rehearse an amateur production Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman.\n\nLast month the organisers of the Oscars said they found it \"extremely troubling\" that Farhadi could be barred from entering the US.\n\nIn a statement, the director said he would not attend the Academy Awards even if he were offered dispensation by the US government.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "When Carli Lloyd scored from the halfway line to complete a hat-trick in the first 16 minutes of the 2015 Women's World Cup final, her United States team-mate Hope Solo ran from her goal to scream: \"Are you even human?\"\n\nHaving already scored winning goals in the 2008 and 2012 Olympic finals, Lloyd was already one of the most celebrated players in the United States.\n\nBut earning America's first World Cup in 16 years and scoring such a spectacular goal pitched the midfielder's status to almost superhero level, with 2015 and 2016 Fifa World Player of the Year awards following.\n\nAfter spending years training on her own in a sparse field in Delran, New Jersey, and showing a single-mindedness which led to a relationship breakdown with her parents, Lloyd had finally proven her doubters wrong to reach the pinnacle of her sport.\n\nNow a new journey begins for the 34-year-old US captain after leaving Houston Dash for a short-term deal with Manchester City, which former England striker Kelly Smith, a former club team-mate of Lloyd's, calls a \"coup\".\n\nCity will now hope Lloyd's undoubted stardust and renowned dedication rub off on a team who are gunning for the Champions League title in their competition debut.\n\nFor those unfamiliar with Lloyd's story, her 55-yard lob in the World Cup final victory against Japan was no fluke.\n\nIt was the product of a feverish commitment to training - which included smashing shots from the halfway line - with her coach and mentor James Galanis. He has been credited with moulding a young player with serious confidence problems and a body not built for an elite midfielder into the world's best player.\n\nAs detailed in her autobiography, When Nobody Was Watching, it is clear nothing gets in the way of Lloyd's ambition to continually improve. And the good news for Manchester City fans is that, even after her World Cup triumph, she believes she can get even better.\n\n\"Her determination exceeds anyone I've ever met,\" Smith, who played with Lloyd for the New Jersey Wildcats in 2004 and spent the majority of her playing career in the US, told BBC Sport.\n\nCountry: US debut in 2005; 232 appearances and 96 goals Honours: 2008 & 2012 Olympic gold medallist, 2015 World Cup winner, 2015 and 2016 Fifa World Player of the Year\n\nFuelling that drive is a quest for perfection and a desire to prove people wrong. It began when she was dropped from the Under-21 national team and was ready to quit football altogether, toying with the idea of becoming an FBI agent.\n\nBut then she met Australian coach Galanis, a trainee electrician, who offered a turning point in her career and proved a lifelong mentor. In 2004 he concocted a 12-year plan, which included Lloyd becoming World Player of the Year by 2016.\n\nWhile her relationship with Galanis has been the backbone of her success, some of her family have blended into the background.\n\nHer golfer husband, Brian Hollins, whom she met in her teens, has learned to stay away from big tournaments to prevent any distractions. And Lloyd's long-running feud with her parents dates back to the beginning of her career when she chose to do things her own way.\n\nThey disapproved of her aloofness around US team-mates and a choice of agent, and weeks before her triumph at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, asked her to move her possessions out of their home.\n\nLloyd hints in her book they may have been jealous of the part Galanis has played in her career and despite calling the situation \"heartbreaking\", has not spoken to them since 2012.\n\nLloyd says she \"doesn't do fake\" and has had disagreements with former US coaches but current manager Jill Ellis, who has had a long-standing connection with her captain since she managed the under-21 team, has said Lloyd is \"team-orientated\" and \"real\".\n\nWashington Spirit midfielder Joanna Lohman, who has known Lloyd since they were 14 and played in the same US youth team, told BBC Sport: \"It's great to have that edge, look where it's taken her.\n\n\"When you don't back down on things and you see things as challenges as opposed to failures, it pushes you even harder.\"\n\nAs a big Liverpool fan, Lloyd has always looked up to former Red Steven Gerrard as the player she wanted to emulate: a box-to-box midfielder with an eye for goal and a fearsome shot.\n\nSmith likens her more to former Chelsea midfielder Frank Lampard for her \"goalscoring ability, and how she arrives late in the box\" but says it has taken time to develop those skills.\n\n\"She wasn't the most technical back when we played, she isn't like Brazilian forward Marta, who beats two or three players at a time,\" Smith adds. \"But she was always very fit, had a fantastic work-rate and was a winner.\"\n\nThat much has been proven in her international career, with three major titles and 96 goals in 232 appearances, making her the national team's all-time highest goal-scoring midfielder. Current US boss Ellis calls Lloyd \"incredible for her consistency in big games\".\n\nClub success for Lloyd has been less impressive. She is yet to win a US domestic championship - the closest she came was a runners-up medal with Western New York Flash in 2013, so winning the Champions League or FA Cup with Manchester City would be a glittering addition to her CV.\n\nCan she help City achieve that success in the twilight of her career? Lloyd has already proven that age has little effect on her work-rate.\n\n\"Carli's a leader on and off the pitch and her winning mentality will help them reach the next level,\" Smith says.\n\nFormer England captain Casey Stoney says Lloyd will have a massive influence on City and the league.\n\n\"She's not past her peak,\" the Liverpool defender said. \"Look at [Manchester United forward] Zlatan Ibrahimovic - he's playing some of the best football of his career and he's 35.\n\n\"Experience buys you time on the ball and better decision-making. It wouldn't surprise me if she was playing in the next World Cup in two years' time.\"\n\nWhy has Lloyd come to England?\n\nIf Manchester City were looking for a marquee signing to demonstrate their growing status in women's football, then Lloyd is a stunning addition to their squad.\n\nLloyd is one of several US players who have recently left their country to ply their trade in Europe.\n\nThe best paid player in women's football, Alex Morgan, joined French side Lyon, lightning-fast winger Crystal Dunn signed for Chelsea and midfielder Heather O'Reilly, who recently retired from international football, joined Arsenal.\n\nBut according to Stoney, Lloyd will be \"the biggest overseas player to have played in England, without a doubt\". It is likely she will have a salary to match.\n\nCity, who only played their first season in the FA Women's Super League in 2014, won the title last season, and with the club's wealthy owners investing more in players and facilities than any other English side, a period of dominance looks likely.\n\nPart of that masterplan is to make inroads in Europe in their debut Champions League season, which continues with a quarter-final tie against Danish side Fortuna Hjorring on 23 March.\n\nBut as much as Lloyd can benefit City, they can also provide a new chapter for the attacking midfielder.\n\nUS boss Ellis, who was born in England, has encouraged American players to experience European football in a year when there are no major tournaments. It comes at a time when US players are in a pay dispute with the national federation, but Smith believes it has more to do with the quality of the football on offer in Europe.\n\n\"The game in America can often be quite back to front and long ball, but players are more technical in Europe and nowhere more than in the Champions League so players want to sample that,\" she says.\n\n\"Lloyd will also experience the best facilities around. Sometimes in the American league you use university pitches and changing rooms, so to be part of a club like Manchester City can be quite precious to Carli.\"", "Haaruun says he would visit the violent websites at the weekend when everyone was outside playing\n\nWhat leads a young child to stand up in front of his class and tell his school friends that he agrees with the aims and objectives of the so-called Islamic State?\n\nMatthew Price met one of the youngsters identified through the government's controversial Prevent programme as being at risk from radicalisation.\n\nThe boy is now 10 years old. He is small, with a round face and engaged eyes. You can tell he is intelligent because he asks questions - lots of them. It is that curiosity that got him into trouble in the first place.\n\nThese days he will not repeat the exact words he used just over a year ago in his primary school classroom in west London.\n\nWhat we are told, however, is that he stood up in front of his class and declared his support for the so-called Islamic State.\n\nIt was a declaration that set in motion a series of interventions from his teachers, children's services and the government's Prevent team which has been set up to de-radicalise at-risk individuals.\n\nHaaruun started researching IS after the Paris attacks\n\nFor obvious reasons we are not revealing the identity of this boy, but let's call him Haaruun. He lives in London, with his mother and several brothers and sisters, and was nine years old when his journey began.\n\n\"I saw on the news the Paris attacks,\" he says. \"As soon as that happened I was on the computer.\n\n\"I searched up ISIS on Google and it came up to BBC News. I saw that. Then I went down and it went to Channel 4 'Children of the Caliphate' and I was shocked. Then I watched other sites.\"\n\nIt was those other sites that really exposed Haaruun to the brutality of IS and left him - his case worker believes - vulnerable to radicalisation.\n\n\"It led me to this one that had brutal executions and them burning people. It just showed them lighting them on fire. The people chained up, lighting them on fire and then they burned them.\"\n\nThere is no emotion as Haaruun describes another video.\n\n\"The men were walking with their hands behind their back,\" he recalls. \"Then they were hit and told to sit down.\"\n\nHe doesn't pause as he delivers the next sentence: \"Then they cut their heads off.\"\n\nThere is no typical case that lands on the desks of Prevent teams across the country.\n\nThey work with children - some as young as Haaruun, others are teenagers - and they work with adults.\n\nSince 2012, Prevent has dealt with more than 1,000 cases. Many involve Islamist radicalisation and in the last year, around a quarter of referrals were because of concerns about far-right extremism.\n\nIt was a far-right website seeking to denigrate Islam which Haaruun had come across and where he was looking at the brutal IS videos.\n\n\"It would be on a weekend, like 'cos everyone was going outside and playing. So when they were all gone and the house was empty, I would go and sit freely in the living room and search up.\"\n\nSiddhartha Dhar, also known as Abu Rumaysah, was suspected of being the man behind some of the IS videos of which Haaruun became aware\n\nHe was not the only one at school who was interested.\n\n\"They'll be kids fighting - like some kids are saying 'Ah, Hezbollah are stronger than ISIS'.\"\n\nHaaruun says a lot of children in his school know about IS because so many have family backgrounds in the Middle East.\n\n\"There was a group of eight children which were always speaking about it. They were searching it up - even in the classroom.\n\n\"When we were doing some research, a boy searched up ISIS and he went on the video. I said 'close the tab' and the teacher came and he heard something and he said 'What was that' - and they all said 'Nothing'.\n\n\"I knew what I was looking at was bad, but then it wasn't only me that was doing it. It was unfair. Other people got away with it.\"\n\nBehind the scenes, unknown to the school, and discovered only by the woman from Prevent who ended up working his case, Haaruun was being bullied.\n\nHe does not talk about it much now. Yet some of the children, he says - both Muslim and non-Muslim - labelled him a \"terrorist\".\n\nThe bullying seems to have played a significant factor in isolating Haaruun and in fuelling his interest in IS. Gradually he became an expert in the group and could name its leadership structure.\n\nIt was all information that led to that day when he stood up in class and declared his sympathy for IS. And that led a woman called Mariam to his home.\n\n\"My mum just said to me one day, 'There's someone coming to the house'. I heard Mariam come in. I was scared and Mariam said the reason she was here and I thought I was going to go to prison.\"\n\nMariam - she prefers we do not use her surname because of her continuing work for Prevent's Kensington and Chelsea team - says it took time to gain Haaruun's trust.\n\n\"It took quite a few meetings before he was opening up and talking about all the things he watched,\" she says.\n\nThere followed almost a year of work between the two. Haaruun would take Mariam to the websites he accessed and they would discuss the videos.\n\nMariam warns that vulnerable people could become radicalised through chatrooms\n\nShe used a social work tool in which Haaruun was asked to list things that made him happy, others that he was interested in and things that were scary.\n\nUnder happy he put \"peace\" and \"family\" and \"Islam\" and under interesting went \"war\".\n\n\"ISIS\" went under scary. So too did \"school\" - and that is what alerted Mariam to the bullying.\n\nHaaruun's mother had tried to deal with the problem, but he had found a way of seeing the material he wanted to see. \"She couldn't keep up with the questions,\" Mariam says.\n\nToday, she does not have to. Prevent have ended their work with Haaruun and if he has learned one thing, he says, it's \"not to go on bad things - bad sites\".\n\n\"Mariam told me the repercussions of it and the impact of how it's not good. Like if you keep on watching it you'll be brainwashed and then you or someone will join ISIS and they will be in trouble and you'll go to prison,\" he says, still matter-of-fact.\n\nBut could that genuinely have happened to Haaruun?\n\n\"We're not suggesting he would become a terrorist,\" says Mariam. \"What we are saying is he was vulnerable.\n\n\"(He could have gone) on to a chatroom and spoken to someone who's there to radicalise him. Could he have said something out on the street and then someone's walking by who's got an interest and attempts to radicalise him?\n\n\"He is a vulnerable young man who's seeing things, forming opinions. How that would have developed without Prevent, we can't predict that.\n\n\"We're not saying he's going to take a bomb and blow anyone up. But it's about minimising those risks.\"\n\nHaaruun is still the engaged, interested little boy he always was.\n\nMariam and the team have given him access to what they call \"safe spaces\" in which to learn. People from his community, the school and other activities all help him explore the wider world, but now in a safe way.\n\nHe says he wants to be a lawyer or an accountant. There is a pause and he adds, with a shy smile, \"or a journalist\".\n\nHear Matthew Price's report on BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Tuesday morning or on iPlayer afterwards.\n• None What is Prevent- - Lets Talk About It The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A man is using sign language to share pop music with deaf people.\n\nWayne Barrow, from Birmingham, whose parents are profoundly deaf, makes online videos in which he signs lyrics.\n\nHe said he learned to sign before he learned English and has called for signing to be taught in schools.\n\nThe videos, which are posted to Facebook and YouTube, have, according to Mr Barrow, helped his mother understand music.", "Last updated on .From the section Snooker\n\nCoverage: Live television coverage on BBC Two Wales, BBC Red Button and online\n\nDefending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan and world number one Mark Selby both progressed to the second round of the Welsh Open on Tuesday.\n\nO'Sullivan, 41, chasing a fifth Welsh Open title, recovered from going a frame down to beat Tom Ford 4-1 and set up a meeting with Mark Davis.\n\nFellow Englishman Selby, 33, did not drop a frame as he beat Liam Highfield.\n• None View the scores and schedule of play from the 2017 Welsh Open.\n\nThere was another surprise exit as China's world number five Ding Junhui was knocked out in the first round in a 4-2 loss to Finland's Robin Hull.\n\nWorld number four Judd Trump eased through 4-1 against Andrew Higginson, while Scottish Open champion Marco Fu beat Martin Gould 4-2.\n\nFifteen-year-old Welsh schoolboy Jackson Page is back in action on Wednesday, when he faces John Astley in the second round.\n\nThe teenage wildcard entry eliminated world number 123 Jason Weston in the first round of his debut professional tournament on Monday.\n\nFind out how to get into snooker, pool and billiards with our fully inclusive guide.\n\nSign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app.", "Sherlock has been sold internationally to 240 territories\n\nSherlock has come out on top again - this time in a worldwide poll of most popular BBC television characters.\n\nActor Benedict Cumberbatch said he was \"honoured\" to see his portrayal of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's sleuth voted top by viewers in seven countries.\n\nHe continued: \"Who would have thought a high-functioning sociopath could be so popular... all over the world?\"\n\nAnother poll of iconic BBC moments saw Sherlock seemingly falling to his death score more than a quarter of the vote.\n\nThat put the ending of 2012's Reichenbach Fall episode streets ahead of Monty Python's Dead Parrot sketch, its closest competitor.\n\nThe BBC Worldwide Showcase poll surveyed more than 7,000 people from Australia, France, Germany, India, Japan, Mexico and the United States.\n\nAlmost 30% of respondents put Sherlock Holmes top, ahead of the Doctor of Doctor Who fame, Idris Elba's Luther, Fawlty Towers' Basil and Top Gear's Stig.\n\nPatsy Stone, played by Joanna Lumley, is the most fabulous woman on the BBC's popularity list\n\nAb Fab's Patsy Stone is the highest ranking woman in the list - though that may change if the next Doctor is female, or if it turns out The Stig has been keeping something from us.\n\nOther characters on the Top 10 include Edmund Blackadder, Hyacinth Bucket from Keeping Up Appearances and the Vicar of Dibley.\n\nBasil Fawlty makes another appearance in the Top 10 of most iconic BBC moments, thanks to the Gourmet Night episode in which he attacks his car.\n\nOther moments singled out include Colin Firth's Mr Darcy emerging from a lake in Pride and Prejudice and David Brent's \"dancing\" in The Office.\n\nBBC Worldwide's Paul Dempsey said the poll demonstrated \"the love and affection audiences have for our shows around the world\".\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Repeated headers during a footballer's professional career may be linked to long-term brain damage, according to tentative evidence from UK scientists.\n\nThe research follows anecdotal reports that players who head balls may be more prone to developing dementia later in life.\n\nThe Football Association says it will look at this area more closely.\n\nExperts said recreational players were unlikely to incur problems.\n\nDawn Astle, the daughter of former England and West Brom striker Jeff Astle, who died aged 59 suffering from early onset dementia, said it was \"obvious that it [his dementia] was linked to his footballing career\".\n\nThe inquest into his death in 2002 found that repeatedly heading heavy leather footballs had contributed to trauma to his brain.\n\nMs Astle told BBC Radio 5 Live: \"At the coroner's inquest, football tried to sweep his death under a carpet. They didn't want to know, they didn't want to think that football could be a killer and sadly, it is. It can be.\"\n\nShe said her father was 55 and physically very fit when he went to the doctor, who diagnosed him with the early onset of dementia.\n\nBy the end he \"didn't even know he'd ever been a footballer\", she said, before adding: \"Everything football ever gave him, football had taken away.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Jeff Astle's daughter tells Today it's \"unforgivable\" the problem was ignored for so long\n\nResearchers from University College London and Cardiff University examined the brains of five people who had been professional footballers and one who had been a committed amateur throughout his life.\n\nThey had played football for an average of 26 years and all six went on to develop dementia in their 60s.\n\nWhile performing post mortem examinations, scientists found signs of brain injury - called chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in four cases.\n\nCTE has been linked to memory loss, depression and dementia and has been seen in other contact sports.\n\nProf Huw Morris, of University College London, told the BBC: \"When we examined their brains at autopsy we saw the sorts of changes that are seen in ex-boxers, the changes that are often associated with repeated brain injury which are known as CTE.\n\n\"So really for the first time in a series of players we have shown that there is evidence that head injury has occurred earlier in their life which presumably has some impact on them developing dementia.\"\n\nIn the study, published in the journal Acta Neuropathologica, the report's authors make it clear they were not analysing the risks of heading by children.\n\nJeff Astle won five caps for England and played in the 1970 World Cup Finals\n\nBut the science is far from clear-cut.\n\nEach brain also showed signs of Alzheimer's disease and some had blood vessel changes that can also lead to dementia.\n\nResearchers speculate that it was a combination of factors that contributed to dementia in these players.\n\nBut they acknowledge their research cannot definitively prove a link between football and dementia and are calling for larger studies to look at footballers' long-term brain health.\n\nThere are many different types of dementia - Alzheimer's is the most common form\n\nDr David Reynolds, at the charity Alzheimer's Research UK, said: \"The causes of dementia are complex and it is likely that the condition is caused by a combination of age, lifestyle and genetic factors.\n\n\"Further research is needed to shed light on how lifestyle factors such as playing sport may alter dementia risk, and how this sits in the context of the well-established benefits of being physically active.\"\n\nHe added that for people who are recreational footballers, football injuries are unlikely to cause long-term problems and he pointed to expert advice that the benefit of exercise is likely to outweigh the risks.\n\nA number of previous cases involving boxers and American footballers have suggested that repetitive blows can cause long-lasting and progressive brain damage.\n\nBut until now there have only been a few case reports of individual footballers with CTE in the UK and the extent of the issue is still unknown.\n\nThe Football Association welcomed the study and said research was particularly needed to find out whether degenerative brain disease is more common in ex-footballers.\n\nDr Charlotte Cowie, of the FA, added: \"The FA is determined to support this research and is also committed to ensuring that any research process is independent, robust and thorough, so that when the results emerge, everyone in the game can be confident in its findings.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland must make people \"fall in love\" with Test cricket again, says newly appointed vice-captain Ben Stokes.\n\nYorkshire batsman Joe Root has been named as new Test captain after Alastair Cook resigned after more than four years in charge.\n\n\"We need to win but we want to perform in a manner that makes people want to come and watch us,\" Stokes said.\n\nRoot's first Test match as England skipper is against South Africa at Lord's beginning on 7 July.\n\nThe 26-year-old has stepped up from vice-captain, with Durham all-rounder Stokes, 25, filling the role as his deputy.\n\n\"Test cricket is the pinnacle and we need people to fall in love with it again,\" added Stokes.\n\nDiscussing his elevation to vice-captain, he added: \"Everything I do is to win and being vice-captain won't change me as a person or as a player.\n\n\"I want to be involved in all aspects of the game, whether it's hitting the winning runs or taking the final wicket. I have always wanted to be in the middle of it.\n\n\"Being vice-captain I will have to bring a mental and supportive side too. If I am not involved in the game then I will have to add my tactical input.\n\n\"I have been more vocal over the last year but I only speak when I think something needs to be said. I'm not one for cliches.\n\n\"Just being vice-captain doesn't give me the right to say whatever I want.\"\n\nEngland have lost six of their past eight Tests, the most recent by an innings and 75 runs against India in December as they slipped to a 4-0 series defeat.", "Courtesy of the Museum of Broken Relationships One heartbroken person sent a collection of font examples they \"mutually loved\" with their partner\n\nAfter a relationship ends, even the most mundane objects can become painful reminders. One museum in Los Angeles puts them on display.\n\nWhen you're heartbroken, everything reminds you of the person who's no longer there. So do you burn your love letters? Throw away your wedding dress after a divorce? Send back that single mismatched sock?\n\nAt the Museum of Broken Relationships in Hollywood, everyday stuff is exhibited as art along with each object's story of betrayal or loss. The result is a moving collection of heartbreak.\n\nOne woman from San Francisco crammed her wedding dress into a pickle jar after her husband of five years left her. Even though her dress was \"non-traditional\" - meaning the kind you could wear again - she never did.\n\n\"I hate throwing perfectly functional items in landfills but would hate to see someone walking around in my once beautiful but now sadness-infused dress,\" the woman wrote on a card now on display next to the jar.\n\nThe jar was used mainly for space, she wrote, but \"any sort of appropriate pickle metaphors can also be invoked\".\n\nAll of the items at the museum are exhibited anonymously. The museum, which opened this summer, was created by a lawyer who visited the original Museum of Broken Relationships in Croatia and wanted to bring the concept to Los Angeles.\n\nTwo artists opened the Croatian museum after breaking up and deciding to curate the debris from their relationship.\n\nThe exhibits in the LA museum are donated from around the world.\n\nA Norwegian donated an iron with the short story: \"This iron was used to iron my wedding suit. Now it is the only thing left.\"\n\nOne exhibit displays an expensive bottle of wine a British couple having an affair planned to drink once they both left their spouses. But the wine remains untouched, the bottle never opened.\n\nWhat happened to their marriages, or if their spouses knew about their infidelity, is left unsaid.\n\nA Slovenian donated a key - a small gift from a friend. The story behind the key says: \"You turned my head; you just did not want to sleep with me. I realized how much you loved me only after you died of Aids.\"\n\nThe museum attracts both the broken-hearted having a cathartic cry and couples on dates, says Alexis Hyde, the director of the museum.\n\nBut she was surprised that it's become a family destination for parents looking for ways to talk about love with their teenage children.\n\n\"It becomes this really safe place to talk about sex and relationships in a way that's not like 'Gross, mom stop talking to me,'\" Ms Hyde says.\n\n\"It's a really beautiful way to open a dialogue about what is OK and what is not,\" she says.\n\n\"You're going to have your heart broken and that's normal. Even though you feel so alone, you're actually very normal.\"\n\n\"It's a little less isolating I think.\"\n\nOne of the more unusual exhibits is a pair of sizeable silicone breast implants a woman says she felt pressured to get by an ex-boyfriend. Her body rejected the implants and she had to have multiple surgeries to remove them and reconstruct her body.\n\nCourtesy of the Museum of Broken Relationships\n\n\"She held on to them to remind herself don't change for someone else. You have to love yourself to be loved and be in a productive relationship,\" Ms Hyde says, adding that the woman hoped her donation would inspire others to have healthier relationships.\n\n\"She was hoping that people would read this and take the cautionary tale.\"\n\nThe museum also includes a broken promise ring and a collection of tins, boxes and books with examples of the \"mutually loved font\" of a former couple.\n\nThere's a dress bought by a girl who planned to wear it to impress a boy. But the boy killed himself before she had the chance.\n\nMix tapes - a sign of love - now in the museum\n\nThere's also a drawer full of mix tapes on display. If you don't remember mix tapes, they were the ultimate romantic gesture of the 1980s - painstakingly-made collections of music put together by recording songs off the radio on to cassette tapes.\n\nIf you missed the start of the song you planned to record, you had to wait for the DJ to play it again the next hour or day, depending on the song's popularity.\n\nThe collection is not what people have come to expect from a museum on Hollywood Boulevard, where tourists frequent Madame Tussauds wax museum and where actors dressed as Chewbacca and Spider-Man hustle tourists for photos.\n\n\"This museum cuts through to the truth of the human experience now like a scalpel. I think that it's a very sophisticated, conceptual art museum even though maybe the objects that compose it themselves individually might not be necessarily considered art,\" says Ms Hyde.\n\nAlexis Hyde says the museum \"cuts through to the truth of the human experience\"\n\nVisitors here are more from the local Los Angeles art scene than tourists.\n\nInside, it's a quiet, cathartic museum and many visitors walk the museum alone, quietly crying.\n\nMany visitors say they come to feel less alone and more connected to their fellow lonely hearts.\n\nBut one visitor says the experience is overwhelming.\n\n\"I'm feeling their pain,\" he says of the people who donated items to the museum.\n\n\"I just feel so alone in here.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nFormer Sunderland striker Asamoah Gyan is among a group of more than 40 players deemed to have \"unethical hair\" under United Arab Emirates Football Association (UAEFA) guidelines.\n\nThe 31-year-old Ghanaian is on loan at Dubai-based Arabian Gulf League side Al Ahli from Shanghai SIPG.\n\nSome Islamic teachings ban 'Qaza' hairstyles, where only part of the head is shaved.\n\nIndividual match referees judge whether players' haircuts are appropriate.\n\nSome match officials in the United Arab Emirates enforce the rules because they are concerned about children copying the styles.\n\nSimilar guidelines have been enforced in neighbouring countries. In 2012, Saudi Arabia goalkeeper Waleed Abdullah was told to cut his \"un-Islamic\" hair by the referee before playing for his club side Al Shabab.\n\nThe UAEFA sends a player's club a warning letter in the first instance, with punishments escalating to a fine and then a suspension if he does not comply.\n\nGyan is one of 46 players at the warning letter stage.\n\nAccording to Middle Eastern football website Ahdaaf, Al Wahda's Suhail Al-Mansoori (pictured below) was told to cut his hair while UAE international and 2016 Asian footballer of the year Omar Abdulrahman, who sports a similar style and also plays in the Arabian Gulf League, was let off.", "Rumours suggest that Nokia are planning to bring back their iconic 3310 phone.\n\nMobile users of a certain age have been getting very excited on social media about the return of this sturdy, reliable handset.\n\nIf you were in the market for a new phone in the year 2000, then the 3310 may have been on your wish-list.\n\nBut when Newsbeat contacted Nokia about the rumours, the company refused to comment.\n\n\"Though we're as excited as everyone else to hear their news, as we have often said about such stories, we do not comment on rumour or speculation,\" a spokesperson tells us.\n\nIf you ever owned one of these phones then the return of the 3310 may be exciting news to you\n\nIt may seem unlikely in the world of Android and iPhones that anyone would want a 17-year-old handset that was best known for playing Snake, but the experts believe there is a place in the market.\n\n\"I'm fairly confident my grandmother could use a 3310, but she wouldn't know where to start with an iPhone or Android,\" Alistair Charlton, deputy technology editor at the IB Times, tells Newsbeat.\n\n\"You can take a £20 phone to a festival and leave your expensive, glass-fronted iPhone at home.\n\n\"Backpackers and the like probably appreciate them too, given their tough build, cheap price and long battery life.\"\n\nMany smartphone users complain about their handset's battery and this could prove the main selling point for users.\n\n\"What an interest in the 3310 does show us though is that battery life is still a major concern for consumers, and one that's not being well-addressed by some smart phones, namely the iPhone,\" Elizabeth Varley, founder and CEO of tech community TechHub, tells Newsbeat.\n\nAnd let's not forget, when Adele revealed the video for Hello back in 2015, she was seen in it making a call on a retro flip phone - not a smart device.\n\nAround that time, the media reported a rise in people seeking old phones, as the 1990s were firmly back in fashion and people like Rihanna were walking round chatting on a chunky mobile.\n\nSo it's not just a phone for drug dealers, as many Twitter users seem to think.\n\nAlistair also backs the author of the original source of the 3310 rumours, VentureBeat writer Evan Blass, as a credible source for technology leaks.\n\nHe describes the journalist as \"a renowned tech leaker who is often accurate with his predictions.\"\n\nBut Alistair also says that to succeed in the current market, Nokia will need to update the 3310's basic features to be relevant in 2017.\n\n\"We don't communicate through calls and SMS as much as we did in the days of the 3310,\" he says.\n\n\"If it had an internet connection and access to WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger, then maybe it has a place.\"\n\nBut Elizabeth Varley doesn't believe Nokia's future can be built on models from the past.\n\n\"The best way forward is rarely backwards,\" she says.\n\n\"To really compete, innovation is the key.\"\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "The claim: The UK's spending on defence fell below 2% of GDP in 2016.\n\nReality Check verdict: Nato has confirmed that its figures for 2016 show the UK is still meeting the 2% target, but won't release the full details until next month. The amount that the IISS claims that defence spending is below 2% of GDP is tiny by the standards of government spending, and may easily be erased by using different exchange rates or definitions of defence spending.\n\nDefence think tank the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) claimed on Tuesday that the UK had dropped below its pledge to spend 2% of GDP on defence, made in the Strategic Defence Review in 2015.\n\nGDP is what you get when you add up all the goods and services produced in an economy. In the UK in 2016 it was about £1.87 trillion.\n\nThe IISS said that as a result of UK GDP being higher than expected, the UK had actually only spent 1.98% of GDP on defence in 2016.\n\nThe Ministry of Defence says that the IISS figures are wrong. It pointed to Nato figures saying that the UK spent 2.21% of GDP on defence last year.\n\nThat figure is based on analysis from Nato, which was published last July, meaning they were based on forecasts for both GDP and spending.\n\nBut Nato later said that it had looked at the final numbers for 2016 and could confirm that the UK was still meeting the 2% target, but it would not be releasing the full figures until next month.\n\nThe alliance said that the UK, US, Poland, Greece and Estonia met the target last year.\n\nAs this is a Nato target, it is Nato's methodology that is important. Before making the calculation, Nato converts both defence spending and GDP into US dollars at 2010 exchange rates and prices.\n\nThere are disagreements about what should and what should not count as military spending - whether pensions paid to soldiers' widows count, for example.\n\nIISS has calculated the figure slightly differently. It gets to a figure of £38.3bn for UK defence spending in 2016 .\n\nIf you divide that by the ONS figure for GDP you get 2.05%, but that's not what the IISS has done. Because it is trying to make comparisons between different countries, it has converted all the figures into US dollars, using International Monetary Fund exchange rates and also used IMF GDP figures.\n\nWhen you do that, you get to 1.98%.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "\"When I started 10 years ago it was pretty quiet.\"\n\nIn a light, airy office on the ground floor of Europol's brutalist headquarters in The Hague, David Ellero, one of its senior officials, is reflecting on how the organisation has changed since he joined in 2007. In those days, some people confused Europol with Interpol and others thought it was just an annoying part of the EU's bureaucratic machinery.\n\n\"Our counterparts, or the investigators in the member states, didn't really know what we did,\" Ellero says.\n\nNow, the European Police Office, to give it its official title, is recognised across the law enforcement world, with a budget of almost £100m, and a workforce of more than 1000, to match.\n\nIts effectiveness certainly isn't lost on the UK government, which is preparing to start negotiations about Britain's role in Europol after the country leaves the EU. Amber Rudd, the Home Secretary, has said that the agency plays an \"incredibly important role in keeping us safe in Europe\".\n\n\"The phone rings quite often,\" says Ellero, with typical understatement.\n\nA former detective - much of his career was spent in Italy investigating Mafia killings - he now heads a department tackling the top organised crime groups across the Continent.\n\n\"For a criminal to communicate with his counterparts across Europe it takes a second on WhatsApp.\n\nEuropol headquarters in The Hague - the second floor is a \"secure zone\"\n\n\"We need to make sure that... police (can act) at the same speed even if they have different judicial set-ups and and even if they speak different languages,\" adds Ellero, pointing out that \"even pickpockets\" operate transnationally.\n\nThe main function of Europol, which started work in 1999, is to act as a hub for the exchange of intelligence between 750 global agencies. It also oversees databases containing tens of millions of pieces of information on criminals, offences and suspect vehicles, and it helps co-ordinate crime-fighting operations against drug dealers, human trafficking gangs and terrorists.\n\nForty countries - including the EU member states and others such as the US and Australia - communicate via a system called Siena - hundreds of thousands of encrypted operational messages are sent every year.\n\nThe agency's main intelligence database - Europol Information System (EIS) - keeps track of crimes, suspects and convicted criminals, including terrorism cases. Only Europol members have direct access to the EIS; other countries must put in a request.\n\nEuropol uses a unique database known as the Analysis Work File (AWF). More than 100 specialists based in The Hague use AWF to help investigators across the EU better understand and tackle crime and organised crime groups - the system has more than 33 million active entries.\n\nOutside Europol, other pan-European intelligence systems help in the fight against crime including the Schengen Information System (SIS). Although the UK is not among the 26 countries that have open borders under the Schengen agreement it can access the database which records cross-border movements and associated intelligence.\n\nIn 2015, the SIS was interrogated three billion times by law enforcement officers across Europe with 64 million \"alerts\" placed on the system every day relating to everything from stolen vehicles and missing children to foreign fighters returning to Europe from Syria and Iraq.\n\nIndeed, one of the fastest-growing areas of work at Europol involves countering the spread of propaganda from terrorist groups and extremists. A 26-strong team in the Internet Referral Unit spends each day combing the web for material and then persuading social media companies and service providers to remove it.\n\nThe head of the unit, Vincent Semestre, likens it to \"emptying the ocean with a spoon\". He says they've identified 91 internet platforms that have contained extremist content, more than 50 of which have co-operated with Europol in deleting the material.\n\nOver the past 18 months the team's most intense periods of work have come after terror attacks in Europe, when it's had to act quickly to prevent the spread of extremist images, videos and postings.\n\n\"You need to have capacity in-house, which is understanding this ideology in its original language: which means staff speaking Arabic, speaking Russian, speaking Turkish,\" says Semestre, who worked for the French judicial police before joining Europol.\n\nThe European Cybercrime Centre is just one part of Europol\n\n\"Multiplying these resources needed by all the member states would be quite difficult.\n\n\"You need to have continuous monitoring of the technological environment so it made sense to have this centralised in Europol in order to provide these centralised services to all the member states,\" he adds.\n\nDespite the serious nature of their work, there's a relaxed and friendly atmosphere inside the Europol building - it looks more like an art college than a police station.\n\nNevertheless, security is tight: everyone is searched on entry, bags are X-rayed, identity documents are taken away to be checked. Around the atrium, blinds are drawn on the windows of meeting rooms, signifying that confidential briefings are taking place.\n\nOn the second floor, there's another layer of protection, with extra ID checks and access possible only via a palm print scanner. It's known as the \"secure zone\" and it's here, and on the floors above, that each of the EU's member states, plus 14 other countries, have their own staff.\n\nIn total, there are more than 200 of them - they're called liaison officers - and they specialise in crimes such as gun-running, trafficking and drug smuggling.\n\nEvery EU member state, plus 14 other nations, has staff in the building\n\nThe main benefit is that representatives of each country can meet in person to sort out the complexities of cross-border police work. For Britain's 17 liaison officers, who work from an office which neighbours the bureaux of Luxembourg, the Republic of Ireland, Belgium and the Netherlands, an added advantage is that the language of Europol is English.\n\nKenny Dron, who's in charge of the UK office, says there's no need for long-distance phone calls, texts... or emails.\n\n\"Emails just don't work when you've got people to protect and lives to protect back in the UK,\" says Dron, who's spent 30 years in border policing and intelligence work.\n\n\"So you've got to have that face-to-face contact to ensure that the other country and your colleagues understand the severity of the situation.\"\n\nAlthough Britain will almost certainly continue to have liaison officers at Europol after Brexit (America isn't in the EU and it has more than 20 staff based there) what's far less clear is the future of the 50 other UK law enforcement employees in the Hague. They're currently overseeing a range of cross-border policing operations, on child sexual exploitation, excise fraud and heroin trafficking, among others.\n\nOne of the British officers, Laura Clark, seconded from the National Crime Agency to work in Europol's migrant smuggling centre, says it would be a \"real shame\" if Britain can't continue to play a major part in the organisation.\n\n\"We would miss a lot of the intelligence that goes through. There's a lot of juicy intelligence that I see that wouldn't be able to get given to countries, a lot of support for investigations wouldn't happen,\" she says.\n\nEuropol director Rob Wainwright speaks of \"some diminution\" in the UK's rights and responsibilities to the organisation post-Brexit\n\nIn January, reflecting on Britain's likely relationship with Europol after Brexit, Amber Rudd told the House of Commons Home Affairs Select Committee: \"I expect and hope us to have an active role going forward,\" pointing out that the UK was \"one of the largest contributors\" to the EU agency's database.\n\nRob Wainwright, Europol's director since 2009, goes further, saying Britain is \"rightly regarded as a natural leader\" on security issues.\n\n\"There is no doubt that if you look over the last 20 or 30 years the evolution of police co-operation in Europe, not just at Europol, there is a heavy British footprint around that,\" says Wainwright, who declares himself to be a \"proud Brit\".\n\nBut he says the \"fullest benefits\" of the organisation go to EU-member states, and if, after Brexit, Britain has an arrangement with Europol akin to that of non-members such as the USA or Norway, Wainwright says there'll be \"some diminution\" in the UK's rights and responsibilities. They have limited access to intelligence and less say over operations and decisions.\n\n\"The opportunity therefore to share that experience, the opportunity to leverage that influence, is going to change and maybe diminish and I think those in charge of running that in Britain will need to find alternative ways therefore of making sure that Britain can still have a real voice in European security affairs,\" he says.\n\nBy then, Rob Wainwright, who's credited with introducing reforms to Europol that have enhanced its standing and effectiveness, will have left the Hague headquarters, as his contract expires in April 2018.\n\nHis successor will inherit an organisation in good shape - but one that will have to adjust to a different relationship with the UK.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nScotland captain Greig Laidlaw has been ruled out for the rest of the Six Nations through injury.\n\nLaidlaw, 31, suffered an ankle injury in the first half of the 22-16 defeat by France last weekend.\n\nThe Gloucester scrum-half left the Stade de France on crutches on Sunday and his injury was assessed following his return.\n\nScottish Rugby confirmed the 58-time capped player sustained ligament damage against the French.\n\n\"The extent of the damage is such that he will take no further part in the current championship,\" Scottish Rugby added in a statement.\n\n\"Laidlaw will see a specialist later in the week to determine the best course of management and estimated time out of the sport.\"\n\n'The boys will be able to step up'\n\nLaidlaw was replaced by Glasgow's Ali Price in Paris. John Barclay, who took over as captain, also departed with a head knock before half-time, only for his replacement John Hardie to suffer the same fate early in the second half.\n\nScotland hooker Ross Ford believes the side will be able to \"shoulder the burden\" without their injured captain.\n\n\"Greig's a massive part of the squad and he's a great leader,\" said Ford.\n\n\"But we've got a leadership group together that's been there helping Greig out.\n\n\"Whatever does happen, the boys will be able to step up and take that role on and move forward.\n\n\"We do it as a group and Greig's the focal point, but we've got a group of leaders there who can shoulder the burden and take it on.\"\n\nSpeaking on Saturday before he knew the extent of his injury, Scotland head coach Vern Cotter said: \"Greig has a big part to play as captain and half-back, but Ali played well when he came on and the guys behind adapted well.\n\n\"These things do happen and we had trained for it. John Barclay and John Hardie both had head injury assessments so we will have to wait and see how they come through the return-to-play protocols.\"", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nArsenal's Champions League hopes lie in tatters at the last-16 stage yet again following a first-leg battering at Bayern Munich.\n\nThe Gunners, who have been eliminated in the first knockout round of the competition in each of the last six seasons, twice by Bayern, not only conceded five goals but over 75% possession in Germany.\n\nTheir challenge lasted until the break thanks to Alexis Sanchez, who followed up his own missed penalty to equalise after Arjen Robben's superbly-struck 25-yard opener.\n\nBut after Arsenal lost Laurent Koscielny to injury early in the second half, Bayern ran riot during a 10-minute period in which Robert Lewandowski headed home before Thiago Alcantara scored twice. Substitute Thomas Muller rubbed salt in the wounds with a late fifth.\n\nIt leaves Arsenal with a near impossible task in the second leg and heaps more pressure on manager Arsene Wenger, who now only has the FA Cup as a realistic source of silverware in what will go down as another failed season.\n• None Is it time for Wenger to go? Read the social media fall-out\n\nThere must have been a feeling of deflated dread for Arsenal when they were drawn to face Bayern in the first knockout round of this season's Champions League.\n\nFor the first time in five seasons, the Gunners claimed top spot in their group (ahead of PSG, who made this achievement even more impressive with their demolition of Barcelona on Tuesday) but nonetheless they were drawn against the Germans - their last-16 conquerors in both 2012-13 and 2013-14.\n\nTheir fears were fully realised on a chastening night in Munich, which further highlighted just how far behind Europe's leading lights they have fallen and how little progress has been made since their visit here last season, which also ended in a 5-1 hammering.\n\nRobben gave early warning of the horror to come when he cut inside from the right and fired into the top corner from range following a move that had involved nine of Bayern's 11 players.\n\nHowever, with the gates fully ajar, the flood failed to come as Arsenal were granted an unlikely way back into the game thanks to Lewandowski's clumsy challenge on Koscielny in the box.\n\nSanchez almost spurned it when his spot-kick was saved by Neuer but after fortunately receiving the ball back, he produced a neat finish through a group of players to level.\n\nThe equaliser prompted Arsenal's best period of the game, during which they remained largely without the ball but produced two clear-cut chances, both of which were wasted as Granit Xhaka and Mesut Ozil struck shots at Neuer after being handed a clear sight of goal.\n\nThe optimism Arsenal had accrued from their encouraging pre-break efforts were dashed in a 15-minute period early in the second half, that began with Koscielny - their best defender - limping from the field and ended with Thiago putting the tie beyond them.\n\nFour minutes after Gabriel had replaced his captain at the back, Bayern reclaimed the lead as Lewandowski rose high above Shkodran Mustafi to meet Philipp Lahm's excellent cross and head home his 31st goal in 34 games for club and country this season.\n\nThe Pole then turned provider for Thiago, backheeling the ball into his path for a simple finish before the Spaniard quickly added his second courtesy of a shot that deflected in off Xhaka's boot.\n\nOnly some lax finishing, the woodwork (from a deflected Lewandowski shot) and a superb David Ospina save to tip over Javi Martinez's header from a corner prevented further goals before late substitute Muller scored with essentially his first contribution, collecting from Thiago before sidefooting home.\n\nMuller's late goal surely represented the final nail in the Gunners' coffin and leaves Wenger now facing an uncomfortable, undesirable truth - that his side's season boils down to an FA Cup game on a plastic pitch in Sutton.\n\n'It is difficult to explain'\n\nArsenal boss Arsene Wenger, speaking to BT Sport: \"It is difficult to explain. I felt we had two good chances to score just before half-time.\n\n\"I felt we were unlucky for the second goal. The referee gave a corner for us at first. Then we concede the second goal and then the most important was that we lost Koscielny. We collapsed.\n\n\"Overall I must say they are a better team than us, they played very well in the second half and we dropped our level. We were a bit unlucky we dropped our level and they were better than us.\"\n\n5-1 at the Allianz again - the stats you need to know\n• None Bayern Munich have won their last 16 home Champions League games, the longest winning run in the history of the competition.\n• None Arsenal conceded five goals in a game for the first time since November 2015 - their last clash with Bayern (1-5).\n• None This is the first time that Arsenal have conceded five goals in a first leg of Champions League knockout match.\n• None Arsenal have conceded 3+ goals in four of their last six first-leg matches in the last 16 of the Champions League.\n• None It's also the first time that Arsenal have conceded four goals in a single half since facing Chelsea in March 2014.\n• None Alexis Sanchez has been directly involved in 33 goals in his last 31 games in all comps (20 goals, 13 assists).\n• None Robert Lewandowski has scored 15 goals in his last 13 Champions League games at the Allianz Arena.\n• None Arjen Robben has now scored in back-to-back Champions League appearances against Arsenal.\n• None Goal! FC Bayern München 5, Arsenal 1. Thomas Müller (FC Bayern München) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Thiago Alcántara.\n• None Attempt missed. Joshua Kimmich (FC Bayern München) right footed shot from the right side of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Arjen Robben following a fast break.\n• None Attempt missed. Olivier Giroud (Arsenal) with an attempt from the right side of the six yard box misses to the left. Assisted by Mesut Özil with a cross following a corner.\n• None Philipp Lahm (FC Bayern München) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt saved. Douglas Costa (FC Bayern München) left footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Thiago Alcántara.\n• None Attempt saved. Arjen Robben (FC Bayern München) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the top left corner. Assisted by Philipp Lahm. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "No-one likes being mistaken for someone else - especially if that someone else has been their sworn rival for more than a century.\n\nSo when Guns N' Roses' announcer yelled \"Sydney\" just before they walked on stage in Melbourne, the band were met with a chorus of boos.\n\nAnd to make matters worse, the veteran rockers weren't even on time.\n\nLuckily, it seems they made up for it with a rousing concert - and a swiftly issued apology on social media.\n\n\"Melbourne!\" the band - which had just completed two nights in Sydney - posted on Twitter.\n\n\"Accidentally after 30 years McBob made an error, we're truly sorry. Thank you for coming out tonight!\"\n\nLuckily, guitar technician McBob, who has been introducing the group on stages around the world during their Not In This Lifetime tour, was quickly forgiven by fans for his momentary slip up.\n\nOne follower replied to the post with: \"One mistake every 30 years... Reasonable.\"\n\nTurns out, Guns N' Roses aren't the only ones to get a little confused on their exact location.\n\nSydney and Melbourne, Australia's two largest cities, have had a long-running rivalry dating back to gripes over trade during colonial times.\n\nToday they feud over which is the better city, with grudges mainly played out on sports pitches.\n\nSydney (pictured) has had a friendly rivalry with Melbourne for more than 100 years\n\nSo it is unsurprising Melbourne booed when the two were mixed up", "Renan Keraudran says it is easy to talk business while on a run\n\nIf you are looking to boost your career, perhaps all you need to do is put on a pair of trainers and start jogging.\n\nOnce considered a rather solitary pursuit, running has in recent years become an increasingly sociable affair.\n\nAided by social media allowing people to connect far more easily, an ever-growing number of running clubs and events are springing up around the world.\n\nAnd as more people travel overseas for business, or move abroad, the sport is becoming a popular way for people to make new contacts around the planet, or even secure a new job.\n\n\"With running, a lot of people think it's something that's just about you and yourself, and that's it, but that's not actually the case,\" says Renan Keraudran.\n\nThe 28-year-old Frenchman works in marketing, and often travels overseas. When he is working abroad he joins up with a local running club, most recently the Canadian group East Laurier, which is based in Montreal.\n\n\"We had a run and a beer together, and they introduced me to some more people,\" says Mr Keraudran.\n\n\"You start talking about running, and then you start talking about business, and of course with some people you even get a true friendship.\"\n\nBridge The Gap is an informal global movement of likeminded runners\n\nMr Keraudran was speaking at a windswept beachfront bar in Barcelona, where more than 100 runners from across Europe were chatting over plates of steaming seafood paella the night before the city's recent 17,000-participant half marathon.\n\nThe dinner was organised by members of Bridge The Gap (BTG), an informal global movement that brings together urban running groups from around the world through parties and Instagram hashtags.\n\nFounded in 2011 by New York club NYC Bridge Runners and London's Run Dem Crew, people who attend BTG events typically work in creative or lifestyle industries, such as music, media, fashion, or sport and fitness.\n\n\"It started out as a way to make people that thought running wasn't cool change their perspective, and get some balance in their lives,\" says Cedric Hernandez, co-captain of NYC Bridge Runners.\n\n\"We didn't know all this would happen, but we've even had marriages through the movement.\n\n\"We've had people putting each other up for free in their apartments all over the world, and on the business side we've had photographers get signed up, people have gotten digital work or video [commissions], or even jobs with corporate brands as ambassadors, where they get paid to travel to different cities.\"\n\nWhile global estimates of recreational runners are hard to come by, it is fast becoming one of the most popular forms of exercise in many countries.\n\nIn England almost seven million people now run at least twice a month, while the number of Americans participating in running events quadrupled between 1990 and 2013.\n\nA growing number of people are participating in running events\n\nAlongside the BTG movement, there are also more formal organisations co-ordinating events around the world, for a wide range of abilities.\n\nParkrun, which launched in a suburban London park in 2004, now hosts free 5km (three mile) runs on Saturday mornings in 15 countries, marshalled by volunteers.\n\nMost major sports brands also organise free regular training sessions alongside competitive races. Nike's online running community, Nike+, has almost 17 million Facebook followers worldwide.\n\nSamuel Hedberg, a programme director at Swedish training and business support firm Hyper Island, says that running \"rallies people to come together\" in an age when they are otherwise just chatting over social media.\n\n\"Running is a community that brings people together for real,\" he says.\n\nHe argues that while traditional business networking events can be elitist, such as business breakfasts or golf afternoons, running is far more down-to-earth and informal, and as a result can better facilitate a more open dialogue between potential new contacts, both at home and abroad.\n\n\"There is a sense of vulnerability when you run with someone,\" says Mr Hedberg. \"You are put on equal levels, and you are out doing something together that doesn't have necessarily any status involved in it.\"\n\nHe adds that running also holds a special place in an age when growing numbers of people are going freelance and embracing the \"gig economy\", or becoming a digital nomad who works around the world.\n\n\"So I think that the trend is really supporting making new business connections over running, you just need a pair of shoes.\"\n\nStockholm-based Australian fitness entrepreneur Dan Paech is among those seeking to benefit financially from the large numbers of people looking to jog with likeminded people when they are working abroad.\n\nDan Paech is establishing running clubs in cities around the world\n\nHis business, Run With Me Stockholm, organises paid running tours for people visiting the Swedish capital.\n\n\"These days people want to do the activities they do at home when they are away,\" says Mr Paech, who adds that a large proportion of his customers are business travellers on tight schedules.\n\nWith a franchise now open in Singapore, and one on the way in Melbourne, Mr Paech hopes to create a global network.\n\nBack at the pre-half marathon dinner in Barcelona, a Hamburg-based event planner is explaining how running friends are helping her to find new clients in Amsterdam, while a British man mulling a relocation to Berlin is working the room for useful contacts.\n\nHowever, Renan Keraudran says there is much more to being a part of BTG or other running movements than just networking and keeping fit.\n\n\"People might think we're just a bunch of people showing off on social media,\" he says. \"But we are a family.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Britain's anxiety about immigration has long been that there is far too much of it. Concerns about the record number of foreign arrivals were a key factor in the vote for Brexit, and the national debate in Parliament and the press has tended to focus on who has got the best policies to reduce it as quickly as possible.\n\nSo one would think statistics suggesting a fall in net migration and a big drop on EU workers coming from the eight so-called accession countries (A8) like Poland would be a cause for rejoicing. Well, not entirely.\n\nNothing has changed at the UK Border since the Brexit vote - this isn't about Britain \"taking control\".\n\nWhat has happened is that more than 100,000 EU citizens have left Britain - 17% more than in the previous year. And arrivals from the A8 countries have fallen sharply.\n\nThe number of new registered workers from Poland is down 16% year on year, Hungary is down 14%, Slovakia down 20% and Lithuania down 6%.\n\nMore workers have come from Romania and Bulgaria, up 11% and 8% respectively, but this may be because free movement from those countries came in much more recently.\n\nSome may have packed their bags fearing the brief window allowing them access to Britain might soon close.\n\nFor most European nationals, though, uncertainty over the status of EU citizens in a post-Brexit Britain, and the sharp fall in the pound, has made the UK a much less attractive prospect.\n\nSome British employers are very worried.\n\nThe growth of our hugely profitable tourism and hospitality sector, for instance, has relied upon importing foreign labour.\n\nI recently went to York, where the tourist industry is booming. In that city alone it is now worth an astonishing £500m a year and supports more than 20,000 jobs.\n\nBut the expansion could not have happened without immigration. The city has close to full employment - there are estimated to be fewer than a thousand local job seekers.\n\nThe news of a fall in migrant workers from countries which have traditionally filled tourist jobs makes grim reading for York's hoteliers, restaurateurs and bar owners.\n\nIf the numbers continue to fall, some fear the worst.\n\n\"It would create a staffing crisis,\" says Graham Usher, who heads York's Hoteliers' Association. \"If we get to the point where we can't fill vacancies with European workers then there's a big gap that we just can't fill.\"\n\nWhat about using British workers? I ask.\n\n\"There just aren't enough of them around. York only has about 700 unemployed people and that is it.\"\n\nA quarter of hospitality businesses across Britain say they currently have vacancies they are struggling to fill and the sector has been holding urgent talks with government officials on how to deal with the shortage of workers.\n\nIt is not just the tourism and hospitality sector, of course. Britain's record employment rate means there is often no immediate domestic alternative to migrant labour for many businesses looking to expand or simply survive.\n\nPoskitt's Carrots is a £35m a year business in the East Riding of Yorkshire, supplying vegetables to many of Britain's big supermarkets.\n\nIn the shed where 50,000 tonnes of carrots are washed and packed, 80% of the staff are Eastern Europeans.\n\n\"If we didn't have access to non-UK labour we just could not run this business,\" says managing director Guy Poskitt. \"I wouldn't even attempt to try and run it. Take away 80% of my workforce how can I operate?\"\n\nGuy Poskitt doesn't want to be reliant on migrant labour, but argues that there just aren't the domestic workers available from the rural communities nearby.\n\nSome argue that Britain needs to rid itself of its addiction to cheap migrant labour, that employers should do more to train and recruit home-grown workers.\n\nMany sectors are now thinking how they might adapt to Britain becoming a lower immigration economy.\n\nHealth ministers hope that universities will expand the number of training places for nurses in England to reduce the reliance on foreign staff.\n\nThe government recently lifted the cap on state-funded bursaries, but replaced them with student loans. Since the announcement, the number of applicants for nurse training in England has fallen 23%.\n\nBritain's creative industries, which are worth more to the UK economy than the finance sector, are often collaborative ventures involving highly skilled but relatively low paid workers from around the world.\n\nFrom ballet companies to computer gaming firms, there is concern that an inability to attract or employ foreign staff will damage their international standing and profitability.\n\nThe social care sector is also extremely concerned about the lack of suitable domestic staff to replace foreign workers who, in parts of the country make up the majority of employees.\n\nEarlier this week the Brexit Secretary David Davies told an audience in Estonia that in sectors requiring low-skilled labour including hospitality, agriculture and social care \"it will be years and years before we get British citizens to do those jobs\".\n\n\"Don't expect just because we're changing who makes the decision on the policy, the door will suddenly shut: It won't,\" he said.\n\nWhat the figures remind us, however, is that immigration works both ways.\n\nWe may not suddenly shut the door, but that doesn't mean foreigners will choose to walk through it.", "Last updated on .From the section Boxing\n\nDavid Haye has called for a physical barrier to be placed between him and heavyweight rival Tony Bellew before their London fight on 4 March.\n\nThe pair have traded insults before the O2 Arena bout and will be face-to-face at media commitments next week.\n\n\"There needs to be protection, a human being isn't enough,\" said Haye, 36. \"Whatever it is, glass or whatever.\"\n\nAt a November news conference, Haye threw a punch at Bellew, who publicly called his opponent out in October.\n\nHaye's attempted punch came almost five years after he brawled with Dereck Chisora at a news conference, and six years after Bellew, 34, had to be separated from Nathan Cleverly at another.\n\nAt another media gathering, Haye - who has conducted much of his training in Miami - repeatedly argued with Bellew's promoter Eddie Hearn.\n\n\"When tensions are high and when guys are scared they do crazy things,\" added former WBA heavyweight champion Haye.\n\n\"I'm going to make sure he is not in striking distance. I'd love to have confidence that he will keep his hands to himself but I don't have any confidence in him, in his mental state. Hopefully there will be some sort of precautions put in place.\"\n\nDuring his in-ring verbal attack on Haye after victory over American BJ Flores in October, Bellew mocked his rival's hairstyle and ridiculed the two opponents Haye has faced since returning to the sport in 2016 after over three years out of the ring.\n\nBellew, the WBC world champion at cruiserweight, will campaign at heavyweight for the first time, completing a two-division jump after competing at light-heavyweight as recently as 2013.\n\nHe holds a record of 28 wins and a draw from 31 fights, with Haye boasting the same number of wins from 30 contests.", "Last updated on .From the section Man Utd\n\nWayne Rooney's agent Paul Stretford is in China to see if he can negotiate a deal for the forward to leave Manchester United.\n\nThere are no guarantees of success and it is thought a deal remains highly unlikely before the Chinese transfer window closes on 28 February.\n\nBut the fact Stretford has travelled to China is a clear indication United boss Jose Mourinho would let Rooney, 31, go.\n\nIn a BBC Sport poll, 30% of voters think that Wayne Rooney's next move should be to move to China.\n\nAnd if he does not leave this month it seems certain he will go in the summer.\n\nRooney has fallen down the pecking order at United under Mourinho.\n\nThe England captain has been made aware of interest in him from the Chinese Super League for some time, although it is not known which clubs Stretford has spoken to.\n\nHowever, two of the three clubs who looked the most likely options for Rooney have ruled themselves out.\n\nBeijing Guoan, believed to be the favourite team of Chinese President Xi, had been seen as one of the favourites to sign Rooney but sources close to the club have told BBC Sport they are not interested in signing him.\n\nThe England captain's representatives have already spoken to Tianjin Quanjian and their coach, Fabio Cannavaro, said talks did not progress, while sources close to Jiangsu Suning also dismissed speculation over a transfer.\n\nOn Tuesday, Mourinho said he did not know whether Rooney, who has only just returned to training after a hamstring injury, would still be at Old Trafford in a week's time.\n\nIt is not known whether this latest development will affect Rooney's chances of being involved in Sunday's EFL Cup final against Southampton.\n\nThey had appeared to have increased after Henrikh Mkhitaryan limped out of Wednesday's 1-0 Europa League win against Saint-Etienne.\n\nIf Rooney follows former team-mate Carlos Tevez to the Chinese Super League, it would almost certainly cost him any chance of making the seven appearances he needs to become England's most capped player.\n\nRooney's preference is understood to be to remain with United for the rest of his contract, which expires in 2019, but a lack of time on the pitch is forcing him to consider alternatives.\n\nRooney is United's record goalscorer and has won five Premier League titles and a Champions League trophy since joining them as an 18-year-old for £27m from Everton in 2004.\n\nThe forward, who has started only three games since 17 December, has said he would not play for an English club other than United or Everton .\n\nThe big difference between Chinese Super League clubs' transfer process and their Premier League counterparts is the preparation.\n\nEnglish top-flight clubs have extensive scouting departments with links around the world. They identify players months in advance, watch many live games and base their decision on an extensive process.\n\nIn CSL, the process is more agent-led. Most of the clubs are approached with recommendations for a position they are recruiting in, rather than seeking out players themselves.\n\nForeign players coming in on large fees are commanding three-, four-, five-year deals, even at the end of their career. They have the upper hand in negotiations and wouldn't leave European football without long-term financial guarantees.\n\nHowever, the Chinese government is concerned about capital leaving the country and it is difficult for these big transactions to exist while they are trying to crack down in other areas.\n\nI think we will see a levelling out in fees. The £15m-£20m transfers will continue to happen for the next few years, but maybe we won't see the likes of the £60m deal that brought Oscar to China.", "Researchers from Dundee University and Derbyshire Fire Service are looking for 500 families to try out a new smoke alarm sound aimed at children.\n\nThis follows their discovery that most children fail to wake up to standard smoke alarms.", "Rich Donovan worked as a trader for 10 years on Wall Street\n\nIt's a fast-paced, risk-taking industry glamorised by Hollywood and writers alike, but when one Wall Street trader left the floor he identified a huge market being ignored by the business world.\n\nCanada-based businessman Rich Donovan worked as a trader for Merrill Lynch for 10 years after he graduated from the prestigious Columbia Business School. It was competitive enough, but with cerebral palsy he felt he had more to prove.\n\n\"I was told to my face that I would never be a trader. They were wrong, but that's just the reality of having a disability. You figure out how to work around it.\"\n\nHe says he was asked at every job interview, \"Can you physically do this job?\" His answer was always the same: \"I don't know, but we're going to find out.\"\n\nDonovan was offered every job he went for and says there was \"never a time that I hit a barrier, largely because I was 10 steps ahead of what I needed to be\".\n\nIt is this attitude that has led him to identify a market worth $8 trillion (£6.4tn) and brimming with untapped talent: the disability market.\n\nAfter he left the trading floor, Donovan set up the Return on Disability Group (ROD). The firm helps companies improve their products, customer experience and recruitment for disabled clients, as well as alerting investors to companies that target that market. Its slogan is \"translate different into value\".\n\nThe trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange\n\nHe estimates the market comprises about 1.3 billion people with disabilities worldwide, plus an additional 2.42 billion people once their friends and family are taken into account, which Donovan describes as \"huge\".\n\nIt seems hard to believe that such a market could be overlooked, but he says it has largely gone unseen because people look at it from the wrong angle.\n\nThe key, he says, is not to consider disability a niche market, but as an \"emerging market\" - and to challenge the conventional because \"companies and governments have no clue how to convert that size into value\".\n\nDonovan says traditional government schemes to get more disabled people into work or bespoke products made for disabled people fail to properly utilise the market.\n\nFor that, you need to think beyond lunches and motivational talks and remember business is always about money.\n\n\"Most companies think they need to be perfectly ready to provide an 'accessible' space for disabled workers. The reality is disabled people know what they need to be successful. Companies only need to listen and adjust to those needs,\" he says.\n\nRich Donovan with his team from Return on Disability\n\n\"Quotas and equity laws do not cause hiring, it's the promise of future profits that does. Companies, by their very nature, act in their shareholders' best interests, doing what will grow revenue in the fastest way possible.\"\n\nTherefore, Donovan says, companies should \"attack the market\" as they would any other.\n\n\"Find out the desires of disabled consumers as they relate to your profitable enterprise, adjust your product and messaging to attract their business then execute this in line with your company's process and culture.\"\n\nDonovan believes mistakes are often made when companies try to \"disable\" their business or do just enough to comply with regulations.\n\nRich Donovan spoke to BBC Business Daily about the disability market from a studio in Toronto\n\nListen to Business Daily on the BBC World Service to hear about the daily drama of money and work from the BBC with a special programme for the Disability Works season.\n\n\"Disabled people don't want 'special' products,\" he says. \"But they are hungry to be included in the mainstream consumer experience.\n\n\"Most companies today look at this as a government regulatory mandate; they're not looking at this as a profitability opportunity, they're not looking at this as an innovation opportunity to improve products for users.\n\n\"They're looking at this as a charity effort,\" he says.\n\nDonovan believes the key to cracking this market is to flip the disabled consumer experience to ultimately benefit the mainstream audience.\n\n\"We've learnt that people with disabilities use things very harshly, they use them in extreme ways, and if you can learn how they use things and use that information it makes that core product better for everyone. That way the returns really take off.\"\n\nThe former trader says there is one company that already does this: Google.\n\nGoogle has developed a self-driving car which turned conventional ideas on their head\n\n\"The core of what they do is innovation and in most of their products there is some disability component. It's at the very core of what they do.\n\n\"Look at the Google [self-driving] car - you can imagine the head engineer walking into his team and saying 'OK, build me a car that a blind guy can drive' and that's exactly what they did.\n\n\"They're very focused on leveraging disability to make the core product experience better for everyone.\"\n\nDonovan says the disability market has only really existed within the past decade continues to develop.\n\n\"They're still grappling with what that looks like and that process historically takes a few years,\" he says. \"You look back at women and race and it takes a little bit of time to adjust to that reality and disability has just started to do that.\"\n\nBut it is not just the disability market that Donovan's company has been tasked with growing.\n\nHis clients have also asked him to apply the same ideas to sexuality and poverty.\n\nDonovan's ambition is to move away from government regulations and to help companies serve non-traditional markets with the aim of ultimately increasing profitability - a process he describes as \"figuring out how to 'eat that elephant'\".\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Priest Gary Bradley and Zubeir Hassam share a cup of tea before buying each other kneepads in the Amazon Prime ad\n\nA man who played an imam in a popular Christmas advert has been asked to work with the government to promote harmony between Islam and other faiths.\n\nIn the Amazon commercial, Zubeir Hassam and priest Gary Bradley buy each other kneepads to help with the discomfort of kneeling while praying.\n\nMr Hassam said it had turned him into a celebrity, with people stopping him in the street for selfies.\n\nHe is even set to meet the Queen when she visits Leicester in April.\n\nSince the ad was released in the UK in November to promote the Amazon Prime delivery service, it has been viewed millions of times around the world.\n\nMr Hassam, principal of the Muslim School, in Oadby, Leicestershire, said he was pleased with its positive message, which promotes friendship between Muslims and Christians.\n\n\"The message that went to the world and the community at large was of peace,\" he said.\n\nBut he said he never thought it would become so popular and he now gets stopped for selfies, including one occasion at an airport in Turkey, where he was recognised by a family travelling to Mecca.\n\n\"It was so amazing to see them all, the sisters and brothers in ihram [where men wear all white for the pilgrimage] and yet they wanted a picture with me,\" he said.\n\nHe was given a taste of celebrity life when he was invited to a world peace conference in Abu Dhabi and put up in a five-star hotel.\n\n\"I'm not royalty but I feel I've reached that level,\" he joked.\n\nBut there is a serious side to the attention the advert has garnered and the government has asked him to work with them on promoting harmony between faiths, he said.\n\nAlthough he has met the Queen three times before the advert aired, he has been invited to dine with her when she visits Leicester on Maundy Thursday.\n\n\"I'm sure she'll [ask] me are you the Amazon imam? And I'll say, 'yes I am',\" he said.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Helen Bailey's husband John Sinfield died while the pair were on holiday in Barbados in 2011\n\nHelen Bailey's life changed completely following the death of her husband in 2011. Overcome by loneliness, she sought solace through the internet, writing a successful blog and communicating with others dealing with grief. It was here that she met the man she thought would become her life partner - but he would instead prove to be her killer.\n\nSix years ago, Ms Bailey was enjoying success as a children's author, having written more than 20 books, including the popular Electra Brown series.\n\nA lover of cooking, Arsenal FC and her Dachshund Boris, the Northumberland-born writer lived with her husband John Sinfield in Highgate, north London. The pair had been together for 22 years, and married for 15.\n\nIn February 2011, during a holiday to Barbados, her world was turned upside down when Mr Sinfield got caught in a rip current in the sea and drowned.\n\nMs Bailey was, in her own words, \"a wife at breakfast, but a widow by lunch\".\n\nThe aftermath saw her start a blog, Planet Grief. The posts shine with wit, humour, honesty and authenticity as she recounts moments from her life as a widow.\n\nShe describes releasing memorial balloons on Hampstead Heath; buying a single Scotch egg in the deli she used to frequent with her husband; coping with Christmas and the loss of the festive traditions she used to enjoy as a couple.\n\nMs Bailey wrote more than 20 books, including the Electra Brown series for teenagers\n\n\"I'm on a Facebook bereavement page, piddling around,\" she wrote in one post. \"A photo comes up. I am surprised to see it because I know the man in the photo.\n\n\"I keep wondering where we met, wracking my grieving brain.\n\n\"As it turned out, we had never met, but the man was Gorgeous Grey-Haired Widower, a man who from the moment we first met, I felt as if I had known for my entire life.\"\n\nMs Bailey went on to date GGHW, as she referred to him in her blog, and they later bought a house in Royston, Hertfordshire, moving in together along with his two sons.\n\nThey were planning to marry and were arranging a wedding at nearby Brocket Hall.\n\nBut in April last year, she was reported missing; a disappearance friends and family said was completely out of character.\n\nMs Bailey and Stewart moved in together at a house in Royston, Hertfordshire\n\nStewart made the initial call to police - he claimed to have found a note from Ms Bailey saying she needed \"space\" and had gone to her holiday home in Broadstairs, Kent.\n\nHe later issued a heartfelt message which said: \"You not only mended my heart five years ago but made it bigger, stronger and kinder.\n\n\"Now it feels like my heart doesn't even exist. Our plans are nowhere near complete and without you there is no point.\"\n\nStewart sent text messages to her phone asking him to let her know she was OK, pleading with her to call.\n\nFriends and fellow dog walkers organised searches to try to find her, with many also sending messages to her phone and social media accounts.\n\nBut all along, her body - and that of her beloved pet Boris - were hidden metres away from where police were searching.\n\nWhen she was found in a cesspit three months later, tests revealed she had been systematically drugged over a period of time before finally being suffocated.\n\nStewart and Ms Bailey were described by a neighbour as \"complete opposites\"\n\nStewart, described by many as \"quiet\" and \"reserved\", had been widowed in 2010 when his wife, Diane, died. She had an epileptic fit in the garden of their home in Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire.\n\nThe 56-year-old had worked as a software engineer before being forced to give up work due to poor health. Early in 2016 he had been told there was a high chance he had bowel cancer, but was later given the all-clear.\n\nHe suffered from insomnia and was prescribed a drug called zopiclone - the same drug pathologists found in Ms Bailey's system.\n\nMavis Drake, the couple's nearest neighbour in Royston, said Stewart was a man \"without much personality\".\n\n\"He didn't make any impression on me,\" she said. \"He wouldn't venture information, so you'd have to try to prise it out of him.\n\n\"I would never in a million years have matched them up as a couple. To me they were complete opposites in character.\"\n\nThe search for Ms Bailey lasted three months\n\nDuring the murder trial, St Albans Crown Court heard evidence about Stewart's behaviour and actions in the weeks after the killing.\n\nOn 11 April, the day he suffocated Ms Bailey, he went to watch his son Jamie play bowls before having a Chinese takeaway in the evening.\n\nDetectives investigating the author's disappearance told the jury he seemed \"quite blasé and non-committal\", appearing, at one point, to \"turn his head to the side and look at us and grin\".\n\nAs the prime beneficiary of Ms Bailey's will, he stood to inherit the bulk of her fortune - thought to be more than £3.3m at the time of her death.\n\nWhile the search for her was under way, he renewed their Arsenal season tickets from the couple's joint account and went on holiday to Mallorca, the jury heard.\n\n\"In hindsight, I think he was beginning to believe everything was going to carry on as normal and she'd never be found,\" said neighbour Mrs Drake.\n\nAn aerial view of the couple's home in Royston and the garage, beneath which Ms Bailey's body was found\n\nMs Bailey's body was found in a cesspit underneath a Victorian well\n\nIt was a comment from Mrs Drake herself that led to his downfall, after she mentioned to officers about the cesspit hidden below her neighbours' garage.\n\nThree months after he reported her missing, Stewart was charged with murder. He was convicted after a seven-week trial at St Albans Crown Court.\n\n\"To say it sent shockwaves through the widowed community is an understatement,\" said Laraine Mason, who, like Stewart, had met Ms Bailey online following the death of her spouse.\n\n\"For this tragedy to have happened to a lady who had found happiness again, after being widowed in the most tragic of circumstances is in itself horrific.\n\n\"Words cannot possibly express the horror and repulsion we feel by the fact that these acts have been perpetrated by one of our own against one of our own.\"\n\nStewart was arrested on suspicion of murder on 11 July last year\n\nComments left by friends on the final Planet Grief blog post after Ms Bailey's death show just how loved and respected she was within the bereaved community online.\n\nThey speak of the comfort her words had brought over the years, her honesty and humour, how much she would be missed.\n\nThe blog had been hugely successful, gaining followers from around the world. In 2015, the posts had formed the basis for a book: \"When Bad Things Happen in Good Bikinis.\"\n\nAt Ms Bailey's memorial service, Ms Mason spoke of the \"exceptional talent\" of her friend, the \"searingly honest, yet at the same time witty account of life after the death of a loved one\".\n\nBereavement coach Shelley Whitehead, who met Ms Bailey a few months after Mr Sinfield died, called her \"a brave, gutsy, connected woman\" who was \"so funny\".\n\n\"Helen created tribes - she had a following on widow and widower's websites,\" she said. \"It helped her, and it helped others who had experienced loss.\n\n\"She was making sense of the world and her loss through her writing.\"\n\nMs Bailey's Planet Grief blog gained followers from around the world\n\nShelley Whitehead, left, said she was \"blessed\" to call Ms Bailey her friend\n\nFor some of those closest to Ms Bailey, it is her writing which stirs up memories of the woman she was, and the impact she had on their lives.\n\n\"Helen lives on in her books - I keep copies of her book on grief in my office. I give them to newly bereaved partners,\" Ms Whitehead said.\n\n\"I feel blessed to have coached a woman like Helen. I feel blessed to call her my friend.\"\n\nIn the wake of the trial, with its revelations about the extent of Stewart's deception and his actions, the dedications at the end of Ms Bailey's book are difficult to read.\n\n\"And finally, this book is dedicated to my Gorgeous Grey-Haired Widower, Ian Stewart: BB, I love you,\" it says.\n\n\"You are my happy ending.\"", "On 1 January 1985 a passenger jet crashed into a mountain in Bolivia killing all 29 people on board. No bodies were ever found. Nor were the black boxes that would have revealed the cause of the accident. But last year two young Americans decided to have a look themselves - and ended up achieving far more than official investigators.\n\n\"What are the chances that a couple of knuckleheads, with no mountaineering experience could actually go up to the top of this 20,000ft mountain and find anything?\" asks Isaac Stoner.\n\n\"Still I thought it would be a neat vacation.\"\n\nIt was his flatmate, Dan Futrell, who came up with the idea one Saturday afternoon in 2015, as he idly browsed the internet looking for developments in the search for the missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370.\n\nHe found himself on a Wikipedia page listing 19 unrecovered flight recorders, and one immediately caught his attention - Eastern Airlines Flight 980, which had crashed in Bolivia in 1985, as it was coming in to land in the capital, La Paz.\n\nMount Illimani as seen from La Paz, Bolivia\n\nUnlike most of the missing black boxes, this one wasn't at the bottom of the sea, it was on land. It hadn't been found, Wikipedia said, due to \"extreme high altitude and inaccessibility of the accident location\". But to Futrell it just seemed like \"a typical Andean peak\".\n\n\"We were on the couch drinking beer,\" Stoner recalls, \"and Dan said, 'Look, this black box is just sitting on the top of a mountain in Bolivia. Let's go get it.'\"\n\nFutrell, 32, a former soldier who served two tours in Iraq, says he misses physical challenges now that he works at an internet company in Boston. So he seeks them out, and gets 31-year-old Stoner, who works at a biotech company, to accompany him.\n\nThey started finding out more about Eastern Airlines Flight 980. It had set off from Asuncion on New Year's Day 1985, heading to Miami via La Paz, carrying 19 passengers and 10 crew. The Boeing 727 had just been cleared to land at El Alto airport at 19:47, when it veered off course and crashed into Mount Illimani, the 21,000ft (6,400m) peak that towers over La Paz. Everyone on board was killed.\n\nThe crash site was located a day later by the Bolivian air force, however a search team was forced to turn back by heavy snowfall. In all, at least five expeditions made it up the mountain over the next 30 years, but none recovered bodies or flight recorders.\n\nAs contraband was often smuggled on flights from South America to Miami, conspiracy theories swirled around. Five members of one of Paraguay's richest families were on the flight and the US ambassador to Paraguay would have been on it too, if he had not changed his plans at the last minute. One unsubstantiated theory even alleges that a climber who reached the wreckage two days after the crash removed the black boxes to prevent a successful investigation.\n\nStoner started contacting climbers in Bolivia to see if two \"ordinary guys\" with no mountaineering experience could make the trip. One, Robert Rauch, said that they could.\n\n\"He told us 'I can put you right on the wreckage.' It turns out the glacier where the plane had crashed had retreated and there hadn't been much snowfall, so we might be able to see debris not seen for decades,\" Stoner says.\n\nRauch also revealed that some of the wreckage had fallen over a cliff, landing 3,000ft (915m) below the rest of the plane. This lower site was more accessible and a good place to start the search.\n\nIt was still high though. They would be operating at altitudes between 13,000ft and 20,000ft (4,000m-6,100m), where oxygen levels are 50% lower than at sea level.\n\nRauch warned them they would need at least three weeks in La Paz to acclimatise, but this was more time than they had available.\n\n\"We told him we had a total of two weeks' vacation,\" says Futrell, 32. \"So he recommended we sleep in an altitude tent beforehand. We rented one and set it up in the basement. It pumps in nitrogen and simulates a low oxygen environment. It was awful and we would wake up with headaches.\"\n\nFutrell and Stoner enlisted the help of experienced mountaineer Robert Rauch\n\nRauch also told the pair to build up their upper arm strength to prepare them for ice climbing.\n\n\"[We did] a lot of pull-ups with backpacks on,\" says Futrell.\n\n\"Isaac mostly attempted and I did all the pull-ups for both of us. I envisioned him hanging off the end of a cliff and me being the only person that could save his life.\"\n\n\"I envisioned cutting the rope and sending Dan down to the bottom of the abyss,\" jokes Stoner.\n\nOther training included trekking up and down the steps of the Harvard Football Stadium in Boston. They also got a prescription for Diamox, which helps the body to absorb oxygen.\n\nIsaac (left) and Dan bought ice axes and shovels in La Paz\n\nOne of the frequent avalanches that Dan and Isaac think are bringing wreckage down the mountain\n\nOn 17 May last year they flew to El Alto airport in Bolivia where they met up with their team - guide Robert Rauch, Bolivian cook Jose Lazo and journalist Peter Frick-Wright, who went on to write a detailed story for Outside magazine. After a few days of acclimatisation, they drove to a nearby peak to practise emergency drills.\n\nThe friends planned to split their time between the lower site Rauch had told them about and the impact site on the glacier, higher up the mountain, where the plane tail was still lodged in the snow.\n\n\"Robert decided that the best course of action would be to get us up on a mountain, to teach us how to ice climb, because we honestly didn't know what we were doing when it came to crampons and ice axes and being tied into a rope,\" says Stoner.\n\nThe housemates also struggled with the changes in temperature that veered from -6C (21F) in the shade to 9C (48F) in the sun.\n\n\"We knew we were going to suffer,\" says Futrell, \"and in fact that was part of the draw of this trip. Worthwhile things are often challenging and that's what we were looking for.\"\n\nThe team set off for their base camp at 15,400ft (4,700m) above sea-level in a battered four-wheel drive, though two miles short of their destination they came to a halt. The road had been blocked by a rock fall, and they had to get out and walk.\n\n\"We camped at this spooky old abandoned mine with a view of the big cliff face where the crash had happened,\" Stoner says.\n\n\"Every now and then there was a distant avalanche that sounded like a runaway train. Apart from that it was silent. We were up above cloud level and it was really wild and beautiful scenery.\"\n\nThe next day they hiked for 45 minutes and, as Rauch had promised, they found themselves in the midst of the plane wreckage.\n\nDebris was scattered over one square mile of rocky ground. Pieces of mangled plastic and wiring mingled with cutlery, wheels and broken cockpit equipment.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Flatmates Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner look for the black box from Eastern Airlines 980\n\nThe first thing they saw, however, was a life jacket - \"a piece of equipment intended to save somebody's life\" as Futrell puts it.\n\n\"So not only did we know we were in the right spot, but we were instantly reminded that there's tragedy here for 29 families.\"\n\nThey had planned a grid search pattern but in their excitement decided first to go off in different directions to take a look.\n\nDebris from the Boeing 727-225 was strewn across one square mile\n\nA pair of children's trainers were among the wreckage\n\nThe friends were busy picking through the wreckage when they were called by Rauch on their walkie-talkies. They rushed over to see what he had found. Slowly they realised they were looking at a human femur lying among the rubble.\n\n\"We all took a moment. We tried saying a few words but couldn't come up with anything,\" says Stoner.\n\nThe discovery disproved one conspiracy theory put forward by former Eastern Airlines pilot George Jehn in his book Final Destination: Disaster. After no remains were found on the first five expeditions, he suggested a bomb had depressurised the cabin and sucked the passengers out of the plane. This would have flung the bodies far from the wreckage. However, Futrell, Stoner and their companions found six body parts in separate locations.\n\nOne of the rock stacks the team used to mark human remains found on the mountainside\n\nCutlery from on board the Eastern Airlines 980 flight\n\nOne of the windows from the plane and orange metal found at the site\n\nThey decided to bury each find and mark the spot with a geomarker and a stack of rocks, in case anyone wanted to retrieve them later on.\n\n\"We also found silverware from the meal service, a sink from one of the bathrooms, shoes and shirts and jackets with pilot stripes on them. We found the emergency slide and life jackets, plane windows, landing gear and part of the instrument panel from the cockpit,\" says Futrell.\n\n\"There were wires everywhere and thousands of reptile skins which were likely to have been contraband.\"\n\nHowever, there was no sign of the black boxes, which despite their name are typically bright orange.\n\n\"We were finding orange bits of metal the whole time, but I was holding on to the hope they weren't pieces of the black box as they are supposed to withstand a plane crashing into a mountain,\" says Stoner.\n\nBut on the final day of searching at the lower site, Stoner unearthed a piece of metal with a label attached to some wires that read \"CKPT VO RCRD\" an abbreviation of Cockpit Voice Recorder.\n\nWires labelled \"cockpit voice recorder\" suggested the team were on the right track\n\nThey decided this probably meant that at least one of the recorders had broken apart.\n\nNot far away, they found a spool of magnetic tape.\n\nWould this hold a recording of the final moments of the aircraft? Futrell describes this as his \"greatest hope\".\n\nAfter three or four days at the lower site, the team decided to move on to the higher debris site and drove to a higher base camp. They set off at 04:30 the next morning but soon ran into serious problems.\n\n\"We had wanted to get up there and back in one day but we found we didn't have the time to do it. We were going slower as we were inexperienced at mountaineering and new crevasses had opened up which meant we had a longer and more difficult route,\" says Futrell.\n\nThey eventually decided it was too risky and turned back.\n\nDan and Isaac spent time digging out debris. At times the high altitude make them feel nauseous\n\nReturning to La Paz they boxed up the orange pieces of metal, wires and tape they had found and flew home with them to Boston. They suspected this might be breaking the rules of air investigations but decided it was the right thing to do anyway.\n\n\"We knew there was a specialist government lab in the States that would give us the best shot at an answer as to why the plane went down. Plus it was a US airliner and there had been no Bolivians on board,\" says Stoner.\n\nBack home in the US, though, they had a problem. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the US department in charge of investigating plane crashes, didn't want to touch their packages.\n\n\"They said 'Great job guys, but we can't do anything with it unless we get Bolivian sign-off,'\" says Futrell.\n\nThe housemates then spent months sending emails and letters and telephoning Bolivian officials.\n\n\"So at this point the black box has been sitting in our apartment on the kitchen counter next to the dog food for seven months,\" Stoner said at the end of 2016. \"And really it's become a key part of the decorative aesthetic in the apartment.\"\n\nFinally, in December, they were contacted by Capt Edgar Chavez, operations inspector at the General Directorate of Civil Aviation of Bolivia, who gave the NTSB permission to analyse the material.\n\nSo on 4 January, Futrell and Stoner handed over the plane fragments to Bill English from the NTSB, who took them to a laboratory in Washington.\n\nBill English picks up the plane fragments that had been sitting on Dan and Isaac's fridge\n\nThe housemates had already concluded that poor weather, the tricky descent to El Alto airport and unreliable equipment had all probably played a part in the crash. However, data from the voice recorder might give conclusive answers to the families who had lost their loved ones.\n\n\"We had people reaching out from Paraguay, we had family members reaching out from the US, right down to an old girlfriend of the pilot calling me on the phone,\" says Stoner, \"and most of them just really did want to say, 'Nice job guys, thank you.'\"\n\nOne of the family members was Stacey Greer, the daughter of Mark Bird, the flight engineer on Eastern Airlines Flight 980. Greer was only two years old when her father was killed.\n\n\"I was surprised that someone would be interested in finding out what happened. It gave me hope that people still care,\" Greer says.\n\nShe had asked Futrell and Stoner to bring back some metal from the plane for her.\n\n\"It was a really touching meeting,\" says Futrell. \"She got to put her hands on pieces of the plane, the last plane that her father flew and that took his life. She took this metal home and she turned one of the pieces of metal into a necklace just in memory of her dad and his loss.\"\n\n\"Usually there is a grave site or a memorial for a lost one, but my family never had that. Now we have something,\" Greer says.\n\nThe items studied by the National Transportation Safety Board in the US on behalf of the Bolivian authorities\n\nFutrell and Stoner had not found the cockpit flight recorder, it said, but rather the rack that had fixed it on to the plane - and the promising spool of tape turned out to be \"an 18-minute recording of the 'Trial by Treehouse' episode of the television series 'I Spy', dubbed in Spanish.\"\n\n\"Needless to say, we're disappointed,\" Futrell wrote on his blog.\n\nHowever, it means both the recorders are still up on the mountain and could still be intact. Futrell and Stoner hope others will now follow in their footsteps.\n\nAlready one member of the US Forces has declared his intention to organise an expedition to recover human remains.\n\n\"This tragedy really deserves a formal, resourced, governmental investigation,\" says Futrell. \"We've proved that 'inaccessible terrain' is an unacceptable reason for failing to close this investigation.\"\n\nListen to Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner speaking to Outlook on the BBC World Service\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Hulya Arif is a business entrepreneur who started her Pro Beauty Clinic in Dulwich, south London, two years ago. She specialises in treatments that other clinics don't offer.\n\nHulya is also disabled, suffering from a rare disorder called transverse myelitis, meaning she is partially paralysed from the chest down.\n\nBut she argues there is no reason disabled people should feel shut out of the world of glamour.", "President Trump (pictured here with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on the left) has made visits to his Florida golf courses a weekend habit during his first month in office\n\nA Hillary Clinton retweet has drawn attention to President Donald Trump's golf outings, which critics are hoping to turn into a political handicap.\n\nThe former Democratic White House candidate shared a graph suggesting her former rival spent 25 hours on the links during his first month in office.\n\nMr Trump made his sixth trip to the golf course on Sunday, joined by professional golfer Rory McIlroy.\n\nThe Republican was a frequent critic of Barack Obama's fairway excursions.\n\nAccording to an analysis of Washington Post pool reports that was retweeted by Mrs Clinton, the president has dedicated 21 hours to foreign relations, 13 hours to tweeting and six hours to intelligence briefings in his first weeks.\n\nWhat do you do when your life's goal, a dream that was nearly realised, slips away in a flash? That's the question Hillary Clinton has faced since Donald Trump smashed her presidential hopes last November.\n\nIn the ensuing days, the former secretary of state has taken long walks in New York woods with her husband, Bill. She's given a few speeches and caught some shows on Broadway, where she's always warmly received. And she's tweeted.\n\nHaltingly, at first. A few Thanksgiving messages here, a get-well note to George HW Bush there. She stood firmly on uncontroversial ground.\n\nNow, however, her voice is sharpening. She celebrates the anti-Trump protests that have swept across the country. She's poked fun at the president and taken more pointed shots at his policies and positions. As the president has stumbled, she's tiptoeing closer and closer to the land of \"I told you so\".\n\nWhat's next for a woman in her life's third or fourth act? Rumours of a run for New York swirled then receded. When the presidential prize was so close, will anything else bring satisfaction?\n\nGiven that the Clintons have been in the national spotlight for decades, a quiet exit seems increasingly unlikely.\n\nMr Trump joined Rory McIlroy, one of the world's highest ranked golfers, at Trump International Golf Club on Sunday.\n\nThe Irishman later told a golf blog he had played a full 18 holes with the president, as well as the chief executive of Clear Sports and former New York Yankee Paul O'Neill.\n\nShe said Mr Trump had only \"played a couple of holes\" on Saturday, as well as Sunday.\n\nWhen pressed about McIlroy's comments on Monday, she said Mr Trump had \"intended to play a few holes and decided to play longer\".\n\nThe White House has otherwise declined to say who plays with Mr Trump, drawing backlash from US media over how much time he spends on the green.\n\nBut the president's golf hobby also recalls his repeated criticism of President Obama.\n\nMr Trump regularly accused Mr Obama of spending too much time golfing before and throughout his presidential campaign.\n\nPresident Trump (2nd left) with Rory McIlroy (2nd right) on Sunday\n\n\"Can you believe that, with all the problems and difficulties facing the US, President Obama spent the day playing golf. Worse than Carter,\" he tweeted in October 2014.\n\nTen days later, he tweeted: \"President Obama has a major meeting on the NYC Ebola outbreak, with people flying in from all over the country, but decided to play golf!\"\n\nMr Trump also said he would be too busy to swing at a tee if elected.\n\n\"I'm going to be working for you. I'm not going to have time to go play golf,\" he said last August.\n\nBut he later softened his tone toward the game, which he said could be used as a tool of diplomacy.\n\nPresident Barack Obama (R) lines up a putt as British Prime Minister David Cameron (L) looks on near Watford in Hertfordshire, England, in April 2016\n\n\"I don't think you should play very much,\" he told the Golf Channel in July.\n\n\"But if you're going to play, you should use it to your advantage, and the country's advantage.\"\n\nEarlier this month, the president hosted Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and played a full round with the foreign leader as well as professional golfer Ernie Els.\n\nHowever, his foursome on Sunday did not include any political types.\n\nFormer Presidents George W Bush and his father, George HW Bush, were also criticised for their golf outings, at the outsets of the first and second Iraq wars.", "Approximately 850 people from the UK have travelled to support or fight for jihadist groups in Syria and Iraq, say the British authorities.\n\nThis BBC News database is the most comprehensive public record of its kind, telling the story of over 100 people from the UK who have been convicted of offences relating to the conflict and over 150 others who have either died or are still in the region.\n\nThis interactive content is optimised for modern, javascript-enabled web browsers. Please ensure you have javascript enabled and a current browser.\n\nThe information above has been compiled from open sources and BBC research. Some details have been withheld for legal reasons or are unavailable.", "Ella (pictured, centre) has made two lifelong friends thanks to her late mother's organ donations\n\nWhen her mother died in 2013, Ella decided her organs should be donated in the hope of saving the lives of others. It has led to several successful transplants and two wonderful friendships. Now Ella is hoping to donate to one of the same women as her mother.\n\nElla Murtha had always hoped the recipients of her late mother's organs would contact her, and that it might bring some form of closure. But she never expected to gain such strong friendships.\n\n\"I hoped I'd hear something when I agreed to be contacted [by the recipients], but I didn't know,\" she tells the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme.\n\nHer mother Tish died unexpectedly in 2013 following a ruptured brain aneurysm, aged 56. Despite her not being on the organ donor list, Ella felt that it was right for her organs to be passed on.\n\nTish's heart, kidney, pancreas, liver, eye tissue and lungs were all donated, leading to successful transplants that doctors said saved the lives of four women and the eyesight of four men.\n\nMany organ donors never have the opportunity to meet the person, or people, whose lives they have changed for the better.\n\nThe recipient's identity remains confidential, although a thank-you letter can often be passed on via a transplant co-ordinator.\n\nFor six months Ella, from Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, heard nothing back. But then two letters arrived on her doorstep in the same week.\n\nTeresa Saunders, from Reading, was one of those who decided to write, wanting to express her gratitude for receiving a kidney and pancreas.\n\nThree years earlier her diabetes had caused her kidneys to fail when she became pregnant, and she had been placed on a waiting list.\n\nAfter the operation Teresa waited about five months before writing to Ella, in order \"to fully recover and make sure I was well and the organs were OK\".\n\nJane Holmes, of Hornsea, East Yorkshire, also decided to write. She was in a wheelchair and had struggled to breathe since being diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension.\n\n\"I wanted Ella to know what her decision had gone on to do - to help save a mum with four children,\" she explains.\n\n\"Initially it's like the lungs came off the shelf - it's clinical and you don't attach people to it.\n\n\"But when you start getting better you want to thank people for it, and you think you visualise the person.\"\n\nThe pair exchanged letters, but their friendship began to blossom when Jane's daughter Maisie sent Ella a Christmas card.\n\nAged eight at the time, Maisie had thought Ella might be lonely without her mother, and wrote a card that read: \"Thank you for letting your mum save my mum's life.\"\n\nMaisie sent a letter to Ella, thanking her for helping to save her mother's life\n\nOn the anniversary of Jane receiving her new lungs, the three women decided to meet, saying it felt like a natural progression.\n\n\"It sounds funny but we are like sisters because we have this bond - even like I'd known them for years,\" Teresa said.\n\n\"I feel really lucky,\" Ella said. \"It's so hard to explain it because I see them like family, but almost special friends that my mum has introduced me to.\n\n\"Teresa and Jane share my mum's organs and that's a special bond as well. For whatever reason, we're meant to be in each other's life.\"\n\nThe women speak almost every day, but the connection between them may yet grow stronger.\n\nTeresa's new kidney is deteriorating, meaning she will require a replacement.\n\nAbout 3,000 kidney transplants are carried out each year\n\nIn up to 90% of cases, a kidney transplant lasts for five or more years. In this instance doctors believe Teresa needs a replacement kidney from a living donor - and Ella hopes to follow in her mother's footsteps by donating her own organ.\n\nShe has undertaken tests to see if their tissue types are compatible. It may not be possible for Ella to donate, but Teresa says she is \"overwhelmed\" by her kindness and knows she can rely on Ella's emotional support.\n\nThe three friends are currently fundraising for Jane's daughter Maisie, who has cerebral palsy, to have an operation to help her walk.\n\nWatch the Victoria Derbyshire programme on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Unilever is behind some of Britain's best-known brands\n\nThink of Kraft Heinz's assault on Unilever as a slap in the face for management. It was short-lived, shocking, and will smart for a good while yet.\n\nIt's a slap that says \"we think we can do a better job for your shareholders than you\". That is not a message you want to get lodged in shareholders minds if you are Unilever's management and today the company acknowledged the sting.\n\n\"Unilever is conducting a comprehensive review of options available to accelerate delivery of value for the benefit of our shareholders. The events of the last week have highlighted the need to capture more quickly the value we see in Unilever.\"\n\nThat is the sound of a company cheek smarting.\n\nIt is very rare for corporate raiders like Warren Buffett (24% owner of Kraft Heinz) and Brazilian financier Jorge Lemann (owner of 3G) to back off so quickly. Once you dangle higher returns in front of pragmatic investors, they usually want to see what the next chat up line might be.\n\nThe Unilever management will take some pride in the fact they convinced some of their own major shareholders to back their rejection of the offer so flatly. The management argument, as told to me by senior management, went something like this.\n\nYes - Kraft has much higher profit margins than Unilever (23% compared to 15%) so looks like the better operator. But - Kraft habitually invests less in the future, therefore has lower organic (internally generated) growth and is saddled with more than average amounts of debt.\n\nAs a result it needs to acquire other companies to keep the growth going and pays for it by using yet more debt, which is financed in part with cash the target company has in the bank.\n\nThat model, argues Unilever, is not sustainable. Before long, we would be part of an underinvested, short-term profit-seeking, company-eating machine. As soon as Unilever had been digested, Kraft would be hungry again.\n\nWhen the management of the company you want to buy REALLY don't want to sell to you, you can always go over their heads, cut them out of the negotiation and appeal directly to the shareholders.\n\nBut \"going hostile\" costs a lot more money and excites much more regulatory and political interest than a deal which the management recommends.\n\nMany UK politicians welcomed the Kraft defeat as a victory for responsible long-term thinking by one of Europe's biggest companies and its shareholders who wisely eschewed the Jerry Maguire \"show me the money\" approach.\n\nIt's lucky for them they did. It will give the government a bit more time to figure out their own play book for how to deal with future bids - which are certainly coming thanks to the discount UK companies are selling at thanks to a near 20% depreciation in sterling post-referendum.\n\nAt the World Economic Forum in Davos last month, I spoke to half a dozen US executives who were running the rule over potential UK targets - big and small.\n\nCurrent rules only allow the government to intervene when takeovers could compromise financial stability, national security or media plurality.\n\nTargets I heard discussed included food and drink, engineering and technology companies based or listed in the UK with foreign earnings potential. You can come up with a reasonably long list using those criteria.\n\nDespite a few eye-catching deals like Japan's Softbank swoop on ARM Holdings and the upstart company Skyscanner being sold to a Chinese rival, there is no flood yet.\n\nIn fact, merger activity overall is still subdued as bidders are still wary of the prospects for UK companies with exposure to domestic and EU markets until greater clarity emerges on the future relationship between the two.\n\nAs Kraft Heinz retreats with its tail between its legs for now there is plenty of food for thought for both Unilever and government.\n\nUnilever's CEO Paul Polman has been warned that if he doesn't focus more on the bottom line, someone else will.\n\nThe government may have to decide quickly whether foreign takeovers are a sign of confidence in the UK to be welcomed or opportunistic raiding parties to be resisted.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester United eased into the last 16 of the Europa League with victory at Saint-Etienne but goalscorer Henrikh Mkhitaryan could be out of Sunday's EFL Cup final after limping off.\n\nLeading 3-0 from the first leg thanks to a Zlatan Ibrahimovic hat-trick, United started sharply in front of a noisy home support at a stadium often referred to as 'The Cauldron', with Mkhitaryan flicking in Juan Mata's cross early on to leave the hosts needing five goals.\n\nThe Armenian departed shortly after and clutched his hamstring as he entered the tunnel, an injury which could impact on manager Jose Mourinho's team selection for Sunday's Wembley meeting with Southampton.\n\nAnd although United had defender Eric Bailly sent off for two bookable offences in the second half, they rarely looked under pressure in securing a place in Friday's last-16 draw.\n\nShort of a Loic Perrin header, which was easily held by Sergio Romero in the first half, United - who had made six changes - were comfortable throughout, with Marcus Rashford poking wide when well placed in the second period.\n\nThe first leg of their next game in the competition will arrive days before an FA Cup tie at Chelsea but with just one defeat in 25 matches, Mourinho continues to shuffle his pack efficiently and the challenge for three cup successes remains in tact.\n\nUnited's brilliant run of form since early November has largely coincided with Mkhitaryan establishing himself as a first-team regular.\n\nHis sixth goal for the club was a deft flick at the near post as he guided the ball low into the net, effectively ending the contest.\n\nHis inclusion, along with that of Ibrahimovic and Paul Pogba, perhaps suggested Mourinho felt United still had work to do in the tie, despite the prospect of a first major trophy of the Portuguese manager's reign being on offer on Sunday.\n\nBut Mourinho believes his playmaker will have \"too little time\" to overcome the injury and Michael Carrick also looks a doubt with a calf complaint.\n\nThe injuries will pose selection dilemmas but could pave the way for Wayne Rooney - whose future at the club looks uncertain - to perhaps figure more prominently at Wembley.\n\nIf Mkhitaryan's injury frustrated Mourinho, he was visibly angered as he waved his hand up in protest when by Bailly was dismissed for two yellow cards in a 185-second spell.\n\nBailly was fractionally late on Romain Hamouma to bring about his second caution, though Mourinho felt the winger \"enjoyed too much the diving and simulation\".\n\nThe defender will miss the first-leg of the next round, but his dismissal should not take any gloss from a professional display. When resistance was needed, it arrived - notably when Bailly and Romero raced to thwart Kevin Monnet-Paquet's burst towards goal in the first half.\n\nAt the other end, the pace of Rashford, drive of Pogba and threat of Ibrahimovic ensured United always looked capable carving their hosts open and finding extra gears if needed.\n\nAlmost nine years have passed since their last European success under then-manager Sir Alex Ferguson, who watched from the stands as United made it five wins in a row, with just one goal conceded.\n\nTough opposition such as Lyon and Roma could yet arise in the Europa League but United clearly look well placed for an assault on a trophy they have never won and though injuries mount, they carry strong momentum into the first domestic cup final of the season.\n\n\"The right message\" - what the managers said\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho: \"Everything was under control, solid, focused, professional. Obviously the first goal kills every hope. We still like to win the game. I told the players if someone gives me a 2-1 victory it is not enough. I always want the best possible result.\n\n\"I have to give the right message to the players and the right message is to play with a strong team and have a bench with options. We knew it would be difficult. It was important to play solid and to have complete control of the game.\"\n\nSaint-Etienne manager Christophe Galtier: \"I would love for my players to have won this game for themselves, first of all, but also for the fans because they would have deserved it. The fans were just exceptional tonight.\"\n• None Since winning their final Europa League group game against Zorya Luhansk in December, United have conceded just seven goals in 18 games, winning 14.\n• None Man Utd have kept four successive clean sheets in European competition for the first time since December 2013.\n• None Henrikh Mkhitaryan has been involved in five goals in his last six games for Man Utd in all competitions (three goals, two assists).\n• None Man Utd have scored in all but one of their last 26 games in all competitions (0-0 v Hull on 1 February).\n• None Attempt saved. Jorginho (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top left corner.\n• None Offside, St Etienne. Fabien Lemoine tries a through ball, but Kévin Monnet-Paquet is caught offside.\n• None Offside, St Etienne. Florentin Pogba tries a through ball, but Nolan Roux is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Bastian Schweinsteiger (Manchester United) right footed shot from the left side of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Paul Pogba.\n• None Attempt missed. Vincent Pajot (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the right.\n• None Offside, St Etienne. Kévin Théophile-Catherine tries a through ball, but Romain Hamouma is caught offside.\n• None Offside, Manchester United. Paul Pogba tries a through ball, but Zlatan Ibrahimovic is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Romain Hamouma (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high. Assisted by Kévin Monnet-Paquet.\n• None Attempt missed. Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United) right footed shot from the right side of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Paul Pogba. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Christine Lewis took medical retirement at 48 but felt she had more to give\n\nSome 600,000 people with arthritis are missing out on the opportunity to work, according to the charity Arthritis Research UK. BBC presenter Julian Worricker, who has psoriatic arthritis, spoke to people trying to juggle staying in work with a painful and debilitating condition.\n\nBritain is a nation of \"put up and shut up\" when it comes to workplace health.\n\nThat's according to leading charity Arthritis Research UK. This isn't just based on anecdotal evidence - before Christmas the charity questioned more than 2,000 people about their attitudes and experience regarding health and the workplace.\n\nOne theme arose time and time again - people's willingness to suffer in silence.\n\nI have arthritis. Not rheumatoid, but another inflammatory form of the disease - psoriatic arthritis. It's linked to the common skin complaint, psoriasis.\n\nI'm lucky in that I've rarely had serious flare-ups. I'm now taking a drug that dramatically improves my symptoms, and at work I can think of only a handful of occasions when I've been hampered, discomforted or forced to make adjustments for any nagging pain I may have been experiencing.\n\nBut for thousands of other people in the UK it's a very different story.\n\nOsteoarthritis - which makes movement more difficult - is the most common form of arthritis\n\nSarah Dillingham is a case in point. She was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis in her 20s when she was working in a high-pressure corporate environment.\n\nSome people at work didn't understand the severity of Sarah's health issues, she says\n\nDuring bad flare-ups she had to cope with extreme fatigue and intense pain. Everyday tasks, even holding a pen, were difficult.\n\nCommuting, or as Sarah put it \"being bashed about on the tube\", really took it out of her.\n\nOver 10 years she struggled to control her symptoms.\n\n\"My world became all about my job because in order to go in and deliver I could only do that if I got up early to deal with the pain. I didn't have any social life. Your world does shrink in quite an unhealthy way,\" she says.\n\nShe experienced the best and the worst from the people she worked alongside.\n\nShe tells me: \"A fantastic colleague used to help by writing on the white board for me during presentations when I couldn't lift my arms up.\"\n\nBut one boss made it very clear that Sarah's health issues were not something to be considered important, forcing her to try and act as if there was no problem at all.\n\n\"Being bashed about on the tube\" on her daily commute was one of the things that made working difficult, says Sarah Dillingham\n\nChristine Lewis's story taps into some of the same narrative.\n\nShe was a nurse when she was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, but daily work tasks became too much for her and she switched her career to banking.\n\nInitially her new employers were very receptive to her needs, but as time went on they became less supportive.\n\n\"They employed someone to come and assess me. She assessed my working environment and made various recommendations.\"\n\nThey suggested minor changes to her desk and workstation, Christine told me.\n\n\"They said that things don't happen very quickly in business. A year later, still nothing,\" she says.\n\nSarah's and Christine's stories diverge at this point. Sarah is now her own boss, works mainly from home, and can manage her travel so that it rarely coincides with the London rush hour.\n\nChristine Lewis, pictured here with Julian, says employers are missing out on a \"wealth of experience.\" She now volunteers for the National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society\n\nAs an employer, partly as a result of what she went through as an employee, she's a believer in what she calls \"sensible flexibility\".\n\nShe says: \"I absolutely understand the importance of hiring people who will give 100%.\n\n\"At the same time pretty much everyone has something in their life, whether that's a long-term medical condition, or young children or having to care for someone.\n\n\"It can be as simple as being able to hold meetings over Skype, or an ergonomic mouse which is very cheap.\"\n\nChristine, by contrast, took medical retirement at the age of 48.\n\nShe feels she still had a number of good working years ahead of her but, without the necessary adjustments being made in the office to help her manage, she felt she had no choice but to give up her job.\n\n\"Employers are missing out on the wealth of experience that people have,\" she says.\n\n\"Being that bit older, I've got a house. I've had children, I've been a housewife and all that actually is quite a lot of experience that employers should tap into.\"\n\nThe Department for Work and Pensions told us that funding is available through the government's Access to Work scheme to pay for equipment or support that a disabled person might need in the workplace.\n\nStories like those of Sarah and Christine might well influence the government's thinking in the coming months.\n\nIt says it wants to halve what's known as the disability gap - that's the difference between employment rates of disabled and non-disabled people - and it's been consulting on how best to do that.\n\nThe Labour MP, Frank Field, chairs the parliamentary work and pensions committee. A lot of evidence about work and disability has come before him in recent months.\n\n\"Nobody doubts the will of the government wishing to do this. What's worrying is whether they've really thought about how hard this objective is to achieve,\" he says.\n\nOne suggestion is to encourage employers using incentives. \"One should have, in this coming Budget, a reduction in national insurance contributions to those employers who say I'm taking [disabled] people onto my payroll,\" he says.\n\nDuring our conversation Mr Field highlighted one statistic that put into perspective what the government wants to do: according to the Learning and Work Institute, halving that disability gap will take - at current rates - 200 years.\n\nJulian Worricker presents a mini-series about arthritis on You & Yours, from Wednesday 22 February to Friday 24 February at 12.15GMT on BBC Radio 4.\n• None 'How I got arthritis to loosen its grip'\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Seven planets have been discovered in a solar system 40 light-years from Earth.\n\nThe researchers say that all seven could potentially support liquid water on the surface, depending on the other properties of those planets.", "Lewis Hamilton has put the first laps on the Mercedes car he hopes will make him world champion for the fourth time in 2017.\n\nThe 32-year-old drove the new Mercedes W08 at Silverstone in blustery, damp conditions.\n\nHamilton said the car felt \"incredible\" and \"pretty awesome\" on his first outing.\n\nIt has been produced to new regulations aimed at making the cars faster, more dramatic and more demanding of drivers.\n\nIt features an elegant design, in contrast to some rivals, and a notably narrow rear.\n• None Did these crazy car launches really happen?\n\nHamilton said: \"Yesterday was the first time I saw [the car] together. It is the most detailed piece of machinery I have seen in F1.\n\n\"This is not an actual test - it's just a few laps to make sure the car will run. But I was able to go faster in the last couple of laps.\n\n\"It feels almost identical to last year's car in terms of ergonomics but you have this bigger, more powerful beast around you.\"\n\n'You may see some sparks' - Bottas\n\nHis new team-mate Valtteri Bottas, signed by Mercedes last month to replace Nico Rosberg, who retired after winning his first world title last year, drove the car on Thursday afternoon.\n\nMercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff said he was hoping for a less fractious relationship between Hamilton and Bottas than between the Briton and Rosberg.\n\n\"It's a completely new dynamic,\" Wolff said. \"I see it as an opportunity to start from square one with a healthy relationship. There are no games, no warfare because there is no history.\n\n\"There is a solid foundation that the relationship works well. But you have to be realistic that when they get out there, it is about winning races and championships, and the rivalry could be difficult.\"\n\nHowever, Bottas told BBC TV that \"you may see some sparks\" and he wanted to be world champion himself at some stage.\n\n\"I am here to do a lot for the team, everything I can,\" he said,\n\n\"I'm here also to prove myself. I'm not here to be the second driver. We are both going to be fighting a lot on the track, but fairly, and for the team.\"\n\nMercedes have clearly worked extremely hard at shrink-wrapping the bodywork as much as possible around the engine and its ancillaries to ensure the cleanest airflow and maximum aerodynamic downforce.\n\nAnd the aerodynamic detailing on the car looks especially intricate, with a cascading series of airflow conditioners - commonly known as 'barge boards' - either side of the cockpit, which are a clear advance on anything seen before in F1.\n\nBottas said: \"What I really like about it is how clean it looks, but at the same time there's a massive amount of detail.\"\n\nWolff added: \"It is a new era of technical innovation, maybe someone has found the silver bullet that makes the difference, like Brawn in 2009. Hopefully it will be us.\"\n\nFourth title 'there for the taking' - Hamilton\n\nHamilton is relishing the prospect of the new season, which starts in Australia on 26 March.\n\n\"It is a good day to get confidence in the car. It is a good way to brush off cobwebs and do the walking because next week we have to go straight into the running,\" he said.\n\n\"I definitely don't want to finish second. Every year you generally set the same goals but you might add more. All drivers want to win but not everyone has the ability or the opportunity.\n\n\"We will find out whether we have the car next week, whether it is a reliable fast car so I can exploit what's inside me. I am looking for that fourth world championship. It's there for the taking again, I am up against another great driver in Valtteri and hopefully Red Bull and Ferrari will be up there as well.\"\n\nThe new rules were introduced at least partly because Mercedes' rivals hoped a reset would allow them to make up some ground. But there was always a risk that the best team with the best engine would end up further ahead.\n\nIt's too early to say that, but the new car looks like a work of engineering art and Hamilton ought to be favourite to win a fourth world title this season.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChelsea boss Antonio Conte has visited England's rugby union team to share ideas with head coach Eddie Jones.\n\nJones, 57, has won all 15 of his Tests since England's World Cup exit, and his side are on a 16-game winning streak.\n\nConte has similarly rejuvenated Chelsea during his first season in England, with the Blues eight points clear at the top of the Premier League.\n\n\"Eddie is a winner and he is transferring that mentality on to the team,\" Conte, 47, told England Rugby.\n\n\"It is important for me to compare my work and experience with another sport to gain inspiration and tactical ideas for the future.\n\n\"It was very interesting to observe another sport and the differences between the two.\"\n\nJones invited his football counterpart Gareth Southgate to Pennyhill Park earlier this month.\n\nThe Australian's team are preparing for Sunday's Six Nations match against Italy at Twickenham (15:00 GMT, live on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra).\n\nJones' men will be seeking a 17th successive Test win, which would see them move within one of New Zealand's record.\n\nChelsea, meanwhile, play Swansea on Saturday, looking for a 12th home win from 13 league games this season.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nHolders Hibernian beat Edinburgh rivals Hearts to set up a home Scottish Cup quarter-final with Ayr on 4 March.\n\nJason Cummings latched on to substitute Andrew Shinnie's clever pass to give Hibs an early lead.\n\nCummings turned provider for Grant Holt's strike as Hearts fell two down before the break.\n\nAnd Shinnie, who had replaced Chris Humphrey early on, rifled in the hosts' third in the second half, Esmael Goncalves replying for Hearts.\n\nHearts found themselves engulfed at the home of their closest rivals. The visitors had expected Hibs to start the game assertively, but the intensity and commitment still saw their resolve collapse.\n\nHibs were canny in their approach, since the vivid pace of Martin Boyle and Humphrey on the flanks was enough to alarm the Hearts full-backs. The latter only lasted four minutes, due to injury, but a series of crosses from the right by both wingers led to desperate Hearts defending.\n\nThe opening goal was typical, with Hibs swarming upfield and Shinnie having the presence of mind to split the Hearts defence with a through ball that allowed Cummings to finish with a powerful and precise finish - continuing his scoring record against Hearts after netting the winner in last season's fifth-round replay.\n\nThe second goal was agonising for Ian Cathro's side, since they conceded possession deep in their opponents' half through a sloppy Lennard Sowah pass, then found themselves further behind after three passes and a counter attack ended with Holt slipping home.\n\nHibs' tenacity was irrepressible. John McGinn set the tone in the second half when he carried the ball into the Hearts penalty area, lost it, but then won it back with such eagerness that the visiting defenders looked forlorn. He cut a pass back to Shinnie, and his effort was saved one-handed by Jack Hamilton.\n\nEvery Hibs figure was fully in command. When the home fans grumbled angrily at a misplaced pass, head coach Neil Lennon turned to the stand and beckoned them to calm down. When they applauded in response, he lifted his arms to raise the atmosphere.\n\nMcGinn, too, was a forceful presence in midfield. It was his determination to win the ball that led to Shinnie striking an effort from 20 yards that seemed to fly through Hamilton's hands for the decisive third goal.\n\nBy the end, the home fans were chanting \"there's only one Ian Cathro\" in mocking tones.\n\nThe Hearts head coach did not need a squad so much as the ability to clone Jamie Walker. The attacking midfielder was the sole figure of defiance in his side, but had to roam the field looking for a way to influence the game that he was mostly isolated.\n\nAlexandros Tziolis is a clever, accomplished footballer, but he seemed at odds with the pace of the game. Malaury Martin looked like a player who had found himself in the wrong game.\n\nHe did not re-emerge for the second half, along with Perry Kitchen, but with Hibs so well organised and drilled, even the addition of a winger in Sam Nicholson and a forward in Rory Currie could not disrupt them.\n\nNicholson did create a chance for Walker, which he sent over, and Currie did win the ball before sending it to Goncalves, who was fouled by Darren McGregor for a penalty.\n\nGoncalves took the spot-kick, but even that was half-hearted and Ofir Marciano saved twice before the striker eventually bundled the ball over the line.\n\nIt was too little, too late, and on the final whistle Walker sank to the ground, alone in feeling too deflated to stand. He was also the only one of the Hearts players to head towards the away fans to applaud them before he left the field.\n• None Attempt saved. Sam Nicholson (Heart of Midlothian) left footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the bottom left corner.\n• None Attempt missed. John McGinn (Hibernian) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the left.\n• None Lewis Stevenson (Hibernian) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Jamie Walker (Heart of Midlothian) wins a free kick in the defensive half.\n• None Attempt missed. Arnaud Djoum (Heart of Midlothian) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left.\n• None Arnaud Djoum (Heart of Midlothian) wins a free kick on the left wing. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "The go-ahead has formally been given for the first phase of the HS2 high speed rail link between London and Birmingham.\n\nAfter three years of debate in parliament, royal assent has been approved.\n\nSupporters say the multi-billion pound project will boost the economy, whilst critics argue it is a waste of money and will damage the environment.", "There are close to three million South Africans who suffer from some form of disability and they experience high unemployment, due to discrimination and lack of access.\n\nOne exception to the trend is Mbalenhle Nkhumelani, who was left paraplegic after a childhood injury, but has found employment with the global steelmaker ArcelorMittal.", "Many of today's papers report on the murder of the children's author Helen Bailey, by her partner Ian Stewart.\n\nThe Times says Stewart drugged Ms Bailey over a period of months, lacing her morning scrambled eggs with a powerful sedative which left her tired and vulnerable.\n\nHelen Bailey chatted to Ian Stewart online before going out on dates and starting a relationship\n\nThe Guardian reports that Stewart began stealing money from his victim just hours after her death, raiding her savings account and attempting to sell one of her properties.\n\nWhile the Daily Express says Stewart made a series of blunders following the murder, including keeping Ms Bailey's phone and referring to her in the past tense.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph reports that the government is under pressure to prove that none of the £20m paid to British terror suspects held at Guantanamo Bay ended up in the hands of the so-called Islamic State group.\n\nThe calls have been sparked by the case of Jamal al Harith - an IS suicide bomber who received up to £1m in compensation after being freed from the prison camp.\n\nThe Daily Mail has come out fighting after Tony Blair accused the paper of hypocrisy over its coverage of the case. The former prime minister pointed out that The Mail had led a huge media campaign for Harith's release.\n\nBut calling Mr Blair \"increasingly delusional\" and \"mendacious\", the paper says that while it had condemned Guantanamo Bay, it had never claimed the detainees weren't \"very bad men\".\n\nBritain is wasting hundreds of millions of pounds on a failed green energy project according to the Times.\n\nIt reports the government has given huge subsidies to power stations to burn wood pellets, which it says do more harm to the environment than the coal they replaced.\n\nThe paper says the scheme was championed by former MP Chris Huhne when he was in the coalition government, adding that he now works for an American company that supplies wood pellets. Mr Huhne has denied any conflict of interest to the paper.\n\nCressida Dick, the first woman to become the chief constable of the Metropolitan police, makes a number of the front pages.\n\nThe Guardian quotes a former senior Met officer who says Ms Dick \"inspires confidence\" and can operate in tough, predominantly male situations as well as working with senior politicians.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph calls her \"the first lady of the Met\" and congratulates her on the appointment but says unlike some of her predecessors she \"must chase criminals, not headlines\".\n\nIf you struggle to eat five portions of fruit or vegetables every day, the Guardian has bad news for you.\n\nIt says scientists are recommending 10 portions a day. A team at Imperial College London believes that eating more fruit and vegetables would prevent about 7.8 million premature deaths across the world.\n\nAnd \"from rags to £14m lotto riches\" is the Daily Mirror's headline about Britain's newest lottery winner. Beverley Doran, who gave up work to care for her autistic children, and told the paper that she had dressed in \"rags\" as all her money went on her family.\n\nNow she has moved out of her council house in West Yorkshire and is staying in a hotel while she looks for a luxury home.\n\nBut, the paper adds, Ms Doran won't be celebrating with the usual bottle of champagne, as she is allergic to it.", "Heard the term but not sure what it means? Chris Fawkes explains.", "Sara Bennett (l) won her Oscar for her work on Ex Machina (centre) and Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy won for her documentary films\n\nOscars season is all about the stars: who said what, which gowns rocked the red carpet, and of course, who won.\n\nBut for women behind the camera, it takes a lot more to get noticed.\n\nFemale nominations for technical work are rare - blink and you can miss them. From the outside, it looks like a man's world - but is that how it feels?\n\nThree women - two of them 2016 Oscar winners - tell us what it's really like.\n\nSara Bennett was the first female VFX supervisor to win an Academy Award\n\n\"I loved film growing up - I watched a lot of horror and I loved prosthetics, so my natural thought was to get into that,\" says Sara Bennett, who won an Oscar for her work on 2015 sci-fi drama Ex Machina.\n\nThe film brought to life the female robot Ava, played by Alicia Vikander, whose body had humanoid features but with a transparent skull, limbs and torso.\n\nAs the first female VFX supervisor to win an Oscar, Sara broke new ground at 2016's ceremony.\n\nIt was only the third time in 89 years that a woman had been nominated for visual effects.\n\nThe last winner? Suzanne Benson for Aliens - back in 1987.\n\nTechnology genius Nathan Bateman, played by Oscar Isaac, holds a robot \"brain\" created by Sara Bennett in Ex Machina\n\nSara said she had to create an \"organic\" look for the \"brain\"\n\nDespite being such rarity, Sara says she's never felt outnumbered.\n\n\"Until last year's Oscar nomination, I'd never really thought about it being male-dominated,\" she says.\n\n\"The hard time for me was learning the craft and moving up, as opposed to dealing with men in my industry.\"\n\n\"Being a woman probably went in my favour, to be honest.\"\n\nSara, whose back catalogue includes Sherlock, The Martian and the first four Harry Potter films, says she loves the variety her work gives her.\n\nHer passion for her work is infectious, and she says it was \"amazing\" winning the Oscar - she couldn't quite believe it when her name was read out.\n\nBut she also mixes it up by managing a team, mentoring young women and leading children's workshops.\n\nHaving trained in prosthetics and make-up, she became a runner during the 1990s, working as a general assistant on film sets before switching to VFX.\n\nAs a compositor, she learned how to combine several visual elements into a believable on-screen image, gaining her first credit in 1998 for Babe, Pig in the City.\n\nAlthough aspiring VFX specialists can now learn through YouTube tutorials, software and courses, Sara's adamant that the best experience is found in the workplace.\n\n\"Until you're working flat out and your eyes are bleeding at four in the morning, that horrible feeling - that's when you really learn about the job,\" she laughs, talking about the pressures of working to tight deadlines.\n\nThree years ago she set up London and Cardiff-based visual effects company Milk with four male colleagues, after their section in another VFX studio, The Mill, was closed down.\n\nSara now sees more women moving through the ranks, and says with delight: \"When I was younger it was about 80/20 men to women in VFX, but now it's closer to 60/40.\"\n\nBut even if more women want creative positions in the film industry, they're not at the top table just yet.\n\nResearch from the Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film says women made up just 17% of \"behind-the-scenes employment\" on the top 100, 250 and 500 films of 2016.\n\nThe study, The Celluloid Ceiling, states this is a drop of two percentage points on 2015, putting the figures on a par with 1998.\n\nThese statistics, combined with this year's all-male VFX Oscar nominations, make those rare female wins look even more stark.\n\nFie Tholander says it is \"cool to have a job where you do magic\" with VFX\n\nSo when's this going to change?\n\nSara says it will take a while. \"There's so many women doing VFX. Maybe they're not doing the big A-List films, but they're out there doing it all.\"\n\nFie Tholander, 31, has been inspired by Sara, working for her as a VFX compositor at Milk.\n\n\"I've always been drawn to magic, to fairy tale stories,\" she says, citing David Bowie fantasy drama Labyrinth (1986) as an inspiration.\n\nShe's single-mindedly pursued her career since she was 15 and is now creating aliens for the upcoming Doctor Who series.\n\nShe also worked on the brains in jars with eyeballs which featured in last year's Christmas special.\n\nShe worked on last year's Doctor Who Christmas episode\n\nAs a Danish high school student, she already knew she wanted to work in VFX, studying art at Animation Workshop before heading for London, with an internship at The Mill.\n\nIt was there that she met Sara, who became her mentor.\n\n\"Having Sara as a role model makes women realise they can actually do it,\" she says.\n\n\"VFX is portrayed as a technical thing, which isn't always the case. I'm not a technical person, I'm more creative.\"\n\nFie thinks women need to be more assertive: \"I think women in general hold back, we're afraid to ask, and men are a bit more bold with their careers.\"\n\nAmy Adams is the lead in the Oscar-nominated film Arrival\n\nHas she ever hit a glass, even a celluloid, ceiling? Nope.\n\n\"Sexism isn't something I've come across. If I want something I have to ask for it - no one will give it to me.\"\n\nBut Fie does think the industry's progressing, with more women applying to work in her profession.\n\nShe's also convinced that the film world is changing.\n\n\"With all the movies coming out, we're getting female role models who aren't princesses, which is great.\"\n\nRecent films such as Arrival have seen Amy Adams star as an expert linguist communicating with aliens, while Star Wars movie Rogue One has Felicity Jones as its lead.\n\nBut it's not just VFX and sci-fi where women are breaking through.\n\nSharmeen Obaid-Chinoy started out as a print journalist before switching to documentaries\n\nSharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, 37, made history last year as Pakistan's only double Oscar winner.\n\nShe won her second best documentary Oscar for A Girl in the River - The Price of Forgiveness, about honour killings in Pakistan.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Oscar-winning Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy on why being a female film-maker is an asset\n\nHer first, in 2012, was for Saving Face, about a plastic surgeon treating those scarred by acid attacks.\n\nStarting out as a print journalist in Pakistan, Sharmeen decided aged 21 to switch to documentaries, so she could tell her stories visually.\n\nThere are hundreds of so-called \"honour killings\" in Pakistan each year\n\nShe pitched her first film proposal to about 80 global organisations.\n\n\"I was pretty much turned down by everyone,\" she says. \"But I've always believed that if a door doesn't open for you, it's because you haven't knocked hard enough.\"\n\nUndeterred, she asked the New York Times, who'd just set up a TV unit.\n\nThey agreed to fund her first film, about Afghan refugee children on the streets of Pakistan.\n\nHer career went upwards from there - she's also won two Emmys (in 2010 and 2013) and the Hilal-e-Imtiaz (Crescent of Distinction), Pakistan's second-highest civilian award.\n\n\"It amplifies your voice and the voices of all of those people you are making a film about.\n\n\"After A Girl in the River, there was legislation about honour killing installed in Parliament in Pakistan. The win at the Oscars gave it the final push it needed to get it passed.\"\n\nShe deliberately multi-tasks by producing and directing because \"it allows me the freedom to tell the type of stories I want to tell\".\n\n\"I've always said that making a film is like having a baby. You have a long period of time where something is inside of you, and when you send it out into the world, you want the world to appreciate it.\"\n\nShe has also won two Emmys\n\nWell aware of the high numbers of men working in the film industry, she says she's at an advantage in her field.\n\n\"Whereas Hollywood will tell you fewer women are getting the opportunities to be directors or play key roles in film, in documentary work, women in greater numbers are coming up behind the camera, winning Academy Awards.\"\n\nAnd for her, being a female filmmaker is an \"asset\".\n\n\"I've been able to get into places where a man would seldom be able to get into,\" she says.\n\n\"If I was a man perhaps I wouldn't be standing here today. I'm looked upon as less of a threat because I'm a woman.\"\n\nSharmeen says it is an \"asset\" being a female filmmaker\n\nSharmeen is keen to see more young women working in film, and tells them: \"You always need to believe in yourself. You need to go out and kick open those doors and you should never take no for an answer. Anything is possible.\n\n\"Chase your dreams and you never know, you may find yourself up on stage telling the stories you want to tell - and getting an accolade for it.\"\n\nSara's words of advice are all about being resilient.\n\nShe adds: \"If you get knocked back just get back up again - keep trying, make sure you enjoy it, put a big smile on your face - don't give up.\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Thirty-three homes have been evacuated and nearly 100 people left homeless by a landslide which is tearing apart the village of Ponzano in Italy.\n\nOfficials say a hill has been cut in two, and the landslide is moving at a rate of a metre a day.\n\nThe village is in the Abruzzo region, which was hit by a string of earthquakes in 2016.", "Lewis Hamilton says he believes the new faster Formula 1 cars this year will be a \"massive challenge\".\n\nThe Mercedes driver said he had trained hard but had no idea whether he was fit enough for cars which could be four seconds a lap faster than 2016.\n\n\"I don't know if I'll be easily fit enough, or will struggle a bit or be super-underneath and need to work harder,\" the 32-year-old said.\n\nWhile confident, he said he did not know if Mercedes would remain in front.\n\nThe three-time world champion, in an exclusive interview with BBC Radio 5 live, added that he:\n• None was over losing the title to team-mate Nico Rosberg last year\n• None looked forward to the challenge of his\n• None was concerned some aspects of the new rules might not work\n• None believed Red Bull's form was the one to watch before the start of pre-season testing\n• None hoped new F1 owners Liberty Media would implement changes to make the sport more exciting\n\nListen - 'I'm very happy to have Lewis as my team-mate'\n\nHamilton lost the world title last year at least partly because he had worse reliability than Rosberg.\n\nBut asked how much that hurt, he said: \"Nowhere near as much as you think. It doesn't change my life. You just move onwards and hopefully upwards.\"\n\nHamilton said it would be \"strange\" not having Rosberg in the team following the German's decision to retire last season but added: \"I have rivalry with everyone so it doesn't really matter who it is against.\"\n\nOf his new Finnish team-mate, who joins from Williams, Hamilton said: \"I have known him a little bit from being at the track and he seems a really nice, pleasant guy and I look forward to working with him and racing against him. I always welcome challenges and competition.\"\n\nBotta, 27, added: \"I've always wanted to be partnering a team-mate who is very good and Lewis obviously is.\n\n\"At the same time for me it's also a big challenge. I'm still much less experienced than him but I almost see that is a positive thing and a good thing.\n\n\"I'm just very happy to see Lewis as my team-mate and I see no reason why we couldn't be a good pair of team mates and race hard on track.\"\n\nNew rules could make it 'harder to overtake'\n\nF1 has introduced new rules this year that have changed the look of the cars and made them much faster.\n\nSwept back front wings, lower and wider rear wings, bigger tyres and a larger floor area should add up to at least a 30% increase in downforce and vastly faster cornering speeds and forces.\n\nIn addition, Pirelli has been told to produce tyres on which drivers can push hard throughout a grand prix, rather than having to nurse them by driving a second or more off the pace to prevent them overheating.\n\nBut Hamilton said he had concerns about whether the new rules would improve F1.\n\n\"My engineers say it's going to be a lot harder to overtake,\" Hamilton said. \"If we see overtaking is worse, it's going to be worse for the fans, the spectacle will be worse so I'm hoping that's not the case.\n\n\"For example, I heard tyres might not be as grippy as we'd hoped but the aero downforce is going to be huge because it's a bigger, wider car so there's going to be more downforce, so the car behind will be affected even more than it ever was before.\n\n\"And I've heard the engineers said this would potentially happen and there is an alternative route but this is the route that's chosen.\n\n\"So we are where we are and I really hope that the engineers, who are the smartest guys, are wrong and I hope that the spectacle is greater and the most competitive that it's ever been and if it is, then I look forward to being part of that.\"\n\n'I hope we'll be fighting with Red Bull and Ferrari'\n\nHamilton said expecting Mercedes to dominate this year in the manner of the past three seasons was \"just jumping to the easy conclusion\".\n\nHe added: \"It's a completely new slate. It might be Ferrari at the front, it might be Red Bull, we have no idea.\n\n\"I think the big unknown is Red Bull, I think they always create an amazing car and this is a new area of downforce and they're amazing at creating downforce so I think it'll be really interesting to see what they pull out and I'm hoping it'll be a real mixture of competition.\n\n\"I hope it'll be close so we'll be fighting with Red Bull and Ferrari. That's what the fans want to see.\"\n\nF1 'has a lot of catching up to do'\n\nUS group Liberty Media completed its takeover of F1's commercial arm last month, removed Bernie Ecclestone as chief executive, and is formulating plans for the future.\n\nHamilton said: \"I'm excited for the new owners who have come in and I hope they do something new and I really think they're going to bring new blood, new ideas, new ways of engaging the fans in a new and unique way.\n\n\"F1 is a bit outdated in the sense that if you look at other sports they're further ahead in the entertainment factor but F1 is catching up and I think there's a lot of catching up to do.\"\n\nHe said he believed Liberty should ask the fans for their opinions.\n\n\"The first step would be to see what the fans feel they're lacking, what they feel they would want more of,\" he said. \"I think you'd get a good balance of opinions of people who have been to a grand prix. You'd get a lot of opinions but, a bit like our government, it might go the wrong way.\"", "Walking behind the tall, concrete tower blocks of Brixton's Loughborough Estate there's an unlikely sight. Against a backdrop of railway arches, young people trot around the floodlit manege of the Ebony Horse Club, an organisation founded in 2006 to teach equestrian skills to local children.\n\nIn this inner city neighbourhood, some children battle with a plethora of problems at both home and school, leading to truancy, high rates of teenage pregnancy, self harm and homelessness.\n\nThese issues are epitomised by the murder of Nathan Foster - a member of the club - who was shot in gang-related activity just a year after it was founded.\n\nThe organisation intends to be a safe haven away from these problems, mentoring children through a mix of sessions with youth workers, as well as helping them get into colleges and employment using their newfound equestrian skills.\n\nOne member who benefited in this way is Natasha, who is now studying equine performance and business management at Writtle College, a partner of the University of Essex.\n\nShe first came to the club when her confidence was at a low ebb.\n\n\"If Ebony wasn't there for me, then I certainly wouldn't be in halls at university,\" said Natasha.\n\n\"I don't know if I would have ever gone through any sort of higher education, since I didn't believe I had the confidence to study away from home.\"\n\nAs well as building confidence and teaching a practical skill, working with the horses teaches the children responsibility as, in addition to riding them, they must groom and care for the steeds.\n\nLinda Hinds, the operations manager of the stables, also believes that due to the size of the horses, the children are made to think about their actions, giving many of them their first positive contact with an animal.\n\nNahshon is one of Ebony's oldest members, having started to ride at the age of nine.\n\nHaving overcome a lot, he now works at Trent Park Equestrian Centre in North London.\n\n\"Learning to ride kept me out of trouble, and being at Ebony definitely helped me become a better and more independent person,\" he said.\n\n\"I was encouraged to step up and take control of my life.\n\n\"Without it, my life would be very different, and I would probably would have been in prison.\n\n\"In the future, I always want to be around horses.\"\n\nWith membership numbers having grown from five to 79 over the past decade, about 140 young people now visit the centre every week.\n\nThe waiting list is more than a year long, but priority is given to children from the immediate area, alongside referrals from social services and doctors, such as one young man with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).\n\nLynden, 14, who has been riding for the past five years, said: \"Ebony Horse Club pushes me to be more, and gives me time and space to let go of what's happening in the outside world.\"\n\nAll photographs taken by Sophie Wedgwood.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Dozens of houses and almost 3,500 hectares of forest have been destroyed by fires which continue to burn in Chile.", "Rumours are rife about Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari's health - and grip on power\n\nAs Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari was beginning his latest visit to London more than a month ago, a new series of Big Brother Nigeria was getting under way.\n\nA former military ruler known for his no-nonsense style would appear to have little in common with a reality TV show where contestants engage in attention-seeking behaviour.\n\nBut both subjects were soon generating headlines for the same reason - neither of them were in Nigeria.\n\nIt turned out that Big Brother was actually being filmed in South Africa - a decision that led Nigeria's information minister to launch an investigation.\n\nWhile the howls of protests from outraged Big Brother fans soon died down, the clamour over Nigeria's leader's extended medical stay in London is not going away.\n\nPresident Buhari's absence comes as Africa's most populous nation is gripped by its worst economic crisis in decades, and faces the threat of famine in north-east Nigeria, which has been devastated by the Boko Haram insurgency.\n\nAnd unlike Big Brother, there are no constant updates - in fact, President Buhari, 74, has not given a single interview since arriving in the UK.\n\nInstead, the Nigerian public is relying on pictures - posted on Twitter - of their leader meeting senior UK officials as proof that he still is alive.\n\nThe latest statement issued by the government said there was \"no cause for worry\" about the president's health but his medical leave was being extended.\n\nNigerians have now heard their leader's voice for the first time since he left for the UK after a telephone conversation with the governor of the northern state of Kano was played out loud at a prayer meeting.\n\nHis month-long stay so far has angered some Nigerians after he promised to crack down on \"medical tourism\" by officials.\n\nLast June, President Buhari spent nearly two weeks in London receiving treatment for an ear infection.\n\nBut the bigger issue this time is that officials have repeatedly refused to disclose his illness and are not saying when he will return to Nigeria.\n\nIn a country where rumours are rife, the presidential statements have done little to dampen the speculation about the leader's health.\n\nNigerians are acutely sensitive to leaders travelling abroad for medical reasons after President Umaru Yar'Adua died while in office in 2010.\n\nFor months, the public was kept in the dark while he received treatment in Saudi Arabia.\n\nThe period of uncertainty created deep political instability in the country.\n\nThe current president's supporters say that is emphatically not the case this time.\n\nThey point to the fact that President Buhari constitutionally handed over power to his vice-president, Yemi Osinbajo, as he has done on previous trips, rather than governing from afar.\n\nHe did take one phone call while in London, however, from the US President Donald Trump - the first between the two leaders.\n\n\"There is no vacuum at the top,\" says political analyst Jibrin Ibrahim.\n\n\"President Buhari takes his constitutional role seriously, and has not personalised power, unlike other African leaders.\n\n\"My chief criticism is that his government has been acting like it has all the time in the world, when in fact urgent decisions needed to be made in regard to the economy.\"\n\nBut, perhaps, one of the most striking things about President Buhari's absence has been the go-getting style of the acting leader.\n\nPresident Buhari has formally handed over his power to vice-president Yemi Osinbajo\n\nYemi Osinbajo is preparing to launch an economic recovery plan.\n\nHe also led a high-profile delegation to the Niger Delta to voice support for a government agreement with local militants groups that have seriously disrupted the region's oil production.\n\nBut critics say that despite all his activity, the vice-president has no real authority.\n\n\"He cannot perform because ministers and other political appointments are not obliged to be loyal to him as he didn't appoint them,\" said Isuwa Dogo, a political analyst, and a member of the opposition party.\n\n\"President Buhari is a public figure and there is no need for him to hide behind his health issues.\n\n\"I want him to be back in the county. If there are successes, he will get the credit. If there are failures, he will get the blame.\"\n\nSo, while Big Brother fans will know in April who has been crowned the series winner, for now, no-one seems to know when Nigeria's president will come back home.", "Great British Bake Off winner Nadiya Hussain is to host her own cookery show\n\nHussain, who won Bake Off in 2015, will feature in the eight-part series for BBC Two, which will seek out great examples of British food.\n\nHer show - Nadiya's British Food Adventure - will see her undertake a road trip around Britain, visiting a different region in each episode.\n\nHussain explored her culinary roots in Bangladesh in a two-part television series last year.\n\nShe is due to travel across the country, from the Scottish Highlands to Devon and Dorset, to highlight some of Britain's most innovative cooking.\n\nHussain said: \"Our country's regional cuisine is much more than tried and tested traditional dishes - there are quirky and clever food producers out there who are reinventing British food in unique and exciting ways.\n\n\"I can't wait to meet these local food heroes, to find inspiration in the most unusual food stories and unlikely ingredients and then come up with some brand new recipes in the kitchen, adding my own special twist.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Irish Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, BBC Radio Ulster & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nFit-again Johnny Sexton has been named in the Ireland team to face France in Saturday's Six Nations match in Dublin.\n\nThe Leinster fly-half, who has overcome a calf strain, is preferred to Paddy Jackson, who started the defeat by Scotland and the victory over Italy.\n\nCaptain Rory Best returns at hooker after missing the game in Rome through illness, while Jack McGrath comes in for Cian Healy at loose-head prop.\n\nRob Kearney is fit to play at full-back after recovering from a biceps problem.\n• None France make three changes for Ireland\n\nBoth Sexton and Kearney came through a full week of training at the squad's Carton House base in County Kildare unscathed.\n\nSexton, 31, has been out of action since sustaining his injury during Leinster's Champions Cup draw with Castres on 20 January.\n\nJackson deputised impressively for Sexton at Murrayfield and in Rome, but must settle for a place on the bench on this occasion.\n\nIreland in the 2017 Six Nations\n\n\"It was a call like any other, we debated it and we do believe we get a good balance with having both players available,\" said Schmidt of the selection call on starting Sexton ahead of Jackson.\n\n\"It's very hard to come into a side and come off the bench when you haven't played. So starting the match has allowed Johnny a bit more training time with the team this week.\n\n\"It's a balance, and I think on Saturday based on how things have gone in the past we'll probably see both players in some positions in some stage of the game.\n\n\"Johnny's done a lot of conditioning in the period of his injury, and fitness is never really an issue for Johnny, it's just making sure he's fully fit.\n\n\"And he is. He trained well today and fully on Tuesday. He's highly motivated to get into the game on Saturday.\"\n\nConor Murray has recovered from a hip issue to take his place in the starting line-up, with Munster's Niall Scannell dropping to the bench in light of the return of Best to the number two shirt.\n\nWith Josh van der Flier ruled out of the remainder of the Six Nations with a shoulder injury, flanker Peter O'Mahony is named among the replacements on his return after a hamstring complaint.\n\nCoach Joe Schmidt has recalled McGrath in the front row in place of his Leinster provincial team-mate Healy, who started against the Italians.\n\nUlster winger Andrew Trimble and forward Iain Henderson comes onto the bench after their return to fitness.", "Barclays will keep the bulk of its operations in London after Brexit, even if the UK loses access to the single market, chief executive Jes Staley says.\n\nThe bank is making Brexit plans including expanding operations in Ireland and Germany, he tells BBC business editor Simon Jack.", "Last updated on .From the section Boxing\n\nBritain's Amir Khan is in talks with Manny Pacquiao to be the WBO world welterweight champion's next title challenger, both boxers have said.\n\nPacquiao's Twitter followers recently voted Khan, 30, as the opponent they would like to see him fight next.\n\nKhan beat fellow Briton Kell Brook, Australia's Jeff Horn and American Terence Crawford with 48% of the vote.\n\nHe said on Twitter: \"Currently negotiating with Manny #teampacquiao. Coming soon. Watch this space!\"\n\nSix-weight world champion Pacquaio, who said his next fight will be in the United Arab Emirates, added: \"My team and I are in negotiations with Amir Khan for our next fight. Further announcement coming soon.\"\n\nThe 38-year-old Filipino retired in April, but returned to claim the belt by beating Jessie Vargas in November.", "Republican Senator Chuck Grassley faced tough questions from his constituents at a town hall meeting.\n\nAmong them was a man who worked as an interpreter for the US Armed Forces in Afghanistan who is struggling to secure asylum.\n\nZalmay Niazy asked for the senator's help as a new White House travel ban looms.", "Last updated on .From the section Winter Sports\n\nCoverage: Live coverage on Connected TV, BBC Red Button and the BBC Sport website\n\nOlympic skeleton champion Lizzy Yarnold says she is \"fired up\" for the World Championships after a \"disappointing\" return to the sport.\n\nAfter completing a career grand slam in 2015, Yarnold took a year's sabbatical citing exhaustion, before returning to action late last year.\n\nShe claimed silver in her second race back, but after struggling with a back injury came 11th in her last race.\n\n\"Results this season haven't been as good as they should've been,\" she said.\n\n\"There have obviously been issues and there are concerns, but I have always enjoyed failure, getting things wrong and being disappointed because that's what fires me up for the next competition.\"\n\nThe World Championships are taking place in Konigssee, Germany.\n\nThe first two of four runs for the female skeleton sliders begin at 14:00 GMT and 16:00 GMT on Friday, with the second two on Saturday (from 07:30 GMT and 09:30 GMT).\n\nSince returning to the sport, Yarnold has suffered a recurrence of the dizzy spells which she first experienced in the season following the Sochi Winter Olympics in 2014, and developed a back condition which at one stage left her struggling to walk.\n\nThe 28-year-old insists she is learning to combat the problems and is happy with the improvements she is making with less than a year to go until the 2018 Games.\n\n\"It sounds weird to say, but I think I'm definitely a better athlete than I was leading up to Sochi,\" she told BBC Sport.\n\n\"This season has actually been very successful as I'm learning and building the foundations which are going to be fundamental to the Olympics.\n\n\"Trying to be the first British Winter Olympian to defend my title is a huge juicy goal that gets me out of bed every day.\"\n\nThe 2015 world champion is part of a six-strong British skeleton team competing at this year's Worlds.\n\nThe event was originally due to take place in Sochi before the sport's international governing body, IBSF, stripped Russia of the hosting rights following the publication of the second McLaren report.\n\nPrior to the decision, Yarnold stated she would consider boycotting the event and told BBC Sport she was \"pleased\" a \"strong stance\" had been taken.\n\nThe slider is now hoping to recapture her form on a track she traditionally enjoys competing on.\n\n\"I would love to get a world medal,\" said Yarnold. \"I'm going into the race to win but it's a year out [from the Olympics] still so, as long as I'm learning getting better I'll be pleased with my performance.\"\n\nYarnold is joined by Laura Deas and Donna Creighton in the women's squad, with Dom Parsons, Jack Thomas and Jerry Rice making up the men's line-up.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nRepublican politicians are returning to their home districts to a barrage of criticism, as many constituents demand to know how they'll hold President Trump to account.\n\nThere's never a good time to talk politics, but democracy starts early in the state of Iowa.\n\nBy 7:30 am, as the morning fog was still lifting and the sun was starting to appear, the meeting room in the Iowa Falls Fire department was already at full capacity.\n\nA few hundred people had travelled from across the state to attend a town hall meeting, filling every chair and corner, and spilling into the hallway.\n\nTown halls are traditionally a forum for constituents to discuss their concerns with elected officials, face to face.\n\nBut in the Trump era, they've taken on a new purpose - with many aggrieved voters seeing them as a way to put pressure on President Trump, by ensuring their members of Congress hold him to account.\n\nRepublican officials across the country have found themselves on the receiving end of questions and demands from voters.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nMany, but not all, of those attending are Democrats, some from progressive groups who are organising around these events to ensure people show up.\n\nBut others are simply frustrated residents, who want their voices heard. All are represented by Senator Chuck Grassley.\n\nThe vast majority of the crowd at the fire station was older, in their fifties or above. Some of them came with handwritten protest signs, others clutched pieces of paper with their questions written on them.\n\n\"I'm new at this,\" a woman named Ingrid told me. She said Trump's victory made her angry.\n\n\"I felt I had to come. I'm hoping our voices get larger and that we can make sure Republicans don't just vote along party lines and listen to their constituents.\"\n\nAnd listen is exactly what Senator Grassley did, even if some felt he didn't quite answer all of their concerns.\n\nAs the seven-term senator entered the room, he began by asking the group which topics they'd like to cover.\n\nAs hands flew in the air, and people jostled for his attention, a range of topics were raised - everything from Russia to guns, healthcare to education.\n\nSenator Grassley wrote the questions down in a small notebook, promising to answer them in the order they were asked.\n\nA large majority of questions were about President Obama's healthcare law - the Affordable Care Act.\n\nThe questions on this were impassioned, as people talked of their personal experiences of Obamacare, and their fears they could lose coverage under a Trump presidency.\n\nOne elderly man attended on behalf of a friend whose son was seriously ill. He told the senator of how \"his parents will probably have to face bankruptcy just as they face retirement\".\n\nOther testimonies reflected the extent people here rely on government subsidised health insurance.\n\n\"I'm on Obamacare, if it wasn't for Obamacare we wouldn't be able to afford insurance,\" said Chris Petersen, an insulin dependent diabetic who runs a farm more than an hour away.\n\n\"I got a present for you,\" he told the senator, as he held up a box of Tums, a medicine used to relieve heartburn, \"you're going to need them in the next few years.\"\n\nWhen a bespectacled man in a grey sweater asked a question about the national debt, things got testy.\n\n\"Raise Trump's taxes,\" yelled a man at the back of the room.\n\n\"Everything is going to a pittance,\" shouted a woman.\n\nAs she did the questioner got angry.\n\n\"I asked him, not you, so shut your hole,\" he said, as he jabbed his finger in her direction.\n\nAt other times the mood in the room was calmer.\n\nWhen Zalmay Naizy, an Afghan who'd been an interpreter for the US army, asked a question, the room fell near silent.\n\n\"I'm a Muslim in this country, who's going to save me here?\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Senator Grassley is one of many Republicans facing angry questions at town hall meetings\n\n\"I've been shot two times, I've been roadside bombed once, nobody cares about me. But I was with the US.\"\n\nThe room erupted in cheers, and while the senator didn't address his question right away, choosing to move onto another question about trade deals, he returned to it later, promising to help Zalmay, as he stood by his side.\n\nThis town hall was held in a county which voted for Donald Trump by a large margin.\n\nSenator Grassley prides himself on holding meetings in every county in the state every year through his \"99 county\" pledge, but not all are town halls. He's faced criticism for holding most of those in solidly Republican areas.\n\nThe event at the fire station was one of two on the same day. Later, in the basement of the Hancock County Sheriff's jail, another crowd gathered.\n\nOnce again many were waiting outside as the room was at capacity. The mood was tense.\n\n\"I want impeachment,\" shouted one man from the back.\n\n\"Why are you against government healthcare, but take it yourself?\" asked another.\n\nObamacare dominated the agenda here too, with more personal stories.\n\nThere was the mother, a former Republican voter, who was concerned about losing healthcare for her son who has disabilities. The veteran worried about treatment of the military.\n\nAnd Jamet, an immigrant from Chile, told the senator \"we're already making this country great\" and asked \"How will you stand up for immigrants?\"\n\n\"We need people to stand up for the ordinary working person,\" said Chris Petersen, the farmer with the Tums, who I'd met at the first town hall.\n\nHis sentiment is not that different to the views of Donald Trump supporters, who told me during the campaign time and time again, that politicians don't represent them.\n\nSome who voted for him were at Senator Grassley's town halls, in a show of solidarity. Jim Carson accused Democrats at the events of \"trying to obstruct the good policies of Mr Trump.\"\n\nWhen I asked Senator Grassley if the anger expressed at the town halls would mean he was more likely to confront the president over his agenda, he told me the focus for him was taking these concerns back to his colleagues on capitol hill.\n\n\"I don't think you should see it as challenging Trump I think you should see it as Congress doing its job and the president doing his job.\"\n\nIt was a popular grassroots movement that helped sow the seeds of a Trump presidency, now another is trying to challenge it.\n\nFor some voters, the only way to get to President Trump is by applying pressure on congress. Senators like Chuck Grassley have to balance their support for the Republican agenda, with the grievances of the voters who keep them in office.\n\nEven a small number of people attending town halls can be enough to keep elected officials on edge.\n\nThese scenes we are seeing at these meetings across America are reminiscent of the early days of the Obama administration, when conservatives attended packed town halls to lobby their congressional representatives on healthcare, in what became known as the Tea Party movement.\n\n\"America is starting to boil,\" Chris Petersen told me as I met him afterwards at his farm.\n\nAs liberals try to exert pressure on their senators and representatives, it's clear that a new progressive movement is brewing.", "The claim: The government's figures on business rates are misleading because they exclude inflation and an appeals adjustment.\n\nReality Check verdict: The figures do exclude both those things, but government publications specify that they do. The government's figures are for the situation after any appeals have been completed, so they depend on how accurately it has predicted their outcome.\n\nThe government has produced tables showing how much business rates would rise or fall in the coming year, broken down by region of the country and type of business.\n\nThe overall effect of all the changes comes to zero, which means that the policy is revenue neutral.\n\nBut there is a key caveat at the bottom of the table, which is that the figures are: \"Before inflation and the adjustment to the multiplier for future appeal outcomes.\"\n\nThe inflation part is widely known. The measure of inflation used will become CPI (Consumer Price Index) instead of RPI (Retail Price Index), which will usually mean the increase is smaller, but that change will not happen until 2020. Increasing rates for RPI will add about 2% per year.\n\nBut the other part is a bit more complicated - it is the adjustment required to make sure that the changes in rates are revenue neutral even after some businesses have appealed against the rated value of their premises and won.\n\nAnalysis from the property consultants Gerald Eve suggested that the adjustment would be between four and five percentage points. They did that by working out how much business rates would change across the country to find out what adjustment would then be needed to make the policy revenue neutral again.\n\nThey add that including both the inflation and the appeals adjustment means that business rates will fall in 135 of the 326 local authorities in England, not 259 as the government claimed.\n\nThe Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) has strongly disputed suggestions that it has misled people with its figures, but has not disputed the suggestion that the appeals adjustment is between four and five percentage points.\n\nSpeaking on the Today Programme, Conservative MP Andrew Bridgen said he thought the figures provided, \"might not be giving the picture that businesses in the real world are going to get when they get their bills\".\n\nThis is certainly true. The DCLG has been clear that its figures are before inflation and the appeals adjustment.\n\nThe government's figures are for the situation after any appeals have been completed, so they depend on how accurately it has predicted their outcome.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Heathrow expansion can only be justified if the government proves it will not breach laws on climate change and pollution, MPs say.\n\nMinisters say a third runway will not exceed environment limits.\n\nHowever, the Commons Environmental Audit Committee has accused the government of \"magical thinking\" - wishing the problem away without a proper solution.\n\nThey say ministers must show the expansion will not fuel climate change.\n\nCommittee chair Mary Creagh told BBC News: \"There's plenty of talk about how the government wants to solve environmental problems at Heathrow, but a total absence of any policy guarantees.\n\n\"The implication of this is that they think other sectors of the economy like energy and industry are going to have to cut their carbon emissions even more so people can fly more - but the government's been told by its own advisors (the Committee on Climate Change) that's not possible.\"\n\nThe MPs also criticised the government's reliance on a projected increase in electric vehicles on the roads to keep local air pollution within safe limits.\n\n\"The government has missed already its targets for electric vehicles,\" Ms Creagh said. \"Our committee has no confidence it will meet its target for 2020 or 2030. Ministers have got to put proper policies in place instead of relying on magical thinking.\"\n\nThe committee previously urged a step change in the way the government tackles environmental issues at Heathrow, but says there is little evidence this has happened.\n\nThe UK has already breached EU limits in London for the pollutant NO2 for 2017. The committee says a new air quality strategy is urgently needed to ensure that airport expansion does not harm public health.\n\nThe government has said after Brexit that EU environmental laws will be imported wholesale into the UK, but the MPs say they have seen no guarantees that the government will keep pace with future EU air quality laws.\n\nThe report calls on the ministers to implement an alert system for nearby residents who are especially vulnerable to short-term exposure to air pollution.\n\nOn climate change, the MPs complain that international aviation emissions from an expanded Heathrow will be 15% higher than the level previously set for 2028-32. They say the government must show how the slack will be taken up by other sectors of the economy, which are already struggling to meet their own emissions targets.\n\nThey say measures on noise lack ambition, with no precision on the timing of a night flight ban and little evidence that predictable respite can be achieved.\n\nThe report was welcomed by John Stewart, the chair of HACAN, the campaign group that opposes Heathrow expansion.\n\n\"The government and Heathrow Airport have got to up their game big-time if they are to have any chance of getting a third runway,\" he said.\n\n\"They have got to prove they can deliver on noise, climate and air pollution - not just say they can.\"\n\nThe report comes just weeks after the government launched a public consultation on a third runway, which ends on 25 May.\n\nLater this year or early next year MPs are expected to be asked to vote on the runway.\n\nA Department for Transport spokesman said: \"We take our air quality commitments extremely seriously and have been very clear that the new runway will not get the go-ahead unless air quality requirements can be met.\"\n\nThe spokesman said the government has no plans to \"water down\" its ambitions on cutting aviation emissions and remains committed to meeting emission reductions targets under the Climate Change Act.", "Leicester City boss Claudio Ranieri praised his side's \"big heart\" after Jamie Vardy grabbed a potentially crucial away goal in their Champions League last 16 tie at Sevilla.\n\nThe Foxes were 2-0 down before Vardy scored for the first time since 10 December to give the Foxes an away goal in a 2-1 defeat.\n\nThe second leg at the King Power Stadium takes place on 14 March.\n\n\"When we play with this character, the luck comes to your side. We have to keep going.\"\n\nVardy played a significant role in Leicester's run to the Premier League title last season, scoring 24 league goals.\n\nHis goal on Wednesday ended a run of nine games without scoring and Ranieri is hopeful it will give the England striker, and the rest of the Leicester team, confidence for the remainder of the season.\n\n\"The goalscorer needs to score, needs to get confidence,\" he added. \"This goal reopens our confidence.\"\n\nAnother defeat, but a corner turned for Leicester?\n\nRanieri had spoken before the game that this fixture could prove to be a turning point in a difficult season.\n\nAfter winning the league last season they now find themselves one point above the relegation zone.\n\n\"We came in the dressing room and I know we lost but I felt that buzz again from the boys and that togetherness,\" said Leicester defender Danny Simpson.\n\n\"I really hope that can kick us on in the league. I know the Champions League is a big competition but the Premier League is the bread and butter and we've got Liverpool next which is a massive game.\"\n\n'Performance of the season by Leicester'\n\nFormer Manchester United defender Phil Neville, who was watching the game for BBC Radio 5 live, believes the Foxes showed more fight in the game than they had all season, particularly after Kasper Schmeichel saved Joaquin Correa's first-half penalty.\n\n\"I thought the penalty save in the first half could be a turning point in the whole season for Leicester,\" he said. \"Not much luck has been going their way and you saw a real lift and team spirit.\n\n\"Sir Alex Ferguson always used to say to us to remember the hard work and the pain we put in last season and put in an extra 10%. Leicester came off shattered after running their socks off and that should be the norm. We haven't seen that from them all season.\n\n\"That's the performance of the season for me by Leicester. Particularly in the second half. They were courageous on the ball and took the came to Sevilla. Well done Claudio Ranieri, well done Leicester City. They are still in this tie.\"", "JavaScript seems to be disabled. Please enable JavaScript to take full advantage of iPlayer.", "Taking part in the Rio carnival can often be a challenge for many of the 45 million people with disabilities living in Brazil. But one samba school is making it possible.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nTen-man Tottenham Hotspur were knocked out of the Europa League as Gent held them to a draw at a sell-out Wembley.\n\nSpurs, who trailed 1-0 after the first leg of the last-32 tie, made a great start as Christian Eriksen slipped an angled shot under Gent keeper Lovre Kalinic.\n\nThe visitors equalised through Harry Kane's own goal, leaving Spurs needing to score twice more in front of a Europa League record attendance of 80,465.\n\nTheir task became harder when midfielder Dele Alli was sent off shortly before half-time for a dangerous high tackle.\n\nVictor Wanyama's curler into the top-left corner revived Spurs' hopes, only for substitute Jeremy Perbet to prod Gent into the last 16 with fewer than 10 minutes left.\n\nSpurs' elimination means they have only reached the Europa League quarter-finals once in the past six seasons.\n\nManchester United, who beat French side Saint-Etienne 4-0 on aggregate, will be the only British side in the last-16 draw on Friday (12:00 GMT).\n\nDespite them needing to score at least twice as the match approached half-time, few would have written off Spurs.\n\nBut they were then reduced to 10 men after Alli's poor tackle.\n\nThe 20-year-old England midfielder has previously shown glimpses of a fiery streak, alongside his technical brilliance, but this was the first red card of his career.\n\nAlli felt referee Manuel de Sousa should have given him a free-kick close to the halfway line and briefly remonstrated with the Portuguese official before turning and launching into Genk midfielder Brecht Dejaegere with a studs-up challenge.\n\nAlli caught Dejaegere just under his right knee - and luckily the Belgian appeared to escape serious injury.\n\nTottenham did not escape without damage, though.\n\nTottenham, particularly since Mauricio Pochettino became manager, have often drawn praise for their fearless and confident approach, and they have become regular title challengers.\n\nBut it is a different story in Europe.\n\nIn truth, they should still have progressed despite Alli's dismissal, only poor finishing costing them in a dominant performance against a team containing a man extra.\n\nThe blame largely lies in a lifeless performance in Belgium.\n\nGent's first-leg victory was only their third win in 13 matches, with their recent form dropping them to eighth place in a Belgian top flight ranked as only the ninth-best European league.\n\nIndeed Belgian leaders Club Brugge, the reigning champions, lost all six matches in their Champions League group, including a 3-0 home defeat and 2-1 loss against Leicester City.\n\nWhile Tottenham's deficiencies were clear, Gent deserve credit. They were organised, disciplined and clinical when their rare chances arrived.\n\nPerbet, who scored the winner last week, put the tie beyond Spurs with the away team's first shot on target at Wembley, sparking exuberant scenes among the 10,000 visiting fans.\n\n\"I am very disappointed. Once again we were excited to play today in front of our fans. We started well and scored. The tie was open but we conceded a goal in one action in the first half. After that it was complicated.\n\n\"I was very proud. We were brave and created chances and scored the second but could not get another. In the second half we played with energy.\"\n• None Tottenham have won just one of their past eight matches at Wembley\n• None Mauricio Pochettino's side have conceded more goals in four European home games at Wembley this season (six) than they have in 12 Premier League games at White Hart Lane (five)\n• None Gent became the first Belgian side to eliminate English opposition in major European competition (excluding qualifiers) since Standard Liege knocked out Everton in the 2008-09 Uefa Cup.\n• None Spurs have been eliminated from eight of their past nine European knockout ties in which they have lost the first leg.\n• None Since the start of 2013-14, Harry Kane has scored four own goals - twice as many as any other Tottenham player.\n\nTottenham, who remain without a trophy since 2008, will focus their attention on trying to catch runaway Premier League leaders Chelsea.\n• None Offside, KAA Gent. Kalifa Coulibaly tries a through ball, but Samuel Gigot is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Harry Kane (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from the left side of the box is close, but misses to the right. Assisted by Jan Vertonghen.\n• None Attempt blocked. Victor Wanyama (Tottenham Hotspur) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt missed. Son Heung-Min (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from the right side of the box is too high. Assisted by Harry Kane. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Pressures have been building on the NHS this winter\n\nNHS leaders in England have been asked by the statistics watchdog to rethink current policies that delay publishing official data on accident and emergency waiting times.\n\nThis follows two separate leaks to BBC News of A&E data for January, which suggested the worst performance by hospitals since records began.\n\nNHS England and the regulator NHS Improvement have been told by the UK Statistics Authority to review the practice of publishing the data six weeks after collecting it.\n\nTheir leaders have been asked to \"to determine how you could reduce the time lag in publication\".\n\nThe call for a review comes in a letter from Ed Humpherson, director general for regulation at the authority, to those who chair the organisations.\n\nThe two leaks of A&E statistics to BBC News came from management information collected by NHS Improvement.\n\nThe second leak - relating to the full month of January - suggested that from a total of more than 1.4 million attendances at A&E:\n\nAt the time the leaked data, obtained by BBC reporter Faye Kirkland, was dismissed as incomplete by NHS sources.\n\nMr Humpherson described the leaks of management information as \"a disorderly release of data\", which had created \"a confused picture\".\n\nBut, in what amounts to a rap over the knuckles, he goes on to urge the NHS organisations to \"undertake the appropriate reviews of how this management information is used and shared\".\n\nEmbarrassingly for NHS leaders, the Statistics Authority chief criticises the publication policy for A&E attendance stats.\n\nIn the summer of 2015, NHS England announced it would stop publishing this data weekly and would shift to a monthly cycle to \"standardise reporting arrangements\" with other information such as cancer waiting times and ambulance response times.\n\nThis was criticised at the time as a reduction in timely information flow from hospitals, especially during winter months.\n\nMr Humpherson notes that the monthly publication policy creates a six-week lag for A&E data, which \"leaves the system vulnerable to leaks because management information circulates around the NHS system for operational purposes well in advance of the publication of the statistics\".\n\nHe has called on the NHS bodies to review the \"timeliness\" of the official performance data by the end of April and talks of the importance of \"maintaining trust\".\n\nIn effect, the statistics watchdog is saying that if the information is available to NHS managers in January, it should also be made available to the media and the public rather than held until March for publication.\n\nIt amounts to a warning to NHS England that leaks are inevitable under the current arrangements.\n\nA spokesperson for NHS England said: \"UKSA has approached the NHS following a leak of unvalidated NHS improvement material to the BBC ahead of its official publication, and NHS Improvement is now considering with other national bodies how best to ensure timely official publication while ensuring this doesn't happen again.\"\n\nThis will no doubt create headaches for NHS chiefs who have tried hard to justify the adoption of monthly rather than weekly data releases.\n\nTheir case was weakened when the Scottish government opted to move to a weekly A&E publication schedule just as NHS England was going in the opposite direction.\n\nAnd the case has certainly been weakened even further by the UK Statistics Authority's intervention and what amounts to a clarion call for transparency.", "An airport in California has released video of a plane, being flown by the actor Harrison Ford, mistakenly flying low over an airliner.\n\nFord's single-engine plane landed on a taxiway instead of a runway at John Wayne airport in Orange County earlier this month.", "It's no secret that the Russians have long tried to plant \"sleeper agents\" in the US - men and women indistinguishable from normal Americans, who live - on the surface - completely normal lives. But what happens when one of them doesn't want to go home?\n\nJack Barsky died in September 1955, at the age of 10, and was buried in the Mount Lebanon Cemetery in the suburbs of Washington DC.\n\nHis name is on the passport of the man sitting before me now - a youthful 67-year-old East German, born Albert Dittrich. The passport is not a fake. Albert Dittrich is Jack Barsky in the eyes of the US government.\n\nThe story of how this came to be is, by Barsky's own admission, \"implausible\" and \"ridiculous\", even by the standards of Cold War espionage. But as he explains in a new memoir, Deep Undercover, it has been thoroughly checked out by the FBI. As far as anyone can tell, it is all true.\n\nIt began in the mid-70s, when Dittrich, destined at the time to become a chemistry professor at an East German university, was talent-spotted by the KGB and sent to Moscow for training in how to behave like an American.\n\nHis mission was to live under a false identity in the heart of the capitalist enemy, as one of an elite band of undercover Soviet agents known as \"illegals\".\n\n\"I was sent to the United States to establish myself as a citizen and then make contact, to the extent possible, at the highest levels possible of decision makers - particularly political decision makers,\" he says.\n\nThis \"idiotic adventure,\" as he now calls it, had \"a lot of appeal to an arrogant young man, a smart young man\" intoxicated by the idea of foreign travel and living \"above the law\".\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. \"This kind of double life wears on you\"\n\nHe arrived in New York in the Autumn of 1978, at the age of 29, posing as a Canadian national, William Dyson. Dyson, who had travelled via Belgrade, Rome, Mexico City and Chicago, \"immediately vanished into thin air\", having served his purpose. And Dittrich began his new life as Jack Barsky.\n\nHe was a man with no past and no identification papers - except for a birth certificate obtained by an employee of the Soviet embassy in Washington, who had kept his eyes open during a walk in the Mount Lebanon cemetery.\n\nBarsky had supreme self-confidence, a near-flawless American accent, and $10,000 in cash.\n\nHe also had a \"legend\" to explain why he did not have a social security number. He told people he had had a \"tough start in life\" in New Jersey and had dropped out of high school. He had then worked on a remote farm for years before deciding \"to give life another chance and move back to New York city\".\n\nHe rented a room in a Manhattan hotel and set about the laborious task of building a fake identity. Over the next year, he parlayed Jack Barsky's birth certificate into a library card, then a driver's licence and, finally, a social security card.\n\nBut without qualifications in Barsky's name, or any employment history, his career options were limited. Rather than rubbing shoulders with the upper echelons of American society, as his KGB handlers had wanted, he initially found himself delivering parcels to them, as a cycle courier in the smarter parts of Manhattan.\n\nThe young KGB agent arrived in New York in the late 1970s\n\n\"By chance it turned out that the messenger job was actually really good for me to become Americanised because I was interacting with people who didn't care much where I came from, what my history was, where I was going,\" he says.\n\n\"Yet I was able to observe and listen and become more familiar with American customs. So for the first two, three years I had very few questions that I had to answer.\"\n\nThe advice from his handlers on blending in - gleaned from Soviet diplomats and resident agents in the US - \"turned out to be, at minimum, weak but, at worst, totally false\", he says.\n\n\"I'll give you an example. One of the things I was told explicitly was to stay away from the Jews. Now, obviously, there is anti-Semitism in there, but secondly, the stupidity of that statement is that they sent me to New York. There are more Jews in New York than in Israel, I think.\"\n\nBarsky would later use his handlers' prejudices and ignorance of American society against them.\n\nBut as a \"rookie\" agent he was eager to please and threw himself into the undercover life. He spent much of his free time zig-zagging across New York on counter-surveillance missions designed to flush out any enemy agents who might be following him.\n\nHe would update Moscow Centre on his progress in weekly radio transmissions, or letters in secret writing, and deposit microfilm at dead drop sites in various New York parks, where he would also periodically pick up canisters stuffed with cash or the fake passports he needed for his trips back to Moscow for debriefing.\n\nHe would return the to the East every two years, where he would be reunited with his German wife Gerlinde, and young son Matthias, who had no idea what he had been up to. They thought he was doing top secret but very well-paid work at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.\n\nBarsky's handlers were delighted with his progress except for one thing - he could not get hold of an American passport. This failure weighed heavily on him.\n\nOn one early trip to the passport office in New York an official asked him to fill out a questionnaire which asked, among other things, the name of the high school he had attended.\n\n\"I had a legend but it could not be verified,\" he says. \"So if somebody went to check on that they would have found out that I wasn't real.\"\n\nTerrified that his cover might be blown, he scooped up any documents with his name on them and marched out of the office in a feigned temper at all this red tape.\n\nThe real Jack Barsky is buried in a Washington DC cemetery\n\nWithout a passport, Barsky was limited to low-level intelligence work and his achievements as a spy were, by his own account, \"minimal\".\n\nHe profiled potential recruits and compiled reports on the mood of the country during events such as the 1983 downing of a Korean Airlines flight by a Soviet fighter, which ratcheted up tensions between the US and the Soviet Union.\n\nOn one occasion, he flew to California to track down a defector (he later learned, to his immense relief, that the man, a psychology professor, had not been assassinated).\n\nHe also carried out some industrial espionage, stealing software from his office - all of it commercially available - which was spirited away on microfilm to aid the floundering Soviet economy.\n\nBut it often seemed the very fact of him being in the US, moving around freely without the knowledge of the authorities, was enough for Moscow.\n\n\"They were very much focused on having people on the other side just in case of a war. Which I think, in hindsight, was pretty stupid. That indicated very old thinking.\"\n\nThe myth of the \"Great Illegals\" - heroic undercover agents who had helped Russia defeat the Nazis and gather vital pre-war intelligence in hostile countries - loomed large over the Soviet intelligence agencies, who spent a lot of time and effort during the Cold War trying to recapture these former glories, with apparently limited success.\n\nBarsky later found out that he was part of a \"third wave\" of Soviet illegals in the US - the first two waves having failed. And we now know that illegals continued to be infiltrated in the 1980s and beyond.\n\nHe believes about \"10 to 12\" agents were trained up at the same time as him. Some, he says, could still be out there, living undercover in the United States, though he finds it hard to believe that anyone exposed to life in the US would retain an unwavering communist faith for long.\n\nHe is scathing about his KGB handlers, who were \"very smart\" and the \"cream of the crop\" but who seemed chiefly concerned with making his mission appear a success to please their bosses.\n\n\"The expectations of us, of me - I didn't know anybody else - were far, far too high. It was just really wishful thinking,\" he now says of his mission.\n\nOn the other hand, the KGB's original plan for him might actually have worked, he says.\n\n\"I am glad it didn't work out because I could have done some damage.\n\n\"The idea was for me to get genuine American documentation and move to Europe, say to a German-speaking country, where the Russians were going to set me up with a flourishing business. And they knew how to do that.\n\n\"And so I would become quite wealthy and then go back to the United States without having to explain where the money came from. At that point, I would have been in a situation to socialise with people that were of value.\"\n\nThis plan fell through because of his failure to get a passport, so the KGB reverted to Plan B.\n\nThis was for Barsky was to study for a degree and gradually work his way up the social order to the point where he could gather useful intelligence - a mission he describes as \"nearly impossible\".\n\nThe degree part was relatively straightforward. He was, after all, a university professor in his former life. He graduated top of his class in computer systems at Baruch College, which enabled him to get a job as a programmer at Met Life insurance in New York.\n\nLike many undercover agents before him, he began to realise that much of what he had been taught about the West - that it was an \"evil\" system on the brink of economic and social collapse - was a lie.\n\nBarsky (fourth right) felt at home with co-workers at Met Life\n\n\"There was a way to rationalise that because we were taught that the West was doing so well because they took all the riches out of the Third World,\" he says.\n\nBut, he adds, \"what eventually softened my attitude\" was the \"normal, nice people\" he met in his daily life.\n\n\"[My] sense was that the enemy was not really evil. So I was always waiting to eventually find the real evil people and I didn't even find them in the insurance company.\"\n\nMet Life almost felt like home, he says, \"because it was a very paternalistic, 'we take care of you' kind of a culture\".\n\n\"There was nothing like we were taught. Nothing that I expected. I wanted to really hate the people and the country and I couldn't bring myself to hate them. Not even dislike them.\"\n\nBut he was keeping a far bigger secret from his KGB bosses than his wavering commitment to communism.\n\nIn 1985, he had married an illegal immigrant from Guyana he had met through a personal ad in the Village Voice newspaper - and they now had a daughter together.\n\nHe now had two families to go with his two identities, and he knew the time would come when he had to choose between them.\n\nIt finally happened in 1988, when after 10 years undercover he was suddenly ordered to return home immediately. Moscow was in a panic, believing the FBI was on to him.\n\nTo do anything other than run as ordered - grab his emergency Canadian birth certificate and driver's licence and get out of the US - would be potentially suicidal.\n\nHe dithered and stalled for a week. Could he really leave his beloved baby daughter Chelsea behind forever?\n\nBut the KGB was losing patience. One morning, on a subway platform a resident agent delivered a chilling message: \"You have got to come home or else you're dead.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The Americans producers: 'Here was someone who lived it'\n\nIt was time for some lateral thinking.\n\nFrom discussions with his handlers in Moscow, Barsky had come to believe the Soviet hierarchy feared three things about America.\n\nHe already knew about their anti-Semitism and their fear of Ronald Reagan, who they saw as an unpredictable religious zealot who might launch a nuclear strike to \"accelerate\" the Biblical \"end times\".\n\nBut he also remembered their \"morally superior\" attitude to the Aids epidemic - their belief that it \"served the Americans right\" and their determination to protect the motherland from infection.\n\nBarsky stalled a bit more and then hatched a plan.\n\n\"I wrote this letter, in secret writing, that I wouldn't come back because I had contracted Aids, and the only way for me to get treatment would be in the United States.\n\n\"I also told the Russians in the same letter that I would not defect, I would not give up any secrets. I would just disappear and try to get healthy.\"\n\nTo begin with Barsky lived in constant fear for his life, remembering that threat on the subway platform. But after a few months, he began to breathe more easily.\n\n\"I started thinking 'I think I got away with this.' The FBI had not knocked on the door. The KGB had not done anything.\"\n\nHe gradually let his guard down and settled into the life of a typical middle-class American in a comfortable new home in upstate New York.\n\nWhile he had fallen for the American Dream and the trappings of the consumer society, he still had some conflicting feelings.\n\n\"My loyalties to communism and the homeland and Russia, they were still pretty strong. My resignation, you can also call it a 'soft defection' - that was triggered by having this child here. It was not ideological. It would be easy to claim that. But it wasn't true.\"\n\nPlaying at the back of his mind was always the question of whether his past would catch up with him. And, finally, one day, it did.\n\nThe man who exposed him was a KGB archivist, Vasili Nikitich Mitrokhin, who defected to the West in 1992 - after the fall of communism - with a vast trove of Soviet secrets, including the true identity of Jack Barsky.\n\nThe FBI watched him for more than three years, even buying the house next door to his as they tried to figure out whether he really was a KGB agent and, if so, whether he was still active.\n\nIn the end, Barsky himself gave the game away, during an argument with his wife, Penelope, that was picked up by the FBI's bugs.\n\n\"I was trying to repair a marriage that was slowly falling apart. I was trying to tell my wife the 'sacrifice' I had made to stay with Chelsea and her. So in the kitchen I told her, 'By the way, this is what I did. I am a German. I used to work for the KGB and they told me to come home and I stayed here with you and it was quite dangerous for me. This is what I sacrificed.'\n\n\"And that completely backfired. Instead of bringing her over to my side, she said: 'What does that mean for me if they ever catch you?'\"\n\nIt was the evidence the FBI needed to pick him up. In a meticulously planned operation, Barsky was pulled over by a Pennsylvania state trooper as he drove away from a toll booth on his way home from work one evening.\n\nAfter stepping out of his car, he was approached by a man in civilian clothes, who held up a badge and said in a calm voice: \"Special agent Reilly, FBI. We would like to talk with you.\"\n\nThe colour drained from Barsky's face. \"I knew the gig was up,\" he says. But with characteristic bravado he asked the FBI man: \"What took you so long?\"\n\nHe kidded around with Joe Reilly and the other agents who interrogated him, and tried to give them as much information about the KGB's operations as he could. But inside he was panicking that he would be sent to jail and that his American family, which he had been trying to hold together, would be broken up.\n\nIn fact, luck was on his side. After passing a lie-detector test he was told that he was free to go and, even more remarkably, that the FBI would help him fulfil his dream of becoming an American citizen.\n\nReilly, who went on to become Barsky's best friend and golfing partner, even visited the elderly parents of the real Jack Barsky, who agreed not to reveal that their son's identity had been stolen.\n\n\"I was so lucky and so was my family that the decision-makers were nice enough to say, 'Well, you were so well-established, we don't want to disrupt your life,'\" he says.\n\n\"It required some interesting gymnastics to make me legal because one thing I didn't have was proof of entry into the country. I came here on documentation that was fraudulently obtained, so it took 10-plus years to finally become a citizen. And when it did, it felt good.\"\n\nBarsky is now married for a third time and has a young daughter. He has also found God, completing his journey from a hardline communist and atheist to a churchgoing, all-American patriot.\n\nHe has even managed to reconnect with the family he left behind in Germany, although his first wife, Gerlinde, is still not speaking to him.\n\n\"I have a very good relationship with Matthias, my son, and his wife. And I am now a grandfather. When we talk about things like Americans playing soccer against Germans, I say 'us'. I mean the Americans. I am not German any more. The metamorphosis is complete.\"\n\nThe final act in his story came two years ago when he revealed the secret of his extraordinary double life on the US current affairs programme, 60 Minutes.\n\nHe had long wanted to share his story with the world, but his bosses at the New York electricity company where he worked as a software developer were less than impressed to find they had a former KGB agent on the payroll, and promptly fired him.\n\nBarsky says he has no regrets. He knows how fortunate he has been.\n\n\"This kind of double life wears on you. And most people can't handle it. I am not saying that I lived a charmed life but I got away with it.\n\n\"I am in good health. I have had some issues with alcohol that I have overcome and I got another chance to have a good family life. And another child. And I am finally getting to live the life that I should have lived a long time ago. I am really lucky.\"\n\nPerhaps the supreme irony of Jack Barsky's story is that he was only able to complete the mission the KGB had set him - to obtain an American passport and citizenship - with the help of the FBI. He cannot resist a smile at the thought of telling his KGB handlers that he has not been such a failure after all.\n\n\"I wouldn't mind meeting one or two of those fellows I worked with and saying 'Hey, see I did it!'\"\n\nDeep Undercover - My Secret Life and Tangled Allegiances as a KGB Spy in America, by Jack Barsky and Cindy Coloma, is published next month\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nEngland centre Jonathan Joseph has been left out of the squad preparing to face Italy in the Six Nations on Sunday.\n\nJoseph, 25, has played in all 15 Tests under Eddie Jones but is back with Bath after being cut from a 24-man squad.\n\nElliot Daly is favourite to start at outside centre, with Ben Te'o also pushing for a starting berth, while James Haskell is set to return on the open-side flank.\n\nEngland will confirm their starting XV and replacements on Friday morning.\n\nThey need to shed one more player from the retained squad when they select their matchday 23.\n\nIf selected in the run-on XV Haskell would be making his first start since June 2016.\n\nThe 31-year-old spent six months out with a foot injury before featuring as a replacement in victories over France and Wales in this year's Six Nations.\n\nProp Mako Vunipola and wing Anthony Watson have been included after recovering from injury, but both may be used from the bench against the Azzurri.\n\nEngland trained last week with Owen Farrell at fly-half and Teo'o and Daly in the centre, a combination which has yet to start a Test.\n\nIn recent matches Farrell has played at inside centre, outside starting fly-half George Ford.\n\nBut assistant coach Steve Borthwick says vice-captain Farrell, who is set to win his 50th cap, will be an influence wherever he is selected.\n\n\"It's great we have versatility there, it allows flexibility,\" Borthwick said. \"He is a great player and a fantastic leader.\"\n\nItaly have recalled Exeter centre Michele Campagnaro as they make four changes for Sunday's match.\n\nThree come in the backs, with fly-half Tommaso Allan and wing Giulio Bisegni joining Campagnaro in the starting XV.\n\nBraam Steyn replaces Maxime Mbanda at blind-side flanker as Italy search for their first win of the tournament.\n\nConor O'Shea's side are bottom of the Six Nations table after heavy defeats by Wales and Ireland.", "A year-long protest against an oil pipeline in North Dakota appears to be nearing its end, as a government deadline for demonstrators to leave the area passes.\n\nSome demonstrators who ignored requests to depart were arrested, and makeshift wooden structures were set ablaze.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nJamie Vardy broke his recent goal-drought to give Leicester an away goal and keep alive their hopes of reaching the last eight of the Champions League despite a narrow first-leg defeat away to Sevilla.\n\nThe England international had gone nine games without scoring and was a peripheral figure for much of Wednesday's game but sprang into life to finish Danny Drinkwater's superb cross with 17 minutes remaining in Spain.\n\nIt was one of only two shots on target the Foxes produced during a game in which they were largely under the cosh and had trailed 2-0 in thanks to Pablo Sarabia's header and a close-range finish from Joaquin Correa for Sevilla.\n\nCity's other hero was Kasper Schmeichel, who saved a Correa penalty with the score at 0-0 and made a number of other good saves.\n\nSevilla also hit the post and bar had over 70% possession but will only take a slender lead to the King Power Stadium for the second leg on 14 March.\n\nAmidst Leicester's dire domestic form, which has seen them lose 14 league games already, including their last five, and exit the FA Cup at the hands of League One Millwall, their Champions League displays have acted as timely reminders of last season's stunning Premier League title success.\n\nAnd there will have been none more timely than this.\n\nPrior to the game, manager Claudio Ranieri suggested a positive display could act as a turning point for their season, and while they were outclassed for long periods, the rediscovery of a stubbornness and spirit could prove crucial not just for this tie but the rest of the campaign.\n\nThe tie looked to be over after Correa's calm close-range finish in the second half had doubled the lead given to the home side by Sarabia's powerful, pinpoint header before the break.\n\nBut with less than a quarter of the game to go, Drinkwater produced Leicester's one incisive attacking ball of the night to find Vardy, whose run into space behind his marker and first-time finish bore all the instinctual qualities he showed so often last season.\n\nVardy's goal not only keeps the tie alive but offers hope to Leicester that he can return to form and fire them to Premier League safety.\n\nHis goal-drought, following the hat-trick against Manchester City on 10 December, coincided with a nine-game winless streak for the Foxes that has left them just a point and a place above the relegation zone.\n\nThe 30-year-old managed just 25 touches in total on Wednesday, but he made the one that mattered - his only shot on goal - count.\n\nJorge Sampaoli's Sevilla side justified their position as La Liga title challengers with a dominant display that lacked only a goal-tally to match.\n\nSchmeichel can take much of the credit for that and following his penalty save, he showed superb awareness and reflexes to tip away shots from Sergio Escudero and Correa.\n\nCity were also indebted to the woodwork, with the post denying Vitolo from a tight angle and the bar halting Adil Rami's late header.\n\n'Every result is still open'\n\nLeicester manager Claudio Ranieri: \"We knew they are better than us, they have high quality in possession. We suffered. They showed their quality but we showed our heart. We showed belief and never game up. That makes me satisfied.\n\n\"Kasper Schmeichel and everybody had a good game. Kasper saved the penalty and gave lot of support to his defenders.\n\n\"For us, it is important to continue to show our performance and our football.\"\n\nSevilla manager Jorge Sampaoli: \"It is difficult to imagine such a big difference [between the sides] in a Champions League game.\n\n\"I am happy with how the game went because we had chances, but disappointed with the result because we deserved more.\"\n\nVardy's first shot in 380 minutes - the stats you need to know\n• None Leicester have kept just two clean sheets in their last 22 games in all competitions (and none in their last 10).\n• None Leicester failed to direct a single shot on target in the first half, registering just one shot on target in total in their last four first halves in all competitions.\n• None Pablo Sarabia has scored in consecutive games for Sevilla for the first time ever, after netting against Eibar at the weekend.\n• None Stevan Jovetic has been involved in seven goals in his eight games for Sevilla in all comps (3 goals, 4 assists).\n• None Jamie Vardy scored for the first time in 758 minutes of action for Leicester in all competitions.\n• None It was also Vardy's first shot on target in 380 minutes of action.\n\nLeicester host Liverpool next Monday and then Hull the following Saturday in the Premier League before the return leg against Sevilla.\n• None Daniel Carriço (Sevilla) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Adil Rami (Sevilla) hits the bar with a header from the centre of the box. Assisted by Pablo Sarabia with a cross following a corner.\n• None Attempt blocked. Stevan Jovetic (Sevilla) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Vitolo.\n• None Attempt blocked. Pablo Sarabia (Sevilla) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Steven N'Zonzi.\n• None Attempt saved. Vitolo (Sevilla) header from the left side of the six yard box is saved in the bottom left corner.\n• None Attempt missed. Stevan Jovetic (Sevilla) right footed shot from the centre of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Vitolo. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "This video can not be played.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nEngland captain Wayne Rooney says he is staying at Manchester United, after being linked with a move to China.\n\nThe 31-year-old striker said he hoped to \"play a full part\" in the rest of the Premier League club's season.\n\nUnited boss Jose Mourinho had refused to rule out the prospect of Rooney's exit this month, although a deal before the Chinese transfer window closes on 28 February was always unlikely.\n\n\"It's an exciting time at the club and I want to remain a part,\" said Rooney.\n\nRooney's agent, Paul Stretford, had travelled to China to see if he could negotiate a deal, although it is not known which clubs he spoke to.\n\nTwo of the three clubs who looked the most likely options - Beijing Guoan and Jiangsu Suning - dismissed speculation about a transfer.\n\nRooney's representatives had already spoken to the third option - Tianjin Quanjian - but their coach, Fabio Cannavaro, said talks did not progress.\n\nRooney is United's record goalscorer and has won five Premier League titles and a Champions League trophy since joining them as an 18-year-old for £27m from Everton in 2004.\n\nThe forward, whose contract expires in 2019, has said he would not play for an English club other than United or Everton.\n\nUnited are sixth in the Premier League and remain in three cup competitions, having reached the last 16 of the Europa League on Wednesday.\n\nThey face Southampton in the EFL Cup final on Sunday before taking on Chelsea in the FA Cup quarter-finals on 13 March.\n\n\"Despite the interest which has been shown from other clubs, for which I'm grateful, I want to end recent speculation and say that I am staying at Manchester United.\n\n\"I hope I will play a full part in helping the team in its fight for success on four fronts.\n\n\"It's an exciting time at the club and I want to remain a part of it.\"\n\nRooney's statement settles his short-term future but does nothing to address long-term issues over his future.\n\nRooney has only started eight Premier League games this season - fewer than Marcus Rashford, Anthony Martial and Henrikh Mkhitaryan - and has featured only three times since breaking United's goalscoring record at Stoke last month.\n\nHe remains committed to United and ideally would stay at Old Trafford.\n\nHowever, should he not play regularly between now and the end of the season, he would explore other options.\n\nThese would include Major League Soccer, as well as China. It is understood his previous statement, that he would only play for United or Everton in the Premier League, still stands.\n\nInterest from China is genuine but despite long-time adviser Paul Stretford travelling to the country this week, there was never any realistic possibility of completing a deal before Tuesday's Chinese Super League transfer deadline.\n\nRooney has scored five goals in 29 appearances for the Red Devils this season, but has started only three games since 17 December and may yet leave in the summer.\n\nFormer Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp says Rooney would be an \"ideal\" signing for United's Premier League rivals Arsenal.\n\n\"Arsenal lack somebody like Rooney - a winner, a leader,\" he told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"He could easily go into somewhere like Arsenal and get a few of their players by the scruff of the neck on the pitch and improve their performances.\"\n\nRedknapp, who was speaking before Rooney's announcement, also suggested the player could make \"a dream move\" back to Everton.\n\nBut Rooney's former team-mate Phil Neville said the striker \"shouldn't write off his United career\" and he could not see him moving to China.", "Immigration rules that require a Briton to be earning a minimum amount before they can bring a non-EU spouse to the UK have been upheld in the Supreme Court. How does this policy affect families?\n\n\"My son has seen his father a few times only,\" says British national Toni Stew.\n\n\"I feel like a single mother rather than a wife.\"\n\nMs Stew, from Worcester, met her Egyptian husband Mohamed El Faramawi, 33, while on holiday in Sharm el-Sheikh in 2009. They got married six years later.\n\nBut, as the 25-year-old does not earn a minimum of £18,600 per year, her husband has been unable to join her and their 17-month-old son Ali in the UK.\n\n\"I feel very guilty towards my baby,\" she says.\n\n\"He hasn't done anything to deserve being without his father.\"\n\nMs Stew, who works as a part-time sales assistant, says she can't afford to work full-time as she also needs to care for Ali.\n\nThey are just one couple out of thousands who are said to be unable to meet the minimum income requirement that came into force in July 2012.\n\nUnder the family migration policy, only British citizens, foreign nationals who are deemed to be \"present and settled\" in the UK, or those with refugee status can apply to sponsor their non-European partner's visa.\n\nAnd whichever of those three categories they are in, they must also show they have sufficient funding. In most cases, this is proof of an annual salary of £18,600, held for at least six months prior to the application. This level rises to £22,400 for a non-European partner and child, with an additional levy of £2,400 for each additional child. The rule does not apply to EU citizens.\n\nThose who are granted the \"family of a settled person\" visa cannot usually claim benefits or other public funds.\n\nThe Home Office introduced the rules as part of attempts to control immigration from outside Europe, with ministers in the then coalition government arguing that the rules would ensure no incoming families would burden the UK taxpayer.\n\nMohamed El Faramawi has been unable to join his son Ali in the UK\n\nBut the minimum income requirement policy was challenged in the High Court in 2013 and again in the Court of Appeal in 2014 by two British claimants and one claimant who has refugee status who want to bring their non-EU spouses to the UK.\n\nThey said the rules were discriminatory and interfered with Article 8 of the Human Rights Act, the right to a private and family life.\n\nThe case then went to the Supreme Court, which said that while family immigration rules requiring minimum income cause hardship, they are lawful.\n\nThese rules need to be changed as the income threshold is too high, the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants says.\n\nThe charity's chief executive Saira Grant says it would \"greatly help\" if the income of the foreign partner was taken into account.\n\nThousands of people are impacted by the rules, she says.\n\nBritish national Laura Segan and her American husband Spencer Russ are facing the possibility of separation less than a year after they have got married.\n\n\"Just because she happens to fall in love with me and I have the wrong passport, she isn't allowed to live with me in her own country,\" says Spencer, 28.\n\nHis student visa expired in January and he has applied for leave to remain in the UK, but if that is rejected he fears he will have to leave the country.\n\nLaura Segan and Spencer Russ have found their relationship complicated by visa rules\n\nFull-time graduate student Laura would then need to earn a minimum of £18,600 per year for a minimum amount of six months in order to bring her husband back to the UK.\n\nLaura, from Devon, says she cannot work full-time while she is studying. \"It doesn't seem right,\" the 28-year-old says.\n\n\"I think it is ridiculous to put a financial requirement on love,\" adds Spencer, who met his wife when they were both teaching English in Russia.\n\nAndy Russell, from Bath, reluctantly describes himself as \"one of the lucky ones\".\n\n\"Yet I don't feel that,\" he says.\n\nMolly's only contact with her family for a year was on Skype\n\nThe 43-year-old teacher faced a long battle to get his Chinese wife Molly, 36, a partner visa after they decided to move to the UK from China in 2012 with their two sons - then just three and five years old.\n\nMolly had to return to China to apply for the visa while Andy searched for a job that met the income requirement.\n\nShe was told she could not enter the UK on a visitor visa because she had expressed her intention to get a partner visa.\n\nA year of separation with Molly able to see her family only via Skype led to her youngest son referring to her as \"computer mummy\".\n\n\"It broke my heart,\" Andy says.\n\nHe says their sons lost the ability to speak Chinese, which affected their bond with their mother as she struggled with English, and led to them \"losing some respect for her\", although their relationship is \"much better now\".\n\n\"They [the government] have got to deal with migration, but not at the expense of genuine, honest families. It is a scandal,\" Andy says.\n\nThe Children's Commissioner for England says that at least 15,000 children are separated from a parent because of the income rules and are growing up in \"Skype families\".\n\nAndy Russell with his two sons and wife Molly before she left for China\n\nSome Britons who are unable to meet the sufficient funding requirements have used the \"Surinder Singh\" route to get their non-EU partners into the country. This involves working in another nation in the European Economic Area (EEA) for about three months.\n\nIt means that when they return to the UK, their case is considered under different rules - as they are treated as a citizen of the EEA rather than a British citizen.\n\nBut the Home Office must be satisfied that people who have demonstrated they did actually \"move\" to their new EEA country for the period they lived there and did not just simply take a short-term job there for immigration purposes.\n\nHome Office figures show the number of partner visas granted fell from 46,906 in the year ending June 2006 to 27,345 in the year ending June 2015, when it says 66% of applications were approved.\n\nA Home Office spokesman said those who wish to make a life in the UK were welcomed \"but family life must not be established here at the taxpayer's expense\".\n\nHe said that was \"why we established clear rules\" based on advice from the independent Migration Advisory Committee.\n\nAll cases are \"considered on their individual merits,\" he said.\n• None Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Scottish Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One, S4C, BBC Radio Scotland, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nJohn Barclay will captain a Scotland side featuring five changes for the Six Nations encounter at home to Wales.\n\nBarclay, 30, is skipper in the absence of Greig Laidlaw, who misses the rest of the campaign with an ankle injury.\n\nAli Price replaces Laidlaw at scrum-half, with Sean Maitland dropping out and Tim Visser starting on the wing.\n\nGordon Reid is in for Allan Dell in the front row, while John Hardie replaces Hamish Watson and Ryan Wilson steps in for Josh Strauss at number eight.\n\n\"John has played a vital role in our leadership group and has led by example throughout this and previous campaigns,\" said head coach Vern Cotter of his new captain.\n\n\"It was disappointing to lose Greig Laidlaw. However, we continue to develop a system of shared leadership in this squad, which has supported the transition. It'll be a proud moment for John and one which he thoroughly deserves.\"\n\nThe Scarlets loose forward took over the captaincy temporarily when Laidlaw sustained his injury in the gruelling 22-16 defeat by France in Paris two weeks ago. However, he had to be replaced after suffering shoulder and head injuries, from which he has since recovered.\n\nBarclay will be joined in the back row by Edinburgh's Hardie and Wilson, the latter having recovered from the elbow infection that kept him out of the France game and who replaces the injured Strauss.\n\nHarlequins wing Visser gets his first opportunity of the championship as a straight swap for Maitland, who has failed to recover sufficiently from the rib injury sustained representing Saracens last weekend.\n\nSince the Six Nations started in 2000, Scotland have beaten Wales just three times, the last success coming in Edinburgh in 2007.\n\n\"We know the Welsh will throw everything at us but we will keep our attacking mind-set and look to convert pressure to points as often as possible,\" said Cotter.\n\n\"The players have worked hard to prepare for this game and are really looking forward to putting in a top performance.\n\n\"It's a huge weekend in the championship and we're still right in the mix.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Hockey\n\nMaddie Hinch has been named Female Goalkeeper of the Year as Great Britain won three world hockey awards.\n\nThe 28-year-old saved four penalties as Great Britain beat the Netherlands in a shootout to win Olympic gold in Rio.\n\nGB women's coach Danny Kerry and assistant coach Karen Brown won the world's best male and female coaches.\n\nHockey players, coaches and fans vote for the annual International Hockey Federation Hockey Stars awards, which were held in India on Thursday.\n\nIreland hockey captain David Harte, 28, was named Male Goalkeeper of the Year for the second year in a row.\n\nThe 28-year-old led Ireland to a first Olympic Games in 108 years in 2016.\n\nEngland Hockey chief executive Sally Munday said: \"Maddie's heroics at the Olympic Games will be remembered by millions who watched our women win gold.\n\n\"She is the goalkeeper no player wants to face when taking a penalty and I am thrilled to see her receive this award.\"\n\nEngland women are currently in South Africa preparing for two Tests on Saturday and Sunday with both games starting at 18:00 GMT.\n\nEngland's men's team are also set to fly out as they take on both South Africa and Germany between 2 and 8 March.", "You may remember Roland Mouret as the designer who came up with the famous Galaxy dress in 2005, which went on to be worn by the likes of Victoria Beckham and Cameron Diaz. He made a triumphant return to LFW to unveil his 20th anniversary collection - an homage to his design work so far.", "Historically, if you need a manager to make a quick impact at a club, Big Sam tends to be your man.\n\nSam Allardyce has enjoyed impressive starts to life at previous clubs, including Bolton, Newcastle, Blackburn and West Ham.\n\nSo when Crystal Palace decided Alan Pardew was no longer needed in December, it made sense that the Londoners turned to the quick-fixer in their bid to remain in the Premier League.\n\nIn a BBC Sport poll, 52% of voters think that Allardyce will not be able to keep Crystal Palace up this season.\n\nIt was a swift return to the familiarity of club football for Allardyce, 62, who had suffered the ignominy of seeing his spell as England boss end after one game.\n\nSo why have the Eagles, now 19th in the table and two points from safety, not benefited from the traditional Big Sam bounce?\n\nHow bad has Allardyce's start been?\n\nAllardyce has a reputation for achieving positive results when he joins a club mid-season and, similarly, clubs generally see a downturn in results if he leaves in mid-season.\n\nIn fact, Palace are the first team where that pattern has not continued for Allardyce.\n\nHis first eight league games in charge at Selhurst Park have produced an average of 0.5 points, the exact same average of his predecessor Pardew's last eight games before he was sacked.\n\nOverall, this is one of the worst starts Allardyce has ever made at a new club.\n\nAside from Notts County, whom he failed to steer away from relegation to League Two in 1996-97 (although they were promoted again by March the next year), Allardyce is on course for his lowest points average from his first 10 league games.\n\nAllardyce's average of 0.5 points from his eight Premier League matches at Palace is 0.4 points lower than the average for his first 10 games at Sunderland and way below the 1.8 average of his start at West Ham.\n\nThere is hope for Eagles fans, though, as Allardyce has guided the last two clubs he joined in mid-season away from the drop zone - Blackburn in 2008-09 and Sunderland in 2015-16, the latter despite eight defeats in his first 10 games.\n\nWhere Allardyce's teams finish when he joins mid-season\n\nWhy the change in fortune?\n\nOne argument could be that Allardyce has not been his usual cunning self in his first transfer window.\n\nAllardyce spent £34.6m in January - more than he has spent in any of his first transfer windows at new clubs - and that outlay was splurged on just four players: Jeffrey Schlupp (£11.7m), Luka Milivojevic (£10.8m), Patrick van Aanholt (£10m) and Mamadou Sakho (loan fee of £1.9m).\n\nIn the 2007 summer transfer window at Newcastle, he spent a comparable £30.8m, but that was on nine players.\n\nAnd his most successful start at a club - West Ham in 2011 - coincided with the mass influx of 12 new players during the summer window\n\nIt should be noted that clubs generally bring in fewer players in winter windows, and have less time to line up signings.\n\nBut Allardyce managed to bring in six players at a cost of £17.6m at Sunderland in January 2016, and went on to save the club from relegation.\n\nAlternatively, perhaps a change in tactics is the source of Allardyce's struggles?\n\nRenowned for his preference for a pragmatic, long-ball style of play, Allardyce seems to have forgone that approach in an attempt to play a more compact version of the game.\n\nOnly 18% of his side's passes have been long passes (defined as a pass over 35 yards with an intended target) - lower than at Newcastle, Blackburn and Sunderland.\n\nAnd what about the old cliche that Allardyce's sides are the masters of the set-piece?\n\nAllardyce has become associated with well-drilled teams when it comes to the dead ball - a threat at the opposition end and organised in their own box.\n\nWell, Allardyce does seem to have firmed Palace up at the back in that respect, conceding from just 24% of defensive set-pieces (three of 14) since his arrival, compared with 47% (15 from 32) under Pardew this term.\n\nBut the same effect has yet to register at the other end, Palace scoring from 25% of their attacking set plays (1/4) compared with 43% (12/28) under Pardew this season.\n\nAnalysis - Can Allardyce keep Palace up?\n\nCrystal Palace assumed they were appointing a guarantee of Premier League safety when Sam Allardyce was hastily ushered through the door at Selhurst Park to replace sacked Alan Pardew in December.\n\nAllardyce was the impact manager and arch-pragmatist whose record had never been stained by relegation from the Premier League, proving his ability to navigate a route out of danger at Sunderland last season, a task he performed with such success it landed him the job as England manager. Briefly.\n\nTo say the move has yet to have the desired effect is an understatement, with Palace now in a far more perilous plight than when he arrived after a home defeat by Chelsea that left them lying 17th.\n\nAllardyce's tried and trusted methods have so far failed miserably, despite inheriting a squad that looked built for his favoured method of using wide players and a powerful striker, with Christian Benteke a disappointment, Wilfried Zaha's role reduced by his presence at the Africa Cup Of Nations with the Ivory Coast and Andros Townsend out of favour.\n\nBut is the real problem with Allardyce himself? Has the man whose concrete-clad self-confidence in everything he did been scarred by his calamitous one-match, 67-day reign as England manager, which ended after he was caught in a newspaper sting? Certainly Allardyce has not seemed the bullish, brash operator of old.\n\nThe England job was meant to be the pinnacle of his career, the job he had craved for more than a decade, not an embarrassing \"blink and you'll miss it\" interlude before another Premier League relegation battle.\n\nIs the man who prides himself on breathing life into his squad battling to motivate himself to the old levels? It is hard to imagine but the loss of his managerial life's dream will have had a devastating impact, even on an experienced campaigner such as Allardyce.\n\nThere was a brief flash of the old Allardyce when he danced in front of Crystal Palace's mascot before the home game with Sunderland - but the music soon stopped as his side were 4-0 down to their relegation rivals by half-time.\n\nIt was a result that snuffed out the brief optimism of his only league win, a 2-0 victory at Bournemouth. Palace's fans are unimpressed with Allardyce and his methods, but more significantly by his results.\n\nPalace and Allardyce simply cannot wait any longer to get their act together - they must start getting results to move out of trouble and for their manager to prove he has not arrived at Selhurst Park as badly damaged goods.", "The fiance of a children's author who drugged and suffocated her before throwing her body in a hidden cesspit has been found guilty of murder.\n\nIan Stewart, 56, had denied murdering Helen Bailey but was convicted at St Albans Crown Court.", "US President Donald Trump has nominated Neil Gorsuch to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court.", "\"Halal snack pack\" has been named People's Choice Word of the Year 2016 by Australia's Macquarie Dictionary.\n\nA snack pack, also known as an HSP, is a hearty pile of kebab meat, chips and sauce which has become a staple of Australian takeaway shops.\n\nIt's perhaps an unlikely platform for political debate, but this year the dish rocketed into Australia's national consciousness, becoming a symbol of peaceful multiculturalism for many, but for others, an unwelcome sign of the growing influence of Islam.\n\nPolitician Pauline Hanson takes the view that halal meat is unacceptable in Australia\n\nThis year the dish, made to Islamic religious standards, found its way into politics, after right-wing anti-Islam politician Pauline Hanson refused an invitation to eat one.\n\nIn congratulating her on her election to the Senate in July, Labor Senator Sam Dastyari - a \"non-practising Muslim\" - told Ms Hanson: \"I'll take you out for halal snack pack out in Western Sydney, whenever you want.\"\n\nMr Dastyari was arguably slightly trolling Ms Hanson, whose One Nation party believes that by \"buying halal certified products, it means that you are financially supporting the Islamisation of Australia\".\n\n\"It's not happening, not interested in halal, thank you,\" she replied, arguing (without evidence) that \"98% of Australians\" were also against halal.\n\nThe dish subsequently enjoyed a surge in popularity. One Melbourne kebab shop even added \"The Pauline Hanson\" to its menu - \"Lamb kebab roasted to perfection in the rotisserie, mint yoghurt, chilli sauce, cheese, beer battered chips\".\n\nThe halal snack pack is an Australian creation, but its creators were immigrants or descendants of recent immigrants from the Middle East and Europe.\n\nIt's a fusion of these cuisines, and even has its own appreciation society on Facebook, for \"sharing great snack pack stories and discussing possible best snack pack in world\".\n\nThe forum asks members to \"show us a sick pic of ur halal snacky, whered ya get it?, is it sick?, is it halal? and salrite or na? also, is it a halal snack pack mountain or na?\"\n\nThe group, which has close to 180,000 members, was inspired by a visit its founders made to Oz Turk Jr, a kebab shop in Sydney.\n\n\"Before, we used to sell 10 kebabs for one snack pack, now it's 10 snack packs to one kebab,\" says owner Ufuk Bozouglu.\n\nAn Australian Muslim of Turkish origin, he credits his mum for the popularity of his snack packs, saying \"she taught me you should only sell what you'd eat\".\n\nMr Bozouglu says his customers are mainly students living locally - who'll queue for up to 40 minute at peak times - but one boy travels two-and-a-half-hours each week to buy one of his snack packs, which cost about A$10.50 each ($8; £6.30), with cheese.\n\nHe says he's never seen anyone be perturbed by the fact his meat is halal.\n\n\"Where we live, it's very multicultural, and people see it doesn't matter if you're Christian, Hindu, whatever. You become friends and have respect for each other.\"\n\n\"The people that it does matter to, they're usually from small areas so they only thing they see [about Muslims] is what they read in the paper.\n\n\"People around this area, they're all together,\" he says. \"Sometimes, you go on Facebook and it's just hate towards Muslims,\" he says, but on the snack pack appreciation forum, it's all about the food.\n\nKeysar Trad, president of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, says normalising words used by other languages can only be a good thing.\n\n\"Especially if you're able to find it in the dictionary, it takes away the mystery,\" he said.\n\n\"It brings people comfort and satisfaction that there's nothing sinister about the word halal. It's all about what's positive, what is good and wholesome.\"\n\nThe popularity of halal snack packs \"demystifies the word, demystifies the culture from which those words are borrowed and hopefully, helps built harmony in society\".\n\nThe Macquarie committee said the choice of the halal snack pack as word of the year \"tells us about something once confined largely to the Muslim community that is now surfacing throughout the broader Australian community\".\n\nThe dictionary's editor, Susan Butler, even said it was \"the duty of lexicographers to, as much as is humanly possible, eat the food items that they put in the dictionary\".\n\n\"How can you write the definition of HSP with enthusiasm if you have never sampled it? So today I ate my first HSP.\n\n\"I can understand why this dish has become the fast food item of the day. It is carbo-loaded, calorific sinfulness. Once started on it, you cannot stop.\"\n\nReflecting similar trends, the dictionary committee last week named \"fake news\" it's Word of the Year, saying it \"captures an interesting evolution in the creation of deceptive content as a way of herding people in a specific direction\".", "It may have started out as a dispute between a track cyclist and her former coach.\n\nBut 10 months after Jess Varnish first made allegations of sexism, discrimination and bullying against Shane Sutton - and British Cycling - it is not just the reputation of the country's most successful and best-funded Olympic sport that is on the line.\n\nThe claims were denied by Sutton, and he was cleared of all but one of nine specific allegations of using discriminatory and inappropriate language by an internal investigation.\n\nBut Varnish's portrayal of a \"culture of fear\" at British Cycling has been backed up by female riders such as Nicole Cooke and Victoria Pendleton, along with para-cyclists and former staff members - triggering an independent review of the culture at its world-class performance programme.\n\nThe panel is headed by Annamarie Phelps, chair of British Rowing and is due to publish its findings later this month.\n\nIf well-placed sources are to be believed, the much-anticipated report - now delivered to British Cycling's board - could make for grim reading for the governing body.\n\nBut it could also raise serious questions for Britain's sporting establishment, the entire approach of funding agency UK Sport, and whether, through its 'no-compromise' approach to the pursuit of medals, standards of behaviour towards elite Olympic and Paralympic athletes are in desperate need of review.\n\nImagine if the report finds evidence that there has indeed been an institutionalised culture of bullying at what was held up as a model governing body. That would seriously raise the stakes for some of British sport's best-respected and most powerful individuals and organisations...\n• Sir Dave Brailsford for instance; a man already under severe pressure over former rider Sir Bradley Wiggins' use of therapeutic use exemptions (TUEs) before major races, and his handling of the furore over the delivery of medication for Wiggins in France in 2011. Performance director at British Cycling from 2007 to 2014, and until recently heralded as the country's leading sports thinker, he denies presiding over any bullying, insisting he was merely uncompromising as he masterminded Team GB's cycling triumphs in successive Games.\n• None For the man who effectively replaced Brailsford at British Cycling, former technical director Shane Sutton, who continues to deny any wrongdoing, and who has plenty of high-profile backers of his own, but who resigned in the wake of Varnish's allegations.\n• Ian Drake, stepped down from his position two months early , having announced his resignation last year. He did so amid questions over whether he (and other board members) were aware of claims of bullying and discrimination against Sutton. In 2012 the man he replaced, former chief executive Peter King, took anonymous statements from 40 personnel as part of a report that was never made public. The report may reveal more about this, and examine whether enough was done in the wake of those testimonies. Drake has said he never heard of any complaints relating to Sutton's behaviour in the past.\n• Brian Cookson , president of British Cycling for 16 years until 2013, when he became the most powerful man in the sport, elected President of world federation the UCI after campaigning to restore the sport's credibility. At the time Cookson spoke proudly of his time in charge of British Cycling, hailing it a \"well-run, stable federation governed on the principles of honesty, transparency and clear divisions of responsibility.\" A man who, when asked whether he had presided over any bad behaviour, surprised some observers by saying \"I don't want to comment on any individual\", but then did so anyway, expressing his \"great respect\" for Sutton.\n• British Cycling, which is already under investigation from UK Anti-Doping over allegations of wrongdoing following revelations that one of its former coaches, Simon Cope, delivered that mystery medical package to ex-Team Sky doctor Richard Freeman in 2011. Dr Freeman now works for British Cycling. Both men deny wrongdoing but to appear in front of the Commons' Culture, Media and Sport (CMS) Select Committee later this month. The governing body has had to defend its support of women's cycling after a blistering attack by former world road champion Nicole Cooke, who recently told the CMS Committee that British Cycling was\n• UK Sport, who say they are considering helping fund Cookson's forthcoming UCI re-election campaign this year [they gave him £78,000 to help him get elected in 2013], despite co-commissioning the investigation into the culture of an organisation that he headed up for 16 years. The wisdom of using National Lottery funds to help pay for the election campaigns of British sports administrators has already been questioned. Despite their crucial role in distributing the billions of pounds that have helped bring about Britain's remarkable rise as a sporting superpower in successive Olympic and Paralympic Games, UK Sport's 'no-compromise' approach is already under serious scrutiny after cutting off funding to sports like badminton, table-tennis and wheelchair rugby, whose appeals will be heard later this month.\n\nThere is a growing sense that the time may have come for British sport to give as much thought to welfare as it does to winning.\n\nThis whole saga has also shone a light on the contracts and rights of elite-level athletes who are part of performance programmes funded by UK Sport. Varnish believes her contract was not renewed because she had publicly criticised her coaches after her team failed to qualify for the Rio Olympics. Sutton denies this, insisting it was simply down to her performances not being good enough. But regardless of this, and whoever is in the right, some observers are increasingly concerned that the current system is too heavily weighted in favour of the governing bodies. Under the terms of their UK Sport contracts, athletes are not employees, and therefore they lack certain rights afforded to other workers.\n\nVarnish, for instance, amid the devastation of being told she was being axed, claims she was initially given just 48 hours to serve notice whether she wanted to appeal. Often, athletes face that deadline to actually present their case too. And even then, they can only appeal against the process rather than the decision. Athletes who want to challenge selection decisions that determine their livelihoods tend to find their appeals are heard by internal panels made up of officials from the governing body, rather than external, independent arbitrators.\n\nDefenders of the system will argue that in the tough and demanding world of international sport, it has to be this way. Public funding is at stake after all, and coaches like Sutton sometimes have to make tough selection decisions, but do so in order to get results. Staying the right side of the line when it comes to delivering bad news, and the language used, is not always easy. Disappointment is inevitable, and many argue that as long as athletes perform well they are safe - the system is meritocratic. British Cycling also says it extended the appeals process deadline for Varnish.\n\nBut it is still easy to see why athletes could feel they are in a vulnerable position. Concerns were heightened last year for instance, after the leak of an email sent by Andy Harrison, British Cycling's technical director, warning riders they could jeopardise their futures by speaking out to the media about the various scandals afflicting the governing body. Harrison later apologised for his \"poorly constructed\" wording, and British Cycling then said that riders were free to talk to the media without fear, but the damage had been done.\n\nHave governing bodies become too powerful? Does there need to be a greater duty of care towards athletes? More thought given to their lives after their contracts come to an end? Is their an imbalance in the relationship between competitor and coach? Are there cultures of fear at some governing bodies? These are the questions Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson has been wrestling with over the past year. Her government-commissioned review into safety and wellbeing in sport is due to report in the next few weeks.\n\nYou may not have heard about it, but in the aftermath of what looks like being an explosive report by Phelps, and the shocking child sex abuse scandal in football, the publication of Grey-Thompson's recommendations could prove highly significant.\n\nNo one can deny that the demanding, uncompromising approach adopted by bodies like British Cycling has contributed to medals, and plenty of them. It partly explains how Team GB rose to second place in the Rio medal table. But at what cost?\n\nBritish Rowing's coaching culture was described on Wednesday as \"hard and unrelenting\" but cleared of bullying by an internal inquiry. But it also urged more care to be taken of athletes' well-being.\n\nThere is a growing sense that the time may have come for British sport to give as much thought to welfare as it does to winning. And in doing so, usher in a new era in the country's sporting evolution.", "A guard was accidentally stranded at a railway station when the train left without him.\n\nPassengers had to get out through the driver's cab door at the next stop and were delayed for an hour waiting for another train.\n\nThe conductor on the 08:16 Ilkley to Leeds service was left behind at Burley-in-Wharfedale station. The train and its passengers stopped at Menston.\n\nNorthern Rail said it was an \"operating incident\".\n\nPassenger Simon Painter said: \"We were offloaded on to the platform via the driver's cab and then waited at Menston for the next train.\n\n\"Left Ilkley at quarter past 8 and arrived Leeds at twenty to 10.\"\n\nA spokesman for Northern Rail said: \"Shortly after 8.23am on Tuesday 31 January the 8.16am Ilkley to Leeds service was delayed after the train left Burley in Wharfedale station whilst the conductor was still on the platform.\n\n\"As a result, the service was terminated at Menston station.\"\n\n\"We are currently investigating the cause of the incident and it would be inappropriate to comment further until that investigation has taken place.\"\n\nThe incident led to delays on several other services between Ilkley, Bradford and Leeds on Tuesday morning.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A woman raised by drug-addicted parents has written a letter to thank them.\n\nChelsea Cameron's parents missed many important moments as she grew up, like exam results and prize giving.\n\nShe told the Victoria Derbyshire programme why she's grateful.", "Huge supertanker planes from the US, Russia and Brazil have been deployed to fight forest fires in Chile.\n\nThe fires are the worst in modern history and have spread to affect 480,000 hectares (1,186,105 acres) so far.", "James Ibori was released from a UK prison in December after serving four years of a 13-year sentence\n\nA Nigerian politician is appealing against his British conviction for corruption, claiming the Metropolitan Police investigation was itself mired in corruption.\n\nJames Ibori was released in December after four years in a British prison, but prosecutors have since admitted they have documents suggesting police officers involved in the case took bribes.\n\nThe UK government spent years and millions getting Ibori out of Nigeria and into a British court in one of the most expensive and complex police investigations undertaken.\n\nMinisters wanted to prove their determination to tackle corruption in Africa.\n\nIbori, a former London DIY store cashier, was jailed for fraud totalling nearly £50m in April 2012.\n\nBut now the tables have been turned with Ibori claiming the British authorities were themselves corrupt.\n\n\"I have been unfairly treated, that's all I can say,\" Mr Ibori told the BBC, confirming that he plans to appeal against his conviction for money laundering.\n\n\"Yes, I am, of course. I have made that decision personally and I have instructed my solicitors.\"\n\nIbori was extradited from Nigeria to London in 2010\n\nIbori was believed to have laundered large sums in the UK, just part of hundreds of millions of dollars it was claimed he had embezzled from the Nigerian people.\n\nOn a state salary of just £4,000 a year he had bought a fleet of luxury cars and expensive properties. He was also looking to buy a private jet.\n\nIn 2005 the Department for International Development funded a special police unit inside Scotland Yard to go after corrupt African politicians.\n\nIts prime target was Ibori. Its aim: to get him into a British court and convict him for corruption.\n\nHaving been extradited to London in 2010, Ibori was convicted and sentenced to 13 years for money laundering two years later.\n\nBut since he was jailed, documents have emerged suggesting that at least one officer involved in the Ibori investigation had taken thousands of pounds in bribes.\n\nLast year, after repeatedly telling judges there was no evidence of police corruption, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) admitted they had found substantial material that supported the allegations.\n\nLast summer, defence lawyers learned more about an undercover Scotland Yard investigation called Operation Limonium.\n\n\"There exists intelligence that supports the assertion that [a police officer] received payment in return for information in respect of the Ibori case,\" the CPS admitted.\n\nThe officer in question has always denied taking bribes and internal police investigations have previously exonerated him.\n\nDetails of how Scotland Yard tapped phones and conducted covert surveillance on a number of officers in the unit investigating Ibori emerged for the first time.\n\nIbori bought expensive properties and cars, including this Bentley, on a salary of £4,000 a year\n\nOther documents alleging officers had taken bribes were sent to the authorities anonymously in 2011 by a lawyer convicted as part of the Ibori case.\n\nFormer solicitor Bhadresh Gohil says he was trying to alert them to the police corruption.\n\n\"I brought this case to the attention of the Met police, the commissioner of the Met police Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, I brought it to the attention of Alison Saunders, the head of the CPS. I also drew it to the attention of the then Home Secretary Theresa May,\" Mr Gohil says.\n\n\"Unfortunately, no-one did anything about this.\"\n\nWhat they did do was attempt to prosecute Mr Gohil for perverting the course of justice by faking the documents. With the CPS release of the new documents, that case collapsed.\n\nThe British authorities managed to get their man before a judge in 2012, but now James Ibori is willingly returning to the courts looking to put the reputation of the UK's criminal justice system on trial.\n\nThe irony will not be lost on government ministers.", "By the end of the Six Nations, England could have won a second Grand Slam in a row and set a new record for the most consecutive wins in the history of Test rugby.\n\nThe key date may well be 18 March, when Ireland host England in a potential Grand Slam decider.\n\nBut England know they face tough battles before that, notably against a resurgent France on 4 February and the difficult trip to Wales on 11 February.\n\nIf England are to win consecutive Slams and set a new Test record of 19 straight victories, they will probably have to survive all manner of close shaves, random bounces and borderline decisions.\n\nIt is how teams handle those key moments that not only defines the result of matches, but also illuminates the bigger picture surrounding them.\n\nLittle more than a year ago, England were tumbling out of their own World Cup at the group stage, so how did they embark on an unbeaten run of 14 matches, and what are the key moments in that amazing journey?\n\nStuart Lancaster, Eddie Jones' predecessor as head coach, called up nine uncapped players to his first squad, so the Australian's promotion of seven fresh faces was perhaps not as revolutionary as it felt at the time.\n\nInstead, it was removing the captaincy from the dependable Chris Robshaw and handing it to Dylan Hartley - who had already served more than a year of bans for various acts of on-field violence before his latest indiscretion - that established the new regime's modus operandi.\n\nWhere Lancaster had spoken of his players being \"ambassadors\", Jones introduced Hartley praising his \"passion\", \"aggression\" and \"uncompromising approach\".\n\nA wretched World Cup campaign had revealed England's soft underbelly. By promoting Hartley, Jones gave his side a hard-nosed ideal to aspire to and the street smarts to succeed.\n\nFormer England hooker Brian Moore, writing in the Daily Telegraph, said: \"Eddie Jones has identified something that had been obvious to many outside the England camp for a while - England work hard, give their all, but there is no edge.\n\n\"We're not talking about illegality, we're talking about the controlled belligerence that is the hallmark of players such as Eben Etzebeth, Ma'a Nonu and Scott Fardy.\"\n\nFor the first match and a half under Jones, England had been effective but not inspirational.\n\nAfter scrapping their way to victory over Scotland in their Six Nations opener, the first half in Rome had been far from the St Valentine's Day massacre England fans might have hoped for under the new coach.\n\nEngland had scored one try and led by a slender two points. But the second half saw a more ambitious, 15-man game emerge, with replacement hooker Jamie George's cutting angle and slick offload to Owen Farrell for the final try the clearest sign of Jones renewing England's licence to attack by instinct rather than the playbook.\n\n\"This is more like it, England cutting loose,\" enthused BBC commentator Eddie Butler as Farrell crossed.\n\nJones' England have now scored 46 tries in 13 games - an average of 3.5 a match, better than predecessors Lancaster (2.1), Martin Johnson (2.1), Brian Ashton (1.9) and Andy Robinson (2.9).\n\nHad Manu Tuilagi, or even Henry Slade, been fit then Farrell might never have got the chance to revive his partnership with George Ford.\n\nAs boys, they became neighbours when their fathers moved south to Saracens, and they played together in the street as well as at school and international age-grade level.\n\nUnder Lancaster, they had competed for the fly-half jersey, with the 12 slot reserved for blunderbus ball-carriers. Under Jones, Farrell was given the chance to show his craft could provide a more subtle midfield weapon, while offering a solid defensive presence as well.\n\nThe perfectly weighted miss-pass that picked off Robbie Henshaw's rush defence and opened Mike Brown's route to the line against Ireland was typical of the way he seized his chance.\n\nDuring the 2015 World Cup - before he took the England job - Jones wrote a column for the Daily Mail lamenting the absence of a specialist open-side flanker in England's ranks.\n\nRobshaw was, he wrote, a \"six and a half at best\", unable to compete with the pace and breakdown skills of Australia's standard-bearer David Pocock.\n\nJames Haskell would not claim to be a traditional number seven either. But he has imposed himself with relentless industry and physicality.\n\nHis colossal hit on Pocock in the first two minutes of the first Test of the summer series against Australia set the tone for a bruising 39-28 win and showed how a perceived area of weakness had turned to a strength for England.\n\nThat it was Haskell - ebullient, driven, and not necessarily everyone's cup of tea - leading from the front was especially significant.\n\nMarginalised under the Lancaster regime, Jones put him front and centre and gave him a very specific brief - smash everyone who comes near you, hammer every ruck you can, and run hard and straight when you get the ball.\n\nThe result? With his confidence high and a focused gameplan, Haskell was man of the series down under, despite injury forcing him out just after the hour mark of the second Test.\n\nTeimana Harrison's parents had flown over from New Zealand to see their son make only his second start for England, in the third Test in Sydney.\n\nThe match was only 31 minutes old when he was replaced in a tactical switch by Jones.\n\n\"I don't see it as a big deal,\" explained Jones when asked about the possible damage to the young flanker's confidence.\n\nJones was similarly blunt with defence coach Paul Gustard, telling him he \"has got to get better\".\n\nAll this in the wake of scoring 44 points to seal a historic whitewash in Sydney.\n\nThere is no concession to reputation or sentiment - either in public words or private decision-making - as Jones drives England on and up.\n\nHe is ruthless in pursuit of victory and more importantly, brutal as they may be, his tactical changes work, as the withdrawal of Luther Burrell in the first Test after half an hour in favour of Ford also demonstrated.\n\nWhen Elliot Daly recklessly charged into the airborne Leonardo Senatore less than five minutes into England's autumn Test against Argentina, it set England an unexpected, but not unwelcome challenge.\n\nDown to 14 men with 75 minutes to play, there was an immediate premium on discipline and defensive concentration.\n\nAfter a nine-try demolition of Fiji the previous weekend, England had to think on their feet, adapt and survive to keep their winning run alive.\n\nArgentina, while not in the form that carried them to the World Cup semi-finals in 2015, looked ominous as they moved to within two points early in the second half.\n\nBut England's composure and conditioning passed the examination in a 27-14 win.\n\nIt was a red letter day for England, one that showed them they could adapt to straitened circumstances on the fly and work out how to win despite the odds being stacked against them. In the future, this may be pin-pointed as the moment the team grew up.\n\nThe dates that will define England's Six Nations\n\nFrance were demolished 62-13 by the All Blacks at the 2015 World Cup, but gave the world champions a scare with a late fightback in Paris in November, coming up just short in a 24-19 defeat.\n\nFrance have not won at Twickenham since 2005, however the mood takes their talented individuals they can poop any party.\n\nThere were only tentative pokes - rather than the expected all-out verbal jousting - between Jones and Wales' counterpart Warren Gatland last year.\n\nThis time around, with Gatland on British and Irish Lions duty, it will be Rob Howley plotting England's downfall. Last time the interim head coach stepped up to the plate, he delivered in style with England sent spiralling to a 30-3 defeat in 2013.\n\nThe fixture list throws up a trip to Dublin on the final weekend for England - just at it did in 2011.\n\nEngland were on for a Grand Slam that year, but were on the wrong end of a 24-8 scoreline by the time the final whistle blew. After wins over the three southern hemisphere superpowers in 2016, Joe Schmidt's side will fear no-one.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nGabriel Jesus scored his first Manchester City goal as they tore West Ham apart at London Stadium.\n\nCity, who left striker Sergio Aguero and goalkeeper Claudio Bravo on the bench, led when Kevin de Bruyne played a one-two with Jesus before stroking home.\n\nFour minutes later, they doubled their lead when the impressive Leroy Sane beat two defenders and his deflected cross was tapped home by David Silva.\n\nAnd the game was as good as won before half-time when Raheem Sterling squared the ball to Jesus to tap home.\n\nYaya Toure added a fourth after the break from a penalty when Hammers debutant Jose Fonte brought down Sterling.\n\nWest Ham, who made errors to lose possession for each of City's three first-half goals, have been beaten heavily by City twice at home in 2017, having lost 5-0 in their FA Cup meeting last month.\n\nCity are now only behind fourth-placed Liverpool on goal difference, 10 points behind leaders Chelsea.\n\nCity boss Pep Guardiola revealed before the game that he had decided to stick with goalkeeper Willy Caballero and his front three of Sterling, Sane and Jesus - all of whom started Saturday's 3-0 win over Crystal Palace in the FA Cup.\n\nAnd it worked in sensational style the trio - aged 22, 21 and 19 respectively - ripped the Hammers to shreds.\n\nJesus, making his first Premier League start following his £27m move from Palmeiras this month, assisted the opener as City broke from their own half at speed with De Bruyne. The Brazilian exchanged passes before the Belgian, who was also impressive throughout, guided the ball past Darren Randolph.\n\nThe second goal was made by Sane, who has recently hit form following a slow start after his £37m summer move from Schalke, with the German skinning two Hammers defenders and crossing, via a touch from Randolph, for Silva to tap home.\n\nThe dynamic front three all had a hand in the third, with Sane playing in Sterling, who passed the ball across goal for a Jesus tap-in.\n\nTheir second-half performance was still dominant albeit less sensational, perhaps because it did not need to be, but they got their fourth when Sterling was brought down by Fonte and Toure narrowly beat Randolph.\n\nIn goal, Caballero kept his third clean sheet of 2017, having only played three matches, in contrast to the benched Bravo, who had conceded the last six shots on target he had faced.\n\nWest Ham have now conceded 12 goals to City this season, including nine in 2017 - all at London Stadium.\n\nAnd while City were brilliant, the Hammers played a huge part in their own downfall.\n\nAaron Cresswell gifted the ball to City for their first, then lost a 50-50 before the second goal and Pedro Obiang gave the ball to Sane for the third. Centre-back Fonte marked his debut, following his £8m move from Southampton, by conceding a penalty for Toure's second-half penalty.\n\nThey only forced Caballero to save the ball once - a simple fourth-minute stop from Michail Antonio.\n\nSlaven Bilic's side - who only had 30% possession - did have the ball in the net once, although Antonio was offside when he latched on to debutant Robert Snodgrass's through ball to fire home.\n\nManchester City boss Pep Guardiola to BBC Sport: \"Our high pressing was good. We were so aggressive without the ball.\n\n\"Gabriel Jesus is a fighter with instinct for the goal. He's good at assists too.\n\n\"We played a front three with an average age of 20. I like the fans to be excited. Those players are the future of the club. Leroy Sane had some problems at the beginning but now he's settled. They will be important players for the next few years.\"\n\nWest Ham boss Slaven Bilic told BBC Sport: \"It's like a copy and paste from the FA Cup game. It's very frustrating. We made such mistakes for the first and third goal. If you give the ball away in those areas, they'll punish you.\n\n\"When it's 3-0, it's hard to play against them. You are hoping if you score you can turn a game around. But at 3-0 it's more likely you'll concede more as they'll gain confidence.\n\n\"It's a heavy defeat for us but we can't let it hurt us a lot. We have to bounce back like we did after the FA Cup defeat.\"\n\nAnalysis - 'City will be found out'\n\n\"I think if Manchester City play the team they did tonight away from home against other team, they will be found out.\n\n\"They are far too open. Yaya Toure, as the holding midfielder, won't get around enough against decent teams.\n\n\"West Ham are the perfect team for Manchester City. They played 4-4-2 and were destroyed in midfield.\n• None Gabriel Jesus became the first player to both score and assist a goal on their first Premier League start for Manchester City.\n• None Jesus also became the second youngest Brazilian player to score his first Premier League goal (19yrs 304days), after Rafael for Manchester United in November 2008 (18yrs 122days).\n• None David Silva scored his third away Premier League goal against West Ham - his highest tally of away goals against another opponent in the competition.\n• None West Ham have shipped four or more goals in three of their 12 Premier League games at London Stadium - the same number as in their final 106 top-flight games at Upton Park.\n• None Yaya Toure has scored all 11 of his Premier League penalties - the best 100% record in the competition.\n• None In his 50th Premier League game, Kevin de Bruyne recorded his 30th goal involvement in the competition (11 goals, 19 assists).\n• None City have scored nine goals in two games in all competitions at London Stadium - just half the number West Ham have (18) in 17 games there.\n\nBoth clubs are back in Premier League action this weekend.\n\nCity host Swansea on Sunday (13:30 GMT), while the Hammers go to Southampton on Saturday (15:00 GMT).\n\nHow the papers saw Jesus' performance\n• None Attempt blocked. Robert Snodgrass (West Ham United) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Offside, West Ham United. Mark Noble tries a through ball, but Robert Snodgrass is caught offside.\n• None Attempt blocked. Edimilson Fernandes (West Ham United) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Offside, West Ham United. Robert Snodgrass tries a through ball, but Michail Antonio is caught offside.\n• None Offside, Manchester City. David Silva tries a through ball, but Sergio Agüero is caught offside. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "President Donald Trump has nominated Colorado federal appeals court judge Neil Gorsuch for the US Supreme Court.\n\nIf confirmed by the Senate, the 49-year-old would replace the vacancy left at the court by the late Justice Antonin Scalia.", "MPs have voted by a majority of 384 to allow Theresa May to get Brexit negotiations under way.\n\nThey backed the government's European Union Bill, supported by the Labour leadership, by 498 votes to 114.\n\nBut the Scottish National Party and the Liberal Democrat leadership opposed the bill, while 47 Labour MPs and Tory ex-chancellor Ken Clarke rebelled.", "Some Brazilian mothers infected with the Zika virus during their pregnancy, who were relieved when their babies did not have abnormally small heads, are finding that their children still face developmental problems related to the virus. Camilla Costa reports from Recife, the worst affected area.", "The January transfer window has closed in England and Scotland after a hectic final few hours of business.\n\nThe most expensive incoming transfer was Southampton's £14m signing of Italy striker Manolo Gabbiadini from Napoli, while Crystal Palace agreed a loan deal for Liverpool and France defender Mamadou Sakho very late on.\n\nElsewhere, Burnley broke their transfer record to sign Republic of Ireland winger Robbie Brady from Norwich, while Odion Ighalo was the major exit, joining Chinese Super League club Changchun Yatai for £20m from Watford.\n\nSee below for a full list of the deadline-day deals on 31 January and see every Premier League move on the transfer wall here.\n\nSignings announced in December, some of which only went through once the window opened, can be found here.\n\nFor all the latest rumours check out the gossip page and, for all the manager ins and outs, see our list of current bosses.\n\n*Deal to go through at end of 2016-17 season\n\nThe page covers signings by Premier League, Championship and Scottish Premiership clubs, along with selected deals from overseas and the Scottish Championship.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland need to work on how they play spin bowling after their tour of India ended in a crushing Twenty20 defeat, says head coach Trevor Bayliss.\n\nEngland lost eight wickets for eight runs in 19 balls to lose by 75 runs in Bangalore, with spinner Yuzvendra Chahal taking 6-25 in his four overs.\n\nThe loss sealed a 2-1 T20 series defeat for England, who also lost the Test and one-day series during the tour.\n\n\"We're certainly not world-class players of spin,\" admitted Bayliss.\n\n\"We're playing against players that are very good players of spin, and they've got very good spinners themselves.\n\n\"When you don't grow up on it, as players here do, it is difficult. It's a learning process.\"\n• None Eight wickets for eight runs - how the collapse unfolded\n\n'One of our worst performances in a while'\n\nEngland lost 86 wickets to spin across all formats on their tour of India, having also struggled against it in their previous tour in Bangladesh.\n\nChasing 203 to win on Wednesday, they were still in the game at the halfway stage of their reply, but after Chahal dismissed both skipper Eoin Morgan and vice-captain Joe Root, the tourists collapsed.\n\n\"It is a little bit disappointing the way we finished our series,\" said Bayliss. \"It doesn't reflect the type of cricket we have played over here. But it's what can happen in a T20 match when you're chasing a big total.\"\n\nMorgan said: \"Everybody is gutted. Today was a big game for us. There was a series on the line and we wanted to produce a good performance but in fact we have produced one of our worst in a long time.\n\n\"If we can take anything from it, it is that it is the first time it has happened in two and a half years.\"\n\n'Still a lot of work to do'\n\nEngland won only three of their 13 matches during the tour - one ODI, one T20 and a tour match against India A.\n\nHowever, they produced their best cricket in the limited-overs series, scoring more than 300 in each of the ODIs and producing some improved bowling displays in the T20s.\n\n\"The results haven't gone the way we'd have liked,\" said Bayliss. \"We've played some pretty good cricket here at times.\n\n\"We've still got a lot of work to do - the boys have been very honest about where they stand.\n\n\"We've got to put together a batting and a bowling performance in one game - we seem to bat well in some games, and bowl well in others.\"\n\nMorgan added: \"There hasn't been a lot between the sides, particularly in the one-day series. There was 15-20 runs between the winning and losing of the series.\n\n\"The improvements we have shown since then have been considerable in our bowling department. When you are going well you have to take advantage of it.\n\n\"But we are really strong at the moment. Home advantage is huge, around the world. We have pushed India right to the cusp in both [limited-overs] series.\"\n\n'Up to Cook if he continues as captain'\n\nIn the wake of the 4-0 Test series defeat in India, Alastair Cook said he had \"questions\" about his role as England captain, admitting Root was \"ready\" to be his successor.\n\nAustralian Bayliss said he had not spoken to Cook since he departed the tour but said he would contact him in due course.\n\n\"I'm heading home to Australia for a little while in the next day or so,\" added Bayliss. \"I'll put the feet up for a little bit and I'm sure I'll speak to him at some stage.\n\n\"I'll give it a couple of days - I'm sure we'll exchange a text message or something.\n\n\"As I said to him when he left, and there was a lot of speculation, it is totally up to him. He will know if it's time to step down.\n\n\"I'm happy either way, whether he stays or goes. There is plenty of time.\"", "Protests against globalisation have become increasingly common\n\nMillions around the globe may have taken to the streets in recent years to protest against the impact of globalisation on their jobs and communities - but this backlash is only likely to grow as globalisation itself becomes more disruptive.\n\nThe stark warning comes from Richard Baldwin, president of the Centre for Economic Policy Research think-tank, who has been studying global trade for the past 30 years.\n\nTechnological advances could now mean white-collar, office-based workers and professionals are at risk of losing their jobs, Prof Baldwin argues.\n\nIn the US, voter anger with globalisation may have led to Donald Trump's election victory, but those who voted for him could be disappointed as his aim of bringing back jobs is unlikely to work, says Prof Baldwin, who also worked as an economist under President George HW Bush.\n\nRobots are now increasingly used in surgery; the first transatlantic operation - with the patient in France and surgeons in the US - was carried out in 2001\n\nProtectionist trade barriers won't work in the 21st Century, he says. \"Knowledge crossing borders in massive amounts [is the] big new disruptive thing.\"\n\nIt's going to help people in Africa and Asia compete more effectively with people in the West, as communication advances mean workers in the developing world will be able to control robots to do jobs in Europe and the US at lower cost, he says.\n\nDeveloping world labour costs can be a tenth of what they are in the West, says Prof Baldwin.\n\n\"They can't get here to take the jobs but technology will soon allow virtual migration, thanks to telerobotics and telepresence.\"\n\nSome of the first post-war Jamaican migrants to the UK - future migration could well be virtual\n\nEver-faster internet speeds becoming globally more widely available, coupled with the rapidly falling prices of robots will allow workers, for example in the Philippines or China, to remotely provide services to a country like the UK - where the sector accounts for about 80% of the economy.\n\n\"What it will do is unbundle our jobs and change the nature of our occupation. Some of the things you do absolutely require your judgement - but parts of your job could be off-shored, just as some stages in a factory can be off-shored.\n\n\"All you need is more computing power, more transmitting power and cheaper robots - and all that is happening.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nSecurity guards in US shopping malls could be replaced by robots controlled by security personnel based in Peru, and hotel cleaners in Europe could be replaced by robots driven by staff based in the Philippines, he argues in his book The Great Convergence.\n\nThe use of robots has grown exponentially since the mid-20th Century.\n\nA Ford factory in 1914; the development of robots has radically altered such production lines...\n\n...now spot the workers; this is a BMW production line in the UK in 2013\n\nA typical industrial robot can cost about £4 an hour to operate, compared to average total European labour costs of about £40 an hour - or £9 an hour in China. And robots are getting cheaper to buy and are increasingly able to do more complex tasks.\n\nThis means the increased use of robots is also threatening millions of jobs in developing countries, says the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (Unctad), as well as in developed economies.\n\nAnd it's not just in factories; the worldwide number of domestic household robots will rise to 31 million between 2016 and 2019, says the International Federation of Robotics (IFR), with sales of robots for cleaning floors, mowing lawns, and cleaning swimming pools forecast to grow to about $13bn (£10.3bn) in this period.\n\nNapoleon's defeat in 1815 after almost 25 years of war triggered a growth in world trade\n\nIn the 19th Century, the first wave of the industrial revolution triggered an upsurge in global trade. Steam power, the end of the Napoleonic wars and the subsequent era of peace cut the costs of moving goods internationally.\n\nGlobal wealth became increasingly concentrated among just a few nations; the G7 group - the US, Germany, Japan, France, the UK, Canada and Italy - saw their share of the world's wealth rise significantly.\n\nBut from the 1990s a second wave of globalisation kicked in, with the rise of information and communications technology. There's been a dramatic change of gear, and \"a century's worth of rich nations' rise has been reversed in just two decades,\" says Prof Baldwin.\n\nOld-style globalisation \"worked on a calendar that ticked year by year\" whereas the current wave of globalisation is being driven by IT which is changing and disrupting economies and societies with increasing rapidity, he says.\n\nAll of this has created a backlash, especially in developed economies, as many voters say they are losing out or seeing little of the benefits that globalisation supposedly brings.\n\nGlobalisation has sparked protests around the world...\n\nProf Baldwin says protectionist policies, such as those of Donald Trump, are ultimately counterproductive. If firms become inefficient by being forced to move jobs back to the US, then ultimately they will lose their business to international competitors.\n\n\"People are so angry they are doing things that are not in their own interest.\n\n\"Cures are being sold which are not related to the problem.\"\n\nGlobalisation has been a factor in the election of Donald Trump in the US...\n\n...and the UK's vote to leave the European Union\n\nHe points out that the backlash is not the same in every single country. It often depends on how governments deal with workers who may be displaced by technology.\n\n\"For instance, in Japan they take care of their workers, and there really isn't an anti-globalisation feeling there,\" he says - unlike in the UK and the US.\n\nAs a consequence, even businesses that are benefiting from greater automation are increasingly sensitive about the potentially negative social and political consequences.\n\nIncreasingly sophisticated robots mean many jobs that used to exist are not going to return, says Prof Baldwin\n\nSimilarly, in Europe the bosses of both Deutsche Telekom and Siemens have advocated paying a basic income to workers replaced by technology.\n\nWe may see a move to protectionism as countries try to preserve jobs within their economies, but this is unlikely to work in the long term, says Prof Baldwin.\n\nThe trick is to accept \"21st Century reality\", he says, and the fact that many jobs simply aren't going to come back.\n\nProtesters in Bordeaux with a banner reading \"together against unemployment and social precariousness\"\n\nGovernments need to pay more attention to social policy, says Prof Baldwin. \"In the post-war period of globalisation we liberalised trade but at the same time we expanded social welfare - instituted low-cost education and retraining for workers.\n\n\"In essence there was a set of complementary policies that reassured workers that they would have a good chance of taking advantage of globalisation.\"\n\nThe challenges all this is throwing up for governments are many, but Prof Baldwin says it should be possible to develop policies that embrace globalisation - and give workers displaced by it the support they need.\n• None Do robots pose a threat to our jobs?", "The claim: Air pollution in London last week was worse than it was in Beijing.\n\nReality Check verdict: Some one-off readings were higher in London last week, but this was an unrepresentative snapshot and Beijing is generally far worse.\n\nOn 22 January, recordings of particulate air pollution were higher in London than in Beijing.\n\nRuth Cadbury is the Labour MP for Brentford and Isleworth, a part of London that has seen unusually high levels of air pollution recently.\n\nLast week saw the highest level recorded in the capital since April 2011.\n\nThe spike was attributed to cold, calm and settled weather, meaning winds were not dispersing local pollutants.\n\nDifferent countries measure air pollution in different ways.\n\nThe UK government uses a one (lowest) to 10 (highest) scale.\n\nLast week's levels in London were a 10.\n\nAnother measure is the Air Quality Index (AQI).\n\nLast Monday, according to this measure, some parts of London showed particulate levels a bit higher than in Beijing.\n\nBut this was just a snapshot and not the case for most of the week.\n\nOn Wednesday afternoon, the overall AQI level in Beijing was about three times higher than in London, and recordings were even higher on the Chinese city's industrial outskirts.\n\nThe World Health Organization gathers average particulate levels from cities around the world.\n\nThey suggest that Beijing's levels are about five times worse than London's.\n\nThe cities with the dirtiest air are Zabol in Iran and Onitsha in Nigeria.\n\nIn the UK, overall emissions of all types of air pollution have fallen dramatically since 1970.\n\nPollution in Beijing is much worse than in London - or in Stockholm, where the same claim was made this week.", "A driver filmed screaming obscenities at BBC presenter Jeremy Vine as he cycled on a narrow road has been found guilty of road rage offences.\n\nShanique Syrena Pearson, 22, made a gun sign and threatened Mr Vine during the row in Kensington, west London.\n\nMr Vine filmed the argument using his helmet camera and posted it online.", "A gang of puppy farmers which sold hundreds of dogs kept inside cages on a farm has been spared jail.\n\nSome of the animals were so sick they died shortly after arriving at their new homes.\n\nMia was one of the dogs rescued, and the BBC spoke to her new owners.", "The Kilauea volcano in Hawaii has been active since 1983, but scientists have filmed an unusual phenomenon.\n\nDramatic footage shows lava as it flows through a crack in a sea cliff, and into the Pacific Ocean.", "Police in Los Angeles have carried out their biggest-ever operation to find girls and young women who were forced into commercial sexual exploitation.\n\nOfficers made almost 500 arrests and rescued more than 50 young people.\n\nThe BBC's Angus Crawford was given exclusive access.", "After decades of debate, years of acrimony over the issue in the Conservative Party, months of brutal brinksmanship in Westminster, and hours of debate this week, MPs have just approved the very first step in the process of Britain leaving the European Union.\n\nThere are many hurdles ahead, probably thousands of hours of debate here, years of negotiations for Theresa May with our friends and rivals around the EU, as she seeks a deal - and possibly as long as a decade of administrative adjustments, as the country extricates itself from the EU.\n\nOn a wet Wednesday, the debate didn't feel epoch-making, but think for a moment about what has just happened.\n\nMPs, most of whom wanted to stay in the EU, have just agreed that we are off.\n\nThis time last year few in Westminster really thought that this would happen. The then prime minister's concern was persuading the rest of the EU to give him a better deal for the UK.\n\nHis close colleagues believed the chances of them losing, let alone the government dissolving over the referendum, were slim, if not quite zero.\n\nThen tonight, his former colleagues are rubber stamping the decision of a narrow majority of the public, that changed everything in politics here for good.\n\nThis isn't even the last vote on this bill. There are several more stages, the Lords are likely to kick up rough at the start.\n\nBut after tonight, for better or worse, few will believe that our journey to the exit door can be halted.\n\nAs government ministers have said in recent days, the moment for turning back is past.\n• None Trump and May 'committed' to Nato", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nSin-bins for yellow-card offences in football could be given the go-ahead as early as next month.\n\nFootball's law-making body Ifab will look at the proposal at its annual meeting in London in March.\n\nThe measure has been tested in Uefa development competitions and some amateur leagues in recent years.\n\nIf approved, sin-bins will come in at youth and amateur levels and could be introduced to the professional game within two to three years.\n\nOther proposals to be discussed at the meeting include allowing national associations more freedom to decide on the number of substitutions in a game.\n\nThe move is intended to help the development of the game at lower levels, \"by promoting and encouraging more people to take part,\" the International Football Association Board agenda reads.\n\nThere is also a line in the release about \"fairness\" and that \"particular focus will be given to the role of the captain and how her/his responsibilities could be enhanced as part of a move to improve on-field discipline and create better communication between players and match officials\".\n\nThis is likely to refer to a suggestion by Marco van Basten, the chief technical officer of governing body Fifa, that only the captain should be able to speak to the referee.\n\nIfab is made up of Fifa and the four British home associations - the FAs of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland - and is responsible for making the final decision on law changes.", "Last updated on .From the section Olympics\n\nRussia have been stripped of their 4x400m relay silver from London 2012 after sprinter Antonina Krivoshapka tested positive for steroid turinabol.\n\nThe ruling is likely to see Jamaica and Ukraine promoted to silver and bronze respectively behind the United States.\n\nKrivoshapka, 29, has not competed since 2013, the same year she won bronze at the World Championships in Moscow.\n\nRussian discus thrower Vera Ganeeva and Turkish boxer Adem Kilicci have also tested positive in a review of samples.\n\nGaneeva finished 23rd in the discus while Kilicci was eliminated in the quarter-finals of the middleweight boxing tournament.\n\nFour hundred and ninety-two samples have now been reanalysed with improved anti-doping methods since London 2012 and the International Olympic Committee states that there are \"likely to be more confirmed adverse analytical findings in the coming weeks and months as the reanalysis programme continues\".\n\nMore than 1,000 Russian athletes were part of a state-sponsored doping programme between 2011 and 2015, according to a report commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency and published in December.\n\nRussia returned more positive tests than any other nation in the re-analysis of Beijing 2008 and London 2012 samples in 2016.\n\nSeventeen Russian athletes tested positive in the review of samples from China, with another 13 showing up from the Games in London four years later.", "Former Take That star Gary Barlow has revealed on Twitter that he has washed his hair for the first time in 14 years. Is this really a hair-raising fact or are there any benefits?\n\nWay back in 2003 when Westlife and the Black Eyed Peas were in the charts and flip mobile phones were all the rage, Gary Barlow washed his hair for the last time.\n\nThat is, until this weekend, when Gary announced on Twitter that it was an \"important day\" as he had washed his short locks.\n\nCue jokes from people on social media - many of whom were surprised at the revelation from the Let It Shine judge.\n\nSo are there any advantages to not washing your hair?\n\nPatrick Graham, from Stroud, Gloucestershire, ditched the shampoo bottle 25 years ago after he heard that hair may be self-cleaning.\n\n\"I had problems with dandruff, I couldn't get rid of it,\" the 60-year-old says.\n\n\"As soon as I stopped my hair was worse for about two weeks.\n\n\"Pretty soon after that I started to feel clean and nice and now I've had no dandruff for 25 years... there is no smell, it is clean.\"\n\nKayleigh Thomas, who wrote about her experience of not using shampoo on her blog Blue jeans white tee, says she stopped using shampoo in March 2015 after seeing another woman on Snapchat who had done so for two years.\n\n\"My hair's more manageable now and I don't feel like I need to tame it using heat tools, so it saves me time in the mornings,\" the 28-year-old from Milton Keynes says.\n\nShe also says that a rash she had behind her ears cleared up as a result.\n\nGary Barlow, pictured two years after he stopped washing his hair, with Take That bandmate Mark Owen\n\nOther public figures have admitted not using any hair products.\n\nAndrew Marr said in 2006 that he had given up washing his hair, which had been \"a vast cost to my wallet and the environment\".\n\nAnd former Conservative MP Matthew Parris spoke to BBC 5 live last year about not washing his hair for more than 20 years.\n\n\"The hair got greasier and greasier and after about 10 days it stopped getting greasy,\" he said.\n\nBut Mark Coray, former president of the National Hairdressers' Federation and owner of a salon in Cardiff, says there is no benefit to not washing your hair.\n\n\"Shampoo is not abrasive or harsh to the scalp,\" he says.\n\n\"The ingredients in shampoo help the hair to look lustrous.\n\n\"The [hair's] oil may build up so it starts to look like it is shiny and lies in place more... but it will not self-clean.\"\n\nAnd the Belgravia Centre in London, a hair loss clinic, recommends that people avoid the no shampoo - known as \"No 'poo\" - trend.\n\n\"Rinsing your hair is not going to be very effective after certain activities that make the scalp sweaty, such as exercising or using a sauna,\" it says.\n\n\"Rinsing will also not remove bacteria or clean the excess oil from your scalp if you have greasy hair.\"\n\nThe clinic says it is \"understandable\" that people want to avoid harsh chemical ingredients in their shampoo, but stresses that there are good quality products free of harsh chemicals that are \"widely available\".\n\nAnabel Kingsley, a trichologist from the Philip Kingsley clinic in London, agrees that hair does not clean itself.\n\n\"Imagine if you didn't wash your face or underarms for a week - the same logic applies to your hair and scalp,\" she says.\n\n\"They are likely to become coated in dirt, smelly, greasy and flaky. Build-up of yeasts and bacteria will also occur, especially as they thrive in oily environments.\"\n\nShe recommends shampooing at least every other day - leaving no more than three days between washes to keep the hair and scalp in good condition.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nArsenal's Premier League title hopes suffered a huge blow with a shock home defeat as Watford secured their first top-flight win over the Gunners since 1988.\n\nFormer Tottenham defender Younes Kaboul lashed in the opener within 10 minutes for Watford with a shot from outside the area which deflected off Aaron Ramsey.\n\nJust two minutes and 57 seconds later, the visitors doubled their lead as Troy Deeney tapped in the rebound after Etienne Capoue's fine run ended with his shot being saved by Petr Cech.\n\nThe Arsenal goalkeeper was called into action again as he tipped Sebastian Prodl's header over the crossbar and pushed away Daryl Janmaat's curling strike.\n\nThe hosts improved significantly in the second half and Alex Iwobi pulled a goal back by steering Alexis Sanchez's cross home.\n\nLucas Perez struck the crossbar with a powerful drive, but they could not find the equaliser.\n\nRelive Watford's win over Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium\n\nChallenge over for another year?\n\nArsenal last won the title in the 2003-04 season and face clawing back a nine-point deficit on London rivals and leaders Chelsea, who drew 1-1 with Liverpool.\n\nAnd their task is made more difficult as they still face trips to play Antonio Conte's side as well as Liverpool and Tottenham - the other three teams in the top four - between now and the end of the season.\n\nGoing into this game they were unbeaten in their last five league fixtures, but a desperately poor first half showing - with manager Arsene Wenger watching powerless from the stands as he served the second of a four-match touchline ban - cost them dearly.\n\nThe Gunners failed to get a shot on target in the first 45 minutes, but forced Watford goalkeeper Heurelho Gomes into sharp saves from substitute Theo Walcott and Iwobi after the break, while the Brazilian pushed away Mesut Ozil's snap shot.\n\nBut they suffered their first defeat at the Emirates Stadium since the opening day against Liverpool, ending a run of eight victories and two draws.\n\nWatford boss Walter Mazzarri was under increasing pressure after an embarrassing FA Cup exit at Millwall and seven games without a win in the league.\n\nBut the visitors' energetic start - pressing Arsenal high up the pitch and not allowing the hosts time on the ball - created the platform for them to climb to 13th in the table, eight points clear of the relegation zone.\n\nCentral midfielder Capoue produced a dynamic performance. He contributed seven tackles and won the ball back the same number of times to top his team's defensive statistics and lay the groundwork for Watford's first league win over Arsenal in nearly 30 years.\n\nDebutant M'Baye Niang, signed on loan from AC Milan until the end of the season, showcased his pace in the 70 minutes he was on the pitch and his strong running down the left caused Arsenal right-back Gabriel constant problems.\n\n'You have to press them'\n\nArsenal manager Arsene Wenger: \"It was obvious we lost duels and were not sharp enough. It looked more mentally that we were not ready for the challenges. We were unlucky for the first goal which was deflected after a soft free-kick.\n\n\"It took us a while to get into the game; it was all us in the second half and we were unlucky not to get something from the game.\"\n\nWatford boss Walter Mazzarri: \"We played a great first half and the condition of some of the players is returning. In the second half, Arsenal managed to press us but in general it was very well done.\n\n\"Against a great team in their stadium, you cannot allow them to play too much of the ball and you have to press them. We did that very well but you cannot do it for 90 minutes. That was our tactic.\"\n\nAnalysis - Arsenal are nowhere near Chelsea\n\n\"I have to give Watford credit because they had not won in seven games but did not look like a side lacking confidence. They had a good game plan and looked a threat on the break.\n\n\"I was a bit surprised by Arsenal. You can't start games like they did today. It was lethargic, sloppy and they did not look like a team going for the title. For the first 25 minutes they were lucky to be only 2-0 down. Watford were the first to every ball.\n\n\"Capoue was a driving force throughout the game. He had a great start to the season and faded but he was back to his best today. His performance was superb.\n\n\"Arsenal played better in the second half but you can't keep giving yourself a mountain to climb against such quality and expect to win games. You are never going to win the league that way. Defensively, even though they brought in reinforcements, I still don't think they are anywhere near Chelsea.\"\n\nArsenal face a crucial trip to Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Saturday (kick-off 12:30 GMT), while Watford host Burnley the same day at 15:00 GMT.\n\nSanchez would love to play Watford every week - the stats\n• None Watford earned their first league win against Arsenal since April 1988, ending a run of seven straight defeats against them.\n• None Younes Kaboul has scored more Premier League goals against Arsenal than he has against any other side (3).\n• None The Gunners had not conceded a goal in the opening 15 minutes of their last 53 home Premier League games before tonight.\n• None Alexis Sanchez has had a hand in six Premier League goals against Watford (three goals, three assists). He has not been involved in more against any other club.\n• None The Hornets ended a run of seven Premier League games without victory (drawn three, lost four), since beating Everton in December.\n• None It was their first away league win since October, when they beat Middlesbrough 1-0.\n• None Despite having twice as many shots in total as Watford (20-10), Arsenal had one shot on target fewer than the Hornets (5-6).\n• None Attempt saved. Lucas Pérez (Arsenal) left footed shot from the left side of the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Mesut Özil.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Shkodran Mustafi (Arsenal) because of an injury.\n• None Tom Cleverley (Watford) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Stefano Okaka (Watford) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Lucas Pérez (Arsenal) hits the bar with a left footed shot from the right side of the box. Assisted by Gabriel.\n• None Attempt missed. Nacho Monreal (Arsenal) left footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left following a corner. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "There is a three letter word that ends in \"x\" which gets people hot under the collar and is a big part of most relationships.\n\nThat word is of course tax.\n\nWhile the headlines from Donald Trump's first 12 days in office have focused on immigration and security, business leaders seem agreed that some of the most profound changes to the role of the US in the global economy will come about via tax reform.\n\nIt is easy for eyes to glaze over at the mention of tax.\n\nNot only is it an unsexy subject, there have also been many false alarms sounding the imminent overhaul of a tax system that all parts of the political spectrum agree needs fixing.\n\nThe US has some of the highest corporate tax rates in the world.\n\nAt 35% it is nearly double the UK rate of 20% and that has seen US companies go to extraordinary lengths to avoid paying it.\n\nAlthough US companies pay 35% tax on profits generated in the US, it is only payable on profits made outside the US when those profits are repatriated.\n\nThat is why those foreign earnings never do make it home.\n\nSome $2.5 trillion of US corporate profits are living in exile.\n\nThey are lapping round the borders of low-tax jurisdictions like Ireland and Luxembourg, or squirrelled away among the palm trees in no-tax hideaways like Bermuda, the Cayman Islands or the British Virgin Islands.\n\nDonald Trump believes that dormant cash should come home to boost the US economy and he is proposing a tax amnesty - a one off charge of just 10% on repatriated cash - to achieve just that.\n\nIt is not, according to Professor Christopher Smart, a former trade and investment advisor to Barack Obama, and a senior fellow at Chatham House, a leading international affairs think tank.\n\n\"The potential is for a great deal of instability both on financial markets and politically,\" he says.\n\n\"On financial markets a large amount of money moving quickly tends to destabilise things but the real political issue is the potential for retaliation.\n\n\"Barriers we have been removing over the last ten to twenty years start to go back up again. We could get trade skirmishes, we could get a trade war,\" the professor warns.\n\nThe second part of Donald Trump's tax plan could be even more provocative.\n\nAs well as a one-off amnesty for exiled profits, the new president's plan involves slashing the headline rate of US corporation tax to 15% from 35%.\n\nAt the same time he wants to impose taxes on imports to encourage companies to locate production in the US.\n\nA border tax on US cars made in Mexico is just one example of a policy that would have profound, and many say chaotic, ramifications.\n\nRetailers, for example, would find it almost impossible to make a profit on imported goods.\n\nJohn Viemeyer, the global chairman of the huge accountancy firm KPMG, sounds a similar warning.\n\n\"You can't look at US tax in a vacuum, you push here and there will be equal and opposite reactions,\" he says.\n\n\"There's been a lot of talk about border taxes on imports that US companies use in their production, that in itself could certainly cause a trade war\"\n\nTo many observers, President Trump's spat with Mexico is just a bit of sparring before the heavyweight clash with China.\n\nThere are many close to the new president who think the current relationship is unfair and needs to change.\n\nAnthony Scaramucci, a senior adviser to the president, told the BBC recently at the World Economic Forum gathering in Switzerland that the relationship with China was \"asymmetrical\", and that he was doubtful of China's ability to exact revenge on the US.\n\n\"What are they going to do, [are] they going to move against our move for fairness?\" he asked, pointedly.\n\n\"That's going to cost them way more than it is ever going to cost us, and I think they know that.\"\n\nWho wins a US-China trade war? That is simple, according to Christopher Smart.\n\n\"No-one. There is huge fallout for the United States and for China and frankly for the global economy,\" he says.", "Last updated on .From the section Horse Racing\n\nNative River, who was joint-favourite with some bookmakers, has been left off the list of Grand National entries by trainer Colin Tizzard.\n\nThe seven-year-old, who won the Welsh Grand National in December, will miss the 8 April showpiece at Aintree.\n\nThe Last Samuri, who finished second behind Rule The World in 2016, returns but Gilgamboa, who was fourth last year, is another absentee.\n\nGrade One winner Don Poli is among trainer Gordon Elliott's 14 entries.\n\nThe long-list of potential runners is 16 names shorter than the 126 named before the 2016 race. A maximum of 40 runners can line up for the race.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nAt least three clubs are at risk of missing a self-imposed deadline to improve access for disabled fans, the Premier League has said.\n\nA report suggests Bournemouth, Chelsea and Watford may not fulfil a pledge to meet standards by August 2017.\n\nIt stressed clubs have been \"working hard on delivery\" since a 2014 BBC report found that 17 of 20 clubs did not provide enough wheelchair spaces.\n\nBut campaigners have criticised the failure to meet the standards set out.\n\n\"The time for excuses is over,\" said David Isaac, chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission.\n\n\"The Premier League promised that disabled access would be improved by the start of next season, so it is disappointing that a number of clubs will fail to meet that deadline.\n\n\"Clubs need to urgently demonstrate to us what they are doing to ensure they are compliant with the law and how they are making it easier for disabled fans to attend matches. If they don't they will face legal action.\"\n\nThe Premier League's report comes after MPs argued last month that top-flight clubs were prioritising finance over improving access and meeting the Accessible Stadia Guidelines.\n\nThe Culture, Media and Sport select committee report said clubs should face legal action if they fail to meet the basic needs of disabled fans.\n\nThe Premier League board can impose fines of up to £25,000, while cases of serious breaches would be referred to an independent panel - which could impose heavier fines or even deduct points.\n\nWho will miss the pledge?\n\nBournemouth have 195 disabled fan spaces but not to the required standard. However, they do not own their Vitality Stadium home and the club says that the stadium's small size makes meeting guidelines difficult. It is planning to move to a bigger ground in the coming years.\n\nChelsea have 128 spaces for disabled fans, against a recommended 214. The club is aiming to move to a new 60,000-seat stadium and says in the meantime it will consult with disabled fans.\n\nWatford have spaces for 61 disabled fans, but should provide 153. It will have more wheelchair spaces by August but says it faces architectural challenges and is aiming to make other improvements to boost the matchday experience of disabled fans.\n\nBurnley, Middlesbrough and Hull were given extensions to 2018 to meet the guideline standards as they were only promoted last summer.\n\nWhat does the Premier League say?\n\n\"Premier League clubs have embarked on a substantial programme of work and rapid progress has been made. The improvements undertaken are unprecedented in scope, scale and timing by any group of sports grounds or other entertainment venues in the UK.\n\n\"Given the differing ages and nature of stadia, some clubs have, and continue to face, significant challenges. For those clubs, cost is not a determining factor.\n\n\"They are working through issues relating to planning, how to deal with new stadium development plans, how to best manage fan disruption or, in cases where clubs don't own their own grounds, dealing with third parties.\n\n\"Clubs deserve credit for committing to and delivering the extensive work detailed in this interim report. What is also clear is that even more progress will be achieved in creating the appropriate levels of access for disabled football fans by our own deadline of August 2017.\n\n\"Beyond that date, clubs will continue to engage with their disabled fans and enhance their provisions in the coming months, years and beyond.\"\n\nThe story so far\n\n2014: A BBC investigation finds that 17 of the 20 clubs in the top flight at that time had failed to provide enough wheelchair spaces.\n\nSeptember 2015: The Premier League promises to improve stadium facilities for disabled fans, stating that clubs would comply with official guidance by August 2017.\n\nSeptember 2016: Campaigners say up to a third of clubs will miss the deadline to meet basic access standards.\n\nOctober 2016: Leading disability campaigner Lord Holmes tells MPs that legal action against clubs and the Premier League remains an option if standards are not met.\n\nJanuary 2017: A report by MPs says some clubs could face sanctions because they are not doing enough. Manchester United, Liverpool and Everton announce plans to develop their grounds to accommodate more disabled supporters.\n\n1 February 2017: A Premier League report outlines the detailed work the clubs are undertaking to make sure they meet guidelines but adds that three clubs will miss the August 2017 target.", "The numbers of people who have signed a petition calling for President Trump not to be allowed to make a state visit to the UK has been widely reported.\n\nThe number reported by Parliament's petitions website is at about 1.8 million.\n\nThere is also a petition saying that President Trump should be welcomed with a state visit, which has passed 200,000 signatures.\n\nAny British citizen or UK resident is entitled to sign a petition on the site and asked to confirm their status when they do so.\n\nAn email is then sent to the address given, containing a link that signatories must click on before they are counted.\n\nThe House of Commons says: \"All petitions are checked for fraudulent activity, using both automated and manual checks. The checks prevent fraudulent signatures being added to petitions by individuals trying to repeatedly sign, or automated attacks (bots).\"\n\nIt adds that there is a balance to be made between making it easy for people to sign while making it harder to do so repeatedly.\n\nSignatories are required to confirm that they are entitled to sign\n\nThe procedures have been tightened up since last June, when at least 77,000 fraudulent signatures were removed from a petition calling for a second EU referendum.\n\nAn investigation was launched after posts were found on websites from people claiming to have written programs that would automatically sign the petition thousands of times.\n\nThe House of Commons will not give details of either the original or new security procedures it has put in place.\n\nIt is not immediately obvious how the system works to prevent people voting more than once, but fraudulent signatures have been disqualified in the past.\n\nIt should be said that both petitions have received considerably more than the 100,000 signatures, above which petitions \"almost always\" trigger a debate in Parliament.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Olympics\n\nOlympic and Paralympic medals for the Tokyo 2020 Games will be made from recycled mobile phones.\n\nThe Japanese public will be asked to donate old phones and small appliances to gather two tonnes of gold, silver and bronze for the 5,000 medals.\n\nThe project hopes to promote sustainability and reduce costs.\n\n\"A project that allows the people of Japan to take part in creating the medals is really good,\" said Tokyo 2020 sports director Koji Murofushi.\n\n\"There's a limit on the resources of our earth, so recycling these things will make us think about the environment.\"\n\nCollection boxes will be placed in local offices and telecoms stores from April and will remain there until the metal required has been collected.\n\nMembers of Japan's Olympic organising committee tabled the idea to government officials and companies in 2016.\n\nOlympic host cities have traditionally obtained the metal from mining firms.\n\nBut Japan, which lacks its own mineral resources, is keen to take the theme of a sustainable future a step further.\n\nDiscarded consumer electronics such as smartphones and tablets contain small amounts of precious and rare earth metals, including platinum, palladium, gold, silver, lithium, cobalt and nickel.\n\nScrap cars and home appliances such as fridges and air conditioners also contain these rarer metals, along with base metals, including iron, copper, lead and zinc.\n\nRecycling or refining companies either collect or purchase tons of this e-waste and industrial scraps. They then use chemical processes to separate the various metals.\n\nMuch of this work takes place in developing countries such as China, India and Indonesia.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nCeltic continued their stranglehold over Aberdeen at Parkhead to stretch their Premiership lead to 25 points and unbeaten domestic run to 28 games.\n\nThe Dons hinted at ending a run of 23 straight league defeats in the east end of Glasgow during an even first half.\n\nBut their resistance ended when Dedryck Boyata rose to head home Scott Sinclair's free-kick after 57 minutes.\n\nAberdeen rallied again late on but couldn't find an equaliser to stop them slipping 27 points behind the leaders.\n\nLooking at the hosts' line-up, it was easy to see why the visitors fancied their chances of a first league win at Celtic Park since 2004.\n\nKey players such as Moussa Dembele, Stuart Armstrong and Leigh Griffiths all missed out through injury, but Aberdeen's five straight wins backed up that belief with form.\n\nWhat the first half lacked in clear-cut chances, it made up for in tactical intrigue with both managers pushing and pulling their men from the sidelines like tinkering chess masters.\n\nAberdeen deployed a high line and they pressed the champions in a way they are not accustomed to domestically.\n\nThe work-rate from the visitors was impressive but as expected, Celtic enjoyed the majority of the possession and their first chance came when left-back Kieran Tierney curled an effort just over the bar after cutting inside and spying Joe Lewis off his line.\n\nBut with their main strikers out, Celtic's killer instinct was also missing and there was a lack of focal point up front, despite some good movement between Scott Sinclair and Patrick Roberts in particular.\n\nSinclair passed up a chance inside the box just before the break, although Ryan Jack should be praised for a timely tackle.\n\nThe Dons were doing their job defensively but in the pursuit of stifling Celtic they were creating very little of their own. A Graeme Shinnie shot high over the bar was as close as they came in the first half.\n\nBut as many teams have found to their cost this season, you can only stifle this Celtic side under Brendan Rodgers for so long and 12 minutes after the break they were ahead through Boyata.\n\nThe big Belgian defender rose magnificently inside the six-yard box to head home an equally impressive Sinclair cross from the left-hand side.\n\nAberdeen looked punch drunk after that - the men in green and white sensed it and pushed for the second. They almost got it too through Sinclair but his curling right-foot effort battered off the bar.\n\nTheir crisp passing and movement off the ball, at times, left the visitors chasing shadows.\n\nWhen the Dons settled they knew, if they were to take points, they had to push out, but they also knew that would leave gaps and Roberts almost exploited pace down the left-hand side but pulled his low drive just wide.\n\nAberdeen had scored in seven of their last eight visits to Celtic Park though and the belief they started with never really left them.\n\nThey continued to press Celtic, hoping to pounce on a stray ball or misplaced pass, but the champions saw it out with the professional swagger that we have become used to.\n• None Gary Mackay-Steven (Celtic) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Scott Brown (Celtic) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt saved. Jonny Hayes (Aberdeen) header from the left side of the six yard box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Peter Capaldi is bowing out at Christmas after four years playing Dr Who\n\nThree years is the maximum length of time anyone should stay in a job, declared actor Peter Capaldi when he explained why he was stepping down from the Dr Who role after four years.\n\n\"I've never done one job for three years. This is the first time I've done this and I feel it's time for me to move on to different challenges,\" he said.\n\nIt's a pretty short tenure compared to the old days when people secured a job after leaving school or university and then stayed there until they collected their golden carriage clock.\n\nBut increasingly, changing one's job every few years is considered the norm.\n\nIn fact, a UK worker will change employer every five years on average, according to research by life insurance firm LV=.\n\nIn the US, it's even shorter with people staying with a single employer for just over four years, according to official statistics.\n\nBut is there a magic number, one that will make sure you don't stop progressing, but also doesn't make you look too, well, flighty?\n\nAlmost a quarter of employed people are currently looking for new roles, according to HR body the CIPD\n\nClaire McCartney, adviser for the CIPD, the professional body for HR and people development, says there's no such thing.\n\n\"It's very specific to the person. It depends on their career plans, assuming they have any career plans and whether they feel they get the right amount of challenge and flexibility,\" she says.\n\nMs McCartney does, however, believe there's a minimum tenure, saying just three months in one role before moving on wouldn't look good, unless it was driven by a change in personal circumstances.\n\nShe also says the size of an organisation can often be a factor in determining how long a person stays, with a smaller company often offering less opportunity for people to progress than a larger rival.\n\nVictoria Bethlehem, the group head of talent acquisition at recruitment firm Adecco, says she looks favourably on a prospective employee who has changed roles every three to five years.\n\n\"Immobility is never desirable in a curriculum. This does not necessarily mean that the candidate needs to have changed several companies and employers.\n\n\"What's important is to see the candidate has an open attitude to change and a continuous learning approach, driving him or her to embrace new challenges,\" she adds.\n\nChanging jobs regularly is seen as positive if it moves your career forward, say experts\n\nIn certain sectors, regular change is not only desirable, but a necessity, according to Robert Archer, regional director of human resources at recruitment firm PageGroup.\n\n\"In technology, advertising and public relations, where professionals are known to change jobs every few years or even months, job hopping can be considered to be a necessity in order to keep up with changes in the market,\" he says.\n\nBut Nigel Heap, managing director at recruitment firm Hays UK & Ireland, warns \"there can sometimes be a stigma associated with 'job hopping'.\"\n\n\"Constantly moving to new roles without demonstrating a good reason might make new employers wary. They may question your ability to commit to an organisation and it may appear that you cannot adapt to new environments and challenges.\n\n\"If you do move jobs frequently it's important that you clearly outline how long you were in each job on your CV, and support this with clear evidence of what you have learned in each role and what value you can bring to future employers,\" he says.\n\nBy far the most influential element driving how often you change jobs is age.\n\nIn the US, the average tenure of workers aged 55 to 64 was 10.1 years, more than three times the 2.8 years of workers aged 25 to 34, according to the most recent US statistics.\n\nThe UK doesn't record such data, but London-based Dr Clare Gerada is an example of an older worker who has stayed at the same place for many years. She has worked for the NHS for 40 years and spent 25 years at the same practice.\n\nClare Gerada started working for the NHS when she was just 14 years old\n\nDr Gerada says this is partly down to her role which offers lots of flexibility and change, but she believes people are inherently designed to put roots down.\n\n\"Of course when you're young you should move around and do things and experiment, gain experience, but there has to be a point I think that you put roots down and actually start to grow in that job,\" she told Radio 4's Today programme.\n\nBut so-called millennials, those born between 1980 and 1999, have very different expectations about jobs.\n\nSeveral surveys suggest that these younger workers aren't motivated by the same factors as previous generations, such as a job for life, but instead value a good work-life balance and a sense of purpose beyond financial success.\n\nJob hopping too often could make new employers question your commitment\n\nIt's a drastically different outlook from the generations before who are used to the more traditional hierarchy of large corporate firms - staying at the same firm and working a set number of years in a particular post before progressing.\n\nAlmost a quarter of employed people are currently looking for new roles, according to the CIPD's latest Employee Outlook survey which polled 2,000 UK employees.\n\nFor companies of course it poses a challenge. Constantly losing staff and their knowledge and having to recruit and retain replacements is costly.\n\nMs McCartney says firms need to do more to try and retain staff, for example holding regular casual chats with staff on career progression.\n\n\"Companies need to be more creative. There might not be room for promotion, but cross-function working, opportunities to work on special projects and secondments are all ways of boosting skills,\" she says.\n\nBut she also says it's important for firms to stay on good terms with departing staff, who may decide to return later on in a different role adding wider experience to their existing knowledge of the firm.\n\n\"It's not about organisations holding on to people at all costs,\" she says.", "England lost their last eight wickets for eight runs as India powered to a 75-run win in the third Twenty20 in Bangalore to take the series 2-1.\n\nChasing 203, England were 117-2 with eight overs to go after three Eoin Morgan sixes in a Suresh Raina over.\n\nBut leg-spinner Yuzvendra Chahal (6-25) got Morgan and Joe Root in successive balls and England fell to 127 all out.\n\nRaina and MS Dhoni both made half-centuries in India's 202-6, while Yuvraj Singh blasted 27 from 10 balls.\n\nThat total was around par on a surface ideal for batting, but the sort of collapse that characterised the Test series loss means that England have been beaten in all three formats.\n\nAlthough Morgan's men competed best in the T20s, they have lost a series in which they won the toss on all three occasions.\n\nWhereas their bowlers impressed in the opening two matches, here they were blitzed, with the batsmen falling in a familiar heap against leg-spin.\n\nTheir slump was the second-worst eight-wicket collapse in the history of international cricket - New Zealand lost 8-5 in a Test against Australia in 1946.\n\nOnly once before in all T20 cricket, either international or domestic, has a side lost eight wickets for eight runs or fewer.\n\nEngland have only once successfully chased more than 200 to win a T20 international, but were well placed despite opener Sam Billings falling to the first ball he faced - an inside edge onto his boot that found slip and gave Chahal his first wicket.\n\nJason Roy wasted a good start - his 23-ball 32 ended when he top-edged the second of India's leg-spinners Amit Mishra - only for Morgan to arrive and pick up the pursuit.\n\nTargeting the part-time off-spin of Raina, Morgan helped take 22 from the 12th over of the innings to leave England needing 89 from the final eight.\n\nHowever, with Root beginning to struggle at the other end - he went 13 deliveries without finding the boundary - Morgan was held on the leg-side fence off the returning Chahal for 40 and, from the next ball, Root was pinned leg-before to depart for 42.\n\nFrom there, it was a procession as Chahal and second T20 match-winner Jasprit Bumrah ran through the lower order.\n\nJos Buttler miscued pacer Bumrah to mid-off, Moeen Ali fetched Chahal to long-on and Ben Stokes pulled the same bowler to deep mid-wicket.\n\nLiam Plunkett, Chris Jordan and Tymal Mills all failed to score as the last eight wickets went down in only 19 balls.\n\nIndia's stacked batting line-up had struggled on slower pitches in the first two matches, mainly down to the excellence of England's bowling.\n\nHere, they fired in a blur of boundary hitting, even though captain Virat Kohli was run-out by bowler Jordan for only two after being sent back by KL Rahul.\n\nAs England missed their lengths - only the pacey Mills was close to the levels of the first two matches - Raina in particular cashed in with power square of the wicket on the off side and pick-ups off his pads. He smashed five sixes in his 45-ball stay.\n\nAt the other end, Dhoni showed more finesse and the occasional deft touch, but he too cleared the leg-side fence twice in his first international T20 half-century - the 76-match wait for a maiden fifty easily the longest by any batsman.\n\nBut the most brutal treatment was dished out by Yuvraj, the man who once hit Stuart Broad for six sixes in a over.\n\nJordan, previously dependable, was punished for failing to nail his yorkers and three times pummelled back over his head for straight maximums as India took 118 from the final nine overs.\n\n'We're not world-class players of spin'\n\nEngland captain Eoin Morgan: \"We made a fatal error in losing two 'in' batsmen when we were going so well. It really hurt us. You have to give credit where credit is due, congratulations to the Indian team.\n\n\"With the benefit of hindsight, we could have done with Joe or I to see out the innings. It's a beautiful wicket to bat on with a small boundary we would have taken conceding 190/200 at the beginning at the game.\"\n\nEngland coach Trevor Bayliss speaking to Sky Sports: \"The way we finished tonight is not an indication of the way we have played on this tour. But we have to give credit, India have played better than us.\n\n\"We're not world-class players of spin yet and it is difficult to knock the ball over the fence. I'd like to see our guys hit down the wicket rather than sweep sometimes.\n\n\"A lot of times the guys have been out playing across the line but that's something we can learn from and make sure we're better at next time we play here.\"\n\nIndia captain Virat Kohli: \"This was an occasion that demanded us to be at our best. Everyone was looking forward to this game. We lost all three tosses but won the series. We have shown character to win all three series.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nEldin Jakupovic made a string of fine saves as Hull frustrated Manchester United by claiming a goalless draw in the Premier League at Old Trafford.\n\nThe hosts dominated the match but could not find a way past the Tigers goalkeeper, who brilliantly kept out Zlatan Ibrahimovic's long-range strike and Paul Pogba's driving effort in the first half.\n\nIn between, Harry Maguire should have done better with a header which he put wide of goal.\n\nIbrahimovic hooked an effort wide in the second half and Jakupovic made his best save to prevent Juan Mata from scoring at the back post, as well as keeping out Paul Pogba's curler.\n\nThe visitors could have won it with five minutes to go, but on-loan Lazar Markovic's clipped shot came back off the post and Abel Hernandez struck tamely at David de Gea.\n\nThe point keeps United in sixth place, but allowed Hull to move off the bottom of the table.\n\nThe rules are different for me - Mourinho\n\nRelive the entertaining draw from Old Trafford\n\nJakupovic made a total of six saves, punching the air in delight with each effort he kept out and taking the acclaim of the jubilant away supporters at full-time.\n\nHull have shipped 47 goals this season - only Swansea (52) have conceded more in the division - and this was just their second clean sheet in 23 league games.\n\nAsked by BBC Sport if it was his best game in a Hull shirt, Jakupovic replied: \"I try to be my best for the team all the time but today I caught a good day.\n\n\"The striker celebrates when he scored, and I celebrated to myself with some saves.\"\n\nUnited striker Ibrahimovic was not impressed by the Hull player's performance. The Swede said: \"I did not see any chances where it was difficult for the goalkeeper. It was not a good save from Mata, it was a bad finish. Some saves he made for the cameras.\"\n\nUnited had seen all the top four sides drop points in this round of fixtures as they chase a Champions League spot, but failed to capitalise even though they had 66% possession in the match.\n\nDespite extending their run to 14 games unbeaten in the top-flight, they have drawn their last three games and are four points adrift of Liverpool in fourth place.\n\nUnited only had themselves to blame in a wasteful performance. Marcus Rashford, who completed a full 90 minutes for the first time since November, highlighted his team's sloppiness by losing possession 21 times - more than any other player on the pitch.\n\nWayne Rooney was brought off the bench at half time, but failed to change the game, having become the club's leading all-time goal scorer in the previous league match at Stoke.\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho: \"We didn't score. You don't score, it is not possible to win.\n\n\"We needed to score, we needed more time to play. If you played 35-40 minutes in both halves, it is a lot. I think Hull City tried to see where they could go, the way they could behave and tried to see what the referee would allow them to do.\n\n\"They had the feedback and were comfortable to do what they did. I am not critical of that. They are fighting against relegation and every point is gold.\n\nAsked by BBC commentator Martin Fisher what upset him about referee Mike Jones' performance: \"If you do not know football, you should not have a microphone in your hand.\"\n\nBefore this game, Hull had lost nine straight away games, with their last point on their travels coming at Burnley in early September.\n\nBut under new boss Marco Silva they have shown enough improvement to suggest they can preserve their top-flight status.\n\nThe Portuguese has led Hull to a win and a draw in his first three games - with a defeat coming against leaders Chelsea - and lie four points away from safety.\n\nHaving beaten United in the second leg of their EFL Cup semi-final last week, Hull may even feel disappointed by not taking all three points with Markovic coming agonisingly close to clinching the winner late on.\n\nHowever, striker Oumar Niasse was lucky not to be given a red card after making late challenges on Michael Carrick and Daley Blind, having earlier received a yellow card.\n\n'Sometimes you have to suffer'\n\nHull boss Marco Silva: \"It is a very good result for us against a very good team. We played like a team with great attitude, spirit and character. What we showed tonight again, I am happy.\n\n\"Sometimes you have to suffer in moments but we have to play as a team.\n\nFirst Old Trafford shutout since 1952 - the stats\n• None Manchester United are on the current longest unbeaten run in the Premier League this season (14 games - won seven, drawn seven).\n• None Hull City have picked up just two points in their 10 Premier League meetings with Manchester United (won zero, drawn two, lost eight).\n• None Man Utd have attempted 85 shots (including blocks) against newly promoted sides at Old Trafford this season but have found the net just twice.\n• None This is the first time United have failed to beat two different newly promoted clubs at home in a Premier League season since 1994-95 (Nottingham Forest and Leicester).\n• None Hull kept their first clean sheet at Old Trafford in all competitions since January 1952.\n• None The Red Devils have only lost once in their last 20 home Premier League games (won 12, drawn seven) - against Manchester City in September 2016.\n• None In fact, United have now gone unbeaten in 18 home games in all competitions (won 12, drawn six). It is their longest run since October 2011 (37 games).\n• None Hull have won four points in three Premier League games under Marco Silva, one more than they managed in the previous nine under Mike Phelan.\n\nUnited travel to champions Leicester City on Sunday (kick-off 16:00 GMT), while Hull host title challengers Liverpool on Saturday (15:00 GMT).\n• None Attempt blocked. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Daley Blind with a headed pass.\n• None Attempt saved. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from the left side of the box is saved in the top right corner. Assisted by Daley Blind with a headed pass.\n• None Attempt saved. Marcos Rojo (Manchester United) header from the centre of the box is saved in the top left corner. Assisted by Paul Pogba with a headed pass.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Andrea Ranocchia (Hull City) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt saved. Abel Hernández (Hull City) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Tom Huddlestone. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Mr Clarke, who was speaking as MPs began two days of debate on a bill to give the go-ahead to the official two year process of leaving the EU, said he had been told he was being too pessimistic about prospects for the UK after Brexit.\n\nWatch more: Ken Clarke on why he's voting against Brexit", "Mariam has to study by candlelight and use a shop's generator to charge up her computer\n\nMariam Hammad, despite every adversity of war and hardship, is trying to be a student in Aleppo in the dark heart of Syria's civil war.\n\n\"My city has turned to ruins,\" she says.\n\nDespite being in constant danger, forced out of her home twice by shelling and living without regular supplies of electricity or water, this 22-year-old has refused to give up being a student.\n\nFour years ago, she had just left school and begun at the University of Aleppo when it was hit by rockets, killing dozens of students around her.\n\n\"I saw my friends killed and still now I can't forget what happened,\" Mariam says.\n\n\"I saw a lot of students hurt and injured. There was blood, death. Everything was terrible.\"\n\nThere was intense danger at home too.\n\n\"I came so near to death many times,\" Mariam says.\n\n\"My family and I rented a house that was only 500m from the front lines, and a lot of rockets fell in my neighbourhood.\n\nMariam has refused to give up her ambition to be a student and get a degree\n\n\"Many of my neighbours were killed, and mortars hit my home twice.\"\n\nShe remembers waking during an attack, unable to see in the dust and darkness and not knowing who was alive or dead.\n\nMariam talks of life in Aleppo becoming a mix of \"horror and danger\".\n\n\"I was crying so much when I saw my city in front of my eyes, everything destroyed,\" she says.\n\nBut her reaction has been to stubbornly carry on and to use her studies as a way of honouring those who have died.\n\nShe became an online student in a warzone, following a degree course run by the US-based University of the People, making a conscious decision to be \"optimistic\" and to make plans to \"rebuild\".\n\nThis week in Aleppo the temperature has fallen below 0C\n\nBut this is far from straightforward, she says over a patchy Skype line.\n\n\"The hardest thing about being a student in Aleppo? Actually, it's being alive,\" Mariam says.\n\nThere are still occasional rockets and mortar blasts, despite a ceasefire, but there are also big practical problems that would have put off a less determined student.\n\n\"We haven't had electricity for two years,\" she says.\n\nInstead, people rely on generators that might operate for a few hours at a time.\n\nMariam goes to a local shop with a small generator, where it can take 12 hours to charge up her mobile phone and an old laptop, and then she ekes out the charge so she can study.\n\nFamilies are living in the wreckage of their city\n\nInternet connections are sporadic and weak - and when an exam was approaching, there was an internet blackout.\n\nWorried that she would be failed, Mariam began to make preparations to travel to Damascus to find a way of sitting the exam.\n\nEven by the standards of a civil war, she says, this would have been extremely dangerous, but friends managed to make contact with the university, and she was able to re-arrange the exam.\n\nMore stories from the BBC's Global education series looking at education from an international perspective, and how to get in touch.\n\nYou can join the debate at the BBC's Family & Education News Facebook page.\n\nHeat and light are daily challenges, particularly in winter, with temperatures in Aleppo below freezing this week.\n\nWater is available only every three or four weeks. \"When we have water, we store huge amounts,\" she says, filling every container.\n\nThere have been long battles between government and rebel armies in Aleppo, but there are also forces of the so-called Islamic State not far from the city.\n\nMariam says they tried to cut a road to the city a few days ago - but she says there is also the battle of ideas and the need to protect the right to education.\n\nTheir presence makes her even more determined to keep studying.\n\nDespite the dangers, the hunger for education has remained in Aleppo\n\nWhile the high technology of war has rained down on Syria, this young woman has to study at night by candlelight.\n\nBut she doesn't complain. Instead, she talks with understated longing for one single \"normal day\" as a student.\n\nAnd what would she do with it?\n\n\"I want to do a lot of things in this day,\" she says.\n\n\"I want to go to my university like any normal student. I want to go with my friends. I want to sit with my family.\"\n\nShe pauses. \"And I want to see everyone I lost,\" she says.\n\nBut in the face of such awful destruction, why is she worrying about getting a degree?\n\nMariam says the experience of war has made education seem even more important - something positive that links people to the chance of rebuilding a better life.\n\nCarrying bread in the streets of Aleppo\n\n\"We have this strong motivation to seek it no matter what,\" she says.\n\n\"You can see that in young children going to their schools, even though they can be hit at any time.\"\n\n\"Education was always important in my life.\n\n\"It gives me hope that I can have a better future.\n\n\"It will help me to rebuild my country and everything that's been destroyed.\"\n\nMariam is studying a business degree with the University of the People, based in California, which supports people around the world who otherwise would not have access to university - including 15 students in Aleppo.\n\nThe ceasefire has made it safer for civilians to walk in the street\n\nThe online university, backed by the likes of the Gates Foundation, Hewlett Packard and Google, offers accredited four-year degree courses, taught by volunteer academics and retired university staff.\n\nThe university's president, Shai Reshef, says: \"We are an alternative for those who have no other alternative.\"\n\nMariam sees her studying as a kind of lifeline and source of hope - and she says any other students around the world should appreciate the chances they have.\n\nStudents were killed when the University of Aleppo was hit in 2013\n\nShe can only dream of having a \"normal life like them\".\n\n\"I hope that whoever sees my story will not be discouraged by difficulties they face,\" she says.\n\n\"I believe that after every hardship comes a great rebirth, and in honour of ever friend, neighbour and Syrian who lost his life due to this war, we must stay optimistic.\"\n\nAnd if that faith wavers?\n\n\"If I feel down, my mother says to me, 'This will pass.'\"", "As the world learns more about the tactics of the Trump administration, the Financial Times has been talking to the president's top trade adviser, Peter Navarro.\n\nLike his boss, he doesn't shrink from saying what he thinks.\n\nHe accuses Germany of exploiting a \"grossly under-valued\" euro - which makes its exports cheaper - to gain an unfair trading advantage over other EU countries and the United States.\n\nHe also confirms that negotiations about a trade deal between the EU and the US are dead.\n\nThe FT says that while criticism of German policy during Barack Obama's presidency was \"cloaked in diplomatic language\", Mr Navarro's comments \"highlight an apparent willingness by the Trump administration to antagonise EU leaders\".\n\nThe Daily Telegraph also leads on Mr Navarro's comments, which it calls \"incendiary\".\n\nMr Trump's trade chief had \"put the US on a collision course with Germany\", the paper added. It sees the comments as a \"new front in the president's assault on the EU\".\n\nA bid to end Britain's \"rip-off\" rail fares will represent the system's \"biggest overhaul in more than 30 years\", the Times says.\n\nThousands of expensive long-distance fares will be scrapped from the National Rail database to ensure travellers get a cheaper deal, it says.\n\nA new website will make it easier for passengers, the Metro adds.\n\nThe website is based on an algorithm mathematicians developed to quickly calculate whether there is a cheaper way to do things, the paper says.\n\nAccording to the Metro, the best deals are on trips over an hour long, as longer journeys offer more opportunities to tweak the route and ticketing.\n\nThe Rail Delivery Group (RDG), which represents train operators, says current fares are \"baffling\" for passengers.\n\nThe Times unveils plans for a test that all newly qualified doctors - as well as doctors from abroad - would have to sit before they could practice in Britain.\n\nIt's being proposed by the General Medical Council. The GMC's president tells the paper that the existing system, under which 34 British medical schools set their own criteria, is inherently unfair and fails to ensure that all doctors starting to practice meet common standards.\n\nThe cost of \"health tourism\" is the main front page story for both the Daily Mail and the Sun.\n\nBoth tell the story of a Nigerian woman who gave birth to quads in a London hospital and whose care will cost the NHS £500,000.\n\nShe appears in a BBC documentary, \"Hospital\", which is on BBC Two tonight.\n\nThe Sun says the failure to make health tourists pay for their care is an outrage and that the NHS is seen as \"a soft touch\" worldwide.\n\nThere is plenty of advice for MPs preparing to vote on Brexit.\n\nThe Daily Express hopes they'll respect the referendum result, while the Daily Mail says up to 100 MPs are ready to vote against triggering Article 50 and, in its words, defy the 16 million people who voted to leave the European Union.\n\n\"They still don't get it\" is the paper's headline.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph says the speech by Labour's Sir Keir Starmer setting out why Remainers must accept the outcome of the referendum was \"soberly compelling\".\n\nThe paper tips him as a future Labour leader.\n\nMeanwhile, the Guardian fears Britain's relationship with Europe is on course to collapse: it urges wavering MPs to \"get real and vote to stop this madness\".\n\nThe paper also gives prominence to the gloomy predictions of the Resolution Foundation, which says this parliament could be the worst for living standards and inequality since the early 1980s.\n\nThe campaigning think tank forecasts that rising inflation and a slowdown in jobs growth will hit poorest households hardest.\n\nThe plight of Gerry and Kate McCann - who yesterday lost their libel case against a Portuguese former detective - is the front page story in the Daily Mirror.\n\nThe McCanns originally sued ex-police chief Goncalo Amaral after he wrote a book claiming they were responsible for their daughter Madeleine's disappearance.\n\nThe paper says they now face a bill for legal costs estimated at £500,000.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph says the result also raises the \"nightmare prospect\" that the couple could be sued for damages by the former policeman.\n\nAnd finally, the Times reports that dozens of families in Cornwall could lose their homes under compulsory purchase orders to protect them from pollution.\n\nCornwall council is considering - as a last resort - moving people out of areas where air pollution exceeds legal limits.\n\nIt says that would be cheaper than a new road bypass costing tens of millions of pounds.\n\nIn an editorial, the paper says this is the kind of eccentric idea that ends up on the table in local government when ministers refuse to take action.\n\nIt urges the government to do more to reduce air pollution, which is linked to more than 40,000 deaths a year.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage: Live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live and text updates on the BBC Sport website. Highlights: Watch on BBC Two and online from 18:00 GMT on Sunday.\n\nLock George Kruis is out of England's Six Nations opener against France on Saturday with a knee ligament injury.\n\nThe 26-year-old Saracens second row suffered the injury in training on Tuesday and will see a specialist on Thursday to determine its severity.\n\nEngland head coach Eddie Jones said: \"We are not ruling him out of the Six Nations at this stage.\"\n\nCourtney Lawes and Joe Launchbury are now expected to pair up in the second row, with Maro Itoje at flanker.\n\nJones will name his starting XV for Twickenham on Thursday.\n\nDefending champions England then face Wales at the Principality Stadium on 11 February, with Kruis' inclusion in that game now unclear.\n\nFrance centre Yann David, 28, has also pulled out of the England match with a thigh injury and is a doubt for their second game against Scotland on 12 February.\n\nFrance head coach Guy Noves now has to select between Gael Fickou, Remi Lamerat and Mathieu Bastareaud to form his centre partnership against England.\n\nDavid is the latest France player to withdraw through injury, with flanker Raphael Lakafia, hooker Camille Chat, loose-head prop Eddy Ben Arous and centre Wesley Fofana all previously ruled out.", "After years of working the streets of Mexico City, Carmen Munoz wondered what happened to sex workers like her when they got old - so she campaigned to set up a retirement home.\n\nIt was on the historic Plaza Loreto in Mexico City - surrounded by buildings that date back to the 16th Century - that Carmen Munoz set out on her path as a sex worker. She had come to the city looking for work and had been told that the priest at the Santa Teresa la Nueva Church sometimes found jobs for domestic workers.\n\nShe was 22, illiterate, and had seven children to feed - including one whom she carried in her arms. For four days she anxiously waited to see the priest, but when she finally succeeded he gave her no help and sent her away.\n\n\"He only told me that there was tons of work, and to look for it around the area,\" she recalls. \"I left crying because it hurt me deeply to hear the priest talk that way.\"\n\nAt that moment a woman approached Munoz to console her.\n\n\"She said to me: 'That man over there says he'll give you 1,000 pesos if you go with him,'\" Munoz remembers. At the time it seemed a fortune, although at today's exchange rate - taking into account a 1993 revaluation when one new peso was valued at 1,000 old pesos - it is barely five US cents.\n\n\"I said: 'I've never seen 1,000 pesos all in one place - where am I going with him?'\n\n\"She said: 'To a room.' And I said: 'A room? How will I know what work to do?'\n\n\"'No!' she said: 'You don't understand, to a hotel.'\n\nThe woman told her bluntly what she would have to do.\n\nWhen Munoz understood, she was shocked.\n\n\"Oh senorita no, no, not that!\" she said.\n\nBut the woman replied: \"You prefer to give it to your husband who doesn't even provide enough money for soap to wash, than to give it to others who will provide for your children?\"\n\nFeeling desperate, she went with the man. He gave her the 1,000 pesos as promised but said he wanted nothing in return. He didn't want to exploit her desperation, he said, and as she cried he pressed the money into her hand.\n\nPerhaps he knew she would be back.\n\nThe following day, Munoz's despair had turned into defiance. She returned to the same corner in Plaza Loreto thinking to herself: \"From now on, my children won't go hungry any more.\"\n\nSoledad, a resident of Casa Xochiquetzal, in her bedroom\n\nFor the next 40 years she made her living as a sex worker on the corners of the Plaza and surrounding streets.\n\nThe area is known as the Merced - 106 bustling blocks that form part of a Unesco World Heritage Site, containing some of the city centre's oldest buildings, its main commercial hub, and the biggest of the city's seven red light districts. There is at least one seedy hotel on every block.\n\n\"When I first entered sex work I was dazzled by the money,\" says Munoz. \"I realised I had worth, that someone would pay to be with me, when the father of my children told me that I was worth nothing and that I was very ugly.\"\n\nBut working on the streets took its toll. Both the authorities and pimps demanded money. Beatings and sexual harassment were common, and she became addicted to drugs and alcohol.\n\nYet, despite all this, she is grateful.\n\n\"Thanks to sex work I was able to take care of my kids and provide them with a roof over their heads - a dignified place to live,\" she says.\n\nAnd years later, she was able to provide a home for others too.\n\nLuchita, a resident of Casa Xochiquetzal, puts on make-up in her bedroom at the shelter\n\nOne night, she passed by a dirty, moving tarpaulin on the side of the street. \"I went over to it and pulled it up, thinking there were going to be children underneath,\" she says. What she found instead were three elderly women huddled together for warmth. She recognised them as fellow sex workers.\n\n\"It hurts you, it hurts you as a human being to see them like that,\" says Munoz.\n\nShe helped the women up, bought them coffee, and got them a room in a cheap hotel.\n\nIt made her realise how many elderly women were working in the Plaza. Once their looks had faded, because of their advancing years and the hard life on the streets, many ended up destitute. Their families didn't want them so they had nowhere to go. Munoz became determined to do something about it.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Listen: Carmen tells Outlook why she wanted to help women such as Marbella Aguilar\n\nFor the next 13 years she lobbied the city authorities to provide a retirement home for elderly and homeless sex workers. With the support of several well-known artists, neighbours from the Merced and fellow sex workers, she finally persuaded them. The city gave them a large 18th Century building, just a few blocks from Plaza Loreto.\n\nThe women's feeling of elation when they first walked through the doors was immeasurable. \"It was an amazing experience,\" Munoz says. \"We cried with joy, laughed and shouted: 'Wow, we now have a home!'\"\n\nNorma, a resident of Casa Xochiquetzal, rests in her bedroom\n\nIt took a lot of work to clean up the building, a former boxing museum, but in 2006 the first women moved in. They named the shelter Casa Xochiquetzal, after the Aztec goddess of women's beauty and sexual power.\n\nWhen I leave the Merced's cacophonous streets and enter Casa Xochiquetzal, the women are listening to music.\n\nJewellery and flower-making workshops are under way and the smell of baking fills the air - a dozen residents are busy baking cakes.\n\nWhile teaching the women new skills, Casa Xochiquetzal also aims to improve their health and well-being by providing self-esteem workshops, medical check-ups and counselling.\n\nMarbella Aguilar's room off the central courtyard is filled with books - her favourite authors are Pablo Neruda, Leo Tolstoy and Franz Kafka.\n\n\"Books have been my refuge since the age of nine,\" she says.\n\nAs a child, nearly 60 years ago, her parents threw her out. Fortunately another woman took her in but when she died, Aguilar - now 16 - had to find the rent and pay for her studies by herself.\n\nWhen this proved impossible, she began to sell her body. \"There was nothing else I could do,\" she says.\n\nThrough a mixture of jobs and occasional sex work, Aguilar managed to support her own three children through school. But when a teenage daughter died of leukaemia, she fell into a deep depression, could not work and was thrown out of her home for failing to pay the rent.\n\nAt this point Casa Xochiquetzal rescued her and she now makes money selling jewellery in nearby markets.\n\n\"This house taught me that my life is worth a lot, that I am as dignified as any other woman,\" she says. \"Now I say that a woman can lose her honour, but never her dignity.\"\n\nHer only sadness is that her surviving children no longer speak to her.\n\nCanela and Norma, both residents of Casa Xochiquetzal, at the shelter\n\nThere are currently 25 other elderly or homeless women living in Casa Xochiquetzal - aged from 55 to their mid-80s. Though many have retired, some still work the streets.\n\nOver the past 11 years, more than 250 sex workers have been given shelter here. There have been big challenges though.\n\nCasa Xochiquetzal's finances are precarious - its grant from the city government has been cut back and it is reliant on charitable donations.\n\nMaría Isabel, a resident of Casa Xochiquetzal, in her bedroom\n\nOn top of that, not everyone gets along. Although the women are friends and roommates now, some were formerly competitors and enemies on the streets.\n\n\"We have been so used, abused, so beaten, and so marginalised, that we are almost always on edge,\" explains Munoz. \"We have our nails out, ready to attack if we are attacked.\"\n\nBut disagreements happen in any family, Aguilar says. \"Here we have been taught to have respect for each other, that there are things worth fighting for - and that brings harmony to the house.\"\n\nAnd if not harmony, at least a sense of peace, and the reassurance that they will not die uncared-for on the streets.\n\n\"We deserve a place where we spend the last days of our lives with dignity and tranquillity,\" says Munoz.\n\nOne day she expects to move in herself.\n\nPaola, a resident at Casa Xochiquetzal, puts on make-up before going to work\n\nListen to Clayton Conn's report on Outlook on the BBC World Service\n\nPhotographs of Casa Xochiquetzal from the series Tough Love (Las Amorosas Mas Bravas) by Benedicte Desrus (via Shutterstock)\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Protests have been taking place outside the US Supreme Court at the nomination of Neil Gorsuch by Donald Trump.\n\nLabor union leader Mary Kay Henry was among those to voice her opposition.", "Tom Burridge reports from the city of Avdiivka in eastern Ukraine, on the front line between government troops and Russian-backed rebels.", "Claims that Lord Coe misled an MPs' inquiry have grown after new emails confirmed he was \"made aware\" of corruption allegations in his sport four months before they became public.\n\nThe president of the IAAF, athletics' governing body, told a select committee in December 2015 he was \"not aware\" of specific allegations of corruption around the Russian doping scandal.\n\nBut the email from Lord Coe to the IAAF's ethics commission in August 2014 states: \"I have now been made aware of the allegations.\"\n\nIn 2015, Lord Coe told Parliament: \"I was certainly not aware of the specific allegations that had been made around the corruption of anti-doping processes in Russia.\"\n\nLord Coe denies there is any discrepancy between his evidence and what the emails say he knew.\n\nMPs had wanted the IAAF [International Association of Athletics Federations] president to return to the committee after former athlete David Bedford's testimony to the Culture, Media and Sport select committee inquiry into doping in sport appeared to contradict Lord Coe's.\n\nThe president has so far declined to return to the committee, but agreed to two requests from MPs to release missing correspondence between him and Michael Beloff, chair of the IAAF ethics commission.\n\nThe emails, published on Tuesday by the committee, cast fresh light on the issue of what Lord Coe knew - and when - about the burgeoning Russian corruption and doping scandal which has blighted world athletics.\n\nCommittee chairman Damian Collins told the BBC: \"Whatever excuse he gives, it is clear that Lord Coe decided not to share with the committee information that was relevant to our inquiry on doping in sport.\n\n\"The committee asked him about his knowledge of doping in Russian athletics and of corruption within the sport. In his answers, he gave the impression that he was unaware of specific allegations.\n\n\"Thanks to evidence that was presented by the BBC Panorama programme last year, and by David Bedford to the committee this January, we can see that he was aware, at least in general terms, of the allegations that had been brought forward by the Russian athlete Liliya Shobukhova.\"\n\nDr Rosena Allin-Khan MP, shadow minister for sport, said: \"These are very troubling allegations. The release of these emails by the select committee casts serious doubts over the evidence previously given by Lord Coe to the inquiry.\n\n\"World Athletics is going through one of the most serious doping scandals in its history and requires the strongest possible leadership. Lord Coe must immediately come back to the select committee and clarify his evidence in light of this new information.\n\n\"He must be honest about which allegations he knew of and when he found out about them. The IAAF and BOA [British Olympic Association] need transparency and honesty throughout their organisations now more than ever, and that has to start at the very top.\"\n\nLast June the BBC's Panorama programme and the Daily Mail alleged Lord Coe - then an IAAF vice-president - had been alerted to the scandal months before it was revealed by the German journalist Hajo Seppelt in December 2014.\n\nThe programme revealed Lord Coe had been sent an email by Bedford, the former world 10,000m record holder, containing several attachments detailing allegations from Russian marathon champion Shobukhova that she had paid almost half a million euros to cover up positive doping tests after being blackmailed by senior IAAF officials.\n\nCollins told Panorama it appeared Lord Coe had \"deliberately misled\" them.\n\nLord Coe told the programme he hadn't opened the attachments and had simply forwarded the email on to the IAAF's Ethics Committee, and that since he did not open the attachments, he had not been aware of the detail of the corruption allegations and therefore had not misled Parliament.\n\nHis spokeswoman told the BBC his failure to open the attachments had been nothing more than a \"lack of curiosity\".\n\nIn his evidence to the select committee in December, Bedford said he was \"surprised and disappointed\" that Lord Coe, who became president of the IAAF in August 2015, said he had not opened the attachments.\n\nHowever, fresh questions have emerged for Lord Coe following his disclosure to the committee of the full email chain between him and Mr Beloff.\n\nWhat does the email say?\n\nThe email, from Lord Coe to Mr Beloff, is dated August 2014 and reads: \"I have in the last couple of days received copied documentation of serious allegations being made by and on behalf of the Russian female athlete Shobukhova from David Bedford.\n\n\"I have spoken to David today on the phone and he advises me that he has shared this information with you. Should I forward this documentation to you?\n\n\"The purpose of this note is of course to advise you that I have now been made aware of the allegations... but would be grateful for your advice.\"\n\nWhat does Lord Coe say now?\n\nIn a detailed four-page letter to the select committee, which accompanies the disclosure of the emails, Lord Coe says there is \"no discrepancy\".\n\nHe said he was not asked specifically by MPs about when he first heard of the corruption of doping cases.\n\nHe said he was on holiday abroad when he received a call from Mr Bedford asking if he was aware of the Shobukhova allegations, and on answering \"no\", Mr Bedford agreed to send them without going into the detail of what the allegations were.\n\nLord Coe says he then dictated the 14 August email to an assistant.\n\nThe letter to the committee reads: \"David had thought the allegations were serious enough to send information about them first to the ethics commission and then to me, and I knew I therefore had a duty to inform the ethics commission that I was aware of allegations having being made, and I wanted to ensure that Michael [Beloff] had all the information David [Bedford] had sent to me.\"\n\nMr Beloff responded on 16 August 2014 that he already had the information.\n\nLord Coe wrote: \"Having received these responses from Michael [Beloff] I was satisfied that I had done what I was required to do under the code of ethics.\n\n\"I have made clear I did not read David Bedford's emailed documents but asked my office to forward them to the person and the commission with exclusive authority to investigate.\n\n\"I trust this clarifies the matter to the satisfaction of the committee, and as such there are no grounds for suggesting that I misled the committee in any way.\"\n\nQuestions remain as to why Lord Coe, if he was unaware of the detail of the allegations, would state to Beloff he had \"now been made aware of the serious allegations being made by, and on behalf of the Russian female athlete Shobukhova\".\n\nCollins told the BBC: \"It was not possible to know this, without some knowledge of the attachments contained in the email, as all David Bedford's email to Lord Coe said was that the documents he was sending to him related to 'an issue that is being investigated by the IAAF ethics commission'.\n\n\"However, if it is true that Lord Coe was somehow unaware of the details of the complaint that had been made by Shobukhova, it is regrettable that neither he nor his team could find the time to read the 1,700 word summary of the allegations that was sent to him by David Bedford.\n\n\"This episode adds further weight to the concern that senior figures within athletics could have done more to make themselves fully aware of serious allegations of corruption and doping within their sport, and then acted on that information to make sure that it was being properly investigated.\"\n\nLord Coe, as a member of the House of Lords, cannot be compelled to give evidence to a select committee, unlike members of the public, but it is likely that the committee will take a dim view of Lord Coe's refusal to return when writing up their final report on doping in sport, which is expected to be published within weeks.\n\nThe BBC Panorama programme also revealed claims Lord Coe had been helped to the presidency of the IAAF by Papa Massata Diack, at a time when Diack was under investigation for serious corruption.\n\nDiack, who is the son of the disgraced former president of the IAAF Lamine Diack, is now banned for life from athletics, is wanted by Interpol and remains in hiding in Senegal. Lord Coe denied anything inappropriate occurred during his election campaign.", "Tim Steiner has an elaborate tattoo on his back that was designed by a famous artist and sold to a German art collector. When Steiner dies his skin will be framed - until then he spends his life sitting in galleries with his shirt off.\n\n\"The work of art is on my back, I'm just the guy carrying it around,\" says the 40-year-old former tattoo parlour manager from Zurich.\n\nA decade ago, his then girlfriend met a Belgian artist called Wim Delvoye, who'd become well known for his controversial work tattooing pigs.\n\nDelvoye told her he was looking for someone to agree to be a human canvas for a new work and asked if she knew anyone who might be interested.\n\n\"She called me on the phone, and I said spontaneously, 'I'd like to do that,'\" Steiner says.\n\nTwo years later, after 40 hours of tattooing, the image spread across his entire back - a Madonna crowned by a Mexican-style skull, with yellow rays emanating from her halo.\n\nThere are swooping swallows, red and blue roses, and at the base of Steiner's back two Chinese-style koi fish, ridden by children, can be seen swimming past lotus flowers. The artist has signed the work on the right hand side.\n\nCollectors can buy the pig skins tattooed by Wim Delvoye once the pigs have died of old age\n\n\"It's the ultimate art form in my eyes,\" Steiner says.\n\n\"Tattooers are incredible artists who've never really been accepted in the contemporary art world. Painting on canvas is one thing, painting on skin with needles is a whole other story.\"\n\nThe work, entitled TIM, sold for 150,000 euros (£130,000) to German art collector Rik Reinking in 2008, with Steiner receiving one third of the sum.\n\n\"My skin belongs to Rik Reinking now,\" he says. \"My back is the canvas, I am the temporary frame.\"\n\nAs part of the deal, when Steiner dies his back is to be skinned, and the skin framed permanently, taking up a place in Reinking's personal art collection.\n\n\"Gruesome is relative,\" Steiner says to those who find the idea macabre.\n\n\"It's an old concept - in Japanese tattoo history it's been done many, many times. If it's framed nicely and looks good, I think it's not such a bad idea.\"\n\nDelvoye worked for 40 hours to complete the piece\n\nBut this aspect of the work often sparks intense debate.\n\n\"It becomes a huge discussion matter every time, and those confrontations with people have been very exciting and interesting,\" Steiner says.\n\n\"People are either very into the idea, or say it's going too far - they're outraged or say it's against human rights. They come with ideas of slavery or prostitution.\"\n\nAs part of his contract, Steiner must exhibit the tattoo by sitting topless in a gallery at least three times a year.\n\nHis first exhibition took place in Zurich in June 2006 - when the tattoo was still a work-in-progress. When the 10th anniversary fell last year, he was in the middle of his longest-ever exhibition, a whole year at the Museum of Old and New Art (Mona) in Hobart, Tasmania, working five hours a day, six days a week.\n\nThat came to an end on Tuesday.\n\n\"Sit on your desk, with your legs dangling off, straight backed and holding on to your knees for 15 minutes - it's tough,\" he says.\n\n\"I did this for 1,500 hours. It was by far the most outrageously intense experience of my life.\n\n\"All that changed throughout the days was my state of mind - sometimes heaven, sometimes hell, always totally alert.\"\n\nThe only thing separating Steiner from visitors to the gallery is a line on the floor - a line that that in the past some have crossed.\n\n\"I've been touched, blown on, screamed at, pushed and spat on, it's often been quite a circus,\" he says. \"But I wasn't touched a single time on this trip, it's a miracle.\"\n\nSteiner takes in the view during his first stint at Mona in 2012\n\nWhen people try to speak to him he doesn't move or reply. He just sits still. \"Many people think I'm a sculpture, and have quite a shock once they find out I'm actually alive,\" he says.\n\nBut he rejects the idea that this is performance art. \"If the name Wim Delvoye was not attached to this tattoo, it would have no artistic relevance,\" he insists.\n\nIt is part of Delvoye's intention, though, to show the difference between a picture on the wall and a \"living canvas\" that changes over time.\n\n\"I can get fat, scarred, burned, anything,\" Steiner says. \"It's the process of living. I've had two lower back operations.\"\n\nOne of the joys of working at Mona has been having the gallery to himself before opening time.\n\n\"To be in there by myself, with my headphones in, roaming around and doing my stretches surrounded by stunning art in this mystical building was surreal,\" he says.\n\nAnd he will be back there in November, for a six-month stint, after appearances in Denmark and Switzerland.\n\n\"This whole experience has convinced me that this is what I am here to do. Sit on boxes,\" he says.\n\n\"And one day TIM will just hang there. Beautiful.\"\n\nTim at the Louvre in 2012\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby League\n\nAustralian rugby league player Ben Barba will be allowed to play rugby union in France despite a drugs ban.\n\nFull-back Barba, 27, was given a 12-match ban by Australia's NRL after testing positive for cocaine.\n\nOn Tuesday he swapped codes to join Top 14 side Toulon - but will only face a sanction if he returns to rugby league.\n\n\"Ben does not have a contract with the NRL so he is free to make a decision to play in a different code with a new club,\" NRL CEO Todd Greenberg said.\n\nBarba failed a drugs test just days after winning the Grand Final with Cronulla Sharks in October.\n\nHis contract with the club was terminated but he then agreed a new deal with Sharks in December. However, that deal has not been ratified by the NRL and now he is moving to France.\n\n\"Ben Barba will arrive in Toulon next week,\" a spokesperson for the three-time European champions said.\n\nAnd the NRL later confirmed it would not be able to enforce his ban because he had switched codes.\n\n\"The match suspension he needs to serve will only begin after he has completed his playing commitments elsewhere,\" Greenberg said.\n\nHe added his main concern was whether the player would be taking \"appropriate courses and programs as part of his rehabilitation\".\n\nBarba could make his debut for Toulon against Lyon on 18 February.", "In a season of Democratic Party frustration and anger, Donald Trump's nomination of Neil Gorsuch to the US Supreme Court Tuesday night is a particularly bitter pill to swallow.\n\nWhen the seat opened nearly a year ago following the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, Democrats imagined a durable liberal majority on the court for the first time since the 1960s.\n\nEven as the Republican Senate majority broke with longstanding tradition and blocked any consideration of President Barack Obama's nominee, Merrick Garland, Democrats comforted themselves with the prospect of Hillary Clinton's likely victory in November's presidential election. They entertained the possibility that she would instead pick someone younger and even more progressive than the decidedly moderate Mr Garland.\n\nThen the election happened - setting up the inevitability of Tuesday night's prime-time announcement. President Trump, standing in the East Room of the White House, sprayed lemon on their open wounds, noting that the next Supreme Court justice would follow in Scalia's conservative footsteps.\n\nRepublicans, across the board, are thrilled with the pick. Mr Gorsuch has a sterling legal reputation and indisputable right-wing pedigree. While Mr Trump has proven an uncertain quantity when it comes to fealty to other party orthodoxies, they view his court pick as their trust rewarded.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\n\"President Trump won 81% of the evangelical vote in no small measure because he made an ironclad pledge that if elected he would fill the vacancy on the US Supreme Court with a strict constructionist who would respect the Constitution and the rule of law, not legislate from the bench,\" Faith and Freedom Coalition Chair Ralph Reed said in a press release. \"We never doubted then-candidate Trump's sincerity or commitment, and by nominating Judge Gorsuch, he has now kept that promise.\"\n\nAs great as was conservative joy, so were the depths of liberal anger - likely only stoked by calls by Republicans, from Mr Trump on down, to give their nominee a fair shake.\n\n\"The default is if you are generally qualified and not extreme you are confirmed,\" White House press spokesman Sean Spicer said on Tuesday afternoon.\n\nIt's a sentiment that has not been welcomed by those on the left.\n\n\"The Democrats should treat Trump's [Supreme Court] pick with the exact same courtesy the GOP showed Merrick Garland,\" tweeted Dan Pfeifer, a former senior adviser to President Barack Obama. \"Don't flinch, don't back down.\"\n\nSenate Democrats considering Mr Gorsuch's nomination have a powerful weapon at their disposal, should they choose to use it - the filibuster. If 41 of the 48 members of their caucus are on board, they could block a confirmation vote indefinitely. It's something some Democrats are already promising to do.\n\n\"This is a stolen seat,\" Democratic Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon said, pledging to invoke the filibuster power. \"We will use every lever in our power to stop this.\"\n\nSuch a scorched-earth strategy puts Senate Democrats in a bit of a bind, however.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nFirst of all, if they do indeed filibuster, Republicans may simply do away with the procedure entirely - the so-called \"nuclear option\" - as Democrats did for all other presidential nominees in 2013, allowing Mr Gorsuch to be confirmed with a simple majority.\n\n\"If you can, Mitch, go nuclear,\" Mr Trump urged Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in a meeting on Wednesday.\n\nIn fact, Democratic pressure could prompt Republicans to do away with the Senate tradition entirely, allowing their party to enact all legislation without minority consent. That would make it significantly easier for Congress to pass conservative priorities like Obamacare replacement, weakening union power, education reform and sweeping deregulation.\n\nAlready some Democrats are giving indications they may not take such a hard-line stand.\n\n\"I'm not going to do to President Trump's nominee what the Republicans in the Senate did to President Obama's,\" Delaware Senator Chris Coons said in a television interview.\n\nMr Coons is in a safely Democratic seat. The 10 Senate Democrats up for 2018 re-election in states Mr Trump carried last year may be under even more pressure to avoid total war with the president over a Supreme Court nomination.\n\nWhile the base may be angry, they will need independent and moderate conservative votes if they want to stay in office.\n\nRonald Klain, a former legal adviser to Democratic President Bill Clinton, offers another reason why Democrats should be cautious when choosing how to handle Mr Gorsuch's nomination. The real battle is not over this seat - it's the next one.\n\nWhile it seems unlikely any of the four liberal justices will willingly vacate their seats during the Trump administration, 80-year-old Anthony Kennedy - who leans conservative but has proven to be a swing vote - may be gauging retirement and will be watching the proceedings closely.\n\n\"While it is tempting to begin the confirmation process with an intent to avenge the injustice done to President Barack Obama and his nominee,\" Klain writes, \"an attitude of score-settling and partisan bitterness would likely be off-putting to Kennedy.\"\n\nThe Democratic base may not care. They're angry, and they're out for blood - and if they don't get it from Republicans, they may turn on their own.\n\n\"Senate Democrats, let's be very clear: You will filibuster and block this Supreme Court nominee or we will find a true progressive and primary you in next election,\" liberal filmmaker Michael Moore tweeted.\n\nMore than 1,000 Democrats showed up at a town hall by Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse after he voted to support Mr Trump's CIA nominee. Around 200 protesters picketed California Senator Dianne Feinstein's California home in response to her votes for several of his cabinet picks.\n\nDemocrats ignore this sentiment at their own peril - and their recent efforts to delay confirmation of Mr Trump's cabinet appointments may be evidence that they are getting the message. The situation is similar to the one the Republican Party found itself in following Barack Obama's election.\n\nAt first, they thought they could harness conservative Tea Party anger to defeat Democrats. They did - but the Tea Party brought down a lot of establishment Republicans, as well.\n\nThis damaged the party's electoral chances in the short term, likely costing them the Senate in 2010 and 2014. It also contributed to Mr Trump's rise and eventual victory in 2016, however.\n\nThat, alone, should be enough to give Democrats officeholders many a sleepless night.", "Donald Trump's immigration order goes against the teachings of the bible, say church leaders\n\nHe may have secured the votes of four out of five white evangelical Christians and a majority of white Catholics, but President Donald Trump's decision to issue an executive order barring immigrants from seven Muslim-majority countries and blocking all refugees from Syria is attracting criticism from across the spectrum of religious belief.\n\nThe Reverend Samuel Rodriguez, who prayed at Mr Trump's inauguration and is president of the world's largest Hispanic Christian organisation, representing more than 100 million evangelicals, is signatory to a group letter asking Mr Trump to reconsider his suspension of refugee resettlement.\n\nThe letter, signed by eight other Christian leaders, says: \"The Bible teaches us that each person - including each refugee, regardless of their country of origin, religious background, or any other qualifier - is made in the Image of God, with inherent dignity and potential.\n\n\"Their lives matter to God, and they matter to us.\"\n\nAnother clergyman who took part in the presidential inauguration, Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, told reporters on Sunday that the executive order \"at first blush causes us some apprehension\".\n\nCardinal Dolan, who has been described as a friend of the president, said he needed time to hear the views of legal experts before consolidating a final opinion.\n\nThe United States' largest Muslim civil rights organisation, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), denounced Mr Trump's order and has filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of more than 20 individuals whom it believes have been unconstitutionally prevented from entering the United States.\n\nThe lawsuit, which was filed in a US District Court in Virginia, says the executive order is unconstitutional because \"its apparent purpose and underlying motive is to ban people of the Islamic faith in Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States\".\n\nThese criticisms are being echoed in Britain. At the annual dinner of charity World Jewish Relief, Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis condemned Mr Trump's action.\n\n\"President Trump has signed an executive order that seeks to discriminate based totally on religion or nationality,\" he said. \"We as Jews, perhaps more than any others, know what it's like to be the victims of discrimination.\"\n\nHe added: \"There are so many millions of refugees who are receiving no hope from the United States of America, of all countries.\"\n\nThe Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, issued a statement expressing shock at the new immigration restrictions.\n\n\"It is extraordinary that any civilised country should stigmatise and ban citizens of other nations in the matter of providing humanitarian protection.\n\n\"In Christ, we are called to welcome the stranger especially when in desperate need.\"\n\nOn the same day as Mr Trump issued his order, he gave an interview to the Christian Broadcasting Network in which he claimed that his actions were not designed to discriminate against Muslims but instead to offer support to Christians, whom he said had been \"horribly treated\".\n\nPope Francis has urged compassion towards refugees, including from Syria\n\n\"If you were a Christian in Syria,\" he went on, \"it was impossible, at least very, very tough, to get in the United States\".\n\n\"If you were a Muslim, you could come in. But if you were a Christian, it was almost impossible.\"\n\nFigures from the Refugee Processing Center do show that as far as Syria is concerned, just a few dozen Christians entered the US in 2016 compared with 15,000 Muslims.\n\nBut Christians make up fewer than 10% of the Syrian population and the UNHCR notes that they are less likely to seek refuge via its programme.\n\nHowever, when other countries are taken into account, the US admitted almost as many Christian refugees (37,521) as Muslim refugees (38,901) in 2016, according to the Pew Research Center.\n\nIn addition to referencing facts, several Church leaders are appealing to theology to defend their opposition to Mr Trump's order.\n\nDr Tim Keller, the minister of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York and the author of Generous Justice, argues that the parable of the Good Samaritan in the New Testament explains why offering assistance to those in need must be a bedrock of Christian faith and practice.\n\n\"By depicting a Samaritan helping a Jew,\" he writes, \"Jesus could not have found a more forceful way to say that anyone at all in need - regardless of race, politics, class, and religion - is your neighbour.\n\n\"Not everyone is your brother or sister in the faith, but everyone is your neighbour, and you must love your neighbour.\"\n\nCorrection 9 March 2017: This article has been updated to include specific figures for Syrian refugees going to the US.", "Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody was turned into a VR fantasy mixing real footage with animation\n\nImagine finding yourself on a futuristic stage with rock legends Queen as they blast out their greatest hit, Bohemian Rhapsody. A neon-rendered Freddie Mercury struts around you.\n\nWell, now that fantasy experience can be a reality - albeit a virtual one.\n\nLast year Queen collaborated with Google Play and Enosis VR to create a 360-degree virtual reality (VR) take on the groundbreaking video for the band's 1975 hit.\n\nThis video is often credited with fuelling the boom in pop videos that characterised the 1980s.\n\nThe interactive app uses 2D and 3D animations combined with motion-captured ballet dancers to immerse the viewer in the late Freddie Mercury's \"subconscious mind\".\n\nVR wizardry transports fans on to a virtual stage with the late Freddie Mercury\n\nThe narrative changes based on where your gaze falls as you watch through your VR headset.\n\nThe original song was also remixed and mastered to create an interactive audio experience, the sound changing as the viewer turns their head.\n\nSo-called \"immersive\" technologies are transforming what used to be a marketing tool into a new revenue stream for an industry whose business model was decimated by digital 20 years ago.\n\n\"It's a powerful sensation to watch something in 360 degrees, far more so than to watch it on a flat, framed screen,\" says Dylan Southard, creative director at US design studio VR Playhouse.\n\nHis firm has worked on 360-degree VR videos with artists such as US R&B singer Dawn Richard.\n\n\"You're more present and so things are more heightened,\" says Mr Southard. \"It can be emotionally intense. You can feel as if you're right inside the story.\"\n\nAlthough it is still early days for the technology - affordable VR headsets have only recently come on to the market - experimentation is rife in the music industry.\n\nZach Fuller, paid content analyst at UK media and technology firm MIDiA Research, says VR is emerging in an increasingly \"visual-centric\" music landscape.\n\n\"Examples are the accompanying film for Beyonce's Lemonade [album] and Frank Ocean's 'visual album' Endless, suggesting a strong future for visual music experiences that bodes well for VR,\" he says.\n\nIn a world where consumers are able to stream songs anywhere at any time, standing out from the crowd is no mean feat.\n\n\"There's so much competition for attention, so anything that's new and potentially remarkable is going to get played with,\" says Ross Cairns, a UK-based creative director who worked on a VR video to accompany Biffy Clyro's single Flammable last summer.\n\nAs well as giving music fans more exciting, immersive videos to watch, VR has great potential in the live music space as well.\n\n\"The sense of presence we can achieve in VR is incomparable to any other medium,\" says Jacek Naglowski, chief executive of Circus Digitalis, a Polish publisher that worked on one of the first cinematic VR music videos in Europe.\n\n\"Experiencing the concert in VR is something that people would be willing to pay for,\" he says. \"In future it may be one of the most important revenue streams for musicians and producers.\"\n\nLive concert and festival specialist Live Nation announced last year that it would be teaming up with US bank Citi and NextVR to create a series of VR live events.\n\n\"The obvious thing is to use this technology to open up live concerts to a wider audience and give them a better experience than just watching video in flat screen,\" says Tom Szirtes, creative technologist at UK digital design studio Mybronic.\n\nWith arrays of cameras that can capture 360-degree images from a number of vantage points - including on stage - a VR live concert could be an even more thrilling experience than being there in person.\n\nThe technology also offers bands the opportunity to perform live in a shared VR space, freeing them from the need to hire expensive venues.\n\nIn 2014, UK indie rock band The Indelicates released a VR single, The Generation That Nobody Remembered. Vocalist Simon Clayton believes fans and other musicians could even play along. \"[Technology] could let us form bands in chatrooms with musicians from all over the world,\" he says.\n\nMybronic is already experimenting in this space.\n\n\"Imagine a band projecting themselves into a computer-generated environment and allowing other people to connect,\" says Mr Szirtes. \"It opens up all sorts of interesting possibilities for artists to connect to new audiences in new ways.\"\n\nTyler Hurd's VR video for Future Islands' track Old Friend is a fully immersive experience\n\nThe future will be about entering the musician's world, rather than simply engaging with an individual song.\n\nAnthony Batt, co-founder of US-based VR creative studio Wevr, says: \"The [VR experience] won't necessarily constantly entertain like a music video, but consumers will enter into the artist's space, into their gallery.\"\n\nWevr produced the VR video experience for the track Old Friend from the band Future Islands last year.\n\nVR Playhouse's Dylan Southard agrees: \"A pop star will be able to create a whole world that their fans can visit and interact with.\"\n\nThe challenge, as always, is making all this VR tech commercially viable.\n\nUsers pay $2.99 (£2.40) to enjoy Wevr's Old Friend VR experience, and Mr Batt says sales are \"in the thousands\".\n\n\"In turn, we recycle that money back to the artists and musicians,\" he says.\n\nVR tech could give bands a virtual space in which to interact with their fans\n\nUS company Vrtify specialises in taking traditional music content and transforming it into an immersive experience, paying 70% of its income back to artists.\n\n\"Immersive technologies aren't mainstream, but we all see how quickly they're evolving,\" says Marcus Behrendt, Vrtify's chief marketing officer.\n\n\"It will soon represent a very important income for the music industry because it is changing how fans are consuming music.\"\n\nNew revenue streams from advertising, membership subscriptions and pay-per-view are possible once the audience grows, he believes.\n\nBut the tech needs to improve before this form of musical entertainment goes mainstream, Mybronic's Mr Szirtes argues.\n\n\"We need to have lighter, smaller, more comfortable headsets that are cheap to produce, combined with lots of great creative content that really understands the strengths of the medium.\"\n\nFollow Technology of Business editor Matthew Wall on Twitter and Facebook", "It looks a bit like bribery at first...", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nPremier League clubs have recorded a transfer window profit for the first time - despite spending reaching a six-year January high of £215m.\n\nSouthampton and Burnley made late deadline-day deals, while Odion Ighalo moved from Watford to China for £20m.\n\nSaints paid about £14m for Napoli's Manolo Gabbiadini, and the Clarets signed Robbie Brady for up to £13m\n\nHowever, top-flight sides brought in £40m more than they paid out, according to finance analysts Deloitte.\n• None All the deadline-day deal as they happened - plus the rest of January's transfers\n\nPremier League teams have spent a record £1.38bn on transfers in the 2016-17 season, after a summer outlay of £1.165bn.\n\nSpending in January 2017 is the second highest - behind the record mark of £225m six years ago - and dwarfs the £35m spent in the first January transfer window in 2003.\n\nWhile the window is now closed for the major European leagues, there could still be departures as big-spending China has an official deadline of 28 February.\n\nAll figures based on transfers reported as at 00:30 GMT on 1 February\n\nDeadline-day sales were led by Nigeria striker Ighalo, 27, moving to Chinese Super League club Changchun Yatai.\n\nBurnley were one of the busier sides, recruiting 25-year-old Republic of Ireland international Brady from Norwich for a club-record fee having earlier snapped up another midfielder, Ashley Westwood, from Aston Villa.\n\nSouthampton bolstered their attacking options by bringing in Gabbiadini, 25, while Crystal Palace secured Liverpool centre-back Mamadou Sakho on loan and signed Serbia midfielder Luka Milivojevic from Greek side Olympiakos.\n\nSwansea City signed Aston Villa forward Jordan Ayew in a swap deal that saw Wales defender Neil Taylor go the other way.\n\nSeveral mooted moves did not go through on a relatively low-key day, with Celtic keeper Craig Gordon and striker Moussa Dembele staying with the Scottish champions despite reported interest from Chelsea.\n\nSunderland, thwarted in their attempts to sign forward Leonardo Ulloa from Premier League champions Leicester City, had a bid of about £12m rejected by Southampton for forward Jay Rodriguez.\n\nChampionship clubs spent a record £40m on deadline day, led by Aston Villa signing forward Scott Hogan from Brentford for a fee that could reach £12m.\n\nWigan sold winger Yanic Wildschut to Norwich for £7m, but they ended the day with eight new players.\n\nSheffield Wednesday have to wait until Wednesday to see if their £9.5m move for Middlesbrough striker Jordan Rhodes had gone through in time.\n\nMidfielder Ravel Morrison returned to QPR on a late loan deal from Italian side Lazio, and highly rated West Ham defender Reece Oxford, 18, moved to Reading on loan for the rest of the season.\n\nStriker Matty Taylor caused a stir by leaving Bristol Rovers, where he has scored 19 times this season, for local rivals Bristol City - the first time a player has done so since 1987.\n\nChampionship side City wasted no time in winding up their League One foes, with manager Lee Johnson saying: \"It'll be a big step up in standard for him.\"\n\nMeanwhile, Neil Danns' tour of the clubs of the north west beginning with a B saw him tick off Blackpool. The midfielder's loan deal from Bury follows spells at Bolton and Blackburn. He has also squeezed in Birmingham City and Bristol City along the way.\n\nWhat were the major deals of the window?\n\nEverton were the Premier League club to spend the most on a single player, paying Manchester United £22m for France midfielder Morgan Schneiderlin.\n\nHowever, the biggest fee was the £60m paid to Chelsea by Chinese Super League side Shanghai SIPG for Brazil attacking midfielder Oscar.\n\nAlso departing the Premier League was Dimitri Payet - with West Ham accusing the France forward of lacking \"commitment and respect\" as he rejoined Marseille for £25m.\n\nThe top six sides did not shell out - the only new purchase among the leading sides being Arsenal's surprise signing of left-back Cohen Bramall from non-league Hednesford Town for £40,000. He had just been made redundant from his job in a car factory before a trial with the Gunners.\n• None Premier League clubs spent £215m to buy new players in the January window, recording a net transfer profit of £40m compared with a net spend of £100m last year.\n• None The bottom six clubs accounted for half of total expenditure, with sides in the bottom half of the table spending £145m (67% of total expenditure).\n• None Deadline-day spending by top-flight clubs totalled £60m, up £20m on last year, and the second-highest ever after £135m in 2011.\n• None Championship sides spent a total of £80m, a big increase on last year's total of £35m and a new record for a January transfer window for the division. The £40m spent on deadline day was the same amount spent by Premier League clubs on deadline day in January 2016.\n• None The Premier League was once again the highest-spending league in European football. The next highest was France's Ligue 1, with total transfer expenditure of about £130m.\n\n\"The sales of Oscar, Dimitri Payet, Odion Ighalo and Memphis Depay, as well as around £20m worth of sales to Championship clubs, have helped Premier League clubs record net receipts for the first time in a transfer window,\" said Deloitte spokesman Dan Jones.\n\n\"As was the case last year, it is clubs in the bottom half of the table who have driven expenditure this January, investing in their squads in an attempt to secure survival.\"\n\nGermany doesn't really get the last-minute English spirit of deadline day, with the Bundesliga wrapping things up at the civilised hour of 6pm local time as usual. Bayern Munich made a pair of big signings in Hoffenheim's Niklas Sule and Sebastian Rudy, but they won't arrive until summer.\n\nBorussia Dortmund moved quickly to snap up 17-year-old Sweden striker Alexander Isak and Bayer Leverkusen also spent big on a youngster on deadline day, paying 12m euros (£10.3m) for Jamaican teenager Leon Bailey from Genk.\n\nThank goodness, then, for Turkey's taste for the grand gesture, with champions Besiktas and surprise title-chasers Baskasehir both going for striking experience in Demba Ba (on loan from Shanghai Shenhua) and Emmanuel Adebayor (free agent) respectively.\n\nIt was a quiet window for Serie A in Italy, with Juventus spending big on young talent but parking it for the future; for example, Mattia Caldara, a 15m euro (£12.9m) signing, is staying with his current club Atalanta on loan.\n\nWith Barcelona typically quiet and Real Madrid barred from involvement, it was similarly sedate in Spain. Villarreal's sale of Alexandre Pato to Tianjin Quanjian for 18m euros (£15.4m) was comfortably the biggest transfer in La Liga, though Jese's loan move to his hometown club of Las Palmas was a romantic subplot on deadline day.\n\nFrance was busier than usual this winter, with Julian Draxler (36m euros/£30.8m) and Goncalo Guedes (30m euros/£25.7m) both joining Paris St-Germain for big fees, and Lyon splashing out on Memphis Depay (18m euros/£15m). On deadline day it was Lille, under new ownership, who were busiest, signing no less than six in a frenetic 24 hours, led by winger Anwar El Ghazi from Ajax for 8m euros (£6.9m).", "The annual Up Helly Aa Viking fire festival has been celebrated in Shetland.\n\nSome 60 \"Vikings\" paraded through Lerwick, trailed by more than 900 torchbearers known as \"guizers\".\n\nThe celebration culminated in the traditional burning of a galley. Mike Grundon reports from Lerwick.", "Okay, you've probably guessed it. This isn't Donald Trump's Kenyan half-brother.\n\nBut that hasn't stopped the internet having a good laugh at this man's uncannily Trump-esque locks. When the photo was shared on American comedian and radio host Ricky Smiley's Facebook page back in January, hundreds joined in on the comments, and thousands more shared the post.\n\nAnd that's not the only comedy meme. Another makes the claim that the man in the photo is one 'Nyirongo Trump' of Malawi.\n\nBut who is the man in the memes? Well, we've had a dig round and we've deduced his identity. Are you ready?\n\nIt is in fact Ghanaian president Nana Akufo-Addo.\n\nA reverse image search on the meme led Trending to the original - un-Photoshopped - image, where he is seen greeting a celebrity supporter of his New Patriotic Party (NPP), Ghanaian actor Kofi Adu.\n\nSo how many have picked up on the man's true identity?\n\nOn the original Rickey Smiley show Facebook post, out of 311 comments, only two people seem to have noticed that the man is, in fact, the Ghanaian president.\n\nDespite not being Trump's half-brother, President Addo has been nicknamed 'Nana Trump' by some of his supporters, mainly due to the fact that his campaign and inauguration happened in very close time-proximity to President Trump's.\n\nAnd it seems that the meme traces its origin back to an image that was shared by some of his supporters back in December, with the text \"Nana Trump: Make Ghana great again\".\n\nNext story: China's travel rumour that was too good to be true\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "Can what you eat change the bacteria in your gut for the better? Dr Michael Mosley has been finding out which foods and drinks can make the most difference.\n\nThe gut microbiome - the diverse community of bacteria that inhabits our intestines - is a hot topic in science right now.\n\nAlmost every day we come across headlines claiming that it has the power to influence our health in new and surprising ways, whether it's our weight, our mood or our ability to resist infection.\n\nUnsurprisingly, given this explosion of interest in our inner ecosystem, our supermarket shelves and pharmacies now stock an array of probiotic products - products containing live bacteria and yeasts - that claim to be able to influence our gut microbiome for the better. But is any of this actually possible?\n\nTo find out, Trust Me, I'm A Doctor set up an experiment in Inverness with the help of NHS Highland and 30 volunteers and scientists around the country. We split our volunteers into three groups and over four weeks asked each group to try a different approach that, it's claimed, can boost gut bacteria for the better.\n\nLactobacillus casei - a bacterium found in the intestines and mouth\n\nOur first group tried an off-the-shelf probiotic drink of the type found in most supermarkets. These drinks usually contain one or two species of bacteria that can survive the journey through our powerful stomach acid to set up home in our intestines.\n\nOur second group tried a traditional fermented drink called kefir which contains an array of bacteria and yeast.\n\nOur third group was asked to eat foods rich in a prebiotic fibre called inulin. Prebiotics are substances that feed the good bacteria already living in our guts, and inulin can be found in Jerusalem artichokes, chicory root, onions, garlic and leeks.\n\nWhat we found at the end of our study was fascinating. The group consuming the probiotic drink saw a small change in one bacteria type known to be good for weight management, bacteria called Lachnospiraceae. However this change wasn't statistically significant.\n\nBut our other two groups did see significant changes. The group eating foods rich in prebiotic fibre saw a rise in a type of bacteria known to be good for general gut health - something that is in line with other studies.\n\nOur biggest change, however, was in the kefir group.\n\nThese volunteers saw a rise in a family of bacteria called Lactobacillales. We know that some of these bacteria are good for our overall gut health and that they can help conditions such as traveller's diarrhoea and lactose intolerance.\n\n\"Fermented foods by their very nature are quite acidic and so these microbes have had to evolve in order to cope with these sorts of environments so they're naturally able to survive in acid,\" says Dr Paul Cotter from the Teagasc Research Centre in Cork, who helped with our analysis. \"That helps them to get through the stomach in order to then have an influence in the intestine below.\"\n\nSo we decided to investigate fermented foods and drinks further - we wanted to know what you should look for when selecting these products to get the best bacteria boost.\n\nWith the help of Dr Cotter and scientists at the University of Roehampton, we selected a range of homemade and shop-bought fermented foods and drinks and sent them off to the lab for testing.\n\nTrust Me, I'm A Doctor is on BBC Two at 20:00 GMT, Wednesday 1 February - catch up on BBC iPlayer\n\nThere were some striking differences between the products. While the homemade foods and products made by traditional methods contained a wide array of bacteria, some of the commercial products contained barely any.\n\n\"Typically, with commercial varieties, they would be subjected to pasteurisation after preparation to ensure their safety and extend their shelf life, which can kill off the bacteria, whereas that wouldn't be the case for the homemade varieties,\" says Dr Cotter.\n\nSo if you want to try fermented foods to improve your gut health it's best to look for products that have been made using traditional preparation and processing, or make them yourself, to ensure you're getting the healthy bacteria you're after.\n\nJoin the conversation on our Facebook page", "Molly Forbes is a sociable person - but became very lonely when she had a baby\n\nA commission started by murdered MP Jo Cox is investigating loneliness in the UK, which it says is an epidemic affecting people of all ages and backgrounds. Here, two young women share their stories.\n\nIn 2010 Molly Forbes had her first child, Freya. But after the birth she was confronted with something she had not prepared for: loneliness.\n\nA \"sociable person\", Molly - then 26 - was one of the first of her friends to have a baby. Her husband was out at work all day and she did not have any close family living by.\n\n\"The loneliness of being a new mother was a real surprise for me. It just hit me,\" she said.\n\n\"You're suddenly at home with a baby. You feel safer there so you stay home - but it makes you more isolated.\n\n\"When you go out, you want to be seen to be doing a good job and being happy. If you admit you're lonely, you might be labelled as not coping.\"\n\n\"You want to be seen to be doing a good job and being happy\", says Molly\n\nThe commission - planned by West Yorkshire Labour MP Jo Cox before she was murdered last June - says a fifth of the population privately admit they are \"always or often lonely\".\n\nBut two-thirds of those would never confess to having a problem in public, it says\n\nMolly, from Devon, said that rather than being honest about how she was feeling, she had \"put a brave face on - and that can make you more lonely\".\n\n\"Looking back, I was definitely feeling quite anxious.\n\n\"I was worrying about money, about whether I'd go back to my job - and when you don't have someone to talk to, these worries can spiral out of control.\"\n\nMolly had lots of friends, but found she couldn't talk to them about her post-baby concerns. That was when she started writing a blog.\n\n\"I made connections with other mums online, and from there I started meeting up with people and found friends that way.\"\n\nThe commission says three-quarters of people who are lonely on a regular basis do not know where to turn for support. It is looking for practical solutions to beat loneliness.\n\n\"Spend time making friends with other pregnant women, so you have a support network ready to go once the baby is born.\"\n\nFind other mums to provide a support network, Molly says\n\nHave you experienced loneliness? Do you have advice or tips about how to deal with feeling isolated? Email your comments to haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk\n\nFor Michelle Ornstein, who has a learning disability, there is nothing worse than being alone.\n\n\"When I'm here on my own, I feel really down and anxious,\" she said.\n\nThe 22-year-old, from Essex, said her anxieties had got worse in recent years, leading her to leave college.\n\nThere had been an incident on the school bus, where Michelle was wearing her hearing aids close to a group of people being loud.\n\n\"I just burst out in tears on the bus. I got myself so worked up and thought this is it. I can't do this,\" Michelle said.\n\n\"At one point I couldn't be left on my own at all, I wouldn't let [my parents] out the door.\"\n\nSpending time out of the house and with friends can be key to countering loneliness but, Rossanna Trudgian, Head of Campaigns at Mencap explained, almost a third of youngsters with learning disabilities spend less than an hour outside their homes on a Saturday.\n\n\"Social isolation and fear of negative attitudes can remain huge barriers towards feeling welcome and included in society,\" she said.\n\nBut things have got better for Michelle. Talking things through with her family has helped - and this week, she starts a new course.\n\nShe said: \"If you keep it to yourself, you will bottle it up and build up more anxieties and won't go out.\"\n\nMichelle is by no means the only young person experiencing loneliness.\n\nThe Mix is an online support service for under-25s. This year, it has seen a 26% rise in the numbers of those accessing their loneliness support service, compared to the previous year.\n\nJo Cox had begun setting up the commission before she was murdered in her constituency last June\n\nCommunity manager James Pickstone said loneliness was \"an underlying issue\" shared by many people who visit the service, even though it was \"rarely discussed openly\".\n\nHe said: \"We see a lot of young people feeling isolated at college and university, living away from home and not having the social life expected and associated with the university experience.\"\n\nAnd younger people can experience loneliness differently from how older adults do.\n\nProf Graham Davey from the University of Sussex explained: \"Younger people appear to be focused on friendship networks - the number of relationships they have - and experience loneliness as a function of the fewer friends they have.\"\n\nAnd in today's society, friendship networks are represented nowhere more obviously than on social media.\n\n\"Whether you perceive yourself to be a successful user of social media is likely to have an impact on feelings of loneliness, anxiety, paranoia and mental health generally,\" the psychology professor said.\n\nBut you won't find too many status updates about feeling lonely because ultimately - Prof Davey argued - loneliness has a stigma and \"few people want to admit they're lonely\".\n• None Test : Am I lonelier than I think?\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "From left to right: Khaled Belkacemi, Azzedine Soufiane, and Aboubaker Thabti\n\nCanadian police have charged a 27-year-old man over the deadly shooting at a Quebec City mosque on Sunday. The six worshippers who died were immigrants who had moved to Quebec to seek a better life.\n\nMr Belkacemi studied chemical engineering in his native Algeria before moving to Canada in the 1980s. He taught food science at Quebec's Laval University and was married to a fellow professor there. His wife was also at the mosque when the shooting occurred during Sunday prayers, but she escaped unhurt.\n\nThe head of Laval's food science department, Jean-Claude Dufour, described Mr Belkacemi as \"an extraordinary person\" who was \"always smiling\" and \"an outstanding teacher who loved his graduate students\".\n\nMr Soufiane was born in Morocco and settled in Quebec three decades ago. He ran a halal shop in the suburb of Sainte-Foy and is described as a important member of the local Muslim community.\n\nKarim Elabed, an imam in nearby Levis, said Mr Soufiane had helped many newcomers in Quebec City. \"When I arrived here eight years ago, [his shop] was the first place I learned about and pretty much all of Quebec's Muslims did their groceries there,\" Mr Elabed told Canadian media.\n\nAbdelkrim Hassane studied information technology in Algeria before emigrating. A colleague quoted by the Globe and Mail newspaper said Mr Hassane had lived in Paris and Montreal before settling in Quebec City.\n\nMr Hassane worked as a programmer for the Quebec government. The colleague, Abderrezak Redouane, said he was \"a very peaceful, sensitive man\". He had three children.\n\nThe two men, described as brothers by Radio Canada, were born in Guinea in West Africa. They are described as IT workers. Mamadou Tanou was a father of two and was reportedly sending money home to Guinea.\n\n\"Tanou lost his father three years ago, so it became his responsibility to support not only his family here but also his family in Africa. Now that's all been cut,\" a family friend told the Globe and Mail.\n\nIbrahima worked for the province's health-insurance agency and had four children.\n\nBorn in Tunisia, Mr Thabti is reported to have moved to Quebec a decade ago and worked in a pharmacy. He was married with two young children, his brother said on Facebook.\n\nA friend, Abder Dhakkar, told the Globe and Mail: \"He's so kind; everyone loves him - everyone.\"", "On 28 January, President Trump signed an executive order, which, among other things, indefinitely bans Syrian refugee arrivals as well as all other refugees for 120 days.\n\nHe also promised \"to prioritise refugee claims made by individuals on the basis of religious-based persecution, provided that the religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual's country of nationality\".\n\nThe executive order imposed a cap of 50,000 on the number of refugees for 2017, less than half of the 110,000 admissions that President Obama planned.\n\nHas the number of refugees in the US and, in particular, those from Syria, risen in recent years?\n\nThe number of refugees admitted to the US over the past 10 years has fluctuated, from the low of 48,282 in 2007, to the high of 84,995 in 2016.\n\nIn the first three months of the new financial year, a total of 25,671 were admitted.\n\nIn 2016, of the nearly 85,000 refugees admitted, the highest number - 16,370 - arrived from DR Congo, followed by Syria with 12,587 and Myanmar (Burma) with 12,347.\n\nThe number of Muslim refugees who entered the US in 2016 was 38,901, making up almost half (46%) of the total, according to this Pew Research report from October 2016.\n\nThe report says this is the highest number of Muslim refugees in any year since data on self-reported religious affiliations first became publicly available in 2002.\n\nBetween 2011, when the conflict in Syria started, and 2015, the US admitted a relatively small number of Syrian refugees - a total of 201. In 2015 the number increased to 1,682 and in 2016 to 12,587, bringing the total, since the start of the war, to 14,470.\n\nBy comparison, the United Nations High Commission for Refugees' latest figures show that the highest number of refugees from Syria since the start of the crisis was taken by Turkey with 2.9 million, Lebanon with one million and Jordan, which took 655,000.\n\nIn the same period, the EU took 844,000 Syrians, according to Eurostat, with more than half of the total admitted by Germany.\n\nThere have been big differences in the number of refugees arriving year-on-year in the US over the past four decades: from the peak of 207,116 in 1980 to the lowest of 27,131 in 2002.\n\nIn total, since 1975, the US has admitted about 3.4 million refugees. Its current population is about 323 million.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Judge Gorsuch spoke of his \"most solemn assignment\"\n\nPresident Trump's Supreme Court pick, Judge Neil Gorsuch, is the youngest such nominee in a quarter of a century.\n\nThe 49-year-old Colorado native, whose legal pedigree includes Harvard and Oxford, would succeed the late Justice Antonin Scalia if confirmed.\n\nHe is favoured by many conservatives who consider him to espouse a similarly strict interpretation of law as Scalia.\n\nJudge Gorsuch was first nominated to the 10th US Circuit Court of Appeals by former President George W Bush in 2006.\n\nJudge Gorsuch began his law career clerking for Supreme Court Justices Byron White and Anthony Kennedy, the latter of whom he could now serve alongside.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. President Donald Trump: \"Was that a surprise? Was it?\"\n\nHe worked in a private law practice in Washington for a decade and served as the principal deputy assistant associate attorney general at the Justice Department under the Bush administration.\n\nJudge Gorsuch graduated from Columbia University and Harvard Law School, where former President Barack Obama was a classmate, and earned a doctorate in legal philosophy at Oxford University.\n\nPerhaps it was during his time in England that he accumulated what his former law partner, Mark Hansen, has said was \"an inexhaustible store\" of Winston Churchill quotes.\n\nJudge Gorsuch - who reportedly likes to fly-fish and hunt - lives in Boulder with his wife Louise and two daughters, where he is also an adjunct law professor at the University of Colorado.\n\nIf confirmed by the Senate, he would become the only Protestant on the current bench. The other justices are Jewish and Catholic.\n\nHis family is well-connected in Republican establishment politics.\n\nHis mother, Anne Gorsuch Burford, was the first female director of the Environmental Protection Agency during the Reagan administration.\n\nHe is known for his clear and concise writing style, navigating the most complex legal issues as deftly as the double-black diamond slopes on which he is reputedly an expert skier in the snow-capped mountain state he calls home.\n\nHe argued against euthanasia in his 2006 book The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia.\n\n\"All human beings are intrinsically valuable and the intentional taking of human life by private persons is always wrong,\" he wrote.\n\nIn a 2005 article in the National Review, Judge Gorsuch argued that \"American liberals have become addicted to the courtroom\".\n\nHe said they keep \"relying on judges and lawyers rather than elected leaders and the ballot box, as the primary means of effecting their social agenda\".\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The Supreme Court has been without a full bench for almost a full year.\n\nJudge Gorsuch has never ruled on abortion, and he is not expected to call into question high-profile rulings on that issue or gay marriage.\n\nHis conservative outlook cements Mr Trump's campaign promise to nominate a judge \"in the mould\" of Justice Scalia, restoring the nine-seat high court's 5-4 conservative majority.\n\nMuch like the late Scalia, the Ivy-League educated judge is known to support textualism, or the interpretation of law according to its plain text.\n\nHe also maintains a strict interpretation of the US Constitution, or how it was originally understood by the Founding Fathers.\n\nWhile sitting on the bench of the 10th Circuit, Judge Gorsuch sided with groups that successfully challenged the Obama administration's requirements for employers to provide health insurance that includes contraception in the Hobby Lobby Stores v Sebelius case.\n\nJustice Scalia (front row, second from left) was one of five justices that made up the conservative majority on the court\n\nJudge Gorsuch has also expressed concern about \"executive overreach\", a criticism that was often directed at the Obama administration's use of presidential orders to overcome congressional gridlock.\n\nHe has sharply questioned a landmark Supreme Court ruling determining that courts should defer to government agencies when it comes to interpretations of ambiguous federal laws.\n\nConservatives blame the 1984 decision involving the Chevron oil company for handing too much power to the regulatory state.\n\nIn an August 2016 concurring opinion, Judge Gorsuch wrote that \"executive bureaucracies [were being allowed] to swallow huge amounts of core judicial and legislative power and concentrate federal power in a way that seems more than a little difficult to square with the Constitution of the framers' design\".\n\nIn a 2013 case, he upheld a lower court's ruling that a police officer was protected under qualified-immunity law after he used a stun gun on a 22-year-old student, who died from the incident.", "A team from Manchester University is travelling to Antarctica to search for rare iron meteorites they believed may be buried in the ice.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChelsea had to settle for a draw against a much-improved Liverpool at Anfield after Diego Costa's late penalty was saved by Simon Mignolet - but still extended their lead at top of the Premier League to nine points.\n\nLiverpool keeper Mignolet made amends for his first-half embarrassment when he had been caught off guard by David Luiz's superb free-kick from 25 yards.\n\nGeorginio Wijnaldum's close-range header 11 minutes after the break gave Liverpool a draw they fully deserved, ending a run of three successive home losses, two of which knocked them out of the EFL Cup and the FA Cup.\n\nHowever, it could have been much better for Chelsea and worse for Liverpool when Costa went to ground under challenge from Joel Matip 14 minutes from the end. Referee Mark Clattenburg pointed to the spot but Mignolet dived low to his right to save the Spain striker's spot-kick.\n\nRoberto Firmino wasted Liverpool's two best chances, shooting high over an open goal and heading straight at Thibaut Courtois in the closing seconds.\n• None Costa 'not the nicest guy', says Klopp\n• None Reaction from Anfield and the rest of Tuesday's Premier League games\n• None Football Daily podcast: Reaction to the draw at Anfield & the rest of the Premier League action\n\nChelsea manager Antonio Conte disguised his disappointment about Costa's late penalty being saved by Mignolet with his reaction at the final whistle.\n\nThe Italian knew Chelsea would be facing a wounded Liverpool after those three damaging defeats - and he clearly saw this as one point won rather than two lost as he went straight to the visiting fans and pumped his fists in delight.\n\nThe Blues were not at their best and yet showed the resilience and compactness of old as they were dominated in possession but kept Liverpool at arm's length for most of the game.\n\nAnd in N'Golo Kante they had the game's outstanding performer, perpetual motion and first to every loose ball in midfield and at both ends of the pitch.\n\nCosta had an off night, including squandering the penalty, but Chelsea found answers elsewhere and carried a threat of their own after Pedro came on as a late substitute.\n\nChelsea may only return to London with a point, but results elsewhere for Arsenal and Tottenham made this a good night for the Premier League leaders.\n\nLiverpool manager Jurgen Klopp had endured his worst week since arriving at Anfield in October 2015 with the Premier League defeat by Swansea City, the EFL Cup semi-final loss to Southampton and the FA Cup fourth-round humiliation against Championship side Wolves.\n\nThe German, however, has proved his mettle against his closest Premier League rivals - and once again he emerged unbeaten to maintain his excellent record against Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City, Manchester United and Tottenham since his appointment.\n\nThis draw means that he has played 15 league games against that group, winning six, drawing eight and losing only one, a home defeat by United last season.\n\nLiverpool's hopes of a first title since 1990 are receding as they are 10 points behind Chelsea - but there was plenty for Klopp to be happy about.\n\nThis was more like the high-intensity Liverpool of the early months of the season, although their play lacks subtlety at times as they seem to get carried away by the emotion of the crowd, as well as their animated manager in his technical area.\n\nAnd further good news was the sight of leading scorer Sadio Mane, who has nine league goals, coming on as a substitute after his return from Africa Cup Of Nations duty with Senegal.\n\n'Outstanding in attitude' - what they said\n\nLiverpool manager Jurgen Klopp: \"I said before the game - and people didn't like it - but this wonderful, powerful club needs to keep its nerves.\n\n\"Not everything is bad because we lose. This team is outstanding in attitude so let's do the best we can and see where we end up at the end of the season. The results tonight were good for us, but we must continue to fight.\"\n\nChelsea manager Antonio Conte: \"It was a very tough game. Both teams tried to play with intensity. I'm pleased. We saw a different game to when we played Liverpool and lost at home.\n\n\"It's pity Diego Costa missed the penalty because he played very well. We had different chances to score goals, but we must be happy with the result and the performance because it is not easy to play away at Liverpool.\"\n\nLuiz's first Chelsea goal for almost four years - the stats\n• None David Luiz scored his first Premier League goal for Chelsea since April 2013 - 1,386 days ago.\n• None All 14 of Georginio Wijnaldum's Premier League goals have been scored in home games (11 for Newcastle, three for Liverpool).\n• None Simon Mignolet has saved six of the 14 penalties he has faced in the Premier League as a Liverpool player, more than any other keeper for the Reds.\n• None Chelsea are unbeaten in their past five Premier League trips to Anfield, last losing there in May 2012.\n• None The Reds have gone five games without a home win in all competitions for the first time since October 2012.\n\nChelsea have another huge Premier League game coming up - they entertain Arsenal (12:30 GMT) in the early kick-off on Saturday. On the same day, Liverpool are away to struggling Hull City (15:00).\n\nHow the papers saw it\n• None Attempt blocked. Marcos Alonso (Chelsea) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Pedro.\n• None Attempt saved. Roberto Firmino (Liverpool) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Sadio Mané.\n• None Attempt missed. Pedro (Chelsea) left footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right. Assisted by N'Golo Kanté.\n• None Cesc Fàbregas (Chelsea) wins a free kick on the right wing. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "In Australia, campaigners are calling for an end to the use of shark nets at beaches, because they are killing dolphins and turtles.\n\nMore have been installed after a recent spate of shark attacks on the east coast - but some nets have been cut deliberately by those who oppose them.", "Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho walks out of his BBC interview after the 0-0 draw with Hull City, telling reporter Martin Fisher: \"If you don't know football, you shouldn't have a microphone.\"\n\nREAD MORE: Hull hold Manchester United at Old Trafford", "NHS staff using Google's search engine has triggered one of its cybersecurity defences.\n\nNHS Digital confirmed so many NHS staff use the search engine that it had started asking them to take a quiz to verify they were \"not a robot\".\n\nNews site the Register reported one NHS Trust had told staff to \"use Bing\" instead.\n\nGoogle indicated its systems were designed to spot unusual traffic and were working as intended.\n\nDetecting suspicious traffic from one network can help defeat potential cyber-attacks, such as attempts to try to overwhelm a website.\n\nThe BBC understands Google is not deliberately singling out NHS traffic.\n\nA Google spokeswoman said: \"Our systems are simply checking that searches are being carried out by humans and not by robots in order to keep web users safe. Once a user has filled out the Captcha [security check], they can continue to use Google as normal.\"\n\nThe NHS is one of the biggest employers in the world, with more than a million members of staff.\n\nAn email sent by an NHS system administrator suggested the number of staff using the search engine was \"causing Google to think it is suffering from a cyber-attack\".\n\nNHS Digital told the Register: \"We are aware of the current issue concerning NHS IP addresses which occasionally results in users being directed to a simple verification form when accessing Google.\n\n\"We are currently in discussion with Google as to how we can help them to resolve the issue.\"\n\nNHS Digital was unable to suggest what NHS staff may be searching for using Google.", "The entrepreneurs will step down at the end of the current series on BBC Two, with their last episode on 26 February.\n\nNick Jenkins, who founded greeting card website Moonpig.com, and Sarah Willingham, who made her money investing in restaurant chain The Bombay Bicycle Club, joined the show in 2015 with Touker Suleyman.\n\nTouker, Deborah Meaden and Peter Jones are understood to be staying.\n\nSarah Willingham, 43, said: \"Being part of Dragons' Den has been one of the best experiences of my life.\n\n\"At the end of last year my husband Michael and I decided to finally put into action our long-held dream to spend a year travelling the world with our young children.\n\nPeter Jones is still the only original entrepreneur to be taking part in the show\n\n\"Sadly this means that I've had to step down from my role as a Dragon.\n\n\"It's been a great privilege to be part of such a fantastic show and I wish everyone on it continued success.\"\n\nNick Jenkins, 49, said: \"I have thoroughly enjoyed making Dragons' Den but I want to focus more on my portfolio of educational technology businesses and that would make it difficult to take on any more investments from the Den.\"\n\nPatrick Holland, channel editor at BBC Two, said: \"Nick and Sarah have both been terrific Dragons, using their nous and insight to make some great investments and produce some compelling entertainment in the process.\n\n\"As they step down from the show I want to thank them and wish them all the very best for the future.\"\n\nSarah Willingham's husband paid tribute to his wife in an Instagram post.\n\nDuring her time on the show, Sarah Willingham invested in a craft gin subscription business, a coconut product firm (with Nick Jenkins), a beauty product subscription service (with Nick Jenkins), a coffee-based body scrub, science-themed children's birthday parties and workshops (with Nick Jenkins) and a skin foundation for vitiligo sufferers.\n\nNick Jenkins put money into a home appliances retailer (with Deborah Meaden), a magnetic dog and equine lead connector, an online double-dating app, freshly cooked baked beans, \"slap-on\" wrist watches and a gourmet pork scratching snack company.\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "Germany's Baltic coastline can be a bleak place out of season. In the small fishing village of Freest, boats creak idly against their moorings. A lone fisherman, stark in his yellow overalls, stands on deck, scraping the scales from yesterday's catch.\n\nIt feels a long way from Berlin. And inside the quayside smokehouse, as she carefully threads sprats on to long metal skewers, fish factory worker Ines tells me she feels forgotten by Angela Merkel's government.\n\n\"They just look after the big cities,\" she says. \"But these small communities up here - no. Nothing is being done for us. Nothing gets through to us.\"\n\nIt can be hard to make a good living here, especially in the winter. The workers in the smokehouse worry about unemployment. This is not a rich community and they feel it's time for political change.\n\nFertile ground then for Germany's right wing, anti-Islam party Alternative for Germany (AfD). A regular poll for the national broadcaster suggests it would take 15% of the vote if the general election was held tomorrow.\n\nInes. who works in a smoked fish factory, says she feels forgotten by the German government\n\nThe party may well complicate coalition building come the autumn. Angela Merkel's CDU party still leads those polls at 37%, but her junior coalition partner, the SPD, is at 20%\n\nRoland delivers another load of slippery, silvery fish to the smokehouse. He pushes his woolly cap off and tells me AfD will be getting his vote.\n\n\"The other parties avoid the real problems,\" he explains. \"Merkel just sticks to her views, even though she sees what she's got us into - like the terror attacks. If she hadn't brought those people into the country,\" he insists, \"the victims of the Berlin Christmas markets would still be alive.\"\n\nFreest is in the northern state of Mecklenburg Vorpommern. It is also home to Mrs Merkel's constituency. Last year AfD beat her Conservatives into third place in the regional election and now, they want to compound that humiliation by putting up a candidate - Leif-Erik Holm - directly against her.\n\nMr Holm, a smartly-dressed former radio presenter who believes a large proportion of Europe's Muslims hold radical views and want to establish a global caliphate, is, in reality, unlikely to take the chancellor's seat. But it's not impossible.\n\n\"We have a big problem with radical Islam and we need to talk about it,\" he tells me. \"It's been taboo in Germany. The AfD broke that taboo and thank heavens people now talk about their fears. Just look at who's carrying out terror attacks in Europe, they're all extreme Islamists.\"\n\n\"We don't create fear. We talk about it,\" says the AfD's Leif-Erik Holm\n\nIt is AfD's vociferous anti-Islam, anti-migrant position which, critics argue, is key to its success. Certainly, support for what originally began as an anti-euro party surged during the latter part of the refugee crisis, as party leaders began to campaign against Mrs Merkel's asylum policy.\n\nBut Mr Holm rejects the notion that AfD is a one issue party, seeking political gain by whipping up fear of Muslim immigrants.\n\n\"During the regional election hustings we spoke with people in small towns and villages and realised fear was the most prominent theme. We don't create fear, we talk about it - the everyday fear that people have of terrorism, of uncontrolled mass immigration.\n\n\"That's what we work with as politicians. We make politics for the people.\"\n\nGeert Wilders, Frauke Petry and Marine Le Pen recently shared a platform in the German city of Koblenz\n\nAfD's anti-EU rhetoric is also growing louder as it seeks to emulate the success of the giants of Europe's far right.\n\nIt recently hosted a rally of the right in the German city of Koblenz, sharing a stage - and a platform - with the French presidential candidate Marine le Pen and Geert Wilders, whose Freedom Party leads the polls ahead of the Dutch general election.\n\nBoth Ms Le Pen and Mr Wilders have pledged referendums on EU membership. AfD's manifesto now promises to pull Germany out if significant structural reforms are not implemented.\n\nDuring the rally (from which the mainstream German broadcasters and press were banned) its leader Frauke Petry likened the EU to Nazi Germany or the Soviet Union and joined Ms Le Pen and Mr Wilders in their calls for a revolution in Europe.\n\nThis was a show of solidarity, a display of unity from Europe's right. Emboldened by Brexit and Donald Trump's victory, the leaders are keen to focus on the threefold message which unites them; a visceral dislike of Islam, a loathing of Mrs Merkel's refugee policy and that contempt for the EU.\n\nAnd they believe 2017 will be their year.\n\nAngela Merkel is to stand for a fourth term as chancellor\n\nIt's hard to say whether they create, reflect or exploit social division, but an interesting recent German survey gave a fascinating glimpse into what might motivate AfD supporters.\n\nThe poll found, for example, that despite last year's terror attack in Berlin, 73% of those polled felt safe in Germany. But when the researchers asked AfD supporters, they found that only 34% felt secure.\n\nSimilarly, when asked whether life is better or worse than 50 years ago, 17% of Germans said it is worse, but this figure rises to 40% among AfD supporters.\n\nIn 2017, Europe's real election battles will take place in communities like Freest, where people feel forgotten by their national governments and left behind by establishment parties. If Europe's leaders want to halt the rise of the right, they must reconnect with those voters and regain their trust.\n\nBecause in this windblown harbour on the German coast, those who feel left out in the cold are warming to what Europe's right already refer to (prematurely perhaps) as the \"patriotic spring\".\n\nThis article is part of the 100 Days season, presented by Katty Kay and Christian Fraser, Monday - Thursday at 19:00 GMT on BBC News Channel, BBC Four and BBC World News.\n• None How do Germans see another Merkel term?", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nNon-league Sutton United's FA Cup fifth-round tie at home to Arsenal will be broadcast live on BBC One.\n\nSutton, the lowest-ranked team left in the competition, beat Championship side Leeds United in round four.\n\nThe game with Arsenal will take place at Gander Green Lane on Monday, 20 February, with kick-off at 19:55 GMT.\n\nBBC One will also have live coverage of the London derby between Fulham and Tottenham at Craven Cottage on Sunday, 19 February (kick-off 14:00).\n\nSouth London side Sutton are 16th in the National League and have played seven games to get this far in the competition, including wins over league sides Cheltenham Town, AFC Wimbledon and Leeds.\n\nArsenal, 12-time FA Cup winners and currently third in the Premier League, are 104 places above them in the English football pyramid.\n• None Sutton chairman says Arsenal tie will not be switched\n• None What can Arsenal expect when they visit Sutton?\n\nSunday 19 February: Fulham v Tottenham - 14.00, BBC One; Blackburn Rovers v Manchester United - 16.15, BT Sport (followed by sixth-round draw)\n\nOther BBC coverage across the weekend includes Football Focus on the road, FA Cup Final Score, fifth-round highlights programmes on Saturday and Sunday night, and the sixth-round draw on Sunday evening.\n\nThere will also be comprehensive coverage of all the weekend's fixtures across BBC Radio 5 live and the BBC Sport website.\n\nBBC TV coverage of the FA Cup this season has so far reached 22 million viewers, with a peak of 5.3 million tuning in to watch Manchester United beat Wigan in round four.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nNewcastle United midfielder Cheick Tiote has joined Chinese second-tier side Beijing Enterprises Group FC for an undisclosed fee.\n\nThe Ivorian made 139 league appearances for Newcastle after joining them in August 2010 from Dutch side FC Twente.\n\nThe 30-year-old featured just three times for the Magpies this season.\n\nTiote was also part of the Ivory Coast squad that won the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations.\n\nFind all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.", "Jodie Abacus: \"We need to be a little bit more empathetic\"\n\nUp-and-coming soul star Jodie Abacus has just released a powerful song about the refugee crisis. He performed it live for the first time on Jo Whiley's BBC Radio 2 show on Wednesday night - but ahead of the session, he sat down with BBC News to talk about the story behind the song (and Elton John's helicopter).\n\nPop is getting a long overdue dose of politics.\n\nLady Gaga issued a subtle rebuke to Donald Trump at Sunday's Super Bowl, singing the protest anthem This Land Is Your Land and quoting from the pledge of allegiance.\n\nPop trio Muna were more explicit. Appearing on Jimmy Kimmel's chat show this week, they added a new verse to their single I Know A Place. The final line? \"He's not my leader even if he's my president.\"\n\nIn the UK, Stormzy prompted an overhaul of the Brits after pointing out the ceremony's lack of diversity in his song One Take Freestyle.\n\nCalled Keep Your Head Down, it tells the story of a family fleeing a war zone, only to be met with fear and suspicion in the country they had thought would provide safe harbour.\n\n\"I focused on Syria when I was writing,\" he says, \"but there's a load of places in the world that are going through the same thing.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Jodie Abacus performs Keep Your Head Down at the BBC's Maida Vale studios.\n\nWhy did you decide to write about the refugee crisis?\n\nI was in LA for a session, and I saw something about refugees on the television in my hotel. That's what triggered it.\n\nI wanted to give a perspective of what it would be like to go from one country to another. I can only imagine it's a terrifying feeling. We need to be a little bit more empathetic.\n\nHow did you write the lyrics?\n\nThe beat of the song triggered the emotion in me. The first lyric was the chorus: \"We're moving on, but the road is long / Don't get your hopes up, you'd better keep your head down.\"\n\nDon't get your hopes up is the father saying \"we're running out of chances\", and keep your head down was like, \"pray that we get out of this\".\n\nI'd assumed it was about having to keep a low profile in a new country.\n\nIt's both. There's a lot of double meanings. It's also about keeping your head down to escape the bullets.\n\nThe thing is, you do all this to save your life - then you're not accepted by the country where you thought you'd be safe. People hate you or they think you're going to steal their jobs or take their benefits. But there's a lot of people running away just to save their own souls.\n\nThe singer has been championed by artists including Elton John, Usher and The Roots\n\nYour musical references are very eclectic. I hear Stevie Wonder, ELO, Steely Dan, even Hall & Oates in there. How did you get into music?\n\nI was born in south-east London in Lewisham Hospital. My dad used to be a DJ. He'd carry around these big speakers and play reggae, soul, funk. I was just surrounded by music.\n\nWhat was the first time you performed in public?\n\nI gave a foyer concert at college. What I'd done was reproduce the Jacksons' Show You the Way to Go on a little computer, and I'd written my own lyrics to it.\n\nNo one really knew I could sing - I wasn't one of the stand-out guys in college - but I thought, \"OK, I'll give it a go\".\n\nAnd all of a sudden there were people watching from on top, people crowding round the sides. At the end they were all like, \"Oh my gosh, he can sing!\".\n\nIt sounds like a scene from a movie.\n\nIt was actually quite nuts.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Jodie Abacus performs She's In Love with the Weekend on the BBC Introducing stage at Glastonbury 2016\n\nWhat inspired you to write your own music?\n\nThere was a lot of trauma. My mum and dad divorced and I missed out on a lot of things because I had to go to court. Being creative took my mind off what was going on.\n\nSo there was a custody battle?\n\nThey were fighting over me and my younger brother and it got nasty. It was harsh. Not a lot of people, not even your parents, understand how the kids suffer, mentally.\n\nWhen you're that age you trust your parents and suddenly this black hole of chaos opens up. But that's what built my character, in terms of deciding I wanted to do music.\n\nBut you studied acting at college, is that right?\n\nYeah, I got my diploma in performing arts and I loved it.\n\nWhy did you decide to pursue music instead?\n\nI literally decided on a notepad. I drew two big arrows in blue biro, one for music and one for acting. I wrote little notes about what I wanted to do... and I wanted to make great music. I didn't know any notes, I didn't know anything. I was just going with my feelings.\n\nYou're in your mid-30s now, so it certainly hasn't been an overnight success. What happened?\n\nYou leave college, you get a job, you get another job - but all that time you're taking the money you earn and you're investing it in the thing you want to do. There's always times where you think it's going to be your turn, but it just doesn't happen.\n\nHow close did you come to giving up?\n\nYou get tormented a lot. You get tormented to the point of thinking, \"why do I keep going?\" - but then you realign yourself.\n\nThere's nothing worse than hearing an old person say, \"Oh, I wish I'd done this or that\". When I'm in my rocking chair eating apple crumble and custard, I want to say I had no regrets.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Jodie Abacus performs I'll Be That Friend live on the BBC Introducing stage at Glastonbury 2016\n\nYour big breakthrough was a song called I'll Be That Friend. How did that song arrive?\n\nThree years ago, I came down with pneumonia and almost died. I was bedridden for about three months and, in the middle of all that, I finished with my ex. She moved on to another dude, like, really quickly. I saw pictures of them kissing and, even though I'd broken up with her, it was still a shock.\n\nAt the end of that year, I needed to be comforted. I needed someone to say, \"it's going to be alright'. It didn't matter who it was. I just needed someone. I'd never felt that way before, but I needed a hug.\n\nThose feelings all came out in the song. As I was writing it, I was crying and singing at the same time.\n\nAnd yet that song, like a lot of your music, is very positive. Was that something you felt pop was lacking?\n\nYeah. I feel there's a fun element missing. Everyone's thinking about the formula of how to write a hit song. I don't. Music is such a spiritual thing, it has to move you.\n\nYou've been getting a lot of support from Elton John on his Beats 1 show. What did you make of that?\n\nThat's incredible. He's one of my heroes. He's given me a couple of proper big shout-outs.\n\nAnd you've covered Bennie and the Jets in concert.\n\nThat was nuts. He was meant to show up - but he didn't because the cloud level was low and his helicopter couldn't land.\n\nSo is there an album on the way?\n\nYeah, it's called Take This and Grow Flowers - because I'm using every little traumatic memory as fertiliser, and then making it grow. All of these things, all of these problems I've had... every memory is like a seed.\n\nWhat's the best thing about success?\n\nI love travelling. I love the adventure. There's not a day where I'm not thankful. I'm happy that Radio 2 have supported me as much as they have done.\n\nHave you become a connoisseur of hotel rooms?\n\nI'm not that fussy. I get annoyed when there's no kettle. It's not just for tea - I use it to steam clothes, and it's useful for steaming your voice as well.\n\nBut do you know what? I always get paranoid that someone's done a wee in it. I always wash it out, just in case.\n\nJodie Abacus's single Keep Your Head Down is out now. His debut album follows later this year.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "So perhaps people will pay for quality journalism after all.\n\nSubscriptions to leading British current affairs magazines, due to be published tomorrow, show a combination of Brexit, Trump and other cultural factors has led to an increase in the number of people handing over money to read smart stuff.\n\nAdvance sighting of circulation figures for two leading publications - The Spectator and New Statesman - shows a clear pattern.\n\nFor weekly or fortnightly publications that don't do general news, there is a growing willingness to pay for high-quality journalism - whether written, in the magazines, or video and audio online.\n\nThis time last year, The Spectator had combined print and digital sales of 62,718, passing a record set in 2006. Of that, 55,165 were print (though print subscribers get access to digital content) and 7,553 were digital only.\n\nNow the combined print and digital figure is 67,120. Of this, 59,923 are print sales, and 7,197 are digital subscribers. In the second half of last year alone, print circulation rose by 3,270.\n\nI pointed out earlier this week Donald Trump has been a boon to the finances of much of the mainstream media - particularly in America. In Britain, Brexit was a more significant factor.\n\nSpectator editor Fraser Nelson told me: \"Brexit seems to have been the catalyst. News events since then (Trump, etc) have led to a lot more interest in high-quality news and analysis.\"\n\nOther cultural factors are at play too. This is what really interests me - and Nelson: \"The market has changed. There's a lot more acceptance of the idea of paying for films, music and content in general.\n\n\"Netflix has helped pave the way for a change in culture. People who would not be seen dead paying for content five years ago are now in the habit of paying for Amazon Prime, music, the odd film and a subscription or two.\n\n\"We hear about Trump helping NY Times subscriptions, but I think it's more than that. The market has just turned, and is now welcoming to titles whose brand and quality is strong enough.\"\n\nThere is another factor: \"Weirdly, the phenomenon of fake news has also helped emphasise the importance of paying for edited content. Where you get your news from has never mattered more.\"\n\nNor is this phenomenon restricted to just one part of the political spectrum. People are paying for high-quality stuff regardless of their leaning.\n\nIn his time as editor, Jason Cowley has made the New Statesman much less slavishly left-wing, picking fights with some figures on the left, such as Ed Miliband.\n\nI would say that the Statesman is now a magazine of scepticism rather than leftism. Of course, some of the smartest scepticism originates on the left: Bertrand Russell's Sceptical Essays is among the most important collections published in the 20th Century.\n\nCombined circulation is now 34,025 - of which 32,098 are print and 1,927 are digital - compared with a combined figure of 32,300 this time last year, and 24,000 in 2010. This is a 35-year high.\n\nIn 2016 newstatesman.com hit 4 million monthly unique visitors and 27 million monthly page views - close to a 400% increase on 2011.\n\nCowley told me: \"In an era of fake news, people are realising that good journalism is worth spending money on. While much of the liberal media has been struggling to survive in a declining market dominated by powerful media groups, the New Statesman has not merely held its position but expanded dramatically - all achieved… with no marketing spend.\"\n\nA bright picture - but several caveats are necessary here.\n\nFirst, I don't yet have the age profile of new subscribers. It would be interesting to know a bit more about this.\n\nSecond, many magazines are succumbing to the temptation to bundle print and digital numbers together.\n\nThe attempt to conflate numbers is really a way of showing a bit of leg to advertisers. But it is a deliberate misrepresentation of the real picture.\n\nWe can hardly take magazines seriously when they call out deceitful public figures if they play fast and loose with their own numbers.\n\nThird, there is a much broader story about web traffic, whether at general newspapers or specialist magazines.\n\nFourth, the fact people are paying for high-quality magazine content does not mean that this model will necessarily work for newspapers.\n\nThe Times, which has a paywall and is growing its subscriber base, has found a business model that works.\n\nThe New York Times operates a metered paywall, but it has an editorial budget of over £300m, has a much vaster domestic target market than, say, The Independent and competes with fewer national newspapers in America. It is a curiosity of Britain that we have so many more national titles for our smaller population.\n\nThe Financial Times, which also operates a metered paywall, is both a generalist and a specialist publication, because it does so much financial news. It also has the advantage that many of its readers are either rich or, because they work for companies dependent on that financial data, able to buy subscriptions on company expenses.\n\nSo it is important not to read across from the success of weekly magazines, which deal in high-quality commentary and analysis, and say the same will necessarily work for daily newspapers.\n\nTheir meat and drink is the much more generally available commodity of daily news, and in Britain they compete with the BBC website, whose reach is huge.\n\nFinally, for many publications, the growth in subscriptions will not offset the precipitous decline in display advertising across the market, which is not far off 20% down year on year, as eyeballs migrate to the web.\n\nThe Spectator now gets two-thirds of its revenue from paying consumers rather than advertisers. The Economist magazine has argued publicly that it expects display advertising revenue to \"pretty much vanish\" by 2025.\n\nThe model for print media is being revolutionised. Those dependent solely or mainly on print advertising are in trouble, and will have to diversify their businesses.\n\nThose flaunting a generally available commodity - daily news - will have to do it better, present it more boldly, and manage costs more smartly.\n\nBut now we know: those who specialise, and publish regularly but not daily, can ask people to pay, with confidence that they will.", "Tiredness and 'brain fog' are common symptoms of the condition\n\nHypothyroidism - or an underactive thyroid - affects one in 70 women and one in 1,000 men according to the NHS. But it can be a tricky disease to diagnose and treat. Dr Michael Mosley, of Trust Me I'm a Doctor, asks if sufferers are slipping through the net.\n\nSomeone emailed me the other day to ask me if I had ever considered the possibility that I might have hypothyroidism; an underactive thyroid. The reason he contacted me is because he had seen me on television and noticed that I have quite faint eyebrows, which can be a sign of this disorder.\n\nI have none of the other symptoms such as weight gain, tiredness and feeling the cold easily, so I've decided not to go and get myself tested.\n\nBut if you do - and you think you could you have it - what should you do about it?\n\nTo get some answers I've been talking to Dr Anthony Toft, who is a former president of the British Thyroid Association.\n\nHe tells me that the thyroid gland is a bit like the accelerator pedal on your car. It produces hormones which help control the energy balance in your body. If it's underactive, then your metabolic rate will be slower than it should be. This means that you are likely to put on weight. Other symptoms can include feeling too cold or too hot, lacking in energy, being constipated, low mood, poor attention or \"brain fog\".\n\nDr Mosley's 'faint eyebrows' led one doctor to contact him about hypothyroidism\n\nThe main hormones involved are thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), T4 and T3. TSH is released by the pituitary gland and tells your thyroid to get going.\n\nIn response your thyroid should release the hormones T4 and T3. T4 is converted in your body into T3, the active hormone that revs up your cells.\n\nIf you have symptoms of hypothyroidism then your GP will probably test your blood. The signs they're looking for are high levels of TSH, together with low levels of T4.\n\nIf your TSH is higher than normal this suggests that the gland that produces this hormone - the pituitary gland - is working hard to tell the thyroid gland to produce more hormone, but for some reason the thyroid gland is not listening.\n\nThe pituitary then ups its game and produces more and more TSH, but T4 levels stay low.\n\nSo if you have a high TSH coupled with a low T4, it's likely that the body is saying \"I need more thyroid hormone!\" but the thyroid gland isn't doing what it's being told. The result is hypothyroidism.\n\nWhen this happens patients are often prescribed levothyroxine (T4). Symptoms diminish and patients are happy.\n\nScans can be carried out for more serious thyroid problems\n\nSo if it's so straightforward, why are there so many forums full of dissatisfied patients? Why do we at Trust Me get so many emails about this subject?\n\nOne of the issues with the blood tests is that there are no standard international reference ranges. In the UK, for example, we set the bar rather higher than many other countries. Certainly Dr Toft thinks that current UK guidelines are sometimes interpreted too rigidly.\n\n\"If the T4 is right down at the lower limit of normal,\" he says, \"and the TSH is at the upper limit of normal, then that is suspicious. It doesn't often arouse suspicion in GPs, but it should.\"\n\nHe is also concerned that when a GP does diagnose an underactive thyroid, then patients are almost always prescribed a synthetic version of T4.\n\nThis works most of the time but in some cases the symptoms don't improve. This might be because with some patients the problem is not an underactive thyroid, but the fact that they can't convert enough T4 into the active hormone T3.\n\nOne way round this is to take T3 hormone in tablet form, but here price is a problem.\n\n\"The cost of T3 has escalated incredibly,\" says Dr Toft. \"It's now about £300 for two months' supply of T3, whereas it costs pennies to make.\"\n\nTrust Me, I'm A Doctor is on BBC Two at 20:00 GMT, Wednesday 8 February - catch up on BBC iPlayer\n\nSo if you have been put on T4 and it doesn't work, what about asking for a trial of T3? Because it is so expensive your GP may well say no.\n\nSo instead some patients are going online and buying T3 from foreign websites. But it's important that if you are taking T3 you are being properly monitored, because it can cause serious side effects, including heart problems.\n\nA slightly less expensive hormone supplement taken from the glands of cows and pigs is available. It contains both the T3 and T4 hormones, and there is a growing call to prescribe it for patients who don't respond to T4 alone. So does Dr Toft think patients should be offered this combination?\n\n\"I suspect that in time that's what will happen,\" he says. \"The trouble is the evidence base is not as strong as we would wish it to be, and I suspect it will be a long time before we have sufficient evidence.\"\n\nDealing with thyroid problems can be complicated. If you've had a blood test and the results have come back normal, then you can ask to look at the actual numbers. But you may also have to accept that medication is not for you and lifestyle changes may be more appropriate.\n\nJoin the conversation on our Facebook page", "Ashley Madison was fined for not sufficiently protecting customers' data\n\nWhen infidelity website Ashley Madison was the victim of a hacking attack in 2015, the affected 36 million global users were suddenly very worried indeed.\n\nThe business, a dating site for married people who wish to cheat on their spouse, had the data of its customers stolen and released on to the internet. All their names, passwords, phone numbers and addresses.\n\nWhile it was a very bleak time for Ashley Madison's users, the company itself faced a major crisis, and it was found to be lacking.\n\nAs customer numbers and revenues plummeted, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) - the US agency tasked with protecting consumers - ruled that the business had not done enough to protect people's information, both before and after the attack.\n\nThe FTC fined Ashley Madison $1.6m (£1.3m), and said that the financial penalty was only that low because it didn't think that the business could afford to pay any more, such was the impact of the hack on its earnings.\n\nWhere Ashley Madison failed was its insufficient crisis management - it hadn't prepared enough for something bad happening, and how it would react.\n\nAll companies need to prepare for how they would react to a hack of their IT systems\n\nWhile the company tells the BBC it has subsequently overhauled all its systems, how should all firms best plan for and then respond to a crisis, be it a cyber-attack, financial scandal or other serious issue?\n\nWith the UK government confirming last year that two-thirds of large British companies had experienced a cyber-attack in the previous 12 months alone, businesses who have an online presence anywhere in the world simply have to prepare for how they would react to a hack that breaches their system.\n\nA business can make its website as secure as possible, but being 100% protected is just not achievable, say IT experts.\n\nPage Group was ready to deal with the breach of its IT system\n\nThankfully for UK employment agency Page Group it knew exactly how to react when it suffered a data breach of its cloud computing system in October last year.\n\n\"We have senior staff in place from across different parts of our organisation that form an issues management team who are well equipped to deal with a crisis, should it arise,\" says Eamon Collins, Page's group marketing manager.\n\n\"That is why when we were alerted to a data breach by our IT vendor Capgemini, this team was able to act fast, review the issue, and provide counsel on the best course of action.\n\n\"The most important part of the process is putting your customers' interests first.\"\n\nHe adds: \"Once we had sufficient information around what had happened, and the impact, we could undertake a transparent and open dialogue with the customer.\"\n\nAt former US mining group National Coal, the crisis it faced was repeated protests in the early 2000s by environmentalists who objected to its opencast mining in east Tennessee.\n\nIts then chief executive, Daniel Roling, said the company had plans in place for how it responded to everything it faced - from trespassers, to staff being threatened, entry roads being blockaded, and bomb threats.\n\n\"We held a number of run-throughs to test the effectiveness of both communications and operation responses,\" he says.\n\n\"The plan should, at a minimum, include an acceptable and effective means of communication, as well as an outline of who can and should provide direction.\"\n\nDaniel Roling says National Coal had crisis management plans in place\n\nMr Roling, who left National Coal before it was sold to Ranger Energy Investments in 2010, adds: \"We had everything planned right down to where we would hold a press conference, and how we would set it up.\n\n\"In crisis planning, you are looking to create an effective auto-response, so that everyone heads in the right direction, without too much deliberation.\"\n\nAt UK tourist attraction, the Jorvik Viking Centre, in York, its crisis was a major flood in December 2015 that caused significant damage.\n\nDirector of attractions Sarah Maltby says the team worked hard to remove precious artefacts before they were damaged.\n\n\"Every company needs solid staff to assist, offer advice, and manage elements of disaster recovery,\" she says.\n\nSarah Maltby says the Jorvik Viking Centre was saved by staff working together\n\nThe centre is now due to finally reopen in April this year.\n\nCrisis management expert Jonathan Bernstein says it is vital that a company responds quickly to a crisis. \"The crisis moves at its own pace, but you need to be faster.\"\n\nHe adds that firms should be honest about the crisis at hand, especially if it is something they are to blame for, such as a financial scandal.\n\n\"Be honest about how you screwed up, and illustrate how you are going to ensure this doesn't happen again,\" says Mr Bernstein.\n\n\"Provide clear information to customers on what happened exactly, and what new protocols will be in place.\"\n\nDamon Coppola, founder of Shoreline Risk, a company that assists businesses with their risk management, says that when it comes to a firm preparing for a possible crisis \"the public might not necessarily expect perfection\".\n\nBut he adds: \"[The public's] judgement will be hard if it is perceived that the company failed to act on an obligation to limit or prepare for a known risk, if they were dishonest in their communication, and perhaps in the worst case, if profits came before people.\"\n\nThese are views echoed by UK public relations expert Benjamin Webb, founder of media relations firm Deliberate PR, which specialises in Swedish start-ups.\n\nHe says: \"At a time of fast-moving crisis, particularly when people's well-being is at stake, transparency to customers and their family members must exceed any responsibility to shareholders.\"\n\nRob Segal says that Ashley Madison has improved its systems since the hack\n\nAt Toronto-based Ruby Corporation, the owner of Ashley Madison, chief executive Rob Segal, says the company has worked hard to rebuild trust since the 2015 hack.\n\nMr Segal, who joined the firm after the attack, says: \"We partnered with Deloitte's world-leading security team following the breach, and they've been helping the company with privacy and security enhancements and 24/7 monitoring.\n\n\"The go-forward lessons for chief executives is to always stay vigilant about cybersecurity, and to continually invest in privacy and security safeguards.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nEuropean football's governing body will ask for its teams to be given 16 places at the expanded 48-team 2026 World Cup.\n\nUefa will also request that the European teams who do qualify are kept apart in the first stage.\n\nThe new-look tournament will begin with an initial round of 16 three-team groups, with 32 qualifiers going through to the knockout stage.\n\nThirteen European teams qualified for the last World Cup in Brazil in 2014, which was won by Germany.\n\nUefa president Aleksander Ceferin said the requests are \"realistic\", and it is his desire for every European team to qualify from the first round.\n\nFifa is expected to confirm the quotas for each continental governing body in May.\n\nCeferin was speaking at a meeting of the Uefa Executive Committee in Nyon. All members of the committee agreed with the proposals.\n• None Limiting Uefa's president and executive committee members to a maximum of three four-year terms.\n• None Granting membership of the committee to two European Club Association representatives.\n\nFifa's members voted unanimously in favour of the World Cup expansion in January.\n\nThe number of tournament matches will rise to 80, from 64, but the eventual winners will still play only seven games.\n\nThe tournament will be completed within 32 days - a measure to appease powerful European clubs, who objected to reform because of a crowded international schedule.\n\nFifa president Gianni Infantino said the World Cup has to be \"more inclusive\", adding: \"Football is more than just Europe and South America, football is global.\"\n\nSpeaking to the BBC at the time of the announcement, he said the decision on who would get the extra qualification slots would be \"looked at speedily\".\n\nHe added: \"The only sure thing is that everyone will have a bit more representation than they have.\"\n\nSpeaking on Thursday, Ceferin said: \"We can push and be outvoted, but we think it is realistic to ask for 16 slots at least, plus another condition that each European team is in different groups.\n\n\"Then if it is true that we are so good, that quality is on our side, I think all 16 can qualify.\"\n\nNow we know for certain that Uefa wants at least 16 places in return for support for expanding the World Cup to 48 teams in 2026.\n\nBut that's not all. It wants one team per group in the first round, enhancing the chances of its member nations making it through to the knockout stages. It's football politics at the sharp end.\n\nUefa's new leader, Aleksander Ceferin, was wily enough to see how strong the support was from other confederations to expand the tournament and he's determined to give his members the best deal possible under the circumstances.\n\nFifa says the final decision on how the extra 16 slots for 2026 will be divided up will be made later this year. But it's an early test for its claim to be a more transparent organisation in light of its scandal-stained past.\n\nHow will the carve-up be decided? An open and fair process? Or in smoke-filled rooms, far away from public scrutiny?\n\nCeferin's apparent confidence in getting the deal he wants suggests Fifa still has some way to travel on its path to full reform.", "Since his first day in office, Mr Trump has faced angry opposition - and it's making his opponents money\n\nDonald Trump's adversarial style during the election divided American voters like few campaigns in recent years.\n\nThe president himself has referred to \"my many enemies\" - but it seems they're getting a substantial boost from the new president.\n\nOrganisations that investigate, oppose, or lampoon the commander-in-chief are seeing a surge in support, in what's been dubbed \"rage donation\".\n\nFrom civil rights to media types, the effect is widespread.\n\nPlanned Parenthood advocates for women's reproductive rights, including abortion - to which Mr Trump and Vice-President Mike Pence are both opposed.\n\nCecile Richards, who leads the family-planning group, told the BBC more than 400,000 people had donated since the election - \"an unprecedented outpouring of support\" - some of which has been given jokily in Mike Pence's name.\n\nBut, she said, no level of donations would be able to match the federal funding the group receives - something which may now be under threat.\n\n\"We will never back down, and we will never stop providing the care our patients need. These doors stay open, no matter what,\" she said.\n\nPro-life supporters in the March for Life received open messages of support from both the president and vice president\n\nThe Centre for Reproductive Rights, meanwhile, is trying to raise $1m in Mr Trump's first 100 days\n\n\"We've had thousands of new donors in the last three months, many of whom have signed on to be monthly sustainers - donors who will be with us for the long haul,\" a spokeswoman said.\n\nOne of American's biggest environmental protection groups, the Natural Resources Defence Council (NRDC), was singled out by popular comedian John Oliver late last year when he called on his viewers to donate following the election.\n\nSince then, \"we have seen an incredible response from the public,\" a spokeswoman said.\n\nThe \"huge spike\" continued through November and December, she said, slowing slightly in early January - before picking right back up at the inauguration.\n\n\"It's definitely driven by concern over President Trump's anti-environmental rhetoric and actions,\" the NRDC said.\n\nThe Sierra Club, another major environmental group, reported 11,000 new monthly donors in the days following the election - nine times its previous record.\n\nIt's not just charities and fundraising that are seeing a positive bump from Trump. This week, it emerged that the long-running satire show Saturday Night Live was celebrating its highest ratings in decades.\n\nIts numbers have grown by 22% overall - to 10 million viewers, the highest since 1995, according to Variety.\n\nAlec Baldwin's parody of Trump has become a weekly fixture on the revived SNL\n\nAlec Baldwin's portrayal of Mr Trump, which became wildly popular during the campaign, is now a weekly staple.\n\nStrident Trump critic Stephen Colbert also beat his late-night rival, Jimmy Fallon, for the first time in years in recent ratings - though there's not yet enough evidence to link late-night show ratings to politics.\n\nPerhaps the biggest success story comes from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).\n\nIn a single weekend - as they fought a legal battle against the president's controversial immigration order - the group clocked up $24m (£19.1m) in donations, six times what it usually receives in an entire year. The huge amount prompted the rights group to turn to Silicon Valley for help managing the funds.\n\nThe ACLU was inundated with record donations after it blocked part of Mr Trump's executive order, days into his term\n\nGroups like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Southern Poverty Law Center, and the National Immigration Law Center have also benefited from social media campaigns.\n\nComedian Josh Gondelman, for example, felt uncomfortable with Mr Trump's close ties to the Patriots American football team. So he came up with the idea of donating $100 to the NAACP every time his team scored a touchdown during the Super Bowl.\n\nCoupled with a social-friendly hashtag (#AGoodGame), the idea took off, and brought in thousands of dollars in donations for civil rights groups across the US.\n\nPresident Trump likes to tweet about the (\"dishonest, lying\") media. Most news outlets would say they don't oppose the president - but by nature, question and hold authority to account.\n\nBut amid outcry over \"alternative facts\" and talk of non-existent massacres, many are reporting more readers and subscriptions.\n\nNon-profit public interest news organisation ProPublica said it had seen \"a dramatic increase in donations, beginning late on election night\".\n\nDonor numbers swelled from 3,400 in all of 2015 to more than 26,000 in 2016, the organisation's president Dick Tofel said.\n\nAnd recurring monthly donations jumped from $4,500 in October, just before the election, to $104,000 in January.\n\nProPublica adopted a new slogan after White House strategist Stephen Bannon suggested the press \"keep its mouth shut\"\n\n\"It seems that the election has caused a large number of people to want to take various forms of civic action. We're very flattered that many of them think of ProPublica - and investigative journalism in the public interest generally - in that connection,\" Mr Tofel said.\n\nHe stressed it was not clear that this was tied to \"particular steps\" taken by Mr Trump, but noted that donations picked up in January from inauguration day.\n\nBut the same bump was seen in private newspapers too.\n\nThe (\"failing, wrong, so false\") New York Times, which the president said should fix its \"dwindling\" numbers, actually added 276,000 digital subscriptions in the last quarter - the biggest jump since it brought in a paywall.\n\nAnd the (\"angry, boring\") Washington Post reported almost 100 million users on its website in both October and November last year, \"greatly exceeding previous traffic records\".\n\nMeanwhile, subscriptions to the Wall Street Journal jumped 300% on the day after the election, and it reported 70% growth in new digital subscriptions year on year.\n\nUS voters chose Mr Trump - he won by a large margin in the electoral college system although he did not win the popular vote. Despite a slip in approval ratings, he appears to retain plenty of popular support.\n\nIt's still too early to know if his policies have had a positive impact, but his supporters remain steadfast.\n\nConservative news outlets such as Breitbart have surged in popularity, and Mr Trump's supporters have boycotted brands such as Kellogg's or Budweiser which are perceived to have taken a political stance against the president.\n\nThe president has directly criticised both people and companies through his Twitter account\n\nMr Trump's unique style of Twitter diplomacy, however, has had a direct negative impact on some companies.\n\nShortly after taking office, the new president tweeted that Boeing's costs for Air Force One were \"out of control\", dropping their stock value. A similar tongue-lashing on fighter jets dropped Lockheed Martin's stock by more than 4%.\n\nNow, that effect already seems to be waning - as Fortune magazine pointed out, when the president struck out at retailer Nordstrom for dropping his daughter's fashion line, its stock actually rallied.\n\nIt may be that Mr Trump's rhetoric is no longer having the effect it once did, and is becoming a normal part of politics.\n\nBut with those opposed to the president's policies vowing they won't accept the new status quo, it remains to be seen if the \"rage\" effect will end up a steady revenue stream for the next four years.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One, Radio 5 live, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nHarlequins' Jack Clifford will make just his second start for England in one of two changes for Saturday's Six Nations match with Wales in Cardiff.\n\nClifford, 23, replaces Tom Wood on the open-side flank and Jack Nowell comes in for Jonny May on the wing - with May and Wood among the replacements.\n\nClifford has yet to start a Six Nations game but head coach Eddie Jones said he \"deserves a starting role\".\n\nThe match will be played with the roof of the Principality Stadium open.\n• None Sign up for rugby union news alerts and get Six Nations news the moment it breaks\n• None How to follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n• None Bright lights and big hitters - take our rugby quiz\n\nClifford forms part of an inexperienced back row - the Harlequins man, Maro Itoje and Nathan Hughes have 20 caps between them, while Wales' likely flankers Sam Warburton and Justin Tipuric have 70 and 47 caps respectively.\n\n\"He has got a good record against Wales, he had a superb game against them in May, he knows what he is going to expect and we're looking forward to him making an impact in our back-row play.\n\n\"Tom Wood will also play his part later in the game off the bench as a finisher.\"\n\nMay started on the wing as England secured a record 15th Test win in a row with a narrow victory at home to France on Saturday, with 23-year-old Nowell on the bench, but the Exeter man has been recalled to win his 20th cap.\n\n\"Jack has an excellent work-rate and he's a guy that carries through the line which will be important for us,\" Jones said.\n\nWales coach Rob Howley had expected the game to be played under a closed roof but England coach Jones asked for it to be open just minutes before a deadline on Thursday afternoon.\n\nJones has spoken at length this week about the atmosphere that awaits England at the Principality Stadium.\n\nIt is his first visit to Wales in charge of England, who were denied a Grand Slam in 2013 by a 30-3 thrashing.\n\n\"Playing Wales in Cardiff is one of the biggest games in world rugby and we're excited,\" Jones added. \"These are the games you want to be part of as a player and coach.\n\n\"We don't need extra motivation this week; we play Test rugby because we want to be the best for England. Every game is important for us and our supporters, and Wales is our next game so it's the most important.\n\n\"There's always shadows in the corners. They're always there and can always come out but I think the team has moved on.\n\n\"Teams go through maturity cycles and to have one of those experiences is a life-changing experience and you never want to go back there.\"\n\nWales have named wing George North and fly-half Dan Biggar in their starting XV, with Jones adding that his side will be prepared for whatever is thrown at them.\n\n\"We're prepared to win and we're prepared for any shenanigans that might go on - and we're looking forward to it,\" Jones said.\n\n\"They're a cunning lot the Welsh, aren't they? They always have been. They've got goats, they've got daffodils, they've got everything. Who knows?\"\n\nIn the absence of injured brothers Mako and Billy Vunipola, England's pack looked short of ball-carriers against the French, and Eddie Jones has addressed this by bringing in Clifford, in the hope his dynamism with the ball in hand will outweigh his inexperience.\n\nEngland's replacements - or \"finishers\" as Jones calls them - made a big impact against France in the final quarter, and more of the same will be expected in Cardiff, with James Haskell amongst those being held back on the bench.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nTerminally ill Sunderland fan Bradley Lowery was visited in hospital by the club's players on Thursday.\n\nBradley was diagnosed with neuroblastoma in 2013 and his mother says he has only months to live.\n\nLast year £700,000 was raised for him and treatment has now begun in hospital in a bid to prolong his life.\n\nEverton pledged £200,000 to the cause in September, when Bradley was mascot for Sunderland's home fixture with the Toffees at the Stadium of Light.", "This video contains distressing scenes from the start.\n\nThe United Nations has launched an emergency appeal for Yemen, warning that its population is on the brink of famine after two years of war.\n\nThis BBC's Our World filmed and first broadcast this report in September 2016, and shows some of the suffering endured by children in the country.", "Karen Matthews came out of her house to talk to Mark Simpson\n\nShannon Matthews's disappearance in a 2008 hoax-kidnapping is being recounted in a BBC drama. BBC News's Mark Simpson, who reported on the case, looks back at the deception.\n\nKaren Matthews made a fool out of me.\n\nI looked into her sunken eyes, saw that she was petrified and gave her the benefit of the doubt.\n\nMaybe my judgement was coloured by the fact that she chose to give me her first interview.\n\nMaybe it was clouded by seeing inside her small semi-detached house, and the grim conditions in which she and her seven children were living.\n\nMaybe I was so cold at the time, my brain froze.\n\nKaren's daughter Shannon, nine, disappeared on the coldest night of the year in February 2008.\n\nPolice divers who searched a lake near her home in Dewsbury Moor in West Yorkshire had to break through ice to get into the water. The air temperature had dipped to -4C.\n\nThe night Karen agreed to talk to me, I was shaking with cold after spending hour after hour talking live on the BBC News Channel (or BBC News 24 as it was then).\n\nKaren spotted me out of her front window and came out to talk. She was shaking too, but out of fear.\n\nShe was scared - scared of being found out.\n\nShe gave me no eye contact. She looked down the barrel of the BBC camera and said; \"Shannon if you're out there, please come home. We love you to bits, we miss you so much. Please, I'm begging you baby, come home.\"\n\nKaren Matthews appeals for information on her daughter's disappearance\n\nWhen the police saw her interview on the BBC Ten O'Clock News, they were annoyed.\n\nThey had advised her not to talk to the media. They were as surprised as me that she agreed to give me an interview.\n\nSo was this erratic behaviour the first sign that all was not what it seemed?\n\nIn hindsight, it may seem so, but at the time, it seemed simply a desperate act by a desperate mother.\n\nFresh in my mind were the Soham murders of schoolgirls Jessica Chapman and Holly Wells. When children disappeared for more than 48 hours, the outcome was usually not good.\n\nThat is why there was such a huge community effort to try to find Shannon. People realised that time was short.\n\nYes, I did wonder if Karen Matthews was telling the truth. Everyone did.\n\nHowever, I believed her. And I was not alone.\n\nAs well as searching hedges and parkland, the police drew up a map showing where convicted paedophiles lived in the Dewsbury area.\n\nThey checked, and double-checked. There was no sign of Shannon.\n\nAs days turned to weeks, the more convinced detectives became that Shannon would not be coming home.\n\nHowever, Karen's friends and neighbours never gave up, and neither did the police.\n\nAbout 10% of the force's officers were put on the case and more than £3m was spent in what was one of the largest search operations since the hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper.\n\nKaren Matthews was jailed for eight years\n\nShannon was eventually found, 24 days after she disappeared. A BBC colleague got a tip-off and phoned me.\n\nI was shopping in Ikea in Leeds at the time, and nearly dropped my phone on a multi-coloured Swedish rug when I heard the news.\n\nAs I drove down the A6110 to Dewsbury, I wondered if Karen would give me an interview again.\n\nWe could do it in the same spot where we had first spoken.\n\nThe only difference would be that this time she would be with Shannon beside her.\n\nThe tears would turn to cheers. For once, it would be a story with a happy ending.\n\nIt later emerged that Shannon had been kept drugged and hidden in the base of a divan bed by the very people appealing for her safe return.\n\nThat September Karen, and Michael Donovan, the uncle of Karen's partner, went on trial for kidnap, false imprisonment and perverting the course of justice. They were jailed for eight years after the court heard about their plot to hide the child and claim a £50,000 reward that subsequently had been offered by the Sun.", "Emilie Telander (right) says she is more tired now she is back on eight-hour days\n\nSweden has been experimenting with six-hour days, with workers getting the chance to work fewer hours on full pay, but now the most high-profile two-year trial has ended - has it all been too good to be true?\n\nAssistant nurse Emilie Telander, 26, cheers as one of the day patients at Svartedalen's elderly care home in Gothenburg manages to roll a six in a game of Ludo.\n\nBut her smile fades as she describes her own luck running out at the end of the year, when after 23 months of six-hour shifts, she was told to go back to eight-hour days.\n\n\"I feel that I am more tired than I was before,\" she reflects, lamenting the fact that she now has less time at home to cook or read with her four-year-old daughter.\n\n\"During the trial all the staff had more energy. I could see that everybody was happy.\"\n\nGothenburg has been experimenting with shorter working days - but the policy isn't cheap\n\nMs Telander is one of about 70 assistant nurses who had their days shortened for the experiment, the most widely reported of a handful of trials in Sweden involving a range of employers, from start-ups to nursing homes.\n\nDesigned to measure well-being in a sector that's struggling to recruit enough staff to care for the country's ageing population, extra nurses were brought in to cover the lost hours.\n\nThe project's independent researchers were also paid to study employees at a similar care home who continued to work regular days.\n\nTheir final report is due out next month, but data released so far strongly backs Ms Telander's arguments.\n\nGothenburg's move has put a shorter working day \"on the agenda both for Sweden and for Europe\", says Daniel Bernmar\n\nDuring the first 18 months of the trial the nurses working shorter hours logged less sick leave, reported better perceived health and boosted their productivity by organising 85% more activities for their patients, from nature walks to sing-a-longs.\n\nHowever, the project also faced tough criticism from those concerned that the costs outweighed the benefits.\n\nCentre-right opponents filed a motion calling on Gothenburg City Council to wrap it up prematurely last May, arguing it was unfair to continue investing taxpayers' money in a pilot that was not economically sustainable.\n\nSaved from the axe at the eleventh hour, the trial managed to stay within budget, but still cost the city about 12 million kronor (£1.1m; $1.3m).\n\n\"Could we do this for the entire municipality? The answer is no, it will be too expensive,\" says Daniel Bernmar, the Left Party councillor responsible for running Gothenburg's elderly care.\n\nBut he argues the experiment still proved \"successful from many points of view\" by creating extra jobs for 17 nurses in the city, reducing sick pay costs and fuelling global debates about work culture.\n\nSweden's 40-hour working week is likely to remain\n\n\"It's put the shortening of the work day on the agenda both for Sweden and for Europe, which is fascinating,\" he says.\n\n\"In the past 10, 15 years there's been a lot of pressure on people working longer hours and this is sort of the contrary of that.\"\n\nYet while work-life balance is already championed across the political spectrum in Sweden, the chances of the Nordic country trimming back its standard 40-hour week remain slim.\n\nOn a national level, the Left Party is the only parliamentary party in favour of shortening basic working hours, backed by just 6% of voters in Sweden's last general election.\n\nNevertheless, a cluster of other Swedish municipalities are following in Gothenburg's footsteps, with locally funded trials targeting other groups of employees with high levels of illness and burnout, including social workers and hospital nurses.\n\nCleaners at Skelleftea Hospital will begin an 18-month project next month.\n\nThere's also been an increase in pilots in the private sector, with advertising, consulting, telecoms and technology firms among those testing the concept.\n\nYet while some have also reported that staff appear calmer or are less likely to phone in sick, others have swiftly abandoned the idea.\n\n\"I really don't think that the six-hour day fits with an entrepreneurial world, or the start-up world,\" argues Erik Gatenholm, chief executive of Gothenburg-based bio-ink company.\n\nHe is candid enough to admit he tested the method on his production staff after \"reading about the trend on Facebook\" and musing on whether it could be an innovative draw for future talent.\n\nBut the firm's experiment was ditched in less than a month, after bad feedback from employees.\n\n\"I thought it would be really fun, but it felt kind of stressful,\" says Gabriel Peres, as he slots a Petri dish inside one of the 3D printers he's built for the company.\n\n\"It's a process and it takes time and when you don't have all that [much] time it kind of feels like skipping homework at school, things are always building up.\"\n\nMore research is being done on Sweden's shifting work patterns\n\nOn the other side of the country, his concerns are shared by Dr Aram Seddigh, who recently completed his doctorate at Stockholm University's Stress Research Institute and is among a growing body of academics focusing on the nation's shifting work patterns.\n\n\"I think the six-hour work day would be most effective in organisations - such as hospitals - where you work for six hours and then you just leave [the workplace] and go home.\n\n\"It might be less effective for organisations where the borders between work and private life are not so clear,\" he suggests.\n\n\"This kind of solution might even increase stress levels given that employees might try to fit all the work that they have been doing in eight hours into six - or if they're office workers they might take the work home.\"\n\nBack in Gothenburg, Bengt Lorentzon, the lead researcher for the Svartedalen care home project, argues that the concept of six-hour days also jars with the strong culture of flexible working promoted by many Swedish businesses.\n\nImproving your working life is not just about how long your day is, says Bengt Lorentzon\n\n\"A lot of offices are already working almost like consultancies. There's no need for managers to have all their workers in the office at the same time, they just want to get the results and people have to deliver,\" he says.\n\n\"Compare that to the assistant nurses - they can't just leave work to go to the dentist or to the doctors or the hairdressers.\"\n\n\"So I don't think people should start with the question of whether or not to have reduced hours.\n\n\"First, it should be: what can we do to make the working environment better? And maybe different things can be better for different groups.\n\n\"It could be to do with working hours and working times, but it could be a lot of other things as well.\"\n\nListen to Maddy Savage's report on Sweden's experiment with six-hour days on The World Tonight.", "A motion of \"no confidence\" in the Football Association has been passed by MPs debating the organisation's ability to reform itself.\n\nWhile the motion is largely symbolic, MPs have warned legislation will be brought in if changes are not made.\n\nSports Minister Tracey Crouch has said the FA could lose £30m-£40m of public funding if it does not modernise.\n\nCulture, Media and Sport (CMS) Select Committee chairman Damian Collins said: \"No change is no option.\"\n• None Timeline: Calls for changes at the FA\n\nHe added: \"The FA, to use a football analogy, are not only in extra time, they are at the end of extra time, in 'Fergie time'. They are 1-0 down and if they don't pick up fairly quickly, reform will be delivered to them.\"\n\nI would have thought with the state of the NHS, the lack of building, not enough cash for defence, that [MPs] would put energy into that not the organisation of football\n\nFA chairman Greg Clarke has said he will quit if the organisation cannot win government support for its reform plans.\n\n\"I watched the debate and respect the opinions of the MPs,\" he said.\n\n\"As previously stated, we remain committed to reforming governance at the FA to the agreed timescale of the minister.\"\n\nCollins suggested ministers should intervene to overhaul English football's governing body because \"turkeys won't vote for Christmas\" and it will not reform itself.\n\nCrouch warned the FA that if it played \"Russian roulette\" with public money it will lose.\n\nThe minister also said the government would be prepared to consider legislation if the FA fails to present plans for required reforms before April. However she felt the debate - which was sparsely attended by MPs - was premature given her desire to see the FA's proposals.\n\nHow have we got here?\n\nThe committee has published two reports since 2010 recommending greater representation at the FA for fans and the grassroots game, as well as more diversity in positions of authority. It also wants to dilute the perceived dominance of the Premier League.\n\nCollins has said the FA was given six months to meet the government guidance on best practice for sports governance but had failed to do so. That guidance called for things such as a move towards gender equality on boards, more independent oversight, more accountability and term limits for office bearers.\n\nHe was joined by fellow Tories and Labour MPs - keen to ensure the \"national game\" is run correctly - in bemoaning the current state of the FA.\n\nThe cross-party motion stated that MPs have no confidence in the FA's ability to comply fully with its duties as its existing governance structures make it \"impossible for the organisation to reform itself\".\n\nIt was approved unopposed at the end of a backbench business debate, which was attended by fewer than 30 MPs.\n\nThe FA is effectively run by its own parliament, the FA Council, which has 122 members - just eight are women and only four from ethnic minorities. More than 90 of the 122 members are aged over 60.\n\nShadow sports minister Rosena Allin-Khan said: \"Not only is diversity not in the heart of the FA ,it isn't in its body, or even its soul.\"\n\nLabour MP Keith Vaz, whose constituency of Leicester East is home to the Premier League champions Leicester City, added: \"A quarter of all professional footballers are black, however only 17 of the 92 top clubs have an ethnic minority person in a senior coaching role.\"\n\nHowever, Keith Compton - one of 25 FA life vice-presidents and a director of Derbyshire FA - questioned why the FA was being discussed in Parliament.\n\n\"It is pity that the MPs have got nothing better to do,\" he told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"I would have thought with the state of the NHS, the lack of building, too many people living in boxes, not enough cash for defence, that some people would put energy into that not the organisation of football.\n\n\"Football is reforming all of the time.\"\n\nAsked whether there should be more female and ethnic minority involvement in FA decisions, he said: \"That's not really the responsibility of the council. If those people were interested enough, and we had enough people, we would have enough women and other people on the FA.\n\n\"I have heard people say supporters aren't represented but that is not true. They have one representative. People want the council to be reduced and now I am hearing it should be increased.\"\n• None FA Council member: 'Old, grey-haired men still have a lot to offer'\n\nResponding to the interview, former FA chairman David Bernstein said: \"I think if you want an argument for change, you've just heard it.\"\n\nAnd Yunus Lunat, the first Muslim to get a seat on the FA Council before leaving three years ago, said new recruits were needed.\n\n\"No-one is disputing the contribution the previous generation has made but there comes a time when you have got to recognise that you are not the most suitable people for the role,\" he said.\n\nThe debate may have been attended by fewer MPs than is needed for a full football match, but the fact a motion of no confidence in the FA was passed still gives it an embarrassing bloody nose, ramping up the pressure on the governing body.\n\nThe few MPs who spoke seemed to mostly agree with each other, demanding greater diversity on the council, independent directors and fan representation on the board, and raising concerns over the clout and money of the professional clubs, especially the Premier League.\n\nBut the people who really matter here are the government.\n\nThe sports minister said the debate was \"premature\" and reiterated that she may consider the nuclear option of legislation to force through reforms - but only if a threat to cut funding does not work. That however, remains some way off and the FA is confident it can comply with a new code of governance. If it fails, chairman Greg Clarke has vowed to step down and then it really will be in the last-chance saloon.\n\nWhat do fans think?\n\nFootball Supporters' Federation chairman Malcolm Clarke: \"We're very pleased to see so many MPs back our proposals for a minimum of five fan representatives on the FA Council, representation on the FA board, and increased diversity.\n\n\"Supporters are integral to the health of our national sport yet are still shockingly under-represented in the FA hierarchy - the FA Council has only one supporter representative, yet the Armed Forces and Oxbridge have five.\n\n\"It is also important to acknowledge that the FA Council has stood up to rampant commercialism within the game and protected fans' interests - such as when the FA Council stopped the 'Hull Tigers' name change.\"\n\nWhat the MPs said - key quotes\n\nSports minister Tracey Crouch: \"The FA's current model does not, in my opinion, and clearly that of other colleagues, stand up to scrutiny. Reform is therefore required.\"\n\nJudith Cummins (Labour, Bradford South): \"At best they're dragging their feet, at worst they're wilfully failing to act.\"\n\nAndrew Bingham, CMS Select Committee member: \"The issues of Sam Allardyce, who manages the (England) team for 67 days, one game, walks away with allegedly around £1m, it is destroying people's faith in football.\"\n\nNigel Huddleston (Conservative, Mid Worcestershire): \"I have a great deal of respect for Greg Clarke but I sense his hands are tied and a sense of institutional inertia pervades the governance of football in this country.\"", "More than 50 of the government's Toyota Prados could not be found\n\nGhana's new government is trying to track down more than 200 cars missing from the president's office, a government spokesman has said.\n\nThe ruling party counted the cars a month after taking power following victory in December's elections.\n\nAfter previous transfers of power, state-owned cars have been seized from officials who did not return them.\n\nA minister in the former government said the implied allegation of wrongdoing by his colleagues was false.\n\nFormer Communication Minister Omane Boamah told the BBC's Thomas Naadi that this was \"a convenient way for the new government to justify the purchase of new vehicles\".\n\nPresidential spokesman Eugene Arhin told the press that officials could only find:\n\nGhanaian radio station Citi FM reported that the president has been \"forced to use a 10-year-old BMW\" as a result.\n\nIn making the statement Mr Arhin revealed the president's office was meant to have more than 300 cars but he did not divulge the purpose of these vehicles.\n\nNana Akufo-Addo from the the New Patriotic Party won the Ghanaian presidential election at the beginning of December, taking power from John Mahama, of the National Democratic Congress.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Sharpen your pencils. Now Theresa May has her prize from the Commons, getting the Article 50 bill (she never wanted) through with no major changes, it makes its way to the red and gold end of the Palace of Westminster, to the Lords.\n\nThe first debate is set for 20 February. More than 140 Peers have already put their names down to speak. But at that stage there probably won't be a vote. A week later the thornier more detailed committee stage begins. Then the last certain stage, the third reading and report is scheduled for 7 March.\n\nIf it all goes according to the government's plan, which sources say is \"hugely unpredictable\", it would allow Theresa May to stick to her timetable and push the button for exit talks to start the next week, once the Bill has been rubber-stamped by the other Palace. (It's daft in this business to make too many predictions, but I'd put a fiver on that happening on Wednesday 15 March.)\n\nThe government will have a bumpier ride in the Lords after a grumpy process in the Commons. The Lords is dramatically different because the government most certainly does not have a majority among peers. And, it is the Lords' express purpose to scrutinise and if needed, improve draft laws before sending them back along the corridor to the Commons.\n\nOvernight a government source suggested that the Lords had better jolly well let the Brexit bill go through, or else. Despite the sabre-rattling though, the atmosphere in the Lords is less febrile than that language might suggest.\n\nDowning Street this morning tried to dampen down the aggressive briefing. And one source in the Lords described the threat as \"total BS\" - I'll leave you to work that out.\n\nThe main opposition leader, Baroness Smith, has made it plain on several occasions that although the Lords may try to tweak the Bill, Labour, broadly, has no intention of trying to block it. Her modus operandi is to \"hold to account, not hold to ransom\".\n\nThe Liberal Democrats are more intent on making changes in the Lords, for it is there they can wield power, rather than in the Commons. But unless they have the support of Labour too, there is a limit to how much trouble they can cause.\n\nThe chatter suggests the Lords will push for concessions from the government over the rights of EU citizens to stay here, reporting the progress of negotiations regularly to Parliament and maybe on a final \"meaningful vote\" for both Houses on the deal.\n\nIt will be up to the government to decide whether to tweak the bill slightly as they did in the Commons or risk some defeats. Insiders predict it is likely the Lords may end up sending back the bill to the Commons once, as \"ping pong\" to force the government to make a change or two. But even senior Lib Dem sources don't expect hostile stand-offs for weeks on end.\n\nThe Lords will make their voices heard, there is no question about that and the Article 50 bill could run into trouble.\n\nIt would be wrong to suggest that ministers don't anticipate a tricky time. But today at least, whatever the sabre-rattling from some parts of government, this historic piece of legislation looks likely to be the subject of a few skirmishes in the Lords, rather than an apocalyptic battle.", "The claim: The government had committed to taking 3,000 unaccompanied refugee children from Europe, but it will now close the programme after taking in just 350.\n\nReality Check verdict: The government previously referred to a goal to bring 3,000 unaccompanied children to the UK but eventually passed an amendment that did not commit to a specific figure. Immigration Minister Robert Goodwill says the 350 figure meets the \"intention and spirit\" of the Dubs Amendment, but Lord Dubs disagrees.\n\nSpeaking on the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme, Labour peer Lord Dubs spoke of his disappointment that the government had \"gone back on their word\" on how many unaccompanied asylum-seeking children would be brought to the UK from Europe.\n\nThe 3,000 figure was originally put forward in a campaign run by charity Save the Children.\n\nAnd in January 2016, the then Immigration Minister, James Brokenshire, said the government would commit to resettling increasing numbers of refugees, most of whom would be children, mentioning the 3,000 figure as a goal but without giving any figure as a commitment.\n\nThen, in March 2016, Lord Dubs, who came to the UK himself as a child refugee fleeing the Nazis, tabled an amendment to the Immigration Bill, which would require the UK to take in 3,000 children who had been separated from their families.\n\nThis had strong support from all opposition parties and a number of Conservative MPs.\n\nAnd it passed in the House of Lords by a significant margin at the end of March.\n\nBut when it went to the Commons in April, the Conservative government's position was to vote against the amendment, and it was rejected by a narrow margin.\n\nIt then went back to the House of Lords, where Lord Dubs reworded the amendment to read that the UK should take a \"specified number\" of unaccompanied children from Europe and that this number would be agreed later in discussion with local authorities.\n\nThis again passed in the Lords with a significant majority.\n\nIt then went back to the Commons and was expected to go to a vote on 9 May.\n\nBut, on 4 May, ahead of the vote, Mr Cameron accepted the revised version of the amendment.\n\nNearly a year later, on Wednesday, 8 February 2017, Immigration Minister Robert Goodwill announced that the government would transfer 350 unaccompanied children - about a 10th of the original figure - from refugee camps in Europe, which, he said, would meet the \"intention and spirit\" of Lord Dubs's amendment.\n\nMr Goodwill said this would include about 200 children already brought to the UK under the terms of Lord Dubs's amendment and another 150 still to come.\n\nHe said that more than 900 children had been brought here from Calais in total in 2016.\n\nThe 700 brought to the UK but not under the terms of Lord Dubs's amendment were brought here under a different regulation, which allows unaccompanied minors to come to the UK if they already have immediate family here.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A family has been rescued from their truck that was dangling over a cliff-edge in southern China.\n\nThe father, who was driving, said the road was slippery.", "An Australian man has survived spending hours struggling to keep his nose above water after his excavator rolled into a waterhole. Daniel Miller, 45, had been riding the machine at his remote property 300km (180 miles) north of Sydney.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nHeather Watson and Johanna Konta led Great Britain to a second successive 3-0 win at the Fed Cup in Estonia.\n\nJocelyn Rae and Laura Robson then saw off Daniela Vismane and Marcinkevica 6-0 6-7 (2-7) 6-2 in the doubles.\n\nBritain beat Portugal 3-0 on Wednesday, and top the group going in to their final match against Turkey on Friday.\n\nVictory would guarantee their place in the promotion play-offs on Saturday, when they would face the winners of Pool B.\n\nFind out how to get into tennis in our special guide.\n\n\"We knew that Latvia was going to be a strong team,\" said Konta. \"It's never easy and a lot of players raise their level in Fed Cup. The scoreline doesn't suggest it was as difficult as it felt.\n\n\"I'm really enjoying it. I didn't get the chance to play it last year so from the very beginning of the season I was clear that I wanted it to be part of my schedule.\"\n\nUnlike the men's team competition, the Davis Cup, which has a World Group of 16 nations, the Fed Cup divides its top teams into two groups of eight - World Group I and World Group II.\n\nThe 91 nations outside the top tiers are divided into three regional zones and Britain have one chance per year to escape - a format that hugely frustrated former captain Judy Murray.\n\nThe Europe/Africa Group I event, which this year takes place in Estonia, has 14 teams divided into groups, with Poland, Croatia, Britain and Serbia the seeded nations.\n\nFour group winners will progress to promotion play-offs on Saturday, and two nations will then qualify for World Group II play-offs in April - which could see Britain given a home Fed Cup tie for the first time since 1993.\n\nThey fell at the same stage in 2012 and 2013 - away ties in Sweden and Argentina - under the captaincy of Judy Murray.", "Moor Park Health and Leisure Centre where you can swim and also see a doctor\n\n\"My colleagues think I'm mad,\" says Dr Andrew Weatherburn.\n\nAs a consultant in geriatric medicine, he is an unlikely addition to the Moor Park Health and Leisure Centre, where schoolchildren queue for swimming lessons and people grab coffees between Zumba lessons.\n\n\"Moving out of the hospital and into the community is the best thing I've done as a consultant.\"\n\nDr Weatherburn works on the Fylde Coast, an NHS Vanguard area. The local health service here is pioneering a new model of working, which could become a blueprint for the rest of the NHS.\n\nBlackpool and Fylde suffer from many of the problems that plague the NHS nationally. With constantly increasing demand and a shortfall in supply, the local services have been under considerable strain for years.\n\nAdd to that a higher than average elderly population, which is set to double by 2030, and the local health service begins to look unsustainable.\n\n\"It's about 3% of our population that use about 50% of the resources,\" says Dr Tony Naughton, the head of the clinical commissioning group in Fylde.\n\nAs a part-time GP, he understands the need for an accurate diagnosis so their first innovation was to use patient data to work out who was actually using the services.\n\nThey were predominantly elderly and tended to suffer from more than one long-term condition. Rather than waiting for these patients to arrive at A&E, the Fylde Coast district set up the Extensive Care system, targeting resources on actively trying to keep them healthier.\n\nRather than providing temporary fixes every time a patient is in hospital, this model takes a more holistic approach.\n\nThe Extensive Care clinic allows patients to have all their health needs addressed together\n\n\"These patients were going off to see a kidney specialist and then a diabetic specialist and then a heart specialist. They had a career in attending hospital, whereas this service wraps all of those outpatients appointments together and looks at each person as an individual, rather than as a heart or as a kidney.\"\n\nDr Naughton explains that to make this more joined up system work, it was taken out of the rigid departmental structure of the hospital and placed firmly in the community.\n\nDr Weatherburn, at his clinic in the leisure centre, believes the benefits are obvious. \"I definitely know my patients much better now.\"\n\nWhile in hospital, he would have had about 10 minutes to assess a patient's most urgent needs. Now every patient who is referred to them receives a thorough two-hour assessment with a group of medics, who then hold a meeting to come up with a co-ordinated treatment plan for each one.\n\nThis system uses welfare workers as well as medics to manage each patients needs.\n\n\"Somebody may come in with a chest infection, but that maybe because they're not eating properly or they have a damp house. Now, I can't write a prescription for a dry house, but I can put them in touch with someone who can help with their housing problem,\" explains Dr Naughton.\n\nThe welfare workers spend more time with the patients, helping them with broader social issues and finding ways of managing their illnesses at home. Their job is really to empower patients to take control of their own health.\n\nA thorough assessment means the team can come up with a co-ordinated treatment plan\n\nDr Weatherburn says it is working. \"It's often the little things that made the big difference. It's not the big medical interventions and fancy tests, it's helping with loneliness, and helping the carers and families as well.\"\n\nThis may sound expensive, but the scheme should pay for itself. The new welfare workers are not medically trained so employment costs are lower, but their intervention can solve underlying problems which keep people coming back to A&E.\n\nThe results are certainly impressive. After a year-and-a-half of trialling the scheme, the Fylde Coast has already seen 13% fewer attendances at A&E, and 23-24% fewer outpatient attendances.\n\nWhen Lily Greenwood's husband, Peter, left hospital after suffering from a stroke, they were referred to the Extensive Care service.\n\n\"The doctor sent us here. We didn't want to come, but it's been the best thing ever.\"\n\nAlthough Lily wasn't the patient, the team's approach of looking at every aspect of the patient's well-being, meant that attention turned to 80-year-old Lily too, as Peter's sole carer. The team helped her to take control.\n\n\"It took its toll on me at the beginning, but now, I just feel that with coming here, we can cope with it.\"\n\nThe Extensive Care system helped look after Lily Greenwood's needs as well as those of her husband\n\nThe team filled in all the forms that Lily had been baffled by, they helped her to apply for the extra benefits she was entitled to and, most importantly, they helped her to manage her husband's condition.\n\nThey even introduced her to local support groups for carers so that she no longer feels alone or overwhelmed.\n\n\"The nurses to me are friends. They have time for you. We're a lot happier now. I feel I can cope with Peter now.\"\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.\n\nGiven their success in reducing pressure on A&E departments, Blackpool and Fylde applied a similarly local, holistic model of care to a broader section of the population.\n\nEvery neighbourhood received its own dedicated team of therapists, nurses and welfare workers who could treat patients at home in order to reduce the pressures on GP surgeries.\n\n\"It's a cultural change. We don't just do the therapy and rush to the next appointment, we think about a patient's overall well-being.\"\n\nLucy Leonard is part of a neighbourhood team in Blackpool. Having been an occupational therapist for 17 years, she knows the NHS is notoriously resistant to change. Yet, she insists, this system is being embraced by patients and practitioners alike.\n\n\"Sometimes people can feel a bit frightened and threatened by change, especially when they worry about their professional identity and being asked to do new roles, but really, it's just about putting the patient at the heart of what we do.\"\n\nThis system has been a success on the Fylde Coast, and the principles could be replicated across the country. By investing in a more holistic approach, not only has the pressure on hospitals and GP surgeries been eased but, vitally, people are healthier and better able to manage their health too.", "The 'historically accurate' portrait of Mr Darcy looks starkly different to Colin Firth who portrayed him in the BBC drama\n\nAcademics have revealed what they claim is the first \"historically accurate\" portrait of Jane Austen's Mr Darcy - and he's a world away from the romantic hero of films and TV.\n\nInstead of the broad shoulders and square jaw of Colin Firth there is a modestly-sized chest and pointy chin.\n\nThere is little description of him in Pride and Prejudice, so the academics used historical fashions from the 1790s, when it was written.\n\n\"Our Mr Darcy portrayal reflects the male physique and common features at the time,\" says Amanda Vickery, professor of early modern history at Queen Mary University of London.\n\n\"Men sported powdered hair, had narrow jaws and muscular, defined legs were considered very attractive,\" she says.\n\nColin Firth in the 1995 BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice seems to have set the standard for the modern Mr Darcy\n\nA frock coat can be seen on the artist's impression, Colin Firth and Matthew Rhys in the BBC's Death Comes to Pemberley\n\nColin Firth got the nation's collective hearts racing in 1995 with his depiction of the mysterious Mr Darcy in the BBC's adaptation.\n\nFurther adaptations since have followed in the style of Firth's portrayal including Matthew Macfadyen in the 2005 film of Pride and Prejudice.\n\nMatthew Macfadyen played Mr Darcy in the 2005 film version of Pride and Prejudice alongside Keira Knightley\n\nBut the academics say their muscular chests and broad shoulders would have been the sign of a labourer and not a gentleman at the time the book was written.\n\nThe fans' favourite Mr Darcy moments - when Colin Firth walked out of a lake dripping wet and Matthew Macfadyen crossed a field in the mist, both showing off their chests - would not have looked the same with the historically accurate Mr Darcy and his sloping narrow shoulders.\n\nAlan Badel - the BBC's Mr Darcy in 1958 - looks more like the academics' impression\n\nSome fans have not been impressed by the portrait.\n\nProfessor John Sutherland, from University College London, who led the research says they only had \"scraps\" of physical description of the character Fitzwilliam Darcy.\n\nAs well as looking at the fashions of the day they also looked at Austen's relationships and the men who may have inspired her characters.\n\n\"He is our most mysterious and desirable leading man of all time, says Prof Sutherland.\n\nAnd he appears frequently in modern culture.\n\nThe character of Mark Darcy, the romantic hero in the Bridget Jones books, was named after Jane Austen's character and played by Colin Firth in the films\n\nFurther depictions of Mr Darcy include Matthew Rhys who played the character in the TV adaptation of the Pride and Prejudice \"sequel\" Death Comes to Pemberley.\n\nHe also inspired the character of Mark Darcy in Bridget Jones's Diary by Helen Fielding, also portrayed by Colin Firth in the film versions.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "On January 21st 2003, Antoine Dixon attacked his ex-partner Simonne Butler with a samurai sword, severing both of her hands.\n\nAfter dozens of operations, Simonne's hands were reattached. Her friend Renee Gunbie, who was with her at the time, lost one of her hands.\n\nDixon then stole a vehicle and drove to Auckland, where he shot dead a man called James Te Aute. Two years later, he was given a life sentence for murder, wounding, kidnapping and using a firearm against a police officer.\n\nHe killed himself in jail. Simonne told 5 live's Nihal Arthanayake what happened on that day in 2003.", "While her life as a London socialite in her early 20s was being documented in her own Sunday Times column, it was accompanied by a growing problem with cocaine use. It all came to a head with an appearance on the Frank Skinner Show in 1999, in which she slurred her words, struggled to remember her host's name and asked him \"Are you married or are you single and what are you doing later?\". The TV appearance was quickly followed by a spell in rehab.", "The issue of fake news on social media has grabbed headlines since the 2016 US presidential election. But how do fake news sites make money?\n\nFind out more on Talking Business on Friday, 10 February at 15:30 GMT on BBC World, and on Saturday, 11 February at 20:30 GMT on the BBC News Channel in the UK.", "Great Britain should be excited about its medal chances at the 2018 Winter Olympics, according to chef de mission Mike Hay.\n\nIt would be a record-breaking Games for Team GB in Pyeongchang if they win more than the four medals they have taken home on two occasions, in 1924 and 2014.\n\nUK Sport has doubled its investment in Olympic winter sports from £13.5m for the four-year cycle to the 2014 Sochi Games to £27.9m for the South Korea event.\n\nAnd with a year go until the 2018 Games begin, UK Sport has agreed a total target of between four and eight medals across the various Winter Olympic disciplines at their respective World Championship events this year.\n\n\"The money that UK Sport have put in is a real confidence boost to our winter athletes,\" Hay told BBC Sport.\n\n\"We've got to go in with high hopes and there are some early indicators that our athletes are going to be competing for podium places.\"\n\nGreat Britain may have won 67 medals in one Games at the 2016 summer Olympics in Rio but Winter Olympic medals have been harder to come by because of a lack of natural facilities and smaller talent pools to select from.\n\nIn the 97-year history of the Winter Olympics, Great Britain have won only 26 medals but Hay believes the country is becoming more accepted on the world stage, especially in freestyle skiing and snowboarding, short track speed skating, curling and skeleton.\n\n\"It's very difficult to challenge the alpine nations but we're making progress into that second tier, if you like, and getting credibility,\" Hay said.\n\nMeanwhile, to mark a year to the event, British Ski and Snowboard has announced it plans to become one of the world's top five skiing and snowboarding nations by 2030.\n\nGreat Britain will send about 60 athletes to the Games.\n\nSki and snowboard: It took 90 years for Britain to win a first Winter Olympic medal on snow, courtesy of Jenny Jones' snowboard bronze in 2014 but in Pyeongchang there could be podium ambitions for athletes in freestyle skiing, snowboarding and even alpine skiing.\n\nSnowboarder Katie Ormerod has been a model of consistency on the World Cup stage, winning the Moscow big air and claiming two other podiums as well as an X Games bronze medal. Her cousin Jamie Nicholls, Billy Morgan and Aimee Fuller have also won World Cup medals and could threaten the podium in slopestyle and big air in 2018.\n\nJames Woods finished fifth in ski slopestyle in Sochi and will be a medal contender in South Korea. He won the season-opening World Cup slopestyle in New Zealand and just missed out on an X Games slopestyle medal, coming fourth. Woods did win the big air title in Aspen but only snowboard big air will make its debut in the Winter Olympics.\n\nIn the alpine world, slalom specialist David Ryding became the first Briton for 36 years to claim a World Cup medal when he finished second in Kitzbuhel, Austria, in January and has backed that up with three other top 10s this season.\n\nBritish Ski and Snowboard has an ambitious target of being a top-five performing nation by 2030. It says it has a strategy to raise more funds and put a world-class coaching structure in place.\n\nShort track speed skating: After the heartbreak of being penalised in all her races in Sochi, Elise Christie will be determined to leave Pyeongchang with a medal. She is leading the world 500m standings this season and has also won World Cup medals in 1000m and 1500m. Charlotte Gilmartin could also claim a medal.\n\nSkeleton: Since skeleton was reintroduced into the Winter Olympics in 2002, Great Britain have won a medal at each of the four Games. Lizzy Yarnold won gold in Russia and is aiming to become the first Briton to retain a Winter Olympic title. She took the 2016 season off but is back and building up to South Korea. Laura Deas has had World Cup success and will also be in contention.\n\nCurling: Great Britain won silver and bronze in Sochi and will again be challenging for the medal matches in 2018. The introduction of mixed doubles boosts GB's chances even more.\n\nSnowboard big air: Snowboarders will head down a ramp and perform a trick off a large jump called a kicker. The new addition is great news for Britain's medal aspirations as there are podium potential athletes in the men's and women's competitions. Meanwhile, it is goodbye to snowboard parallel slalom, which has been dropped from the Games.\n\nCurling mixed doubles: Each team is made up of a man and a woman and they play with six stones, rather than the usual eight and there are only eight ends, instead of the traditional 10. Great Britain finished fourth at the 2016 World Championships and compete in the 2017 competition at the end of April. Performances from the 2016 and 2017 World Championships will be taken into account with the top seven ranked nations, plus hosts South Korea, qualifying for the Games.\n\nSpeed skating mass start: This will take place on the long track and will be a 16-lap race where all skaters start simultaneously. There will be four sprints where points are awarded. The first three athletes to cross the finish line will be awarded the medals.\n\nAlpine skiing team event. Teams will consist of two men and two women and they will compete against other nations in head-to-head slalom races.\n\nWhat will Pyeongchang be like?\n\nThe 2018 Winter Olympics will be held between 9 and 25 February and it is the third time Asia has held a Winter Olympics after Japan hosted both the 1972 Games in Sapporo and Nagano in 1998.\n\nPyeongchang will be split between the coast and the mountains, similarly to Sochi. The coastal cluster will host curling, ice hockey, figure skating, short track and speed skating, while the mountain area will host skiing, snowboarding, bobsleigh, skeleton and luge.\n\nThe winter Paralympics will run from 9 to 18 March.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One, Radio 5 live, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nWales wing George North says he will be fit to face Scotland in round three of the Six Nations after being \"gutted\" to miss out their defeat by England.\n\nAlex Cuthbert's return for North was confirmed an hour before kick-off. North had a dead leg suffered in Wales' win against Italy six days earlier.\n\n\"A six-day turnaround with a pretty decent dead leg was always going to be tough,\" said North.\n\n\"Two weeks time, Scotland in mind. I'll be fit to go again.\"\n\nNorth had been named on the team sheet handed out to the media before kick-off, but told the Welsh Rugby Union's television service he had been ruled out on the morning of the game.\n\nHowever, Dan Biggar was passed fit to start the match after picking up a rib injury in Rome.\n\nProps Rob Evans and Tomas Francis were the other two changes from the 33-7 win over Italy in Rome.\n• None Sign up for rugby union news alerts and get Six Nations news the moment it breaks\n• None How to follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n• None Bright lights and big hitters - take our rugby quiz\n\nBath number eight Taulupe Faletau, who had not played since Christmas Eve, was on Wales' bench for Wales, taking the place of Ospreys forward James King.\n\nIt meant a vote of confidence for the starting back-row of Sam Warburton, Justin Tipuric and Ross Moriarty.\n\nThe roof at the Principality Stadium was open for the match at the request of England coach Eddie Jones, who said he was ready for Welsh 'shenanigans' after he named his team to face Wales.\n\nHowley wanted the roof closed on the other hand and said he thought that would be the case on Thursday lunchtime, before England confirmed it would remain open.\n\nBoth teams have to agree for the roof to be closed.\n\nWales in the 2017 Six Nations", "Parents have met the emergency doctor who saved the life of their newborn baby.\n\nWhen Daphne-Louise was born, complications meant she was not getting any oxygen and she was given just nine minutes to live.\n\nAn air ambulance crew flew to her home at Friday Bridge, near Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, and was able to save her.\n\nAfter baby and mother were stabilised, they were taken to hospital in King's Lynn.\n\nHer parents were reunited with Anne Booth, of Magpas Air Ambulance.", "Last updated on .From the section Golf\n\nFourteen-time major winner Tiger Woods says he will \"never feel great\" again because of the number of injuries suffered during his career.\n\nWoods, 41, pulled out of the Dubai Desert Classic before the second round this month because of a back spasm.\n\nHe only returned to action in December after two back operations.\n\n\"There were a lot of times I didn't think I was going to make it back. It was tough, it was more than brutal,\" Woods told Dubai magazine Vision.\n\nWoods' first return to competitive action after a 15-month lay-off came in December at the Hero World Challenge - an 18-man tournament in the Bahamas - and he finished 15th at the PGA Tour event.\n\nHe hopes to compete in the Masters at Augusta from 6-9 April.\n\n\"There have been plenty of times when I thought I would never play the game again at the elite level,\" added Woods, who has won 79 titles on the PGA Tour.\n\n\"It was tough, it was more than brutal. There were times I needed help just to get out of bed.\n\n\"I feel good, not great. I don't think I will ever feel great because it's three back surgeries, four knee operations.\n\n\"I'm always going to be a little bit sore. As long as I can function, I'm fine with that.\"\n\nWoods has not won a tournament anywhere since 2013, while his title drought in major championships dates back to 2008.\n\n\"There is a changing of the guard,\" he said. \"My generation is getting older but if I'm teeing up then the goal is to win.\"", "The costs of school meals could rise in some areas, according to a report\n\nThe Daily Mail and Daily Telegraph both lead on a survey by the think tank, the Local Government Information Unit, suggesting millions of households are facing above-inflation rises in council tax.\n\nAlmost all of England's town halls are said to be planning to increase bills by up to 5% to pay for social care.\n\nMany are also planning higher charges for parking, school meals and even burials and cremations.\n\nAccording to the Mail, critics say councils could avoid the rises if they stopped hoarding cash and dipped into their huge reserves.\n\nOthers say they could employ fewer chief executives earning more than the prime minister.\n\nThere is a continued focus on problems besetting the health service.\n\n\"With the NHS collapsing around her ears, brazen Theresa May yesterday insisted the Tories have lavished record sums of cash on the service,\" the paper says.\n\nHowever, it quotes figures from the Institute of Fiscal Studies which the paper says \"shatter\" that claim.\n\nAnd it says the IFS has warned that \"a shocking funding crisis gripping the NHS\" means it'll be unable to cope with a growing and ageing population.\n\nThe Guardian quotes a government health adviser, Patrick Carter, warning that hospitals are under such extreme pressure that they're \"in a state of war\".\n\nThe Times quotes Sir Robert Francis QC, who led the public inquiry into the Mid Staffordshire scandal, warning that the NHS faces an \"existential crisis\".\n\nIt's manifestly failing, he says, and he dismisses plans for savings as \"unrealistic\".\n\nSeveral papers report that doctors will not have to reveal their income from private work, after a U-turn by health chiefs.\n\nA revolt by doctors is said to have forced NHS England to abandon plans to make them publish their outside earnings.\n\nInstead, they'll be expected to publish on NHS websites how much time they spend on private work.\n\n\"What are they hiding?\" asks the Daily Mail.\n\nThe Times castigates Wikipedia's volunteer editors in the UK for deciding that the Daily Mail can no longer be cited as a reliable source.\n\nIt suggests there's been an extension of the phrase \"fake news\" to cover publications that people merely dislike.\n\nThe paper also rejects Jeremy Corbyn's claim that reports suggesting he's close to stepping down as Labour leader are \"fake news\".\n\nMr Miller was pinned down by a bar on the excavator\n\nIt says he's a liability for his party - and that colleagues are appalled by what it calls his ineptitude.\n\nA cartoon in the Telegraph likens the plight of Mr Corbyn to the misfortune of an Australian man who was trapped in a muddy ditch for six hours and survived by just about keeping his nose above the murky water.\n\nThe photograph is published in a number of the papers.\n\nThe Daily Express says migrants were caught trying to enter Britain illegally at the rate of 200 a day in the run-up to the Brexit referendum.\n\nFigures apparently show that 24,800 people were stopped in the first six months of last year.\n\nBut as the historic vote on 23 June approached, the paper says, the rate of detection increased - with 5,900 being caught in June.\n\nThe Express says the scale of illegal immigration through northern France can be revealed for the first time after the paper won a long battle with the Home Office to publish the figures.\n\nSeveral papers feature a former maths student from the University of Liverpool who is believed to be the first British woman to join the fight against so-called Islamic State in Syria.\n\nKimberley Taylor, who is 27, travelled to the war zone without telling her family in Merseyside after becoming shocked by the plight of refugees.\n\nShe is quoted saying: \"I'm prepared to give my life for this.\"\n\nThe Mail says women fighters are greatly feared by the jihadis who believe it's a disgrace to be killed by a woman in battle, prohibiting them from entering paradise.\n\nFinally, there is more bad news for healthy eaters already struggling to find iceberg lettuces and courgettes.\n\nThe Times warns that Britons will soon have to be a little less generous drizzling their olive oil.\n\nApparently erratic weather in the Mediterranean has sent wholesale prices soaring.\n\nItalian olive groves have been particularly badly hit because fruit flies have been attracted by the humid weather, while a heatwave in Greece last spring is said to have cut the supply there by a quarter.", "Reform of the FA? Haven't I heard this one before?\n\nYes, we've been down this road many times. Does this sound familiar?\n\n\"We are making progress, albeit slowly. I intend to see that we continue to make progress by continuing to meet all the interested parties and bringing them together, if necessary, because all of us are concerned with the health of this great game which has given so much satisfaction, not only to us but to almost the whole nation over the years.\"\n\nThat quote comes from Denis Howell MP, Minister for Housing and Local Government, speaking in the House of Commons in 1968 about reform of the Football Association.\n\nHowell was taking part in a debate on the Chester Report, commissioned in 1966 to \"enquire into the state of association football at all levels, including the organisation, management, finance and administration, and the means by which the game may be developed for the public good; and to make recommendations\".\n\nNow, nearly half a century later, MPs are once more asking roughly the same questions - given the lack of any substantial change.\n\nOn Thursday, a Commons debate will ask whether the FA has the ability to reform itself, or whether legislation is needed to force it to change.\n\nWhat do MPs want?\n\nThe crises in governance at some global sports bodies, including football's world governing body Fifa, prompted a rethink over how organisations which receive government funding should operate.\n\nLast year, grassroots funding body Sport England set out required standards for transparency, accountability and financial integrity from those organisations which ask for government and National Lottery funding. The Code for Sports Governance will come into force in April.\n\nIt demands, for example, 30% gender diversity on boards, greater transparency and term limits.\n\nThe FA is due to meet the Government in the spring to show its plans for achieving the required standards.\n\nBut MPs on the Culture, Media and Sport (CMS) Select Committee have run out of patience and are exerting pressure on the FA to ensure it goes through with modernisation. Thursday's backbench debate is another method to do just that.\n\nThe committee has previously published two reports which set out how its MPs think:\n• None The Premier League is dominant within English football and should have its influence diluted\n• None There should be greater representation for fans and the grassroots game\n\nWhat role has the Premier League played?\n\nIn a letter to the chairman of the CMS committee last December, five former FA chairmen and chief executives outlined how they believe the governing body is incapable of change without external assistance in the form of government-backed legislation.\n\nThe quintet - David Bernstein, David Davies, Greg Dyke, Alex Horne and Lord Triesman - also laid some of the blame for the failures within English football at the door of the Premier League.\n\n\"We can testify first-hand that the FA's decision-making structures are arcane and convoluted leading to a lack of clarity about the role and purpose of these structures,\" they wrote.\n\n\"The FA has neither the modernity of approach nor independence required to counter the [Premier League] juggernaut or to modernise its own governance.\"\n\nIn response, the Premier League said it had \"always supported the FA's governance reforms\" and had backed previous reform proposals.\n\nA statement at the time read: \"We have kept patience when past chairmen and chief executives at the FA have failed to deliver, but will continue to work with the current leadership team at the FA to progress their governance agenda.\"\n\nThe former executives also outlined how the FA board is effectively gridlocked, with members of the professional game and those of the national - or grassroots - game often representing their own interests rather than those of the wider sport.\n\nSo what needs to happen?\n\nThe board of directors, the FA Council and matters such as voting structures all need to change. If not, the FA's public funding - worth £30m over four years - is at risk.\n\nUltimately, the government could also refuse to act as a financial guarantor if the FA wanted to bid to host a future World Cup or European Championship.\n\nFormer FA chairman Dyke said he wanted the council, which is effectively English football's parliament, to be more representative and \"better reflect the balance of the modern game\".\n\nOf its current 122 members, only eight are women and four are black or ethnic minority. There is also representation from Oxford and Cambridge Universities, something many people see as anachronistic given there is only one representative each from fans and players.\n\nOh, and 92 of them are aged over 60, while 12 are octogenarians.\n\nDyke failed in his efforts for reform with some board members opposed, given they believe their roles would be watered down - and his successor must find a way to convince them otherwise.\n\nThe FA board, meanwhile, has been amended in recent years with the addition of two independent directors. There are plans to add two female representatives this summer, bringing the total number of members to 14.\n\nIt currently consists of four representatives of the national game and four representatives of the professional game, plus two non-executives, the chairman and the chief executive.\n\nWill those changes be enough? And what does the FA have to say?\n\nThe FA is privately annoyed at the timing of the debate, believing it should be allowed to set forward its plans in April to Sports Minister Tracey Crouch.\n\nIt is also keen to emphasise that it has invested record amounts in grassroots facilities, has led the way on promoting women's football and has developed St George's Park as a hub to improve the fortunes of the England national teams.\n\nBut the spectre of legislation - essentially, having change forced upon them - awaits if the FA's reform plans fail.\n\nThat would need government backing to bring forward, and there is no sign of that occurring just yet.\n\nFA chairman Greg Clarke has threatened to resign if his plans are not supported. That can probably be viewed as a signal of his confidence of delivering reform to both the board and council, thus satisfying the immediate requirements of the Code for Sports Governance.\n\nWill it make a difference? If so, what?\n\nThe glacial pace of the debate has left many involved frustrated, and believing the FA is unable to self-regulate.\n\nThe five former executives wrote that meaningful reform \"may well move us to redressing the woeful lack of English players or managers and the embarrassing failures of our national team for the past 50 years\".\n\nAnd reform would also see those at the heart of the FA decision-making change to look more like those who actually play, watch and administer the game in 2017.\n\nThursday's debate, though, is just the latest staging post on what is a very long journey.", "June Lord, 82, is one of those helped home from hospital under the Wakefield project\n\nEvery Monday morning, in a meeting room within earshot of the bells of Wakefield cathedral, a group of healthcare workers help to stage a mini-revolution.\n\nNothing that you read in the next few minutes may strike you as particularly surprising.\n\nYet the experimental manner in which they are working together in this corner of Yorkshire is being seen as a possible way to improve healthcare across the country, and save the NHS money.\n\nAt the table is a healthcare assistant, called Kay, Karen the physiotherapist, then Jane the occupational therapist.\n\nOn the other side sit two mental health nurses both called Rachel, and finally Sue Robson - another mental health nurse who's been with the NHS for 37 years.\n\n\"I've seen many, many changes, and this is one of the most exciting,\" smiles Sue.\n\nEach Monday, they sit together and plan the care that will be offered to the mostly elderly people they are working with in a number of care homes in the Wakefield district.\n\nBecause each here brings a different specialism to the table, they can, as a group, build up a complete picture of how best to help each patient.\n\nThere is one woman they are especially worried about this week. She has fallen quite a few times, but as they talk it begins to look less like a purely physical problem.\n\n\"I carried out a physio session last week,\" says Karen.\n\nShe was \"very anxious. It was difficult to engage with her,\" adds Kay.\n\n\"So today if things don't seem to be improving we may look at discussing with the psychiatrist whether she needs a review,\" concludes Sue.\n\n\"As professionals we are linking up,\" Sue continues. \"We're discussing the case between ourselves. We have links to the GP. We have links to the mental health services and we are all working together rather than in isolation.\"\n\nMental health nurse Sue Robson says they have seen good results in Wakefield\n\nAcross the board this project in Wakefield - which at its most basic aims to get the different parts of the health service and the care system working together - is easing the pressures on the NHS and on care homes.\n\nThey have seen a sizable reduction in the number of patients who've had to go to hospital from the care homes they work in. A reduction in the use of ambulances. A reduction in the number of days patients who do go to hospital end up spending in a hospital bed.\n\nIt's both about keeping patients out of hospital in the first place, and getting them home as quickly as possible if they do need to go.\n\nIn the first nine months of 2016-17, phase one of the Wakefield Vanguard Care Homes scheme recorded:\n\nThe project has involved NHS workers training up care home staff beyond the basic first aid most already have. That gives care homes the skills they need to better diagnose what is wrong with a resident who falls ill. It is resulting in better care for patients and fewer 999 calls for an ambulance.\n\nThere are also efforts to improve people's health in the first place. A lot of work is going into making the men and women who live in care homes and \"independent living\" flats (they used to be known as sheltered accommodation) feel less isolated.\n\nSharon Carter runs one project that aims to stop the elderly feeling lonely. It's called Portrait of a Life. Essentially it's a photo and memory book that residents like 91-year-old Marjorie Smith receive.\n\nMarjorie Smith is a resident at the Croftlands independent living scheme\n\nIt helps them reminisce, it helps other older people living in the same accommodation get to know their neighbours, and it helps care staff learn about what makes the people in their care tick.\n\n\"We're finding they have a better sense of well-being as opposed to ill-being,\" says Sharon.\n\nAlong with everything else the project is doing, she says it's led to fewer people going into hospital and residential care.\n\nMany of course still do end up in hospital. And when they do Louise Lumley works at the \"getting them home\" end of the process.\n\nShe's part of Age UK's Wakefield District team, and outside Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield she's securing 82-year-old June Lord's wheelchair in the back of an adapted car. It will be a 20-minute journey home.\n\nWhen they arrive, Louise goes through a list of questions. Does June have someone who can help her in the coming days? Does she have the medicine she needs? Is there anything at home that's particularly dangerous that might need to be made safe, to prevent future injuries?\n\nThe answers will go into a database that can help tailor June's care in the coming months.\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.\n\nThere is plenty of other work besides. A local not-for-profit Housing Association sits in meetings with health staff to work out how best to improve the lives of the elderly people who rent flats from them.\n\nThey're trying to join up all the parts of the system as much as they can.\n\nEveryone here stresses it's about improving patient care. But there are savings to be made. They estimate that if they roll this project out across the whole district, by 2021 they will make a net saving of £5.3m a year.\n\nYou can download the podcast containing Matthew Price's full report for BBC Radio 4's Today programme here.", "We know our population is ageing and, as we live longer, many of us will need support in old age. There has also been an increase in the numbers of people living with a disability who may rely on some level of social care.\n\nNiall Dickson, the head of the NHS Confederation, which represents NHS providers, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that the system was trying to cope with \"huge amounts of extra demand\" as a result of there being \"many many more\" older people.\n\nBetween 2005 and 2015, the number of people aged 65 and over in the UK increased by 21%, while the number aged 85 and over increased by 31%.\n\nMore than a million more people were living with a disability in the UK in 2016 than 10 years earlier because people are living longer with disabilities than before. This is all good news.\n\nBut at the same time, directors of adult social services in England say they have had to cut £4.6bn from their budgets since 2010.\n\nSo who is getting care, what kind of care are they getting and who is paying for it?\n\nUnlike the NHS, in England social care is not free at the point of delivery - a lot of people have to pay for at least some of their care, and a lot of that care is delivered by private providers.\n\nThat can be anything from someone coming to your house to help you get out of bed or washed, to full-time accommodation in a care home.\n\nIt's a little different in the rest of the UK - home care is capped at £60 a week in Wales and free for the over-75s in Northern Ireland, while Scotland provides free personal care, that is help with things such as washing and dressing, in both care homes and people's own homes.\n\nThe UK Homecare Association estimates that more than 70% of homecare services in the UK are bought by local authorities, with the rest bought by people paying for their care themselves.\n\nIn 2014-15, that equated to 646,000 people being cared for in their homes with the state paying.\n\nThis doesn't necessarily mean 70% of people who need care at home are paid for by the state.\n\nIn 2015, Age UK estimated that more than a million older people in England were living with unmet social care needs (such as not receiving assistance with bathing and dressing), a rise from 800,000 in 2010.\n\nPeople not eligible for funding may just be doing without the care they really need or relying on informal care from friends and family.\n\nWhen it comes to residential care, the latest figures from 2014 suggest local authorities across the UK paid for 37% of people, while the NHS funded 10% of care home places.\n\nThe rest was made up of people who either paid for all of their care (41%), or topped it up with a contribution from their local council (12%).\n\nOn 31 March 2016, in England, there were 199,305 people in nursing and residential home places and 452,990 people accessing long-term care in the community for whom the local council had some role in funding or providing care or assessing the needs of the person receiving it.\n\nThe most recent data doesn't tell us how many people were cared for overall in England, but we can say that there were 1.8 million requests for support in 2015-16.\n\nOf those, 28% were from people aged 18-64 and the remaining 72% were aged 65 and over.\n\nBut of these requests, 57% resulted in no direct support from the council.\n\nFor the over-65 group, almost a quarter of requests for support were from people being discharged from hospital.\n\nThink tank the King's Fund says the number of older people getting state-funded help in England alone fell by 26% between 2009 and 2014.\n\nThis is in the context of an ageing population.\n\nThe government has said English councils' social care departments are getting an extra £3.5bn by 2020.\n\nAlmost £2bn of this comes from council tax, which local authorities have been allowed to raise by 3% this year and next year provided they spend it on adult social care.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Snooker\n\nWorld champion Mark Selby suffered a shock first-round defeat by world number 18 Martin Gould at the World Grand Prix in Preston.\n\nGould, who beat Selby on his way to the semi-finals two years ago, came through a tense final frame to win 4-3.\n\nThe 35-year-old from Middlesex made a career-high break of 142 in the fourth frame and goes on to face Joe Perry.\n\nAustralian Neil Robertson beat Ricky Walden of England 3-2 to set up a last-16 clash with Ronnie O'Sullivan.\n\nChina's world number five Ding Junhui saw off Yu De Lu 4-2, while England's Anthony Hamilton, winner of last week's German Open, lost 4-0 to Mark Allen of Northern Ireland.\n\nGould looked on course for a straightforward victory when he led Selby 3-1, and then 3-2 with a 58-0 lead, but the world champion hit back with a brilliant 64 clearance to force a decider.\n\nIn a final frame that required a re-rack, following an early stalemate, Selby surprisingly missed two opportunities before Gould took charge with a 54 that proved decisive.", "Not everyone was won round by Donald Trump when he became the Republican presidential nominee last year - even members of his own party had their doubts.\n\nWe spoke to a group of Republican women in New Hampshire who were among those initially sceptical of the current president, but who have since had a change of heart.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nBob Howden has stepped down as chairman of British Cycling, but will remain the organisation's president.\n\nJonathan Browning, a former chairman of Vauxhall, has succeeded him.\n\nUK Sport was expected to publish a report this month after an independent investigation into the culture and practices at British Cycling - but that has been delayed.\n\nThe governing body is also being investigated by UK Anti-Doping over allegations of wrongdoing.\n\nHowden, who was re-elected in December, has denied that the move is related to the publication of the report.\n\nA former managing director of Jaguar Cars, Browning was appointed to the British Cycling board as a non-executive director in March 2015.\n\n\"British Cycling has delivered tremendous success at every level over the past two decades, but there is clearly work to do to take the organisation to the next level,\" he said.\n\nIan Drake left his post as chief executive officer in January, saying it was the \"natural moment\" as preparations began for the Tokyo Olympics in 2020.\n• None Should welfare come before winning?\n\nWhat is the background?\n\nBrowning's appointment comes after a turbulent year for one of the country's most successful and well-funded sports governing bodies.\n\nBritish Cycling is preparing for the results of the investigation into whether there was a culture of bullying at its world-class performance programme.\n\nPublication of a report sources have described as \"explosive\" has been delayed until next month.\n\nFormer world champion Nicole Cooke has accused the organisation of sexism.\n\nAnd Howden was criticised for his performance in front of a parliamentary select committee at the end of last year.\n\n\"The appointment of an independent chair brings British Cycling more closely in line with the new code for sports governance,\" Howden said.", "Tara Palmer-Tomkinson described when she realised she was living a privileged life, in an interview with Jane Garvey on BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour.\n\nIt followed the launch of her novel 'Inheritance'.\n\nThe former Sunday Times columnist, reality TV star, and goddaughter of Prince Charles was found dead on Wednesday aged 45.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Watch: How Munther Alaskry got his family to the US\n\nAn Iraqi translator who worked extensively with the US military spent almost seven years trying to get his family to America. But with days to go before their departure, President Trump signed a travel ban that put the family's future in question.\n\nIt took seven years for Munther Alaskry to secure visas for his family. Now, they were only four days away from a new life in Houston, Texas, where friends and an apartment were waiting.\n\nBut instead of spending his final days in Baghdad celebrating and saying good-bye to family, Munther was in a panic.\n\nPresident Donald Trump was about to sign an executive order that would ban immigration from seven majority-Muslim countries for 120 days, including Iraq.\n\nMunther - a 37 year old chemical engineer and former translator for the US military - decided they couldn't wait. He told his family they were leaving Baghdad for the US immediately.\n\nHis wife Hiba protested - she hadn't finished packing, and her grandfather was about to have emergency surgery for cancer. She wanted to see him before they left. It was only four days, she told him.\n\n\"I don't think we have even one day,\" Munther said.\n\nAfter hastily selling off the last of their furniture and some jewellery, Munther was able to raise the $5,000 (£4,022.50) needed for the next-day flight to Houston, with a connection through Istanbul, Turkey. The couple crammed the last of their possessions into gigantic roller suitcases, and told their distraught family members there'd been a drastic change of plans.\n\nAs his family slept, Munther flipped anxiously between CNN, Fox News and the BBC. It was just past midnight in Iraq, but in the US, it was still Friday afternoon. Munther watched President Trump at the Pentagon signing an executive order titled \"Protecting the Nation From Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States\".\n\n\"I am establishing new vetting measures to keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the United States of America. We don't want them here,\" Trump said before placing his pen on the paper.\n\n\"We want to ensure that we are not admitting into our country the very threats our soldiers are fighting overseas. We only want to admit those into our country who will support our country and love deeply our people.\"\n\nMunther believed that he firmly belonged in the latter category. He'd always been fascinated by America, learning English from watching action movies like Rambo and The Terminator, and listening to Metallica as a teenager.\n\nMunther in 2008 after an Iraqi national football team win\n\nHe stunned a group of Marines with his knowledge of American heavy metal after he met them at a checkpoint near a relative's home in Baghdad, back in 2003. At the time, he was still a student at the University of Technology, Iraq.\n\n\"You speak good English,\" the Marines told him. \"Why don't you join us?\"\n\nMunther saw it as an opportunity to rebuild his country in the then-hopeful, post-Saddam Hussein era Iraq.\n\n\"I wanted to help the American army and the Iraqi people to understand each other. I was trying to help both of them,\" he said. \"It was the right thing to do.\"\n\nAfter the Marines left, Munther got a succession of jobs translating for the 3rd Infantry Division and 1st Armored Division. He was sent to the outskirts of Baghdad to help train the Iraqi National Guard. He manned the checkpoints. He had his own service weapon.\n\nHe developed a reputation for his punctuality and his sunny disposition. One former soldier described him to the BBC as a \"critical asset\", trustworthy with unflinching \"integrity and morals\".\n\nThe most dangerous assignment was with a unit clearing roadside bombs. His convoy was hit more than once.\n\nFellow translators were getting killed or losing limbs.\n\nThey were also getting murdered by members of al-Qaeda.\n\n\"They burned them alive. They cut their heads,\" Alaskry recalled. \"In Arabic we say, 'You are putting your spirit on the palm of your hand.' Because you don't know what will happen next.\"\n\nOne day, Alaskry found a letter on his car telling him that he would burn in hell for working for the \"infidels\".\n\nHe fled for Jordan without telling anyone, but returned to Iraq a few years later to once again work for the Americans on a health care project for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).\n\nIn 2008, Munther married Hiba, also a chemical engineer. When their daughter Dima was born the following year, Munther realized that his young family had no future in Iraq. He was a marked man, and life in Baghdad was too unstable.\n\nThe family had to move every year to keep their whereabouts a secret. When American troops began pulling out for good in 2011, Munther felt abandoned, like a trap was closing in on him - a feeling that followed him for years.\n\n\"Everyday they are bombing us. Almost everyday, we have like a car bomb,\" he said. \"It's not safe over here, especially [after] working with the Americans.\"\n\nIn 2010, Munther applied for a Special Immigrant Visa, reserved for Iraqis and Afghans who served with the US military and could prove their lives were under threatened as a result.\n\nThe programme was choked with applicants desperate to get out of the country. Delays mounted, as did the costs for doctor's exams and certificates from the local police ensuring Munther had no criminal record. Several American law enforcement agencies had to complete independent background checks on the family.\n\nFinally, in December 2016, they were cleared. Their tickets were booked.\n\n\"We said, 'There will be a light at the end of the tunnel. We will go to the states. We will secure a better life for our kids.\"\n\nIn the early morning darkness, Munther and Hiba loaded their enormous bags and two sleepy children into a relative's car and left for the Baghdad airport.\n\nIt was the middle of the night in the US. Trump's order, now eight hours old, had not been uploaded to the White House website. As the family checked in, no one questioned their visas or their Iraqi passports.\n\nAs they waited for their first flight from Baghdad to Istanbul, Munther dashed off texts to his sponsors and former colleagues from USAID. He sent an email to his contacts at No One Left Behind, a non-profit in Washington founded by American soldiers to help translators resettle in the US.\n\n\"I'm so scared ... I don't know what we will face and I don't know if the officer at Istanbul will let us board on the Airplane,\" he wrote in one message. \"Right now the only feeling i have is fear.\n\nThe three-hour flight to Istanbul was unbearable. Munther quaked in his seat. It was, he said, \"just like a horror movie - when you dream you're jumping from a high building\".\n\nIn Istanbul, the family transferred to the plane to Houston without incident. After they took their seats, Munther put on cartoons for three year old Hassan. His daughter Dima, an exuberant, chatty seven year old, threw her arms around her father's neck, proclaiming this to be the best airplane she'd ever seen.\n\nMunther started to relax. He reminded Dima of his promise to take her to Disney Land, a treat for which she'd been saving her pocket money.\n\nAbout 15 minutes after they boarded, a Turkish police officer made her way down the aisle, followed by three uniformed airport security officers. They stopped at Hiba's seat.\n\n\"Madame, your passport please,\" the officer said.\n\nAt that moment, Munther says, \"I knew our dream was lost\".\n\nThe heap of luggage in the Alaskrys' apartment after the failed attempt to migrate to the US\n\nAfter they were pulled from the Turkish flight - the children crying as they were ejected onto the tarmac in the snow - the Alaskrys spent 13 hours in the Turkish airport waiting for a flight back to Baghdad. Hiba and Munther took turns sleeping in order to keep watch over their bags.\n\nBy then, news of the executive order had reached airlines and customs officials abroad, and travellers from Syria, Sudan, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Yemen and Somalia were being pulled from their seats or barred at the gates at airports all over the world.\n\nIn New York City, flights that had been in the air when Trump signed his order had touched down, and US Customs and Border Patrol officers were beginning to hold anyone from the seven barred countries. Some people were sent back. Some signed documents presented to them that cancelled their visas. Even permanent residents - green card holders - were being told they could not return to their homes in the US.\n\nOne of the first Iraqis to be stopped at John F Kennedy International Airport was a man called Hameed Khalid Darweesh, who had come to the US on the same type of visa Munther was carrying: an SIV, which he earned after interpreting for the US military for 10 years.\n\nPeople gather for a protest at Terminal 4 of the John F Kennedy airport in New York on 28 January\n\nOver the course of the day more and more reports of detainees at airports around the country began to come in: at San Francisco International, Dulles International in Washington, and Philadelphia International Airport.\n\nAs the news spread, demonstrators began showing up to the terminals. Darweesh was eventually released, and a challenge filed in court on his behalf resulted in a US District Court judge ordering a stop to all deportations for visa-holders from the seven countries.\n\nGreen card-holders were allowed into the country, in some cases after long, intense interviews by customs officials. Lawyers in Virginia, then Massachusetts, then Washington state and Minnesota filed various motions to block Trump's executive order.\n\nMunther watched the protests swelling at JFK on television from their nearly empty house in Baghdad, their carefully packed bags now strewn in a heap across the floor.\n\n\"It was amazing,\" he said. \"Lawyers go voluntarily to help the refugees, to help the immigrants, to help the kids. I was feeling happy because other people could make it.\n\n\"American people are great people. Really. I work with them. I know them.\"\n\nBefore they left, Munther sold their car and almost all their furniture. He quit his job and had turned down other offers of employment. Because they missed their flight, the resettlement agency in Houston had to give their apartment away. There would be no refund for the aborted trip, nor for the return flight to Baghdad.\n\nIn an upstairs bedroom, Munther flipped through a stack of his old identification badges. His weapons authorisation card, his translator's badge, a pass to former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein's palace, refashioned as a US military base named FOB Prosperity.\n\nMunther Alaskry said working with the US military was \"the right thing to do\"\n\nHe had a stack of photographs of himself standing with American soldiers - playing cards, riding on top of a tank, posing with an M-16 rifle. The younger Munther looks giddy in the photos.\n\n\"They were like my brothers, you know?\" he said. \"They're really nice guys. Really nice.\"\n\nMunther pulled out another folder stuffed with letters of commendation, certificates of appreciation, and other documentation of his work history.\n\n\"Thank you for your hard work and exceptional performance,\" read one.\n\n\"We couldn't do it without you!\" said another.\n\n\"Another one. Another one,\" Munther said, flipping faster and faster, then throwing the whole pile on a heap on his bathroom counter. \"Even if I have thousands of those, it's now worth nothing, you know?\"\n\nTrump's executive order halted all immigration from Iraq for 120 days. The Alaskrys' visas were due to expire in just two months, at which point they'd be back where they started in 2010.\n\nMunther didn't believe they would ever come to the US, at least not while Trump was president.\n\n\"Losing a job, losing money, it's OK. You can survive,\" he said, \"But losing your dreams? This is the most terrible thing.\"\n\nAfter three days of chaos, confusion, and a blizzard of legal challenges from all over the country, a press conference was called in Washington with the heads of Homeland Security, US Customs and Border Protection and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.\n\n\"This is not, I repeat, not a ban on Muslims,\" said Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly.\n\nBut Kevin McAleenan, acting commissioner of US Customs and Border Protection, did have an important clarification to make.\n\n\"Lawful permanent residents and Special Immigrant Visa holders are allowed to board their flights,\" he said. The state department later confirmed that \"it is in the national interest to allow Iraqi Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) holders to continue to travel to the United States.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nSoon after, the founder of No One Left Behind posted a victory message on the group's Facebook page and sent messages to all of their clients abroad, including Munther: \"GREAT NEWS! Afghan and Iraq SIVs WILL be allowed to enter America!! We did it!!!\"\n\nIn his empty apartment, Munther watched McAleenan's comments. He checked the US Embassy's website and read the new guidance. Finally, after a representative from the embassy called and confirmed that he and his family would indeed be able to travel, Munther once again booked a flight to the US.\n\nBut almost as soon as the tickets were purchased - this time flying through Doha, Qatar, to New York City - dread set in.\n\n\"First I was happy, but now I'm scared,\" he said. \"I don't want my wife and kids to face the same situation.\n\n\"Oh my god, I cannot handle it. I barely handled it last time.\"\n\nAs they packed their bags once again, it was clear that little Dima was still traumatised by her experience in Turkey. She asked her mother to bring blankets so that when they were kicked off the flight and forced to spend another night in the airport, she would have something to cover herself with.\n\n\"I don't want to go to the America because they don't want us to go,\" she told her father.\n\nMunther tried to reassure her, but he wasn't feeling very sure himself.\n\n\"Hopefully everything will be just fine,\" he repeated over and over. \"Fingers crossed.\"\n\nMunther and family waiting for their fight to New York City in Doha\n\nAfter a sleepless night, Munther lined up the suitcases once more at the front door of their home and called Qatar Airlines to make sure they would be able to board their flight.\n\nHe was told no. No-one at the airline had heard of the new guidance.\n\nIn a panic, Munther called the US Embassy in Baghdad, which referred him to an emergency hotline and emailed him the text of the new rule to show airport officials.\n\nThe airline employees were unimpressed. Munther continued sending frantic emails and texts to the US Embassy all the way to the airport. Finally, about an hour before the flight was set to take off, Munther got a call from Qatar Airlines.\n\n\"Do you want to hear some good news?\" the man asked him.\n\nThe family was cleared, and allowed through security with just 30 minutes to make it to their gate. After a sprint through the airport, they arrived just in time for their flight to Doha.\n\nIt was at this point that Munther finally broke down.\n\n\"I don't know how to describe how I'm feeling right now,\" he said, tearing up. \"Finally. It was a struggle. But finally.\"\n\nThe flight from Doha touched down at John F Kennedy International Airport at 8:30am, and a small group of lawyers, a local rabbi and a volunteer chauffer waited by customs for the Alaskrys.\n\nAyla Yavin volunteered through her synagogue to drive the Alaskrys to their hotel\n\nAn hour passed, then two.\n\nAll of the Doha flight passengers came and went with no sign of the family.\n\n\"This is worrying,\" said Emad Khalil, a lawyer from the newly formed group No Ban JFK. He started making phone calls to the American Civil Liberties Union, who in turn began calling the border patrol and airport officials.\n\nAfter three hours, Khalil was certain that the family was being detained somewhere behind the big, white wall that separated customs from arrivals. If they did not appear soon, the lawyers said they would file a legal motion on behalf of the family.\n\nFinally, after five anxious hours, they finally emerged, Dima and Hassan holding hands, Hiba and Munther smiling from behind a roller cart stacked high with luggage.\n\nDespite the lengthy delay, Hiba said that the customs officials who interviewed them were friendly, and they never felt intimidated.\n\nHassan, Dima and Munther Alaskry emerged from customs five hours after their flight landed\n\nOne woman handed Dima and Hassan drawings from her own children that read, \"Welcome to New York!\" Dima chattered away about her plans to see Frozen's Elsa at Disney Land.\n\n\"I like it so much - it's so cute,\" she enthused about the bland, sterile airport terminal.\n\nLike her father, she also learned English in part from watching movies.\n\n\"She would like to be famous,\" said Hiba, smiling. \"She has a very strong personality.\"\n\nAt the hotel, the family was greeted by two women from No One Left Behind. They brought a basket filled with Legos, Play-Doh, blocks, a fashion drawing kit for Dima. The children unpacked and re-packed the basket over and over again, counting their new bounty.\n\nFinally, the Alaskrys were left alone to ascend to their 15th floor room, overlooking the rooftop gardens of the Upper East Side.\n\nThe children ripped open packets of mini Chips Ahoy cookies, and Dima devoured her first Pop-Tart. They scurried from one end of the room to the other. No one seemed ready for a nap, though they'd been up for nearly two days.\n\nDima digs into a blueberry Pop-Tart, a treat left in the hotel room by members of No One Left Behind\n\nThe upshot of the cancelled flight to Houston was an unexpected three-day vacation in New York City, thanks to a relative who paid for their hotel as a gift. Sitting on the plush, crisp bedspread, Munther was in disbelief.\n\n\"I've been hearing songs about New York, I've been watching New York like from the American movies,\" he said. \"You see like the yellow taxi of New York, the pizza of New York - it's amazing.\"\n\nThe Alaskrys' new, final destination was Rochester, New York, about five hours north of the city, where a host family and a group of about 40 volunteers waited to help them navigate their new lives in the US.\n\nBut before all of that, Munther said he was taking his children to the Statue of Liberty.\n\n\"Now they are in the best country in the world, in my opinion,\" he said. \"This is my dream, to bring my kids here, now. After like, maybe ten years, 20 years, I'll be able to tell my kids, 'Listen, you were in Baghdad in that situation, I brought you all the way, I did all these sacrifices for you, and you are here now.'\n\n\"I'm sure - or I hope - they will appreciate it.\"\n\nOn Sunday, Munther and his family took the ferry to the Statue of Liberty", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nPremier League champions Leicester City can use their FA Cup win over Derby to kick-start their season, says midfielder Andy King.\n\nThe Foxes are one point above the relegation zone having won two of their past 15 league matches.\n\nBut a much-changed side secured a 3-1 win, clinched by two extra-time goals, in a fourth-round replay against their East Midlands rivals on Wednesday.\n\n\"We showed the fight we have got in the squad,\" said Wales midfielder King.\n\nKing headed the Foxes, who made 10 changes, ahead after Demarai Gray's clever cross was nodded back across goal by Marc Albrighton.\n\nAbdoul Camara's free-kick forced extra time but substitute Wilfred Ndidi and Gray scored fine goals to put Leicester through.\n\nManager Claudio Ranieri led the Foxes to the Premier League title last season despite them being 5,000-1 shots, but recent reports suggested he had lost the support of his players.\n\nLeicester, who are 16th and without a league win in 2017, released a statement on Tuesday giving their \"unwavering support\" to the 65-year-old Italian.\n\n\"It's been a tough few weeks and we've been getting a lot of criticism,\" added King, who played for the Foxes in League One and has now made more than 400 appearances for them.\n\n\"It was important to get a win tonight to try to kick-start some form to take into the league.\n\n\"We have 14 massive games left in the league but now we are through in a couple of rounds of the cup. Why can't we create another journey this season?\"\n\nThe Foxes, who have never won the FA Cup, travel to League One side Millwall in the last 16 on Saturday, 18 February.\n\nThey are also through to the last 16 of the Champions League and travel to Sevilla for the first leg on Wednesday, 22 February.\n\nFormer Leicester manager Martin O'Neill on Match of the Day:\n\n\"It is a really big win for Leicester City - I'm delighted they've done it. I think there has been a lot of doom and gloom around the place and that will lift it.\"\n\nFormer Republic of Ireland winger Kevin Kilbane on BBC Radio 5 live:\n\n\"I think Leicester's win could spark their season.\n\n\"We were looking where the spark was going to come from. Demarai Gray provided it for the opener and then [Wilfred] Ndidi and Gray scored those great goals.\n\n\"Can Gray get more game time? Can he play more central?\"", "Scottish National Party MPs were told off by Deputy Speaker Lindsay Hoyle for whistling and singing the EU anthem \"Ode to joy\" in the Commons chamber as MPs voted on Brexit legislation.\n\nMPs agreed by 494 votes to 122 to let the government begin the UK's departure from the EU.", "Alan Simpson formed, with Ray Galton, one of the great television scriptwriting partnerships.\n\nTheir early work with Tony Hancock pioneered what became known as situation comedy.\n\nThey went on to create Steptoe and Son, which became the most watched comedy on TV over its 12-year run.\n\nBut, although they continued to write, they failed to replicate the success of their early work.\n\nAlan Simpson was born in Brixton, London on 27 November 1929.\n\nAfter leaving school, he obtained a job as a shipping clerk before contracting tuberculosis. He became so ill that he was not expected to live and was given the last rites.\n\nHowever, he survived, and while a patient in a sanatorium in Surrey he found himself alongside another teenage TB sufferer named Ray Galton.\n\nGalton never forgot his first sight of his future partner, 6ft 4in tall with a build to match. \"He was the biggest bloke I'd ever seen.\"\n\nThey discovered a shared love of American humorists such as Damon Runyon and had both listened to the BBC radio comedy programmes Take It From Here and The Goon Shows.\n\nTheir first work together was for hospital radio. Have You Ever Wondered was based on their experiences in the sanatorium, which was played out in 1949.\n\nWhen Simpson left hospital he was asked by a local church concert party to write a show and he roped in Ray Galton to help. They also began sending one-liners to the BBC, which secured them a job writing for a struggling radio show called Happy-Go-Lucky.\n\nThe pair also linked up with several other promising new comedy writers and performers of the time, notably Eric Sykes, Peter Sellers, Frankie Howerd and Tony Hancock.\n\nThey were quickly tiring of the format of radio comedy shows of the time which included music, sketches and one-liners, and hankered after something with more depth.\n\nThey came up with the idea of comedy where all the humour came from the situations in which characters find themselves. Tony Hancock liked the idea and Hancock's Half Hour was born.\n\nSteptoe and Son carried elements of black comedy and social realism\n\nIt is often credited as the first true radio sitcom, although two other shows of the time, A Life of Bliss and Life with the Lyons, were already using the format in 1954 when Hancock first aired.\n\nOver the following five years the writers developed the format, often taking cues from a new generation of playwrights such as John Osborne and Harold Pinter.\n\nThe pace of each show became slow and more measured, in direct contrast to the speedy wise-cracking delivery of contemporary radio comedians such as Ted Ray.\n\nSimpson himself appeared in early episodes as the unknown man who had to suffer Hancock's interminable monologues.\n\nIn 1956 the series transferred to TV and ran until 1961. The final series was just entitled Hancock and it was that run which featured the best-known shows including The Blood Donor (\"It was either that or join the Young Conservatives\") and The Radio Ham, in which Hancock proves completely incapable of responding to a distress signal from a sinking yachtsman.\n\nHancock, who was becoming increasingly self-critical and drinking heavily, sacked his writers in 1961. Unwilling to lose them, the BBC commissioned them to write scripts for Comedy Playhouse, a series of one-off sitcoms.\n\nOne play, entitled, The Offer, spawned Steptoe and Son, the tale of two rag-and-bone merchants, a father and son, living in Oil Drum Lane, Shepherd's Bush.\n\nThey remained close friends after their writing partnership ended\n\nThe script relied on the clash between the two characters; Albert, the grasping father with none too hygienic personal habits and Harold, his aspirational son who yearns for a better life but never achieves it. The show was unusual in that the two performers, Wilfrid Brambell and Harry H Corbett, were actors rather than comedians.\n\nThe original four series ran between 1962 and 1965 and the show was revived between 1970 and 1974, during which time two feature film versions were also released.\n\nIt proved to be the high point for the duo. There was further work with Frankie Howerd and, in 1977, Yorkshire TV attempted to replicate the success of Comedy Playhouse with Galton & Simpson's Playhouse, although none of the episodes produced a series.\n\nSimpson quit writing in 1978 to pursue his other business interests although he and Galton remained close friends. In 1996 they reunited to update some of their best-known scripts for the comedian Paul Merton.\n\nSimpson blamed their later lack of popularity on the fact that shows were commissioned by armies of managers rather than producers.\n\n\"Fifty years ago,\" he said in an interview with the Daily Telegraph, \"if you had an idea, it could be going out in three weeks; the time it took to build the sets. Now it has to go through committees and the process takes years.\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "The day after his hip replacement, Georg Thoma was cheerfully sitting up in bed.\n\nLike most Germans, the businessman pays into compulsory health insurance.\n\nHe contributes 7% of his salary before tax and his employers match that amount.\n\nIn return, patients get access to care which is so rapid that national waiting data is not collected.\n\n\"The doctor said to me that I have to decide when I get the operation. Normally it takes three or four weeks.\"\n\nGeorg travels for work to the UK and tells me he was astonished to hear that patients can sometimes wait months for a similar routine operation.\n\nGermany's spending on health care is relatively high, just over 11% of its wealth, compared to 9.8% in the UK and it has more doctors and hospital beds per patient than the UK.\n\nGeorg's operation was carried out in an 80-bed hospital in one of the Black Forest towns in the south-west region Baden Wurttemberg.\n\nBut even in Germany's well-funded system, the financial viability of a hospital this small is not guaranteed.\n\nA group of doctors in this area is trying to manage costs in an experiment that has attracted interest from the UK.\n\nMartin Wetzel, a GP for 25 years, explains they have done a deal with big insurance funds to make prevention a priority.\n\n\"I have more time - and it needs more time to explain to patients what I'm doing and why. So my consultations changed from an eye wink to an average of 15 minutes,\" he says.\n\nDuring that time patients might be offered a range of interventions to improve their health provided locally, which frees up time for the GP.\n\nThese include subsidised gym sessions, access to different sports and nutrition advice as well as screening programmes to reduce loneliness as well as increasing healthiness.\n\nIt is being run by a company called Gesundes Kinzigtal in which the doctors are majority shareholders.\n\nAlready a couple of years into their 10-year project, they say healthcare is costing 6% less than you would expect for the population.\n\nThey are trying to improve data sharing and believe hospital treatment can be reduced further.\n\nMuch of the vision comes from its chief executive Helmut Hildebrandt, a pharmacist and public health expert.\n\nHe says the health insurance funds have tended to concentrate on short-term cost control measures, rather than improving the health of their patients.\n\n\"At the moment the economy in Germany runs so well they don't have a problem. But in the long run every politician or administrator knows in the next 10 or 20 years the system will run into a crisis.\"\n\nHe fears that could undermine the commitment to the health insurance covering most Germans, with a risk of richer people opting out of it.\n\nWhat Gesundes Kinzigtal is trying to do is similar to some integrated care projects in the NHS.\n\nThere is more money in the German system, but arguably more waste too.\n\nThe Caesarean rate is higher, so is the use of MRI for diagnosis and the length of hospital stay.\n\nPatients waiting to see a GP in Thuringia\n\nAnd in many ways there has been little incentive for change in a system where doctors still have a high degree of influence and life expectancy in Germany is not higher than the UK.\n\nBernadette Klapper heads the health section of the Robert Bosch Foundation, which funds social policy innovation.\n\n\"I think we should get more for the money we spend inside healthcare. While we see other countries spending less, but having the same results as us, there's something wrong.\"\n\nGermany is ageing very rapidly, only just behind Japan in forecast for its population profile.\n\nBut the health system is changing slowly and the Bosch foundation is trying to encourage more small health centres.\n\nMany doctors in Germany set up in practice on their own, as GPs or out-of-hospital specialists, but as cities are more popular that leaves rural areas with a shortage.\n\nTravel east to the wide open rolling countryside of Thuringia and you get a glimpse of the challenge.\n\nFive years ago they were 200 GPs short of what was needed in this region.\n\nIt has taken grants, and offers of help with housing and arranging childcare, to reduce that to 60.\n\nAnnette Rommel is head of the doctors' association in the village of Mechterstadt and says: \"A few years ago we arranged for specially-trained nurses to make home visits and for more teamwork with nurses and doctors together.\"\n\nIt is similar to the way many community nurses work in the UK, but in Germany this is a recent development.\n\nNurses have a much more restricted role.\n\nOn a visit I saw a nurse and a carer, who is paid for out of the long-term care insurance that Germany introduced 20 years ago, check up on an elderly couple.\n\nIt has reduced the amount families have to pay, although social care can still be a financial worry.\n\nThere is enough money in the German system to make trying new approaches to healthcare a little easier.\n\nMost patients feel they can see a doctor easily, so for example the number of visits to the equivalent of A&E is very low compared to the UK.\n\nWhile out of hours care has been reorganised, GPs and other out of hospital doctors are often still involved in helping provide cover on a rotation.\n\nNone of this removes the long-term worry about whether providing such rapid and easy access to care is affordable in the long term.\n\nA debate that German politicians are unlikely to begin publicly in this election year or any time soon.\n\nThe lessons for the UK are that money on its own is not the only solution, although it does ease pressure in the system considerably.\n\nFinding better co-ordinated ways of looking after patients, often elderly, with the highest health needs is a priority.\n\nAnd in Germany, despite the long-term care insurance, families still have to contribute a significant amount to looking after older people.\n\nHowever, there is a mechanism for sustainable funding for social care that is very different from the significant reductions in care budgets seen in the UK.\n\nA week of coverage by BBC News examining the state of the NHS across the UK as it comes under intense pressure during its busiest time of the year.", "Jeremy Corbyn unusually had the better of Theresa May in Prime Minister's Questions, brandishing leaked texts across the despatch box, claiming evidence that the Tories had given Surrey a special deal to avoid the chance of a damaging 15% council tax rise in a Conservative safe haven.\n\nThe council, and ministers, denied there had been any stitch-up.\n\nBut hours later, the government admitted they had agreed, in theory, that Surrey County Council could, like several others, try out keeping all of the business rates they raise from 2018, which could plug the gaps in funding in future.\n\nThat change is due to be in force across in England by 2020. Technically therefore, Surrey County Council has not been offered any additional funding. But the prospect of more flexibility over their own income in future could help fill the council's coffers, and seems to have eased some of their concerns.\n\nBut as a solution to easing the pressure in social care across the country now, the idea could fall far short.\n\nWhere there is high need for care for the elderly, there is likely to be a lower local tax base. Conversely, in more prosperous areas where councils can raise a lot of tax, there is likely to be less need for financial help.\n\nOne local government leader told me \"all that would do is to lock in the existing iniquity to the system\". And major changes to how councils pay their way could make a difference in the long term. Many argue, the social care crisis is now.\n\nMedics, NHS leaders, local government leaders, MPs, former ministers, and of course many members of the public are day after day reporting concerns about the creaks in the social care system, arguing for big changes or big extra money.\n\nThere are though few signs of any extra cash on the way in the Budget next month. Privately ministers are hunting for solutions. The prime minister's allies say she is prepared to be \"radical\".\n\nA Tory council might have been appeased by a promise to change their future funding - others may not be so easily satisfied.", "Feng Shui consultant Joey Yap has predicted a showdown between the East and the West in 2017, with China and the US taking centre stage.\n\nWe asked him to forecast how this could affect US President Donald Trump's relations with other world leaders in the Year of the Fire Rooster.", "It takes a special kind of person to run a radio station in an area controlled by Islamist militants in northern Syria. Music is forbidden, so are women presenters. But Raed Fares - manager of Radio Fresh FM - has come up with a creative response to the militants' demands.\n\nIt is mid-day and almost time for the latest news from Radio Fresh FM in the rebel-held province of Idlib, in north west Syria.\n\nSuddenly the airwaves are filled with assorted sounds of tweeting birds, clucking chickens and bleating goats. As the newsreader gets under way, the cacophony continues beneath his voice.\n\nYou might be forgiven for thinking that this is some sort of farming bulletin. It's not. It's simply that the station's manager, Raed Fares, has had enough of being told what to do by the powerful jihadist group, Jabhat Fateh al-Sham or JFS - which until last July was linked to al-Qaeda and known as the al-Nusra Front.\n\n\"They tried to force us to stop playing music on air,\" says Fares. \"So we started to play animals in the background as a kind of sarcastic gesture against them.\"\n\nIn what appear to be further acts of sarcastic sabotage aimed at JFS's ban on music, Radio Fresh FM has introduced long sequences of bongs from London's Big Ben clock, endless ticking sounds, ringing explosions and the whistle of shells flying through the air.\n\nAnd instead of songs with melodies, the station now plays recordings of tuneless chanting football fans.\n\nFares has been getting involved in confrontations of one kind or another for years now.\n\nHe took part in hundreds of demonstrations against Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime at the beginning of the uprising in 2011 and continues to see it as the biggest enemy. Many of his friends were killed or imprisoned, as the authorities responded with increasing violence.\n\nRaed Fares was one of many demonstrators in the town of Kafranbel in the early days of the Syrian uprising\n\nThen came the threats from fighters of the so called Islamic State. Like JFS, they said the station's music was haram, or offensive to Islam. Believing this to be totally wrong, Fares ignored the threats and carried on as before, but nearly paid with his life.\n\nJust over three years ago, when the 44-year-old former estate agent arrived home in the early hours of the morning, after finishing work at the radio station, two IS gunmen with Kalashnikovs were waiting for him. They fired a barrage of shots, leaving more than a dozen holes in his car, even more in the wall behind, and two in the right side of his body. These shattered several bones in his shoulder and ribs, as well as puncturing his right lung.\n\nFares was left lying in a pool of blood and only narrowly survived after being rushed to hospital by his brother.\n\n\"I still have trouble breathing,\" he later said, \"but my doctor says my lungs should be no problem because of the size of my nose.\"\n\nIt's not that surprising that IS doesn't like Fares. After all, he did once design a poster depicting Syria as an alien with a monster called ISIS exploding out of its chest. The group has since been pushed out of Idlib province.\n\nPresident Assad, though, is his favourite target. He once got his friends to drape themselves in shrouds and then filmed them staggering out of graves calling for Assad to step down, as if even the dead want him gone. He posted it online and it was played on a number of Arabic television stations.\n\nHumour, it seems, is never far from the surface with Raed Fares. Take his response to another of JFS's demands, to get rid of women news readers - who are also haram, they say.\n\nHas he, I ask him, agreed to swap them for men?\n\n\"No, I have another solution for that issue. We simply put their voices through a computer software program which makes them sound like men.\"\n\nThough having heard the resulting broadcasts, I would say the women now sound closer to Daleks or robots than men.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nThe feisty 6ft 2in station manager has also refused JFS's demands to allow their members into the radio station to monitor the behaviour of his staff.\n\n\"We said 'No,'\" he says. \"You have to monitor the transmissions, not what people are doing inside the radio station.\"\n\nJFS are not the only extremist rebels in the area. There are about a dozen others, and even though some of the biggest factions have recently been forming new alliances, this still makes the area chaotic to govern.\n\nThere is little more than two hours of mains electricity a day, water supplies are limited and food increasingly expensive in a region flooded with 700,000 refugees from elsewhere in the country.\n\nThe fact that Fares's dispute with JFS has continued for so long is evidence that the group is a little more tolerant than IS. But as a family man with three children is he not worried that sooner or later one of these jihadist groups will kill him?\n\n\"They've tried that five times already,\" he says. \"If it happens, it happens. But they haven't succeeded yet. I try to survive, but if I can't, it's OK.\"\n\nHe tells me that the lowest point in his life came when one of his closest friends was killed and another severely injured by a bomb last summer. Fares admits that he nearly took his own life in the days that followed. But now, he says, he is more determined than ever to carry on.\n\n\"We started the revolution together and were all aware that we faced the same risks,\" he says. \"That means that my life isn't more expensive than my friends who lost their lives.\"\n\nMike Thomson's report about radio Fresh FM ran on the Today programme on 9 February.\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "He's only 19cm (7.4 in) tall and has been named Thanos.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLeicester secured a first home win of 2017 as Demarai Gray's superb solo goal sealed an extra-time victory over Derby in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.\n\nAndy King headed the hosts, who made 10 changes, ahead after Gray's clever cross was nodded back across goal by Marc Albrighton.\n\nAbdoul Camara's free-kick forced extra time for Championship Derby only for substitute Wilfred Ndidi to restore the Foxes' lead with a fantastic strike.\n\nGray sealed a deserved win with an angled finish after a fine run.\n\nPremier League Leicester will now face League One Millwall in the last 16 on 18 February (15:00 GMT).\n\nSmiles for Ranieri - at last\n\nClaudio Ranieri has not had too much to cheer about lately as last season's champions have been plunged into a fight for Premier League survival.\n\nYet the Italian was all smiles and applauded home fans as they chanted his name around the King Power Stadium soon after King's opener.\n\nLeicester, 16th in the table and one point above the relegation zone, face a battle to climb away from trouble but their first win since 7 January will at least provide them with some momentum.\n\nA spirited Derby display - and a poor performance from the officials - made sure it was anything but a straightforward win.\n\nThe hosts should have won a first-half penalty when Ben Chilwell was sent sprawling inside the area by Richard Keogh but referee Mike Jones was not interested.\n\nThere was more controversy in the 85th minute when Derby keeper Jonathan Mitchell clearly handled outside his area but Leicester's Ahmed Musa was booked for protesting after Jones dismissed the home team's appeals.\n\nAlthough there was disappointment from Rams boss Steve McClaren, his team gave Leicester two tough games.\n\nDerby led until four minutes from the end in the original game and forced Leicester into extra time on their own ground before running out of steam.\n\nIt might have been a different story had Ron-Robert Zieler not palmed away Jacob Butterfield's low drive on the stroke of half-time. By the time McClaren reached the dugout for the second half, his side were behind - King giving Leicester the lead in the opening minute of the second half.\n\nThe Rams responded well to falling behind. Camara had a free-kick beaten away before the Guinea international found the net with a 25-yard set-piece that deflected off Chilwell's thigh on its way into the net.\n\nDerby's Max Lowe chested against his own post while attempting to guide the ball back to his keeper before two sublime finishes took the tie away from the visitors.\n\nNdidi fired home via the post from 25 yards then Gray, energetic and dynamic throughout, made it 3-1 after avoiding several challenges before his clinical finish allowed Leicester fans to celebrate a welcome victory.\n\nAll change - cup gets second billing\n\nBoth teams seemed to have their eyes on this weekend's games as they made 18 changes between them.\n\nMusa was the only survivor from the Leicester side that started last weekend's match with Manchester United even though the Foxes are not in action again until Sunday.\n\nDerby, despite bringing 5,000 travelling fans, made eight changes, as they also rested players to aid their play-off push.\n\n\"I didn't want to make eight changes. If the game was last night the team would have been totally different,\" said McClaren.\n\nHowever, pundit and former Leicester midfielder Robbie Savage was critical of the number of changes made by both managers.\n\nHe said: \"If Derby County were playing three Championship games in a week and chasing promotion would they put this team out? It's absolute nonsense. Play your best team.\"\n\n'This fresh air is good for us'\n\nLeicester boss Claudio Ranieri: \"Derby played good football and we won. This is what we needed and I wanted.\n\n\"We want to do well in all competitions. We want to go forward in the FA Cup. The Premier League is not so good but we have to stay in the Premier League. This fresh air is good for the players.\"\n\nDerby County boss Steve McClaren: \"There are some very tired players in the dressing room. It was always going to be hard work.\n\n\"We had a go and I can't fault the players. We ran out of steam in the end. We missed our opportunity in the first game.\"\n\nSunday's Premier League game at fellow strugglers Swansea City (16:00 GMT) is a huge match for Leicester. Derby will look to strengthen their Championship play-off bid with a home victory over Bristol City (15:00 GMT) on Saturday.\n• None Attempt missed. David Nugent (Derby County) header from the centre of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Cyrus Christie with a cross.\n• None Goal! Leicester City 3, Derby County 1. Demarai Gray (Leicester City) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the top right corner. Assisted by Marc Albrighton.\n• None Attempt saved. Wilfred Ndidi (Leicester City) header from the right side of the six yard box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Riyad Mahrez with a cross.\n• None Attempt saved. Andy King (Leicester City) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Riyad Mahrez.\n• None Attempt missed. Johnny Russell (Derby County) header from the centre of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Cyrus Christie with a cross. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Shirley Collins is best known for the album Anthems in Eden, which she recorded in 1969 with her sister, Dorothy\n\nFolk star Shirley Collins, who was robbed of her voice for 30 years by an emotional crisis, has been nominated for two Radio 2 Folk Awards.\n\nThe 81-year-old is up for singer of the year, while Lodestar, her first record since 1978, is up for best album.\n\nCollins was an immensely important figure in Britain's folk-rock scene in the 1960s, thanks to her pared-down singing style and strong storytelling.\n\nBut her career was cut short by the end of her marriage in the late 1970s.\n\nThe star's second husband, Ashley Hutchings, left her for a young actress who took to showing up at Collins' performances.\n\nOne night, during a performance of Lark Rise at London's National Theatre, she froze on-stage and found herself unable to sing.\n\n\"It was humiliating,\" she told BBC Radio 4's Mastertapes last year. \"Some nights when I opened my mouth nothing would come out, or just a few croaks would come out.\n\n\"It went on night after night after night, for far too long. I was trying to sing through tears. I was just in a state.\"\n\n\"I never lost the desire to sing,\" she added. \"It was really heartbreaking for me not to be able to. [But] I couldn't even sing indoors. I couldn't sing to myself.\"\n\nCollins developed a form of dysphonia, a condition often associated with psychological trauma.\n\nIn the years that followed, she wrote books while working in charity shops and a job centre \"for five ghastly years\" to support herself.\n\nBut her music was discovered by a younger generation of fans - including Blur's Graham Coxon and the Decemberists' Colin Meloy - and, eventually, she was coaxed back onto the stage, releasing her new album to wide acclaim last year.\n\nCollins is nominated for singer of the year alongside Ireland's Daoiri Farrell, Scottish musician Kris Drever, and five-time Folk Award winner Jim Causley.\n\nFarrell has the most nominations, three in all, while Songs of Separation - a project inspired by the Scottish referendum, featuring Eliza Carthy, Karine Polwart and Jenny Hill - has two.\n\nWoody Guthrie is one of the most influential figures in folk and popular music\n\nUS folk icon Woody Guthrie will be inducted to the Folk Awards Hall of Fame on the 50th anniversary of his death.\n\nThe author of classics such as I Ain't Got No Home, Pretty Boy Floyd and This Train Is Bound For Glory, his songs were a major influence on popular music, and have been covered by the likes of Van Morrison, Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan.\n\nJust this week, Lady Gaga sang a portion of his civil rights anthem This Land Is Your Land in a thinly-veiled attack on Donald Trump at the Super Bowl.\n\nBilly Bragg, who made a Grammy award-winning album with Wilco based on unused Woody Guthrie lyrics, will pay tribute to the star with a headline performance at the awards.\n\nScottish singer-songwriter Al Stewart, best known for the hit single Year Of The Cat, will also perform, after being honoured with the lifetime achievement award.\n\nMark Radcliffe and Julie Fowlis will present the awards at London's Royal Albert Hall on Wednesday, 5 April. The ceremony will be broadcast live on BBC Radio 2.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Miriam Gonzalez Durantez, whose husband is former Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, has complained after being invited to an International Women's Day event in her married name.\n\nPosting a picture of a letter addressed to \"Mrs Clegg\" on Instagram, she noted the \"irony\" of the situation.\n\nThe event, on 8 March, is designed to \"celebrate women's success\", she added.\n\nMs Gonzalez Durantez is a lawyer specialising in international and EU trade law.\n\nMiriam Gonzalez Durantez says she does not want to be known by her husband's surname\n\nShe wrote: \"The irony of being invited to speak at an International Women's Day event to celebrate women's success, addressed to me as 'Mrs Clegg'.\"\n\nMs Gonzalez Durantez set up the Inspiring Women group, which recruits women with successful careers to visit and speak to girls at state schools in England.\n\nThis is not the first time she has criticised the way she is perceived or described.\n\nLast year she told Marie Claire magazine: \"I find people say of me 'She wears the trousers' and as you can see, it is true, I have very nice trousers.\n\n\"Or if my husband and I share the school run, it's me who has forced him, dragged him away from his work.\n\n\"But when people, or in my case the media, are using that label on you, they are not saying you are strong, they are saying you should get back in your box. You should make the dinner and have his slippers ready with a gin and tonic.\"", "The \"old men\" accused of blocking change at the Football Association are \"stupid enough\" to fight reforms, says former chairman Greg Dyke.\n\nMPs will debate the FA's failure to reform in Parliament on Thursday.\n\nSports Minister Tracey Crouch has warned the FA could lose £30m-£40m of funding if it does not modernise.\n\n\"You shouldn't underestimate the old men of English football. They've seen off all sorts of people over the years,\" Dyke told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"Government are now saying if you don't do these things you'll lose money and we won't support you in the future. Who knows, they are stupid enough to say 'we're going to fight it anyway'.\"\n\nThe government has repeatedly called for the FA to be more representative of modern society, and those who play the game. It also wants the organisation to change the way it makes decisions.\n\nThe FA is effectively run by its own parliament, the FA Council, which has 122 members - just eight are women and only four from ethnic minorities. More than 90 of the 122 members are aged over 60.\n\nIn a letter sent to those members, Barry Taylor - Barnsley's life president and one of 19 FA life vice-presidents - wrote: \"Let them stop the money.\n\n\"I often wonder why the FA does not tell the government to concentrate on running the country and allowing the FA to run football.\n\n\"We have the money, we have the power, and they will be back in four years' time to initiate change again.\n\n\"Why does the FA continually have to battle with different governments, who do not have to retire, have no age limit, and have no term limits?\"\n\nLast year, five former FA executives - including Dyke - called on the government to pass legislation to force through FA reform, saying they had been blocked in their attempts to do so.\n\n\"There needs to be radical change,\" Dyke continued. \"You've got to have younger people there, more women, supporters, ethnic minorities - it's got to change.\n\n\"The Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee has produced two papers over the years that have both pressed for change and both been completely ignored by this bunch of old guys.\"\n\nHe singled out 25 life presidents on the FA Council he said were \"not representing anyone\", adding: \"It's an ongoing oligarchy that looks after itself.\n\n\"My understanding is that the professional game has also had enough of these old guys.\"\n\nBut in his letter, Taylor challenged the idea that the Council was unrepresentative.\n\n\"It is not exactly static or long-serving, considering that since 2014 a third have retired and therefore a third are new members,\" he wrote.\n\n\"To accuse them of blocking progress is simply not true as the numbers do not add up. They are easy targets.\"\n\nCurrent chairman Greg Clarke has said he will quit if his latest plans for reform are not accepted when he presents them to the government in the spring.\n\nAnd Dyke said: \"I think Greg Clarke is a good guy who is trying to make a change, as I did.\n\n\"I suspect what Greg is doing is saying to the FA, more than government, that if you can't give me a deal that meets what government is after then I'm not staying around. In which case they'll have lost another chairman. I'm not sure that will worry them - they've lost so many chairmen over the years it doesn't really matter.\"\n\nGreg Dyke's latest comments will no doubt anger many FA councillors.\n\nWhile few deny the governing body's \"parliament\" lacks diversity and needs to be more representative of the modern game, many reject the narrative that they are always to blame for a lack of progress.\n\nOne of the reasons Dyke's attempts at reform failed when he was chairman was because the council feared it would hand even more power and influence to the professional clubs, and especially to the Premier League.\n\nThey insist they were right to stand up to Dyke at a time of mounting concern over inequality in the sport.\n\nSome critics also point out it is the FA's board - not its council - where real power lies, and that until more independent directors are added to it, the power of the game's vested interests will continue to prevent decision-making for the whole sport.\"", "Tara Palmer-Tomkinson might have been surprised by the amount of coverage, as well as the genuinely sad tone, afforded to her death, aged 45.\n\nThe Guardian calls hers \"a life cut short\", but added that \"no-one could quite remember what she was famous for\".\n\nThe Daily Telegraph sees her as having been \"the earliest incarnation of the C-list celebrities that now dominate our TV schedules\".\n\nShe was one of the \"It girl\" crowd who were considered, the paper says, \"silly, inconsequential, sexy, effervescent, naughty - and incredible fun\".\n\nReferring to the socialite by her initials TPT, the Daily Mail says she \"lit up the gossip columns of the 90s\".\n\nShe simply \"loved being in the spotlight and the spotlight loved her back\", it says.\n\nThe photo on the front of the Daily Mirror, dressed in a bikini, white boots, a fur coat and a snorkeling mask, presents her in her party-loving heyday.\n\nThe obituary in the Times remembers her \"untiring glamour and her outgoing personality that fizzed like the bottles of Bollinger she enjoyed devouring\".\n\nBut \"she never found contentment\", says the Daily Express, recalling her spiral into addiction and ill health.\n\nShe \"desperately craved happiness yet rarely found it\", the paper adds.\n\nThe political fall-out from Brexit so far is dealt with in the Telegraph with a cartoon.\n\nBesides a bottle of \"Cameron's referendum elixir\", dubbed a \"cure for acute Euro-party splits\", stands a glowing Mrs May.\n\nShe declares: \"I can't believe it actually worked for us!\"\n\nOn the other side, Mr Corbyn and some red rosette-wearing aides are doubled up in pain, saying: \"It just made my lot worse.\"\n\nThe i newspaper highlights the resignation from the Labour front bench of Clive Lewis - someone it describes as a \"key Corbyn ally.\"\n\nThe Sun talks of renewed speculation about the Labour leader's future. However, party officials tell the Daily Mail he will not stand down - and he will fight the next election.\n\nThe Sun reports that auditors have found a \"spike\" in thefts of public money intended to be spent on foreign aid.\n\nThe Times suggests that hundreds of millions of pounds are lost every year.\n\nThe Mail says the requirement to spend 0.7% of national income on aid has led ministers to \"shovel bucket loads to corrupt regimes and lorry-loads more to any agency willing to spend it.\"\n\nFar better, says the Express, to make sure \"sick and elderly people in this country are properly looked after.\"\".\n\nThere are few things the papers enjoy more than a survey that is almost certain to provoke a family row.\n\nThe Mail has got hold of an academic study that suggests \"first born children are more likely to do better at school than their siblings\".\n\nThe researchers think that's because \"their parents give them more stimulation in their early years\".\n\nHowever, the i points out that history does not prove that first-borns are brighter.\n\nWhile Albert Einstein and JK Rowling were, Charles Dickens was the second of eight, and Marie Curie the the youngest of five.\n\nForget Brexit - says the Express - the latest issue to divide the nation is ketchup.\n\nNamely, should it be stored in the fridge, or not?\n\nSupermarkets including Aldi and Asda have been trying to find out what the customers prefer - and microbiologists have chipped in too.\n\nHowever, the Express ducks out of the debate, saying only that the Food Standards Agency advises people to follow the instructions on the label.", "The puppy had been trying to get outside to the garden to play when he became stuck\n\nA puppy had to be rescued after getting its head firmly wedged in a tumble dryer vent hole.\n\nDennis, a 12-week-old American bulldog-cross Staffordshire bull terrier may have been trying to get outside to play, his owner from Peterborough said.\n\nHe told firefighters the pup could see the garden through the hole in the kitchen wall and attempted to squeeze through - but his head got stuck.\n\nOfficers used a hammer and chisel to chip away at the wall to free Dennis.\n\nDespite his ordeal the puppy was unharmed and is paw-fectly fine.\n\nFirefighters had to chisel the wall away to rescue Dennis from his predicament\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Demarai Gray produces a moment of magic as he slaloms past Derby defenders to score for Leicester in their FA Cup fourth-round replay.\n\nWatch all the best action from this season's FA Cup here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "President Donald Trump has again lambasted the judicial rulings keeping him from enforcing his travel ban - but this time his tweet had a curious turn of phrase.\n\n\"Big increase in traffic into our country from certain areas, while our people are far more vulnerable, as we wait for what should be EASY D!\" he wrote at 12:41 Washington time.\n\nIt was just one of a string of tweets defending his executive order, which banned entry to the US from citizens from seven countries deemed a high risk for terrorism. It has been put on hold while judges across the country assess its legality.\n\nBut the use of \"EASY D\" left the Twitterati scratching their heads.\n\n\"I think the one thing uniting the country rn [right now] is that none of us, regardless of political affiliation, knows what \"Easy D\" is,\" wrote Teen Vogue's Lily Herman.\n\nSome were certain they knew: \"Spoiler alert: D means decision,\" wrote CNN's Jon Ostrower. (Others argued that it meant \"defence\", a commonly used abbreviation in sports.)\n\nMost were less concerned about the meaning and more interested in the opportunity to make a quick joke.\n\n\"Don't make him switch out Easy D for Hard D,\" warned frequent Trump critic Arthur Chu.\n\nThe single-theme joke account @TrumpDraws got into the act with a new image playing on the Easy D reference.\n\n\"The media never wants to talk about the people Easy D slaughtered at Bowling Green,\" quipped Vox writer Matt Yglesias, referring to the non-existent massacre mistakenly mentioned by Trump strategist Kellyanne Conway.\n\nScreenwriter Randi Mayem Singer joked about Trump's earlier tweet, jeering the retailer Nordstrom for dropping his daughter Ivanka's fashion line. \"I just got measured at Nordstrom. Was wearing an Easy D, but I should be an Easy DDD.\"\n\nStill, while the anti-Trump crowd had fun laughing it up on Twitter, they have had less success stopping Trump's cabinet appointments.\n\nSo far all of his picks remain on track to confirmation, and even the most hotly-contested nomination, Betsy DeVos, was approved by the Senate.\n\nMeanwhile, Trump supporters say their man is doing exactly what they elected him to do - keep the country safe and disrupt government business as usual.", "Viewsnight is BBC Newsnight's new place for ideas and opinion.\n\nHere, French-Algerian journalist Nabila Ramdani argues Marine Le Pen will not win in France - as Donald Trump did in the US - because of the legacy of her father.\n\nFor more Viewsnight, head over to BBC Newsnight on Facebook and on YouTube", "This video can not be played.", "JavaScript seems to be disabled. Please enable JavaScript to take full advantage of iPlayer.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Sir Jon Cunliffe: \"The UK, in order to be a successful financial centre, needs robust regulation\"\n\nThe man responsible for financial stability at the Bank of England has warned against relaxing banking regulation, saying that such a move could damage the global economy.\n\nSir Jon Cunliffe told the BBC that \"lax controls\" risked undoing progress that had been made since the financial crisis.\n\n\"We've made very substantial progress since the financial crisis, increasing the resilience of the financial sector and increasing its ability to support the economy in times of stress both nationally and in Europe and globally, including the US,\" Sir Jon told me.\n\n\"Those changes were necessary.\n\n\"None of us want to see again the sorts of events we saw between 2007 and 2009 and the costs of those events are still very clear.\n\n\"In order to have a resilient financial sector and consistent regulation internationally we need international standards, we need the reforms we have had and it is important we preserve them.\"\n\nSir Jon's comments come after suggestions that if Britain did not secure a good trade deal with the European Union following Brexit, the UK could become an offshore tax haven - encouraging businesses and banks to move to the country to avoid tougher regulations elsewhere.\n\nDonald Trump, via an executive order, has also announced there will be a review of the Dodd-Frank legislation in America.\n\nIt was passed during the Obama presidency to control the use of complicated financial instruments by institutions, increase the amount of money banks are required to have available to avoid tax-payer funded bailouts and stop banks using their own money to invest in intricate equity and debt products for profit, what is called proprietary trading.\n\nAlthough it had many supporters for making banks more secure, it has also been attacked for making banks less able to lend and more risk averse, particularly smaller, regional banks which support local economies.\n\nSir Jon, who is the deputy governor of the Bank responsible for financial stability, said that it was too early to say what the outcome of the reform proposals would be.\n\nHe pointed out the executive order spoke about proportionate regulation and maintained the need to prevent bail outs which didn't seem \"out of line\" with global approaches to regulation.\n\nSir Jon said it was necessary, as the Bank had done, to investigate problems of \"regulatory conflict\" and change the rules where there had been unintended consequences.\n\nBut he warned that as the UK had a very large financial services sector - providing about 8% of the country's economic output - it was important that the highest standards were maintained.\n\n\"It is important we have proportionate, highest quality regulation - robust and in line with best international standards,\" he said.\n\n\"The UK - in order to be a successful financial centre, you need good regulation, you need robust regulation and you need regulators that have credibility and experience.\n\n\"One doesn't become successful as an international centre by having lax standards and by being open to crises and regulatory arbitrage [the use of regulatory loopholes to avoid banking costs].\"\n\nSir Jon, a member of the Monetary Policy Committee which sets interest rates, said that the next move on interest rates, whether up or down, was \"balanced\".\n\nYesterday another MPC member, Kristin Forbes, suggested that she was moving towards supporting a rate rise because growth was more robust than originally thought and inflation was rising.\n\n\"There are risks on the downside as well,\" Sir Jon said.\n\n\"That [the economy] will slow faster and that uncertainty effects will come in and have an impact. For me the risks are evenly balanced.\"\n\nSir Jon was speaking at the launch of new Bank research which showed that a third of companies surveyed admitted that they had not invested enough over the last five years.\n\nHe said that investment was important to support economic growth and better productivity.\n\nReasons for not investing included economic uncertainty, risk aversion following the financial crisis and a perception that there were still constraints on bank lending. The man responsible for financial stability at the Bank of England has warned against relaxing banking regulation, saying that such a move could damage the global economy.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby League\n\nSt Helens earned a narrow win in a low-scoring but enthralling Super League season opener against Leeds Rhinos.\n\nJoel Moon scored the first try of the new season in the corner as Rhinos went into the break 4-0 ahead.\n\nTheo Fages crashed over early in the second before Mark Percival's conversion gave the lead to Saints, who had two tries ruled out by the video referee in the match.\n\nLeeds pressed for another, but Saints stood firm in an energy-sapping game.\n\nAs the game came to a close, both sides needed last-ditch defending to save them, including from Rhinos' Ashton Golding, a stand-out performer to deny Saints getting more scores on the board throughout.\n\nThe Rhinos, who had to secure their Super League place through The Qualifiers last campaign, looked a totally different side to the one that found itself bottom of the table during last season.\n\nRob Burrow, playing his 500th Leeds Rhinos match, and Carl Ablett put Moon in for the first try, and Golding held up Tommy Makinson to ensure the visitors kept their advantage going into the second half.\n\nSaints were without the injured Matty Smith, but Danny Richardson was impressive throughout, and his half-back partner Fages broke through the defence to help put Saints ahead.\n\nMakinson then superbly saved a certain try himself, taking Liam Sutcliffle out of play when the Leeds man looked to be heading for the line.\n\nLeeds had the majority of play towards the end of the match, but Saints' long-kicking game made it difficult for Rhinos to gain ground and the hosts held out for victory.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\n\"A confused shop with a mish-mash of products with no emphasis on the fact that this is supposed to be a shop specialising in cruelty-free, fair trade toiletries and make-up,\" is Suzy Bourke's damning verdict on The Body Shop.\n\nThe 42-year-old stage manager used to be a regular shopper at the High Street chain, but now she tends to go to Boots instead.\n\nAnd she's not alone. Its owner, cosmetics giant L'Oreal, wants to offload the High Street chain, which has been suffering slowing sales.\n\nThe Body Shop, founded by Dame Anita Roddick in 1976, was a pioneer using natural ingredients for its beauty products when it started out. It initially thrived, expanding rapidly, and by the 1980s was one of the most well-known brands on the High Street.\n\nI remember the chain fondly from my youth, when it seemed to be an exciting shop full of affordable, fun and exciting products. Coloured animal soaps, banana shampoo, white musk perfume and strawberry shower gel were the height of 1980s beauty chic as far as I was concerned.\n\nBut by the early 2000s, rivals had caught up, with firms such as Boots, for example, developing similar natural beauty ranges. New challengers such as Lush also emerged, encroaching on The Body Shop's market share.\n\n\"You never see a Body Shop busy any more, they always used to be packed,\" says Suzy Bourke\n\nThe chain is still a sizeable High Street presence with more than 3,000 stores in 66 countries and employs 22,000 people, according to its website.\n\nThe Body Shop's results for 2016 show total sales were 920.8m euros (£783.8m), down from 967.2m euros in 2015, which L'Oreal blamed on market slowdowns in Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia.\n\nThe sales were a tiny proportion of L'Oreal's overall 25.8bn euros of sales for the same period.\n\nAnd arguably the chain - which L'Oreal bought for £652m ($1.14bn) in 2006 - remains a lower-end and insignificant part of its huge portfolio of brands, which include skincare specialists Kiehl's, Lancome and Garnier, as well as fragrance brands Ralph Lauren and Giorgio Armani.\n\nVeteran retail analyst Richard Hyman argues that L'Oreal overpaid for the chain and has failed to add any value to it.\n\n\"Frankly it's a bit of mystery them buying it in the first place.\n\n\"What they bought is a retailer and what they're good at is brands,\" he says.\n\nThe Body Shop's use of natural ingredients made it a pioneer when it started out in 1976\n\nHe thinks The Body Shop's struggles are down to the same issues facing the retail sector as a whole:\n\n\"Retailing in shops is becoming an increasingly challenging business. You've got to have a very compelling retail proposition as opposed to a brand or product proposition.\n\n\"Everyone that shops in The Body Shop spends most of their personal care budget somewhere else. They're constantly chasing their tail, having to work hard to attract people into a store,\" he says.\n\nWhen the 2006 deal was struck, founder Dame Anita - who died just a year later - was forced to reject claims that The Body Shop, known for its ethically sourced goods, was joining with \"the enemy\".\n\nThere were concerns that some of the ingredients L'Oreal then used in its products had been tested on animals, while The Body Shop was publicly opposed to animal testing.\n\nThe French firm insisted the brand would complement its existing offering, giving it increased presence in the \"masstige\" sector - mass market combined with prestige.\n\nBut Charlotte Pearce, an analyst at consultancy GlobalData Retail, believes the firm has \"slightly lost its way\" under L'Oreal's ownership.\n\n\"While The Body Shop's heritage is strong, it needs to work on its brand perception. It's not known as a brand which is innovative and new, and it's failed to keep up with market trends - contour sticks, kits and palettes were a strong trend in 2016, and these are nowhere to be seen in The Body Shop's range,\" she says.\n\nAnalysts say The Body Shop has lost its cachet as a fashionable brand\n\nThese days the firm is not seen as \"a trendy brand\", but mostly as a shop for gifting and low-value items, such as its body butters and body lotions, she says.\n\n\"With premium retailers such as Jo Malone and Liz Earle offering in-store treatments, there is more that The Body Shop could be doing to raise its profile and improve the customer experience,\" she adds.\n\nNonetheless, Prof John Colley from Warwick Business School believes there will still be plenty of interest from private equity funds.\n\nHe expects the firm to be sold with its current separate management team, who he says are likely to have their own ideas for how to improve it.\n\n\"When a major corporate has decided it doesn't want a business, it will sell it, probably, whatever the price.\n\n\"They [L'Oreal] are trying to get rid of it because it's underperforming. But anyone bidding will see a clear turnaround. Independent ownership would probably serve the firm well. A refreshed image would almost certainly work,\" he says.\n\nMr Hyman, too, believes a new owner could improve The Body Shop, particularly by selling the chain's products outside its own shops. But he says trying to offload the large store estate with long committed leases will be a hindrance to any buyer.\n\n\"That's not to say it isn't a business with potential, but it could perform much more strongly,\" he says.\n\nDame Anita Roddick, who founded the firm in 1976 at the age of 34, said her original motivation for the firm was simply to make a living for herself and her two daughters while her husband was away travelling.\n\nBut as someone who had travelled widely, she set out to do things differently, relying on natural ingredients and her customers' interest in the environment.\n\n\"Why waste a container when you can refill it? And why buy more of something than you can use? We behaved as she [my mother] did in the Second World War, we reused everything, we refilled everything and we recycled all we could.\n\n\"The foundation of The Body Shop's environmental activism was born out of ideas like these,\" she wrote.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The claim: It has taken longer for Donald Trump to have his \"full cabinet\" confirmed than any president in US history.\n\nReality Check Verdict: Democrats have slow-walked many of Mr Trump's presidential nominations. It has taken longer so far for him to get the majority of his choices confirmed, although part of that is due to the lateness of a few nominations and delays in submitting background-check paperwork. Mr Trump still has months to go, however, before he sets a record for how long it has taken to have all his cabinet positions filled.\n\nOn 7 February Donald Trump tweeted that it was a \"disgrace\" that he did not have his full cabinet of top-level presidential appointments confirmed by the US Senate. He called it the \"longest such delay in the history of our country\" and blamed it on Democratic obstruction.\n\nHis message echoed comments made by other prominent Republicans in Congress and his own administration.\n\nPress secretary Sean Spicer said the length of time it has taken to get Mr Trump's presidential nominations confirmed was \"ridiculous\".\n\n\"The Senate Democrats have done everything in their power to slow the work of the Senate, while the president continues to take decisive action, just like he promised,\" he said.\n\nSenate majority leader Mitch McConnell said \"Democrat obstruction has reached new extreme levels\", which he called a \"historic break with tradition\".\n\n\"It's time to finally accept the results of the election and move on,\" he added.\n\nDo as I say, not as I do?\n\nAt its most basic level, Mr Trump's tweet about the historic nature of the delays in assembling his \"full cabinet\" is demonstrably false.\n\nAs of 8 February, Mr Trump has had six of his 15 cabinet selections confirmed by the Senate, with several more awaiting final Senate approval. While he still has a way to go before his entire team is in place, it's hardly historic at this point.\n\nBill Clinton didn't have his final spot filled until 11 March. Republican George HW Bush took until 17 March. Barack Obama holds the modern record, as his last pick - Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius - didn't get her Senate vote until 28 April.\n\nOnly George W Bush, who like Mr Trump won the presidency without securing a plurality of the popular vote, had his full team in place within weeks of his inauguration, following John Ashcroft's confirmation as attorney general on 30 January.\n\nWhile Mr Trump's assertion is without basis in fact, he - and his fellow Republicans - are on firmer ground with a more general complaint about delayed confirmations.\n\nOf the past five presidencies, Mr Trump has by far the fewest confirmed cabinet selections at this point. Only two of his nominees - Secretary of Defence James Mattis and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly - were approved on inauguration day. Mr Clinton had three, Mr Obama had six, and George W Bush had seven. By mid-February, Mr Obama had all but three of his picks seated. Mr Clinton had all but one. George HW Bush was missing four.\n\nPart of the reason it took so long to fit those last pieces into their cabinets is because those past presidents had to withdraw initial selections due to scandal or insurmountable political opposition. George HW Bush's defence pick, John Tower, was voted down by the Senate. Mr Clinton swung and missed twice on attorney general before settling on Janet Reno. Mr Obama withdrew commerce nominees twice and health and human services once.\n\nSo far, Mr Trump has stuck with his original picks - although labour secretary nominee Andrew Puzder has yet to complete his ethics review and has had his confirmation hearing delayed four times.\n\nPuzder isn't the only one of Mr Trump's wealthy nominees who has had difficulty completing the Office of Government Ethics' vetting paperwork, which has contributed to confirmation delays. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross were among those who were tardy in complying with background-check requirements.\n\nMr Trump was also remarkably slow to come up with several cabinet picks. He didn't announce Veterans Affairs nominee David Shulkin until 11 January. Agriculture pick Sonny Perdue was unveiled just two days before inauguration on 20 January - an astounding fact, considering of Mr Trump's four predecessors, only four original nominations came after New Year's Day (George HW Bush's energy pick James Watkins was the latest, on 12 January).\n\nEmpty Democrat seats during a committee vote on two cabinet nominee\n\nThis isn't to discount the obvious efforts Democrats have made to drag out the confirmation process for some Trump picks.\n\nThey staged walk-outs at committee hearings for health and human services nominee Tom Price and treasury's Steven Mnuchin, delaying approval votes by a day. They gave long speeches that held up votes for Mr Sessions in committee vote and Ms DeVos on the Senate floor.\n\nThey've used bits of arcane Senate procedure and parliamentary manoeuvres to gum up the works where they can - although, due to their minority status, they can only delay, not derail.\n\nAlthough the efforts have been futile, Democratic senators are voting \"no\" on Mr Trump's nominees at an increasingly higher rate. More Democrats cast votes against Ms Devos than all previous education secretaries combined, dating back to the position's creation in 1980.\n\nThere have been a total of 111 no votes in the five nominees who have come up for a full Senate vote so far - compared with only 18 in the entirety of Mr Clinton's presidency. Mr Obama's choices had 406 no votes, but that was over the course of eight years and 31 nominations.\n\nDemocrats have also pumped up the anti-Trump rhetoric, throwing red meat to a Democratic base that is furious at any signs of compromise or accommodation.\n\n\"If not total unanimity, we're going to have near Democratic unity in opposing the remaining nominees for President Trump's cabinet,\" Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer said on Monday. \"This unity makes clear just how bad this cabinet would be for America's middle class and those struggling to get there.\"\n\nWhile Republicans cite statements like Schumer's as examples of unprecedented Democratic intransigence, Democrats are quick to note that in the latter days of the Obama administration, conservatives were equally vigorous in their opposition to the president's selections.\n\nMerrick Garland, whose Supreme Court nomination languished for 10 months before expiring without a hearing, is foremost in their minds, but even Mr Obama's second-term cabinet picks faced record-breaking delays.\n\nHis choice for labour secretary, Thomas Perez, took 121 days to be confirmed. John Bryson, his commerce pick, waited 126 days. Attorney General Loretta Lynch holds the modern record, as 161 days passed before getting Senate approval.\n\nIf a Trump nominee had that sort of delay, he or she wouldn't assume office until well into June.", "Hiddleston was nominated for the Bafta Rising Star award in 2011\n\nThe last few months haven't been too easy for Tom Hiddleston.\n\nIn September, he and girlfriend Taylor Swift broke up after three months together amid accusations their relationship was a publicity stunt.\n\nThen, in January, he apologised for an \"inelegantly expressed\" winner's speech at the Golden Globes in which he referred to aid workers in South Sudan \"binge-watching\" The Night Manager.\n\nThis time last year, the actor was riding the crest of a wave.\n\nAfter starring in hugely successful BBC drama The Night Manager as well as the big-screen adaption of JG Ballard's High-Rise, he was a hot favourite to be the next James Bond.\n\nBut have his off-screen actions since done damage to his brand?\n\n\"Some of the recent headlines have been unhelpful,\" admits Mark Borkowski, a strategic PR consultant.\n\n\"There are events that happen and they're not thought through properly, and the nature of being caught up with Taylor Swift's gang and not thinking it through strategically has undone him.\n\nSwift and Hiddleston dated for three months last year\n\n\"Sometimes people don't recognise the power of their brand, and often you can't conduct yourself in the way you think you can.\"\n\nBut Steven Gaydos, vice-president and executive editor of Variety, thinks Hiddleston is still a hot property, despite his recent PR mishaps.\n\n\"I don't think anything he's done to date has put any serious dent into his career,\" he told the BBC.\n\n\"He's a fantastic actor doing fantastic work. He has a fanbase and he's delivering the goods.\n\n\"These are just missteps - somebody doing something that causes chatter. In this case Tom Hiddleston made a speech and people thought it was silly, or he dated a woman and people thought it was a little bogus.\n\n\"He's not going to be hauled in front of the courts for any of this.\"\n\nHiddleston starred in BBC One's adaption of The Night Manager\n\nNonetheless, it's fair to say HiddleSwift brought Tom a great deal of negative attention.\n\nSome fans thought the couple were being suspiciously open about their relationship, leading to accusations that all was not what it seemed.\n\nHiddleston has now defended his relationship with Swift in an interview with GQ, saying: \"Of course it was real.\"\n\nHe also said the 'I ♥ T.S. [Taylor Swift]' tank top he was photographed wearing was \"a joke\", explaining he was lent it by a friend to protect a graze from the sun.\n\nThe actor said the pictures of him wearing the shirt were taken \"without consent or permission\", and that fans and the media had \"no context\".\n\n\"I was just surprised that it got so much attention,\" he said. \"The tank top became an emblem of this thing.\"\n\nThe series was directed by Susanne Bier (right) and adapted from a John le Carre novel\n\nSo is this latest interview simply damage limitation? \"Absolutely,\" says Mark Borkowski.\n\n\"I don't think Tom Hiddleston knew at the time just how big a brand he was. Now he does know that and has to think carefully.\n\n\"This GQ interview is an example of putting the record straight and trying to get a narrative together to try and recover from some poorly judged moments.\"\n\nBorkowski adds: \"There's a beautiful naivety about Tom Hiddleston that is projected through this interview where he's trying to talk directly to his fans. This is material you put there for them.\"\n\nHiddleston's acceptance speech at last month's Golden Globes was criticised\n\nHiddleston himself admits in the interview: \"A relationship in the limelight takes work. And it's not just the limelight. It's everything else.\n\n\"And I'm still trying to work out a way of having a personal life and protecting it, but also without hiding.\"\n\nGaydos has a lot of sympathy for the 36-year-old on the Taylor Swift front.\n\n\"Imagine you just met someone and you're having a relationship and the whole world is watching. It's like snakes all around you,\" he says.\n\n\"I'd hate to to live in a fish bowl and have every move analysed, with people saying you're a fraud, your relationship is a fraud, everything you're doing is insincere and fake.\"\n\nHiddleston said his relationship with Taylor Swift wasn't a publicity stunt\n\nHiddleston has two films coming out later this year - Thor: Ragnarok and Kong: Skull Island. Gaydos says the film studios won't be particularly worried about Hiddleston's off-screen actions.\n\n\"They're worrying about the tracking. If the trailer goes out for Kong and the response isn't strong or the awareness of the movie isn't high, that's what they're really concerned about,\" he says.\n\n\"Tom has not ventured anywhere near the space where we've seen stars screw up their careers and really damage their star wattage.\"\n\nHiddleston will be seen in the new Kong and Thor films later this year\n\nBorkowski adds: \"Anything is recoverable in this day and age.\n\n\"Last week we were hearing about the death of the David Beckham brand, but we'd forgotten about it by Thursday.\n\n\"Things move so quickly now, so it is always about recovery.\"\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Villager Alexander Batyokhtin has built a church out of snow in Sosnovka in Siberia.", "Haiti's Celine Marti, a full-time police officer, competes in the skiing World Championships, despite only starting training for the event three months ago.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Last updated on .From the section Snooker\n\nJudd Trump will face Stuart Bingham in Sunday's Welsh Open final after the Englishmen enjoyed comfortable wins in the last four in Cardiff.\n\nTrump, the world number four, beat Scotland's Scott Donaldson 6-3 in the first of the semi-finals.\n\n\"It's always special when you reach the semi-finals and finals,\" said Bristol's Trump, who last won a title at the European Masters in October.\n\n\"It's a different atmosphere out there and you really thrive off it, so for me to play in the final here, in kind of my home tournament - it would be an amazing achievement to win it.\"\n\nTrump, 27, opened with a break of 131 but was pegged back from 4-1 to 4-3, making the decisive move with a 74 break in the eighth frame in Cardiff.\n\n\"I feel like I've really improved this season and it's taking people at the top of their game to beat me,\" he added.\n\n\"Every tournament I go into I'm fully prepared and give it my best shot. If I could win this and make it two ranking events in a season, it would feel like a step up to a different level.\"\n\nBingham, 40, played superbly, opening with a break of 127 and closing with a 101 as he raced through six frames.\n\n\"It all started off from a massive fluke in the first frame and to make a hundred off that settled me down and put Rob on the back foot,\" he said. \"I punished him for every mistake.\"\n\nLooking ahead to the final, Bingham added: \"We've had some great matches and I'm looking forward to it. If I play like that, it's hopefully going to be a high-quality match.\"\n\nSign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app.", "Harry Kane guides home Christian Eriksen's cross to give Tottenham an early lead against Fulham in the FA Cup fifth round tie at Craven Cottage.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nFA PEOPLE'S CUP: Sign up for free five-a-side competition – entries close midnight on Sunday!\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby League\n\nWarrington Wolves achieved the first win for an English club over Australian opponents since 2012 as they beat Brisbane Broncos in the first match of the 2017 World Club Series.\n\nKevin Brown excelled on his Wire debut, scoring a try in the second minute.\n\nRyan Atkins and Matty Russell helped the hosts into a 20-0 lead and Tom Lineham also crossed before half-time.\n\nDeclan Patton added 11 points with the boot, while Corey Oates, James Roberts and David Mead replied for Brisbane.\n\nLeeds' World Club Challenge win over Manly five years earlier had been the last time a northern hemisphere side had beaten one of their NRL counterparts, and Super League clubs had lost all six matches since the expanded World Club Series began in 2015.\n\nSuper League champions Wigan Warriors host NRL Grand Final winners Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks in the World Club Challenge on Sunday (15:00 GMT).\n\nBrisbane, coached by England boss Wayne Bennett, do not begin their league season until 2 March and a lack of match practice appeared to contribute to their slow start, for which they were clinically punished.\n\nWarrington made the perfect start when Joe Westerman raced 60 metres after charging down a kick and Brown, a winter signing from local rivals Widnes, darted over after Westerman had been hauled down short of the line.\n\nLast season's beaten Super League finalists were 20-0 up after 19 minutes as Atkins powered over and Russell showed neat footwork to evade three Brisbane defenders.\n\nOates went over acrobatically in the corner for the Broncos but winger Lineham's score for Warrington, given after consultation with the video referee, helped the Wire to an 18-point lead at half-time.\n\nBrisbane improved after the break and Roberts' 80-metre dash for a try gave the Australian side some heart, but Patton's drop goal and a fifth successful kick from the tee established a three-score advantage which was rarely threatened.\n\n\"We wanted to get Super League off to a good start. Not too many people gave us a chance but we know the belief in our squad and it was good to put a good performance out.\n\n\"I felt like our ball control was good, especially in that first 20 minutes, and our kicking game was great. That's a great way to kick-start our year.\n\n\"We wish Wigan and Cronulla all the best for Sunday. I had 11 or 12 great seasons in the NRL and I love that competition. May the best team win, but hopefully people will look a little bit differently at Super League after that result.\"", "An exhibition tracing the changing styles of Diana, Princess of Wales is due to open in Kensington Palace.\n\nDiana: Her Fashion Story will display iconic outfits from throughout her life - from before she was married to after her divorce in the 1990s.\n\nCurator Eleri Lynn said the exhibition showed how the princess was \"growing in confidence throughout her life\".\n\nA \"White Garden\" celebrating Diana's life will also be planted in the palace grounds this summer.\n\nPrincess Diana commissioned this tartan coat and skirt from designer Emanuel for an official royal visit to Italy in 1985.\n\nThe boxy style may have been fashionable in the 1980s but many commentators thought little of the coat.\n\nThis silk chiffon evening gown was worn by Diana at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival, and for a performance of Miss Saigon at the Theatre Royal, London in 1989.\n\nIt was created by Catherine Walker who took inspiration for the dress from the gown worn by Grace Kelly in Alfred Hitchcock's 1955 film, To Catch A Thief.\n\nPrincess Diana hit the headlines when she danced with actor John Travolta at a state dinner in the White House in 1985.\n\nThe velvet silk evening dress which she wore that night was designed by Victor Edelstein and was said to be one of her favourites.\n\nThis cocktail dress, which Diana wore for a concert at the Barbican in 1989, was considered an unusual choice for a princess given it was based on a masculine tuxedo.\n\nDesigner David Sassoon said it was an example of how Diana started to \"break the rules\" as she experimented with styles and learned what clothes worked for different occasions.\n\nThis sequined evening dress created by Catherine Walker in 1986 was said to be typical of Diana's \"Dynasty\" phase when the media noted her taste for \"large shoulder pads, lavish fabrics and metallic accessories\".\n\nThe princess wore it for an official visit to Austria in 1986 as well as two charity balls in 1989 and 1990.\n\nDiana increasingly worked with Catherine Walker during her life to develop what the designer called her \"royal uniform\".\n\nShe wore this red day suit created by Walker for her famous visit to the London Lighthouse, a centre for people affected by HIV and AIDS, in October 1996.\n\nDiana: Her Fashion Story will open on 24 February\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Stuart Bingham held his nerve in a tense final frame to beat Judd Trump 9-8 and win his first Welsh Open title.\n\nThe Englishman, 40, took the last two frames, sealing victory with a break of 55 to claim his first ranking title since the 2015 World Championship.\n\nBingham had led 4-0 in the early stages and came through a scrappy final session that saw a highest break of 63.\n\n\"Unbelievable,\" said the world number two. \"To get my hands on another trophy means everything.\"\n\nCompatriot Trump, 27, cut the early deficit to 5-3 by taking the last frame of the afternoon session and moved 7-6 and 8-7 ahead in the evening.\n\nHowever, Bingham got back on level terms and, after Trump missed an early opportunity in the decider, it was the former world champion who prevailed with a clearance.\n\n\"I honestly felt that Judd outclassed me from the word go,\" said Bingham. \"The first two frames were massive but it was only from his mistake that I cleared up and won.\n\n\"I've been knocking on the door since October, playing pretty well. I thought it wasn't going to happen here and hats off to Judd, from 4-0 down a lot of people would have crumbled and given up.\"\n\nTrump said: \"It was tough. I missed a few chances early on. I kind of threw it away in the first four frames.\n\n\"I missed too many easy balls and even tonight when I was getting back into it, I missed another easy ball. On the whole I did well to get back into it, it was just the odd shot here and there that cost me.\"", "The Oscar-nominated film Hidden Figures tells the story of African-American women whose maths skills helped put a US astronaut into orbit in the 1960s. But the history of black women working for Nasa goes back much further - and they were still struggling to get the best jobs in the 1970s.\n\nIn 1943, two years after the US joined World War Two, Miriam Daniel Mann was 36 years old. She had three children, aged six, seven and eight - but she also had a Chemistry degree.\n\nJob opportunities for married women were limited then, especially for those with children, and even more so for African-American women.\n\nBut as men went off to war, there was a skill shortage in vital industries. The president signed an executive order allowing black people to be employed in the defence sector for the first time, and Nasa's predecessor, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), started looking for black women to work on mathematical calculations.\n\nThrough her husband, a college professor, Mann heard about the recruiters visiting black college campuses. She registered to take an exam, passed it, and became one of the first black women to work as a \"human computer\" at the NACA aeronautics research facility at Langley in Virginia.\n\nThese were the days before the machines we now know as computers were available to crunch numbers - and when they were invented, they took their name from the humans who had done the job before them.\n\nMiriam Mann's daughter, Miriam Mann Harris, wrote in 2011: \"My early memories are of my mother talking about doing math problems all day. Back then all of the math was done with a #2 pencil and the aid of a slide rule... She would relate stories about the 'colored' sign on a table in the back of the cafeteria. She brought the first one home, but there was a replacement the next day. New signs went up on the bathroom door, 'colored girls'.\"\n\nMann's granddaughter, Duchess Harris - a professor at Macalester College and co-author of Hidden Human Computers, the Black Women of Nasa - points out that Mann was born in 1907, only half a century after the end of slavery.\n\nBut there had been a big drive to educate African Americans, most of whom had been illiterate before emancipation, Harris says, so by the 1940s there was a pool of talented black women with maths and science degrees waiting to be employed.\n\nThanks to them - and to white women, who had been employed as computers since the 1930s - male engineers could spend more time theorising and writing equations.\n\n\"After the war in most industries the women were sent home again,\" says Bill Barry, Nasa's chief historian. \"But in the computing business that didn't happen. In fact, Nasa started hiring more women, in large part because of the quantity of work going on.\"\n\nOften jobs were held open for women to come back to after having a child.\n\n\"A skilled computer was an incredibly valuable resource,\" he says.\n\nAt Langley, in the 1940s and 1950s the women were split into two pools - the East computing unit for white women, and the West computing unit for black women. This segregation had been a requirement of Virginia state law, says Barry.\n\nFor most of the 50s, a woman called Dorothy Vaughan was the supervisor in charge of West Computing - she is one of the main characters in the film Hidden Figures.\n\nWhen tasks from the engineers came in, she would allocate the work and show her team what they needed to do.\n\n\"Dorothy Vaughan would take the equation and break it into sections and tell you how to solve that equation in small parts. Tell you which columns you multiply, which ones you add,\" says Christine Darden, who started working for Nasa in 1967. \"By the time you have followed all her directions across you would have the solution.\"\n\nBy the time Darden joined, the women were no longer in separate pools and had been allocated to specific engineering sections.\n\nChristine Darden learned to programme the new IBM computers\n\nShe had fallen in love with maths as a teenager, but when she told her father she wanted to study it at college, he didn't like the idea. He could not see a career path.\n\n\"My father insisted I get a degree in teacher education because during that time black females generally didn't get very many jobs in math,\" says Darden. \"He told me I had to be able to teach so I could get a job.\"\n\nDarden listened to her father, but as she was determined to follow her passion she took extra maths classes and even carried on studying for a Master's while teaching. One day at college she was handed an application form for Nasa, and a few weeks later she was offered a job in one of their computer offices.\n\nWhile most of the women were still carrying out their tasks using spreadsheets and a calculator, she was among a growing number who learned to programme the new IBM computers. These were capable of doing laborious calculations in a fraction of the time it took a human.\n\nWhen Darden was given an equation to solve, she would work out the different steps required, and then write a program telling the computer each step, by punching holes in a card that would be fed into the machine.\n\n\"We had a card punch in our office. I would punch the cards. I would take the cards over to the building that had the computer and they had people who would run the program.\"\n\nThe work that these women did from the 1940s onwards was essential for Nasa's work, but their names didn't appear on research papers.\n\nKatherine Johnson calculated the trajectory for Alan Shepard, the first American in space\n\nSlowly, however, some of these highly educated and intelligent women started to make their way into more advanced roles.\n\nThe film Hidden Figures features a woman named Katherine Johnson who helped work out the trajectories to launch the first American into orbit around the planet.\n\nAnother is Mary Jackson who fought for the right to be an engineer in her own right.\n\nMary Jackson became Nasa's first black female engineer in 1958\n\nBut years later, Christine Darden, with her Masters degree, still had to struggle to be treated as an equal to the male engineers.\n\n\"When I found out that the engineers were doing very theoretical engineering - sitting at their desk working with equations, I decided that was what I wanted to do,\" she says.\n\nHer manager told her it wasn't possible.\n\nBut in 1972, as funding for the space programme was scaled back, Christine feared she was about to be made redundant.\n\n\"That gave me the incentive to go to a higher-level boss and ask why men were assigned to engineering sections to do their own projects - write the paper, give the paper - but the females were assigned to the computer pools to do the calculating as a support role.\"\n\nIt worked - Christine was allocated to an engineering team that was studying planes flying faster than the speed of sound. She studied ways to minimise sonic booms which are caused by planes travelling at such speeds.\n\nBy the time she retired in 2007, as a Nasa senior executive, she had published more than 50 papers.\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Tottenham striker Harry Kane rifles home to seal his hat-trick in the FA Cup fifth round tie against Fulham at Craven Cottage.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "The Daily Telegraph carries claims from senior Whitehall sources that Russia plotted to assassinate the prime minister of Montenegro and overthrow its government last year.\n\nMontenegro's PM Milo Djukanovic is said to have been the targeted on election day last October\n\nIt is claimed the plot was designed to sabotage Montenegro's attempts to join Nato and was foiled \"only hours\" before being carried out.\n\nThe paper says British and American intelligence agencies have gathered evidence of \"high-level Russian complicity\" - but the Kremlin has denied any involvement.\n\nA leaked document seen by the Observer suggests the EU is concerned that millions of EU nationals from other countries living in the UK will be \"stranded in a legal no-man's land\" after Brexit because of weaknesses in Britain's immigration system.\n\nThe report - drawn up by MEPs - argues the Home Office doesn't have the information or systems in place to select who can stay once Britain leaves.\n\nThe lead story in the Mail on Sunday claims the head of the police force investigating allegations of historical sexual abuse against Sir Edward Heath is convinced the former prime minister was a paedophile.\n\nWiltshire's Chief Constable Mike Veale is said to regard the claims as \"120% genuine\" and plans to publish a report in June.\n\nSir Edward died in 2005, and the Sir Edward Heath Charitable Foundation has previously said it is confident he will be cleared of any wrongdoing.\n\nWiltshire Police declined to comment on the story but said its chief constable had previously stated it was his job to ensure the probe was \"proportionate, measured, legal and necessary\".\n\nA head teacher in Oldham has raised fears of a new \"Trojan Horse plot\" to take over her school, according to the Sunday Times.\n\nShe is said to have emailed her local authority in December to report a campaign of intimidation against school staff, and to highlight concerns about the activities of a Muslim former parent governor.\n\nThe lead story in the Sunday Express says children as young as five are calling a helpline to be read bedtime stories because their parents are too drunk to tuck them in at night.\n\nThe paper's editorial argues it's a \"national scandal\" that so little has been done to help the estimated two-and-a-half million children who live with an alcoholic parent.\n\nIt says it is \"even more tragic\" that no local authority appears to have a strategy to deal with the problem.\n\nThe Sunday Mirror claims a convicted rapist who is alleged to have won a lottery jackpot of £2.5m with a fraudulent ticket carried out a \"dry run\" of the suspected scam.\n\nHe is said to have shown friends a faked ticket in 2009 - five months before he claimed the prize money.\n\nThe Mirror says he has refused to comment on the fraud allegations that have been made against him, and police investigated the case but decided to take no action.\n\nThe Mirror's editorial argues the Gambling Commission probe into the payout was covered up, and calls for this latest evidence to be investigated as part of an inquiry by MPs because, it says, \"a parliamentary report cannot be covered up\".\n\nMeanwhile, Justice Minister Liz Truss has told the Sun on Sunday that prisons must stop acting as offender warehouses and rehabilitate inmates instead.\n\nShe says she is determined to get a grip of the \"epidemic of reoffending\" so will change the law this week to make reforming offenders a \"key aim\" of prison.\n\nAccording to the paper, seven months in the job \"have convinced Ms Truss of the enormity of the task\", after violence in prisons hit a 10-year high under her watch.\n\nAnd Lincoln City's win in the FA Cup yesterday - making them the first non-league side to reach the quarter final stage of the competition for over a century - allows the headline writers to come up with a plethora of puns, using the club's nickname, The Imps.\n\nThe Sunday Telegraph says Lincoln's feat will have repercussions \"long beyond this season\" as the club's financial future is now secure \"for many years to come\".", "Father-of-three Ray Woodhall survived 27 heart attacks in 24 hours. He first became ill during a game of \"walking football\".\n\nHe was taken to hospital, where two stents were put in his main artery, but then he began to suffer multiple heart attacks.\n\nThe 54-year-old told 5 live he thought he had been asleep but had actually gone into arrest and had to be resuscitated: “I was apologising to the staff for falling asleep and they said ‘you’ve not been asleep, we had to arrest you, you’d gone.’”\n\nThis clip is originally from 5 live Breakfast on Saturday 18 February 2017.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nZlatan Ibrahimovic came off the bench to score the winner as holders Manchester United had to work hard to beat Championship strugglers Blackburn in the FA Cup fifth round.\n\nStriker Ibrahimovic was allowed too much time in the box to latch on to fellow substitute Paul Pogba's pass and tuck in from close range to set up a quarter-final tie against Premier League leaders Chelsea.\n\nDanny Graham had given the hosts the lead with a rising finish following excellent play by Marvin Emnes, who himself had tested Sergio Romero with a thumping effort moments earlier.\n\nIn response, Rovers goalkeeper Jason Steele pushed away Ander Herrera's fierce shot, but Marcus Rashford equalised for the visitors by going round the goalkeeper and slotting in from Henrikh Mkhitaryan's precise pass.\n\nRovers striker Anthony Stokes had a goal rightly ruled out offside following Romero's triple save late on.\n\nVictory for United maintains their hopes of a cup treble this season, as they travel to Saint-Etienne in the Europa League on Wednesday with a healthy last-32 first-leg advantage, and face Southampton in the EFL Cup final next Sunday.\n\nJose Mourinho's side did not have it all their own way at Ewood Park and were slow and sloppy in possession, while struggling to carve open clear-cut opportunities.\n\nBut they had summer signings Ibrahimovic and Pogba to thank as the two players combined for United's winning goal, with the side now losing just one of their last 10 away games in all competitions.\n\nWorld-record signing Pogba, who reportedly said he left the club in his first spell after failing to play against Blackburn in 2011, picked out Ibrahimovic with an inch-perfect pass, although the home defenders should have done better to close the Swede down for his 24th goal of the campaign.\n\nIt was also Mkhitaryan's incisive, outside-of-the-foot pass which opened up the Blackburn's defence for the opening goal. The excellent Armenian controlled much of the match with his intricate passing and pacy forward play, driving a strike narrowly wide in the first half.\n\nHarking back to the old days\n\nPremier League title rivals against United during the mid-1990s, Rovers have fallen on difficult times since and find themselves at the wrong end of the Championship, in real danger of being relegated to the third tier.\n\nWhen once they could boast the likes of Simon Garner, Alan Shearer and Andy Cole in their starting line-up, this side is mostly put together from free and loan signings.\n\nNomadic front man Graham, acquired for nothing from Sunderland, has impressed this term and rolled back to happier times for Rovers with a well-taken effort after 17 minutes, turning Chris Smalling and striking high past Romero for his 12th goal of the season.\n\nGraham's spin and shot when looking for a second provided no problems for the United goalkeeper and winger Craig Conway was wasteful by lashing over the crossbar from a promising position.\n\nDefeat means Owen Coyle's men have won only once in five games and now turn their attention to preserving their Championship status.\n\n'We conceded a brilliant goal' - what they said\n\nBlackburn boss Owen Coyle: \"We gave a very good account of ourselves but nobody likes losing games. We did enough to get another shot at it today.\n\n\"We now have to show that display week in, week out in the Championship.\n\n\"We know we have good footballers here, nobody could see they are short changed by us when it comes to entertainment.\n\n\"We showed great spirit and courage to try and get an equaliser at the end and we will need those qualities for the rest of the season.\"\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho: \"Did they give us a good game? More than good, they gave us a hard game and congratulations to them. Their approach was brave, strong. They had real competitors and if we didn't have the right attitude from everybody we would be in real trouble.\n\n\"For long periods of the game you couldn't feel which one was the strongest team, they were brilliant. If they transfer this quality to the Championship they will have a big chance to survive.\n\n\"We conceded a brilliant goal. It was a brilliant goal. The movement and shot was really good, it didn't affect any player individually for us. We kept stable and we then scored a great goal.\"\n\nBlackburn travel to Burton Albion in the Championship next Friday (kick-off 19:45 GMT), while Manchester United head to Saint-Etienne for the second leg of their Europa League last-32 tie on Wednesday (kick-off 17:00 GMT).\n• None Zlatan Ibrahimovic has now scored in the FA Cup, Coppa Italia, Copa del Rey and Coupe de France.\n• None The Swede is now Manchester United's joint-top scorer in all competitions since the start of last season (24 - joint with Anthony Martial), despite only joining this summer.\n• None No Premier League player has played more games in all competitions this season than Ibrahimovic and Nathan Redmond (both 36).\n• None All five of Paul Pogba's assists for Manchester United in 2016-17 have been for Ibrahimovic.\n• None Manchester United have progressed from each of their last 11 FA Cup ties against teams from a lower division.\n• None Danny Graham scored his first FA Cup goal since January 2013, which also came against top-flight opposition (Arsenal).\n• None Four of Henrikh Mkhitaryan's five assists for Manchester United have been in cup competitions (three in the League Cup and one in the FA Cup).\n• None Marcus Rashford has scored four goals in his six FA Cup appearances for Manchester United.\n• None Blackburn have kept just one clean sheet in their last 11 home games in domestic cup competition (FA Cup and League Cup).\n• None Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Offside, Blackburn Rovers. Marvin Emnes tries a through ball, but Anthony Stokes is caught offside.\n• None Attempt saved. Marvin Emnes (Blackburn Rovers) right footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Attempt saved. Anthony Stokes (Blackburn Rovers) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the top centre of the goal.\n• None Attempt saved. Connor Mahoney (Blackburn Rovers) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Willem Tomlinson.\n• None Connor Mahoney (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Attempt blocked. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Zlatan Ibrahimovic. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLincoln achieved a \"football miracle\" as they knocked out Burnley on a dramatic day of FA Cup fifth-round action, with 10-man Millwall beating Premier League champions Leicester.\n\nThe Imps became the first non-league side in 103 years to reach the last eight with their win over the Clarets.\n\n\"Football at our level is not romantic and this moment in the limelight is special,\" Imps boss Danny Cowley said.\n\n\"It was a one in 100 chance and thankfully we got that opportunity.\"\n\nIt is the first time in Lincoln's 133-year history that they have reached the quarter-finals.\n\n\"It's a football miracle for a non-league team to be in the last eight. The boys were excellent, playing against a Premier League team,\" Cowley said after the 1-0 win.\n• None Reaction and coverage of the FA Cup fifth round\n• None Don't miss out on the FA People's Cup 2017\n• None Listen - Lincoln win 'will go down in history of The FA Cup'\n\n\"The last eight of the FA Cup sounds pretty good. We work hard and we are mightily proud of the players.\"\n\nCowley appeared as a guest on Match of the Day on Saturday night and said: \"It is a great day for us and the football club. I am immensely proud of the players and they probably do not understand what they have achieved.\n\n\"We are in North Ferriby on Tuesday night. It becomes a harder game on the back on this win. It will be good to go back to proper football.\"\n\nCowley's assistant manager, his brother Nicky, was also on the show and said: \"It has not sunk in. I definitely think the magic of the cup is still alive where we live. If it's a football miracle, then we will take that.\"\n\nThe quarter-final draw will take place at 18:30 GMT on Sunday and can be seen on the BBC News channel and the BBC Sport website, with commentary on BBC Radio 5 live.\n\nHow big an achievement is this?\n\nLincoln are the National League leaders but there are 81 places between them and Burnley in the football pyramid.\n\nThis is the first time that two non-league teams have reached the FA Cup fifth round since 1888.\n\nTheir determination and ability to frustrate Burnley ensured that Sean Raggett's 89th-minute header saw the side become the first non-league team since Queens Park Rangers in 1914 to make the quarter-finals.\n\nThe historic victory, celebrated jubilantly by the players and travelling fans, means the Imps are the first non-league side since Telford in 1985, and only the third ever, to knock out four league clubs in a single season.\n\n\"It is a game that will go down in history. Every Lincoln player is a hero,\" former Chelsea winger Pat Nevin told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"Lincoln are deservedly through, not just for effort but the skill and bravery. They knew they were good enough and didn't give up.\"\n• None Lincoln win 'will go down in history of The FA Cup'\n\n'We took inspiration from Lincoln'\n\nLeague One side Millwall followed in Lincoln's footsteps and added to Leicester's woes as they consigned the Foxes to their first FA Cup defeat by a side from the third tier or lower since they were knocked out by Wycombe Wanderers in 2001.\n\nThe reigning Premier League champions, who were beaten 1-0 and face Sevilla in the Champions League on Wednesday, are in danger of relegation after five successive defeats left them one place and one point above the bottom three.\n\n\"When a team from League One beats the champions we say 'why?' and have to react as soon as possible,\" Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri said. \"We are better than Millwall but Millwall deserved to win.\"\n\nMillwall had already beaten Premier League sides Bournemouth and Watford on their way to the fifth round and victory secured their place in the last eight for the third time in 32 seasons.\n\n\"We took inspiration from what Lincoln have done. What they achieved today outshines us,\" Millwall manager Neil Harris said.\n\n\"I thought the atmosphere was electric. The noise was phenomenal. These are special days for us.\"\n\nMatch of the Day pundit John Hartson said: \"Millwall actually improved when they went down to 10 men. Neil Harris made a good change, bringing on another striker Lee Gregory, and he set up the winner. It was a really, really brave substitution.\"\n\nIt was a strong day for sides facing Premier League opposition, with Huddersfield Town forcing a replay against Manchester City despite the Terriers making seven changes to their side.\n\nCity's starting line-up included Sergio Aguero but they were forced to settle for a goalless draw.\n\nFellow Premier League side Middlesbrough were also pushed by League One's Oxford United. Boro made six changes to the side that drew with Everton last time out but it took substitute Cristhian Stuani's strike four minutes from time to ensure their place in the quarter-finals.\n\nChelsea had the most comfortable win, beating Championship side Wolves 2-0 with second-half goal from Pedro and Diego Costa.\n\nIn a scrappy and, at times, tense game, it was Raggett's header that beat Tom Heaton to secure Lincoln's place in the last eight.\n\nThe 23-year-old, who said in 2012 that he one day hoped to play against Burnley's Joey Barton, has scored five times in 30 appearances for the Imps this season.\n\n\"It's crazy, a non-league side in the quarter-finals in modern football, it's unheard of,\" Raggett told BT Sport.\n\n\"They're a top quality side, drew with Chelsea last week, it's amazing. We had massive belief, we didn't come to draw, we came to win the game.\"\n\n\"Thank god for goalline technology. We don't have it at our level so I'm not sure the goal would have been given in the National League,\" Cowley added, after seeing Raggett's header marginally cross the line.\n\nLincoln frustrated Burnley throughout the game, with striker Matt Rhead and Barton often outmuscling one another as tensions grew in the final minutes.\n\n\"It is something you dream of as a kid. We went toe-to-toe with a Premier League team,\" Rhead said.\n\n\"It is unbelievable. When we started back in October it was a dream. I enjoyed every minute of it. The lads have done unbelievable.\"\n\n'We're unfortunately part of their fairytale'\n\nBurnley have not progressed to the sixth round of the FA Cup since 2002-03 and they were left frustrated at the final whistle.\n\nThey had the majority of possession in the first half but Raggett's header consigned them to only their fourth home defeat in their past 30 matches at Turf Moor.\n\n\"You have to work, be diligent and believe you will get another chance - I think they only had one chance, credit to them,\" Burnley manager Sean Dyche told BBC Sport.\n\n\"My team were nowhere near the level they can show. No excuses. We're unfortunately part of their fairytale.\"", "Harry Kane scores a hat-trick as Tottenham reach the FA Cup quarter-finals with a comfortable 3-0 win over Championship side Fulham.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Former boxing champion Spencer Oliver has described a suspected car-jacking attack on his friend and fellow former boxer Michael Watson.\n\nOliver told 5 live: “Michael has some burns when he was dragged down the road in the car. It was a crazy incident and thankfully no one was seriously hurt.”\n\nA police spokesman confirmed: \"Two men, aged in their 50s, informed officers that they had been sprayed in the face with a suspected noxious substance by two suspects who attempted to steal the car.\n\n\"The male suspects fled the scene in a different vehicle.\"\n\nThis clip is originally from 5 live Breakfast on Sunday 19 February 2017.", "Animal lovers hope to make it mandatory for pets found by council workers to be checked for microchips so they can be returned to their owners.\n\nA petition to the assembly wants it to be mandatory to scan microchips of all pets, dead or alive.\n\nRebecca Baker, assistant manager at Dogs Trust Bridgend, urged anyone who found an animal to take it to a centre to get it scanned so families can get \"peace of mind\".", "Award winning author Jeanette Winterson has been speaking to the BBC about having to close her deli in Spitalfields because of rising rates.\n\nHer business rates will rise from £21,500 to £54,000 in April.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nFormer Australia lock Dan Vickerman has died at the age of 37, the Australian Rugby Union (ARU) has confirmed.\n\nSouth Africa-born Vickerman played 63 Tests for Australia after his 2002 debut and featured in three World Cups.\n\n\"The rugby world is in shock after news of the tragic passing of Dan Vickerman. He was an enforcer on the field and a much-loved character off the field,\" said ARU chief executive Bill Pulver.\n\nNo details of the cause of death have been disclosed.\n\nThe former Wallaby died at his family home in Sydney and is survived by wife Sarah and two sons.\n\nHe retired from the game in 2012 after spells with the Brumbies and Waratahs franchises in Super Rugby, and also spent the 2009-10 season in England with Premiership side Northampton Saints whilst studying at Cambridge University.\n\nHe played for Cambridge in their 2008 Varsity match defeat by Oxford, before captaining the Light Blues to victory in the 2009 edition at Twickenham.\n\nEngland head coach Eddie Jones, who coached Australia and the Brumbies in his homeland, was among those to pay tribute.\n\n\"On behalf of the RFU and myself, I would like to send my condolences to Dan Vickerman's family, Sarah and the two kids,\" he said.\n\n\"He was a wonderfully committed team player and a good guy. He will be sorely missed by the rugby community.\"", "David Tennant's new West End role will show him in a new light, according to the play's writer and director.\n\nThe Broadchurch and Doctor Who star is going to be a \"real anti-hero\" in Don Juan in Soho, says Patrick Marber - the man behind Oscar-nominated film Closer.\n\nIt's been described as a \"savagely funny and filthy\" update of Moliere's 17th century tragicomedy Don Juan, with the action taking place in modern-day London.\n\nMarber says Tennant has been known for playing \"decent\" people in recent years, but all that will change when he takes on the title role.\n\n\"It's a great part for him,\" says Marber as rehearsals get under way at Wyndham's Theatre.\n\n\"I think it's going to be very funny and very rude. It's really exciting to see my play again.\"\n\nThe play was first staged in 2006, with Rhys Ifans playing Don Juan as the seducer who's hell-bent on pleasure, and couldn't care less about the consequences.\n\nOf the new Don Juan, Marber - who's also been an actor and comedian - says: \"It's a part we haven't seen David play before, really.\n\n\"The man is an amoral hedonist, and is wicked. You love to hate him, and hate to love him - he's a real anti-hero.\"\n\nPatrick Marber says Don Juan in Soho is 'naughty but nice'\n\nAnd, according to Marber, Tennant is funny - very, very funny indeed.\n\n\"He's always a great comedian,\" he says.\n\n\"When I met him 20 years ago, he was the best light comedian I'd ever seen at the time. This is an opportunity to give full rein to his comic skills.\"\n\nAsked quite how rude Don Juan is going to be, Marber replies: \"I think it's naughty but nice. I don't think it's shocking.\"\n\nIt's a busy time for the playwright. He directed the just-opened West End transfer of Tom Stoppard's Travesties, which enjoyed a sell-out run at London's Menier Chocolate Factory last year.\n\nFans can also see his version of Hedda Gabler at the National Theatre, with Affair star Ruth Wilson giving what Marber describes as \"one of the greatest performances\" he has ever seen.\n\nSo how is he getting through this hectic period?\n\n\"I'm getting as much sleep as I possibly can and drinking a lot of coffee,\" he says.\n\nTravesties stars Rev's Tom Hollander as Henry Carr, a man recalling his memories as a diplomat living in Zurich in 1917, and the people he met there - including James Joyce and Lenin.\n\n\"I think it sold out on the two Toms names - Hollander and Stoppard. It's a really nice combination of people,\" said Marber.\n\n\"It's not been on in London since the early 1990s. so I think there's some curiosity there too.\"\n\nHe described it as a \"very funny play\" which is \"about universal things like love, sex, art and politics\".\n\nIt is especially relevant in 2017, he added.\n\n\"At the time it's set, in Europe 1917 - exactly 100 years ago - the world is at war.\n\n\"It talks to that anxiety, that feeling that the world is disturbing and troubled. And it feels increasingly relevant, the play.\n\n\"I think that in troubled times, people want to be entertained, and it's a very entertaining evening at the theatre. It wears its politics lightly.\n\n\"It speaks to the soul and intellect, the heart and the head.\"\n\nTravesties is at the Apollo Theatre until 29 April. Don Juan in Soho is at Wyndham's Theatre from 17 March.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Microsoft founder Bill Gates has warned a deadly pathogen could easily wipe out 30m people in a year, and that the example of Ebola was one to heed.\n\nSpeaking at the Munich Security Conference, Mr Gates said there was a \"reasonable probability\" of such a virus spreading, and that it would most likely do so in fragile states where it is difficult to stop epidemics.", "Thousands of men wearing just loincloths gathered at the Saidaiji Kannon-in Temple, Okayama, Japan for an annual festival.", "Russian gold medal winners at the biathlon world championship in Austria had to sing their national anthem after an old, Yeltsin-era anthem was played by mistake.\n\nAleksei Volkov, Maksim Tsvetkov, Anton Babikov, and Anton Shipulin were handed the microphone when organisers played the old anthem.", "Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford beats goalkeeper Jason Steele to cancel out Danny Graham's opener in their FA Cup fifth-round tie at Blackburn Rovers.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nFA PEOPLE'S CUP: Sign up for free five-a-side competition – entries close midnight on Sunday!\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Paris suburbs have seen violent protests after Theo's alleged sexual assault\n\nIn the Paris suburbs, youth sits idle. Young men chat and smoke. Some deal drugs. Most days are spent like this.\n\nBut today the talk is still about the alleged sexual assault on one of their friends, 22-year-old Theo, a young black man, who was brutalised by police.\n\nA truncheon, they say, was rammed into his backside, leaving him hospitalised for two weeks.\n\nEleanor says she was in disbelief when she heard the details of what had happened to her brother\n\nI meet his sister Eleanor, behind the graffiti-covered building where the assault is said to have taken place.\n\n\"They pulled him around the side to make sure the cameras couldn't see it,\" she says.\n\n\"Everyone here knows where the CCTV cameras are, and he tried to get to a place where they could see him. But the police - there were four of them - they pulled him back.\n\n\"I was afraid. I was afraid to see how he is and what they had done.\"\n\nEleanor says she was in disbelief when she heard the details of what had happened. Her elder brother told her it was rape.\n\n\"'Rape?' I said. 'What are you talking about?'\n\n\"I started to cry because I was so shocked. But after that I knew I had to be strong.\"\n\nAttacks by police, residents here say, are pretty common.\n\nBut this provoked real anger. Protests erupted across the French capital - cars were burned and property destroyed.\n\nTheo (left) was last week visited in hospital by French President Francois Hollande\n\nMejdi is 27 and was born on the estate. He rides up and down on his BMX, but is keen to stop and talk.\n\n\"If there is no charge for rape,\" he warns, \"people here will go mad.\"\n\n\"Nothing changes here. I was here in 2005 during the massive protests - they came back and tried to clean the place up. But you don't change anything with a coat of paint. Work, hope. We have none of that.\"\n\nHe - like many here - is bright and well informed. He knows what the problems are - but is despondent that no-one seems to want to solve them.\n\nAn air of boredom and hopelessness hangs over this place.\n\nFor the young men here, the state is the enemy.\n\nPolice cars drive up and down the roads, through column after column of social housing. Groups of young men shout \"rapists\" as they go by.\n\nFranco says banlieue youths \"have to fight\" for justice\n\nLocal activist Franco, from the anti-negrophobia league, says the anger is justified.\n\n\"The expression of their anger is the consequence of this first violence against Theo. This violence is a system, and this keeps us in a place where we cannot progress.\n\n\"When there is no justice, we have to fight to have it.\"\n\nTheo's ordeal is part of a bigger cycle of violence that keeps on spinning. Youth vs police; black vs white; haves vs have nots. And communities left behind.\n\nFabien is also from the anti-negrophobia group.\n\n\"What the police are trying to do right now is not protecting us,\" he says.\n\n\"They want us to just shut up. They don't want us to express in any shape or form. They are just here to shut us down.\n\n\"We have to come and ask for justice. We have to acknowledge that this injustice is particular to a certain type of people. Coloured, minority, black, Arab - whatever you want. We are the most exposed to the systemic racism of the French state.\"\n\nTheo himself appealed for calm from his hospital bed. His sister is also keen to stress her commitment to peace.\n\n\"We speak because we trust in justice,\" she says. But she knows what's in store if that justice isn't seen to be done.\n\n\"If not, there will be more anger, for sure,\" Eleanor says.", "The sister of the young man who was allegedly sexually assaulted by French police, has spoken to the BBC.\n\nEleanor has said that there will be further violence unless justice is seen to be done.", "Becoming a successful artist is hard enough without being homeless and disabled. But Chuma Somdaka, who has been living in a park in South Africa for three years, has not let her circumstances discourage her and is now preparing for her first exhibition.", "US President Trump invited one of his supporters on stage during his \"campaign rally for America\" event in Florida.\n\nWhile the Republican was giving a speech, he recognised the man in the crowd that he had seen \"on television just now\", and let him deliver a few words at the podium to the Trump supporters.", "Facebook's new bereavement leave policy was announced by Sheryl Sandberg\n\nFacebook last week doubled its bereavement leave allowance for its staff. Employees can now take up to 20 days off with pay to mourn the death of an immediate family member.\n\nThe new policy was announced by Facebook's chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, who has spoken publicly about mourning her husband, Dave Goldberg, who died in 2015.\n\n\"We need public policies that make it easier for people to care for their children and aging parents and for families to mourn and heal after loss,\" Ms Sandberg posted on Facebook.\n\nShe added that companies that stand by the people who work for them do the right thing and \"improve their bottom line by increasing the loyalty and performance of their workforce\".\n\nThe move has sparked huge debate on social media and has been lauded as extremely generous. Is it enough? We asked the views of four people dealing with grief in the workplace.\n\nChad Andrews and his family returned home from an Alaskan cruise three years ago when his eight-year-old son, Connor, was rushed to hospital a few days later.\n\nConnor had mild flu symptoms that suddenly worsened. He was placed in intensive care but deteriorated rapidly.\n\nIn June 2014, he died of myocarditis - an inflammation of the heart stemming from a virus.\n\nMr Andrews told the BBC that his life became a blur. He had lost an \"exceptional, brilliant and beautiful\" son and was left in shock.\n\nBut he forced himself to return to work a fortnight later even though he admits he wasn't very productive.\n\n\"When you're paralysed by grief and it's all your mind can absorb, the last thing you care about is work,\" he says. \"I had no capacity to be in control or function in the everyday world.\"\n\nMr Andrews works at IBM where he builds technology platforms for video content. Officially, the company gives staff three days of bereavement leave but he says there was never any pressure for him to return.\n\nAfter many stops and starts, it took him seven weeks to resume work full-time.\n\nWhile he believes there is no magic formula, he says Facebook's 20 days bereavement leave \"seems like a good best effort to set an effective benchmark\".\n\nBut he adds that it depends on when the individual can function again.\n\nChad Andrews and his family on holiday in Alaska. His son Connor (right) died a week later\n\nChan Lay Lin has been a social worker and family therapist for more than 20 years.\n\nShe is a principal medical social worker at Singapore's Institute of Mental Health and says most organisations in Singapore will allow about three days of compassionate leave when a staff member suffers a bereavement.\n\nIn her experience, this is adequate when the circumstances are not overly traumatic. But she says in exceptional cases experienced by around one in seven people, a longer grieving period may be needed, with the approval of a doctor or therapist.\n\nThe factors considered, she says, include the relationship with the deceased, the level of attachment and dependency and the nature of the death. Sudden and unexpected deaths are all the more traumatic.\n\nMs Chan says in severe cases some people may never feel like they get back to normal and can fall into depression, making them unable to go back to work for a long time.\n\nFor those people the grief may never end, even if it gets easier to bear. But she stresses these are very rare and extreme cases.\n\nPeter Wilson believes 20 days bereavement leave would be \"excessive\" if it became law\n\nPeter Wilson has been a boss working in human resources for 33 years, and is the chairman of the Australian Human Resources Institute.\n\nAccording to him, the standard for bereavement leave in democratic, Western cultures is between two and five days.\n\nWhen his own parents died he used compassionate leave to take one day off for the funeral and another to grieve with his family. He took an extra week of annual leave in each instance, which he describes as a \"fair balance\".\n\nMr Wilson believes Facebook's bereavement leave policy is unusual and doubts it will be adopted widely. Twenty days amounts to nearly 10% of the working year, which he says would be \"excessive\" if it became law.\n\nHis concern is that it would put pressure on employers to increase other categories of leave too. \"This could have a knock-on effect which could make companies uncompetitive,\" he says.\n\nHe favours a \"sensible, minimum standard which the government prescribes and the discretion to give more leave on a case-by-case basis\".\n\nTen years ago, he granted three months' paid leave to an indigenous employee on cultural grounds.\n\nMr Wilson says most employers will extend leave provisions where there's a good case for it.\n\nA company's compassionate leave policy can give an insight into its ethics, says headhunter Dan Clements\n\nDan Clements is the managing director of the technology executive recruitment firm, Identify, and says most people probably do not factor in bereavement leave when they are deciding whether to join a company.\n\nHowever, he believes a firm's compassionate leave policy could give potential employees insight into its culture and ethics. Firms that take a mature and humane approach stand to attract great talent because employees want to be treated fairly and with kindness, he says.\n\nMr Clements surveyed the compassionate leave policies of 10 multinational companies. They all offered between three and 10 days, with five days being the most common.\n\nOne firm went further, giving its managers discretion to grant staff more days off for a bereavement.\n\nBut he says companies can do more by offering flexible working arrangements such as remote or part-time working, as well as job sharing to help staff in need of more time to grieve.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nA hat-trick from Denny Solomona pushed Sale to victory in a high-scoring affair against leaders Wasps.\n\nSale had raced to a 31-9 lead just after half-time at AJ Bell Stadium before Wasps found their groove.\n\nTries from Josh Bassett and Ashley Johnson put them back in touching distance at 31-21 before Sale's Will Addison delivered a vital three points.\n\nKurtley Beale scored Wasps' third try 11 minutes from time and that made for a tense finish but Sale held firm.\n\nWasps had been unbeaten in their past six Premiership matches but looked off the pace from early on. Conversely, Sale showed quickly they wanted to make a statement and did so through rugby league covert Solomona.\n\nHis move from Castleford Tigers has attracted controversy off-the-field, but on it, his hat-trick took his try tally to seven in his first five matches - a new Premiership record.\n\nAnother new face, South Africa international Willie Le Roux made his Premiership debut for Wasps and the full-back set up Beale's try after coming off the bench.\n\nBut as Wasps threatened in the closing stages, Sale replacement scrum-half Peter Stringer gained a vital turnover and marshalled his pack to help run down the clock.\n\nSale remain in 10th place, but open up a 10-point gap above Worcester, who lost to Exeter this weekend.\n\nAt the other end, Wasps remain top by six points, but missed the chance to go as much as 10 points clear of Saracens and Exeter in joint-second.\n\n\"First half was particularly good. It was a training ground move for the first try.\n\n\"Denny's shown his true class a couple of times and he should have got another one really shouldn't he?\n\n\"Denny takes his opportunities and makes his opportunities and that is what we knew he'd bring to the party. If he keeps doing that, he'll go a long way.\n\n\"It's good to get us past the 25-point mark, which I always think you need to stay in league.\"\n\n\"I'm sure there will be accusations of complacency, but I don't think that was the case.\n\n\"It is very hard to argue that we weren't where we should be at mentally. We made uncharacteristic mistakes first half that we haven't done all season.\n\n\"I thought they were the better team, had more edge to them than we did and I thought they deserved their win.\n\n\"We haven't lost too many physical battles this season so you have to look at yourself really - they had an edge today that we didn't have.\"\n\nFor the latest rugby union news follow @bbcrugbyunion on Twitter.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nMore than 5,000 people travelled on the first timetabled steam train service on the Settle to Carlisle railway line in 50 years, Northern Rail has said.\n\nTornado, the newest steam locomotive in Britain, pulled 12 Northern services over three days from 14 -16 February.\n\nThe company described the event as \"a remarkable success\" and has not ruled out running similar services again.\n\nIt was part of celebrations to mark the upcoming reopening of the line after landslides closed a long stretch.\n\nPaul Barnfield, Northern Rail regional director, said: \"During the three days just over 5,500 people travelled on the steam services and it was great to see so many entering into the spirit of the celebration.\n\n\"This was the first timetabled steam service in England for almost 50 years and to be able to bring Tornado to such an iconic and visually stunning line, as a way of saying thank you, was a genuine pleasure.\"\n\nGraeme Bunker, of the Darlington-based A1 Steam Locomotive Trust, which built Tornado, said: \"To see the many thousands who travelled and many thousands more enjoying the event at the line side made the endeavour very worthwhile and delivered a welcome boost to the local community after recent challenges.\n\n\"I am very proud of my team for their part in ensuring the services ran so successfully.\"\n\nThe landslip was caused by heavy rain\n\nDouglas Hodgins, of the Friends of Settle to Carlisle Line, added: \"There must be lessons here about the demand for steam, scenery and rail travel in general. It was the perfect curtain-raiser for the reopening of the line on 31 March.\"\n\nIt took 18 years for the trust to build the £3m Tornado 60163, which can achieve speeds of 75mph (120km/h). It was completed in 2008.\n\nThe Appleby to Carlisle stretch of line closed in February 2016 after a 500,000-tonne landslip at Armathwaite.", "Watch the best of the goals from the FA Cup fifth round, including Rudy Gestede's acrobatic volley for Middlesbrough, a cheeky free-kick from Oxford's Chris Maguire and a lovely finish from Blackburn's Danny Graham.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Austrian Marcel Hirscher wins men's slalom gold as Britain's Dave Ryding misses out on a medal after finishing 11th at the Alpine World Championships in St Moritz, Switzerland.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "As peers begin debating the Brexit legislation, the Guardian says it has been told by European politicians that British attempts to \"blackmail and divide\" EU countries in the run-up to Brexit negotiations will lead to a disastrous \"crash landing\" out of the bloc.\n\nThey say the approach being pursued by Theresa May's government will leave the UK without a free trade deal and facing perilous consequences, reports the paper.\n\nThe Daily Express is concerned there is a plot by \"remainer\" Lords to delay Britain's exit from the EU.\n\nIt leads with a warning from Tory MP Philip Davies that any attempt by peers to block Brexit could lead to the demise of the House of Lords.\n\nElsewhere, there are divergent views on the value of advice from New Labour's elder statesmen after Lord Mandelson urged the House of Lords not to \"throw in the towel\" over Brexit.\n\nAccording to the Sun, Lord Mandelson may think it fine to treat voters as an annoying irrelevance, but for them, that is exactly what he has become.\n\nThe Daily Mail accuses him of acting like an 18th Century aristocrat planning a last stand against the peasantry.\n\nBut Matthew d'Ancona in the Guardian welcomes Tony Blair's earlier decision to take on Brexit. \"If not him, then who?\" he asks.\n\nAnd the Daily Telegraph reports Brexit could lead Oxford University to break with more than 700 years of tradition by establishing its first foreign campus.\n\nThe paper says French officials met senior staff at Oxford to discuss proposals that they hope will guarantee future EU funding for a satellite base in Paris. Other universities, including Warwick, are also said to have been approached.\n\nThe Times says ministers risked enraging small businesses over April's business rate revaluation.\n\nIt says it has seen a private letter to Conservative MPs in which ministers claim that a growing revolt over changes to business rates is being fuelled by lies.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph says Theresa May is facing a Cabinet split over the issue. An unnamed cabinet source tells the paper: \"The last thing you want to do is whack the confidence of small businesses.\"\n\nMeanwhile, the Daily Mirror reports Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has paid for what it describes as \"a massive secret opinion poll on his leadership\" as rumours grow that he might quit before 2020.\n\nIt says he has ordered a 10,000 person survey but will keep the results secret from all but his closest ally, the shadow chancellor John McDonnell.\n\nThe Mirror believes it is a legitimate exercise, but that keeping the findings confidential is less defensible, saying they should be shared, \"warts and all\".\n\nThe main news in the Daily Telegraph is a warning from Defence Secretary Sir Michael Fallon that millions of refugees will head to Europe from Afghanistan unless British troops maintain their roles in training local forces.\n\nHis words, says the Telegraph, are a stark reminder that, whether we like it or not, the consequences of previous Western interventions continue to this day.\n\nAccording to the lead in the Daily Mail, a report has revealed that the NHS in England has cut 15,000 beds over the past six years.\n\nThe paper says that amounts to the equivalent of closing 24 hospitals at the same time as demand for beds is soaring due to the pressures of the social care crisis, immigration and an ageing population.\n\nBut ministers are disputing the accuracy of the British Medical Association's findings and NHS England tells the paper that modern treatment advances mean patients need to spend less time in hospital.\n\nFinally, the Daily Mail, reports on research carried out by Hungarian scientists studying the effects of separating young people from their mobile phones.\n\nMore than 80 18 to 26-year-olds were wired up to heart monitors.\n\nThe paper says researchers found that if their phones were taken away for even a short time they exhibited heartbeat patterns usually associated with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.", "Mark Clemmit is shown around the away dressing room at Sutton United by manager Paul Doswell, which Premier League side Arsenal will be using during their FA Cup fifth-round match on Monday.\n\nWatch live coverage of Sutton v Arsenal, Monday 20 February, 19:30 GMT on BBC One and the BBC Sport website.", "Two cars have fallen down a sinkhole in Studio City, a Los Angeles neighbourhood in the US.\n\nThe drama of the second one, teetering on the edge and then tumbling down, was shown on live television.\n\nOne of the strongest storms in years - dubbed a \"bombogenesis\" or \"weather bomb\" - has hit California.", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nMo Farah took victory in the 5,000m at the Birmingham Grand Prix to win the final indoor race of his career.\n\nThe 33-year-old, who will retire from the track this year, set a European record of 13 minutes 9.16 seconds.\n\nLaura Muir won the 1,000m in a British record of 2:31:93, taking over a second off Dame Kelly Holmes' 2004 mark.\n\nJamaica's 100m and 200m Olympic gold medallist Elaine Thompson stormed to victory in the women's 60m in 6.98 seconds, the eighth-fastest time ever.\n\nFour-time Olympic champion Farah plans to focus on road racing after the World Championships in London in August.\n\nHe was pushed hard by Bahrain's Albert Rop, who held on as Farah kicked away from the majority of the field, but was defeated in a sprint finish.\n\n\"I had amazing support from the crowd today and I can't quite believe it's my last indoor race,\" said Farah.\n\n\"I've had a great career indoors and particularly on this track.\n\n\"I knew I needed to do some work after Edinburgh, I had to leave my family but hard work pays off.\"\n\nFarah had finished seventh last month at the Great Edinburgh Cross Country.\n\nScotland's Muir has already broken two records this year - the European 3,000m indoor record and the British 5,000m indoor record, the latter held for 25 years by Liz McColgan.\n\nThe 23-year-old demolished the field in Birmingham and her time was just one second shy of Maria Mutola's world indoor record of 2:30.94.\n\nMuir will head to Belgrade for the European Indoor Championships from 3-5 March as favourite in both the 1500m and 3,000m.\n\n\"I wanted to come away with a win on home soil but to break Kelly's record, I'm so chuffed, and I was not far away from the world record, so I am really pleased,\" said the Dundee Hawkhill Harrier.\n\n\"The crowd were huge, I couldn't hear myself breathing they were so loud.\n\n\"It is every athlete's dream to be injury free and running as well as I am. Hopefully I can carry this sort of form into the summer.\n\n\"I'm in the best shape I can be so I'm hoping to win some medals in Belgrade.\"\n\nWhen you're in amazing shape as Laura is right now, and setting record after record, what you really want to do is capitalise on that and come away with two gold medals in Belgrade to underline that form; particularly when next year she'll be going back to her veterinary studies and will have to pick and choose with the calendar a little more.\n\nShe's got Belgrade not too far away now [in two weeks], the timetable works really well to double up there, it fits in perfectly and can be a real confidence boost going into the summer.\n\nIn Saturday's other events, Andrew Pozzi ran a personal best and world leading time of 7.43secs in the 60m hurdles to beat fellow Briton David King and Aries Merritt of the United States.\n\nGreat Britain took first and second place in the women's long jump, as Loraine Ugen jumped a season's best 6.76m ahead of Jazmin Sawyer's 6.71m.\n\nIn the women's 800m, British Champion Shelayna Oskan-Clarke came third in a personal best time of 2:01:71 and secured automatic selection for the European Indoor Championships.\n\nUSA's Ronnie Baker won the men's 60m in 6.55 as 40-year-old Kim Collins took second place and Britain's Richard Kilty came third.\n\nIn the women's 400m, GB's Laviai Nielsen almost held off Czech Republic's Zuzana Hejnova, but the 20-year-old was beaten into second place in the final few metres.\n\nEilidh Doyle, who has already qualified for Belgrade, finished fourth, while Laviai's twin sister Lina Nielsen came fifth.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLincoln City will play Arsenal in the FA Cup quarter-finals as reward for their stunning fifth-round victory over Burnley.\n\nThe fifth-tier club became the first non-league team in 103 years to reach the last eight with the biggest shock of the competition so far on Saturday.\n\nMiddlesbrough face Manchester City or Huddersfield, who drew 0-0 on Saturday.\n\nArsenal reached the last eight with a 2-0 win at Sutton.\n\nThe replay between Manchester City and Huddersfield is provisionally set for Tuesday, 28 February at Etihad Stadium.\n\nThe quarter-final matches will take place on the weekend of Saturday, 11 March.\n\nThere are 88 places between National League leaders Lincoln and Arsenal.\n\nLincoln boss Cowley said his side had achieved a \"football miracle\" after beating Burnley 1-0 at Turf Moor with an 89th-minute winner.\n\nIt is the first time in the club's 133-year history that they have reached the quarter-finals.\n\nTheir next match is away to North Ferriby United on Tuesday, while they are also still in the FA Trophy and play Boreham Wood for a semi-final place on Saturday.\n\nQueens Park Rangers, who joined the Football League in 1920, were the last non-league team to make the FA Cup last eight, in 1914. They were beaten 2-1 by Liverpool in their quarter-final at Anfield.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The SpaceX rocket was launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida\n\nPrivate rocket firm SpaceX has successfully launched a rocket carrying a cargo ship for the International Space Station following the postponement of take-off on Saturday because of technical problems.\n\nWitnesses said the rocket was only briefly visible before making its way into the clouds.\n\nThe launch was made from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.\n\nThe rocket booster successfully landed nine minutes after taking off.\n\nThe touchdown is part of the company's strategy of returning rockets to earth so they can be reused rather than jettisoning them in the ocean after a single launch.\n\nMoments after the rocket landed, the SpaceX Dragon supply ship successfully reached orbit, prompting cheers inside the SpaceX Mission Control room.\n\nWitnesses said the rocket was only briefly visible before making its way into the clouds\n\nThe Dragon is now making its way to the International Space Station, and is expected to arrive on Wednesday.\n\nOn 14 January SpaceX resumed flights by launching a Falcon 9 vehicle from the Vandenberg Air Force Base on the California coast.\n\nIt was the first mission by the company since one of its vehicles exploded on the launch pad in September.\n\nElon Musk, the founder of SpaceX, wants his company to be at the forefront of the race involving several companies to deploy satellite-based internet services over the next few years.\n\nThe company also has a long queue of customers all waiting for a ride to orbit - including America's civil space agency (Nasa), the US military and multiple outfits in the commercial sector.\n\nBut September's launch pad mishap was a spectacular reminder of just how unpredictable rockets can be sometimes.", "Germany's Angela Merkel, seen here with US Vice-President Mike Pence, asked in a speech whether countries would return to \"parochial policies\"\n\nThe Munich Security Conference is at one and the same time an annual jamboree for senior officials and think-tankers and a place where former officials and corporate movers-and-shakers meet up.\n\nBut it also affords an opportunity for a whole series of behind the scenes bilateral meetings. And once every four years it is the place where Europe takes stock of a new US administration.\n\nThis year the meeting had added significance since the man in the White House, Donald Trump, is unlike any other president in living memory.\n\nHis supporters believe he is the man to overturn the \"establishment\" in Washington and to get things done.\n\nHis detractors believe he is unfit for high office, his erratic behaviour leading some even to question his mental state.\n\nRemember this was a man who on the campaign trail described Nato as \"obsolete\" and who said that he would end the free ride that he believed many allies - especially in Europe - were taking at the American taxpayers' expense.\n\nSo this encounter in Munich was an opportunity for Nato allies to weigh up the new Trump team and to try to gauge the new administration's likely direction. Mr Trump sent his Vice-President Mike Pence to Munich to deliver a series of clearly worded messages.\n\nAnd to avoid any doubt his new defence chief, General James Mattis, provided a warm-up act at Nato headquarters at the end of last week - and to ensure nobody mistakes the message Mr Pence himself will be heading to Brussels, the seat of Nato, once the Munich conference is over.\n\nMr Pence used his Munich speech to bring a message of reassurance from the new president. \"The US,\" he said, strongly supports Nato and will be \"unwavering in its commitment to the trans-Atlantic alliance\" .\n\nMike Pence's words were an attempt to calm nerves ruffled when President Trump called the alliance 'obsolete'\n\nBut with so few allies actually meeting the agreed target for defence spending, there was a warning too.\n\n\"Let me be clear on this point,\" he stressed, \"the president of the United States expects our allies to keep their word to fulfil this commitment and for most that means the time has come to do more\".\n\nThis statement was met with hesitant applause - an indication that many Europeans do not welcome being bullied by the Trump White House.\n\nEarlier, German Chancellor Angela Merkel had emphasised that military spending alone was not the only measure of the Europeans' commitment to security.\n\nShe calmly - but pointedly - took issue with many of the Trump team's putative policies, noting the importance of international multilateral institutions like the EU and the UN (both of which have been condemned by Mr Trump).\n\nIndeed at the end of her speech she seemed to take on the central tenet of the Trump campaign - enshrined in the slogan \"America First!\" Looking to the future she posed a fundamental question. \"Will we be able,\" she asked, \"to act in concert together or (will we) fall back into parochial policies?\"\n\nOne of Europe's greatest fears has been Mr Trump's apparent willingness to do a deal with Moscow - not to mention his evident admiration for Russia's leader Vladimir Putin. Mr Trump's emissaries pretty much convinced their European hosts that on key issues - at least for now - there would be no change.\n\nGeneral Mattis insisted that Russia had to abide by international law and US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, on a recent visit to Bonn, stressed that agreements like the Minsk accords to end the fighting in Ukraine had to be fully implemented by all sides - including Moscow.\n\nSergei Lavrov, represented Russia, who were almost bystanders at this Nato conference\n\nVice-President Pence emphasised the message saying here in Munich that the US would continue to hold Russia to account, even as it searched for areas of common ground.\n\nThe Russians have almost been bystanders here watching the internal Nato debate from the sidelines. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov returned to a familiar theme - that Nato was essentially an institution of the past. The expansion of the Atlantic Alliance, he said, had led to an unprecedented level of tensions. What was now needed was what he called a \"post-western world order\".\n\nSo there seems little chance here for President Trump's hope for fresh understanding with Moscow - or at the very least that it will not come at the expense of the European Nato allies, or perhaps even of Ukraine. If there is a deal to be done between Washington and Moscow it will lie elsewhere, perhaps over Syria.\n\nThis Munich conference will end on Sunday with many of the concerns of the Europeans only partially stilled. For they relate more to the character and outlook of the new US president himself.\n\nOne of his tweets can undermine policies that have received bipartisan support in Washington for decades. And its not just a style thing: many of Mr Trump's policies remain unclear, even as so many positions inside his team remain unfilled.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby League\n\nJoe Burgess scored a hat-trick of tries as Wigan beat Cronulla Sharks to win a record fourth World Club Challenge.\n\nVictory for the Warriors also completed a 2-0 World Club Series win for Super League over Australia's NRL.\n\nOliver Gildart also crossed as an English club became world champions for the first time since Leeds in 2012.\n\nWigan's success was aided by a superb defensive effort, with Cronulla's only score coming from Jesse Ramien midway through the second period.\n\nHowever, the Sharks had two marginal video referee decisions go against them when claiming tries of their own during the first half.\n\nNational Rugby League clubs had won all six matches since the inception of the expanded World Club Series in 2015, but Super League champions Wigan followed up Warrington's victory over Brisbane Broncos to secure a first series win for the northern hemisphere's domestic competition.\n\nWigan won three of the first five World Club Challenge contests but had not been victorious in the annual fixture since 1994.\n\nBurgess, in his first home match since returning to the club following a year playing in Australia, enjoyed the perfect homecoming for the Cherry and Whites.\n\nHe is only the second player to score a hat-trick in a World Club Challenge, following Michael Jennings' treble for Sydney Roosters against Wigan in 2014.\n\nEngland winger Burgess, a scorer for the Warriors in that loss three years earlier, acrobatically touched down for their opening score and he grabbed his second at the end of a thrilling passage of play.\n\nThe home side survived two punishing sets of six tackles near their own try line, before going the length of the field to establish a 10-0 lead.\n\nSharks second-rower Luke Lewis had already seen his effort ruled out for offside and there was more disappointment for the reigning NRL champions as Kurt Capewell was deemed to have scraped the whitewash with the ball as he grounded it in the corner.\n\nGildart's score, adding to his try in last season's Grand Final victory over Warrington, gave Wigan some valuable breathing space but any hopes of becoming the third World Club Challenge winners to prevent their opponents from scoring were ended when Ramien touched down a grubber kick in the corner.\n\nAs well as Wigan's defence performed, Cronulla - who do not begin their league season until the start of March - were guilty of several handling errors and the Warriors were able to see out time with little alarm.\n\nAnd Burgess was able to produce a dream finale, getting a fingertip onto a low kick in the last minute to complete his hat-trick.\n\nWigan Warriors head coach Shaun Wane told BBC Radio 5 live sports extra: \"It's a fantastic feeling and I'm so pleased. The staff work hard but the players do their business out on the park.\n\n\"We did too much defending. I'm trying to stay positive and not think about how we played. I'm just glad to get the win.\n\n\"One thing we're good at in this country is looking for negatives. Let's be positive. Tony Smith did a great job with Warrington on Saturday and we won fair and square. Let's give Super League a pat on the back.\"\n\nCronulla head coach Shane Flanagan: \"Wigan played really well and I thought it was a good game of footy. I wasn't happy with the refereeing, but Wigan took their opportunities and good luck to them.\n\n\"It's a great experience to come over here and play. The hospitality we've been shown has been fantastic and the game's in good shape when we can get games like this on in a packed stadium.\n\n\"We've had a great time. A lot of our players have never been to the UK and they'll be better players for it.\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nViolinist Gaelynn Lea chose her musical craft over surgery which might have changed her life, but it is a decision she does not regret.\n\nShe now tours America and Europe with her haunting electro-folk music, but at just 3ft tall she plays her violin like a cello, enhanced by haunting electronic loops.\n\n\"When I was in fourth grade I saw an orchestra which came to school and I remember being blown away by the sound,\" she says. \"I actually wanted to play the cello because it's beautiful, but it's obviously really big.\"\n\nLea from Duluth, Minnesota, who has Osteogenesis Imperfecta - or Brittle Bone Disease - settled for the much smaller, musical sister of the cello - the violin - after she scored 100% in a music aptitude test at school.\n\nIt was a decision which would see her travel the world.\n\n\"Because I did so well in the test, my teacher was really determined, and we experimented a lot until we worked out I could play the violin like a cello.\n\n\"She could have said 'this isn't going to work' or 'you should have done choir' but she was really encouraging. We made a good team and I'm very grateful that she was so open minded.\"\n\nThe duo developed a technique which involved Lea holding the bow \"like a baseball bat\" with the body of the instrument placed in front of her, like a cello, and attached to her foot so it wouldn't slip when she played. There were a few other workarounds which also had to be developed.\n\n\"I can't use my fourth finger because of the angle of my right hand, so I had to re-write a lot of classical music. It makes it a little harder to do some stuff, but I practice a lot,\" she says.\n\nLea turned to Celtic and American folk music when she was 18, after finding her busy schedule precluded her from joining the college orchestra.\n\nGaelynn Lea in the studio before recording her Christmas album\n\nThe haunting sound which is her trademark was developed when she started experimenting with a loop pedal which enabled her to build and repeat several layers of sound.\n\n\"Looping fiddle music is one of my favourite concepts to play and it meant I could start doing solo shows,\" she says.\n\n\"I have a set loop that I start with but its never the same twice because I improvise a lot.\"\n\nThe inspiration for her songs and music comes from the people she knows or cares about and is often about the human condition. Lea says people \"never have the same life experiences or outlook\".\n\n\"Usually the songs come into my mind with a melody and I'll play my violin to figure it out, but it's all in my head,\" she says. \"Nothing is written down, except the odd chord.\"\n\nLea released her debut solo album All the Roads that Lead Us Home in 2015, and last year won NPR Music's Tiny Desk Contest - a name which does not reflect the height of the musicians - with her song Someday We'll Linger in the Sun which defeated more than 6,000 other submissions.\n\n\"I didn't expect to win but it's meant playing in a few places including New York which was a dream of mine, but I really want to play Paris.\n\n\"The thing that I love about performance is the energy in the room, when you're connected to the audience and that can happen anywhere - the pizza shop, a cafe, busking - I've had some moments where I've connected with the audience and it's like a spiritual experience.\"\n\nDespite the apparent ease with which she plays Lea has to contend with the continual challenges of Brittle Bone Disease - a genetic defect in the collagen in the bones.\n\nShe has \"only\" broken 16 bones since she was born and is proud to say she hasn't had a fracture in the last five years.\n\nOne of her arms is twisted which can make things more difficult, but she decided against a potentially life-changing operation for fear it could hamper her music career.\n\nKnown in America as \"rodding\", the operation would have seen her arm and leg bones threaded onto a metal rod which would act as a splint and keep the bone aligned if it fractured. It could also have improved her mobility.\n\n\"I actually chose not to walk and I'm happy,\" she says. \"I could have had operations to put rods in my arms and my legs but there was no guarantee how well they'd work. I'd already started playing the violin so I didn't want to have my arms operated on and have my nerves damaged.\n\n\"I use an electric wheelchair so I didn't feel I needed to walk to make my life more fulfilling. And I don't think I'd even be who I am without brittle bones so I don't regret the decision.\"\n\nWhen Lea is not on the road she works as a violin teacher and has 15 students on her books.\n\n\"I teach them the regular way - with the violin up on their shoulder,\" she says. \"I watched some videos so I knew how it should be held and I understood the physics but it was trial and error to begin with.\"\n\nHer students cover a vast age spectrum, and her main hope for them is that they always remain involved in music. \"Music is such an important part of peoples' lives,\" she says.\n\nThroughout her own musical development Lea says she has come across some people who see her disability as an obstacle, but many others have been supportive.\n\n\"If you think about it - I just play the violin at a different angle. It's still the same music but some people cant' get over the fact it's not regular.\n\n\"I'm sure there'll be other challenges, but it's not impossible. And I don't want to be limited by my disability.\"\n\nMeet the NHS mental health director who was hospitalised for depression and hear about her open letter which went viral.\n\nFor more, follow on Twitter and Facebook, and subscribe to the weekly podcast.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Museums are searching for unusual ways to raise money\n\nFancy learning how to practise taxidermy on roadkill? Or visiting the lawnmowers of the rich and famous? As our arts centres and museums suffer funding cuts, several are seeking innovative ways to increase income and footfall. But can quirky fundraisers keep our tourist attractions afloat?\n\nYears ago, a day out at a museum may have meant trawling round glass cases full of dusty but worthy exhibits, before stopping in the teashop for a stale scone and a lukewarm drink.\n\nBut pitch up at some of England's museums nowadays and you could find yourself wandering into a film set or a cocktail bar.\n\nThe former head of Arts Council England, Sir Peter Bazalgette, suggests arts venues need to be imaginative about raising funds\n\nFunding cuts have meant England's 1,300 accredited museums have had to find imaginative ways to raise money.\n\nIndeed, the former head of Arts Council England, Sir Peter Bazalgette, suggested museums go even further if they want to survive.\n\nHe said theatres should open charity shops, art galleries should run bed and breakfasts and museums should become film sets to make more money.\n\nSir Peter pointed to examples such as the Roses Theatre in Tewkesbury, which runs a charity shop and Islington Mill, an arts centre in Salford, which runs a B&B.\n\nSome museums say they might have limited appeal as a B&B\n\nAlistair Brown, policy officer for the Museums Association, the sector's membership organisation, said: \"Lots of museums are looking at new ways to generate income and are being quite creative about it.\n\n\"But it's probably a mistake to think that is the best way of saving them. The levels of income they are losing through cuts are greater than the amount they are able, in the short term, to raise through entrepreneurial activities.\"\n\nSo what are the quirkiest ways museums have found of raising funds? And is opening a guesthouse or running as a film set feasible for all of them?\n\nThe Grant Museum is not, at first glance, an obvious stand-up comedy venue\n\nAn Edwardian library jam-packed with animal skeletons and jars of pickled frogs might not seem, on the face of it, a barrel of laughs.\n\nBut the Grant Museum of Zoology, in London, decided its quirky setting was the perfect location to stage stand-up comedy gigs.\n\n\"It's a cabaret-style comedy night. We hold three of them a year and they are hugely popular,\" said Jack Ashby, the museum manager.\n\n\"The events are compèred by a professional comedian who introduces different members of staff to the audience. We have people working here who get particularly nerdy about animals nobody has ever heard of - and audiences find that pretty entertaining.\"\n\nThe museum holds other events, such as improvised opera nights and animal adoption schemes, to raise funds and make its displays of everything from elephant skulls to jars of tapeworms slightly more accessible.\n\nBut Mr Ashby has a word of caution as museums try to diversify.\n\n\"Museums have to think very carefully about what they can do to make money,\" he said.\n\n\"Some museums take a significant amount from weddings or corporate hire but you really have to invest in the staff to support those events. And realistically, you can only offer your venue as a film set if there is a film industry in your town or city.\"\n\nOutdoor museums make ideal film sets, as the Black Country Living Museum has found\n\nSeveral museums have sought extra funds by offering up their locations as film sets.\n\n\"We've always had filming at the museum,\" said Laura Wakelin, deputy chief executive of the Black Country Living Museum in Dudley. \"But previously it was much more sporadic.\n\n\"When I arrived in 2013, we decided we needed to start actively promoting the museum as a unique venue for filming.\"\n\nSince then, the museum has famously been the backdrop for BBC drama Peaky Blinders and the ITV period adaptation Arthur and George, as well as reality shows and a Bollywood movie.\n\nIn 2015 alone, filming raised about £50,000 for the museum, which has also capitalised on its raised profile in other ways.\n\nThe museum is capitalising on its appeal by holding themed weekends for visitors\n\n\"As Peaky Blinders took off, we started to see flat caps in our gift shop and we run Peaky Blinders nights,\" said Miss Wakelin. \"They usually sell out and bring in a slightly younger demographic.\n\n\"It's about finding what works for your venue. Yes, we have wonderful assets here but we are in the middle of quite an economically disadvantaged area so we do have to pitch these things right.\"\n\nThe Pathology Museum, in London, is hosting taxidermy workshops\n\nThe idea of setting up as a bed and breakfast or a film set might be tempting if your attraction is charmingly photogenic.\n\nBut such ventures would not work for every location, explains Carla Valentine, technical curator of the Pathology Museum, in London.\n\n\"This isn't the kind of museum that has space to be a B&B and we couldn't do that anyway as it contains human remains,\" she said.\n\nHowever, the museum, which showcases medical specimens owned by Queen Mary University London, does put on macabre fundraising events.\n\nThe classes have a wide appeal, according to the museum\n\nAmong the most successful have been its Stuff and Nonsense beginners' taxidermy classes.\n\nAmanda Sutton, who runs them, said: \"They are very popular and tend to sell out. I think it's the experience of doing something so unusual that appeals to people.\n\n\"We are running a special class for Valentine's Day. People come as couples and work together on their animals, which is quite sweet in a weird kind of way.\n\n\"When we set these classes up, some other London museums didn't seem to think it was very appropriate but they have now started running their own weird events. I don't think museums can just run stuffy events for academics - they need to appeal to the general public.\"\n\nThe Museum of Curiosities venue includes a cocktail bar that it hires out\n\nOf course, online communities bring added scope for museums to reach out to like-minded enthusiasts and nowhere is this better demonstrated than in a Hackney basement, which plays home to London's Museum of Curiosities.\n\nThe museum, which revels in the incoherence of its collections - ranging from dodo bones to fast food collectables - was initially funded by 500 people on Kickstarter and it has also used crowdfunding to add to its displays, most notably with a mummy.\n\nIts premises include a small cocktail bar, which it hires out to raise funds. Mr Wynd also meets running costs via sponsorship.\n\nViktor Wynd says it is important museums are self-reliant\n\nFounder Viktor Wynd is passionate about such enterprises being relatively self-reliant.\n\n\"The government's involvement in the arts is often disastrous,\" he said. \"It creates vast bureaucracies and the money would be better spent on the police or NHS.\n\n\"Museum culture in the UK has centred around the misguided idea that funding should only come from the government, meaning that most cultural bodies put huge amounts of resource into getting grants - resources that if applied successfully to raising money from the private sector would probably do just as well.\n\n\"I believe the government ought to support a handful of major national collections - but even those should be encouraged to generate as much of their revenue as possible.\"\n\nCelebrity donations, such as comedian Lee Mack's dibber, helped the museum broaden its appeal\n\nDiversifying some museums would be a push too far, according to Brian Radam, the curator of the British Lawnmower Museum in Southport.\n\n\"I can't see the British Lawnmower Museum becoming the latest blockbuster set - especially as most of our exhibits were destined for the scrapyard,\" he said.\n\n\"As for the idea of a B&B - well, they would be extremely uncomfortable to sleep on.\"\n\nFinding funding to keep the museum going is exhausting work, Mr Radam says.\n\n\"Over the last 25 years we have become experts on saving money, running the museum on a shoestring,\" he said.\n\nBrian Radam says keeping the museum going is exhausting work\n\nThe venue does not receive public funding so relies on its visitors and innovative ideas to secure its future.\n\nAs well as ticket sales, the museum also makes money through restoring beloved family grass-cutting heirlooms.\n\n\"One of our ideas was to create an exhibition of lawnmowers of the rich and famous,\" said Mr Radam.\n\n\"We had Prince Charles and Princess Diana's mower, Brian May's and Albert Pierrepont's on display,\" he said.\n\n\"Lawnmowers are not the sexiest of subjects but the exhibition created a lot of interest and revenue.\"\n\nBut as museums and public arts venues face significant financial pressures, is it realistic to say that all can find ways to raise funds independently?\n\nThe Museums Association believes there are more than 2,500 museums across the UK but says more than 60 have closed in the past 10 years.\n\n\"The bulk of closures are happening in areas that are less well-off, where there has been a severe decline in public spending,\" said Mr Brown.\n\n\"We have also seen several museums opening over that time - these tend to be small, independent museums that are volunteer-run.\n\nDozens of museums have closed over the past decade\n\n\"A lot of our museums date from the 19th Century at a time of great national and civic pride.\n\n\"I don't think the number of museums is unsustainable but clearly there is a trend for some types of museums - particularly those run by local authorities - to close at the moment.\n\n\"It feels as if museums are being asked to make an extremely quick transformation into business organisations, but that can't take place overnight.\n\n\"There's also a philosophical question about what the role of museums is and the extent to which they should be focusing their energies on generating income or on their public role of inspiring and educating people.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The apparent killing of Kim Jong-nam raises tricky questions for China\n\nBeijing needs to do more to rein in North Korea: that's the view of US President Donald Trump and his new team. But how much leverage does China really have there and what are the chances of it being used, asks the BBC's Stephen McDonell in Beijing.\n\nChina and North Korea seem to be heading into yet another tense period in their recently rocky relationship.\n\nOnce brothers-in-arms fighting against \"imperialist aggression\" during the Korean War, now Beijing accuses Pyongyang publicly of breaching United Nations sanctions in the pursuit of its missile and nuclear weapons programmes.\n\nAnd the apparent assassination of Kim Jong-nam - the half brother of North Korea's brutal leader - is being seen as a fresh point of tension between these official allies.\n\nIn fact, some view it as direct slap in the face for China.\n\nIt appears Mr Kim was murdered in Kuala Lumpur airport, on his way back to Macau, by female killers using of some type of poison.\n\nKim Jong-nam died at Kuala Lumpur airport as he prepared to board a flight\n\nKim Jong-nam spent much of the past decade in a type of self-imposed exile inside the former Portuguese colony. There he was seen to have the protection of China.\n\nThe eldest son of North Korea's late leader Kim Jong-il, he said time and again that he had no interest in becoming involved in his country's politics.\n\nWhat's more, whenever he was cornered by reporters in the Asian casino city, with his shirt unbuttoned to number three and sporting a three-day growth, you could really believe him when he said it. After all, why would he want to?\n\nThere has been speculation that he operated some sort of North Korean sanction-busting slush fund out of Macau and that this was the reason that Beijing and Pyongyang tolerated his hedonistic life style.\n\nBut for China there was something else too. He was an ally inside the North Korean elite: somebody who thought the best way forward for his homeland was a Chinese-style opening up.\n\nFor years, China has been trying to promote this style of thinking with its isolated, impoverished neighbour.\n\nBefore he died, Kim Jong-il was shown around the prosperous Chinese city of Dalian. The message: \"You too could have some of this at home with a bit of opening up!\"\n\nBut the Kim dynasty has appeared petrified by the prospect of such openness, and that Kim Jong-nam would side with the Chinese.\n\nSo despite his apparent lack of interest in political power, the fact that he could be seen hanging around down in Macau as a possible leader to be called on by Beijing in the event of regime collapse in Pyongyang made him a threat to the paranoid figure in power there today.\n\nIf this was a political assassination, then most North Korea observers think the order came right from the top.\n\nThis will not go down well with the government of Xi Jinping in Beijing. In recent days the two countries' relationship has become even more murky.\n\nSouth Korea's Yonhap news agency has reported that China turned back a $1m (£800,000) coal shipment from North Korea.\n\nChina has long been criticised for turning a blind eye to North Korean coal exports, in violation of UN sanctions, but maybe not this time.\n\nIn the wake of last weekend's North Korean ballistic missile test, 16,295 tonnes of its coal were denied entry to Wenzhou Port in Zhejiang Province.\n\nYou see the sequence of events: Sunday 12 February missile test, next morning an ally of China is murdered, later that afternoon Beijing criticises the test, two days later the coal shipment is turned back. What's next?\n\nWhen asked about the death of Kim Jong-nam, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Geng Shuang said his government had \"seen the media reports\" and that that they were \"following the developments\". I'll bet they are.\n\nCoal had been one of North Korea's main exports with most going to China\n\nAt a social function run by the Chinese military recently, I was speaking to a Chinese officer about the US demand that they do more to bring pressure on North Korea.\n\nHe shrugged his shoulders. He said they didn't know what the North Koreans would do next and that they had no idea what China could do to change their minds.\n\nYet by far and away the vast majority of trade in and out of the DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of Korea), as the country prefers to be called, is with China. If you take Chinese trade out of the equation there's not much left.\n\nSo why would Beijing put up with all this? Why put up with the waves of instability flowing out of Korean peninsula?\n\nIt's often said that a meltdown in North Korea could lead to millions of refugees pouring into China but, even if this did happen, it would likely only be a temporary problem.\n\nNo. The real fear is that a complete collapse of the North Korean regime could lead to Korean unification, with American soldiers based in a country with a land border with China.\n\nBeijing will not let that happen and Pyongyang's current ruler, Kim Jong-un, knows it.\n\nSo no matter how many times North Korea drives its powerful protector to distraction, in the end, Beijing believes it doesn't have much choice but to put up with its weirdness, with its basket-case economy, with its erratic behaviour and probably also with its pursuit of nuclear weapons.", "British skier Dave Ryding puts himself in contention for a medal with a strong opening run in the men's slalom at the Alpine World Championships in St Moritz, Switzerland.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.\n\nWatch the second run of the men's slalom from 11:45 GMT on the BBC Red Button and the BBC Sport website.", "Five objects, each worth at least £2,500, have been hidden around Scunthorpe, and the deal is finders keepers.", "BBC Sport takes a look at how non-league side Lincoln City became FA Cup legends after beating Premier League side Burnley 1-0 in the fifth round, becoming the first non-league side in 103 years to reach the quarter-finals.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "US Vice-President Mike Pence has defended Donald Trump's right to ban people from travelling to the US from seven mainly-Muslim countries.\n\nOn Friday the ban was suspended by federal Judge James Robart, who the president has since described as a \"so-called judge\".\n\nAn attempt by the White House to reinstate the ban on Sunday was rejected by the US federal appeals court.", "The BBC has obtained a more localised breakdown of votes from nearly half of the local authorities which counted EU referendum ballots last June.\n\nThis information provides much greater depth and detail in explaining the pattern of how the UK voted. The key findings are:\n\nA statistical analysis of the data obtained for over a thousand individual local government wards confirms how the strength of the local Leave vote was strongly associated with lower educational qualifications.\n\nWards where the population had fewer qualifications tended to have a higher Leave vote, as shown in the chart. If the proportion of the local electorate with a degree or similar qualification was one percentage point lower, then on average the leave vote was higher by nearly one percentage point.\n\nUsing ward-level data means we can compare voting figures in this way to the local demographic information collected in the 2011 census. Of the main census statistics, this is the one with the greatest association with how people voted.\n\nIn statistical terms the level of educational qualifications explains about two-thirds of the variation in the results between different wards.\n\nThe correlation is strong, whether based on assessing graduate and equivalent qualifications or lower-level ones.\n\nThis ward-by-ward analysis covers 1,070 individual wards in England and Wales whose boundaries had not changed since the 2011 census, about one in nine of the UK's wards. We had very little ward-level data from Scotland, and none from Northern Ireland.\n\nIt should be noted, however, that many ward counts also included some postal votes from across the counting area, and therefore some variation between wards will have been masked by the random allocation of postal votes for counting. This makes the results less accurate geographically, but we can still use the information to explore broad national and local patterns.\n\nAdding age as a second factor significantly helps to further explain voting patterns. Older populations were more likely to vote Leave. Education and age combined account for nearly 80% of the voting variation between wards.\n\nEthnicity is a smaller factor, but one which also contributed to the results. Adding that in means that now 83% of the variation in the vote between wards is explained. White populations were generally more pro-Leave, and ethnic minorities less so. However, there were some interesting differences between London and elsewhere.\n\nThe ethnic dimension is particularly interesting when examining the outliers on the graph that compares the Leave vote to levels of education.\n\nSome wards in Birmingham illustrate the pattern of ethnic minority populations being more likely to support Remain.\n\nThere are numerous wards towards the bottom left of the graph where electorates with lower educational qualifications nevertheless produced low Leave and high Remain votes. This is where the link between low qualifications and Leave voting breaks down.\n\nIt turns out that these exceptional wards have high ethnic minority populations, particularly in Birmingham and Haringey in north London.\n\nIn contrast, there are virtually no dramatic outliers on the other side of the line, where comparatively highly educated populations voted Leave. Only one point on the graph stands out - this is Osterley and Spring Grove in Hounslow, west London, a mainly ethnic minority ward which had a Leave vote of 63%. While this figure does include some postal votes, they are not nearly enough to explain away this unusual outcome.\n\nIn fact, in Ealing and Hounslow, west London boroughs with many voters of Asian origin, the ethnic correlation was in the other direction to the national picture: a higher number of Asian voters was associated with a higher Leave vote.\n\nThis powerful link to educational attainment could stem from the lower qualified tending to feel less confident about their prospects and ability to compete for work in a competitive globalised economy with high levels of migration.\n\nOn the other hand some commentators see it as primarily reflecting a \"culture war\" or \"values conflict\", rather than issues of economics and inequality. Research shows that non-graduates tend to take less liberal positions than graduates on a range of social issues from immigration and multi-culturalism to the death penalty.\n\nThe former campaign director of Vote Leave, Dominic Cummings, argues that the better educated are more prone to holding irrational political opinions because they are more driven by fashion and a group mentality.\n\nOf course this assessment does not imply that Leave voters were almost all poorly educated and old, and Remain voters well educated and young. The Leave side obviously attracted support from many middle class professionals, graduates and younger people. Otherwise it couldn't have won.\n\nWhile there was undoubtedly a lot of voting which cut across these criteria, the point of this analysis is to explore how different social groups most probably voted - and it is clear that education, age and ethnicity were crucial influences.\n\nAfter these three key factors are taken into account, adding in further demographic measures from the census does little to increase the explanation of UK-wide voting patterns.\n\nHowever, this does not reflect the distinctively more pro-Remain voting in Scotland, since we are short of Scottish data at this geographical level. It is clear as well that in a few specific locations high student numbers were also very relevant.\n\nTo a certain extent, using the level of educational qualifications as a measure combines both class and age factors, with working class and older adults both tending to be less well qualified.\n\nBut the association between education and the voting results is stronger than the association between social or occupational class and the results. This is still true after taking the age of the local population into account.\n\nThis suggests that voters with lower qualifications were more likely to back Leave than the better qualified, even when they were in the same social or occupational class.\n\nThe existence of a significant connection between Leave voting and lower educational qualifications had already been suggested by analysis of the published referendum results from the official counting areas.\n\nThe data we have obtained strengthens this conclusion, because voting patterns can now be compared to social statistics from the 2011 census at a much more detailed geographical level than by the earlier studies.\n\nThe BBC analysis is also consistent with opinion polling (for example, from Lord Ashcroft, Ipsos Mori and YouGov) that tried to identify the characteristics of Leave and Remain voters.\n\nThe data we have collected can be used to illustrate the sort of places where the Leave and Remain camps did particularly well: it is hard to imagine a more glaring social contrast than that between the deprived, poorly educated housing estates of Brambles and Thorntree in Middlesbrough, and the privileged elite colleges of Market ward in central Cambridge.\n\nIt is important to bear in mind, however, that most of the voting figures mentioned below also include some postal votes, so they should be treated as approximate rather than precise. It is also important to note that the examples are limited to the places for which we were able to obtain localised information, which was only a minority of areas. The rest of the country may well contain even starker instances.\n\nOf the 1,283 individual wards for which we have data, the highest Leave vote was 82.5% in Brambles and Thorntree, a section of east Middlesbrough with many social problems. Ward boundaries have changed since the 2011 census, but in that survey the Thorntree part of the area had the lowest proportion of people with a degree or similar qualification of anywhere in England and Wales, at only 5%. And according to Middlesbrough council, the figure for the current Brambles and Thorntree ward is even lower, at just 4%.\n\nSecond highest was 80.3% in Waterlees Village, a poor locality within Wisbech, Cambridgeshire. This area has seen a major influx of East European migrants who have been doing low-paid work in nearby food processing factories and farms, with tensions between them and British residents.\n\nOther wards with available data which had the strongest Leave votes were congregated in Middlesbrough, Canvey Island in Essex, Skegness in coastal Lincolnshire, and Havering in east London.\n\nThe highest Remain vote was 87.8% in Market ward in central Cambridge, an area with numerous colleges and a high student population, in a city which was strongly pro-Remain.\n\nThis was followed by Ashley ward (85.6%) in central Bristol, a district featuring ethnic diversity, gentrification and alternative culture.\n\nNext highest was Northumberland Park (85.0%) in Haringey, north London, which has a substantial black population.\n\nOther wards with available data which had the strongest Remain votes were generally located in Cambridge, Bristol and the multi-ethnic London boroughs of Haringey and Lambeth.\n\nThe count for Ashburton in Croydon, south London, split 50-50 exactly, with both Leave and Remain getting 3,885 votes, but that did include some postal ballots.\n\nAs for being nearest to the overall result, the combined count of Tulketh and University, neighbouring wards near the centre of Preston, was 51.92% for leave, very close to the UK wide figure of 51.89%. The individual ward of Barnwood in Gloucester had Leave at 51.94%. Both figures however contain some postal votes.\n\nGiven that a few councils provided even more detailed data down to the level of polling districts, it is possible to identify some very small localities that were nicely representative of the national picture.\n\nThe 527 voters in the neighbouring districts of Kirk Langley and Mackworth in Amber Valley in Derbyshire, whose two ballot boxes were counted together, produced a leave proportion of 51.99%. And this figure is not contaminated by any postal votes.\n\nSo journalists (or anyone else for that matter) who seek a microcosm of the UK should perhaps visit the Mundy Arms pub in Mackworth, the location for that district's polling station.\n\nSimilarly, the 427 voters in the combined neighbouring polling districts of Chiddingstone Hoath and Hever Four Elms to the south of Sevenoaks in Kent delivered a leave vote of 51.6% (again, without any postal votes).\n\nThe data obtained points to 269 areas of various sizes (wards, clusters of wards or constituencies) which had a different Leave/Remain outcome compared to the official counting area of which they were part.\n\nThis consists of 150 areas which backed Remain but were part of Leave-voting counting areas; and 119 in the other direction.\n\nThe detailed information therefore gives us an understanding of how the electorate voted which is more variegated than the officially published results.\n\nScotland voted to Remain - but some wards backed Leave, analysis shows\n\nEvery one of Scotland's 32 counting areas came down on the Remain side. Yet, despite the fact that most Scottish councils did not give us much detailed information, we can nevertheless identify a few smaller parts of the country which actually backed Leave.\n\nA cluster of six wards in the Banff and Buchan area in north Aberdeenshire had a strong Leave majority of 61%. There is much local discontent within the fishing industry of this coastal district about the EU's common fisheries policy.\n\nAn Taobh Siar agus Nis, a ward at the northern end of the Isle of Lewis in Na h-Eileanan an Iar (Western Isles), also voted Leave, if very narrowly.\n\nAnd at a smaller geographical level, in Shetland the 567 voters in the combined polling districts of Whalsay and South Unst had an extremely high Leave vote of 81%. The island of Whalsay is a fishing community, where EU rules have been controversial and in 2012 numerous skippers were heavily fined for major breaches of fishing quotas.\n\nEaling and Hounslow are neighbouring multi-ethnic boroughs in the west of London with large Asian populations, where - in contrast to the national picture - non-white ethnicity was associated with voting Leave, particularly in Ealing. Both boroughs shared a varied internal pattern of prosperous largely white areas voting strongly Remain, poorer largely white areas preferring Leave, and the Asian areas tending to be more evenly split.\n\nEaling voted 60% Remain, with Southfield ward hitting 76%, but in contrast the Southall wards which are over 90% ethnic minority were close to 50-50.\n\nIn Hounslow the richer wards in Chiswick in the east of the area voted heavily Remain (73%), but the poorer largely white wards at the opposite western end in Feltham and Bedfont voted Leave (64-66%). Osterley and Spring Grove was also 63% Leave, the highest Leave vote in any individual ward in the UK with a non-white majority for which we have data.\n\nThe south London borough of Bromley narrowly voted Remain. Those parts which did not do so by a significant margin were the Cray Valley wards, largely poor white working class areas; and Biggin Hill and Darwin wards, locations to the south which contain more open countryside and lie outside the built-up commuter belt.\n\nIn Croydon in south London, places which voted Leave by substantial amounts were New Addington and Fieldway, neighbouring wards with large council estates.\n\nBeyond the areas with the strongest backing for Leave and Remain, examining the detailed breakdown of votes in various places gives greater insight into the pattern of support for the two sides - as can be seen from the following examples.\n\nIn several places (for example, Birmingham, Bristol, Nottingham, Portsmouth) there was a strong contrast between the Leave-voting populations of large, rundown, predominantly white, housing estates in the urban periphery, versus Remain-voting populations in inner city areas with large numbers of ethnic minorities and sometimes students.\n\nBirmingham had several wards with large Remain votes, although the city as a whole narrowly voted Leave. These pro-Remain wards tended to be the more highly educated, better off localities, or minority ethnic areas which strongly backed Remain despite low levels of educational qualifications. I have written about this before.\n\nIn Blackburn with Darwen, Bastwell ward had the highest Remain vote at 65%, compared to only 44% in the area as a whole. This ward has an ethnic minority proportion of over 90%. Other Blackburn wards which voted Remain were also ones with high minority populations.\n\nBradford voted to Leave (54%), but the area included some starkly contrasting places which went over 60% Remain: the prosperous, genteel, spa town of Ilkley, and strongly ethnic minority wards in the city, such as Manningham and Toller.\n\nBristol voted strongly Remain on the whole (62%), but there were some striking exceptions, particularly the large, deprived, mainly white estates to the south of the city. Hartcliffe and Withywood backed Leave at 67%. Similar neighbouring wards (Hengrove and Whitchurch Park, Filwood, Bishopsworth and Stockwood) also voted Leave, as did the more industrial area of Avonmouth and Lawrence Weston to the north west of the city.\n\nAs a county Cornwall voted to Leave. But one of its six parliamentary constituencies, Truro and Falmouth, voted 53% to Remain, possibly linked to a significant student population.\n\nIn Lincoln, which voted 57% to Leave, Carholme ward stands out as very different - it voted 63% to Remain. This ward includes Lincoln University, and 43% of the residents are students\n\nMiddlesbrough voted 65% to Leave. As already noted, it had several wards with extremely high leave votes of over 75%. But one ward, Linthorpe, voted very narrowly to Remain - a comparatively well-to-do inner suburb which includes an art college; and another ward, Central, which contains Teesside University, nearly did.\n\nMole Valley in Surrey exhibited a dramatic contrast between two neighbouring districts with very different demographics and housing. The highest Remain vote was in the very prosperous location of Dorking South, which voted 63% Remain, but the neighbouring ward of Holmwoods, dominated by large estates on the edge of the town of Dorking, voted 57% Leave, the area's highest Leave vote.\n\nNottingham voted narrowly to Leave, but the inner city ward of Radford and Park voted 68% Remain. This has both a comparatively high proportion of ethnic minorities and considerable numbers of students from two nearby universities. There was a lot of variation within the area. Bulwell - a market town to the north of the city with many social problems - voted 69% Leave\n\nThere was also a high Leave vote in the housing estate locations of the Clifton wards in the south of Nottingham.\n\nOldham voted to Leave at 61%, but Werneth, the city ward with the highest ethnic minority population, voted Remain (57%). Other wards with high minority populations also voted Remain.\n\nThe central wards in Oxford had high Remain votes\n\nIn Oxford the cluster of polling districts which included Blackbird Leys and other deprived estates on the southern edge of the city voted to Leave at 51%. In contrast the central areas containing colleges, university buildings and student accommodation voted to Remain at over 80%.\n\nPlymouth voted 60% Leave, but Drake ward which includes the university had the city's highest Remain vote at 56%.\n\nPortsmouth was another place with wide variation. Paulsgrove ward, with its large estate on the edge of the city, had the highest Leave vote at 70%, whereas at the other end of the spectrum Central Southsea, an inner city ward and student area, voted 57% Remain.\n\nRochdale voted 60% Leave. The place which bucked this trend by voting 59% Remain, Milkstone and Deeplish, was the most predominantly ethnic minority ward. Central Rochdale had the second highest Remain vote and is the other ward that is mainly not white.\n\nWalsall voted strongly Leave (68%). The only ward which voted Remain, Paddock, is both a comparatively prosperous and multi-ethnic locality.\n\nA few councils released their data at remarkably localised levels, down even to individual polling districts (ie ballot boxes) in the case of Blackburn with Darwen and Bracknell Forest, or clusters of two/three/four districts, in the case of Amber Valley, Brentwood, Sevenoaks, Shetland, South Oxfordshire, and Tewkesbury.\n\nThis provides very local and specific data, in some cases just for neighbourhoods of hundreds of voters.\n\nAt its most detailed this reveals that the 110 people who cast their votes in the ballot box at St. Alban's Primary School in central Blackburn split 56-52 in favour of Remain, with two spoilt papers.\n\nIt also discloses stark contrasts in some neighbouring locations. The 953 people who voted at Little Harwood community centre in north Blackburn had a Leave vote of only 31%, while the 336 electors who voted in the neighbouring ballot box at Roe Lee Park primary school produced a Leave percentage over twice as high, at 64%.\n\nThe very detailed data we obtained also provides some rare evidence on the views of postal compared to non-postal voters. Campaign strategists have often deliberated on whether the two groups vote differently and should be given separate targeted messages.\n\nMost places mixed boxes of postal and non-postal votes for counting, so generally it's not possible to draw comparative conclusions. However there were a few exceptions which recorded them separately, or included a very small number of non-postal votes with the postals.\n\nThese figures indicate that postal voters were narrowly less likely to back Leave than voters in polling stations. Data covering five counting areas with about 260,000 votes shows that in these places the roughly one in five electors who voted by post backed Leave at 55.4%, one percentage point lower than the local non-postal support for Leave of 56.4%.\n\nThe counting areas involved are Amber Valley, East Cambridgeshire, Gwynedd, Hyndburn and North Warwickshire.\n\nSince the referendum the BBC has been trying to get the most detailed, localised voting data we could from each of the counting areas. This was a major data collection exercise carried out by my colleague George Greenwood.\n\nWe managed to obtain voting figures broken down into smaller geographical units for 178 of the 399 referendum counting areas (380 councils in England, Wales and Scotland, with a separate tally in Gibraltar, while in Northern Ireland results were issued for the 18 constituencies).\n\nThis varied between data for individual local government wards, wards grouped into clusters, and constituency level data. In a few cases the results supplied were even more localised than ward level. Overall the extra data covers a wide range of different areas and kinds of councils across the UK.\n\nElectoral returning officers are not covered by the Freedom of Information Act, so releasing the information was up to the discretion of councils. While some were very willing, in other cases it required a lot of persistence and persuasion.\n\nSome councils could not supply any detailed data because they mixed all ballot boxes prior to counting; some did possess more local figures but simply refused to disclose them to us. Others did provide data, but the combinations in which ballot boxes were mixed before counting were too complex to fit ward boundaries neatly.\n\nA few places such as Birmingham released their ward by ward data following the referendum on their own initiative, but in most cases the information had to be obtained by us requesting it directly, and sometimes repeatedly, from the authority.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A group of commuters raided their bags and pockets to clean racist graffiti from a New York subway car.\n\nGregory Locke was one of them, and spoke to BBC World Have Your Say.", "Alastair Cook had become \"drained\" as England Test captain, says England's director of cricket Andrew Strauss.\n\nCook stepped down on Monday after a record 59 matches in charge.\n\n\"He was getting drained by the relentlessness of being England captain,\" Strauss told the BBC's sports editor Dan Roan.\n\nStrauss added that vice-captain Joe Root would be a strong candidate to take over but refused \"to rule anyone in or out of the role\".\n\nCook is England's highest run-scorer in Test cricket with 11,057, while his 140 Test appearances and 30 centuries are also national records.\n\nBut the Essex batsman had been considering his future as captain after his side suffered a 4-0 Test series defeat in India last year.\n\nAnd Strauss said the 32-year-old had taken time to come to his decision.\n\n\"We know it has been a tough winter and it was an obvious time for him to step back and reflect and consider and have thoughts about what was right for the team moving forwards,\" he said.\n\n\"In my conversations with him in January it became clear that Alastair felt a huge amount of energy, drive and determination was needed to drive the team forward over the next 12 months.\n\n\"You are the only one who knows how much gas you have left in the tank and how much the many demands of being England captain are taking out of you.\n\n\"He feels it is time for new blood, new impetus and fresh thinking and allow someone else to take over and do that.\"\n\nStrauss said he did not attempt to make Cook change his mind, and explained: \"Once it became obvious how clear his thinking was, it was his decision to make. It would have been wrong to persuade him otherwise.\"\n\nIs the appointment of Root a foregone conclusion?\n\nThe Yorkshire batsman, who was appointed England vice-captain before the 2015 Ashes Series is seen as the favourite for the job.\n\nBut Strauss, while praising his qualities, says that there is a process to go through before Cook's successor is announced.\n\nEngland's next Test series will be against South Africa with the first game of the four-match series due to start at Lord's on 6 July.\n\nAfter that, they will host the West Indies in three Tests in August and September before travelling to Australia for the Ashes in November.\n\n\"Joe has leadership experience and is a phenomenal cricketer and an influential figure in the dressing room, and there is no reason why he wouldn't be a strong candidate,\" said Strauss.\n\n\"But I don't want to rule anyone out or in at this stage.\n\n\"There are conversations that need to take place, both between myself and the selectors and the coach, but also among some of the senior players to make sure I understand how best to take the team forward so that when we announce the captain he is the right man for the job.\"\n\nCook's first job after taking over from Strauss in 2012 was to manage the return of batsman Kevin Pietersen, who had been left out of the England side over allegations he had sent derogatory text messages about Strauss to members of the South Africa team.\n\nBut Cook also played an influential role in the decision to end Pietersen's international career in February 2014 when he was part of a three-man panel who met the batsman to tell him of their decision.\n\nWhen asked if that incident could overshadow Cook's legacy as captain, Strauss said: \"I think the fact he was able to get through that episode at a very tough time for him and others and come out the other side and keep scoring runs and winning matches and keep a degree of sanity at a difficult time speaks volumes for him.\"\n\nThe most difficult time for Cook as England captain was in 2014, which began with the Ashes whitewash down under, moved on to the Kevin Pietersen saga and was followed by a home series defeat by Sri Lanka.\n\nHis 2013 Ashes win as skipper is a highlight of his reign. So too, the triumph in South Africa in 2015-16 and the historic win in India in 2012.\n\nCook's winning percentage of 40.67 is only the fourth best of the six captains to have led England in more than 40 Tests. It has been an up-and-down ride.\n\nThe extended period of time taken to mull over his future shows that Cook has made the right decision for him. He will be incredibly comfortable with what lies ahead. That is likely to be scoring many more runs for England.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nWales stuttered for an hour in the face of a colossal Italian defensive display before pulling clear to open their Six Nations campaign with a victory.\n\nBut they missed out on a bonus point as Liam Williams came agonisingly close to a fourth try from the final move of the match, but lost control of the ball over the line as he tried to tried to touch down.\n\nRob Howley's team left a number of criticisms from the autumn campaign unanswered as they toiled in damp and slippery Rome to break down an Azzurri team inspired by peerless number eight and captain Sergio Parisse.\n\nIt was only when Italy cracked in the face of lopsided possession and penalty count, and prop Andrea Lovotti was sent to the sin-bin, that Wales were able to open up.\n\nTries by Jonathan Davies and Liam Williams while Italy were a man short turned the tables, and an apparently injured George North delivered a killer blow as he ran in from 60 metres.\n• None Never miss a Six Nations story - sign up for our rugby news alerts\n\nWales almost claimed the tournament's first every try bonus point when wing Williams just failed to touch down as the clock ticked past 80 minutes.\n\nItaly led at half-time, but just as Parisse had feared in his pre-match news conference, fell off the pace in the last 20 minutes and paid a heavy price.\n\nLeigh Halfpenny kicked three conversions and four penalties for his 18-point tally.\n\nWales' ambition saw them turn down three kickable penalties in a dominant opening 20 minutes, but they failed to score a point despite 80% possession.\n\nAnd with referee JP Doyle disinclined to issue warnings let alone a yellow card for repeat infringements, Italy weathered the storm and then showed a more ruthless cutting edge when their chance came.\n\nParisse was alternately deft and a powerhouse as he set up the attack and then orchestrated the rolling maul that led to scrum-half Edoardo Gori touching down between the posts.\n\nHalfpenny, having missed an early chance, finally had Wales on the scoreboard in the 36th minute when he nailed a penalty as the hosts took a 7-3 lead into the changing rooms at the break.\n\nAfter the interval Wales were in no mood to turn down the points as Halfpenny punished continuing Italian indiscipline with three penalties before Lovotti pushed Mr Doyle's patience past breaking point.\n\nWhen replacement fly-half Sam Davies showed the quick hands that have earned him his Wales call, Scott Williams was able to send Davies over, and Williams' try followed quickly.\n\nFreed of the shackles of having to win the game, Wales showed ambition and skill where they had previously been patient in the face of remorseless defence.\n\nWith their scrum bolstered by the arrival of Rob Evans and Tomas Francis from the bench, the visitors finished well on top.\n\nBut they have a lot to think about and work on in the six-day turnaround before England arrive in Cardiff.\n\nAnd it is unlikely they will be on the right end of a 16-5 penalty count on that day.\n\nIt could have been Sergio Parisse, but the accuracy of Leigh Halfpenny's boot and his counter-attacking late in the game earned him the nod.\n\nWhat is the pundit's view?\n\nJonathan Davies, former Wales dual-code stand-off and captain: \"As expected it was a tough game and a brutal first 60 minutes. They absorbed that and then went on to score a couple of great tries and win comfortably.\n\n\"There were a few problems - namely the slow ball movement but by the end the Italians didn't have enough.\"\n\nReplacements: 16-Leonardo Ghiraldini for Gega (47), 17-Sami Panico, 18-Pietro Ceccarelli for Cittadini (59), 19-Joshua Furno for Fuser (41), 20-Francesco Minto, 21-Giorgio Bronzini for Gori (63), 22-Tommaso Allan for Canna (69), 23-Michele Campagnaro Benvenuti (53),\n\nReplacements: 16-Scott Baldwin, 17-Rob Evans for Smith (50), 18-Tomas Francis for Lee (50), 19-Cory Hill Hill for Ball (63), 20-James King for Moriarty (74)., 21-Gareth Davies for Webb (74), 22-Sam Davies (for Biggar, 40), 23-Jamie Roberts for S Williams (74).", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Speaker Bercow said it would make things 'less stuffy'\n\nJohn Bercow has defended the decision that Commons clerks will no longer have to wear wigs, after one MP likened the move to an \"executive order\".\n\nThe Speaker announced the clerks, who advise him on conduct and constitutional issues, would also no longer wear wing collars and white tie.\n\nConservative Sir Gerald Howarth said the tradition of wearing wigs went back \"several centuries\".\n\nBut Mr Bercow said there was an even older tradition of not wearing wigs.\n\nHe announced the changes on Monday, but added that clerks would keep part of their garb - black gowns, to signify they are experts on procedure and constitutional issues.\n\nMr Bercow said changes to clothing and headgear represented the \"overwhelming view\" of clerks themselves.\n\nThey would \"convey to the public a marginally less stuffy and forbidding image of this chamber at work\".\n\nBut Sir Gerald, MP for Aldershot, raised a point of order, telling the Commons: \"I was surprised by [the] statement, which had the sort of appearance of an executive order.\"\n\nHe added that traditional clerks' dress was \"key to the dignity of the House\" and had been so \"for several centuries\", adding that MPs \"should discuss this\".\n\nMr Bercow replied that it was \"a matter that can properly be decided by the Speaker\", adding that the House of Commons Commission had approved the changes, which clerks themselves had suggested.\n\nHe said that, if one went back more than a \"couple of hundred years\", the situation was different from that presented by Sir Gerald, and that \"several centuries ago\", clerks \"did not wear wigs\".\n\nMr Bercow has refrained from wearing a wig himself in the Commons since becoming Speaker in 2009, as did his predecessors Michael Martin and Betty Boothroyd.", "The New England Patriots produced the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history to beat the Atlanta Falcons 34-28 in overtime and claim a fifth title in the most dramatic of circumstances.\n\nThe Patriots trailed by 25 points in the third quarter but recovered to level at 28-28 and force the extra period - the first in Super Bowl history.\n\nThanks to everyone back in Boston... we're bringing this sucker home!\n\nQuarterback Tom Brady led the recovery, finishing with a record 466 yards en route to being named the Super Bowl's Most Valuable Player for a fourth time.\n\nThe turnaround was completed when James White scored on a two-yard run - taking his personal haul for the game to 20 points.\n\nThe previous biggest deficit overcome by the eventual Super Bowl champions was 10 points, a record emphatically shattered by the Patriots on an incredible night at Houston's NRG Stadium, which also featured a spectacular half-time show by Lady Gaga.\n\nThe singer opened her set with Woody Guthrie's civil rights anthem This Land Is Your Land, \"a gentle but pointed rebuke to the Trump administration\", BBC Music reporter Mark Savage says.\n• None Tom Brady becoming the first quarterback to win five Super Bowl rings - and just the second player in history along with Charles Haley\n• None Brady breaking his own Super Bowl record with 43 pass completions\n• None Brady also becoming the first player to win four Super Bowl MVPs, on a record seventh appearance in the game\n• None Brady's 466 passing yards surpassing the previous record of 414 set by Kurt Warner in Super Bowl XXXIV\n• None James White finishing with 14 receptions, the most by any player ever in the Super Bowl. His 20 points is also a record\n• None New England's Bill Belichick setting a new record for Super Bowl games as head coach (seven) and wins (five)\n• None The Patriots scoring 19 unanswered points in the fourth quarter - including a pair of two-point conversions\n\nBrady, 39, admitted afterwards the outcome could have been very different had any part of the Patriots team not done its job.\n\nA key moment came with the Patriots trailing 28-20 with 2:28 remaining in the final quarter when Julian Edelman made a miraculous catch for a first down, somehow grabbing the ball under pressure from three opponents after it was tipped into the air by Falcons cornerback Robert Alford.\n\n\"I couldn't believe the Edelman catch, it was one of the greatest catches. I don't think he knows how he caught it. We've been on the end of a few of those, it was spectacular,\" Brady said.\n\n\"It's going to be a great celebration tonight. Thanks to everyone back in Boston, we love you, we're bringing this sucker home!\"\n\nHe added: \"That was exactly the way we didn't plan it. It was a hell of a football game.\n\n\"This is an incredible team and I'm just happy to be a part of it. We overcame a lot of different things and it's all worth it.\"\n\n\"To be 28-3 down, it was a lot of mental toughness from our team and we're all going to remember this for the rest of our life.\"\n\nMuch of the talk before the game centred on whether Brady could become the first quarterback to win five Super Bowls, but such thoughts were swiftly pushed to one side once the game began as the veteran struggled to find a rhythm.\n\nThe first quarter whipped by with hardly any stoppages and no points scored, both defences on top, but come the second quarter the momentum shifted emphatically in favour of Atlanta, who boasted the best regular-season offense and, in quarterback Matt Ryan, the NFL's MVP.\n\nAtlanta went ahead when Devonta Freeman capped an impressive half by rushing for a touchdown, while Ryan connected with Austin Hooper for the second a short time later.\n\nFor the last year and a half I've talked about how Tom Brady is not the greatest of all time. I take it all back\n\nBrady, meanwhile, was labouring, struggling to connect with his receivers and cutting an increasingly frustrated figure as half-time loomed.\n\nWhen Alford intercepted Brady for an 82-yard touchdown, the writing appeared to be on the wall - with a 21-point lead already double the highest deficit ever overcome in a Super Bowl - although a late field goal at least gave the Pats a sliver of hope at the interval.\n\nAs Lady Gaga descended into the arena, Falcons fans were no doubt daring to dream that the franchise could break its Super Bowl duck at the second time of asking, having been beaten by the Denver Broncos on their only previous appearance in 1999.\n\nBut if they were thinking along those lines, they reckoned without Brady.\n\nCertainly the omens looked good for Atlanta at the start of the second half with Tevin Coleman's score taking their advantage to 28-3, but that was the cue for New England's fightback to begin.\n\nWhite scored what seemed like a consolation touchdown late in the third quarter, a feeling only heightened by Stephen Gostkowski's failed extra-point attempt, but still the Pats kept coming.\n\nA Gostkowski field goal was backed up by Brady's touchdown pass to Danny Amendola, with the successful two-point conversion from a White rush closing the gap to eight points.\n\nWith Atlanta rattled, Brady marched the Patriots 90 yards upfield via Edelman's stunning catch to present White with a one-yard rushing touchdown, which was followed by a vital two-point conversion catch by Amendola that took the game to overtime.\n\nWhat they said...\n\nPatriots quarterback Tom Brady: \"There were a lot of plays, probably about 30 of them, and if any one was different the outcome would have been different. It was unbelievable. I'm so proud of these guys.\n\n\"James White is everything you want in a team-mate. Dependable, reliable, durable. He brings it every day. We kept going to him and that speaks for itself.\"\n\nPatriots wide receiver Danny Amendola: \"[Brady] was the same as he always is: cool, calm and collected. He's the leader, the general, the best ever and that is the end of the story.\"\n\nPatriots running back James White: \"We knew we had a shot the whole game. It was an amazing comeback by our team. It's surreal right now. You couldn't write this script.\"\n\nPatriots coach Bill Belichick: \"We have great players, they competed the whole game. They were 28-3 down but they never looked back. They just keep competing for 60 minutes, or longer.\"\n\nPatriots owner Robert Kraft: \"I told our fans two years ago that was the sweetest win of all, but a lot has transpired in the last two years. That doesn't need any explanation.\n\n\"This is unequivocally the sweetest. I am proud to say for the fifth time the Patriots are world champions.\"\n\nFalcons quarterback Matt Ryan: \"There's nothing you can really say. That's a tough loss. Obviously very disappointed, very close to getting done what we wanted to get done, but it's hard to find words tonight.\"\n\nOsi Umenyiora, BBC NFL analyst: \"There is no solace for Atlanta. They were ahead by 25 points, a game they had to win. I can't imagine how they are feeling. They made so many young mistakes, you can't make them against the New England Patriots.\n\n\"This is the worst loss we have ever seen in the history of the Super Bowl.\n\n\"For the last year and a half I've talked about how Tom Brady is not the greatest of all time. I take it all back. The improbability of what this man just did, I can't believe what I have seen with my own two eyes.\n\n\"It is unbelievable. I take back every negative thing I ever said about this man, he shut me up today. He truly is the greatest.\"\n\nSocial media reacts to the game... and Gaga", "Handheld scanners which detect bleeding on the brain will be introduced to improve the ringside care of boxers.\n\nThe British & Irish Boxing Authority (BIBA) hopes to use the device at an event in Bradford on 26 February.\n\nMike Towell died from head injuries sustained in a bout in September, six months after Nick Blackwell was hospitalised with a bleed to the brain.\n\nBIBA will offer use of the scanners to fighters who compete under the British Boxing Board of Control (BBBofC).\n\nBut the BBBofC told BBC Sport it \"does not recognise\" BIBA - known as the Malta Boxing Commission until 2016 - and that it will continue to do its own research and use its own medical practices.\n\nBIBA vice-president Gianluca Di Caro told BBC Sport: \"It's not about us and the fighters we work with versus fighters with other organisations. It is about all the fighters.\n\n\"If there is a fighter anywhere, who has been suffering with headaches, he needs to know we will go to him and do a scan. Sometimes we will just have to move quickly to ensure that any boxer can be helped.\n\n\"We will have one scanner by 22 February, another is on order and our aim is to have 10. I will raise the sponsorship to do that.\"\n\nScans 'can only be good'\n\nTowell had been suffering with headaches in the run-up to a bout days before his death after a fifth-round loss to Welsh fighter Dale Evans.\n\nUpon hearing news of the introduction of scanners, his girlfriend Chloe Ross posted on Facebook: \"I'm glad to be finally seeing something good coming from what happened to Michael. It shouldn't take someone's life for these things to be used but if it saves someone else's life then that can only be a good thing.\"\n\nThrough sponsorship from an Australian backer, BIBA has purchased two scanners at a cost of $15,000 (£12,000) each and intends on using them to check on fighters before and after fights.\n\nScanners, which operate by shining a light laser beam into the head, can detect brain bleeds with an accuracy of 90% and take around three minutes to complete. Their use by BIBA will form part of a broad medical undertaken by fighters before bouts, including cognitive testing.\n\nIn addition to Towell's death and Blackwell's injury, 2016 also saw amateur boxer Kuba Moczyk, 22, die after sustaining a severe head injury in his first bout.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "A 41-gun salute has been fired in London's Green Park to mark the Queen's 65 years on the throne.\n\nDuring the celebration, 89 horses pulled six World War One-era 13-pounder field guns into position in the park.\n\nThe Queen has become the first British monarch to reach a Sapphire Jubilee, after becoming the UK's longest-reigning monarch in 2015, aged 89.", "The John Deere tractor was seen leaving Harrogate in the early hours of the morning\n\nA tractor being driven by a 15-year-old boy \"as a taxi for his drunk mates\" has been stopped by police in North Yorkshire.\n\nThe John Deere tractor was pulled over by officers in the village of Ripley and had two other males on board.\n\nThe vehicle had been seen in nearby Harrogate at about 05:00 GMT with no headlights on.\n\nPolice said the driver had no licence, was not insured and did not have permission from the tractor's owner.\n\nThe vehicle was seized, with the three due to be interviewed by officers.\n\nPosting on Twitter, Insp Chris Galley said: \"A strange end to a night shift. 15-year-old lad driving a tractor as a taxi for his drunk mates.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "In Cambodia's capital, motorbike taxis are everywhere - but it's extremely rare to see women drivers transporting tourists. Those who do are judged harshly. Katya Cengel meets the young entrepreneur trying to change that.\n\nWhen they show up at a Phnom Penh hotel in their tight red T-shirts and skinny jeans, people tend to get the wrong idea about Renou Chea and her fellow Moto Girl Tour guides.\n\n\"They think we're not 'good girls',\" says Renou, a slight 26-year-old with long dark hair. \"They think we're 'bad girls'.\"\n\nIt is an important distinction to make in Cambodia, where women who associate with foreigners are often assumed to be \"bad girls\" - or women who work in the sex trade.\n\n\"Sometimes they think that when we hang out with the men, it's just like for sex or something like that,\" adds her sister, Raksmey Chea, 23.\n\nThe Moto Girl Tour website doesn't help, offering motorbike tours of Cambodia's capital by \"young and beautiful lady drivers\".\n\nBecause they are all young and beautiful, Renou doesn't understand why advertising this might seem strange.\n\nWhat is strange, at least in this South East Asian country, is women driving tourists. It just isn't done, says Siv Cheng, owner of Phnom Penh-based CS Travel.\n\n\"Mostly, you see, all moto (taxi) drivers are male,\" says Cheng.\n\nLeft to right: Sreynich Horm, Raksmey Chea and Renou Chea\n\nMany women drive the little Vespa scooters and Hyundai motorbikes that zip around the city - everyone does - but they don't usually carry tourists.\n\nRenou got the idea after an aunt told her about schoolgirls offering a moto taxi service in Thailand.\n\nHaving ridden a motorbike since high school, and having studied English in college, Renou figured showing tourists around her city would be a fun way to earn money. Having also studied accounting, she no doubt saw a good business opportunity as well. In 2015 almost five million tourists travelled to Cambodia, according to the Cambodian Ministry of Tourism.\n\nRenou recruited her younger sister and Sreynich Horm, 22 - both as petite and pretty as Renou - and occasionally a fourth woman to be Moto Girl Tour guides.\n\nBut before they took their first tourists on board their bikes in early 2016, they had to convince their families that they would be safe.\n\nHorm's father worried that a foreigner riding behind her could touch her and do other things to her - things \"good\" virgin girls should not have done to them.\n\nTo make sure they kept their reputations safe, the women established a rule - no holding on to the guide, hold the handlebar on the seat behind you instead.\n\nWhen they have night tours and tours outside the city they team up. Still, friends and family often worry about the women carrying around large foreigners.\n\nAt 4ft 9in (1.45m) and 6st 5lb (40kg), Renou is the \"tall\" Moto Girl. Her Vespa is more than twice her weight, but she gets upset when people think she can't handle it or heavy loads.\n\nFor years she has been helping her father with his grocery store by making deliveries on her Vespa. Plus, as a woman, she believes she is actually a safer driver, something Hong Ly, guest relations' manager at Mito Hotel agrees with.\n\nRenou would like to see more female travellers in Cambodia\n\n\"Tourists like girls who drive slow, not weave in and out of traffic,\" said Ly, who keeps a stack of Moto Girl Tour brochures on her desk.\n\nThe Moto Girls may be on to something. In early 2016 Vespa Adventures motorbike tour-company opened a branch in Phnom Penh and began hiring both male and female drivers, says Alex Meldrum, manager of the Phnom Penh branch.\n\nAn American man founded the original Vespa Adventures in Vietnam. But a Cambodian woman who plans to hire mainly female drivers in the group's other Cambodian location of Siem Reap runs Cambodian Vespa Adventures.\n\nChanel Sinclair, a 31-year-old lawyer from Australia, was both thrilled and comforted to find female tour guides when travelling solo in Phnom Penh for the first time in spring 2016.\n\nShe was so pleased with the attentive service she received from the Moto Girls, including regular cold water deliveries and help with bartering, that she went on three tours with the group.\n\nRenou would like to see more women travellers like Sinclair, but so far the majority of the company's 50 or so customers have been male.\n\nScottish photographer Ross Kennedy, 44, took a custom tour with the Moto Girls in March 2016. To find more authentic scenes for Kennedy to shoot, Horm went to a region outside the city where her father has family and asked locals' advice.\n\nKennedy's tour began with crashing a wedding in the morning and ended with a Buddhist blessing ceremony in the afternoon. \"Those are the memories that make a trip special,\" Kennedy wrote in an email.\n\nIn addition to being female, the Moto Girls try to differentiate themselves as well-informed guides who can discuss Cambodian art, history and culture.\n\nFinding the right spots are not the only challenges they face. There are the cultural differences as well, like the Indian customer who said \"Yes\" while shaking his head in a fashion Renou mistook for \"No\", or the man from New Zealand who screamed when he saw a chicken on the road.\n\nOn one occasion Renou and her client were so absorbed in their tour of the National Museum that neither heard the alarm sounding the museum's closing. Renou finally glanced at her watch at 17:30, half an hour after closing time. As they raced to the gate, her client promised to book another tour - if she could get them out of the museum.\n\nThe locked gate proved a dead end, but some workers were able to find a security guard who let them out. Renou's customer proved true to his word and booked another tour.\n\nOther difficulties are in the driving itself. Passengers unfamiliar with riding motorbikes sometimes lean to the left when they should lean right, says Horm.\n\nThen there was the tourist who got the wrong idea and asked her out on a date. She turned him down, not wanting to confuse her work with her social life. Plus, she didn't fancy him.\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "An immigrant rights campaigner took the podium at the LGBTQ Solidarity Rally in New York on Saturday.\n\nThanushka Yakupitiyage from the New York Immigration Coalition spoke at one of a number of worldwide protests over President Trump's agenda.", "James Bond director Guy Hamilton, pictured here on the set of Goldfinger, was a secret agent during World War Two\n\nThat James Bond creator Ian Fleming drew literary inspiration from his wartime work in espionage is relatively well known. But the heroic World War Two exploits of the director of Bond films including Goldfinger and Live and Let Die are less well documented.\n\nGuy Hamilton, who grew up in France but was sent to boarding school to England, made an early foray into the film industry in the late 1930s, but after fleeing France at the outbreak of war his film-making career had to be put on hold while he joined the effort to defeat Nazi Germany.\n\nIn June 1944, he found himself in the sort of dire straits that would have challenged Bond himself.\n\nOn a mission to drop French secret agents in Brittany, Lt Hamilton and his crew of two sailors became stranded in a place crawling with German soldiers.\n\nUnder cover of darkness, Hamilton and his crew had rowed to shore from his navy ship in a small surfboat to drop off the agents. But when he headed back the ship had gone. There was no way of returning home.\n\nHamilton ran covert high-speed motor gun and torpedo boats out of Dartmouth for the Royal Navy's 15th Flotilla\n\nHamilton used the Shelburne Line, one of a series of crucial Allied escape routes that crisscrossed occupied France\n\nPlymouth's Honorary French Consul Alain Sibril, who was born in Brittany and whose grandfather was part of the local Resistance, said: \"This was shortly after D-Day, it was extremely, extremely dangerous.\n\n\"You can imagine it was a terrible place to be stuck.\"\n\nSpeaking to BBC Inside Out before his death last year, Hamilton said the events of that time were still etched on his memory: \"My worries were to get rid of the surfboat and to try and get as far away form the beach as possible.\"\n\nHe spent several days on the run with two other sailors, evading German patrols and navigating minefields.\n\nThey were eventually rescued by the French Resistance and sheltered in a safe house run by Anne Ropers.\n\nHamilton (right) spent a month in Brittany pretending to be a Frenchman to avoid detection\n\nAnne Ropers hid Hamilton and two other agents for about a month\n\nIn an interview before she died last year Mrs Ropers, then 97, said: \"They stayed in my parents' room. At night, Guy was in one bed and the sailors in the other.\n\n\"By day, all three of them spent their time lying on their beds, so that they did not make any noise.\"\n\nMr Sibril said: \"Had the Germans discovered Guy Hamilton and his fellow sailors, this would have been extremely dangerous. Not only for them, but also for the whole network of Resistance fighters.\"\n\nMarguerite Pierre, 92, was another Resistance member who helped Lt Hamilton.\n\nShe said: \"We were told by our commander that we risked either deportation or being shot in the field. We knew what the risks were.\"\n\nHamilton managed to send a message back to his naval crew in Dartmouth telling them he was safe\n\nOne night Hamilton's cover was almost blown, when members of the Resistance took him for a boozy game of boules.\n\nHe said: \"They took me down the road to a cafe that had a bowling alley in the back.\n\n\"Well that was alright except that it was full of Germans all in uniform, having a drink. And the lads said 'can we have the bowling alley after you Fritz?', and they said 'yes, yes'… I was appalled and horrified.\"\n\nMrs Ropers said: \"Each team bought the other a jug of cider. The Germans bought a jug of cider for the Englishman and vice versa.\"\n\nSir Roger Moore said Hamilton \"was very much a James Bond character himself\"\n\nHamilton would recall these experiences while directing James Bond films, as 007 actor Sir Roger Moore recalls.\n\nHe said: \"He did tell me that he was once dropped into Nazi-occupied France and, being separated from his squad, found himself in a fairly sticky situation in a French village teeming with German soldiers.\n\n\"By virtue of speaking fluent French he was able to pull the wool over the Germans' eyes in a bar by pretending to be a local, and he was obviously very convincing.\"\n\nFor nearly a month Hamilton managed to avoid detection before escaping back to safety in England. Ten days later the escape route used by the Resistance was uncovered by the Nazis.\n\nAfter the war Guy Hamilton worked in the film industry training under Carol Reed\n\nThe first Bond film he directed was Goldfinger in 1964\n\nHamilton directed a series of war films including Battle of Britain in 1969\n\nHe lived in Majorca until his death last year, aged 93\n\nHamilton would be awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his gallantry.\n\nAfter the war he returned to the film industry, training under legendary director Carol Reed on movies such as The Third Man, later directing blockbusters including The Colditz Story and Battle of Britain, as well as four Bond movies - Goldfinger, Diamonds are Forever, The Man with the Golden Gun and Live and Let Die.\n\nAnd for Moore, Hamilton's experiences in the Royal Navy informed the way he helped to bring Bond to life on the silver screen.\n\n\"Guy was very much a James Bond character himself,\" the actor said.\n\n\"He always knew what was believable and how far he could take audiences - and that was based on both his film-making experience and real wartime exploits.\"\n\nGuy Hamilton's daring exploits can be relived on Inside Out South West on BBC One on Monday 6 February at 19:30 BST and on the iPlayer for 30 days thereafter", "BBC Sport looks back at some of the best moments of Super Bowl LI, including some dazzling footwork from Atlanta Falcons Taylor Gabriel and Lady Gaga's dramatic half-time entrance.\n\nWATCH MORE: Watch the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "Social media updates by the Egyptian suspected of launching a machete attack at the Louvre in Paris suggested nothing untoward, says his friend.\n\nFrench authorities say a man, believed to be Abdullah Hamamy, was shot in the stomach as he lunged at soldiers with the knives at the museum on Friday.\n\nBut his neighbour in Egypt, Ibrahim Yossry, says updates to Abdullah's social media upon his arrival in France suggested nothing untoward.", "The star performed aerial stunts throughout the first half of her set\n\nShe jumped off the roof of Houston's NRG stadium and bathed in the light of hundreds of drones - but Lady Gaga's Super Bowl show was fairly restrained... by her standards.\n\nThe star only changed costume twice, letting her music do the talking in a 12-minute, hit-laden set.\n\nShe opened with Woody Guthrie's civil rights anthem This Land Is Your Land, a gentle but pointed rebuke to the Trump administration; which she reinforced by performing Born This Way - her hymn to acceptance and inclusion.\n\n\"No matter black, white or beige... I was born to be brave,\" she sang to an expected US TV audience of 110 million.\n\nBut Gaga refrained from overt sermonising, simply saying: \"We're here to make you feel good\" (and, later on, \"hello mum\").\n\nGaga's vocals were impeccable throughout the show\n\nShe only performed one song from her current album, Joanne\n\nAhead of the Super Bowl, the star said her show would be \"inclusive\" and celebrate \"the spirit of equality\". Sponsors Pepsi simply said it would be \"uniquely Gaga\".\n\nAnd, while she didn't hatch from an egg (as at the 2011 Grammy Awards) or smear herself in blood (2009's Monster Ball tour), it was certainly spectacular.\n\nGaga first appeared 79 metres above the crowd, as a swarm of drones hovered behind her; twinkling in the sky before adopting the colours of the stars and stripes during Woody Guthrie's left-wing anthem.\n\n\"One nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all,\" said the star, quoting the pledge of allegiance, then promptly performed a swan-dive from the roof, landing on a towering, torch-like structure several storeys below.\n\nThere, she launched into a dizzying medley of hit singles including Poker Face, Just Dance and Telephone, backed by an army of dancers.\n\nHer vocals were strong and resonant throughout - although the intricate choreography left her out of breath for the set's sole ballad, Million Reasons.\n\nThe show had taken months to plan\n\nLady Gaga ties with Katy Perry as the youngest female artist to headline the half-time show: Both were 30 when they performed\n\nStage hands had just seven minutes to construct the elaborate set\n\nFans who flooded the pitch were given torches that flashed in time to the music, spelling out lyrics and making elaborate, co-ordinated patterns.\n\nBBC Sport presenter Mark Chapman revealed that the entire stadium - including his commentary booth and the public toilets - had been plunged into darkness to make the visuals work on television.\n\nGaga ended the set with Bad Romance, backed by 40 dancers, dressed in blinding white costumes inspired by American Football uniforms.\n\nFinishing the show atop a staircase, Gaga shouted \"Super Bowl 51,\" dropped her microphone and jumped into the crowd holding a glittery silver football.\n\n\"This is for you Monsters,\" the star tweeted to her fanbase. \"I love you.\"\n\nGaga was backed by 40 dancers for Bad Romance\n\nGaga posed on the field during the build-up to the clash between the Patriots and the Falcons\n\nShe also found time to take a selfie from the centre of the stadium\n\nThe last time the Super Bowl was held in Houston the half time performer was Janet Jackson, whose infamous \"wardrobe malfunction\" made the NFL wary of hiring young, edgy pop stars for several years.\n\nGaga posed no such problems, taming her worst excesses to deliver a streamlined, spectacular show that reminded many fans why they love her.\n\nAnd while her performance lacked the political punch of Beyonce last year; or even a gif-able meme like Katy Perry's \"left shark\", there wasn't a single mis-step or misfiring moment.\n\nThe star was invited to play the half time show after singing the National Anthem at the 50th Super Bowl in California last year.\n\nShe said she had studied the greats (name-checking Michael Jackson, Diana Ross and Bruce Springsteen) before beginning work on her show in September.\n\n\"I want every guy's girlfriend in his arms; I want every husband and wife kissing; every kid laughing,\" she told Radio Disney last year.\n\n\"In my mind they're having this really powerful family experience watching the Super Bowl.\"\n\nAccording to CNN, the drone light show required special permission from the Federal Aviation Authority - which had established a 34.5-mile-radius \"no-drone zone\" around the stadium during the game for safety and security reasons.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nFormer South Africa captain Joost van der Westhuizen has died aged 45, six years after he was diagnosed with the debilitating motor neurone disease.\n\nVan der Westhuizen won the World Cup with the Springboks in 1995.\n\nRegarded as one of the finest scrum-halves in history, he won 89 international caps between 1993 and 2003, scoring 38 tries.\n\nHe captained the Springboks for four years, including at the 1999 World Cup, before his retirement in 2003.\n\nVan der Westhuizen was admitted to hospital in Johannesburg on Saturday, when he was said to be in a \"critical condition\".\n• None In his own words: 'It's been a rollercoaster from day one'\n\n\"Joost will be remembered as one of the greatest Springboks - not only of his generation, but of all time,\" said South Africa Rugby president Mark Alexander.\n\n\"He also became an inspiration and hero to many fellow sufferers of this terrible disease as well as to those unaffected.\n\n\"We all marvelled at his bravery, his fortitude and his uncomplaining acceptance of this terrible burden.\"\n\nVan der Westhuizen made his Springboks debut the year after the team were readmitted to international rugby and was their record try-scorer until Bryan Habana surpassed him in 2011.\n\nHe will be best remembered for his major role in the Springboks lifting the World Cup on home soil, beating New Zealand in the final.\n\nAfter winning the Tri-Nations Championship in 1998, he was named captain for the 1999 World Cup - at which South Africa finished third - before retiring after defeat by New Zealand in the quarter-finals of the 2003 tournament.\n\nAt the time of his retirement, his 89 Tests made him the most-capped South African of all time, though five players have since won more caps.\n\nAfter being diagnosed with MND, a rare condition that progressively damages parts of the nervous system and impacts on important muscle activity such as walking, speaking and breathing, he set up the J9 Foundation, which provides support and care to people with the disease.\n\n'He was the best I played against'\n\nWales interim coach Rob Howley said he was \"devastated\" by his fellow former scrum-half's death.\n\n\"He was a fantastic rugby player and for me was the best nine I played against,\" Howley said.\n\n\"He was a world-class nine who was respected throughout the rugby world.\n\n\"I have been fortunate enough to play against him and enjoy his company off the pitch and it is tragic he has passed so young.\"\n\nEngland coach Eddie Jones, who coached against Van der Westhuizen during his time in Super Rugby, also paid his tribute.\n\n\"He was an absolutely outstanding player, a very good long-passer with a great kicking game, a terrific defender and a guy who really influenced the players,\" he told BBC Sport.\n\n\"Having coached against him when he played for the Bulls, they were a completely different team with him playing and he will be sorely missed.\n\n\"You had to be very tight around the ruck when you played against him because he was a great sniper. He was such a big guy who had good pace and was difficult to defend against.\n\n\"It is so sad to hear of his death. You feel for his family and supporters of South African rugby.\"\n\n'It became an iconic moment'\n\nFormer South Africa captain Jean de Villiers says Van der Westhuizen will be remembered as one of the best to play for the Springboks.\n\n\"What he achieved on the rugby field was unbelievable,\" he told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\nDe Villiers remembers Van der Westhuizen's tackle on New Zealand great Jonah Lomu, who died at the age of 40 in November 2015, in the 1995 World Cup final as an \"iconic moment in the game\".\n\n\"The sad thing is that neither of them are with us any more,\" he added.\n\n\"Joost's tackle on Jonah that day - a front on tackle on the guy that was destroying every team in the world. Here comes a scrum-half, someone who is not meant to put in tackles like that, and tackles him front on.\n\n\"The team as a whole got so much inspiration from him for doing that. For us as a country it became an iconic day and it changed the way that we were viewed forever.\"\n\nDe Villiers says Van der Westhuizen's contribution to raising awareness of motor neuron disease will be remembered as much as his rugby achievements.\n\n\"He never gave up,\" he said. \"He gained so much respect in the latter part of his life, even though he was so successful on the rugby field as well.\"\n\nFormer South African captain Corne Krige added: \"If you wanted an X factor in your team - he was that guy.\n\n\"He was the ultimate modern day scrum-half - first of the bigger scrum-halves in the world. It's tragic for his family and for his kids and for everyone involved.\"\n\nJoost van der Westhuizen made an impact on the sport in two ways.\n\nThe first was as a magnificent scrum-half - one of the all-time greats - who won 89 caps and scored 38 tries and was the man who stopped Jonah Lomu in his tracks in the 1995 World Cup final, which the Springboks went on to win.\n\nThe other part was as a great inspiration - a man who gamely and bravely fought motor neurone disease for six years, who set up his foundation and inspired so many people along the way.\n\nHe was a great figure on and off the rugby field.", "Iris Sibley spent six months in hospital waiting for a place in a care home\n\nIt is December in the Bristol Royal Infirmary and in a room tucked away on a top floor is 89-year-old Iris Sibley. She has been living here for more than six months.\n\nKeeping her company are her devoted husband and son - Arthur, who is 90, and John.\n\n\"Mum has got dementia and other problems and she now needs 24/7 nursing care,\" says John.\n\n\"At the moment she is being funded by the NHS. But it's just a system where you're going from one organisation to another and nobody seems to be co-ordinating.\"\n\nTracing the steps that John, Arthur and Iris have tried to take to get her moved on to a care home is mind-numbingly complex. Everyone is well meaning but no-one is fully in charge of the whole process.\n\nJulia Clarke, chief executive of local NHS services provider Bristol Community Health, says Iris's case is simple to process and fund - but finding space in a care home is the difficult part.\n\n\"I've seen the printout of all the calls that we made to the various homes between August and December and it was more or less a daily effort,\" she says.\n\n\"Twenty-four homes were contacted during the period, 11 had no vacancies and another 11 felt they couldn't meet Mrs Sibley's needs. And the two able to meet her needs with vacancies, unfortunately were too far away for the family and for Mrs Sibley to have access to her support networks.\n\n\"So it's a combination of circumstances. Some people would call it a perfect storm.\"\n\nThere are two big costs here, the human and of course the financial cost for the NHS, which is providing a place for Iris to live.\n\nBristol Royal Infirmary is a large teaching hospital in the centre of the city\n\nRobert Woolley, the chief executive of the Bristol Royal Infirmary, says he has 800 beds available. On any given day around 60 people are ready to leave but can't and that is when it gets pricey.\n\n\"The sort of medical ward that Mrs Sibley was on, the costs are in the order of £450 a night.\n\n\"Given the delay that she had leaving hospital, going on for six months that is probably £90,000 that we didn't really need to spend in the NHS if there had been appropriate care available for her outside of hospital.\"\n\nIris's husband Arthur appreciates the care given to his wife but said: \"She needs a bit of stimulation. I'm not sure that being alone in the room is good for her.\n\n\"We've tried all sorts of ways to hurry things up but if they can't find a vacancy, they can't find a vacancy.\"\n\nAnne Morris, director of nursing for South Gloucestershire's clinical commissioning group which orders the area's NHS and community health services, says: \"Iris is an elderly lady with some health needs that some of the care homes would struggle to be able to meet.\"\n\nShe adds they are working to put appropriate support in place for staff.\n\nHowever space is not the only problem John and Arthur face - money can potentially be an issue.\n\n\"We went to see a home where there was a vacancy and it was great,\" says John.\n\n\"It had everything that mum needed, a window to look out into a garden to see birds. But then a few days later we heard from the NHS people that the bed had gone.\"\n\nCare providers have to balance the number of patients who pay privately and those funded by the state\n\nJohn believed his mum lost out on the place because a private person could pay more.\n\nDavid Sallacombe, chief executive of Care and Support West, the body that represents the homes, is blunt about the cost.\n\n\"What often happens is that the provider has to make some difficult judgements about the percentage they have in their organisation who might be self-funders and the percentage of state-funded,\" he explains.\n\n\"Some organisations have made the decision to only have self-funding clients, whereas on the residential side it can be often 70% self-funders, 30% state funded.\"\n\nSince December, Iris has been found a place in a nursing home and she loves it.\n\nHowever, she has been reassessed by the funding authority and although she is still doubly incontinent, living with dementia and needing a hoist to be moved out of bed, the family are now being told that she no longer qualifies for NHS funding.\n\nThis means she will be back with the council and the family will have to pay towards her care.\n\nMike Hennessy, director of adult social services for Bristol City Council, says fully-funded NHS care is free at the point of delivery, whereas council services are means tested. He points out there is usually a contribution to be made by the service user towards their care.\n\n\"The cost of a care home varies significantly. In actual fact it could be anywhere between £800 and £1,100 a week depending on the needs of the individual,\" he says.\n\nHe says the amount to pay is decided on the individual's income and any assets that they have.\n\n\"Sometimes if people have got over £23,500 they will be required to pay the full cost of their care.\"\n\nEveryone we talked to about Iris mentioned the future that we all face, with an ageing population and a lack of money. Could some planning and a national conversation make it less gloomy?\n\nMr Sallacombe says: \"Is there any conversation about what that might mean - are we talking here about whether it will cost everybody a pound a week more or five pounds a week more?\n\n\"That debate hasn't in my view been engaged in the public with enough vigour.\"\n\nYou can download the podcast of Justin Webb's full report for BBC Radio 4's Today programme here.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One Wales, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nWales have injury concerns over fly-half Dan Biggar and wing George North before their Six Nations game against England in Cardiff on Saturday.\n\nFly-half Biggar injured ribs and wing North played on after taking an early blow to the thigh in their 33-7 win over Italy in Rome.\n\nBiggar failed to return after half-time while North played on - and scored a try - in obvious discomfort.\n\nThe wing's 60-metre try in the 77th minute was Wales' highlight.\n\nFull-back Leigh Halfpenny's conversion meant Wales scored 30 unanswered points in the second period.\n\nWales have a six-day turnaround before playing England in Cardiff with the visitors having a day extra to recover from their opening win over France.\n\n\"Dan's taken a blow to his ribs, we'll wait for more medical information,\" said interim coach Rob Howley.\n\n\"George took an early bump, and has a haematoma on his thigh.\n\n\"We were happy for him to stay on and he showed some mental toughness which is important in games when you come away from home and we were delighted for him to get over the try-line as well.\"\n• None Never miss a Six Nations story - sign up for our rugby news alerts\n\nWales are hoping to have number eight Taulupe Faletau and lock Luke Charteris available to face England.\n\nNeither player travelled to Rome with Howley confirming they had been working on their fitness in Wales over the weekend.\n\nBiggar's replacement, Sam Davies, played a part in two of Wales' second-half tries.\n\nIt was his adventure deep in Wales' own 22 which set up North's score and took Howley's team within touching distance of the tournament's first try bonus point.\n\n\"Sam played particularly well, as we know he can,\" said Howley.\n\nBut the coach refused to be drawn on whether Davies had done enough to gain selection for England ahead of Bigger if both players are fit.\n\n\"We'll have to see how Dan comes through. Hopefully he and George North will be available for selection,\" he added.\n\nNorth believes the faith they showed in themselves paid off in the win.\n\nWales ended the first round on top of the table after North followed Jonathan Davies and Liam Williams in touching down amid 30 unanswered second-half points.\n\n\"We had to fight to the end, every inch, but we're happy with the performance,\" said North.\n\n\"We know they are a passionate team but we backed ourselves and it showed.\"\n\nAfter leading the team for the first time since replacing Sam Warburton as captain, lock Alun Wyn Jones was pleased with his side's attitude having trailed 7-3 at the break.\n\n\"The first half proved how much of a test it was,\" said Jones.\n\n\"We started slowly but the character showed. We got our foot in the door after the way results have gone.\n\n\"We worked a little harder, kept the ball and we came together in the second half.\"", "No modern president has been so analysed. Other leaders don't know him and can't read him. He leaves a trail, but it is strewn with contradictions. He craves popularity but revels in being demonised. He trusts his gut instincts and embraces unpredictability as a virtue.\n\nDiplomats, foreign leaders, business chiefs are all trying to decipher what drives the 45th president.\n\nDonald Trump's first two weeks have been about power, about asserting it, about the noise of power, about taking a wrecking ball to the establishment and leaving it wrong-footed and uncertain.\n\nNo president before him has been so ready with threats against foreign powers, old allies, major corporations, and Washington's public servants.\n\nAt conferences, seminars, at diplomatic functions, in foreign ministries, I have encountered the same whispered and not so hidden question: what do these erratic actions tell us about the mind of Donald Trump?\"\n\nSome say he can't survive or that he will over-reach himself. Others are waiting for him to self-destruct, but there is clear calculation behind these early heady days of being the most powerful man in the world.\n\nDespite the protests, many Americans support the president on migration\n\nFirst, Donald Trump is doing in office what he promised he would do, on the campaign trail.\n\nAt more than 15 campaign stops, I heard him vow to:\n\nHis claims were dismissed as campaign braggadocio, but he would bracket most of his promises with the words \"believe me\". He is now delivering.\n\nSecondly, President Trump is looking after his core supporters; all those voters in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and North Carolina who delivered him the White House.\n\nWhile demonstrators gather in cities and at airports, protesting at his banning refugees and citizens from seven mainly Muslim countries from entering the States, the polls indicate that in middle America he has the support of nearly one in two Americans: 49% agreed with the policy.\n\nAll the outrage about the policy being discriminatory, that it is incoherent, that it will prove a recruiting sergeant for extremists, that such a policy - if it had been in place - would have prevented none of the recent terrorists attacks, make little impression on Mr Trump's inner circle.\n\nMr Trump knows his people, and he tweets his messages to them, direct and simple, as they were during the campaign.\n\n\"This travel ban is not about religion,\" he tweets, \"this is about terror and keeping our country safe.\"\n\nSome who voted for him may have misgivings, but most of them, so far, don't.\n\nThey like his confrontational style. Offending Washington's elite is a badge of his authenticity.\n\nEarly battles with judges and state department officials are evidence that he is \"draining the swamp\" as promised.\n\nWhen a federal judge halted the travel ban, the president tweeted: \"The opinion of this so-called judge… is ridiculous and will be overturned.\"\n\nWhile his critics accused him of showing a lack of respect for the Constitution, Donald Trump reminded his audience that many \"bad and dangerous people\" could be \"pouring\" into the country.\n\nMr Trump has criticised those who halted his new migration policy\n\nThe dizzying array of announcements and executive orders form part of a strategic plan.\n\nNever mind that some of the policies are incomplete. That is to miss the point.\n\nThe strategy is to demonstrate over the first 100 days of his presidency that he is a \"high-energy\" leader, shaking up the old order.\n\nHe is lucky to have inherited a strong economy, but he has promised much more.\n\nThe bonfire of regulations, the slashing of corporate and personal taxes, the pump-priming investments in infrastructure are all intended to lift growth levels above 3%.\n\nIf he achieves that, many Americans will stick with him.\n\nSocial media, as it did during the campaign, enables him to talk directly to those who packed his rallies.\n\nThe conventional wisdom was that he would not be tweeter-in-chief when he got to the White House.\n\nBut Mr Trump knows that every tweet becomes a news story and so enables him to manage the news agenda.\n\nThe mainstream media is still struggling to find a convincing riposte to a president who bypasses them to deliver his messages.\n\nHe declares he's in a \"running war\" with the press.\n\nHis chief strategist labels the media the \"opposition party\".\n\nAgain Mr Trump understands that if he denounces the media as \"dishonest\", it weakens its ability to hold him to account.\n\nThe state of the US economy will be a key indicator of President Trump's achievements\n\nThey point to his personal flaws: the need to be loved, to be popular, to make every issue about himself, the thin-skinned retorts, the savaging of those who disagree and the demonising of the press.\n\nAll are weaknesses that over time may damage and perhaps undo him.\n\nHis strategy is not just to change America but for him to dominate the public space.\n\nOthers search for the ideology that will underpin his presidency.\n\nFor Donald Trump, his guiding slogan will be \"America first.\"\n\nIt will be his defence against all attacks. If that means challenging the international order, or tearing up old trade agreements or upsetting the global elite, so be it.\n\nIn these early days, it is impossible to know how much of a revolutionary Donald Trump will be and how much ideology will inform his decision-making.\n\nHis chief strategist, Stephen Bannon is, on the other hand, deeply ideological.\n\nHe seeks a new political order, where sovereignty returns to nation states, where the West confronts the \"hateful ideology\" of radical Islam.\n\nIn the immediate future, President Trump is likely to continue with his confrontational style, believing it is popular with his core supporters.\n\nMany tests lie ahead. Not least is whether his policies will be followed through.\n\nWas the announcement about the wall with Mexico intended as a headline or is Mr Trump determined to build it with Mexican money?\n\nWill he really impose an import tax?\n\nWill he risk a trade and currency war with China?\n\nWill he move the American embassy in Israel to Jerusalem?\n\nWill he encourage anti-establishment parties in Europe?\n\nThe questions are many, and the answers few.\n\nTo those who have openly doubted the president's sanity in these churning, bruising opening days, a clear strategy emerges.\n\nThe president and his close advisers will pay scant attention to the outcry from their opponents.\n\nBut they will nurture those who gave him his majority in the electoral college and might again.\n\nIn two years, and by the time of the mid-term elections, the American public will deliver an initial verdict on Trumpism.\n\nMost importantly the Republican Party will be deciding whether it stays loyal to Mr Trump or whether it allows doubts and reservations to seep in, making Congress the obstacle to his presidency.", "One of the candidates in France's presidential election, Jean-Luc Melenchon, has launched his campaign as a hologram.\n\nThe veteran hard-left politician took to the stage in the flesh in Lyon while his three-dimensional image spoke simultaneously to another delighted audience in Paris, 500km (310 miles) away.\n\nMr Melenchon promotes the use of new technology as part of his \"citizen revolution\".\n\n\"Melenchon killed it for innovation in political communication this year,\" French radio station Europe 1 tweeted (in French).", "The New England Patriots complete the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history, courtesy of a Tom Brady performance \"for the ages\", beating the Atlanta Falcons 34-28, having trailed 28-3.\n\nWATCH MORE: Superb things from the Super Bowl\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nAlastair Cook has resigned as England Test captain after a record 59 matches in charge.\n\nThe 32-year-old Essex batsman took the role in August 2012 and led his country to Ashes victories in 2013 and 2015.\n\nHowever, during last year's 4-0 Test series defeat in India he admitted to having \"questions\" over his role.\n\n\"Stepping down has been an incredibly hard decision but I know this is the correct decision for me and at the right time for the team,\" said Cook.\n\n\"Playing for England really is a privilege and I hope to carry on as a Test player, making a full contribution and helping the next England captain and the team however I can.\"\n\nCook is England's highest run-scorer in Test cricket with 11,057, while his 140 Test appearances and 30 centuries are also England records.\n\nEngland and Wales Cricket Board director of cricket Andrew Strauss, who Cook replaced as captain, said his successor was owed \"a great debt of gratitude\" by his country.\n\n\"He's led the team with determination, conviction and a huge amount of pride over the last five years and his record stands for itself,\" added Strauss.\n\n\"He deserves to be seen as one of our country's great captains.\"\n\nIn a BBC Sport poll, 32% of voters think that Cook was one of England's best ever captains.\n\nThe ECB has started the process of selecting Cook's successor, with his fellow batsman Joe Root regarded as the favourite.\n\nStrauss said he hoped to make an appointment before England depart for a three-match one-day international series in the West Indies on 22 February, which will be led by limited-overs captain Eoin Morgan.\n\nThe team will only play limited-overs matches for the first half of 2017, with their next Test, against South Africa at Lord's, starting on 6 July.\n\nAfter the four-match South Africa series, England host the West Indies in three Tests in August and September before travelling to Australia for the Ashes in November.\n\nWhy has Cook stepped down?\n\nAccording to Cook's long-time mentor Graham Gooch, he was asked to make the decision now or wait until the end of this winter's Ashes tour.\n\nSpeculation over Cook's future first arose before the winter tour of India, when he said he was looking forward to a time when he was no longer captain.\n\nAlthough England gained a creditable draw in the first Test, their performances deteriorated.\n\nIn the fourth Test they became only the third side to lose by an innings after making 400 or more batting first, a result that sealed a series defeat and after which Cook said he thought Root was \"ready\" to lead.\n\nThe fifth Test saw the tourists again beaten by an innings after hitting 477 batting first, this time with India piling on 759-7, their highest Test total and the largest made by any side against England.\n\nIn the aftermath, former England batsman Geoffrey Boycott called on Cook to step aside, while ex-captain Michael Vaughan said he expected the opener to stand down.\n\nCook always maintained his future would be decided in a regular post-series debrief with Strauss.\n\nThe former team-mates met to discuss the India tour in January, but Cook had already indicated he would like more time to consider his position, with Strauss keen to give his old opening partner ample opportunity to come to a decision.\n\nHowever, despite being publicly backed to stay on by coach Trevor Bayliss and a number of players, the Essex batsman has opted to quit, informing ECB chairman Colin Graves of his decision on Sunday.\n\nAs England's highest Test run-scorer, Cook has always been admired for his batting, but there have always been questions, particularly over his tactics.\n\nHe has been stubborn - an excellent quality for an opening batsman, not always ideal in a captain - and largely cautious.\n\nThe most difficult time was in 2014, which began with the Ashes whitewash down under, moved on to the Kevin Pietersen saga and was followed by a home series defeat by Sri Lanka.\n\nCook's 2013 Ashes win as skipper is a highlight of his reign. So too, the triumph in South Africa in 2015-16 and the historic win in India in 2012.\n\nCook's winning percentage of 40.67 is only the fourth best of the six captains to have led England in more than 40 Tests. It has been an up-and-down ride.\n\nThe extended period of time taken to mull over his future shows that Cook has made the right decision for him. He will be incredibly comfortable with what lies ahead. That is likely to be scoring many more runs for England.\n\nRoot, who was Cook's vice-captain, made his England debut against India in 2012 and has won 53 caps.\n\nThe 26-year-old Yorkshireman is the overwhelming favourite to replace Cook, but England head coach Bayliss indicated last week that all options would be looked at.\n\nSpeaking to BBC Sport two weeks ago, Root said it was \"hard to say\" how he would deal with becoming England captain.\n\n\"I've got a lot of experience in Test cricket and it's one of those things that you learn on the job,\" he added.\n\nRoot said he would like Cook to remain in the Test team as \"whether as captain or not he will be a massive leader within the dressing room\".\n\nFormer England off-spinner Graeme Swann has said he is \"not convinced\" appointing Root would be the right decision.\n\n\"Root is the outstanding candidate, but you wouldn't want it to be a case of making your best player captain, only for it to backfire on you later,\" said Swann.\n\n\"I want him to concentrate on being the best player we have ever had, rather than having his talent curbed by the pressures of captaincy.\"\n\nCook was always seen as the heir to former captain Strauss, who retired in 2012.\n\nHis first job was to manage the return of batsman Kevin Pietersen, who had been left out of the England side over allegations he had sent derogatory texts messages about Strauss to members of the South Africa team.\n\nWith Pietersen back, Cook's first year in charge was a success, including a first Test series win in India for 27 years and the retaining of the Ashes on home soil.\n\nHowever, England were whitewashed 5-0 in the return series in Australia in 2013-14, after which England decided to end Pietersen's international career, a decision in which Cook played an influential role.\n\nWith Cook's form on the wane - at one point the left-hander went almost two years without a Test century - and England struggling, he came under immense pressure in the summer of 2014.\n\nAfter defeats by Sri Lanka at Headingley and India at Lord's, the likes of Vaughan and Alec Stewart, another former England captain, called for Cook to resign.\n\nCook, who later admitted he came close to quitting, revived his tenure with 95 against India at Southampton, an innings that set England on the way to a 3-1 series win.\n\nAlthough he was sacked as one-day captain in late 2014, he regained the Ashes in the summer of 2015 and led England to a 2-1 series victory in South Africa, the world's number one team at the time.\n\nIn the summer of 2016, he became the first England batsman to reach 10,000 Test runs and spoke of his desire to lead on the Ashes tour of 2017-18.\n\nHowever, he began speculation over his future with his comments before the India series.\n\nThe four defeats took him to 22 as captain, an England record, while eight Test losses in 2016 equals their worst calendar year.\n\nWhat they said\n\nCook's mentor Gooch, another former England captain, said he had told Cook to stay on.\n\n\"This type of sportsman only comes once in a generation, maybe less. He's a great man and he's still got great things to do for his country,\" Gooch told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\nFormer England bowler Matthew Hoggard said Cook would be remembered \"not only as a great leader but also as a genuinely nice bloke\" and his captaincy had \"evolved\" over time.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLeicester City goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel has said the Foxes could be relegated if their \"embarrassing\" Premier League title defence continues.\n\nThe Foxes are just one point above the relegation zone following Sunday's 3-0 defeat at home by Manchester United.\n\nLeicester are yet to win a league game in 2017 and have not scored in their previous five league outings.\n\n\"We're the reigning champions but quite frankly it's been terrible,\" Schmeichel told Sky Sports.\n\n\"Every player is hurting. It's not a situation that is comfortable. It's time for everyone to stand up and be counted because if we don't we're going to end up getting relegated.\"\n• None Listen: Mahrez 'really is lacking in confidence'\n\nAre the players behind Ranieri?\n\nThis time last year, Leicester won 3-1 at Manchester City to move five points clear at the top of the table and put them on course for an unexpected title.\n\nNow they are 38 points behind leaders Chelsea with reports suggesting manager Claudio Ranieri has lost the support of his players.\n\nSchemeichel would not comment on the speculation but Ranieri insisted his squad is behind him.\n\n\"We're together. I'm happy with the players and they're happy with me. We have to stay together and keep fighting,\" he said.\n\nLeicester full-back Christian Fuchs said the players must start to show more fight if they are to pull away from trouble.\n\n\"We keep our heads high, we have to fight as a team and give everything until the last game,\" he said.\n\n\"We have to stick together. We are not there to stick our head in the sand, we want to fight back.\"\n\nFormer England international Jermaine Jenas, speaking on Match of the Day 2, said: \"Watching the game against Manchester United, it was not a great performance, but I didn't see players downing tools, or players that had completely given up on a manager.\n\n\"I saw players low on confidence and not given much direction of where to play.\n\n\"In the stadium there seemed to be no atmosphere and the longer that continues, the more they will be in trouble.\"\n\nManchester United boss Jose Mourinho had sympathy for his counterpart's predicament.\n\nMourinho was sacked by Chelsea in December 2015, just seven months after winning the Premier League, and the Portuguese coach said Ranieri deserves respect for his achievement at Leicester.\n\n\"For many years people will remember what he did,\" he said.\n\n\"They are finding it difficult. But we know their strength well. I'm sure they will get enough points to stay in the league.\"\n\n'If not for title, Ranieri would be gone' - analysis\n\nEx-England defender Phil Neville, speaking on Match of the Day's Facebook Live, said: \"As much as last season was an absolute fairytale, they have got to get that out of their heads quickly because they are in a relegation battle.\n\n\"Everyone kept telling me of the qualities of Leicester last season but I have not seen any of that - the hard work, discipline.\n\n\"They must have been wracking their brains but what they have got to do is shape up. Ranieri has to take some of the blame and find a system that will get them results.\"\n\nJenas added: \"If Ranieri hadn't won the league last season he would have gone. He is in a tough spell. The fact the club are sticking with him is the right decision.\"\n\n'They are in serious trouble'\n\nNeville added on Match of the Day 2: \"With the fixtures they have got coming up, you can't see where their next three points are coming from.\n\n\"In the next eight games, if they pick up one win, they will be lucky and that's why I think they're in serious trouble.\n\n\"The barometer is not last season when they won the league - that was a one-off - the barometer is two seasons ago when they had 21 points and were bottom of the league and won seven of their last nine games. They will have to do something similar.\"", "Nico Rosberg says he would have liked Fernando Alonso to replace him as Lewis Hamilton's team-mate.\n\nThe German retired last November, five days after winning the title, and Mercedes have chosen former Williams driver Valtteri Bottas to replace him.\n\nAsked by Spain's Marca who he would have preferred, Rosberg said: \"Everyone says Alonso and I say it too because there would be fireworks with Hamilton.\n\n\"As a fan, it would be nice, but for the team it wouldn't work.\"\n\nRosberg, who has become a Mercedes ambassador after hanging up his helmet, said: \"They've found a great solution. Bottas is fast and though Hamilton will be at a very, very high level and it will be difficult to beat him, I have proved that he can.\"\n\nThis will be the first season F1 has not had the reigning champion competing on track since 1994, when Alain Prost retired after winning the title with Williams.\n\nRosberg said he was \"happier\" now he no longer has to battle against Hamilton and he said he would continue to attend some races this year.\n\nHe said: \"It's true, it's a little weird. It is not the first time it's happened, but without the two yeah, well... I'm going to be at some races. I want to go and be close to the sport, I love it and I'll be a fan from now on.\"\n\nHe dismissed suggestions Mercedes might have been angry with him for announcing his decision so late and forcing them to have to persuade another team to release a contracted driver.\n\n\"Angry?\" he said. \"No, they have a lot of respect for me and I appreciate it.\n\nHowever he admitted his relationship with non-executive chairman Niki Lauda, who has been critical of his decision in the media, was \" more complicated\".\n\n\"Though he seems angry in the press, with me he isn't,\" Rosberg said. \"He told me in person that he took off his hat to me. He's been very supportive after three very good years working together.\"", "Ciaran Maxwell was set upon and beaten unconscious as a teenager in Larne\n\nA Royal Marine Commando from Northern Ireland has pleaded guilty to preparing acts of terrorism linked to dissident republicanism. Ciaran Maxwell's case raises alarming questions of how he was able to penetrate the ranks of an elite British military unit and smuggle out arms.\n\nIn the early hours of a morning back in June 2002, Maxwell, then 16, was walking from his home in Larne towards the Seacourt estate, which sits on a hill overlooking the port. What happened next left the Catholic teenager \"angry and traumatised\", according to someone in the nationalist community who knew him.\n\nMaxwell was struck by a bottle, fell to the ground and was set upon and beaten unconscious by a gang of loyalists armed with golf clubs and iron bars.\n\nThe unprovoked attack featured in the republican newspaper An Phoblacht, which claimed that an Army patrol arrived at the scene but did not intervene.\n\nThat cannot be substantiated, though amid escalating tension in the town, soldiers were back on the streets to support the police who dealt with nearly 300 sectarian incidents between April 2001 and March 2004.\n\nA security source we spoke to recalled shootings, houses being burnt out and regular beatings.\n\nThis was the environment in which Maxwell - described as a \"quiet republican\" - became an adult.\n\nSeveral residents in his home town said the mental scars of his beating never fully healed, leaving a vulnerability that others would later exploit.\n\nThe failure of police to prosecute anyone for the assault may also have caused him bitterness.\n\nEight years later the adventure-loving, physically fit Maxwell began the gruelling 32-week training to become a Royal Marine, writing online: \"Pain is temporary, the Green Beret is forever.\"\n\nIn May 2011 his mother expressed her pride ahead of attending his passing out parade in England.\n\nBut all was not as it seemed. One of the men who completed training with Maxwell, and does not want to be identified, told the BBC: \"He was a strange character, very reserved, didn't join in with the banter.\"\n\nHe described him as \"shifty\" and unwilling to form close relationships with others in the unit.\n\nBefore he had even completed his training, court papers show that Maxwell began \"assisting another to commit an act of terrorism\" although it is not clear which individual or group he was working with.\n\nHe was not the only young man from Larne being drawn into the orbit of dissident republicanism.\n\nA friend from the Seacourt estate was jailed in 2014 after pleading guilty to possession of explosives with intent to endanger life. Niall Lehd had buried chemicals, a pipe bomb and a deactivated submachine gun in blue barrels in a field.\n\nBy 2016, despite having become a father, Maxwell had begun burying his own blue barrels full of explosive ingredients during visits to see family in Larne.\n\nSome of the ammunition discovered\n\nIn a country park, he stockpiled chemicals which he bought online, timer units and improvised detonators. Even more alarmingly, in a remote forest he hid a handgun, ammunition, pipe bombs and Claymore anti-personnel mines he had stolen from the British military.\n\nHis behaviour was becoming increasingly reckless as he built more hides in the woods near his home in Devon where he also stashed cannabis he planned to sell in Larne.\n\nIn his work locker were bank card details stolen from fellow Marines to carry out fraud and handwritten notes on tactics used by terrorist groups.\n\nBut his plans unravelled when police uncovered the hides in Northern Ireland in one of the most significant arms finds of recent years.\n\nDetectives traced the serial numbers on the mines across the Irish Sea to 40 Commando, the Royal Marine unit based near Taunton where Ciaran Maxwell had been quietly building a career. They also found his DNA on some of the material found in the woods.\n\nMaxwell had endured so much to get the green beret only to trade it for terrorism. Was his a long-planned infiltration or was he dragged back by others to a past he thought he had escaped?\n\nIn his hometown few are willing to talk on the record about his case. Larne is much calmer these days but the occasional street mural and flag hint at the continuing presence of loyalist paramilitary groups such as the Ulster Volunteer Force and the Ulster Defence Association.\n\nThere are concerns that dissident republicans are becoming more active in parts of Northern Ireland. Last month a police officer was shot and injured in north Belfast.\n\nAlthough Maxwell had links to dissident republicans, it is not known how extensive they were. A security source told the BBC that he was \"operating as a bit of a lone wolf.\"\n\nSammy Wilson, Democratic Unionist MP for East Antrim, said: \"There has always been a dissident group which has been operating around Larne engaged in firebombing, that kind of activity, and it's been known that they have been trying to move into the area and recruit.\"\n\nMr Wilson is concerned that Ciaran Maxwell was able to sneak munitions out of his base and evade detection for so long.\n\nHe said: \"Where it is clear that someone is vulnerable either to coercion or may well have sympathies to aid and abet terrorist groups because of their background, perhaps we should give special attention to them when they come back to their own community.\"\n\nThe BBC asked the Ministry of Defence about its security vetting procedures for Royal Marines but received no response.\n\nThe criminal case against Ciaran Maxwell was overwhelming, paving the way for today's guilty plea.\n\nWhat is much less clear is exactly why he turned to terrorism, although his actions offer a stark reminder of the dark forces that still threaten stability in Northern Ireland.", "Every day scores are migrants are using public buses to travel to the port of Calais from the only official camp near Dunkirk, the BBC has discovered.\n\nMany say they are hoping to stow away in lorries and enter the UK via Dover.", "Last updated on .From the section English Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One (watch with 5 live commentary on BBC Red Button and online from 16:30 GMT)\n\nEddie Jones will seek to address England's \"horrendous\" record in Cardiff before the Six Nations meeting with Wales on Saturday.\n\nEngland have won just two of their past seven visits to the Welsh capital and head coach Jones says the fixture has \"petrified\" previous Red Rose teams.\n\nJones' side set a new national record 15th consecutive victory after beating France in their opening game.\n\n\"I can't work out why our record in Wales is so poor,\" said Jones.\n• None Watch the latest highlights and videos from the Six Nations\n\nWales, who are top of the early Six Nations table after their 33-7 win against Italy, have won 36 of 61 home meetings against England - nearly 60%.\n\nJones added: \"There seems to be some sort of thing there because no-one can tell me why the English are petrified of playing Wales in Wales.\n\n\"I will talk to a few blokes who have played there to figure out what the problem is and why the record is so horrendous - because it is horrendous.\n\n\"Obviously it has been difficult for the English to cope with, so we need to find a way whereby they see it as being delightful.\"\n• None Get all the latest Six Nations news by adding", "It has been three long years in the making, but today it seems as if we have a resolution to the closure of Tube ticket offices.\n\nBoth have moved on to greater things but the hangover of that announcement has lasted until today.\n\nIt was one of the most radical changes in Tube history and 953 jobs were earmarked for closure.\n\nThe bosses tried to sweeten the pill on that day by announcing the Night Tube, but it was the job losses the unions really hated.\n\nFrom that day, there have been countless strikes, pickets, demonstrations, offers and counter offers over the issue of job cuts and safety.\n\nBut under the Tory mayor, Boris Johnson, the unions had given up striking as they were making very little headway.\n\nThe ticket offices shut in 2015 and the unions managed to get the number of lost staff down to 838.\n\nIn the mayoral election last year, the unions reinvigorated their campaign against the cuts and when Labour's Sadiq Khan took power he promised a review of the ticket office closures - carried out by London TravelWatch.\n\nCountless strikes, pickets and demonstrations have been held in the last three years\n\nIt found staff were not visible enough (but didn't comment on specific numbers) and it did not say ticket offices should be re-opened.\n\nHowever, crucially for the first time LU admitted they were short of staff.\n\nThat was the turning point and then it became a question of numbers.\n\nThe RMT and TSSA unions walked out on 9 January much to the annoyance of the new mayor whose promise of \"zero strikes\" evaporated.\n\nThis week that number rose - according to LU - to 325 with at least 200 of them being full-time.\n\nOn top of that 325 will be taken on as part of annual recruitment to match those leaving their jobs on the Tube. (The unions say 300 or so jobs are lost a year through retirement etc and there are already 70 unfilled posts.)\n\nSo, who can claim this as a victory?\n\nCertainly the unions are delighted. They have got more staff but it is some way short of the 838 laid off.\n\nLU said getting rid of 838 staff would save £50m a year. That saving will be reduced and now there is inevitably the question of affordability.\n\nTransport for London (TfL) is having to make big changes and big savings and there are job losses being made elsewhere.\n\nConservative London Assembly member Keith Prince says: \"Sadiq Khan has caved in and bought off the RMT by spending tens of millions of pounds on unnecessary jobs.\"\n\nBy recruiting in one area, bigger cuts will have to be made elsewhere. This though was a political and operational priority.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Sgt David Evans has offered to buy Ivy and cover the cost of replacing her\n\nMore than 15,000 people have signed a petition to allow a police dog to retire with her handler.\n\nSgt David Evans, from Shropshire, is \"heartbroken\" at the prospect of not being able to keep four-year-old Ivy when he retires, his daughter said.\n\nShe set up an online petition to gather support for her father, who is stepping down in April after 34 years' service.\n\nThe chief constable has \"made a direct offer\" to speak to Sgt Evans. Police dogs normally retire about age eight.\n\nSgt Evans, 59, has been told he will have to pass the animal - a Malinois cross German Shepherd - on to another handler to continue working, the family said.\n\nThe petition calling for Ivy to be allowed to retire with her handler has been signed by people from as far afield as Canada and New Zealand\n\nWest Mercia Police's chief constable has offered to speak to the officer personally about Ivy's future\n\nThe petition has been signed by people from as far afield as Canada and New Zealand. Daughter Jennie said the response was \"incredible\".\n\nShe said Sgt Evans, of Market Drayton, had offered to buy Ivy and cover the cost of replacing her.\n\nMs Evans said: \"Dad sacrificed many family moments with the support of his wife to enable him to undergo months of training with his police dogs.\n\n\"West Mercia need to show they appreciate these efforts and do not treat dogs as dispensable equipment that can be 'handed down' to other people.\"\n\nWest Mercia Police said Chief Constable Anthony Bangham \"recognises the unique bond between an officer and his dog and has made a direct offer to speak to the officer personally about this\".\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A bright meteor streaked across skies over US Midwestern states early on Monday morning.\n\nHundreds of witnesses reported seeing the glowing object, which was visible in seven US states and Ontario, Canada, according to the American Meteor Society.\n\nThe fireball was also reportedly accompanied by a sonic boom that rattled homes in the area.", "\"When was the last time you thought of taking your partner for a nice weekend in Frankfurt?\".\n\nThat was one of the more memorable lines of a heavy sales pitch from politicians and business leaders from Paris. A raiding party touched down in London this morning determined to cart off billions in business and tens of thousands of jobs to the French capital in the weeks and months ahead.\n\nValerie Pecresse - President of the region including Paris and its environs, and a former budget minister under Nicolas Sarkozy - led the party, and told a group of senior finance executives from heavyweights such as Blackrock, Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse why Paris was the natural choice for any business they moved out of London.\n\nTo be fair to Mme Pecresse, the brochure she presented had more to it than Paris being très agréable. She described the competition for London business as fierce and came armed accordingly.\n\nA 28% top rate of income tax for expat executives for a period of eight years (recently extended from five). That compares to a top rate of 45% in the UK.\n\nCommercial rents one-third the price of London - with millions of square feet currently unoccupied.\n\nA deep pool of talent - a lot of which, she joked, is currently in London.\n\nTwo international schools and a plan for two more near the business areas of Paris.\n\nSome companies in the City of London have already said staff may have to move abroad\n\nFour of the six biggest continental European banks are French and based in Paris.\n\nThe brochure was glossy and the tone was friendly - apart from the odd sideswipe at arch rival Frankfurt. But there were two issues the political and business leaders from across La Manche struggled with.\n\nBankers I spoke to afterwards said that one big turn off remains how difficult it is to fire people in France. That really matters for banks. As their staff are so well paid, when business slumps they need to reduce their biggest cost - people - quickly. Working in finance is profitable but it can be brutal.\n\nThe other issue was politics.\n\nThe delegation arrived on the same day as the man who thought he would be president, Francois Fillon, was fighting for his political life after paying his wife over half a million euros for work she may or may not have done.\n\nEconomic nationalism, the political wind that many say secured Brexit and the Trump presidency, is packing a punch in France with Marine Le Pen promising French jobs for French workers. Tax breaks for rich expats and looser employment protection sit uneasily with those priorities.\n\nThe future of the UK's relationship with the EU is maddeningly vague to most business leaders, but if it's political uncertainty you don't like - why would you ever pick France?\n\nMadame Pecresse and her entourage insisted that the political uncertainty would be gone after the elections on 7 May. She said she was convinced that whoever was in charge, \"HE\"(sic) would be pro-business.\n\nThe same folks who told us Donald Trump couldn't win and that Brexit would never happen agree with her.\n\nOne member of the raiding party told us why the pundits were right about France. Jean-Louis Missika, the Deputy Mayor of Paris for economic development, told the BBC that \"because France has embraced globalisation with more care for our workers, the backlash will be less severe\".\n\nThe Parisian ambition is to tempt 10,000 direct employees and further 20,000 indirect employees to Paris. When bankers move, they tend to take law, accounting, office management, sandwich making and dry cleaning jobs with them.\n\nThose are pretty modest ambitions when you consider over a million people work in financial services in the UK - a third of them in London. Modest, but perhaps realistic. The good news for Paris is that they are already 10% of the way there.\n\nHSBC has already said it will move 1,000 jobs to Paris.\n\nIt seems unlikely they will be the only newcomers to succumb to its charms.", "When her daughter, Thalya, was diagnosed with chronic kidney disease, Chantal Onelien's initial reaction was shock. But, as Adam Harris reports, it was only the beginning of a long and difficult fight.\n\nThalya, then only 13 years old, would need to begin dialysis immediately, and she would also need a new kidney.\n\nThe family set out on what became a two-year journey of dialysis appointments, meetings with doctors and trying to provide Thalya a normal childhood.\n\n\"You make it work, so that it doesn't seem like doom and gloom,\" Onelien told the BBC.\n\nEvery ten minutes in the United States, someone is added to the national transplant list. Roughly 119,000 total people are on the list as of early February 2017, and almost 100,000 of those are waiting for a kidney. There are not nearly enough organ donors - living or deceased - to trim that figure.\n\nBut for the Oneliens, an African-American family, the odds were even greater.\n\nIn 2016, African Americans accounted for 30% of the overall organ donation waiting list, and 33% of the kidney list, despite being only 13% of the US population.\n\nA black organ recipient doesn't have to have a black donor. But they would be more likely to have a successful match - based on certain genetic markers and antibodies - if more black donors were available. The percentage of black Americans who donate organs has risen since 1988, but there is still an outsized need.\n\nFaced with these odds, the Oneliens started a social media campaign, using the hashtag #KidneyForThalya on Twitter, and a Facebook page that called for donations, shared inspirational stories of successful transplants and posted educational material about organ donation.\n\nChantal Onelien is familiar with some of the reasons why African Americans might not want to donate, including a distrust of doctors. \"People sometimes believe that not only will they not try to save your life, but will try to use your organs as experiments,\" she says.\n\n\"And it's hard to defuse some of that thinking - to debunk and demystify it.\"\n\nMistrust of the medical community among African Americans is not uncommon, and not without historical justification.\n\nIn the Tuskegee syphilis experiment, black men in Alabama were promised free medical care, and then unknowingly signed up for a long-term research study into the effects of syphilis. When a cure became available, the men were denied treatment so that the study could continue.\n\nHenrietta Lacks went to John Hopkins for cervical cancer treatment, where a doctor took samples from her cervix and used them to develop one of the most-used cell research lines - all without her permission or knowledge.\n\nDerek DuBay, chief transplant surgeon at the Medical University of South Carolina, believes there is much more at play than just mistrust in the medical community.\n\nSo Dr DuBay, alongside a team of researchers, used surveys and focus groups to find out why there was a such a disparity between black and white donors. They found many African Americans cited fear that their organs would not be usable due to high blood pressure, heart disease and other prevalent ailments in the black community.\n\nThe researchers concluded that often, it's a simple matter of educating people about organ donation.\n\n\"We need to enhance education to let them know that a lot of times these organs are acceptable for transplant,\" Dr DuBay says. \"And even though the heart might not be good for transplant,\" another organ might be.\n\n\"While there may be mistrust in the African-American community surrounding organ donation,\" Dr Wilder says, \"it is not a barrier to the extent that lack of education or access is\".\n\nAccess, Dr Wilder says, is key to driving both living and deceased donations.\n\n\"Minorities are more likely to live in places with less economic and healthcare resources.\n\n\"This is a vicious cycle that feeds on itself because these resource poor environments make people sicker and they often have greater need for organ transplantation.\"\n\nThe treatment centre helped by providing activities like music and entertainment during dialysis, Onelien says, making it seem less like a chore\n\nThe lack of access is found in both rural communities and urban centres in close proximity to transplantation hospitals.\n\n\"If you do not have health insurance or strong social support resources,\" he says, meaning both emotional and tangible support, such as money or childcare, \"you will not have access to transplantation\".\n\nDonor advocates are now trying to steer kidney donors of all races towards living donations.\n\nJosh Morrison and Thomas Kelly were both living donors. They started Waitlist Zero to educate the general public abut living donation and chip away at the growing waitlist.\n\nOrgans such as kidneys, segments of the liver, and portions of the pancreas and intestine can be donated with the donor continuing to live a healthy life.\n\nUnfortunately, African Americans are the least likely group to receive a kidney donation from a living donor. But Mr Morrison hopes public education campaigns can change that.\n\n\"If you ask people who've donated, they get this surge of just purpose and energy,\" Chantal Onelien says. \"It's like, 'Wow, I saved someone's life'.\"\n\nIn June, the Obama administration announced several measures it was taking to address the overall waiting list, including $200m for research and development, and promoting new technology to make registering as an organ donation easier.\n\nOn 19 November, the Oneliens got the call - there was a deceased donor and kidney for Thalya. The family spent 33 days in hospital, after minor complications led to more procedures than anticipated. Just days before Christmas, they went home.\n\nWith Thalya in recovery, the Oneliens are now looking forward to the future.\n\nWhen asked whether they planned to continue to raise awareness about organ donation, Chantal Onelien says: \"Absolutely. Now more than ever.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nRussia will miss this summer's World Championships after athletics' governing body voted to extend their suspension from international competition for state-sponsored doping.\n\nHowever, some Russians may be able to compete under a neutral banner, if they can satisfy testing criteria.\n\nRussia was suspended by the IAAF in November 2015, meaning athletes missed the Rio Olympics last year.\n\nThe country is now not expected to be fully reinstated until November.\n\nLondon will host the World Championships between 4-13 August.\n\nThe decision to extend Russia's suspension came at an IAAF Council meeting in Monaco on Monday.\n\nIndependent chairman of the IAAF Taskforce, Rune Andersen, told the council that the Russian Track and Field Federation (Rusaf) was unlikely to be reinstated until the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) declared the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (Rusada) code-compliant, probably in November.\n\nHowever, the taskforce said concerns still exist about drug-testing procedures in Russia.\n\nMore than 1,000 Russian athletes were part of a state-sponsored doping programme between 2011 and 2015, according to the McLaren report, commissioned by Wada and published in December.\n\nAthletes who can follow strict IAAF criteria and show they are clean may be allowed to compete - but not under a Russian flag. The IAAF said so far this year, 35 Russians had applied to compete as neutrals.\n\nAt the meeting, IAAF president Lord Coe also said that all nationality switches by athletes would be frozen.\n\nHe said the current rules were \"no longer fit for purpose\" and new proposals would be written up.\n\nAndersen said that there is still limited testing of Russian track and field at a national level and there continued to be \"troubling incidents\", although the situation is improving.\n\nHowever, he said that in January 2017:\n• None Five athletes had withdrawn from a national competition after hearing that drug testing would be taking place;\n• None Bottles being shipped to foreign laboratories for testing were opened and screened in at least one case;\n• None Russian authorities have refused to release samples that have been screened in Moscow so the IAAF can test them further;\n• None Testers are still being denied access to 'closed cities' - military facilities where some athletes train.\n\n\"Our priority is to return clean athletes to competition but we must all have confidence in the process,\" said Briton Coe.\n\n\"Clean Russian athletes have been badly let down by their national system. We must ensure they are protected and that those safeguards give confidence to the rest of the world that there is a level playing field of competition when Russians return.\"\n\nHow can Russia compete again?\n\nThe IAAF has put together a \"roadmap\" that Russia must follow before athletes can once again take part in international competition. It includes:\n• None Russia providing an \"appropriate official response\" addressing points raised in the McLaren report;\n• None Drug testing being \"carried out without any further adverse incidents or difficulties\";\n• None Rusada being reinstated as \"a truly autonomous, independent and properly resourced national anti-doping organisation\".\n\nAthletes are now banned from changing nationalities following a proposal by Coe, who said athletics was \"vulnerable\" to the practice.\n\n\"It has become abundantly clear with regular multiple transfers of athletes, especially from Africa, that the present rules are no longer fit for purpose,\" he said.\n\nThe IAAF Council was told African talent was effectively being put up for sale to different nations.\n\nHamad Kalkaba Malboum, Africa area group representative on the IAAF Council, said: \"The present situation is wrong. What we have is a wholesale market for African talent open to the highest bidder.\n\n\"Lots of the individual athletes concerned, many of whom are transferred at a young age, do not understand that they are forfeiting their nationality.\"\n\nAt December's European Cross Country Championships, the top two finishers in both the senior men's and women's races were Kenya-born athletes representing Turkey.", "Canada's Denis Shapovalov said he was \"incredibly ashamed and embarrassed\" after he was defaulted for hitting the umpire with a ball - handing Great Britain Davis Cup victory in Ottawa.\n\nThe 17-year-old had just dropped serve to trail Kyle Edmund 6-3 6-4 2-1 when he angrily hit the ball out of court.\n\nIt struck French umpire Arnaud Gabas in the eye and a default followed.\n\n\"Luckily he was OK but obviously it's unacceptable behaviour from me,\" said Wimbledon junior champion Shapovalov.\n\n\"I just feel awful for letting my team down, for letting my country down, for acting in a way that I would never want to act.\n\n\"I can promise that's the last time I will do anything like that. I'm going to learn from this and try to move past it.\"\n\nThe World Group first-round tie was poised at 2-2 after Vasek Pospisil beat Dan Evans to set up a decider, but Canada's hopes ended when Shapovalov let frustration get the better of him.\n\nHe later apologised to Gabas in the referee's office before the Frenchman headed to Ottawa General Hospital for a precautionary evaluation on bruising and swelling to his left eye.\n\nThe International Tennis Federation (ITF) said in a statement it was \"clear that Mr Shapovalov did not intend to hit Mr Gabas\".\n\nReferee Brian Earley has the power to impose a fine of up to $12,000 (£9,600) and the ITF might significantly increase that fine, and suspend Shapovalov from future ties.\n\nGB captain Leon Smith said: \"Unfortunately for the young lad this is going to get an awful lot of attention.\n\n\"This will be looked at closely and it should be as it is dangerous. Whether it's an umpire or a young kid who's at the side of the court, that really could be a serious injury, so I'm sure it will be dealt with swiftly and pretty firmly.\"\n\nBritain go on to face an away tie in France from 7-9 April - a repeat of the 2015 quarter-final in London that Britain won on their way to regaining the title for the first time in 79 years.\n\nWe don't know yet how the umpire's eye is but we could see it was already closing. You don't know about permanent damage until he sees the doctor.\n\nIt's devastating for Shapovalov. He let himself down, he let his country down. He could have caused serious damage to the umpire. He will realise that he can't do that sort of thing again and he's going to get a lot of trouble in the press for this, quite rightly so because he deserves it, but he will rebound.\n\nIf you look to the brighter side we've seen some undoubted talent in him, if he can just control it a little bit. There's nothing wrong with getting emotional - we've seen great champions like John McEnroe get emotional - but you can't go to that extent and he'll have to curb it a little bit.", "David Hockney has told the BBC he's \"not that good, but not that terrible either\", as the Tate Britain puts on the biggest ever retrospective of the artist's work.\n\nHe spoke to the BBC's arts editor Will Gompertz.", "The Eagle Huntress, a documentary about a Kazakh nomad girl in Mongolia learning to hunt with a golden eagle, divides opinion. It is up for a Bafta award on Sunday night but missed out on an Oscar nomination, possibly because to some viewers it feels staged. Director Otto Bell, however, denies all accusations that the film was scripted, acted or re-enacted.\n\nThe story of the Eagle Huntress is simple and heartwarming. Aisholpan Nurgaiv, the rosy-cheeked 13-year-old heroine, is trained by her father to hunt on horseback with a golden eagle - traditionally a male pursuit - and shocks everyone by winning the prestigious eagle-hunters' competition held annually in the town of Ulgii, in north-western Mongolia.\n\nIt has a stirring musical soundtrack, ends with an anthem \"You can do anything\" sung by pop superstar Sia, and is narrated by another teenage role model, Star Wars actress Daisy Ridley.\n\nOne reviewer has described it as a \"fairytale documentary\" - two words that don't usually go together - that feels at times \"more like fiction than fact\".\n\nAnother calls it a \"repetitious, half-baked, contrived and crudely staged homily on female empowerment [that] tells us less about Kazakh nomads than Pocahontas does about the Algonquins in 17th Century Virginia\". The film took another culture's traditions, he goes on, and translated them \"into the tired platitudes of a second-rate Disney animation\".\n\nEarly publicity for the film did little to inspire confidence, by stating that Aisholpan had fought \"an ingrained culture of misogyny to become the first female eagle hunter in 2,000 years of male-dominated history\" - a claim that US historian Adrienne Mayor has shown is untrue.\n\nThis line was recast to say that Aisholpan is \"the first female in 12 generations of her Kazakh family\" to be an eagle huntress. But Mayor and others still argue that the film creates a false impression, by failing to mention other Kazakh eagle huntresses, and exaggerating the patriarchal pressures that Aisholpan had to overcome.\n\n\"I think eagle hunting would be open to any young woman who would want to pursue it,\" Mayor says.\n\nAdrienne Mayor's paper, The Eagle Huntress - Ancient Traditions and New Generations, mentions a number of Kazakh women who have trained or are training to hunt with eagles\n\nThe spark for the film came when director Otto Bell came across photographs of Aisholpan taken by Israeli photographer Asher Svidensky on the BBC News website, in April 2014.\n\nHe tracked Aisholpan's family down (being nomads, they move around) and on the very first day, he says, filmed one of the early scenes in the film, where the girl and her father seize a baby eaglet from its nest. It's a dramatic moment with Aisholpan climbing down a cliff, her father holding a rope attached to her waist. And it's one of a number of scenes that some critics have assumed was staged.\n\n\"The scene where she takes the baby eagle out of the nest - people are always surprised to know that's one single take. I filmed it like I would film a live sports event,\" he says.\n\n\"I did it drawing on my experience in commercials. As far as reconstructing stuff and staging stuff, what you see on the screen is what we got.\"\n\nAnother scene that sceptics find questionable comes when Aisholpan's father, Agalai, gets his own father to give his blessing to Aisholpan's eagle-hunting ambitions. The shot is framed and the camera is rolling when the conversation between the two men takes place outside the tent, and the girl is summoned to receive the old man's good wishes.\n\nWas it staged? No, says Bell.\n\n\"The blessing scene - he said he was going to do this, I just asked him to do it outside. He told me: 'We need to think about what my father thinks of this.' The father likes to sit outside anyway, he likes to watch the goats. That was as close [to staging] as we got.\"\n\nOtto Bell (centre) with Aisholpan's parents at the Ajyal film festival in Doha in December\n\nThere are other moments that critics grumble about. Tim Robey in the Telegraph describes as \"woefully unspontaneous\" a scene where a newsreader on the radio in the family's tent is heard talking about the forthcoming eagle festival, and Aisholpan pipes up to plead with her parents for permission to enter.\n\nIt's \"engineered storytelling\" he says. \"You feel sorry for her enacting some of these charades.\"\n\nWill Dunn in the New Statesman is also bothered by the film's \"re-enactment and editorialising\", though he notes that without the imposed girl-power narrative it's \"a film about the fox-hunting techniques of Mongolian Kazakhs, a subject that is not exactly a banker at the box office\". He also accepts it would have been a shame if Aisholpan's world had not been revealed to a wider audience.\n\nNigel Andrews in his review in the Financial Times last December wrote that the action and dialogue seemed \"a little set up\". He was particularly suspicious of a montage of grumpy elderly men filmed tut-tutting over the idea of a woman taking up eagle hunting. But while the academic Adrienne Mayor suggests Bell went searching for these naysayers in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, in Andrews' latest article about the film Bell says he just went round knocking on elders' doors, and all openly voiced disapproval. So he put them in the film.\n\nMeghan Fitz-James, a Canadian traveller who spent time with Aisholpan's family, also says that one scene showing Aisholpan training for the eagle festival was in fact shot three days later, in a four-hour shoot with coaching and retakes.\n\nBut the fundamentals of the film are confirmed by Aisholpan herself.\n\n\"I started to train when I was 10 years old, going into the mountains with my dad,\" she told the BBC, while passing through Ulan Bator recently. \"I told my dad that I wanted to become an eagle huntress.\"\n\nThat was in 2011 - two or three years before Svidensky arrived on the scene - and she wasn't just training with the eagle, she was already hunting too, she says.\n\nAisholpan also confirms that she was aware some men thought a girl was not strong enough to hold an eagle, that she should stay at home, and would not be able to stand the cold hunting for hours in winter in the Altai mountains.\n\n\"The pressure gave me more will and power. It gave me the inspiration to win,\" she says.\n\nBut the curmudgeonly views of these mostly elderly men were not expressed at the eagle festival, where officials and competitors were supportive, she says. After her win in 2014 (captured on film) she was greeted by loud cheers when she competed again in 2015 and 2016.\n\nWatching the film, a cynical viewer may fear that Aisholpan has been coached when she says: \"Girls can do anything if they try.\" But she says the same thing off-screen too: \"I am happy that I have won a man's competition. It shows how strong women are.\"\n\nWho would not be proud, in her position, to have beaten grown men with years of eagle-hunting experience? Any telling of her story would carry a female empowerment message, even if this film does milk it for all its worth.\n\nDespite her criticisms of the film, the historian Adrienne Mayor agrees that Aisholpan is a worthy heroine.\n\n\"Her bravery and her feats in that eagle hunting contest are really amazing and inspiring,\" she says. \"That would have been enough in the film.\"\n\nAdditional reporting by Grace Brown in Ulan Bator, and Mike Wendling in London\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "In Perth, striker Moussa Dembele completes his hat-trick in a 5-2 win for Celtic over St Johnstone with a goal that came at the end of 24 passes involving every member of the Celtic team.\n\nPlease note, available to UK users only.", "Alastair Cook never had it easy. He's had the toughest ride of all recent England captains.\n\nAs England's highest Test run-scorer he has always been admired for his batting, but there have always been questions, particularly over his tactics, during his 59-match reign as skipper, which he ended on Monday.\n\nIn a funny way, the constant criticism forced him to improve, to reflect on the things he had not done well and to try new things. I put this to him once and he laughed it off, but I still disagree.\n\nHe has been stubborn - an excellent quality for an opening batsman, not always ideal in a captain - and largely cautious, which is hardly surprising considering his mentor was predecessor Andrew Strauss, another skipper that favoured the attritional approach.\n\nThe most difficult time for Cook was in 2014, which began with the Ashes whitewash down under, moved on to the Kevin Pietersen saga and was followed by a home series defeat by Sri Lanka.\n\nHe found a measure of redemption in the subsequent victory over the touring India side, but the year still ended with him being sacked as one-day captain.\n\nTo this day, he thinks that was the wrong decision, but he is in a minority. He was no longer worth his place in the side and he had to go. It also may have aided England's bid to regain the Ashes in 2015, which few at the time gave them much hope of doing. That success, to go with Cook's 2013 Ashes win as skipper is a highlight of his reign. So too, the triumph in South Africa in 2015-16 and the historic win in India in 2012, England's first there in 27 years. Time will prove what a good result that was - England are miles away from doing it again.\n\nBut there were also the disappointments. As well as the thumping in Australia and the loss to Sri Lanka, there was a defeat by India at Lord's on a made-to-order green seamer and a 1-1 draw away to a poor West Indies team.\n\nCook's winning percentage of 40.67 is only the fourth best of the six captains to have led England in more than 40 Tests. The two skippers with a worse record, Michael Atherton and Nasser Hussain, did not have the world-class talents of Pietersen, Graeme Swann, James Anderson and Stuart Broad, or the emerging Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Jonny Bairstow at their disposal. It has been an up-and-down ride.\n\nWill Cook be defined by the way in which Pietersen's international career was ended? The two men will inevitably always be linked, but that would be to ignore the fact that Cook welcomed Pietersen back into the England side when many captains in his position could have quite easily taken the opposite stance.\n\nWhen Cook took over in 2012, Pietersen was in exile for his part in text messages sent to the South Africa team about former skipper Strauss. Cook oversaw Pietersen's 'reintegration' and the star batsman responded, playing a pivotal role in that triumph in India.\n\nBut, as we now know, the relationship deteriorated on the fateful tour of Australia a year later, with Cook eventually having a hand in Pietersen's international career being ended.\n\nSome will say that there was nothing that Cook could have done, others will think that the captain should have seen those problems approaching and done more to manage them.\n\nWhat is unarguable is that the vitriol that Cook faced on social media from certain individuals in the aftermath of the Pietersen affair was nasty, personal and uncalled for.\n\nViews were expressed, most of them by people who do not know Cook. Lots of them were depressing.\n\nIndeed, it could be said that he was the first man to serve as England captain in a world that has been fully gripped by social media - though Cook himself has no interest in putting his views out online or anywhere else.\n\nAt the time, I thought he was getting some very rough treatment over the Pietersen issue and I was happy to say so publicly. Maybe because he saw me as an ally, we have always had a very good working relationship during his time as captain.\n\nI have interviewed him well in excess of 100 times and can say that he is not a natural speaker. He sees media responsibilities as something to be endured rather than enjoyed.\n\nThere have been times when we have agreed, others when we have disagreed and when I have criticised him. The task of being honest about a player, but fair enough that they will still speak when you put a microphone under their nose, is a tightrope a sports journalist must walk.\n\nWe have also had our moments of fun.\n\nJust on this last tour of India, I was cajoled into having a pedicure by an Indian barber. Who should walk in, but Cook, complete with camera. He took great delight in showing the photo to everyone he could find, as well as making sure he got it out to the world. I let him enjoy that one.\n\nAnd so he departs. For Cook, the nature of the end of his tenure as captain very much reflects the type of man he is.\n\nThere was no chucking it all in at the end of the fifth Test against India, a shambles in Chennai. That's not his style. Like his batting, he was patient, he weighed it all up and considered his options. He went back to his farm and away from cricket, he no doubt had many conversations with his wife Alice. They really are a team and it was Alice who talked Cook out of stepping down in 2014.\n\nThis, though, is different. The extended period of time taken to mull over his future shows that Cook has made the right decision for him.\n\nHe will be incredibly comfortable with what lies ahead. That is likely to be scoring many more runs for England.", "Some of Southern's drivers say they are not happy with the deal\n\n\"It's two weeks of my life I'll never get back. But we finally got there.\"\n\nBizarrely, the bosses of both sides said exactly the same thing to me when I interviewed them last week, moments after they'd announced a deal to resolve the worst of the Southern rail strikes.\n\nMick Whelan from Aslef and Nick Brown from GTR (Southern's parent company) looked shattered but pleased with their agreement.\n\nBut was everyone cracking the champagne corks too soon?\n\nAslef's 1,000 or so drivers still need to vote on the deal and there are possible signs that they might just kick it out.\n\nI spoke to a couple of Southern's train drivers over the weekend and they were not happy.\n\nOne wrote this to me: \"GTR, 'We will agree to carry on doing exactly what we want.' Aslef, 'OK, we'll agree to that then.'\"\n\nStrikes on the Southern network caused chaos for passengers\n\nHe went on: \"I'm very much of the opinion it will be a resounding 'no' vote (when members vote). The feeling is the union has sold us out.\"\n\nAnother driver also said that everyone he'd spoken to will vote no to the deal, again saying that they felt let down and that the company had got away with it.\n\nHe even suggested that some of his colleagues might leave Aslef and join the RMT union instead. The RMT is still in dispute with Southern over the same issue and was vitriolic about the deal over the weekend.\n\nTrue, this is just the opinion of two drivers who've been chatting to their colleagues. But it suggests some anger at what they are being asked to sign up to.\n\nI understand that there is going to be a meeting in Brighton on Tuesday, where Aslef reps will try to sell the deal to members. It's bound to be frosty.\n\nAslef general secretary Mick Whelan says the deal was discussed in \"good faith\"\n\nAll of this doesn't necessarily mean that Aslef's drivers will vote against the agreement. When I interviewed Mick Whelan last week he told me: \"I'm not in the habit of making deals that my members don't like.\"\n\nThen there are the London members who already use driver-only-operated trains and may not feel as strongly over this crunch issue.\n\nPlus, Aslef doesn't pay members during industrial action, and the double whammy of losing strike-day pay plus overtime may be enough to cut their appetite for a fight.\n\nIf the drivers do vote against the deal though, it's hard to see where the next breakthrough in this dispute might come. If two weeks of \"incredibly intense\" negotiation at the TUC can't solve it, what can?\n\nIf Aslef drivers vote no to the deal, could more strikes lie ahead?\n\nPresumably, Aslef would be forced to call more crippling strikes, which would also turn up the heat on the government to take over either part or all of this troublesome, complex behemoth of a franchise. I can tell you, ministers are not keen to seize control.\n\nMeanwhile, the RMT union, which represents the guards/conductors, has vowed to keep fighting. Their strikes don't have the same impact as Aslef's, with the last one only knocking out around 30% of services.\n\nBut even that might change if their angry Aslef colleagues decide not to cross picket lines.\n\nAnyway, we should know all on 16 February when the ballot result comes back.\n\nThe worst may not be over for beleaguered Southern passengers.", "Back in the mid-1990s, an economist called William Nordhaus conducted a series of simple experiments with light.\n\nFirst, he used a prehistoric technology: he lit a wood fire.\n\nBut Prof Nordhaus also had a piece of hi-tech equipment with him - a Minolta light meter.\n\nHe burned 20lb (9kg) of wood, kept track of how long it burned for and carefully recorded the dim, flickering firelight with his meter.\n\nNext, he bought a Roman oil lamp, fitted it with a wick, and filled it with cold-pressed sesame oil.\n\nHe lit the lamp and watched the oil burn down, again using the light meter to measure its soft, even glow.\n\nBill Nordhaus's open wood fire had burned for just three hours on 9kg of wood.\n\nBut a mere eggcup of oil burned all day, and more brightly and controllably.\n\nHe wanted to understand the economic significance of the light bulb.\n\nBut Prof Nordhaus also wanted to illuminate a difficult issue for economists: how to keep track of inflation, the changing cost of goods and services.\n\n50 Things That Made the Modern Economy highlights the inventions, ideas and innovations that helped create the economic world.\n\nTo see why this is difficult, consider the price of travelling from - say - Lisbon in Portugal to Luanda in Angola.\n\nWhen that journey was first made, by Portuguese explorers, it would have been an epic expedition, possibly taking months.\n\nLater, by steam ship, it would have taken a few days; then, by plane, a few hours.\n\nAn economic historian could start by tracking the price of passage on the ship, but once an air route has opened up, which price do you look at?\n\nMaybe you simply switch to the airline ticket price once more people start flying than sailing.\n\nBut flying is a different service - faster, more convenient.\n\nIf more travellers are willing to pay twice as much to fly, it hardly makes sense for inflation statistics to record that the cost of the journey has suddenly doubled.\n\nIt was to raise this question over the way we measure inflation that Bill Nordhaus started fooling around with wood fires, oil lamps and light meters.\n\nProf Nordhaus found the Roman oil lamp offered much better light\n\nHe wanted to unbundle the cost of a single quality that humans have cared deeply about since time immemorial, using the state-of-the-art technology of different ages: illumination.\n\nLight is measured in lumens, or lumen-hours.\n\nA candle gives off 13 lumens while it burns.\n\nA typical modern light bulb is almost 100 times brighter than that.\n\nImagine gathering and chopping wood 10 hours a day for six days.\n\nThose 60 hours of work would produce 1,000 lumen hours of light.\n\nThat is the equivalent of one modern light bulb shining for just 54 minutes, although what you would actually get is many more hours of dim, flickering light instead.\n\nOf course, light is not the only reason to burn fires: they also help keep you warm, cook your food and scare off wild animals.\n\nIf you just needed light and a wood fire was your only option, you might decide to wait until the Sun comes up.\n\nThousands of years ago, better options came along - candles from Egypt and Crete, and oil lamps from Babylon.\n\nTheir light was steadier and more controllable, but still prohibitively expensive.\n\nIn a diary entry of May 1743, the president of Harvard University, the Reverend Edward Holyoake, noted that his household had spent two days making 78lb (35kg) of tallow candles.\n\nSix months later, he noted: \"Candles all gone.\"\n\nAnd those were the summer months.\n\nNor were these the clean-burning paraffin wax candles we use today.\n\nThe wealthiest could afford beeswax, but most people - even the Harvard president - used tallow candles, stinking, smoking sticks of animal fat.\n\nMaking them involved heating up animal fat and dipping and re-dipping wicks into the molten lard.\n\nIt was pungent and time-consuming work.\n\nA tallow chandler dips a frame of candles into a bath of liquid fat\n\nAccording to Prof Nordhaus's research, if you set aside one whole week a year to spend 60 hours devoted exclusively to making candles - or earning the money to buy them - that would enable you to burn a single candle for just two hours and 20 minutes every evening.\n\nThings improved a little as the 18th and 19th Centuries unfolded.\n\nCandles were made of spermaceti - the milk-hued oily gloop harvested from dead sperm whales.\n\nAmerican founding father Ben Franklin loved the strong, white light they gave off, and the way they \"may be held in the hand, even in hot weather, without softening\", and noted that they \"last much longer\".\n\nWhile the new candles were pleasing, they were also pricey.\n\nGeorge Washington calculated that burning a single spermaceti candle for five hours a night all year would cost him £8, or well over $1,000 (£820) in today's money.\n\nA few decades later, gas lamps and kerosene lamps helped to lower costs.\n\nThey also saved the sperm whale from extinction.\n\nBut they, too, were basically an expensive hassle.\n\nThey dripped, smelt and set fire to things.\n\nThat something was the light bulb.\n\nBy 1900, one of Thomas Edison's carbon filament bulbs would provide you with 10 days of bright, continuous illumination, 100 times as bright as a candle, for the money you could earn with our 60-hour week of hard labour.\n\nBy 1920, that same week of labour would pay for more than five months' continuous light from tungsten filament bulbs.\n\nBy 1990, it was 10 years.\n\nA couple of years after that, thanks to compact fluorescent bulbs, it was more than five times longer.\n\nThe labour that had once produced the equivalent of 54 minutes of quality light now produced 52 years.\n\nAnd modern LED lights continue to get cheaper and cheaper.\n\nSwitch off a light bulb for an hour and you are saving illumination that would have cost our ancestors all week to create.\n\nIt would have taken Benjamin Franklin's contemporaries all afternoon.\n\nBut someone in a rich industrial economy today could earn the money to buy that illumination in a fraction of a second.\n\nAnd of course, unlike oil lamps and candles, modern light bulbs are clean, fire-safe and controllable.\n\nThe light bulb has become an icon of innovation.\n\nIt has transformed our society into one where we can work, read, sew or play whenever we want to, regardless of how dark the night has become.\n\nBut the price of light alone tells a fascinating story: it has fallen by a factor of 500,000, far faster than official inflation statistics suggest.\n\nA thing that was once too precious to use is now too cheap to notice.", "CCTV showing police chasing Zakaria Bulhan moments after he stabbed six people in London has been released.\n\nThe 19-year-old has admitted killing a US tourist and wounding five others in Russell Square on 3 August last year, pleading guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility.", "Hundreds of thousands of protesters shone torches on their phones at an anti-corruption rally in the capital Bucharest, lighting up Victory Square.\n\nIt's thought between 250,000 and 300,000 people were at the demonstration, which came despite the government revoking a controversial decree which would have shielded many politicians from prosecution for corruption.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nPremier League champions Leicester are just one point above the relegation zone after defeat at home by Manchester United left them still searching for a first league win in 2017.\n\nA dour opening half came to life just before the break when the visitors scored twice in two minutes.\n\nFirst, Henrikh Mkhitaryan latched onto Chris Smalling's flick-on and raced through on goal before beating Kasper Schmeichel with a clinical finish.\n\nZlatan Ibrahimovic then took advantage of terrible Leicester marking to side-foot home his 15th Premier League goal of the season.\n\nJuan Mata ensured there was no way back for the hosts when he finished off a one-two with Mkhitaryan early in the second half.\n\nLeicester never looked like scoring, with their only shot on target a tame Wilfred Ndidi strike just before half-time.\n\nManchester United remain in the hunt for a top-four finish. They are sixth, one point behind Liverpool and two behind fourth-placed Arsenal.\n• None Listen: Mahrez 'really is lacking in confidence'\n\nCould the champions really go down?\n\nJose Mourinho was in charge of Chelsea the last time he visited the King Power Stadium. That was in December 2015 and he was sacked the day after a defeat that strengthened Leicester's title charge.\n\nThis time it is Foxes boss Claudio Ranieri who is under pressure. Far from defending their title, they are very much in a relegation dogfight and went into Sunday's game looking to record their first league win since New Year's Eve.\n\nA pacy attack of Ahmed Musa and Jamie Vardy promised much but ultimately offered little, the latter in particular a shadow of the striker who scored in 11 consecutive Premier League games last season.\n\nThe Foxes have now failed to score a league goal in five games this year, but of equal concern for Ranieri will have been his side's defending. Ibrahimovic was left unmarked to poke home Manchester United's second and then Wes Morgan played two players onside for the third.\n\nLeicester have not won away all season in the league, so it is their home form that has kept them out of the drop zone so far - 18 of their 21 points have been collected at the King Power Stadium.\n\nThis defeat, though, was their third in six home games and Ranieri will need to get things back on track quickly if the Foxes are to avoid being the first reigning top-flight champions to be relegated since Manchester City in 1938.\n\nManchester United have been far too reliant on Ibrahimovic this season. The evergreen Swedish striker is the club's leading scorer with 10 more league goals than any other Manchester United player.\n\nIn an effort to relieve the Swede's burden, Mourinho started Marcus Rashford alongside him in a 4-4-2 formation.\n\nIt quickly became evident that Ibrahimovic was far more effective in a central role and after 20 minutes Mourinho reverted to 4-2-3-1 with Rashford, Mkhitaryan and Mata behind the former Paris St-Germain striker.\n\nThe change immediately improved the visitors' attacking strength as the pace of Mkhitaryan and Rashford, coupled with Mata's creativity, stretched Leicester's defence and left gaps for Manchester United to exploit, which they did to full effect.\n\nIn the end Leicester could not cope and although United will arguably face tougher defences this season, three different goalscorers and a convincing win will give Mourinho confidence his side can challenge for the top four, particularly with Liverpool and Arsenal's own challenge faltering.\n\nWhat they said\n\nLeicester manager Claudio Ranieri: \"When we conceded the first goal we got down. I don't understand why. It's important to be strong until the end and never give up. But the confidence is not so high.\n\n\"Last season was terrific but we are Leicester and every time we have to fight.\n\n\"We are together. I am fully confident in my players and the players are confident in me.\"\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho: \"It was really important for us. We lost two points in the last match at home and had three consecutive draws so we needed the points.\n\n\"I am happy. We don't have a league defeat since October and if we tried to transform the unlucky draws to victories, we would be in an amazing position.\"\n• None Leicester City are the first Premier League team to fail to score in the first five matches of a calendar year and the first top-flight side since Spurs in 1986.\n• None They are the only side in the top-four English tiers to have failed to score in the league in 2017.\n• None Manchester United are unbeaten in their past 15 Premier League games; their longest run since March 2013 (18 games unbeaten).\n• None The Foxes are the second reigning Premier League champions to lose successive home league games by a three-goal margin (also Man Utd in 2013-14).\n• None There were just 88 seconds between Henrikh Mkhitaryan's and Zlatan Ibrahimovic's goals for Man Utd.\n• None Ibrahimovic has reached 15 Premier League goals for Man Utd in the fourth fastest number of games (23), following Van Nistelrooy (19) Yorke (20) and van Persie (21).\n• None Juan Mata has been involved in 86 Premier League goals since his debut (44 goals, 42 assists) - the highest goal involvement rate of any Premier League midfielder in that time.\n\nAfter an FA Cup fourth-round replay against Derby at the King Power Stadium on Wednesday, Leicester have a potentially massive game in the Premier League on Sunday [kick-off 16:00 GMT]. They travel to Swansea, who are one place below the Foxes in 18th.\n\nManchester United, meanwhile, host Watford on Saturday [15:00] knowing three points could lift them into the top four.\n• None Attempt blocked. Demarai Gray (Leicester City) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Riyad Mahrez.\n• None Attempt saved. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Ashley Young.\n• None Attempt missed. Henrikh Mkhitaryan (Manchester United) right footed shot from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Antonio Valencia.\n• None Attempt blocked. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Ander Herrera. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "A fare dodger who attacked a rail ticket inspector has been jailed for 15 weeks.\n\nBritish Transport Police has released video of Elliot Nash ranting at a female train worker before kicking and lashing out at her colleague on a London Midland service.\n\nThe 32-year-old, from Northfield, Birmingham, verbally abused three members of rail staff and threatened to knock them out while travelling between Bournville and Northfield in November.\n\nFootage from one ticket officer's body-worn camera shows Nash repeatedly swearing and taking a running kick at a staff member in the train's aisle.\n\nPolice identified Nash from the footage, arresting him at his home just two hours later.\n\nHe was later charged with assault and two public order offences. He pleaded guilty at Birmingham Magistrates' Court.\n\nPC Nicola Mallaber said: \"As the footage shows, his attitude is completely unacceptable and there was absolutely no need for this to have escalated into violence - all for the sake of a £2.20 fare.\"", "Francisco Fernandez and his business are little known\n\nMost people have never heard of a Swiss man called Francisco Fernandez, but tens of millions of us rely on him to look after our money.\n\nAn unassuming 53-year-old who likes playing the piano in his spare time, he is responsible for the security of $4 trillion (£3.2tn) of bank deposits around the world.\n\nMr Fernandez is the founder and boss of a company that is as little known as he is - Avaloq.\n\nThe Swiss business and its 2,500 employees may fly under the radar, but it is one of the world's largest providers of banking software.\n\nIts systems are used by more than 450 banks around the world, including the UK's Barclays, HSBC, and Royal Bank of Scotland, plus Deutsche Bank, Societe Generale, UBS and Nomura.\n\nAs you'd expect, Avaloq takes security very seriously, especially protecting banks from cyber-attack. To help make its software as secure as possible, the company has a novel approach - it pays technology firms in Israel to attack it.\n\nAvaloq says it sees off thousands of cyber-attacks every year\n\nWith a number of hi-tech Israeli companies at the forefront of protecting against hacking, Avaloq uses them to test its defences.\n\nMr Fernandez says: \"The Israelis are very, very good, they [the young tech workers] are coming out of active military service, and they are brilliant.\n\n\"We regularly appoint them to attack our systems in a controlled way, and then with their help we try to make our systems bulletproof.\n\n\"We do our homework, security is a constant thing... we get thousands of attacks per year but so far, touch wood, we have never had an intrusion into our systems.\"\n\nFor a company that today enjoys annual revenues of more than $500m (£351m), Avaloq has come a long way since 1991 when Mr Fernandez led a $200,000 management buyout of the computer department of Swiss bank BZ Bank.\n\nAt the time the department had just five members of staff, but Mr Fernandez had big ambitions.\n\nHe says he had long recognised that the software used by most banks across the world was both overly complicated and unstable, yet also too expensive.\n\nHis idea was to produce a simpler but stronger universal software system that could be used by multiple banks.\n\nSo with a small amount of money coming in from a single bank customer and some additional consulting work, Mr Fernandez and his team set to work on building their software system. It took them five years.\n\nWhen the software was finally ready to be sold to banks, Avaloq found that the notoriously risk-averse Swiss banking sector was reluctant to take a chance on a start-up business that by then still had only 20 employees.\n\nThe company is based in Zurich\n\nMr Fernandez says that many people thought it would be a \"mission impossible\" for Avaloq to find a buyer for its new software, but then thanks to a contact he was able to showcase it to no less than Switzerland's central bank, the Swiss National Bank.\n\nThe central bank was impressed enough to buy the software, which within six months saw five commercial Swiss banks follow suit. Overseas banks soon came on board too.\n\nToday Avaloq offers banks two services - the use of its software, or a more intensive service whereby it also takes over the running of a bank's computer system. Some 17% of banks (holding $700bn of funds) now opt for the latter, which uses cloud computing technology.\n\nThe business remains owned by its staff\n\nAvaloq makes its money through continuing licence fees, and apart from a 10% stake held by a Swiss bank, the company is owned by its employees.\n\nOf its 2,500 members of staff, 500 are programmers. In addition to a main base in Zurich, it also has offices in Edinburgh and as far afield as Manila, the capital of the Philippines.\n\nInstead of staff getting individual bonus payments for hitting personal targets, all workers get a bonus if the company meets its annual objective, be that revenue growth or extended geographic reach.\n\nMr Fernandez says his family background helped give him the will to achieve in life\n\nAntony Peyton, deputy editor of trade paper Banking Tech, tells the BBC: \"Avaloq's success can be attributed to chief executive Francisco Fernandez's astute leadership, and the Avaloq Banking Suite, its core software offering for private banks.\"\n\nMr Fernandez is the son of Spanish refugees who fled the dictatorship of General Franco and settled in the Swiss city of Lucerne before he was born.\n\nHe says his background played a large part in his decision to take a risk and launch Avaloq.\n\n\"My parents were fugitives after the Spanish Civil War, and that culture, of leaving your country, and having the guts to come out of your comfort zone, is very much in my DNA.\n\n\"As a child we couldn't afford a car, TV or central heating, but growing up in Switzerland was a huge privilege, and I was able to attend ETH Zurich, one of the best [universities] in the world for computer science.\n\n\"I feel privileged to have the top job at Avaloq, but I don't take anything for granted.\"\n\nFollow The Boss series editor Will Smale on Twitter @WillSmale1\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The Daily Express is one of many papers to seize on the news that the government is to tighten the rules to prevent \"health tourism\" in England.\n\nThe paper says the move to make foreign nationals pay in advance for non-urgent care is \"long overdue\", and will cut what it calls the \"widespread abuse\" of the system.\n\nThe plan is welcomed by the Daily Mail as a \"major crackdown\".\n\nMeanwhile, the Times says the move comes after a week in which NHS bosses faced criticism that their attempts to combat health tourism were \"chaotic\".\n\nBut Labour's Meg Hillier, who chairs the public accounts committee, says she does not think mandating hospitals to take patients' money is the answer to the problem.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph leads with a different NHS story - saying one in six A&E departments in England could be facing closure.\n\nThe paper says the changes are being considered despite record overcrowding, and quotes senior doctors as calling them \"crazy\", although health officials say care will also be improved, and moved closer to people's homes.\n\nThe paper describes the plan as \"a potent example of the death spiral gripping the NHS\" - greater demand leads to cuts, which make the situation worse.\n\nIts editorial suggests there is a clear logic to recouping money from overseas patients - but it calls for a more fundamental overhaul.\n\nHis attack on a \"so-called\" judge who suspended his travel ban is certainly in character, says the paper, \"but this is the judiciary... Presidents aren't supposed to attack judges\".\n\nThere is a similar warning in the Guardian, which says the president is \"fishing in dangerous waters\" by questioning the legitimacy of a court.\n\n\"If this continues,\" it says, \"the United States would be taking a step into the unknown.\"\n\nThe Daily Telegraph finds voters in west Kansas fully supportive of Mr Trump's policies.\n\n\"Foreigners are coming in, getting bigger in the areas they're in, and their goal is to kill us,\" says one.\n\nThe Daily Mail leads with what it calls the \"downsizing revolution\", which it expects in a government White Paper on housing in England this week.\n\nIt says pensioners with large family homes will be given incentives to sell and move to smaller properties.\n\nStudies suggest more than 2.5m family homes could be made available if older owners downsized but the paper quotes Whitehall officials stressing there is no intention to put pressure on people to sell up.\n\nFinally, the Sun thinks that the special relationship between Donald Trump and Theresa May is bearing fruit - over the issue of vegetables.\n\nIt says British shopkeepers have turned to the Americans to solve the \"Great Lettuce Shortage\" which has been caused by bad weather in Europe.\n\nIt says that is one in the eye for those who warned about Britain going to the back of the queue - though the paper also notes that iceberg lettuces flown in from California and Arizona are selling for three times the price of those from Spain.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph warns that the shortage could soon spread to carrots, parsnips and other vegetables because of a cold snap which might see temperatures plummet to -15C.\n\nOn the bright side, one expert says slower growth increases the sugar level, so the vegetables you do get are likely to be sweeter.", "Watch Julian Edelman make a miraculous catch which helps New England Patriots complete the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history to beat the Atlanta Falcons.\n\nWATCH MORE: Watch the greatest comeback in Super Bowl history\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Gabriel Jesus has made quite a start to his Manchester City career but I would be wary of going overboard about how good a player he is just yet.\n\nJesus has scored three goals in two Premier League starts, and against Swansea he looked sharp and lively - a player who works hard and can finish, and has ability on the ball so can bring others into play too.\n\nI am delighted for him, but he is only 19 and he is getting what all youngsters get when they arrive in the Premier League - that circus-type scenario where everyone just seems to jump on board and describe a player as the new best thing that has ever happened.\n\n'Nobody knows what kind of player Jesus can be yet'\n\nThere has been a lot of hype about Jesus but, although he is clearly a very talented player, I have not seen anything that has really blown me away in the way the likes of Wayne Rooney and Michael Owen did when they burst on to the scene.\n\nPart of that is because nobody knows what kind of player Jesus can be yet. Even Guardiola came out with an analogy this week comparing him to a watermelon that you have to cut open to see whether it is good or not.\n\nJesus has been compared to Neymar back in Brazil but, for all we really know at the moment, he might just be a 'right place, right time' person - a goal poacher. We will have to wait to find out.\n\nDon't get me wrong, I love to see young players get their chance and he has taken this opportunity brilliantly so soon after a move to a different country. He deserves a lot of credit for that.\n\nBut the point I am trying to make is related to his situation at City, and the player whose place he has taken in their attack.\n\nI have not seen enough from Jesus to think he is a better striker than Sergio Aguero, or is good enough to replace him. Not yet, at least.\n\n'Aguero is not the kind of player to sit on City's bench'\n\nJesus got Manchester City out of jail with his late winner against Swansea on Sunday but I still find it hard to believe that there is no room for Aguero in Guardiola's side.\n\nIf the situation continues, there is only one thing that is going to happen - Aguero will leave in the summer. He is not the kind of player that is going to sit on City's bench.\n\nThe Argentina striker's comments after the Swansea game basically said that if City want to keep him, then they will show it.\n\nIf I were in his situation, I would be sitting there thinking that this manager does not want me, and it is time for me to leave.\n\nI don't think anybody at City, from fans to staff, could argue that Aguero is not within his rights to say that because, if there is anyone in their squad who deserves a starting place, it is him.\n\nAguero is not having a great season by his high standards, but I would put that down to the way he has been managed.\n\nBased on the way he has been treated, like being dropped for City's Champions League game against Barcelona in October for example, you cannot blame him for feeling frustrated.\n\nHe has not been poor - he has still scored 18 goals in all competitions - he has just not been the lethal player we know.\n\nSince he joined City in 2011, Aguero has been one of the best strikers the Premier League has ever seen, so there is no way you can tell me they are better without him.\n\nThe statistics we showed on MOTD2 would suggest that is the case, based on the past couple of seasons.\n\nBut as I explained on the show, those percentages in the table above do not reflect who they were playing.\n\nFor example, in 2015-16, City played nine Premier League games without Aguero. They won five of them, and lost only two.\n\nBut four of those five wins came against teams who were 16th or lower, and they were games City were expected to win anyway.\n\nJesus selection worked to perfection - for player and manager\n\nIt is not a massive surprise to see Aguero treated this way because Guardiola has done it before, with Robert Lewandowski at Bayern Munich and Zlatan Ibrahimovic at Barcelona.\n\nThere were times when Guardiola played without a main striker at all, just to get his team to play the way he wants to play.\n\nWe have seen Jurgen Klopp do similar at Liverpool when Roberto Firmino leads their attack. Firmino is more than an attacking midfielder but you would still not describe him as an out-and-out striker.\n\nJesus is similar, with his movement and his work-rate, and his selection is clearly down to him fitting into the system that Guardiola is trying to implement.\n\nAt the moment the kid is on a crest of a wave and things are working out for him to perfection - and for his manager too.\n\nTwo of the biggest calls I have seen by any manager this season have been by Guardiola, to leave out a player with Aguero's reputation in City's last two games, against Swansea and West Ham.\n\nThis is a player whose goals have helped City win two titles - but Guardiola has left him out twice in a week, and won both games.\n\nHe says Aguero is still part of his plans but if he is looking to the future then you could understand if he isn't, no matter what he has contributed to the club in the past.\n\nWhat next? Real Madrid, Chelsea… or Man Utd?\n\nAguero is understandably not happy but I believe him when he says he will give everything for the team when he is needed for the rest of the season.\n\nLike Arsenal's Alexis Sanchez or Barcelona's Luis Suarez, Aguero is a born winner - you are always going to get the best out of him when he is out on the pitch.\n\nRight now the biggest clubs in the world will be rubbing their hands, thinking they might be able to sign him. He turns 29 in June and is at the peak of his powers.\n\nWho would want him? Who wouldn't, if they can afford him? Real Madrid would take him in the blink of an eye if they could.\n\nChelsea must be thinking that if Diego Costa leaves them in the summer then they would take Aguero. Even Manchester United must be watching the situation too.\n\nCarlos Tevez moved across Manchester when he left United so it is not impossible to go the other way and, if Aguero leaves City, it will be because they were willing to let him go.", "There are many indicators against which patients can judge the performance of the NHS.\n\nBut historically, the totemic benchmark of the quality of service provided by hospitals is the number of people waiting for surgery and how long they have to wait.\n\nWaiting times for non-urgent surgery were the subject of fierce political debate for much of the last two decades, but recently they faded in importance as targets have been met.\n\nThat could now be changing as waiting lists grow longer in the different health systems across the UK and the human cost of delayed surgery becomes more apparent.\n\nMedia and political attention has focused on the four-hour benchmark for being treated or assessed in A&E.\n\nThe King's Fund think tank believes the number of patients waiting for operations in England will soon top four million - for the first time in nearly a decade - and that could prove to be the tipping point for public and political opinion.\n\nCutting waiting lists was a key promise by New Labour ahead of its election victory in 1997. Remember the pledge card brandished by Tony Blair and his colleagues?\n\nLabour delivered its policy of reducing numbers waiting for operations by 100,000, and then, in 2008, went further by introducing the 18-week target.\n\nThat established a right for patients to start consultant-led treatment within 18 weeks of being referred by a GP, with a benchmark of 92% of patients seen in that time.\n\nThe 18-week target and fines regime, which was refined in 2012, was widely seen as an effective incentive to hospitals to cut waiting times for patients.\n\nTony Blair pledged to cut waiting lists during the 1997 election campaign\n\nHospitals on average managed to hit and exceed the 92% standard, but that all changed in early 2016 when performance slipped below that target.\n\nAnalysis of NHS England data reveals that the number of patients waiting more than 18 weeks for non-urgent surgery has more than doubled in the four years to November 2016.\n\nThat is a much faster rate of increase that the number who start treatment in under 18 weeks and faster still than the rate of growth of NHS operations across the board.\n\nHospital chiefs and health experts say increasing waiting times are an inevitable consequence of NHS budgets lagging behind increases in patient demand.\n\nWhen emergency admissions are rising, and with a finite number of beds, something has to give.\n\nDelayed transfers of care make the task of finding beds even harder. Patients waiting for routine surgery and procedures are the ones who lose out.\n\nScotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have different target regimes for waiting lists.\n\nAll have seen sharp increases in the number of long waits between 2012 and 2016.\n\nWales has not hit its target since 2010 and the NHS in Scotland has been adrift since June 2014.\n\nThe pressures on resources and the ability to deliver timely routine treatment are similar across the UK.\n\nWithout an injection of more cash it is hard to see how the waiting list situation will improve, given the stresses and strains on all forms of care across the NHS.\n\nCancellations of routine surgery over Christmas and early January will contribute to the deterioration.\n\nWaiting lists are still a lot shorter than at the worst points in the 1990s and at times over the following decade.\n\nBut the question now is whether patients begin to feel that what they get from their local hospital, unless they are seriously ill, is falling well short of their expectations.", "Our bathrooms are filled with shampoo bottles, toilet rolls and cleaning products which could easily be put into our recycling bins when finished with.\n\nYet research shows our green intentions are washed away as soon as we step near a toilet.\n\nNow a business group has come up with an idea for how to combat this problem - two bathroom bins.\n\nThe Circular Economy Taskforce, who were brought together by Prince Charles's Business in the Community environment charity, says it could boost recycling.\n\nSo should two bins really sit alongside your stack of loo roll in the bathroom?\n\nWhy should people have two bins in their bathrooms?\n\n\"It's trying to address the problem that people are less likely to recycle packaging for things we use in our bathrooms than for things we use in other rooms of the house,\" says Jonny Hazell, senior policy adviser for environmental think tank Green Alliance.\n\nThe Recycle Now campaign points to its statistics, which show that while 90% of packaging is recycled in our kitchens, only 50% is being recycled in the bathroom.\n\n\"Often homes have one central recycling bin located in the kitchen, so when in the shower or washing your face it can be tricky to remember to transfer it to that bin,\" it says.\n\n\"This is why having a recycling bin or bag in the bathroom might be useful, if there is space.\"\n\nBusiness in the Community says two bins could make it easier to separate out the plastics that can be recycled.\n\n\"But it doesn't have to be a bin, it could be as simple as a bag on the door handle that you bring down to the kitchen every week,\" it added.\n\nWhere has this idea come from?\n\nWhile recycling has grown from 12% to 45% in the UK over the last decade, campaigners say the bathroom is an area that needs more focus.\n\nThe Circular Economy Taskforce came up with the idea as part of its work looking at practical collaborative ways to boost recycling and re-use rates.\n\n\"The bathroom is one of the areas that has come up time and time again in the group as somewhere where both business and consumers can make a difference to help us all reduce our impact on the environment,\" says Business in the Community.\n\n\"Thinking about how different types of bins could boost recycling in the bathroom is just one example of a potential simple solution that could have a big impact.\"\n\nWhy are people failing to recycle their bathroom products?\n\nCampaigners believes it comes down not just to where a recycling bin is located but also to confusion over what can be recycled.\n\nRecycle Now says: \"There can also be confusion about what can or can't be recycled with bathroom products.\n\n\"For example many people don't realise that bleach bottles can be easily recycled - simply make sure it's empty and put the lid back on.\n\n\"Recycling just one bleach bottle saves enough energy to power a street light for 6.5 hours, so the value quickly adds up.\"\n\nResearch from the University of Exeter also found that people who threw away waste in the bathroom saw it as being \"dirty\" and were less likely to recycle it.\n\nGoing through your bathroom bin to separate out what can and can't be recycled can seem off-putting,\" says Business in the Community.\n\nIt added: \"There is also a lot of confusion around what can be recycled in the bathroom, for example many consumers are confused by aerosols.\"\n\nHow much recyclable waste comes from a bathroom?\n\nPlastic shampoo, conditioner and shower gel bottles, plastic moisturiser bottles (such as for hand cream and body lotion), glass face cream pots (plus the cardboard packaging they come in), perfume and aftershave bottles, aerosols for deodorant, air freshener and shaving foam, bleach and bathroom cleaner bottles, toothpaste boxes and toilet roll tubes.\n\nIs a lack of recycling in bathrooms a real problem?\n\nEvery little helps, is the message from environmental and recycling groups.\n\n\"In general, the less we recycle, the more water and energy we need to use to produce the materials we use in our daily lives,\" said Mr Hazell.\n\nRecycle Now says recycling reduces the amount we are sending to landfill and makes use of resources already available rather than making them from scratch.\n\n\"Ultimately this means reduced levels of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere which contribute to climate change,\" it added.\n\n\"For instance it takes 75% less energy to make a plastic shampoo bottle from recycled plastic compared with using virgin materials.\"\n\nCan two bins have a meaningful impact on recycling overall?\n\n\"Ensuring you recycle in the bathroom can make a big difference,\" says Recycle Now.\n\n\"It would save £135,000 in landfill costs if every UK household threw their next empty shampoo bottles into the recycling bin.\n\n\"On top of this, if everyone recycled one more toilet roll tube it would save enough cardboard inner tubes from landfill to go round the M25 38 times.\"\n\nBut what if you don't have the space for two bins?\n\nThere are other options. Hang a reusable bag on the bathroom door so you can transfer your recyclable items straight into the recycling bin. Or opt for a bin with split compartments which can be used to separate recyclable and non-recyclable items.\n• None Are you rubbish at recycling?\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nCameroon came from behind to beat Egypt 2-1 and seal a fifth Africa Cup of Nations in a thrilling, edgy final.\n\nSubstitute Vincent Aboubakar swept in the winner two minutes from time, flicking the ball over defender Ali Gabr and thumping it home.\n\nNicolas Nkoulou had earlier equalised for Cameroon, rising highest to power in a header on the hour mark.\n\nThe equaliser cancelled out Mohamed Elneny's opener on 22 minutes with a beautifully taken near-post strike.\n\nThe wild celebrations for Aboubakar's winner announced Cameroon's return to the continental summit, after a 15-year wait.\n\nIt also makes them the second most successful nation in the competition's history - behind Egypt - and marks the first time they have beaten the Pharaohs in the final in three attempts.\n\nBesiktas striker Aboubakar ran towards the triumphant Cameroon fans in the Stade de l'Amitie stands in Libreville to celebrate, pursued by delirious team-mates and coaching staff.\n\nUnderdogs Cameroon had already upset the odds to reach the final and stunned the much-fancied Egyptians with a late dramatic strike, after fellow substitute Nkoulou had drawn them level.\n\nDespite being beset by pre-tournament problems, including the withdrawal of key players such as Joel Matip and Eric Choupo-Moting, coach Hugo Broos managed to assemble a squad that got their reward for being strong, adaptable and resilient in equal measure throughout.\n\nThe Pharaohs - bidding for an eighth title after seven years in the international wilderness - started comfortably and Elneny's opening strike capped a wonderful fluent move down the right.\n\nThe Gunners midfielder started the move and finished it - receiving the ball from Mohamed Salah in the box and sweeping it past Fabrice Ondoa into the roof of the net at the near post.\n\nBut Egypt invited the Indomitable Lions to come at them in the second half and they paid a heavy price.\n\nThe excellent Cameroon forward Benjamin Moukandjo whipped in a dangerous cross and substitute Nkoulou muscled his way through the Egyptian defence to beat Ahmed Hegazy to the ball and bury it past 44-year-old Essam El Hadary in the Egyptian goal.\n\nThe contest developed into a fascinating cagey final, with Cameroon, inspired by Christian Bassogog and Jacques Zoua up front, pinning Egypt back and limiting them to long balls to Salah and substitute Ramadan Sobhi.\n\nFatigue soon set in in the Egyptian ranks and Cameroon got their reward for increasing the pressure on the experienced Pharaohs defence.\n\nAboubakar controlled a long ball forward with his chest at the edge of the box, flicked it over the stranded Gabr, before gathering, taking a step and smashing home off his right foot for a fitting winner.\n\nThe Egyptians - featuring the tournament's oldest and most experienced player - El Hadary, were left stunned after looking comfortable for much of the first half.\n\nAs they had done for much of the tournament, Egypt relied on a well-marshalled defence, led by Ahmed Hegazy, Gabr and Hull City's Ahmed Elmohamady. They also had the formidable Elneny and Salah leading the line.\n\nThe Pharaohs more than played their part in an entertaining final, but it was Cameroon's energy that would light up the occasion and provide a thrilling end to a thoroughly entertaining tournament for the near-capacity crowd of more than 38,000 in the Gabonese capital.\n\nBelgian coach Broos reflected the unity in his squad's ranks, as he celebrated the first Nations Cup title of his career.\n\n\"I am happy for the players,\" he said. \"This is not a group of football players, they are a group of friends.\"\n\nEgypt coach Hector Cuper was left to dwell on another defeat in a major final, having lost two European Champions League finals with Spanish club Valencia.\n\n\"The sadness I have is not because I lost another final,\" he said.\n\n\"It's because there was so much hope especially among the people in Egypt and I am sorry for the players who put in so much effort.\"\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Christian Bassogog (Cameroon) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt missed. Mohamed Elneny (Egypt) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses the top right corner. Assisted by Abdallah El Said from a direct free kick.\n• None Collins Fai (Cameroon) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt blocked. Benjamin Moukandjo (Cameroon) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Christian Bassogog.\n• None Vincent Aboubakar (Cameroon) is shown the yellow card for excessive celebration.\n• None Goal! Egypt 1, Cameroon 2. Vincent Aboubakar (Cameroon) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Sébastien Siani.\n• None Offside, Egypt. Abdallah El Said tries a through ball, but Ali Gabr is caught offside. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "President Trump is just one of the sculptures carved out of snow and ice featured in the annual Sapporo snow festival, which attracts thousands of visitors.", "MPs applauded the speaker of the House of Commons for declaring he would not choose to invite President Trump to Parliament.\n\nJohn Bercow said he valued the relationship with the US, but would oppose inviting the president to address MPs and Lords in Westminster.", "The Queen has become the first British monarch to reach a sapphire jubilee, marking 65 years on the throne.\n\nShe will spend the day at her estate in Norfolk, with no official engagements planned.", "BBC Sport looks back at key milestones in Alastair Cook's England Test career after the 32-year-old Essex batsman resigned as skipper on Monday.\n\nWATCH MORE: Cook was drained by captaincy before retiring - Strauss\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Some of the most famous English phrases use people's names to convey a meaning, from the Bob of \"Bob's your uncle\" to the Gordon Bennett we call upon when we must not swear. But are these expressions, and others like them, based on real people? And if so, how did they become household names?\n\nThe phrase \"all my eye and Betty Martin\" is used to declare something as nonsense.\n\nThere are a number of theories as to who the mystery woman - or indeed man - was, says Benjamin Norris, assistant editor of the Oxford English Dictionary.\n\n\"One idea is that it stems from Latin words used to call on the goddess of Crete 'O mihi Britomartis', or St Martin of Porres 'O mihi, beate Martinehe',\" he said.\n\nEric Scaife from the Yorkshire Dialect Society said: \"St Martin was the patron saint of innkeepers, so if you had had a few it may sound different - you would be talking rubbish!\"\n\nCould it be that British soldiers or sailors abroad heard locals uttering these Latin words in disbelief and anglicized them?\n\nCould Betty Martin be versions of the Latin for St Martin or the goddess of Crete Britomartis?\n\n\"I suspect she was a character of the lusty London of 1770s and no record of her exists,\" wrote lexicographer Eric Partridge in his Dictionary of Catchphrases (1977).\n\nMr Norris said in northern England the phrase is sometimes uttered as \"all my eye and Peggy Martin\".\n\n\"It seems relatively unlikely that we will be able to discover the identity of the individual in question for sure,\" said Mr Norris.\n\nThe term is used to mean \"and there you have it\" or the equivalent of the French \"et voilà\".\n\nIts origin could have been a satirical swipe at Conservative prime minister Lord Salisbury's controversial decision in 1887 to appoint his nephew Arthur Balfour as chief secretary for Ireland, wrote journalist Fraser McAlpine, in his BBC America Anglophenia blog.\n\nMr Norris agreed: \"In light of Lord Salisbury's Christian name being Robert - 'Bob', of course, being a familiar form of this name - and the appointment being seen by many at the time as nepotistic this theory is an appealing one.\n\n\"Though, if it is true, it does not easily explain why the phrase is first recorded in the 1930s.\"\n\nIs Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, the third Marquess of Salisbury the inspiration for the phrase \"Bob's your uncle\"?\n\nMcApline and Mr Scaife have also both questioned whether the phrase could have something to do with Sir Robert Peel, who created the Metropolitan Police Force - where officers were commonly known as \"bobbies\".\n\n\"Perhaps he had a roguish nephew who was believed to have been kept from prison by his uncle,\" McAlpine wrote.\n\n\"Then there's the name itself, which appears to have been used as a catch-all name for someone you don't know, in much the same way that Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and that lot constantly referred to, well, anyone, as Clyde,\" he wrote.\n\nThis expression conveys the sense that \"if anything can go wrong it will go wrong\".\n\nIt was created by aerospace engineer Captain Edward A Murphy while he was working on a series of US Air Force studies to test human tolerance to acceleration and deceleration, according to Brewer's Dictionary of Irish Phrase & Fable.\n\nHe coined the phrase after he observed someone setting up an experiment that required the attachment of 16 accelerometers, according to Brewers.\n\nCaptain Edward A Murphy is thought to be behind his eponymous \"law\"\n\nEach consisted of a sensor that could be attached to its mount in two different ways - and the subject had attached all of them the wrong way round.\n\n\"It is quite widely accepted as true and it also fits the chronology of our evidence for the phrase, with the earliest recorded use of Murphy's law in Genetic Psychology Monographs: 1951,\" said Mr Norris.\n\nThe expression \"to go to Davy Jones's locker\" means to be drowned at sea.\n\n\"This item of nautical slang is shrouded in mystery, though we do know that the figure of Davy Jones was seen to represent the spirit of the ocean, sometimes even being interpreted as essentially a sea-devil,\" said Mr Norris.\n\nDavey Jones's locker is a nautical phrase meaning to drown at sea\n\nThe use of Davy Jones's locker to refer to the depths of the sea, frequently considered as the graveyard of those who have drowned, has been around since 18th Century, he said.\n\nFor instance, in his 1751 work Peregrine Pickle, Tobias Smollett refers to Davy Jones as \"the fiend that presides over all the evil spirits of the deep\".\n\nThis man's name is often used in place of a swear word when making an exclamation of anger, surprise or frustration.\n\nThere were two famous Gordon Bennetts who might have been the source - a father and son.\n\nJames Gordon Bennett senior (1795-1872) was a Scottish-born journalist, famous in the US for founding the New York Herald and conducting the first ever newspaper interview.\n\nHis son, of the same name, was something of an international playboy. Mr Scaife described him as \"a dandy... known for driving fast cars and causing consternation and surprise\".\n\nGordon Bennett used his inheritance to sponsor the Bennett Trophy in motor racing from 1900 to 1905, and in 1906 established a hot-air balloon race that is still held today.\n\nHe holds the Guinness Book of Records entry for \"Greatest Engagement Faux Pas\".\n\nOne very drunken evening he turned up late to a posh party held by his future in-laws, and ended up urinating into a fireplace in full view of everyone. The engagement, unsurprisingly, was broken off.\n\nHowever Mr Norris said of the Gordon Bennett expression: \"It seems most likely to be a euphemistic substitution for 'gorblimey', which is itself a phonetic rendering of a colloquial or regional pronunciation of 'God blind me'.\"\n\nThis story was inspired by phrases sent in by readers of England's oddest phrases explained.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "About 500,000 demonstrators rallied across Romania on Sunday, despite the government revoking a controversial decree that had fuelled their discontent.\n\nThe left-wing government earlier scrapped the bill, which would have shielded many politicians from prosecution for corruption.\n\nBut protesters remain dissatisfied about a revised version of the bill which will now be put to parliament.", "Donald Trump (R) met technology leaders when he was president-elect\n\nIt also just so happens to be the sixth largest economy in the world and home to the most influential, profitable and powerful companies on earth.\n\nIf the bubble bursts, or even just contracts a little, the whole country suffers - including President Donald Trump and his supporters. California is a so-called “donor” state, meaning it simply pays more into the US Treasury than it gets out.\n\nSo when President Trump talks about making deals, he’ll know full well that in California he faces formidable bargaining chips he can’t ignore. He may even be on the back foot.\n\nAnd that may be one of the reasons why we saw a peculiar thing happen on Friday.\n\nUber boss Travis Kalanick decided not to turn up to President Trump’s economic advisory panel, and the president said... nothing.\n\nHe didn’t call the company “failing” or “once great” or “weak” or any of those words he’s typically thrown around when he feels personally slighted.\n\nIn fact, aside from a few pre-election skirmishes with Apple, President Trump has been relatively ambivalent towards tech firms, and there’s a very good theory as to why - he really needs them.\n\nTravis Kalanick put Uber's reputation ahead of the value the company might get from a meeting with the president\n\nAnd they need him too, of course.\n\nUnder President Trump, Silicon Valley is holding out for a lower corporate tax rate - which could bring billions back into the US, a win-win for both sides.\n\nBut there’s a snag in this arrangement. For the most part, the workers at these companies are outraged, seething at the prospect of their bosses even sitting at the same table as the new president.\n\nThat’s why we saw 2,000 Google employees across the world leave their desks on Monday to demonstrate against the immigration ban.\n\nIt’s why Amazon’s own employees are calling on the company to stop advertising on right-wing news website Breitbart.\n\nIt’s why Uber’s staff wrote a lengthy “Letter to Travis”, informing their boss about how unpopular his involvement with President Trump was among the ranks. It worked.\n\n“Joining the group was not meant to be an endorsement of the president or his agenda but unfortunately it has been misinterpreted to be exactly that,” Mr Kalanick told staff in a memo announcing he was stepping down.\n\nThe tone was understanding, but a little frustrated. Would it not be better to at least have a seat at the table? Uber’s staff didn’t see it that way.\n\nAlthough he said he didn’t support President Trump’s immigration policy, people thought he did. And that’s what mattered most.\n\nHe put Uber’s reputation ahead of the value Uber might get from a meeting with the president.\n\nHe may have been extra-sensitive after a long week.\n\nLast Saturday, a misjudged tweet caused a reported 200,000 Uber users to delete their accounts - so many, in fact, the company had to create a special tool to automate the process.\n\nUber’s explanation that it was all a big misunderstanding has merit, but the furore, justified or not, underlined the fine line tech companies tread with their users.\n\nThe firms have until now acted in ways that were “good for business”, but now they are being forced to consider what is simply “good”.\n\nOne minute you can be helping the people of San Francisco get around, the next those same people are protesting outside your headquarters.\n\nAnother company tip-toeing along is Twitter, buoyed by its role as the mouthpiece for the most important man in the world, but cowed by what that man chooses to share.\n\nIt has faced calls to ban President Trump from the site on account of some feeling he has breached the network’s rules on hate speech and harassment.\n\nIt of course hasn’t done that - and to be fair, the demand didn’t gain significant traction, even amongst Trump’s opponents.\n\nBut Twitter’s employees, nervous about their role as President Trump’s megaphone, contributed a combined $1m (£800,775) to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).\n\nThe ACLU has been the benefactor of choice for companies that have one eye on public perception.\n\nMany are dealing with what can be plainly described as the “Peter Thiel problem”. Mr Thiel, an investor with an arguably unrivalled track record, has his fingers in almost every significant pie around here.\n\nAnd, uncomfortably for many, he also has the ear of the president, of whom he is an outspoken supporter.\n\nWhen Facebook’s chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg chose not to make a public statement on the Women’s March two weeks ago, people jumped to various conclusions, most of which inevitably led to the hand of Mr Thiel - who sits on Facebook’s board.\n\nThis comes despite any evidence Mr Thiel is calling any kind of shots on Facebook’s political position.\n\nSupport for President Trump in California is harder to come by than in other parts of the US\n\nMeanwhile, well-regarded start-up accelerator Y Combinator is also feeling pressure thanks to its links with Mr Thiel.\n\nThe company’s president Sam Altman said he wouldn’t sever ties with the investor. The programme has said it will take on the ACLU as one of its cohorts, offering mentorship on digital projects.\n\nIt seems for now the rank-and-file of Silicon Valley see advising President Trump as indistinguishable from supporting him.\n\nTechnology companies are perhaps paying for years of hyperbolic statements about changing the world, in a place where a minor software update gets people “super excited”.\n\nOne thing that has struck me about staff at these huge companies is the infectious, passionate loyalty. It exists because those employees believe the company stands for the same issues they do. Any wavering creates shockwaves.\n\nThe atmosphere may get less toxic as the presidency continues, but it leaves bosses extremely hesitant to get around President Trump’s table.\n\nWill President Trump need to get around theirs?\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nCanada's Denis Shapovalov has been fined $7,000 (£5,600) after hitting an umpire in the eye with a ball.\n\nThe 17-year-old was trailing Great Britain's Kyle Edmund 6-3 6-4 2-1 when he struck the ball in anger and hit Arnaud Gabas - and defaulted the match.\n\nHe must pay $2,000 for the default and $5,000 for unsportsmanlike conduct, escaping the maximum $12,000 penalty as it was not deemed intentional.\n\nThe International Tennis Federation has said no further action is anticipated.\n\nThe Davis Cup World Group first-round tie in Ottawa was poised at 2-2 after Vasek Pospisil beat Dan Evans to set up a decider, but Canada's hopes ended when Shapovalov was disqualified after letting frustration get the better of him.\n\nHe later apologised to Frenchman Gabas in the match referee's office before the umpire went to Ottawa General Hospital as a precaution.\n\nNo damage to the cornea or retina was found and Gabas will see an eye doctor in France on Tuesday for a further examination.\n\nShapovalov, who had just dropped serve when the incident happened, said he feels \"incredibly ashamed and embarrassed\".\n\n\"I just feel awful for letting my team down, for letting my country down, for acting in a way that I would never want to act,\" he added.\n\n\"I can promise that's the last time I will do anything like that. I'm going to learn from this and try to move past it.\"\n\nShapovalov was full of remorse and handled himself very impressively in the hour after his disqualification. He is only 17, and should be allowed to put this behind him.\n\nBut - given the ferocity with which he hit the ball away - this appears a lenient response from the ITF.\n\nBy way of comparison: Heather Watson was fined $12,000 and Serena Williams $10,000 for smashing racquets into Wimbledon's turf last year. Yes, they are both much more experienced than Shapovalov - but the consequences in Ottawa were potentially far greater.\n\nI wonder if chair umpires around the world feel their employers are doing all they can to protect them?", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nBritish markets are seen as a microcosm of the city or town in which they are based, encapsulating the diversity of communities and skills a place has to offer. But with some being sold off due to their prime locations and others fighting for their existence amid the rise of discount supermarkets and online retailers, will generations to come be able to enjoy them?\n\nKirkgate Market has been selling food and goods to the people of Leeds for more than 150 years.\n\nThe winner of \"Britain's Favourite Market\" for the second year in a row, the cavernous hall at the south of the city centre remains popular. But it is not immune to the need to adapt to changing trends.\n\nAmong the 170 stall-holders, optimism for the future is mixed with serious concern about dropping footfall and the rising costs of renting floor space.\n\nNear an entrance to the 1904 hall, with its glass roof and cast-iron balcony, sits North African and Middle Eastern food vendor Cafe Moor.\n\nOwner Kada Bendaha set up his stand after a life-changing breakfast in the bustle of London's Borough Market and its speciality food stands.\n\n\"The beauty of a market is you have that one-to-one contact, you build that relationship with your fishmonger or butcher,\" he said.\n\n\"If you go to the fish section, there's a gentleman there who has been there for 38 years, you go and ask him about a particular fish, he knows the business inside out.\n\n\"Go to a supermarket and you will have a student who is just working part time there, it's not the same.\"\n\nDating back to 1857, Kirkgate has become one of the largest indoor markets in Europe, selling fish, meat, fruit and vegetables, clothes, jewellery, haberdashery, flowers and hardware.\n\nThe booming voice of a butcher offering the day's best prices still echoes down its walkways, although e-cigarette stands and racks of iPhone covers tick off some modern requirements.\n\nIt has been a turbulent time for the Leeds City Council-run market over the past couple of years, with temporary walls and scaffolding becoming a familiar sight during a £13.7m renovation.\n\nDespite the council reducing rents during this period, stall-holders have complained of regulars becoming put off and heading elsewhere.\n\nMonthly footfall at Kirkgate dropped significantly from 718,000 in 2014 to 628,000 in 2015, but the number rose again to 699,000 in 2016.\n\nLeslie Burwell, of Whitaker's Farmhouse Eggs, has worked in the market for 25 years in total.\n\nShe said: \"It used to be heaving, you couldn't move for people down the aisles, there was an atmosphere with people shouting.\n\n\"They've taken all of the shops out of one section and made a big wide open space - they have spent millions of pounds and have nothing to show for it.\"\n\nKashif Ali Raja, who recently took over Spice Corner, said he was positive despite widespread change.\n\nHe said: \"When you start a business, you have to work really hard. There's early mornings, working late.\n\n\"We sell seeds, fresh vegetables, things which are very difficult to find in Leeds, this is the only place you can get it.\n\n\"I don't think recent changes have made any difference, because the regular customers are the same, they will always come.\"\n\nThe outdoor section of Kirkgate, with its fruit stalls, luggage-sellers and flea market, is where Michael Marks opened his Penny Bazaar, leading to the founding of Marks & Spencer in 1890.\n\nThe patch now sits a stone's throw away from the newly-opened 42,000 sq m Victoria Gate complex, a £165m retail development featuring a flagship John Lewis store.\n\nLeeds City Council wants the market to be able to take advantage of the expected increase in shoppers in the area, but not everyone feels it will make a difference.\n\nJulie Carr has worked in the outdoor section for 35 years and now sells second-hand toys and collectables at her stall.\n\nShe said: \"The new John Lewis has made no difference to us, I don't think their customers and ours are connected at all.\n\n\"My theory is in 20 years there will be no shops, no markets, everything will be online and people will say 'I remember when we used to go to the market' - and they've gone.\"\n\nThe market's 1976 Hall has seen the most significant change, with the space transformed into a brightly-coloured communal seating area, where established \"street food\" traders have decided to set up permanently.\n\nA rotating schedule of craft fairs, live music and kids' entertainment is used to draw people in, with long tables encouraging those new to the market to get chatting to those who have been regulars for decades.\n\nOne of the new food traders is the Yorkshire Wrap Company, selling hot meals wrapped up in a Yorkshire pudding.\n\nMichael Pratt, who runs the stall, said: \"First impressions are good, word of mouth seems to be getting out about the new food hall area.\n\n\"It's bringing a lot of different faces into the market, people who maybe wouldn't have usually come here.\"\n\nHe added: \"Markets give a sense of community and the ability to get everything under one roof, great produce for great prices. I think they're going from strength to strength.\"\n\nDown in the basement of the top end of the market, Brian Bettison has been providing haircuts since 1982. He said rents for stalls had gone \"up and up and up\".\n\nHe said: \"They've had numerous different ways of doing it through the years, it was measured on square footage, it was zoned into the most desirable areas.\n\n\"Everyone now has different agreements with the markets, nobody will let you know, they will keep it to themselves.\"\n\nWhat do the shoppers think?\n\nClose to where the indoor market meets the outdoor section, Cheryl Murtheh has been selling cosmetics for 16 years.\n\nShe said: \"They're giving cheaper rent to newcomers coming in, but they should lower the rents of people who have been here a long time.\n\n\"What happens to the people who have been keeping you going for years, shouldn't they be entitled to something as well?\"\n\nAccording to the National Association of British Market Authorities, from 2009 to 2016 the number of market traders in the UK dropped from approximately 55,000 to 32,000.\n\nThe recession has been highlighted as a key reason for this, although there is some evidence the sector as a whole has started to turn a corner.\n\nThe National Market Traders Federation (NMTF) said traditional retail markets currently have a collective annual turnover of £2.7bn, with the figure increasing by £200m year on year since 2013.\n\nLike Kirkgate, several markets across the UK are adapting to modern trends to cater for younger shoppers.\n\nMany have introduced hot food areas, improved their branding, have extended opening hours and provided free wi-fi.\n\nJoe Harrison, chief executive of the NMTF, said: \"It's easy to follow trends, but five years down the line you may realise you've got nothing.\n\n\"They need to make sure careful steps are taken to keep them popular with the next generation, but it needs to have that social value, dealing with every demographic rather than focusing on one specific thing as it's currently the most economically viable.\"\n\nLeeds City Council said visitor numbers were now \"on the up\" since the refurbishment, with the number of vacant units \"also reduced significantly\".\n\nA spokeswoman said: \"We recognise that there is still some way to go but we are very optimistic that more and more visitors will continue to discover the traditional charm combined with the new modern areas that Kirkgate has to offer.\"\n\nClearly the market has reached a key moment in its history, with bold decisions about the site's future use being made.\n\nWhile serving up mint teas and chicken shawarmas to lunchtime customers at his food stand, Mr Bendaha said: \"This is not just a full-time job, it's a lifestyle and it's a big part of the city.\n\n\"Hopefully it will never die.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. CCTV footage appears to show the moment Kim Jong-nam is attacked\n\nMalaysian authorities have identified the substance that killed Kim Jong-nam at Kuala Lumpur airport as VX, which is classified as a weapon of mass destruction. Bruce Bennett, a defence expert with the Rand Corporation, dissects how this could have happened.\n\nVX is an extraordinarily potent chemical weapon. About 0.01g - less than a drop - on the skin can kill. The chemical goes through the skin and disrupts the nerve system.\n\nIt is an oil-like substance; it would normally not mix well with water, which raises questions about how it was applied on Mr Kim without killing those who carried out the mission. This is the first time VX has been used in such a way, so there are plenty of imponderables.\n\nThe CCTV footage and police statements do not lay out the full sequence of events. Two women appear to assault him, at least one with a cloth wiping his face.\n\nMolecular model of VX nerve agent shows atoms represented as spheres: Carbon (grey), hydrogen (white), nitrogen (blue) oxygen (red), phosphorous (orange) and sulphur (yellow)\n\nMalaysian investigators said the two women coated their hands with the liquid toxin and wiped Kim's face afterwards. But if that were the case, they would have died immediately.\n\nSo if a liquid was sprayed or wiped on Kim Jong-nam it is likely that it did not contain VX and that would help to explain why the women seen accosting him did not die despite apparently getting the liquid on their hands.\n\nIn that case it appears likely that a very small quantity of VX - possibly just a drop - was actually on the cloths used by the women to wipe his face.\n\nWe do know now that one of the women involved has been vomiting since the attack.\n\nThe perpetrators would have really wanted to practise with this to make sure the drop touched Kim, and that they did not touch the drop. And that is what we are told happened.\n\nPolice say that they are believed to have repeated this move in shopping malls ahead of the actual event on 13 February.\n\nAs the drop absorbed into Kim Jong-nam's skin, it would have started affecting his nerve system, causing symptoms that take effect within minutes. The subject will experience coughing, chest tightness, blurry vision, fatigue and eventually seizures as the nervous system is shut down. He is likely to have died within minutes.\n\nKim, seen here in a file photo, reportedly died before he could be taken to hospital\n\nIt appears that the North Korean government may have felt that they could claim the body and avoid an autopsy, thus denying the outside world knowledge of what had happened.\n\nMalaysia has proven diligent in insisting on an autopsy and clearly North Korea failed in its efforts to prevent this. This has led to a row between the two nations, Malaysia being one of few that had diplomatic relations with the North.\n\nSo how could the VX have actually got into Malaysia?\n\nA woman wearing a white top was thought to have attacked Mr Kim\n\nBecause the quantity required to kill is extraordinarily small, it could have been smuggled into Malaysia in a cartridge in a pen or some such thing. The security forces would have had no idea it was being smuggled in unless someone had tipped them off, which clearly did not happen.\n\nIt is unlikely that VX was made in Malaysia - it is not something that can be made safely in a kitchen sink.\n\nOf course, we don't know for sure that North Korea made it and it is also possible they may have purchased it from a third country. There is both a US and a Soviet/Russian version of VX and it will be interesting to see which version was eventually used.\n\nIt would take sophisticated laboratory analysis to tell them apart, which may already have been done.\n\nVX is extremely stable - like oil, it does not evaporate quickly. That made the VX safe on a cloth or some other surface until it touched human skin.\n\nVX, seen here in a container held by a US Army chemical school instructor, is a clear amber-coloured and oily liquid\n\nBut this use of VX, unheard of previously, is a serious violation of international standards. The fact that it was used in a foreign country means that Malaysia and other countries will be both appalled and furious.\n\nOf key importance will be how China responds. After all, China was reportedly providing protection for Kim Jong-nam.\n\nIf North Korea seriously violated international law, China should presumably do more than just cut off imports of North Korean coal.\n\nChina has the opportunity to punish North Korea and thereby hopefully deter it from carrying out this kind of attack again.", "Britain's anxiety about immigration has long been that there is far too much of it. Concerns about the record number of foreign arrivals were a key factor in the vote for Brexit, and the national debate in Parliament and the press has tended to focus on who has got the best policies to reduce it as quickly as possible.\n\nSo one would think statistics suggesting a fall in net migration and a big drop on EU workers coming from the eight so-called accession countries (A8) like Poland would be a cause for rejoicing. Well, not entirely.\n\nNothing has changed at the UK Border since the Brexit vote - this isn't about Britain \"taking control\".\n\nWhat has happened is that more than 100,000 EU citizens have left Britain - 17% more than in the previous year. And arrivals from the A8 countries have fallen sharply.\n\nThe number of new registered workers from Poland is down 16% year on year, Hungary is down 14%, Slovakia down 20% and Lithuania down 6%.\n\nMore workers have come from Romania and Bulgaria, up 11% and 8% respectively, but this may be because free movement from those countries came in much more recently.\n\nSome may have packed their bags fearing the brief window allowing them access to Britain might soon close.\n\nFor most European nationals, though, uncertainty over the status of EU citizens in a post-Brexit Britain, and the sharp fall in the pound, has made the UK a much less attractive prospect.\n\nSome British employers are very worried.\n\nThe growth of our hugely profitable tourism and hospitality sector, for instance, has relied upon importing foreign labour.\n\nI recently went to York, where the tourist industry is booming. In that city alone it is now worth an astonishing £500m a year and supports more than 20,000 jobs.\n\nBut the expansion could not have happened without immigration. The city has close to full employment - there are estimated to be fewer than a thousand local job seekers.\n\nThe news of a fall in migrant workers from countries which have traditionally filled tourist jobs makes grim reading for York's hoteliers, restaurateurs and bar owners.\n\nIf the numbers continue to fall, some fear the worst.\n\n\"It would create a staffing crisis,\" says Graham Usher, who heads York's Hoteliers' Association. \"If we get to the point where we can't fill vacancies with European workers then there's a big gap that we just can't fill.\"\n\nWhat about using British workers? I ask.\n\n\"There just aren't enough of them around. York only has about 700 unemployed people and that is it.\"\n\nA quarter of hospitality businesses across Britain say they currently have vacancies they are struggling to fill and the sector has been holding urgent talks with government officials on how to deal with the shortage of workers.\n\nIt is not just the tourism and hospitality sector, of course. Britain's record employment rate means there is often no immediate domestic alternative to migrant labour for many businesses looking to expand or simply survive.\n\nPoskitt's Carrots is a £35m a year business in the East Riding of Yorkshire, supplying vegetables to many of Britain's big supermarkets.\n\nIn the shed where 50,000 tonnes of carrots are washed and packed, 80% of the staff are Eastern Europeans.\n\n\"If we didn't have access to non-UK labour we just could not run this business,\" says managing director Guy Poskitt. \"I wouldn't even attempt to try and run it. Take away 80% of my workforce how can I operate?\"\n\nGuy Poskitt doesn't want to be reliant on migrant labour, but argues that there just aren't the domestic workers available from the rural communities nearby.\n\nSome argue that Britain needs to rid itself of its addiction to cheap migrant labour, that employers should do more to train and recruit home-grown workers.\n\nMany sectors are now thinking how they might adapt to Britain becoming a lower immigration economy.\n\nHealth ministers hope that universities will expand the number of training places for nurses in England to reduce the reliance on foreign staff.\n\nThe government recently lifted the cap on state-funded bursaries, but replaced them with student loans. Since the announcement, the number of applicants for nurse training in England has fallen 23%.\n\nBritain's creative industries, which are worth more to the UK economy than the finance sector, are often collaborative ventures involving highly skilled but relatively low paid workers from around the world.\n\nFrom ballet companies to computer gaming firms, there is concern that an inability to attract or employ foreign staff will damage their international standing and profitability.\n\nThe social care sector is also extremely concerned about the lack of suitable domestic staff to replace foreign workers who, in parts of the country make up the majority of employees.\n\nEarlier this week the Brexit Secretary David Davies told an audience in Estonia that in sectors requiring low-skilled labour including hospitality, agriculture and social care \"it will be years and years before we get British citizens to do those jobs\".\n\n\"Don't expect just because we're changing who makes the decision on the policy, the door will suddenly shut: It won't,\" he said.\n\nWhat the figures remind us, however, is that immigration works both ways.\n\nWe may not suddenly shut the door, but that doesn't mean foreigners will choose to walk through it.", "Andrew Frankish was filmed stamping on a bulldog and throwing her down stairs\n\nWhen two brothers who filmed themselves torturing a dog were spared jail it provoked an outcry. Yet England and Wales has the lightest maximum sentence in Europe for animal cruelty offences. Now an MP is hoping to make the law tougher on perpetrators.\n\nThere was outrage when the abuse to which Andrew and Daniel Frankish subjected a bulldog became public knowledge.\n\nThe brothers, from Redcar in Teesside, had repeatedly stamped on the dog and thrown it down stairs. As a result the dog became paralysed in the back legs and was eventually put down.\n\nYet they were given only a suspended sentence at Hartlepool Magistrates Court. Even if they had been jailed, the maximum prison sentence they could have faced was six months - meaning they would be released in just three.\n\nThe sentence attracted widespread criticism. Nearly 500,000 people signed an online petition calling for a tougher penalty. Others held a vigil for the abused dog while a plane was flown over Middlesbrough FC's stadium during a match, calling for the brothers to be locked up.\n\nRedcar's Labour MP Anna Turley, who was among those outraged by the sentence, has secured a parliamentary debate about the issue later on Friday.\n\nBetween 2013 and 2015 more than 3,000 people in England and Wales were convicted of animal cruelty but just 7% received jail terms.\n\nCurrently sentences in England and Wales are the lowest in Europe. In France the maximum is two years and in Germany it is three.\n\nMs Turley's Animal Cruelty (Sentencing) Bill - which will have its second reading on Friday - would increase the maximum to five years, matching the current situation in Northern Ireland.\n\nThis dog was nailed in the head and buried alive. It had to be put down\n\n\"The current sentences available to courts to punish animal abuse are not working,\" she says. \"They often mean the perpetrators of cruel acts towards animals just receive a slap on the wrist.\n\n\"If we do not properly punish these people then as a society we are essentially legitimising abuse against animals\".\n\nShe reiterated her stance when another pair of her constituents admitted hammering a nail into a dog's head and burying it alive in what a court heard was \"the worst case\" a vet had ever seen.\n\nClaire Horton, chief executive of Battersea Dogs' and Cats' Home, said the sentences for animal cruelty were too gentle.\n\n\"Six months in prison for the gravest act of animal cruelty, such as torturing an animal to death, is a fraction of the maximum sentence for fly tipping [five years] or theft [seven years],\" she said.\n\n\"So let's get this into proportion and let the punishment for abusing animals truly fit the crime.\"\n\nThe current sentencing guidelines have not changed since the Protection of Animals Act 1911. The Act was introduced essentially to make it an offence to override or overload animals pulling loads on the street.\n\nThe Animal Welfare Act 2006 actually made provision to increase sentencing to 51 weeks, but the provision was never enacted.\n\nPuppies were rescued from a farm in Solihull\n\nThe RSPCA is firmly behind the idea that sentences should be tougher.\n\nIts chief veterinary officer James Yeates says people are not only being deliberately cruel, but \"in disturbingly inventive ways.\"\n\nThere have been five prosecutions relating to the \"Neknomination\" online craze in which people took part in \"dares\" involving swallowing live fish, frogs and even a lizard.\n\nIn Gloucestershire a man was jailed for 16 weeks for microwaving a rabbit to death because he \"was angry\". Paul Rogers said he had \"no remorse whatsoever. Not even a grain of sand on a beach. I would be lying if I said I did.\"\n\nDozens of dogs were found in squalid conditions at a farm in Bradford, including dead puppies in a wheelbarrow\n\nThe RSPCA has highlighted several \"shocking\" cases, including that of a man who stabbed his dog and then hid her behind the washing machine. He was jailed for 12 weeks.\n\nThere are wider issues too. There is a substantial body of evidence that animal cruelty offenders also commit other serious crimes. A study carried out on behalf of the NSPCC found the children of pet abusers were more at risk of neglect or abuse themselves.\n\nThe charity says professionals \"can no longer afford to ignore the potential links between child abuse and animal cruelty. The two forms of abuse should not be seen as mutually exclusive; it needs to be recognised that they can co-exist, or there may be associations between the two\".\n\nLeague Against Cruel Sports chief executive Eduardo Goncalves added: \"If we don't offer a serious punishment to animal abusers then they will continue abusing animals.\n\n\"I spend a lot of my time looking at horrific dog fighting footage as the League is working hard to stamp this out in the UK, but I know in the back of my mind that if we catch a dog fighter, the most they will get is six months in prison - and probably much less.\n\n\"That's utterly inadequate and would be laughable if it wasn't so shocking.\"\n\nWhen discussing the five-year proposal in November, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Justice, Sam Gyimah, pointed out that the average custodial sentence for animal cruelty was about three and a half months.\n\n\"If judges are not going up to the maximum six months, there is a question whether the issue is with the maximum sentence length or the courts are finding the current sentencing powers inadequate or restrictive in dealing with those cases. We have to look at that.\n\n\"The maximum penalty for animal cruelty offences is under review.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage : Live on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nBen Te'o will make his first start for England in Sunday's Six Nations match with Italy.\n\nTe'o, 30, has won five caps as a replacement, but has been named at outside centre for the meeting with the Azzurri.\n\nDanny Care partners George Ford at half-back, with Owen Farrell at inside centre and Elliot Daly on the wing.\n\n\"Ben Te'o at 13 gives us another way of playing the game,\" said head coach Eddie Jones.\n\n\"We are excited about seeing him, George Ford and Owen Farrell play together in the midfield.\"\n\nWatch Eddie Jones answer your questions on Conte, player power and Buddhism.\n\nCare last started for England in the Grand Slam showdown with France in Paris a year ago.\n\n\"Ben Youngs has been outstanding for us at number nine, but Danny Care gets the starting jersey this week,\" added Jones.\n\n\"For the first half he'll give us a lot of speed and running at the base of the ruck as well as the scrum. Ben will then come on and finish the game.\"\n\nElsewhere wing Jonny May and flanker James Haskell both return to the starting XV, as Jones makes four changes from the side that beat Wales.\n\nHaskell came off the bench in the wins over France and Wales.\n\nFind out how to get into rugby union with our special guide.\n\n\"Tom Wood has been great for us at seven, and Jack Clifford did well against Wales but James Haskell has the starting role on Sunday; he has come back to a much better level of fitness and we are sure his explosive actions will help us in the first part of the game,\" Jones continued.\n\nMako Vunipola has been included among the replacements after recovering from a knee injury, while Henry Slade is also included in the squad, with Anthony Watson missing out.\n\nFarrell, 25, wins his 50th cap at Twickenham as England look to win their 16th straight game under Jones.\n\n\"It is an important Test match for us and our only consideration is to play well. Italy have a proud record in Test rugby, they beat South Africa in November, and we will not underestimate them,\" said the Australian.\n\n\"I know the Twickenham crowd will give Owen Farrell a big cheer. To reach 50 caps at such a young age is a fine achievement. The one thing I know about Owen is that his next 50 are going to be more impressive than his first.\"\n\nTe'o has made an explosive impact off the bench in the first two Six Nations matches, and is rewarded with a place in the starting XV for the first time.\n\nNormally an inside centre, Jones has surprisingly selected him in the number 13 shirt, and he will provide the ball-carrying power England have missed in the absence of Manu Tuilagi, and which the last coaching regime hoped would be provided by another cross-code convert, Sam Burgess.\n\nThere were suggestions Owen Farrell would move to fly-half on the occasion of his 50th cap, but Jones has persisted with the playmaking combination of George Ford and Farrell at 10 and 12.\n• None Get all the latest Six Nations news by adding", "It may seem simple - we like chocolate because it tastes nice. But there's more to it than that - and it relates to a fat/carbohydrates balance that is set right from the very beginning of our lives.\n\nI love chocolate and once I start on a bar I can't stop until it's all gone. One square, or even a few, are never enough. My family know that if they bring chocolate into our house they will have to hide it.\n\nSo what is it about the food that so many of us find irresistible? And what characteristics does chocolate share with other foods that we simply can't say, \"no\" to?\n\nAs part of a new series on the science of food, botanist James Wong and I went looking for answers.\n\nChocolate is made from cocoa beans, which have been grown and consumed in the Americas for thousands of years.\n\nThe Maya and the Aztecs made a drink out of cocoa beans called xocolatl, which means \"bitter water.\"\n\nThat's because in its raw form cocoa beans are intensely bitter.\n\nTo get at the beans you first have to crack open the thick husk of the cocoa pod, releasing a pulp that has an intense tropical flavour that's halfway between lemonade and a custard apple. Known as baba de cacao, it's sweet, acidic and very sticky.\n\nThe beans and pulp are then sweated and allowed to ferment for several days before being dried and roasted.\n\nRoasting releases a range of chemical compounds including 3-methylbutanoic acid, which on its own has a sweaty rancid odour, and dimethyl trisulfide, the smell of over-cooked cabbage.\n\nThe combination of these and other aroma molecules creates a unique chemical signature that our brains love.\n\nBut the rich, chocolaty smells and the happy memories of youth that those smells provoke, are just part of chocolate's attraction.\n\nChocolate contains a number of interesting psychoactive chemicals. These include anandamide, a neurotransmitter whose name comes from the Sanskrit - \"ananda\", meaning \"joy, bliss, delight\". Anandamides stimulate the brain in much the same way that cannabis does.\n\nIt also contains tyramine and phenylethylamine, both of which have similar effects to amphetamines.\n\nFinally, if you look hard enough, you will find small traces of theobromine and caffeine, both of which are well-known stimulants.\n\nFor a while, some food scientists got very excited about the discovery but to be honest, although chocolate contains these substances, we now know they are only there in trace amounts.\n\nYour brain is not going to get much of a chemical rush from eating a few squares. None the less, they may play a small part in seducing our senses.\n\nSo what else does chocolate have going for it?\n\nWell, it also has a creamy viscosity. When you take it out of its wrapper and put a bit in your mouth without biting, you will notice that it rapidly melts on your tongue, leaving a lingering sensation of smoothness.\n\nSpecial touch receptors on our tongues detect this textural change, which then stimulates feelings of pleasure.\n\nBut the thing that really transformed the cocoa from a bitter and watery drink into the snack we adore today was the addition of sugar and fat.\n\nThe addition of just the right amount of each is crucial to our enjoyment of chocolate. Look at the side of a packet of milk chocolate and you will see that it is normally contains around 20-25% fat and 40-50% sugar.\n\nIn nature such high levels of sugar and fat are rarely found, or at least not together.\n\nYou can get lots of natural sugars from fruits and roots, and there is plenty of fat to be found in nuts or a tasty chunk of salmon, but one of the few places where you will find both together is in milk.\n\nHuman breast milk is particularly rich in natural sugars, mainly lactose. Roughly 4% of human breast milk is fat, while about 8% is made up of sugars. Formula milk, which is fed to babies, contains a similar ratio of fats to sugars.\n\nThis ratio, 1g of fat to 2g of sugars, is the same ratio of fats to sugars that you find in milk chocolate. And in biscuits, doughnuts, ice cream. In fact this particular ratio is reflected in many of the foods that we find hard to resist.\n\nSo why do I love chocolate? For a whole host of reasons. But it may also be that I, and chocoholics like me, are trying to recapture the taste and sense of closeness we got from the first food we ever sampled; human breast milk.\n\nThe Secrets of Your Food begins on BBC2 at 2100GMT on Friday February 24th.\n\nJoin the conversation on our Facebook page.\n• None BBC Two - The Secrets of Your Food", "Last updated on .From the section Scottish Rugby\n\nScotland secured their first Women's Six Nations win since 2010 as they recovered from two tries down to beat Wales.\n\nCarys Phillips' score was followed by a penalty try for the visitors, with Elinor Snowsill converting both.\n\nThe Scots responded with Lisa Thomson's converted try, and Rhona Lloyd crossing in the second half.\n\nLana Skeldon missed the conversion for Lloyd's try, but Sarah Law's late penalty gave the Scots victory.\n\nA shaky start by Wales allowed Scotland to camp in their 22 early on. However, the opening was plagued with unforced errors from both sides, one of which by Wales allowed Skeldon and Jemma Forsyth to gain a penalty but Law's attempt was wide.\n\nDyddgu Hywel and debutant Jasmine Joyce's use of wide spaces meant Scotland were soon on the back foot and from a driven maul off a line-out Wales captain Phillips touched down.\n\nThe Welsh then utilised a powerful scrum drive to force their penalty try and Snowsill added her second conversion.\n\nHowever, the tide started to turn when Law offloaded for Thomson to cross and scrum-half Law converted.\n\nThe try gave Scotland renewed impetus after the break, but Amy Evans, Hywells and Phillips all threatened to add to the Welsh advantage.\n\nA rolling maul applied more pressure to the hosts and only Jade Konkel's interception and burst forward allowed space for the Scots to breathe.\n\nAnd it was from Konkel's pass to Lloyd that the hosts were finally back in contention. The winger managed to soar over the line in the left corner for her third international try.\n\nThe closing stages were fiery and Thomson's powerful drive through the Welsh defence resulted in a scrum dangerously close to the line.\n\nWales managed to get the ball away and were safe, momentarily, but their inability to disrupt the Scottish line-out meant the hosts were back on the attack and Law held her nerve with the decisive kick after the visitors had been penalised for offside.", "Last updated on .From the section Athletics\n\nThree Russian athletes have been cleared to return to competition by the IAAF's doping review board.\n\nPole vaulter Anzhelika Sidorova, sprinter Kristina Sivkova and hammer thrower Aleksei Sokirskii all met the \"exceptional eligibility criteria\".\n\nRussia's athletics federation remains suspended from international competition after claims of state-sponsored doping.\n\nSidorova, Sivkova and Sokirskii would compete as neutral athletes.\n\nTheir participation in competitions is still subject to approval by the organisers of individual events.\n\nThe three could compete in the European Indoor Championships in Belgrade and European Throwing Cup next month.\n\nLong jumper Darya Klishina and sprinter Yulia Stepanova had previously been declared eligible and will remain so.\n\nThe IAAF has received 48 applications from Russian athletes to compete independently, 28 of which were endorsed by Russia's athletics federation.\n\nIn a statement, the IAAF said six applications had been declined, but did not give the names of the athletes in question.\n\nRussian officials say they do not expect any more of their athletes to be cleared for the European Indoors as they expect the remaining rulings \"no earlier than the middle of March\".\n\nIAAF president Lord Coe said: \"The application process to compete internationally as neutral athletes is about our desire to support the hopes and aspirations of all clean athletes including Russian athletes who have been failed by their national system.\n\n\"While prioritising applications based upon the entry deadlines of the competitions concerned, the primary responsibility of the doping review board must always be to safeguard the integrity of competition.\"\n\nBefore last summer's Olympic Games in Rio, the governing body outlined \"strict criteria\" any Russian athletes must meet if they wanted to take part in the Games.\n\nOnly US-based Klishina was able to meet the criteria - and she entered as a neutral.", "Approximately 850 people from the UK have travelled to support or fight for jihadist groups in Syria and Iraq, say the British authorities.\n\nThis BBC News database is the most comprehensive public record of its kind, telling the story of over 100 people from the UK who have been convicted of offences relating to the conflict and over 150 others who have either died or are still in the region.\n\nThis interactive content is optimised for modern, javascript-enabled web browsers. Please ensure you have javascript enabled and a current browser.\n\nThe information above has been compiled from open sources and BBC research. Some details have been withheld for legal reasons or are unavailable.", "Ella (pictured, centre) has made two lifelong friends thanks to her late mother's organ donations\n\nWhen her mother died in 2013, Ella decided her organs should be donated in the hope of saving the lives of others. It has led to several successful transplants and two wonderful friendships. Now Ella is hoping to donate to one of the same women as her mother.\n\nElla Murtha had always hoped the recipients of her late mother's organs would contact her, and that it might bring some form of closure. But she never expected to gain such strong friendships.\n\n\"I hoped I'd hear something when I agreed to be contacted [by the recipients], but I didn't know,\" she tells the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme.\n\nHer mother Tish died unexpectedly in 2013 following a ruptured brain aneurysm, aged 56. Despite her not being on the organ donor list, Ella felt that it was right for her organs to be passed on.\n\nTish's heart, kidney, pancreas, liver, eye tissue and lungs were all donated, leading to successful transplants that doctors said saved the lives of four women and the eyesight of four men.\n\nMany organ donors never have the opportunity to meet the person, or people, whose lives they have changed for the better.\n\nThe recipient's identity remains confidential, although a thank-you letter can often be passed on via a transplant co-ordinator.\n\nFor six months Ella, from Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, heard nothing back. But then two letters arrived on her doorstep in the same week.\n\nTeresa Saunders, from Reading, was one of those who decided to write, wanting to express her gratitude for receiving a kidney and pancreas.\n\nThree years earlier her diabetes had caused her kidneys to fail when she became pregnant, and she had been placed on a waiting list.\n\nAfter the operation Teresa waited about five months before writing to Ella, in order \"to fully recover and make sure I was well and the organs were OK\".\n\nJane Holmes, of Hornsea, East Yorkshire, also decided to write. She was in a wheelchair and had struggled to breathe since being diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension.\n\n\"I wanted Ella to know what her decision had gone on to do - to help save a mum with four children,\" she explains.\n\n\"Initially it's like the lungs came off the shelf - it's clinical and you don't attach people to it.\n\n\"But when you start getting better you want to thank people for it, and you think you visualise the person.\"\n\nThe pair exchanged letters, but their friendship began to blossom when Jane's daughter Maisie sent Ella a Christmas card.\n\nAged eight at the time, Maisie had thought Ella might be lonely without her mother, and wrote a card that read: \"Thank you for letting your mum save my mum's life.\"\n\nMaisie sent a letter to Ella, thanking her for helping to save her mother's life\n\nOn the anniversary of Jane receiving her new lungs, the three women decided to meet, saying it felt like a natural progression.\n\n\"It sounds funny but we are like sisters because we have this bond - even like I'd known them for years,\" Teresa said.\n\n\"I feel really lucky,\" Ella said. \"It's so hard to explain it because I see them like family, but almost special friends that my mum has introduced me to.\n\n\"Teresa and Jane share my mum's organs and that's a special bond as well. For whatever reason, we're meant to be in each other's life.\"\n\nThe women speak almost every day, but the connection between them may yet grow stronger.\n\nTeresa's new kidney is deteriorating, meaning she will require a replacement.\n\nAbout 3,000 kidney transplants are carried out each year\n\nIn up to 90% of cases, a kidney transplant lasts for five or more years. In this instance doctors believe Teresa needs a replacement kidney from a living donor - and Ella hopes to follow in her mother's footsteps by donating her own organ.\n\nShe has undertaken tests to see if their tissue types are compatible. It may not be possible for Ella to donate, but Teresa says she is \"overwhelmed\" by her kindness and knows she can rely on Ella's emotional support.\n\nThe three friends are currently fundraising for Jane's daughter Maisie, who has cerebral palsy, to have an operation to help her walk.\n\nWatch the Victoria Derbyshire programme on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Lewis Hamilton has put the first laps on the Mercedes car he hopes will make him world champion for the fourth time in 2017.\n\nThe 32-year-old drove the new Mercedes W08 at Silverstone in blustery, damp conditions.\n\nHamilton said the car felt \"incredible\" and \"pretty awesome\" on his first outing.\n\nIt has been produced to new regulations aimed at making the cars faster, more dramatic and more demanding of drivers.\n\nIt features an elegant design, in contrast to some rivals, and a notably narrow rear.\n• None Did these crazy car launches really happen?\n\nHamilton said: \"Yesterday was the first time I saw [the car] together. It is the most detailed piece of machinery I have seen in F1.\n\n\"This is not an actual test - it's just a few laps to make sure the car will run. But I was able to go faster in the last couple of laps.\n\n\"It feels almost identical to last year's car in terms of ergonomics but you have this bigger, more powerful beast around you.\"\n\n'You may see some sparks' - Bottas\n\nHis new team-mate Valtteri Bottas, signed by Mercedes last month to replace Nico Rosberg, who retired after winning his first world title last year, drove the car on Thursday afternoon.\n\nMercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff said he was hoping for a less fractious relationship between Hamilton and Bottas than between the Briton and Rosberg.\n\n\"It's a completely new dynamic,\" Wolff said. \"I see it as an opportunity to start from square one with a healthy relationship. There are no games, no warfare because there is no history.\n\n\"There is a solid foundation that the relationship works well. But you have to be realistic that when they get out there, it is about winning races and championships, and the rivalry could be difficult.\"\n\nHowever, Bottas told BBC TV that \"you may see some sparks\" and he wanted to be world champion himself at some stage.\n\n\"I am here to do a lot for the team, everything I can,\" he said,\n\n\"I'm here also to prove myself. I'm not here to be the second driver. We are both going to be fighting a lot on the track, but fairly, and for the team.\"\n\nMercedes have clearly worked extremely hard at shrink-wrapping the bodywork as much as possible around the engine and its ancillaries to ensure the cleanest airflow and maximum aerodynamic downforce.\n\nAnd the aerodynamic detailing on the car looks especially intricate, with a cascading series of airflow conditioners - commonly known as 'barge boards' - either side of the cockpit, which are a clear advance on anything seen before in F1.\n\nBottas said: \"What I really like about it is how clean it looks, but at the same time there's a massive amount of detail.\"\n\nWolff added: \"It is a new era of technical innovation, maybe someone has found the silver bullet that makes the difference, like Brawn in 2009. Hopefully it will be us.\"\n\nFourth title 'there for the taking' - Hamilton\n\nHamilton is relishing the prospect of the new season, which starts in Australia on 26 March.\n\n\"It is a good day to get confidence in the car. It is a good way to brush off cobwebs and do the walking because next week we have to go straight into the running,\" he said.\n\n\"I definitely don't want to finish second. Every year you generally set the same goals but you might add more. All drivers want to win but not everyone has the ability or the opportunity.\n\n\"We will find out whether we have the car next week, whether it is a reliable fast car so I can exploit what's inside me. I am looking for that fourth world championship. It's there for the taking again, I am up against another great driver in Valtteri and hopefully Red Bull and Ferrari will be up there as well.\"\n\nThe new rules were introduced at least partly because Mercedes' rivals hoped a reset would allow them to make up some ground. But there was always a risk that the best team with the best engine would end up further ahead.\n\nIt's too early to say that, but the new car looks like a work of engineering art and Hamilton ought to be favourite to win a fourth world title this season.", "Leicester City caretaker boss Craig Shakespeare has denied a player revolt led to the sacking of Claudio Ranieri.\n\nBBC Sport understands some players were summoned to meet the chairman after the 2-1 loss to Sevilla and Ranieri's fate was sealed by the negative reaction.\n\nThe Italian was sacked by Leicester on Thursday nine months after leading the club to the Premier League title.\n\n\"There was a lot of frustration because of the results, but he had not lost the dressing room,\" Shakespeare said.\n\n\"A lot of the talk of unrest has been speculation. I've not had one problem with the players.\n\n\"I always feel sorry when people lose their jobs. My relationship with Claudio has been fine all along.\n\n\"I spoke to him last night and he thanked me for my support throughout. It was not brief and we exchanged views. A lot of what we said will stay private.\"\n• None Hero to zero: Were Leicester right to sack Ranieri?\n\nLeicester are 17th in the Premier League, one point above the relegation zone, with 13 matches left and are out of the FA Cup after losing 1-0 to Millwall in the fifth round.\n\nDespite losing 2-1 to Sevilla in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie, they could yet reach the quarter-finals. The second leg is on 14 March.\n\nShakespeare, who will take charge of Monday's home league match against Liverpool, admitted he felt like a \"pantomime villain\" having been asked to face the media after Ranieri's \"very sad\" exit, but added the decision \"must be respected\".\n\n\"Whether I think it's right or not is irrelevant,\" he added.\n\n\"We all know in football people lose their jobs because of results - and the results haven't been good enough. He will get the utmost respect in terms of what he has achieved with this club.\"\n\nLeicester started last season as 5,000-1 outsiders for the title, having almost been relegated the season before.\n\nFormer Leicester, Everton and England striker Gary Lineker described his hometown team's achievement as \"the biggest sporting shock of my lifetime\".\n\nThe remarkable title win saw Ranieri named best men's coach at Fifa's awards in January, and top coach at the BBC's Sports Personality of the Year awards in December.\n\nThe chairman and vice chairman had become increasingly concerned by the players' alienation from Ranieri this season over a variety of issues.\n\nElimination from the FA Cup at Millwall and the flattering scoreline in Seville hardened the hearts of the influential members of the dressing room.\n\nSo Ranieri was sacked by Director of Football, Jon Rudkin, yesterday afternoon when they flew back to the Midlands.\n\nThe favourite to replace him is Roberto Mancini, but at the moment it's understood he hasn't been sounded out by Leicester, nor is he particularly interested.\n\nJudging by Shakespeare's assured performance at today's press conference, he wouldn't be fazed at the prospect of running the show for the final 13 matches of this season.\n\nHe was alongside Nigel Pearson two years ago when Leicester staged a remarkable escape from relegation. He's a highly capable, experienced coach, very popular with influential figures in the dressing-room.\n\nShakespeare is clinging to the 'it's just about Monday v Liverpool' mantra. but he seems at ease with any further challenges.\n\nJose Mourinho wrote on Instagram on Thursday: \"Champion of England and Fifa manager of the year, sacked. That's the new football. Claudio, keep smiling. Nobody can delete the history you wrote.\"\n\nSpeaking on Friday, the Manchester United boss described his post as \"my little homage to somebody that wrote the most beautiful history in the Premier League\".\n\n\"He deserves to have Leicester's stadium named after him,\" the Portuguese added.\n\n\"It's a decision that has everyone in football united and is very difficult to accept. I was sacked as a champion, a giant negative as I thought - but it's peanuts compared to Claudio.\"\n\nFormer Manchester City boss Roberto Mancini, the bookmakers' early favourite to replace Ranieri, posted on social media: \"I am sorry for my friend Ranieri. He will remain in the history of @LCFC, in the heart of Leicester fans and all football lovers.\"\n\nLiverpool manager Jurgen Klopp said: \"Am I surprised that things like this can happen? No. It is not only football.\n\n\"For me there have been a few strange decisions in 2016-17. Brexit, Trump, Ranieri. I have no idea why Leicester did this. Everyone could see the situation in the league, the situation in the Champions League - which we are not in.\n\n\"He is a really special person in this business, a really nice guy. I met him before when he visited me at Dortmund and we had a nice talk. He is a wonderful person.\"\n\nChelsea boss Antonio Conte said: \"I'm very sad, but this is our job. He is a friend, a good man and a good manager. He reached a dream to win the title. I am disappointed as a friend and a coach.\"\n\nAnd when asked about reports of the players having a role in Ranieri's sacking, he added: \"I don't like to follow this type of story, it's a lack of respect. If this happened, it means the club is poor, with no power. It's not right that players can control your destiny as a manager.\"\n\nRoma coach Luciano Spalletti said: \"It's inexplicable, there is no recognition. He was the one who created this chemistry in the team and the locker room that made it possible to win the championship.\n\n\"When you win a title ahead of Manchester City, Manchester United and Chelsea, if you have a little dignity, you even accept to be relegated without touching anything.\n\n\"It should be such a joy to have won that the following year you can accept to be relegated. It's always us (managers) who leave. Have you ever seen a president, an official or a player sacked before the end of the season?\"\n\nAston Villa manager Steve Bruce said: \"We understand as managers now that we are the whipping boys. I'm scratching my head, like everyone else is, asking myself how someone who delivered the finest achievement in football last year, could now be sacked. We're talking about Leicester here.\n\nBournemouth manager Eddie Howe said: \"I was shocked at Claudio Ranieri's sacking. He's real gentleman and a positive person. But it doesn't taint Claudio's story and he will always be remembered for that historic achievement.\"\n\nSunderland manager David Moyes: \"It's a disappointing day for managers all round the world, I'm really sad for Claudio.\n\n\"It made me think how lucky I was to go 11 years at Everton and how few people get to do that.\n\n\"A lot of clubs often decide to sack the manager so it has an impact on the players. I'm hoping it doesn't have an impact, and that it helps us - maybe they're a little bit rudderless at the moment and it might actually help us.\"\n\nRichard Bevan, chief executive of the League Managers' Association, said: \"A manager's lifespan is probably now about a year. It's baffling, and morally wrong.\n\n\"He delivered the holy grail to the football club and nine months later he's been sacked from his job.\n\n\"It's a very brutal game but certainly the timing of this is a surprise and disbelief and it's undermined the coaching profession.\"\n\nEddie Jones, the head coach of England's rugby union team, said: \"When we first got together one of the things we talked about was Leicester City and what they went through last season, what we could learn from it.\n\n\"I must admit I felt a bit sick last night hearing the news because he's such a great, honourable guy and he's done a fantastic job.\"", "Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho defends sacked Leicester City manager Claudio Ranieri and says he was let down by \"selfish\" players.\n\nWATCH MORE: Five things we'll miss about Claudio Ranieri", "Jasvinder Sanghera was locked in a room by her parents when she was 16, when she refused to marry the man they had chosen for her. Here she describes how she escaped with the help of a secret boyfriend - but lost all contact with her family as a result.\n\nGrowing up we had no freedom whatsoever. Everything was watched, monitored and controlled. We understood that we had to be careful how we behaved so as not to shame the family.\n\nI'm one of seven sisters and there's only one younger than me so I'd watched my sisters having to be married at very young ages - as young as 15.\n\nThey would disappear to become a wife and go to India, come back, not go back to school and then go into these marriages and be physically and psychologically abused. And my impression of marriage was that this is what happens to you - you get married, you get beaten up, and then you're told to stay there.\n\nMy parents were Sikh and Sikhism was born on the foundation of compassion and equality of men and women, and yet here we have women who were treated very differently. My brother was allowed total freedom of expression. He was also allowed to choose who he wanted to marry. But the women were treated differently and that was reinforced within the communities. It's gone unchallenged and it's deeply ingrained.\n\nI don't think I was smarter. I just don't know what it was within me. My mother used to say: \"You were born upside down, you were different from birth.\"\n\nMaybe she helped me out by saying that, because it made me question a number of things, and then when I was shown the photograph of this man, as a 14-year-old, knowing that I'd been promised to him from the age of eight and being expected to contemplate marriage, I looked at this picture thinking: \"Well he's shorter than me and he's very much older than me and I don't want this.\"\n\nAnd it was as simple as that.\n\nBut within our family dynamic we were taught to be silent.\n\nSaying no to the marriage meant my family took me out of education and they held me a prisoner in my own home.\n\nI was 15 and I was locked in this room and literally I was not allowed to leave the room until I agreed to the marriage. It was padlocked on the outside and I had to knock on the door to go the toilet and they brought food to the door.\n\nMy mother was the very person who enforced the rules. People don't think of women as the gatekeepers to an honour system.\n\nSo in the end I said yes, purely to plan my escape. And it was as simple as that, because then I had freedom of movement.\n\nThe only friends we were allowed had to be from an Indian community as well. And my best friend, who was Indian, it was her brother who helped me in the end.\n\nHe became my secret boyfriend. He saved some money and said, \"I want to be with you and I'll help you to escape.\" He would come to the house at night and stand in the garden and we would secretly mouth things to each other through the window.\n\nOne day he dressed up as a woman and went into a shoe shop and pretended he was shopping. He handed me a note which said, \"I'll be at the back of the house at this time - look out of the window.\" So I did, and he mouthed for me to pack my wardrobe and I lowered two cases down using sheets tied together, and flushed the toilets so my mother wouldn't hear.\n\nAnd then one day I was at home with my dad, who was at home because he worked nights, and the front door was open, and I just ran out.\n\nI ran all the way, a good three-and-a-half miles, to where my boyfriend worked and hid behind a wall and waited for him to come out. He went and got my cases and then picked me up in his Ford Escort and got me to close my eyes and put my finger on a map, and it landed on Newcastle.\n\nJasvinder, now 51, helps others who are in the same situation as she was\n\nI sat in the footwell of the car all the way so no-one would see me and then when I saw the Tyne bridge I was absolutely amazed by it because I had never been anywhere outside Derby.\n\nMy parents reported me missing to the police and it was the police officer who told me I had to ring home to let them know I was safe and well.\n\nMy mother answered the phone and I said: \"Mom, it's me. You know, I want to come home but I don't want to marry that stranger.\"\n\nHer response has stayed with me for the rest of my life. She said: \"You either come back and marry who we say, or from this day forward you are now dead in our eyes.\"\n\nIt was only later on when things settled down that I begin to think, \"I've done it but where's my family? I want my family.\" I was missing them terribly. You feel like a dead person walking.\n\nMy boyfriend used to drive me to my hometown at 3am just so I could see my dad walking home from the foundry.\n\nWhat changed how I felt was the death of my sister, Robina. She was taken out of school at 15 for nine months, married to a man in India, and then came back and put in the same year as me and nobody questioned this at all. But he treated her terribly and when her son was around six months old she severed the relationship.\n\nShe then married for love and my parents agreed to it because he was Indian - Sikh and from the same caste as us. She again suffered domestic abuse but my parents made it clear that because she had chosen him she had a duty, doubly, to make it work.\n\nShe went to see a local community leader - they have a lot of power, my parents would have seen his word as the word of God - and he told her: \"You need to think of your husband's temper like a pan of milk - when it boils it rises to the top and a woman's role is to blow it to cool it down.\"\n\nWhen she was 25 she set herself on fire and she died. When she was - I say - driven to commit suicide, that was the turning point for me.\n\nBBC 100 Women names 100 influential and inspirational women around the world every year. We create documentaries, features and interviews about their lives, giving more space for stories that put women at the centre.\n\nOther stories you might like:\n\nI've learned to live my life with no expectations of family whatsoever. I've never had a birthday card in 35 years and neither have my children. For my children it's a total blank on their mother's side when it comes to family. I've got nephews and nieces that I'll never meet because all of my siblings sided with my parents.\n\nI have actually stipulated in my will that I do not want any of my estranged family to be at my funeral because I know the hypocrisy that exists within them. They will want to show their face, but if they couldn't show it when I was alive, I'm not going to give them that privilege when I'm gone.\n\nI have three children - Natasha who's 31, Anna who's 22 and Jordan who's 19.\n\nYou almost live vicariously through your children because you want them to have everything you never had.\n\nMy daughter married an Asian man and I was worried - I didn't want this family to take it out on her that her mother was disowned and had run away from home. But thankfully for me my fears were completely unfounded because here was an Indian family that did the exact opposite of what my family did.\n\nStarting a charity, Karma Nirvana, in 1993 from my kitchen table allowed me for the first time to start talking about my personal experiences and what had happened to my sister. My family wanted us to never speak about Robina again.\n\nSometimes at Christmas my children would meet these different women at the dinner table - survivors disowned by their family - and they had no idea who would be the next person at our table, but they understood why.\n\nThe charity will be 25 years old next year. We have helped make forced marriage a criminal offence, we have a helpline funded by the government which takes 750 calls a month - 58% of callers are victims and the others are professionals calling about a victim.\n\nWe do risk assessments, offer refuge and help plan escapes.\n\nWe still don't have enough responses from professionals and we've got to try to increase the reporting, but we're getting there. This is abuse, not part of culture where we make excuses - cultural acceptance does not mean accepting the unacceptable. Abuse is abuse.\n\nI'm a grandmother now - my daughter's expecting her second child in March. And you know when I look at them I think to myself, 'they're never going to inherit that legacy of abuse because of that decision I made when I was 16.'\n\nAnd that really makes me feel a lot stronger.\n\nJasvinder appeared on The Conversation, on the BBC World Service - listen to the programme here - and also spoke to Sarah Buckley for 100 Women.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "These men are the turnover kings at the ruck.\n\nRugby commentators call them jackals, but what they really mean is hyenas - aggressive beasts with huge upper bodies who spend half their lives buried up to their waists in the bloody carcass of the ruck, never happier than when ripping the ball from the grasp of a downed opponent.\n\nHistorically the hyenas have been open-side flankers - think outstanding Australian David Pocock, who played most of his career in the seven shirt before moving to number eight for the Wallabies.\n\nBut as the game has developed apace, winning turnovers is a skill that is increasingly being distributed throughout the team.\n\nThe former Wales captain has been a man revitalised after shedding the responsibility of leading the team.\n\nPacking down on the blind-side in this Six Nations he has won three turnovers in the two games so far and is a constant menace at every ruck.\n\nWarburton learned from former Wales flanker Martyn Williams, who was a master of the art, and has significantly bulked up over the years to be able to take the inevitable pounding players face when attempting to force turnovers.\n\nThe Ireland blind-side is having a superb Six Nations both with ball in hand and in defence.\n\nA squat 6ft 1in - he packs getting on for 18 stone into that comparatively compact frame - getting over the ball at the ruck is just another of the skills he executes very well.\n\nStander is averaging a turnover a game over the past two Six Nations and is always looking to give his team an advantage - he views this as another area for him to exploit in order to wrest back momentum for the men in green.\n\nBack in the day turnover specialists were rarely towering next-level athletes with the height and heft to play second row - but this is 2017 after all and Saracens forward Itoje is enjoying redefining the possibilities, having shifted from lock to blind-side for England this season.\n\nAt 6ft 5in and with a correspondingly higher centre of gravity, he should be - comparatively - easy to shift off the ball, but not only is he outstandingly quick to get in position at a ruck, once he is there he is impossible to blast out of the way.\n\nLast season he was borderline for me at the breakdown as, rather than support his own weight legally, he flirted with illegality by putting his elbows on the ground to support himself, and although he has improved a little bit this season he still pushes his luck and can improve.\n\nJohn Barclay has been rewarded for his influence by being handed the Scotland captaincy for Saturday's game against Wales.\n\nThe versatile back-rower - he will start at six at Murrayfield - missed out on the 2015 World Cup despite being in the top three for turnovers in the Pro12 the previous season.\n\nThe 30-year-old Scarlets player has persevered and his ability to turn over ball and force penalties at the breakdown will be key if Scotland are to end their long losing run against Wales at the weekend.\n\nThe second of Ireland's multi-purpose back row hunter-killers along with Stander, O'Brien was outstanding on the opening weekend in the defeat by Scotland.\n\nDespite not having played for a month he was at the heart of their fightback and added two turnovers to his tally of tackles and metres made, before the Scots made the game safe once the Tullow Tank had finally run short of power after 65 minutes and been replaced.\n\nThe 30-year-old flanker epitomises the 'farm strength' that those raised on a farm accrue as they grow up, and the years spent chucking bales around are all too evident when he get his mitts on the ball and refuses to budge.\n\nRemember what I said about the game changing? Towards the end of his career former Ireland centre Brian O'Driscoll had become so adept at the breakdown he was like another open-side playing in midfield when it came to winning turnovers and penalties at the ruck.\n\nEngland winger Nowell is a similar size and build, and that stocky power means he was equal top of the turnover charts with seven in last year's Six Nations.\n\nIt is always good to see a back in the turnovers-won rankings and keep an eye out for Nowell over the next three games as he proves it's not just forwards who can be influential in this area.\n\nWho has Guscott missed out?\n\nWhat no John Hardie? And where's James Haskell? How about Alun Wyn Jones? And where's Joe Launchbury?\n\nWhether you agree or disagree with Jerry's choices, why not rank his picks in the order you think they should be in using our interactive tool below.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLeicester's decision to sack Claudio Ranieri nine months after winning the Premier League made former Foxes striker Gary Lineker \"shed a tear\".\n\nRanieri guided Leicester to the title despite them being rated 5,000-1 shots at the start of the 2015-16 campaign.\n\nThe Foxes are 17th this season and lost to League One Millwall in the FA Cup.\n\n\"It is very sad,\" said Match of the Day presenter Lineker. \"It is inexplicable to me. It's inexplicable to a lot football fans who love the game.\"\n\nSpeaking to BBC Radio 4, the 56-year-old added: \"I suppose you can explain it in terms of a panic decision and for me a wrong decision.\n\n\"I shed a tear last night for Claudio, for football and for my club.\"\n\nIn Ranieri's last game in charge, the Foxes lost 2-1 to Sevilla in the first-leg of their Champions League last-16 tie on Wednesday, with the return leg on 14 March.\n\nSpeaking to BBC Sport on Friday, Lineker added: \"Last season was the inexplicable one, not this season. The fact they are in a reasonable position in the Champions League, they are not in the bottom three and given the magic of last season surely he deserved more time.\n\n\"I think that the way everybody got behind Leicester was something I'd never witnessed before. Just to toss that all away over a premature decision and disloyal, lack of gratitude, is quite gobsmacking.\n\n\"I think they should be building statues to him, not sacking him.\"\n\nRanieri flew back to Rome on Friday, with his former assistant Craig Shakespeare replacing him at the club's scheduled news conference on Friday.\n\nAfter news of the 65-year-old Italian's dismissal broke on Thursday, former England captain Lineker, who played for his hometown club for seven seasons, said the \"game's gone\" in a post on social media.\n\n\"It's a sign of modern football, what happened last season was truly extraordinary, \" he added on Friday. \"The lack of gratitude from the owners of the club and who knows who else involved in such a decision beggars belief.\n\n\"That season will remain with us forever, it was truly special and a lot of that was down to the management.\n\n\"The same guy cannot be considered incapable of doing the job a few months months later after achieving what, for me, was the biggest miracle in sport.\"\n• None Analysis: Were Leicester right to sack Ranieri?\n• None 'One of the worst things the owners have done'\n• None 'Craig will step up to the plate'\n\nChelsea dismissed Jose Mourinho as manager the season after their 2015 title and Lineker says while that is \"expected at big clubs\", the decision to sack Ranieri \"takes away from the glory\" for the Foxes.\n\n\"For a club like Leicester to win the league last season, the magnificence of the story, the likeability of the club under Ranieri - the ultimate gentleman - it kind of demeans the club.\n\n\"Leicester were hugely popular right around the world. To do something like this now loses a lot of that popularity.\"\n\nFormer Leicester and England goalkeeper Peter Shilton, said the club's struggles this season made Ranieri's sacking understandable.\n\nSpeaking to Radio 4, he said: \"Going down would be a disaster for Leicester and I suppose the board have made a very brave decision.\n\n\"If they stay in the Premier League then they've made the right decision. A lot of people will say there's no sentiment in football, look at what he's done for the club, but he's had a lot of the season to get things going.\n\n\"There's obviously some reason why not. We're not privy to that - maybe the board are. Maybe there's unrest in the dressing room, who knows? Maybe the players just aren't performing.\"\n• None 'If they stay in the Premier League, they've made the right decision' - listen to more from Shilton\n\nLeicester owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha used social media platform Instagram to explain why he sacked Ranieri.\n\n\"We have done our best as management, we do not have only one problem to solve, but there are a million things to do to make our club survive,\" the billionaire wrote.\n\n\"Please respect my decision, I will never let the club down.\"\n\nFormer Leicester player and Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini is the odds-on favourite with the bookmakers to replace his countryman.\n\nThe 52-year-old, who won the Premier League title with City in 2012, has current odds of 4-6.\n\nHe is followed by former Leicester manager Nigel Pearson, who was sacked in June 2015 (8-1), ex-Crystal Palace boss Alan Pardew (10-1), ex-Chelsea boss Guus Hiddink (10-1) and former Ajax boss Frank de Boer (10-1).\n\n\"There's almost a sense of grief in the city today, with many having lost their 'favourite uncle'.\n\n\"Claudio Ranieri was the man that brought the dream to life by winning the Premier League title. It has gone sour this term with players underperforming, new signings not working out and baffling tactics at time from the Tinkerman.\n\n\"I thought they would get relegated with Ranieri in charge. I hated to say it. I hoped it wouldn't come true and I'd be proved wrong.\n\n\"This gives them a chance. A different kind of chance to stay up.\"\n\nIt is almost the thought that dare not speak its name amid the wave of shock, outrage and disgust at Leicester's decision. But is there actually method in what many see as the madness of the club's Thai owners?\n\nLeicester's fall has been more dramatic than anything they could have foreseen in their worst nightmares. A win for any of Sunderland, Crystal Palace and Hull City this weekend would put the Foxes in the relegation places. Wins for all three and they would be bottom by the time they face Liverpool on what will now be a highly charged occasion at the King Power on Monday.\n\nAfter 26 games last year they were top on 53 points, two ahead of Spurs. This season they are 17th after 25 games, with only 21 points. Last season they had lost only three games compared with 14 in this campaign, and conceded only 29 goals compared with 43 this term. Indeed, they only conceded 36 in the entire 2015-16 season.\n\nThe difference is stark and, very clearly in the opinion of Leicester's owners, dangerous.\n\nI understand the players were summoned to a meeting by the chairman in Seville after the 2-1 defeat and Claudio Ranieri's fate was sealed by the negative reaction.\n\nThe chairman and vice-chairman had become increasingly concerned by the players' alienation from Ranieri this season over a variety of issues, and elimination from the FA Cup at Millwall and the flattering scoreline in Seville hardened the hearts of the influential members of the dressing room.\n\nI understand some influential players, who were part of the Nigel Pearson squad a couple of years ago, were making graphic contrasts with team spirit and the organisational qualities of Pearson compared with Ranieri this season.\n\nThe club never really lost faith in Pearson this time two years ago. Despite the fact they were in the parlous position, the general feeling was that he had the dressing room and knew where he was going. He left in the summer of 2015 for different reasons - personal reasons associated with his son, who was on the staff.\n\nThe favourite to replace Ranieri is Roberto Mancini, but at the moment it's understood he hasn't been sounded out by Leicester nor is he particularly interested.\n\nWhat did Leicester say?\n\nOn 7 February, Leicester issued a statement saying Ranieri had their \"unwavering support\". Sixteen days later they sacked the 65-year-old Italian, who had signed a new four-year deal in the summer.\n\nHis departure came a day after the Foxes won praise for their performance despite losing 2-1 in their Champions League last-16 first-leg tie at Sevilla.\n\n\"Ranieri was told he was sacked on Thursday afternoon in Leicester once the team returned from Spain, but the suggestion is the owners decided before that defeat by Sevilla,\" said BBC sports editor Dan Roan.\n\n\"The decision was taken very reluctantly but the club's owners are desperate to avoid relegation and its consequences.\"\n\nFoxes vice-chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha said: \"This has been the most difficult decision we have had to make in nearly seven years since King Power took ownership of Leicester City.\n\n\"But we are duty-bound to put the club's long-term interests above all sense of personal sentiment, no matter how strong that might be.\n\n\"Claudio has brought outstanding qualities to his office. His skilful management, powers of motivation and measured approach have been reflective of the rich experience we always knew he would bring to Leicester City.\"\n\nSrivaddhanaprabha added: \"His warmth, charm and charisma have helped transform perceptions of the club and develop its profile on a global scale. We will forever be grateful to him for what he has helped us to achieve.\n\n\"It was never our expectation that the extraordinary feats of last season should be replicated this season. Indeed, survival in the Premier League was our first and only target at the start of the campaign.\n\n\"But we are now faced with a fight to reach that objective and feel a change is necessary to maximise the opportunity presented by the final 13 games.\"\n\nA year (and nine days) in the life of Ranieri\n\n14 February 2016: Leicester lose 2-1 at Arsenal, their final defeat of the 2015-16 season before a 12-game unbeaten run.\n\n2 May 2016: The Foxes are crowned champions of England for the first time in their history as Tottenham draw at Chelsea.\n\n13 August 2016: Leicester lose their first game of the 2016-17 season - a 2-1 defeat at Hull City.\n\n15 October 2016: The Foxes are hammered 3-0 by table-topping Chelsea at Stamford Bridge.\n\n22 November 2016: Leicester secure top spot in their Champions League group with one game to spare.\n\n18 December 2016: Ranieri is named Coach of the Year at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year awards.\n\n7 February 2017: After a run of two wins in 15 league games, Leicester give Ranieri their \"unwavering support\".\n\n22 February 2017: The Foxes lose 2-1 to Sevilla in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie.\n\nWhat the papers say...", "Labour's failure to retain Copeland for the first time since the seat was created highlights three interlinked problems for the party.\n\nThe most serious is trust - or lack of it.\n\nLabour insiders tell me they \"got Jeremy to the right place on nuclear\" - by not just committing to retaining the industry but also no longer opposing new capacity.\n\nYet very few voters here in Whitehaven that I spoke to this morning believed him - and some were still unaware of his position.\n\nThe second problem, though, is with Jeremy Corbyn himself.\n\nEven some left-wing MPs tell me his leadership came up completely unprompted on the doorsteps. So messenger and message aren't fully trusted.\n\nThe third problem, though, is that while Labour is in opposition nationally - and Jeremy Corbyn says he will take on the political establishment - in areas which the party has controlled for decades it is seen as part of that establishment.\n\nVoter after voter said to me \"look at the town centre here\" [pictured above] with pound shops, charity shops and bookies.\n\n\"Labour has done nothing for this area, we need new blood,\" said one. \"I am 80 and Labour has been in charge all that time - we need a change,\" said another.\n\nAnd that change was from the opposition to the government, standing conventional political wisdom on its head.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nRepublican politicians are returning to their home districts to a barrage of criticism, as many constituents demand to know how they'll hold President Trump to account.\n\nThere's never a good time to talk politics, but democracy starts early in the state of Iowa.\n\nBy 7:30 am, as the morning fog was still lifting and the sun was starting to appear, the meeting room in the Iowa Falls Fire department was already at full capacity.\n\nA few hundred people had travelled from across the state to attend a town hall meeting, filling every chair and corner, and spilling into the hallway.\n\nTown halls are traditionally a forum for constituents to discuss their concerns with elected officials, face to face.\n\nBut in the Trump era, they've taken on a new purpose - with many aggrieved voters seeing them as a way to put pressure on President Trump, by ensuring their members of Congress hold him to account.\n\nRepublican officials across the country have found themselves on the receiving end of questions and demands from voters.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nMany, but not all, of those attending are Democrats, some from progressive groups who are organising around these events to ensure people show up.\n\nBut others are simply frustrated residents, who want their voices heard. All are represented by Senator Chuck Grassley.\n\nThe vast majority of the crowd at the fire station was older, in their fifties or above. Some of them came with handwritten protest signs, others clutched pieces of paper with their questions written on them.\n\n\"I'm new at this,\" a woman named Ingrid told me. She said Trump's victory made her angry.\n\n\"I felt I had to come. I'm hoping our voices get larger and that we can make sure Republicans don't just vote along party lines and listen to their constituents.\"\n\nAnd listen is exactly what Senator Grassley did, even if some felt he didn't quite answer all of their concerns.\n\nAs the seven-term senator entered the room, he began by asking the group which topics they'd like to cover.\n\nAs hands flew in the air, and people jostled for his attention, a range of topics were raised - everything from Russia to guns, healthcare to education.\n\nSenator Grassley wrote the questions down in a small notebook, promising to answer them in the order they were asked.\n\nA large majority of questions were about President Obama's healthcare law - the Affordable Care Act.\n\nThe questions on this were impassioned, as people talked of their personal experiences of Obamacare, and their fears they could lose coverage under a Trump presidency.\n\nOne elderly man attended on behalf of a friend whose son was seriously ill. He told the senator of how \"his parents will probably have to face bankruptcy just as they face retirement\".\n\nOther testimonies reflected the extent people here rely on government subsidised health insurance.\n\n\"I'm on Obamacare, if it wasn't for Obamacare we wouldn't be able to afford insurance,\" said Chris Petersen, an insulin dependent diabetic who runs a farm more than an hour away.\n\n\"I got a present for you,\" he told the senator, as he held up a box of Tums, a medicine used to relieve heartburn, \"you're going to need them in the next few years.\"\n\nWhen a bespectacled man in a grey sweater asked a question about the national debt, things got testy.\n\n\"Raise Trump's taxes,\" yelled a man at the back of the room.\n\n\"Everything is going to a pittance,\" shouted a woman.\n\nAs she did the questioner got angry.\n\n\"I asked him, not you, so shut your hole,\" he said, as he jabbed his finger in her direction.\n\nAt other times the mood in the room was calmer.\n\nWhen Zalmay Naizy, an Afghan who'd been an interpreter for the US army, asked a question, the room fell near silent.\n\n\"I'm a Muslim in this country, who's going to save me here?\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Senator Grassley is one of many Republicans facing angry questions at town hall meetings\n\n\"I've been shot two times, I've been roadside bombed once, nobody cares about me. But I was with the US.\"\n\nThe room erupted in cheers, and while the senator didn't address his question right away, choosing to move onto another question about trade deals, he returned to it later, promising to help Zalmay, as he stood by his side.\n\nThis town hall was held in a county which voted for Donald Trump by a large margin.\n\nSenator Grassley prides himself on holding meetings in every county in the state every year through his \"99 county\" pledge, but not all are town halls. He's faced criticism for holding most of those in solidly Republican areas.\n\nThe event at the fire station was one of two on the same day. Later, in the basement of the Hancock County Sheriff's jail, another crowd gathered.\n\nOnce again many were waiting outside as the room was at capacity. The mood was tense.\n\n\"I want impeachment,\" shouted one man from the back.\n\n\"Why are you against government healthcare, but take it yourself?\" asked another.\n\nObamacare dominated the agenda here too, with more personal stories.\n\nThere was the mother, a former Republican voter, who was concerned about losing healthcare for her son who has disabilities. The veteran worried about treatment of the military.\n\nAnd Jamet, an immigrant from Chile, told the senator \"we're already making this country great\" and asked \"How will you stand up for immigrants?\"\n\n\"We need people to stand up for the ordinary working person,\" said Chris Petersen, the farmer with the Tums, who I'd met at the first town hall.\n\nHis sentiment is not that different to the views of Donald Trump supporters, who told me during the campaign time and time again, that politicians don't represent them.\n\nSome who voted for him were at Senator Grassley's town halls, in a show of solidarity. Jim Carson accused Democrats at the events of \"trying to obstruct the good policies of Mr Trump.\"\n\nWhen I asked Senator Grassley if the anger expressed at the town halls would mean he was more likely to confront the president over his agenda, he told me the focus for him was taking these concerns back to his colleagues on capitol hill.\n\n\"I don't think you should see it as challenging Trump I think you should see it as Congress doing its job and the president doing his job.\"\n\nIt was a popular grassroots movement that helped sow the seeds of a Trump presidency, now another is trying to challenge it.\n\nFor some voters, the only way to get to President Trump is by applying pressure on congress. Senators like Chuck Grassley have to balance their support for the Republican agenda, with the grievances of the voters who keep them in office.\n\nEven a small number of people attending town halls can be enough to keep elected officials on edge.\n\nThese scenes we are seeing at these meetings across America are reminiscent of the early days of the Obama administration, when conservatives attended packed town halls to lobby their congressional representatives on healthcare, in what became known as the Tea Party movement.\n\n\"America is starting to boil,\" Chris Petersen told me as I met him afterwards at his farm.\n\nAs liberals try to exert pressure on their senators and representatives, it's clear that a new progressive movement is brewing.", "The claim: The Conservatives' win in Copeland is the first time since 1878 that a governing party has made a comparable gain in a by-election\n\nReality Check verdict: A governing party gaining a seat at a by-election is an extremely unusual event. It has happened since 1878, but you could argue that those occasions had unusual circumstances that meant they were not comparable.\n\nGoverning parties rarely look forward to by-elections, which tend to have relatively low turnouts and are seen as having less at stake than general elections.\n\nIt is very rare for the governing party to pick up votes from the opposition. It is even rarer for them to gain a seat, as the Conservatives did when Trudy Harrison won Copeland in Cumbria.\n\nThe constituency and its predecessor, Whitehaven, had returned Labour MPs since 1935.\n\nThe Conservatives say this is \"the first time since 1878 that a governing party has made a comparable gain in a by-election\".\n\nThe party was referring to the Worcester by-election 139 years ago, when they won the seat from the Liberals.\n\nCopeland is certainly not the first instance of a ruling party winning a seat at a by-election since that year, when Benjamin Disraeli was prime minister and women could not vote.\n\nThat has happened several times since, but in unusual circumstances which are perhaps not \"comparable\" to Copeland.\n\nFor example, in 1982 at the height of the Falklands War, a Labour MP defected to the Social Democratic Party in the south London seat of Mitcham and Morden.\n\nThis split the left-of-centre vote, meaning the Conservative candidate won despite getting a smaller share of the vote than at the previous general election.\n\nA Conservative/National Liberal candidate won the Yorkshire seat of Brighouse and Spenborough from Labour in 1960, but that seat was very marginal. Labour won by just 47 votes at the 1959 general election, and lost by 666 a year later.\n\nIn 1953, the governing Conservatives took Sunderland South from Labour, but this was also very close and the Conservative vote share fell slightly because a Liberal picked up some votes.\n\nCopeland was not nearly as tight as these examples, and the Conservatives increased their vote share substantially.\n\nLabour's Jamie Reed won the seat by more than 2,000 votes in 2015, while the new Conservative MP took it by a similar margin.\n\nThe swing was 6.7%, a stunning result for a governing party.\n\nThere are various other examples of government by-election gains since 1878.\n\nHowever, as Matt Singh of NumbrCrunchr Politics points out, these are \"mostly the product of freakish circumstances… none of which apply to Copeland\".\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Winter Sports\n\nCoverage: Live coverage on Connected TV, BBC Red Button and the BBC Sport website\n\nOlympic skeleton champion Lizzy Yarnold sits fourth at the World Championships after the second run was cancelled because of heavy snow.\n\nYarnold, 28, completed her first run in 52.29 seconds, just 0.02secs outside the medal places, but had fallen to 13th after her second run.\n\nHowever, the second run times will now not count towards the final standings.\n\nFellow Briton Laura Deas, 28, had moved up to a provisional second but will now resume on Saturday 13th in Konigssee.\n\nRun three will begin at 07:30 GMT, with run four to follow from 09:30 GMT.\n\nYarnold is competing in her first World Championships since taking a year-long sabbatical.\n\nThe 2015 world champion, starting 15th, held on to fourth after the first round before a slide of 54.02 in round two saw her fall down the standings as conditions worsened.\n\nDeas improved from a first run of 52.76 to post a total time of one minute 45.29 seconds after two completed runs, putting her into the silver medal position until the results were annulled.\n\nGermany's Jacqueline Loelling is first with a time of 52.02, with compatriot and 2016 champion Tina Hermann 0.06secs behind and Canada's Elisabeth Vathje in third place.\n\nBriton Donna Creighton is 22nd out of the 31 sliders.\n\nIn the men's competition, sliders were able to complete both runs on day one - Dominic Parsons the highest-placed Briton in ninth, 1.93 seconds behind leader Martins Dukurs of Latvia.\n\nFellow Britons Jeremy Rice and Jack Thomas are in 18th and 21st respectively, with the men's event set to conclude on Sunday.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nClaudio Ranieri says his \"dream died\" when he was sacked as Leicester manager nine months after winning the Premier League.\n\nRanieri, 65, guided the Foxes to the title despite them being rated 5,000-1 shots at the start of the campaign.\n\nLeicester are one point above the relegation zone with 13 matches left.\n\n\"After the euphoria of last season and being crowned champions, all I dreamt of was staying with Leicester. Sadly this was not to be,\" Ranieri said.\n\n\"The adventure was amazing and will live with me forever. My heartfelt thanks to everybody at the club, everybody who was part of what we achieved, but mostly to the supporters.\n\n\"You took me into your hearts from day one and loved me. I love you too.\n\n\"No-one can ever take away what we achieved together and I hope you think about it and smile every day the way I always will.\n\n\"It was a time of wonderfulness and happiness that I will never forget. It's been a pleasure and an honour to be a champion with all of you.\"\n• None Mancini? O'Neill? Hodgson? Redknapp? Who next for Leicester?\n\nRanieri's departure came less than 24 hours after Wednesday's 2-1 defeat at Spanish side Sevilla in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie. The second leg is on 14 March.\n\nOn Saturday, Leicester were knocked out of the FA Cup by League One Millwall.\n\nIn explaining the club's decision, vice-chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha said \"long-term interests\" had been put above \"personal sentiment, no matter how strong that might be\".\n\nThe Foxes took last season's Premier League title by 10 points but have won just five top-flight games this season, and could become the first defending champions since 1938 to be relegated.\n\nThey have lost their past five league matches and are the only side in the top four English divisions without a league goal in 2017.\n\n'He had not lost the dressing room'\n\nBBC Sport understands some players were summoned to meet the chairman after the defeat by Sevilla, and Ranieri's fate was sealed by the negative reaction.\n\n\"There was a lot of frustration because of the results, but he had not lost the dressing room,\" Shakespeare said.\n\n\"A lot of the talk of unrest has been speculation. I've not had one problem with the players.\n\n\"I always feel sorry when people lose their jobs. My relationship with Claudio has been fine all along.\n\n\"I spoke to him last night and he thanked me for my support throughout. It was not brief and we exchanged views. A lot of what we said will stay private.\"\n\nShakespeare and first-team coach Mike Stowell will take charge of the squad until a new manager is appointed.\n\nRanieri's compatriots Paolo Benetti and Andrea Azzalin, both key members of his coaching staff, have left the club.\n\nEx-Manchester City and Inter Milan boss Roberto Mancini and Nigel Pearson, who Ranieri replaced in 2015, are the early bookmakers' favourites to take over at Leicester.\n\nFormer Birmingham boss Gary Rowett - a one-time Foxes player who is around fifth favourite - told BBC Radio 5 live: \"I'm sat at home waiting for the right opportunity to come along. Leicester would be an amazing one, but it's still raw for everyone.\"\n\nRowett, who played for Leicester between 2000 and 2002, was controversially sacked by Birmingham in December, and replaced by former Chelsea striker Gianfranco Zola.\n\n\"I played there for two years so I've had good experiences at Leicester and it's an excellent club. It would be a daunting one for anyone and a fantastic opportunity for someone,\" he added.\n\nThe contenders: Read more from Phil McNulty\n\nAfter the euphoria of last season and being crowned Premier League champions, all I dreamt of was staying with Leicester City, the club I love, for always.\n\nSadly this was not to be. I wish to thank my wife Rosanna and all my family for their never-ending support during my time at Leicester.\n\nMy thanks go to Paolo and Andrea, who accompanied me on this wonderful journey. To Steve Kutner [Ranieri's agent] and Franco Granello [his Italian agent] for bringing me the opportunity to become a champion.\n\nMostly I have to thank Leicester City Football Club. The adventure was amazing and will live with me forever.\n\nThank you to all the journalists and the media who came with us and enjoyed reporting on the greatest story in football.\n\nMy heartfelt thanks to everybody at the club, all the players, the staff, everybody who was there and was part of what we achieved. But mostly to the supporters. You took me into your hearts from day one and loved me. I love you too.\n\nNo-one can ever take away what we together have achieved, and I hope you think about it and smile every day the way I always will.\n\nIt was a time of wonderfulness and happiness that I will never forget. It's been a pleasure and an honour to be a champion with all of you.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nTen-man Tottenham Hotspur were knocked out of the Europa League as Gent held them to a draw at a sell-out Wembley.\n\nSpurs, who trailed 1-0 after the first leg of the last-32 tie, made a great start as Christian Eriksen slipped an angled shot under Gent keeper Lovre Kalinic.\n\nThe visitors equalised through Harry Kane's own goal, leaving Spurs needing to score twice more in front of a Europa League record attendance of 80,465.\n\nTheir task became harder when midfielder Dele Alli was sent off shortly before half-time for a dangerous high tackle.\n\nVictor Wanyama's curler into the top-left corner revived Spurs' hopes, only for substitute Jeremy Perbet to prod Gent into the last 16 with fewer than 10 minutes left.\n\nSpurs' elimination means they have only reached the Europa League quarter-finals once in the past six seasons.\n\nManchester United, who beat French side Saint-Etienne 4-0 on aggregate, will be the only British side in the last-16 draw on Friday (12:00 GMT).\n\nDespite them needing to score at least twice as the match approached half-time, few would have written off Spurs.\n\nBut they were then reduced to 10 men after Alli's poor tackle.\n\nThe 20-year-old England midfielder has previously shown glimpses of a fiery streak, alongside his technical brilliance, but this was the first red card of his career.\n\nAlli felt referee Manuel de Sousa should have given him a free-kick close to the halfway line and briefly remonstrated with the Portuguese official before turning and launching into Genk midfielder Brecht Dejaegere with a studs-up challenge.\n\nAlli caught Dejaegere just under his right knee - and luckily the Belgian appeared to escape serious injury.\n\nTottenham did not escape without damage, though.\n\nTottenham, particularly since Mauricio Pochettino became manager, have often drawn praise for their fearless and confident approach, and they have become regular title challengers.\n\nBut it is a different story in Europe.\n\nIn truth, they should still have progressed despite Alli's dismissal, only poor finishing costing them in a dominant performance against a team containing a man extra.\n\nThe blame largely lies in a lifeless performance in Belgium.\n\nGent's first-leg victory was only their third win in 13 matches, with their recent form dropping them to eighth place in a Belgian top flight ranked as only the ninth-best European league.\n\nIndeed Belgian leaders Club Brugge, the reigning champions, lost all six matches in their Champions League group, including a 3-0 home defeat and 2-1 loss against Leicester City.\n\nWhile Tottenham's deficiencies were clear, Gent deserve credit. They were organised, disciplined and clinical when their rare chances arrived.\n\nPerbet, who scored the winner last week, put the tie beyond Spurs with the away team's first shot on target at Wembley, sparking exuberant scenes among the 10,000 visiting fans.\n\n\"I am very disappointed. Once again we were excited to play today in front of our fans. We started well and scored. The tie was open but we conceded a goal in one action in the first half. After that it was complicated.\n\n\"I was very proud. We were brave and created chances and scored the second but could not get another. In the second half we played with energy.\"\n• None Tottenham have won just one of their past eight matches at Wembley\n• None Mauricio Pochettino's side have conceded more goals in four European home games at Wembley this season (six) than they have in 12 Premier League games at White Hart Lane (five)\n• None Gent became the first Belgian side to eliminate English opposition in major European competition (excluding qualifiers) since Standard Liege knocked out Everton in the 2008-09 Uefa Cup.\n• None Spurs have been eliminated from eight of their past nine European knockout ties in which they have lost the first leg.\n• None Since the start of 2013-14, Harry Kane has scored four own goals - twice as many as any other Tottenham player.\n\nTottenham, who remain without a trophy since 2008, will focus their attention on trying to catch runaway Premier League leaders Chelsea.\n• None Offside, KAA Gent. Kalifa Coulibaly tries a through ball, but Samuel Gigot is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Harry Kane (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from the left side of the box is close, but misses to the right. Assisted by Jan Vertonghen.\n• None Attempt blocked. Victor Wanyama (Tottenham Hotspur) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt missed. Son Heung-Min (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from the right side of the box is too high. Assisted by Harry Kane. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Fernando Alonso said podium finishes would \"probably not\" be enough to satisfy him this year but he is realistic about McLaren's expectations.\n\nThe 35-year-old Spaniard said he was \"100% committed to winning\", adding: \"I want to be world champion.\"\n\nAlonso, champion in 2005 and 2006, has not won a race since 2013 as a result of a lack of performance from his cars.\n\nHe added that he had never considered joining Mercedes when Nico Rosberg retired at the end of last season.\n\nIn a news conference at McLaren's 2017 car launch, Alonso was in an expansive mood and discussed:\n• None his future, with his contract up for renewal at the end of 2017\n• None his motivation for his 16th year in F1\n• None his feelings about Rosberg's decision to retire\n\nAlonso, a winner of 32 grand prix and one of the biggest stars in F1, also gave a withering response to his old rival Lewis Hamilton's recent observation that he regretted the amount of data-sharing in F1 because he felt it allowed his team-mates to learn from him.\n\nAlonso said: \"If he was watching more data from Rosberg last year, maybe he would have won the championship.\"\n\nMcLaren have had two difficult seasons since the start of their engine partnership with Honda in 2015, with both chassis and engine less effective than those of world champions Mercedes.\n\nAlonso said it was unrealistic to expect McLaren to close what was a 1.5-second gap at the end of last season in one winter.\n\n\"We need to recover a huge gap,\" he said. \"Winning having come sixth in the previous constructors' championship is something no-one did apart from Brawn in 2009.\n\n\"We started 2017 early enough. We put a lot of resources in this year's car. We changed completely the philosophy of the engine, which is risky but needed if we want to win because the engine of the last two years was not good enough to win.\"\n\nHe added: \"I expect Mercedes to still be very competitive. We saw their new car yesterday, which seems very well elaborated, and they have the advantage of the engine. They will be contenders. I am sure the Red Bull will be up there and hopefully we can put ourselves in that group.\"\n\nMcLaren have made it clear they wish Alonso to sign a new contract to keep him at the team after 2017, probably for at least another two years.\n\nThe driver reiterated his statements of last year that he hopes the new cars will see a return to \"fighting spirit and racing spirit\", allowing drivers to push hard at all times, before he commits. And he added that he was in no rush to make up his mind.\n\n\"After the summer break, around September, is a good time to start thinking and sitting with yourself and deciding what to do,\" Alonso said. \"Until then, I will not think too much about the future.\n\n\"Obviously, I want to be world champion. That is what I am training for, why I was running and biking at -10C in the middle of the snow in the last month.\n\n\"Travelling to Australia (for the first race), normally I arrive on Monday or Tuesday, but this time I will arrive on the Friday before. I am 100% committed to win and if I can win this year it's better than next year.\"\n\nAlonso was one of the drivers Mercedes considered as a replacement for Nico Rosberg, who announced his retirement five days after winning his first world title last November.\n\nBut the 35-year-old said he never seriously considered the possibility of moving.\n\n\"There were some phone calls that arrived to me but there was no point discussing anything because I was happy at McLaren,\" said Alonso.\n\n\"After the surprise of Rosberg they had to do a little check on everyone. It was nothing really strange or a deep conversation. It was a round-check they did with everyone - and me - to assess their situation.\n\n\"My situation was very clear. I had this year with McLaren and I am happy here. It was not a point to talk about any further.\"\n\nAlonso said he understood Rosberg's decision to retire at 31, but it was counter to his own nature.\n\n\"In my case, I cannot stop. It is like a drug,\" he said.\n\n\"For him he was very brave to stop. I wish him all the best. It was in his character. I am more a racer. I will be 80 years old in a go-kart pushing kids out of the track. Everyone is different.\"", "Match of the Day host and former Leicester City striker Gary Lineker says the club should have built a statue in honour of Claudio Ranieri rather than sacking him as manager.\n\nWATCH MORE: Five things we'll miss about Claudio Ranieri", "It's no secret that the Russians have long tried to plant \"sleeper agents\" in the US - men and women indistinguishable from normal Americans, who live - on the surface - completely normal lives. But what happens when one of them doesn't want to go home?\n\nJack Barsky died in September 1955, at the age of 10, and was buried in the Mount Lebanon Cemetery in the suburbs of Washington DC.\n\nHis name is on the passport of the man sitting before me now - a youthful 67-year-old East German, born Albert Dittrich. The passport is not a fake. Albert Dittrich is Jack Barsky in the eyes of the US government.\n\nThe story of how this came to be is, by Barsky's own admission, \"implausible\" and \"ridiculous\", even by the standards of Cold War espionage. But as he explains in a new memoir, Deep Undercover, it has been thoroughly checked out by the FBI. As far as anyone can tell, it is all true.\n\nIt began in the mid-70s, when Dittrich, destined at the time to become a chemistry professor at an East German university, was talent-spotted by the KGB and sent to Moscow for training in how to behave like an American.\n\nHis mission was to live under a false identity in the heart of the capitalist enemy, as one of an elite band of undercover Soviet agents known as \"illegals\".\n\n\"I was sent to the United States to establish myself as a citizen and then make contact, to the extent possible, at the highest levels possible of decision makers - particularly political decision makers,\" he says.\n\nThis \"idiotic adventure,\" as he now calls it, had \"a lot of appeal to an arrogant young man, a smart young man\" intoxicated by the idea of foreign travel and living \"above the law\".\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. \"This kind of double life wears on you\"\n\nHe arrived in New York in the Autumn of 1978, at the age of 29, posing as a Canadian national, William Dyson. Dyson, who had travelled via Belgrade, Rome, Mexico City and Chicago, \"immediately vanished into thin air\", having served his purpose. And Dittrich began his new life as Jack Barsky.\n\nHe was a man with no past and no identification papers - except for a birth certificate obtained by an employee of the Soviet embassy in Washington, who had kept his eyes open during a walk in the Mount Lebanon cemetery.\n\nBarsky had supreme self-confidence, a near-flawless American accent, and $10,000 in cash.\n\nHe also had a \"legend\" to explain why he did not have a social security number. He told people he had had a \"tough start in life\" in New Jersey and had dropped out of high school. He had then worked on a remote farm for years before deciding \"to give life another chance and move back to New York city\".\n\nHe rented a room in a Manhattan hotel and set about the laborious task of building a fake identity. Over the next year, he parlayed Jack Barsky's birth certificate into a library card, then a driver's licence and, finally, a social security card.\n\nBut without qualifications in Barsky's name, or any employment history, his career options were limited. Rather than rubbing shoulders with the upper echelons of American society, as his KGB handlers had wanted, he initially found himself delivering parcels to them, as a cycle courier in the smarter parts of Manhattan.\n\nThe young KGB agent arrived in New York in the late 1970s\n\n\"By chance it turned out that the messenger job was actually really good for me to become Americanised because I was interacting with people who didn't care much where I came from, what my history was, where I was going,\" he says.\n\n\"Yet I was able to observe and listen and become more familiar with American customs. So for the first two, three years I had very few questions that I had to answer.\"\n\nThe advice from his handlers on blending in - gleaned from Soviet diplomats and resident agents in the US - \"turned out to be, at minimum, weak but, at worst, totally false\", he says.\n\n\"I'll give you an example. One of the things I was told explicitly was to stay away from the Jews. Now, obviously, there is anti-Semitism in there, but secondly, the stupidity of that statement is that they sent me to New York. There are more Jews in New York than in Israel, I think.\"\n\nBarsky would later use his handlers' prejudices and ignorance of American society against them.\n\nBut as a \"rookie\" agent he was eager to please and threw himself into the undercover life. He spent much of his free time zig-zagging across New York on counter-surveillance missions designed to flush out any enemy agents who might be following him.\n\nHe would update Moscow Centre on his progress in weekly radio transmissions, or letters in secret writing, and deposit microfilm at dead drop sites in various New York parks, where he would also periodically pick up canisters stuffed with cash or the fake passports he needed for his trips back to Moscow for debriefing.\n\nHe would return the to the East every two years, where he would be reunited with his German wife Gerlinde, and young son Matthias, who had no idea what he had been up to. They thought he was doing top secret but very well-paid work at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.\n\nBarsky's handlers were delighted with his progress except for one thing - he could not get hold of an American passport. This failure weighed heavily on him.\n\nOn one early trip to the passport office in New York an official asked him to fill out a questionnaire which asked, among other things, the name of the high school he had attended.\n\n\"I had a legend but it could not be verified,\" he says. \"So if somebody went to check on that they would have found out that I wasn't real.\"\n\nTerrified that his cover might be blown, he scooped up any documents with his name on them and marched out of the office in a feigned temper at all this red tape.\n\nThe real Jack Barsky is buried in a Washington DC cemetery\n\nWithout a passport, Barsky was limited to low-level intelligence work and his achievements as a spy were, by his own account, \"minimal\".\n\nHe profiled potential recruits and compiled reports on the mood of the country during events such as the 1983 downing of a Korean Airlines flight by a Soviet fighter, which ratcheted up tensions between the US and the Soviet Union.\n\nOn one occasion, he flew to California to track down a defector (he later learned, to his immense relief, that the man, a psychology professor, had not been assassinated).\n\nHe also carried out some industrial espionage, stealing software from his office - all of it commercially available - which was spirited away on microfilm to aid the floundering Soviet economy.\n\nBut it often seemed the very fact of him being in the US, moving around freely without the knowledge of the authorities, was enough for Moscow.\n\n\"They were very much focused on having people on the other side just in case of a war. Which I think, in hindsight, was pretty stupid. That indicated very old thinking.\"\n\nThe myth of the \"Great Illegals\" - heroic undercover agents who had helped Russia defeat the Nazis and gather vital pre-war intelligence in hostile countries - loomed large over the Soviet intelligence agencies, who spent a lot of time and effort during the Cold War trying to recapture these former glories, with apparently limited success.\n\nBarsky later found out that he was part of a \"third wave\" of Soviet illegals in the US - the first two waves having failed. And we now know that illegals continued to be infiltrated in the 1980s and beyond.\n\nHe believes about \"10 to 12\" agents were trained up at the same time as him. Some, he says, could still be out there, living undercover in the United States, though he finds it hard to believe that anyone exposed to life in the US would retain an unwavering communist faith for long.\n\nHe is scathing about his KGB handlers, who were \"very smart\" and the \"cream of the crop\" but who seemed chiefly concerned with making his mission appear a success to please their bosses.\n\n\"The expectations of us, of me - I didn't know anybody else - were far, far too high. It was just really wishful thinking,\" he now says of his mission.\n\nOn the other hand, the KGB's original plan for him might actually have worked, he says.\n\n\"I am glad it didn't work out because I could have done some damage.\n\n\"The idea was for me to get genuine American documentation and move to Europe, say to a German-speaking country, where the Russians were going to set me up with a flourishing business. And they knew how to do that.\n\n\"And so I would become quite wealthy and then go back to the United States without having to explain where the money came from. At that point, I would have been in a situation to socialise with people that were of value.\"\n\nThis plan fell through because of his failure to get a passport, so the KGB reverted to Plan B.\n\nThis was for Barsky was to study for a degree and gradually work his way up the social order to the point where he could gather useful intelligence - a mission he describes as \"nearly impossible\".\n\nThe degree part was relatively straightforward. He was, after all, a university professor in his former life. He graduated top of his class in computer systems at Baruch College, which enabled him to get a job as a programmer at Met Life insurance in New York.\n\nLike many undercover agents before him, he began to realise that much of what he had been taught about the West - that it was an \"evil\" system on the brink of economic and social collapse - was a lie.\n\nBarsky (fourth right) felt at home with co-workers at Met Life\n\n\"There was a way to rationalise that because we were taught that the West was doing so well because they took all the riches out of the Third World,\" he says.\n\nBut, he adds, \"what eventually softened my attitude\" was the \"normal, nice people\" he met in his daily life.\n\n\"[My] sense was that the enemy was not really evil. So I was always waiting to eventually find the real evil people and I didn't even find them in the insurance company.\"\n\nMet Life almost felt like home, he says, \"because it was a very paternalistic, 'we take care of you' kind of a culture\".\n\n\"There was nothing like we were taught. Nothing that I expected. I wanted to really hate the people and the country and I couldn't bring myself to hate them. Not even dislike them.\"\n\nBut he was keeping a far bigger secret from his KGB bosses than his wavering commitment to communism.\n\nIn 1985, he had married an illegal immigrant from Guyana he had met through a personal ad in the Village Voice newspaper - and they now had a daughter together.\n\nHe now had two families to go with his two identities, and he knew the time would come when he had to choose between them.\n\nIt finally happened in 1988, when after 10 years undercover he was suddenly ordered to return home immediately. Moscow was in a panic, believing the FBI was on to him.\n\nTo do anything other than run as ordered - grab his emergency Canadian birth certificate and driver's licence and get out of the US - would be potentially suicidal.\n\nHe dithered and stalled for a week. Could he really leave his beloved baby daughter Chelsea behind forever?\n\nBut the KGB was losing patience. One morning, on a subway platform a resident agent delivered a chilling message: \"You have got to come home or else you're dead.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The Americans producers: 'Here was someone who lived it'\n\nIt was time for some lateral thinking.\n\nFrom discussions with his handlers in Moscow, Barsky had come to believe the Soviet hierarchy feared three things about America.\n\nHe already knew about their anti-Semitism and their fear of Ronald Reagan, who they saw as an unpredictable religious zealot who might launch a nuclear strike to \"accelerate\" the Biblical \"end times\".\n\nBut he also remembered their \"morally superior\" attitude to the Aids epidemic - their belief that it \"served the Americans right\" and their determination to protect the motherland from infection.\n\nBarsky stalled a bit more and then hatched a plan.\n\n\"I wrote this letter, in secret writing, that I wouldn't come back because I had contracted Aids, and the only way for me to get treatment would be in the United States.\n\n\"I also told the Russians in the same letter that I would not defect, I would not give up any secrets. I would just disappear and try to get healthy.\"\n\nTo begin with Barsky lived in constant fear for his life, remembering that threat on the subway platform. But after a few months, he began to breathe more easily.\n\n\"I started thinking 'I think I got away with this.' The FBI had not knocked on the door. The KGB had not done anything.\"\n\nHe gradually let his guard down and settled into the life of a typical middle-class American in a comfortable new home in upstate New York.\n\nWhile he had fallen for the American Dream and the trappings of the consumer society, he still had some conflicting feelings.\n\n\"My loyalties to communism and the homeland and Russia, they were still pretty strong. My resignation, you can also call it a 'soft defection' - that was triggered by having this child here. It was not ideological. It would be easy to claim that. But it wasn't true.\"\n\nPlaying at the back of his mind was always the question of whether his past would catch up with him. And, finally, one day, it did.\n\nThe man who exposed him was a KGB archivist, Vasili Nikitich Mitrokhin, who defected to the West in 1992 - after the fall of communism - with a vast trove of Soviet secrets, including the true identity of Jack Barsky.\n\nThe FBI watched him for more than three years, even buying the house next door to his as they tried to figure out whether he really was a KGB agent and, if so, whether he was still active.\n\nIn the end, Barsky himself gave the game away, during an argument with his wife, Penelope, that was picked up by the FBI's bugs.\n\n\"I was trying to repair a marriage that was slowly falling apart. I was trying to tell my wife the 'sacrifice' I had made to stay with Chelsea and her. So in the kitchen I told her, 'By the way, this is what I did. I am a German. I used to work for the KGB and they told me to come home and I stayed here with you and it was quite dangerous for me. This is what I sacrificed.'\n\n\"And that completely backfired. Instead of bringing her over to my side, she said: 'What does that mean for me if they ever catch you?'\"\n\nIt was the evidence the FBI needed to pick him up. In a meticulously planned operation, Barsky was pulled over by a Pennsylvania state trooper as he drove away from a toll booth on his way home from work one evening.\n\nAfter stepping out of his car, he was approached by a man in civilian clothes, who held up a badge and said in a calm voice: \"Special agent Reilly, FBI. We would like to talk with you.\"\n\nThe colour drained from Barsky's face. \"I knew the gig was up,\" he says. But with characteristic bravado he asked the FBI man: \"What took you so long?\"\n\nHe kidded around with Joe Reilly and the other agents who interrogated him, and tried to give them as much information about the KGB's operations as he could. But inside he was panicking that he would be sent to jail and that his American family, which he had been trying to hold together, would be broken up.\n\nIn fact, luck was on his side. After passing a lie-detector test he was told that he was free to go and, even more remarkably, that the FBI would help him fulfil his dream of becoming an American citizen.\n\nReilly, who went on to become Barsky's best friend and golfing partner, even visited the elderly parents of the real Jack Barsky, who agreed not to reveal that their son's identity had been stolen.\n\n\"I was so lucky and so was my family that the decision-makers were nice enough to say, 'Well, you were so well-established, we don't want to disrupt your life,'\" he says.\n\n\"It required some interesting gymnastics to make me legal because one thing I didn't have was proof of entry into the country. I came here on documentation that was fraudulently obtained, so it took 10-plus years to finally become a citizen. And when it did, it felt good.\"\n\nBarsky is now married for a third time and has a young daughter. He has also found God, completing his journey from a hardline communist and atheist to a churchgoing, all-American patriot.\n\nHe has even managed to reconnect with the family he left behind in Germany, although his first wife, Gerlinde, is still not speaking to him.\n\n\"I have a very good relationship with Matthias, my son, and his wife. And I am now a grandfather. When we talk about things like Americans playing soccer against Germans, I say 'us'. I mean the Americans. I am not German any more. The metamorphosis is complete.\"\n\nThe final act in his story came two years ago when he revealed the secret of his extraordinary double life on the US current affairs programme, 60 Minutes.\n\nHe had long wanted to share his story with the world, but his bosses at the New York electricity company where he worked as a software developer were less than impressed to find they had a former KGB agent on the payroll, and promptly fired him.\n\nBarsky says he has no regrets. He knows how fortunate he has been.\n\n\"This kind of double life wears on you. And most people can't handle it. I am not saying that I lived a charmed life but I got away with it.\n\n\"I am in good health. I have had some issues with alcohol that I have overcome and I got another chance to have a good family life. And another child. And I am finally getting to live the life that I should have lived a long time ago. I am really lucky.\"\n\nPerhaps the supreme irony of Jack Barsky's story is that he was only able to complete the mission the KGB had set him - to obtain an American passport and citizenship - with the help of the FBI. He cannot resist a smile at the thought of telling his KGB handlers that he has not been such a failure after all.\n\n\"I wouldn't mind meeting one or two of those fellows I worked with and saying 'Hey, see I did it!'\"\n\nDeep Undercover - My Secret Life and Tangled Allegiances as a KGB Spy in America, by Jack Barsky and Cindy Coloma, is published next month\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nBilly Mckay scored a stunning overhead kick as Inverness Caledonian Thistle beat Rangers to move off bottom spot in the Premiership.\n\nMckay's goal came minutes after Iain Vigurs had missed a penalty for the hosts.\n\nInverness took a first-half lead thanks to Greg Tansey's long-range strike.\n\nRangers levelled through Martyn Waghorn's penalty after Lee Wallace was downed but the Ibrox side ultimately fell to a second straight defeat.\n\nThey remain six points behind second-placed Aberdeen, who entertain Ross County on Saturday.\n\nVictory takes Inverness one point above Hamilton Academical, who visit Celtic on Saturday.\n\nVigurs' spot-kick was poor and easily saved by Wes Foderingham. Amazingly, it did not matter.\n\nWhat happened next was utterly fantastic from an Inverness point of view. Mckay, with his back to goal, angled a perfect overhead kick into the left corner to earn a monumental win.\n\nAnd no-one celebrated more than Vigurs.\n\nIt was in the last minute and is a game-changer in terms of the outlook of this season for boss Richie Foran.\n\nThere is a renewed steel about Caley Thistle these past few weeks, a return to the \"old Inverness' as Foran describes it. That was on show in spades against Rangers.\n\nTansey's opener was as good as Mckay's winner. He arrived on to a blocked Liam Polworth shot and curled a magnificent effort home.\n\nInverness might have had a penalty when Polworth stayed on his feet after looking like he was caught by Wallace.\n\nDefensively, the home side harried, blocked, diverted. They dropped a little too deep and were made to pay despite surviving a few scary moments.\n\nThey reacted well to conceding, though, and Tansey was unlucky with a fierce drive that Foderingham save brilliantly.\n\nThe dramatic nature of the victory should give Inverness the shot in the arm they need. They were tremendous.\n\nRangers started the match superbly. They were incisive and crisp in their passing and created a few chances. But, as has so often been the case this season, they lacked a cutting edge.\n\nBarrie McKay nodded over from a great position before Emerson Hyndman missed one great chance then hesitated and lost another.\n\nRangers began to hem Inverness in during the second half and got the break they badly needed.\n\nLouis Laing was outfoxed by a one-two but rashly slid in, took Wallace out and conceded a soft spot-kick. Waghorn made no mistake.\n\nIt looked like Rangers would kick on on from there but Inverness had other ideas.\n\nThe Ibrox side have now won only once in their last seven league matches and face a huge struggle to overtake second-top Aberdeen.\n• None Goal! Inverness CT 2, Rangers 1. Billy McKay (Inverness CT) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the top left corner.\n• None Penalty saved! Iain Vigurs (Inverness CT) fails to capitalise on this great opportunity, right footed shot saved in the bottom left corner.\n• None Danny Wilson (Rangers) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Penalty conceded by Danny Wilson (Rangers) after a foul in the penalty area.\n• None Brad McKay (Inverness CT) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Attempt saved. Billy McKay (Inverness CT) right footed shot from a difficult angle on the left is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Attempt missed. Danny Wilson (Rangers) header from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the left. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "When RBS lost £24bn in 2008, my daughter was half way through junior school.\n\nShe's now doing her A-levels and RBS is still losing billions.\n\nNext year she'll apply for university - next year RBS will lose another few billion.\n\nWatching RBS develop has not been a very rewarding experience - for anyone.\n\nTaxpayers have seen the £45bn they sank into the bank more than offset by £58bn of losses and counting.\n\nThe RBS headcount has shrunk by 100,000 in that time, with thousands more yet to lose jobs as the bank shrinks further and branches close.\n\nIf there has been a scandal going, RBS has been involved.\n\nFines for PPI, Libor rigging, foreign exchange fixing, squeezing small businesses for profit, and selling risky mortgages have laid waste to any earnings the core UK bank has been making.\n\nIn terms of fines for past misconduct the worst is yet to come in the form of a whopping fine from US authorities for RBS's role in the subprime mortgage crisis.\n\nThat should be settled this year but if RBS gets much change out of £10bn it will be considered a pretty good result.\n\nAnd yet... beneath all this wreckage is a UK-focused bank that lent £24bn into the UK economy and has been churning out a profit of about £1bn every three months.\n\nSadly, that bank will have to wait till 2018 to see the light of day.\n\nSo why has it taken RBS so much longer than others to heal itself?\n\nLloyds and Barclays are both making a profit, the US banks at the epicentre of the 2008 financial earthquake are flying high while RBS shares need to double in value for the UK taxpayer to break even.\n\nA former senior Treasury official told the BBC: \"You have to remember that wherever something bad or unwise was happening, RBS was at the forefront.\n\n\"It took the biggest risks, was involved in every scandal, was the most aggressive, made the most absurd acquisition (£50bn for ABN Amro in the teeth of the crisis) and had the biggest balance sheet in the world.\"\n\nThat put it in the worst possible position to recover from the crisis.\n\nWhich begs another question. Why wasn't the fix imposed in 2009 more radical?\n\nSome £45bn was pumped in for an 81% stake. In hindsight, that was nowhere near enough and the coalition government of 2010 should have done more to fix it after it had survived the initial crisis.\n\nHe told the BBC: \"We should have recapitalised the banks much quicker like in the United States and then allow the conduct issues to come back when the banks were making money.\n\n\"In the UK, the banks didn't have sufficient capital and got hit by the conduct issues at the same time, and this bank (RBS) had that in spades.\"\n\nBut remember, the economic and political picture looked very different in 2010.\n\nAusterity was the name of the game and George Osborne could ill afford to be seen to be throwing more money at RBS, possibly paying to fully nationalise it, when he was making swingeing cuts elsewhere.\n\nNot only that but there were real hopes that RBS would make a profit in 2011 and the share price was on the way up.\n\nIt looked like the government could get away without putting in any extra money. So it didn't.\n\nThat turned out to be a very false dawn as the eurozone crisis hit and the full magnitude of past misconduct began to emerge.\n\nThere was also a battle over what kind of bank RBS should try to be.\n\nThe man heading the bank at the time, Stephen Hester, wanted to hang on to the investment banking bits in the hope that when the world returned to normal, the high profits usually associated with trading - helping companies raise money and advising them - would help the bank return to health.\n\nThe Treasury disagreed and since it owned 80% of the bank, Stephen Hester was shown the door in 2013.\n\nFormer Treasury officials acknowledge that at least two of his five years in charge was wasted in strategic wrangling with the government.\n\nWe still care about this humbled giant because we still own so much of it and the prospect of the taxpayer getting its money back is still a very distant one.\n\nCompare that to Lloyds which has paid back nearly all the £20bn put in.\n\nAs discussed, RBS was a much sicker bank than Lloyds - and failing to recognise that earlier led to another mistake.\n\nThe government overpaid for its stake.\n\nUnder enormous pressure, working all night, with the prospect of cash machines not working on a Monday morning, the government agreed to pay roughly 500p a share in today's money.\n\nThe financial crisis led to drastic action by the government\n\nThat was what each share was worth on paper at the time - or the so called \"book value\".\n\nA couple of weeks later, the US government paid half that for the shares it bought in US banks.\n\nThat enabled the US government to sell off its stakes much earlier.\n\nNow, the prospect of selling at a big loss is an unattractive one for the government and the prospect of a bank predominantly owned by the government is an unattractive one for investors.\n\nThey know that one day there will be a big seller of the shares. It's a stand-off that keeps the price stubbornly low.\n\nThere is a core bank churning out profits, a billion pounds a quarter and today's announcement included the first confident prediction of bottom line profit we have seen from Ross McEwan\n\nThere is still pain ahead but there is also light.\n\nWho knows, by the time my daughter leaves home, RBS may be back in the black.", "Anna Rowe had a whirlwind romance with Antony Ray after meeting him through the dating app Tinder.\n\nBut their 14-month relationship came crashing down when she discovered his profile was a fake.\n\nHis name was not Antony and he was not single.\n\nIn fact, he was a married dad who had initially used photos of a Bollywood actor on his profile and had lured in other women too.\n\n\"He used me like a hotel with benefits under the disguise of a romantic, loving relationship that he knew I craved,\" says Anna.\n\nThe practice of using a fake profile to start an online romance is known as \"catfishing\".\n\nNow Anna, 44, from Kent, has launched a petition calling for it to be made illegal.\n\nBut how serious is catfishing and is it practical to make it a crime?\n\nMany dating apps and sites offer advice on how to spot fake profiles\n\nMore than half of online dating users say they have come across a fake profile, according to consumer group Which?\n\nWhile the number of people defrauded in the UK by online dating scams reached a record high in 2016.\n\nThere were 3,889 victims of so-called romance fraud last year, who handed over a record £39m.\n\nIt has become so prevalent, that it led to the creation of reality TV show Catfish - which is dedicated to helping victims learn the true identity of their online romances.\n\nCurrently catfishing is not illegal but elements of the activity could be covered by different parts of the law.\n\nIf a victim hands over money, the \"catfish\" could be prosecuted for fraud.\n\nSomeone using a fake profile to post offensive messages or doctored images designed to humiliate could also face criminal action.\n\nA review of social media and the law by the House of Lords in 2014 concluded there was enough current legislation to cover crimes committed online.\n\nNew guidance was also issued by the CPS in October to help the police identify online crimes - including trolling and virtual mobbing.\n\nBut Anna thinks the law needs to go further.\n\nWriting on her petition, she said: \"I did not or would not consent to have a sexual relationship with a married man, let alone a man who was actively having relations with multiple women simultaneously.\n\n\"His behaviour was definitely premeditated showing his intent to use women, yet the current law will not find his actions a criminal offence.\"\n\nTony Neate, chief executive of Get Safe Online, recognises the devastating impact catfishing can have on victims.\n\n\"It can ruin a life. I know there have been suicides because it's affected someone badly,\" he says.\n\n\"It can affect their mental stability and lead to depression and the victims feel they can't trust anyone again.\n\n\"I do think we need to look more wisely at this in relation to how it is tackled at the moment.\"\n\nMr Neate, a former police officer, says there should be a \"discussion\" about punishing the worst catfishing offenders.\n\nBut he raises concerns about how practical a new law would be to implement.\n\n\"I really feel for that poor woman [Anna] but we have got to be realistic on how far we got and how the police would be able to enforce it,\" he says.\n\n\"Let's have the discussion because we can't have people being hurt and it's something we have got to look at.\"\n\nMany dating websites offer users advice on how to spot a scammer and tips to avoid being taken in by a fake profile. (See \"Tips to avoid catfishes\", below)\n\nPopular dating site Match.com has a team which will remove unwanted accounts and check photos and personal ads.\n\nIt also has a built-in screening system that can help identify suspicious accounts, remove them and prevent re-registration.\n\nLovestruck has a verification service that can confirm members are single and professional by checking their profiles against their other social media sites.\n\nBut the advice has not stopped many people being duped.\n\nLast month, university professor Judith Lathlean revealed how she was tricked out of £140,000 by a gang using a fake profile.\n\nIfe Ojo, 31, and Olusegun Agbaje, 43, were jailed in 2016 after conning a woman out of £1.6m using a fictional character.\n\nBut Andrew McClelland, chief executive of the Online Dating Association - the trade body for the industry - believes legislating against catfishing would be \"difficult\".\n\nHe said there could be genuine reasons why someone might not use their real details online - for example if they had been in an abusive relationship and did not want their ex-partner to find them.\n\nData protection and freedom of expression would also be an issue when it came to enforcing such a law, he added.\n\n\"The biggest problem this faces is how do you legislate against someone lying?\" says Mr McClelland.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nEngland captain Wayne Rooney says he is staying at Manchester United, after being linked with a move to China.\n\nThe 31-year-old striker said he hoped to \"play a full part\" in the rest of the Premier League club's season.\n\nUnited boss Jose Mourinho had refused to rule out the prospect of Rooney's exit this month, although a deal before the Chinese transfer window closes on 28 February was always unlikely.\n\n\"It's an exciting time at the club and I want to remain a part,\" said Rooney.\n\nRooney's agent, Paul Stretford, had travelled to China to see if he could negotiate a deal, although it is not known which clubs he spoke to.\n\nTwo of the three clubs who looked the most likely options - Beijing Guoan and Jiangsu Suning - dismissed speculation about a transfer.\n\nRooney's representatives had already spoken to the third option - Tianjin Quanjian - but their coach, Fabio Cannavaro, said talks did not progress.\n\nRooney is United's record goalscorer and has won five Premier League titles and a Champions League trophy since joining them as an 18-year-old for £27m from Everton in 2004.\n\nThe forward, whose contract expires in 2019, has said he would not play for an English club other than United or Everton.\n\nUnited are sixth in the Premier League and remain in three cup competitions, having reached the last 16 of the Europa League on Wednesday.\n\nThey face Southampton in the EFL Cup final on Sunday before taking on Chelsea in the FA Cup quarter-finals on 13 March.\n\n\"Despite the interest which has been shown from other clubs, for which I'm grateful, I want to end recent speculation and say that I am staying at Manchester United.\n\n\"I hope I will play a full part in helping the team in its fight for success on four fronts.\n\n\"It's an exciting time at the club and I want to remain a part of it.\"\n\nRooney's statement settles his short-term future but does nothing to address long-term issues over his future.\n\nRooney has only started eight Premier League games this season - fewer than Marcus Rashford, Anthony Martial and Henrikh Mkhitaryan - and has featured only three times since breaking United's goalscoring record at Stoke last month.\n\nHe remains committed to United and ideally would stay at Old Trafford.\n\nHowever, should he not play regularly between now and the end of the season, he would explore other options.\n\nThese would include Major League Soccer, as well as China. It is understood his previous statement, that he would only play for United or Everton in the Premier League, still stands.\n\nInterest from China is genuine but despite long-time adviser Paul Stretford travelling to the country this week, there was never any realistic possibility of completing a deal before Tuesday's Chinese Super League transfer deadline.\n\nRooney has scored five goals in 29 appearances for the Red Devils this season, but has started only three games since 17 December and may yet leave in the summer.\n\nFormer Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp says Rooney would be an \"ideal\" signing for United's Premier League rivals Arsenal.\n\n\"Arsenal lack somebody like Rooney - a winner, a leader,\" he told BBC Radio 5 live.\n\n\"He could easily go into somewhere like Arsenal and get a few of their players by the scruff of the neck on the pitch and improve their performances.\"\n\nRedknapp, who was speaking before Rooney's announcement, also suggested the player could make \"a dream move\" back to Everton.\n\nBut Rooney's former team-mate Phil Neville said the striker \"shouldn't write off his United career\" and he could not see him moving to China.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester United forward Wayne Rooney \"will be involved\" in Sunday's EFL Cup final against Southampton, says manager Jose Mourinho.\n\nRooney, 31, announced on Thursday that he is staying at Old Trafford after being linked with a move to China.\n\nThe England captain has missed United's past three matches with a calf injury.\n\n\"He is fine, he has been training with the team,\" said Mourinho on Friday. \"He made his statement about staying here exactly in the right moment.\"\n\nThe Portuguese added: \"That should be the last question about it until the end of the season.\"\n\nRooney's agent, Paul Stretford, had travelled to China to see if he could negotiate a deal, although it is not known which clubs he spoke to.\n\nHowever, United's record goalscorer released a statement on Thursday saying he hoped to \"play a full part\" in the rest of the Premier League club's season.\n• None Man Utd drawn against Russian side in Europa League last 16\n• None Why the Red Devils must keep Ibrahimovic - Shearer\n\nRooney has won five Premier League titles and the Champions League since arriving at Old Trafford as an 18-year-old for £27m from Everton in 2004.\n\nThe forward, whose contract expires in 2019, has said he would not play for another English club other than the Toffees.\n\nUnited are sixth in the Premier League and remain in three cup competitions, having reached the last 16 of the Europa League on Wednesday with a 4-0 aggregate victory over French side Saint-Etienne.\n\nRooney will be part of the squad to face top-flight rivals Southampton at Wembley on Sunday (16:30 GMT kick-off).\n\n\"No doubts, he is involved,\" said Mourinho.\n\n\"He was not selected for Saint-Etienne because he was not ready to play. He stayed at home this week so he could have one more important training session.\"\n\nMidfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan misses the final with a hamstring injury and Mourinho says Rooney's role will depend on which system he decides to play.\n\n\"Without Mkhitaryan, if we want to play with a number 10, obviously Wayne, it's his position, it's where he was playing with us many matches, so he is an option for me,\" he added.\n\nOn Rooney staying, the 54-year-old added: \"He said no way he moves and wants to help the team fight for trophies. I said I would be happy if that was the decision.\"", "Scotland will attempt to end their decade-long winless streak against Wales with a team missing five key men as the Six Nations resumes this weekend.\n\nNot since 2007 have Vern Cotter's men won a Six Nations match against Wales, with the average margin of defeat 15 points in that period.\n\nIreland have recalled Lions fly-half Jonny Sexton as they look to re-establish themselves in the title race with a win over a resurgent France.\n\nAnd Sexton's main rival to be the Lions' 10 this summer, Owen Farrell, will lead unbeaten England out against the Azzurri at Twickenham on Sunday as he wins his 50th cap in arguably his most impressive championship yet.\n\nFarrell has a new partner at outside-centre in former rugby league star Ben Te'o for a fixture that England have never lost, coach Eddie Jones content to try out new combinations against at Italy side on a nine-match losing run in the Six Nations.\n\nWith James Haskell back at flanker after coming off the bench to great effect in the wins over France and Wales, it is a more direct, muscular selection from Jones, blessed with a greater depth of talent than either Scotland or Wales.\n\nIn an entertaining, free-scoring tournament so far, the clash at Murrayfield is pivotal to two sides who have shown both signs of rebirth and flashes of old flaws thus far.\n\nWith one win and one defeat apiece, Saturday's early kick-off will go a long way to defining the season not only of the two sides but of their coaches, Cotter in his last campaign in charge, Rob Howley once again in a caretaker role as Warren Gatland focuses on Lions preparation and selection.\n\nThe fixture has often produced classics - not least a Wales win in 1988 garlanded by superb tries from Jonathan Davies and Ieuan Evans, and the 31-24 thriller in 2010 when Wales were 10 points down on 76 minutes.\n\nAnd despite recent history it is arguably the hardest of the third round matches to call, although the loss of Scotland's captain and place kicker Greig Laidlaw to injury and the return of talismanic winger George North to Wales's ranks may prove pivotal.\n\nIreland ran up 63 points against Italy in Rome a fortnight ago, and after a chastening opening-day defeat in Edinburgh a victory over France would keep their hopes of a third Six Nations title in four years alive.\n\nFrance have lost their last four away matches in this competition but led England until late at Twickenham at the start of the month, and came past Scotland in Paris with a blend of power and guile that hinted that their long statistical and stylistic slump may be coming to an end.\n\nWhile the return of captain Rory Best after a stomach bug will be welcomed in Dublin, Sexton's return is not without controversy.\n\nHe has played very little rugby this season, this most physical of fly-halves once again dogged by injury, and in his absence Paddy Jackson has appeared liberated from the unflattering comparisons of old, kicking 12 of his 13 goals to be leading points scorer in this year's tournament.\n\nFarrell, meanwhile, has shown a craft with ball in hand this winter to match what was always considered his defining strength, that ability from kicking tee across the pitch and no matter what the pressure.\n\nIt was his long, flat pass that sent Daly away for the late try in Cardiff a fortnight ago that kept England on course for a final-day Grand Slam decider in Dublin and maintained the extraordinary 15-match unbeaten run under Jones.\n\nEngland have not yet fired fully this year, coming from behind in the final quarter against both France and Wales.\n\nBut what is ominous for Italy is that strength in depth on the replacements' bench and the impact it is consistently having in big matches.\n\nUnder Jones England have scored a cumulative 83 points more than their various opponents in the last 20 minutes of matches, while Italy - weaker in their starting XV, weaker still on the bench - have shipped almost half their total points conceded in the last 20 minutes of their opening two matches.\n\nSo many options does Jones have that he can afford to leave Jonathan Joseph, scorer of three tries in the corresponding fixture last year, out of his match-day squad altogether.\n\nAnd with star prop Mako Vunipola returning to the bench after recovering from a knee injury, anything else than a heavy defeat would count as a victory of sorts for Italy's Irish coach Conor O'Shea.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nBanned cyclist Lance Armstrong's fight against a $100m (£79m) lawsuit by the US government has been set for a trial starting in Washington on 6 November.\n\nHe is accused of fraud by cheating while riding for the publicly funded US Postal Service team.\n\nThe lawsuit was filed by Armstrong's former team-mate Floyd Landis before being joined by the government in 2013.\n\nArmstrong was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and banned for life in August 2012.\n\nThe 45-year-old won the seven titles between 1999 and 2005. The US Postal Service sponsored the team between 1996 and 2004.\n\nArmstrong admitted to using drugs in all seven of his Tour wins in January 2013 while Landis was stripped of his 2006 Tour de France title for failing a doping test.\n\nThe government wants Armstrong to pay back money the US Postal Service paid his team for sponsorship, plus triple damages.\n\nLandis could collect up to 25% of any damages awarded.", "Last updated on .From the section Hockey\n\nMaddie Hinch has been named Female Goalkeeper of the Year as Great Britain won three world hockey awards.\n\nThe 28-year-old saved four penalties as Great Britain beat the Netherlands in a shootout to win Olympic gold in Rio.\n\nGB women's coach Danny Kerry and assistant coach Karen Brown won the world's best male and female coaches.\n\nHockey players, coaches and fans vote for the annual International Hockey Federation Hockey Stars awards, which were held in India on Thursday.\n\nIreland hockey captain David Harte, 28, was named Male Goalkeeper of the Year for the second year in a row.\n\nThe 28-year-old led Ireland to a first Olympic Games in 108 years in 2016.\n\nEngland Hockey chief executive Sally Munday said: \"Maddie's heroics at the Olympic Games will be remembered by millions who watched our women win gold.\n\n\"She is the goalkeeper no player wants to face when taking a penalty and I am thrilled to see her receive this award.\"\n\nEngland women are currently in South Africa preparing for two Tests on Saturday and Sunday with both games starting at 18:00 GMT.\n\nEngland's men's team are also set to fly out as they take on both South Africa and Germany between 2 and 8 March.", "Thousands of people protested in the Romanian capital of Bucharest on Sunday night.\n\nCrowds gathered outside government offices in the latest of two weeks of protests.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on BBC One Wales, S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nCoach Rob Howley said he was \"proud and delighted\" about Wales' performance against England - until the visitors grabbed victory in the closing stages.\n\nThe hosts led until wing Elliot Daly finished off a counter-attack, after Jonathan Davies failed to find touch with a clearance kick, and Owen Farrell converted to seal a 21-16 victory.\n\n\"In the last five minutes we lacked a bit of composure,\" said Howley.\n\n\"Unfortunately, England know how to win. They've got a lot of confidence.\"\n\nDefeat was Wales' second during Howley's second stint as stand-in for British and Irish Lions coach Warren Gatland.\n\nThey lost heavily to Australia in November and were criticised for their style of play in wins over Argentina, Japan and South Africa.\n\nHowley's men opened their Six Nations campaign with a 33-7 victory over Italy in Rome, and produced a vastly improved display in defeat by England.\n\n\"I'm proud and delighted with the performance... up to about 75 minutes,\" said Howley.\n\n'You have to applaud England'\n\nDaly dived over under pressure from Alex Cuthbert, who was promoted into the team in the build-up to the match when George North failed to recover from a dead leg.\n\nNorthampton Saints player North says he will be fit to face Scotland in round three on Saturday, 25 February.\n\nHowley added: \"I felt England were getting on top in the last 10 to 15 minutes and they took their chance.\n\n\"You have to applaud them for that.\n\n\"International rugby is about taking your chances and keeping discipline.\"\n\nHowley said fly-half Dan Biggar's display was one of the highlights for Wales.\n\n\"Dan Biggar delivers that level of performance whether it's in training or in a Test match,\" he said.\n\n\"He's one of the key players in the unit and he's matured to become a class player.\"\n• None Never miss a Six Nations story - sign up for our rugby news alerts\n\nWales captain Alun Wyn Jones said: \"Hopefully we answered some of the critics.\n\n\"We had a great first half. Yes we are disappointed, but the performance was there for 76 minutes. We will take huge belief from this.\"", "Rural areas of Australia's New South Wales state have been evacuated as wildfires rage across the state, threatening homes and closing roads.\n\nSome 97 fires were burning across the state, with 37 uncontained, the Rural Fire Service said.", "About 20 miles west of Glasgow lies a modern ruin. St Peter's Seminary was built only 50 years ago, yet by the 1990s it was derelict. However, plans to breathe new life into the building are now close to being realised.\n\nThe concrete ghost is hidden in woods on the north side of the River Clyde - the shell of an ambitious 1960s modernist building which the Catholic Church had planned to use to train 100 novice priests.\n\nBut the seminary - at the back of a golf course on the edge of the village of Cardross - was built in changing times. The Church would soon shift away from training priests in seclusion, instead placing them in the community.\n\nThe inauguration ceremony was held on St Andrew's Day 1966.\n\nAt the ceremony, the Archbishop of Glasgow James Scanlan commented on the \"unique edifice… of such architectural distinction as to merit the highest praise from the most qualified judges\".\n\nBut by the 2000s, the same space would be in ruins.\n\nThe post-war years saw the break-up of many of the traditionally Catholic areas in Glasgow - as sections of the old inner city were demolished and people moved into new high-rise homes or out to new towns like East Kilbride or Cumbernauld.\n\nIn this photo taken in the mid-60s, newly-built 20-storey flats in the Gorbals area of Glasgow overlook St Francis Church and Friary.\n\nThe Catholic Church embarked on an ambitious building project to serve these new communities - using architects Gillespie, Kidd and Coia (GKC).\n\nGKC was also asked to build a new St Peter's Seminary near Cardross - to replace the old St Peter's College in Bearsden, which was destroyed by fire in the 1940s.\n\nThe architectural drawing above, of the new St Peter's south elevation, includes Kilmahew House - the 19th Century mansion which had been used as a temporary seminary since the late 1940s.\n\nThe trainee priests were to have \"cells\" in the main block - directly above the chapel - as shown in this section drawing from 1961.\n\nThe first sod on the site was cut in 1960.\n\nArchitects John Cowell (left) and Isi Metzstein (right) - with project manager Stan Blair in the centre - celebrate here with pints of Guinness at the \"topping out\" ceremony in 1965.\n\nTucked away on a wooded hilltop, St Peter's was removed from the outside world.\n\nThe entrance to the main block was across a bridge spanning a shallow pool.\n\nThe architecture was celebrated at this early stage, and the project won a Royal Institute of British Architects Bronze Regional Award in 1967.\n\nThe granite altar in the sanctuary was the heart of the seminary complex.\n\nDespite the sharp contrast between Kilmahew House and the St Peter's extension, the old mansion was an integral part of the college.\n\nWith the break up of traditional Catholic communities in the West of Scotland, and the increasing secularisation of society, St Peter's was never used to full capacity.\n\nIt was designed to hold 100 residents, but the highest number of students living there at any one time was 56.\n\nThis under population only exacerbated a series of maintenance problems on the site.\n\nInefficient heating, poor sound insulation and water leaks made life difficult for the trainee priests - but it did not stop them from enjoying a game of football.\n\nIn November 1979, only 13 years after it opened, the Archdiocese of Glasgow decided to close St Peter's because of the dwindling number of trainee priests, the maintenance issues and financial constraints.\n\nThe building was used as a drug rehabilitation centre for four years in the 1980s, but then fell into a state of disrepair.\n\nArchitectural interest remained though, and in 1992 Historic Scotland granted St Peter's Category A listed status.\n\nTwo years later, the adjoining Kilmahew House was gutted by fire and had to be demolished. Only the footprint of the mansion was left behind.\n\nWith no secure plans for the future, the site continued to deteriorate.\n\nWhat the priests left behind, the graffiti artists claimed as their own.\n\nSince the seminary's closure, numerous ideas have been submitted for repurposing St Peter's.\n\nOne ambitious plan - scuppered by the recession which followed the financial crash in 2008 - would have seen the modernist structure turned into a swimming pool and health spa.\n\nNow arts charity NVA is working towards turning the site into a dramatic space for public art, performance and debate.\n\nThe idea is to consolidate the ruin into a new design - with only partial restoration. A master plan was submitted in 2011.\n\nWith significant help from the Heritage Lottery Fund and Creative Scotland, NVA has reached its £7m funding target - and later this year work is expected to start on returning the site to a usable space.\n\nA big clean-up last year removed lots of the detritus.\n\nThe sanctuary and altar area could be turned into a performance space like this.\n\nBut the public has already been given a chance to see the ruin of St Peter's in a new light.\n\nIn Spring 2016, NVA created a journey in light and sound through the concrete. Called Hinterland, the event was sold out.\n\nSt Peter's made a dramatic architectural statement when it was built, but its first incarnation as a seminary was short-lived.\n\nIt is hoped this 21st Century rebirth by NVA, bringing the structure back into productive use, will prove more enduring.\n\nHistoric Environment Scotland, in partnership with NVA and Glasgow School of Art, has published a more detailed history of the site - St Peter's, Cardross: Birth, Death and Renewal by Diane M Watters.", "Believing you will win when all around see a match that's slipping away. Coming back for more when all game you have been turned over and picked off. Finding precision in the critical moment, having been imprecise in so much of what has gone before.\n\nEngland, despite the late larceny in Cardiff that has extended their victory roll to 16 games and counting, are far from perfect. There are flaws and weaknesses there, but the abiding memory from this white-hot battle on a frozen winter's night will be of strength: of character, in depth, of conviction.\n\nWales thought they had done enough. For 76 minutes they had, playing with a pace and ferocity that stirred memories of the massacre of Stuart Lancaster's innocents here four years ago. The massed ranks of their support were singing them home.\n\nAnd then it turned, ostensibly on one tired clearing kick from Jonathan Davies, but really on so much more.\n\nGood teams go close and see the logic in their defeat. They vow to go away and learn the lessons. They accept that sometimes it is just not their day.\n\nThis England team don't appear to countenance defeat at all. They refuse to let the pressure of being close cloud their thinking. They keep winning that ugly way.\n• None Howley delighted until last five minutes\n• None 5 live In Short: England's backs 'more talented than Wilkinson era'\n\nGeorge Ford, fielding Davies' kick 40 metres out with England 16-14 down, might have gambled on a speculative drop-goal.\n\nOwen Farrell, taking his pass at pace and with only one man outside him, might have twitched at the memory of the interception a few minutes earlier, or gone safely into contact to set up field position.\n\nElliot Daly, running on instead to another fast, sweetly timed pass, might have cut inside or allowed himself to be swallowed up by the onrushing arms of Alex Cuthbert.\n\nFour minutes to go, everything hanging on that one moment, and they made it happen. If it was cruel on Wales, better than they have been in many a marooned year, it characterised the essence of what this England team has become.\n\nEddie Jones always thinks his side will win, no matter what mess they find themselves in. Rob Howley always looks worried that his Wales team will lose.\n\nThat belief has permeated through the ranks. Maro Itoje doesn't dwell on the possibility of defeat, not least because in his brief career it has been such an unfamiliar experience to him.\n\nJames Haskell's ego makes him relish coming off the bench to help turn games around. Farrell, hit so late and hard by Ross Moriarty early in the second half that he was left dry-retching, sucked it in, grinned and came back to produce the contest's pivotal pass and kick.\n\nHowley is a nice man and a dedicated coach who, as a player, could do things few other scrum-halves could. His record as Wales' caretaker boss while Warren Gatland is away is statistically solid - seven wins in his past 10 matches - and has touched occasional heights: a record-breaking win over South Africa last autumn, that unprecedented 30-3 hammering of England in 2013.\n\nBut whereas Jones comes across as a general with both tactical mastery and troops who are genuinely frightened of him, Howley is more the well-meaning supply teacher whose optimistic lesson plans fail to survive the streetwise and disruptive elements inherent in every classroom.\n\nIt is the difference too between the England of Jones and that of his predecessor Lancaster, another honourable, hard-working man who saw crunch matches slip from his grasp in each of his four Six Nations campaigns.\n\nIt happened at Twickenham in 2012, when Scott Williams' brilliant solo burglary and escape sent Wales away towards a third Grand Slam in eight years and left England stalled in second.\n\nIt happened in Paris in 2014, when Gael Fickou's late acceleration inside Alex Goode snatched a victory at the death to spell another second place.\n\nAnd it happened, most famously of all, at Twickenham in that tumultuous World Cup group showdown 18 months ago, when an England team 10 points ahead, with half an hour to go, let a Welsh side with a scrum-half on the wing, a wing at centre and a patched-up fly-half at full-back fight back to steal away a three-point win that will be sung about until the Severn runs dry.\n\nJones, reptilian grin and all, does not care who likes him or what others think of his team, as Howley often appears to do and Lancaster once did.\n\nAnd he is becoming defined by these wins when all is nip and tuck and maybe not: here in Cardiff, when his inexperienced back row shipped eight turnovers to their opponents, when the usually unflustered Jonathan Joseph was throwing passes into touch, when only Daly's muscular speed had denied the excellent Dan Biggar a breakaway try; against France a week ago, when three opposition players all made more than 125m with ball in hand; when a red card for Daly meant 75 minutes against Argentina last autumn with 14 men.\n\nThe power of the bench\n\nJones spoke afterwards of his team having used up all their get-out-of-jail cards. It was an admission that he expects better and will drill his charges until it comes.\n\nIt was also a reflection of a bench that he calls his finishers but may be better described as his emergency services.\n\nNormally the sight of a skipper being hauled off uninjured after 46 minutes would be a cause for crisis. Not when Jones can send on Jamie George for Dylan Hartley.\n\nHaskell, bullish in mind and body, deserves better than the bench but repeatedly makes such an impact from it that he may suffer the unusual misfortune of playing himself out of the starting XV.\n\nBen Te'o, Danny Care, Kyle Sinckler; the names and minutes played may change from game to game, but the influence seldom does.\n\nIn the second row, Joe Launchbury: not a first choice, not with Itoje and George Kruis in town, but 20 tackles on Saturday night in a defence that kept Wales within range.\n\nAnd so England rumble on, to play an Italian team who have never beaten them, to another home fixture after that against a Scotland side who are winless at Twickenham in 34 years.\n\nNo-one in the camp is talking yet about Grand Slams, but precedent suggests the trip to Ireland in five weeks time might be precisely for that.\n\nWales will take heart from their performance, if little comfort from helping produce a match that gripped from the start and carried all watching along to the end.\n\nThey might wonder how this one got away, look back with regret at those first-half penalties not aimed at the posts or the period of second-half dominance that featured wonderful possession and territory but nothing on the board to show for it.\n\nEngland? There will be no regrets, not when they keep marching forward, not when they keep finding a way.", "Lady Gaga rocked the half-time show at the 2017 Super Bowl in Houston. Her first song of the night was a cover of an American folk song called This Land is My Land by Woody Guthrie.", "It's amazing to think that just 10 years ago, flat-rate digital music streaming services were a mere gleam in the eye of industry executives.\n\nIt was as recently as September 2007 that Rick Rubin, then co-head of Columbia Records, put forward the idea as a way of combating online music piracy and file-sharing.\n\n\"You'd pay, say, $19.95 a month, and the music will come from anywhere you'd like,\" he told the New York Times.\n\n\"In this new world, there will be a virtual library that will be accessible from your car, from your cell phone, from your computer, from your television.\"\n\nAs it turned out, he was essentially describing Spotify, which launched just over a year later.\n\nHe even got the price right. In those heady days, when the pound was a lot stronger, $19.95 was equivalent to £10, which, give or take a penny, is the monthly cost of Spotify Premium in the UK today.\n\nBut Spotify is yet to make a profit, while plans to float the firm on the stock market have reportedly been delayed, raising a big question mark over its business model.\n\nOf course, Spotify isn't the only streaming platform out there. Others have joined it over the past decade, including Apple Music, Amazon Prime Music and Deezer, as well as high-resolution music services Tidal and Qobuz.\n\nBut Spotify is seen as the leader, with more than 100 million users, 40 million of them paid-up subscribers to its Premium tier.\n\nSpotify's Daniel Ek is now the music industry's most powerful player, says Billboard\n\nThe Swedish firm is now a major player in 60 countries, including the world's biggest music market, the US, where streaming accounted for 51% of music consumption last year.\n\nReflecting the huge impact that Spotify has had, its chief executive, Daniel Ek, has just topped US music industry magazine Billboard's latest Power 100 list of the biggest movers and shakers in the business.\n\n\"For the first time since [former file-sharing service] Napster decimated music sales, the recorded music industry is showing signs of growth, and that reversal of fortune is largely due to one man,\" Billboard said in its citation.\n\nThe magazine also hailed Spotify as \"the place fans discover music as well as consume it\", pointing to its promoted playlists, including its Discover Weekly service.\n\nHowever, the clock is ticking for Spotify as it hatches its plans to go public.\n\nThe firm originally planned to float this year, but according to the TechCrunch website, this could now be delayed until 2018.\n\nThere are various issues behind this move, not least of which is that Spotify needs to conclude new long-term licensing deals with the big three record companies - Universal, Sony and Warner - to avoid the risk of suddenly losing major chunks of its content.\n\nIt's thought that Spotify currently pays 55% of its revenue to record labels in royalties, with additional money going to music publishers.\n\nIn the interest of finally becoming a profitable company, it would like to lower that percentage, but this is unlikely to go down well with artists, who argue that the royalties they receive from streaming are unfairly low as it is.\n\nBut if it waits too long before floating, it could face a serious cash crisis.\n\nIn March last year, the firm raised $1bn from investors at an interest rate of 5% a year, plus a discount of 20% on shares once the initial public offering (IPO) of shares takes place.\n\nIs Spotify now too big to fail?\n\nHowever, under the terms of the agreement, the interest rate goes up by one percentage point and the discount by 2.5 percentage points every six months until the IPO happens.\n\nSo as time goes on, Spotify must pay ever larger sums to its creditors just to settle the interest on its loan, while the amount of money it can raise from its IPO is trimmed by an ever greater amount.\n\nUnless Mr Ek can get the better of this brutal arithmetic, the future looks tough for Spotify.\n\nBut at the same time, as Billboard says, \"the entire music business now has an interest in its success\".\n\n\"If it's not already too big to fail, it's headed in that direction quickly,\" concludes the magazine.", "Castle View on Canvey Island hit the headlines in 2013 for banning triangular flapjacks after a student was injured by one\n\nA school is letting pupils who behave well during the day go home before those who do not, it has emerged.\n\nCastle View School on Canvey Island, Essex, said some pupils could finish at 14:50 if they had made \"the right decisions, every lesson of the day\".\n\nOthers finish 10 minutes later in what the school calls a \"second dismissal\".\n\nAn NUT official said he had not heard of a school doing this before, but that it was \"not that innovative\" if it was just another way of giving detentions.\n\nThe academy trust school, which hit the headlines in 2013 after banning triangular flapjacks, has about 1,100 students aged 11 to 16.\n\nPupils at the school begin their day at 08:30 with first lessons starting by 08:50.\n\nIn a letter to parents explaining the system, the school, rated \"good\" by Ofsted, said: \"Our second dismissal system is designed to ensure students have an instant consequence that can be put right at the end of the day and start afresh the next day.\"\n\nThe BBC has asked the school whether the introduction of the new system had caused any issues for parents, but the school has yet to respond.\n\nJerry Glazier, general secretary of the Essex branch of the National Union of Teachers (NUT) said he had not heard of schools having split-time endings before.\n\n\"Then again, perhaps it is not that innovative if most pupils are leaving at the normal time and the rest are getting detentions,\" he said.\n\n\"It is up to schools to determine what rewards or sanctions they want to use to motivate pupils.\"\n\nMichelle Doyle Wildman, policy and communications director at PTA UK, which represents parents and teacher associations, said: \"PTA UK's position would be that its really important that parents are fully informed and preferably consulted on any changes to arrangements to the beginning and end of the school day.\n\n\"The best schools do see parents as key partners and will consider how they approach things from a parent and family perspective.\n\n\"This is especially relevant to parents juggling work and additional caring responsibilities.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nGreat Britain qualified for the Fed Cup World Group II play-offs with a 2-1 victory over Croatia.\n\nThe tie was decided in the final doubles contest, with Johanna Konta and Heather Watson beating Ana Konjuh and Darija Jurak 4-6 6-4 6-3.\n\nEarlier, British number two Watson beat Donna Vekic 6-2 6-4 to give GB the lead in Tallinn, Estonia.\n\nBut leading Briton Konta lost 6-4 6-3 to Konjuh in the following singles match as the tie went to a decider.\n\nCaptain Anne Keothavong said she was \"absolutely ecstatic\" with her team's victory.\n\n\"It's been a real emotional rollercoaster, but the way the girls performed today and throughout the whole week, I'm just so proud of them,\" she said.\n\n\"It was so tight, everyone was on the edge of their seats. But they fought their hearts out and played with so much passion. I'm so proud of them.\"\n\nKonta and Watson were broken twice in the opening three games of their doubles match as they lost the first set 6-4.\n\nThere was cause for concern when Australian Open quarter-finalist Konta needed treatment on her ankle early in the second set. But the world number 10 overcame the problem as the British pair levelled.\n\nThe opening four games of the deciding set went against serve before Konta and Watson secured the decisive break en route to victory.\n\nKeothavong's team will now play one of the four losers from the World Group II matches.\n\nThe first big selection decision of Keothavong's captaincy proved successful, as Konta and Watson recovered from a set down, and twice a break of serve down in the decider, to wrap up the tie.\n\nLaura Robson and Jocelyn Rae were Britain's first-choice doubles pair in the group matches in Tallinn, but were asked to make way for the higher-ranked singles players.\n\nBritain crave a first home Fed Cup tie for 24 years, but depending on what happens in other ties this weekend, could end up heading to Australia or Chinese Taipei in April.\n\nUnlike the men's team competition, the Davis Cup, which has a World Group of 16 nations, the Fed Cup divides its top teams into two groups of eight - World Group I and World Group II.\n\nThe 91 nations outside the top tiers are divided into three regional zones and Britain have one chance per year to escape - a format that hugely frustrated former captain Judy Murray.\n\nThe Europe/Africa Group I event, in Estonia, was made up of 14 teams divided into groups, with Poland, Croatia, Britain and Serbia the seeded nations.\n\nFour group winners progressed to the promotion play-offs, with Britain one of the two nations to qualify for World Group II play-offs in April - which could see them given a home Fed Cup tie for the first time since 1993. Poland and Serbia are competing for the other place.\n\nGB fell at the same stage in 2012 and 2013 - away ties in Sweden and Argentina - under the captaincy of Judy Murray.", "Cancer patients took to the catwalk as part of New York Fashion Week.\n\nThe event was organised by Say Yes to Hope a charity which provides support for people with advanced cancer.", "Petkovic was among the German team members outraged by the mistake\n\nThe United States Tennis Association has apologised after a version of the German national anthem associated with the Nazi era was accidentally sung at a tournament in Hawaii.\n\nThe obsolete first verse, including the words \"Germany, Germany above all else\" was sung by a soloist at the Fed Cup.\n\nThe error left members of the German team and fans upset and angry.\n\nThe USTA extended \"a sincere apology to the German Fed Cup team and fans for the outdated National Anthem\".\n\n\"This mistake will not occur again,\" it said.\n\nGermany's Andrea Petkovic and Alison Riske of the US were about to play their first-round tie when the anthem was heard.\n\n\"It was an absolute outrage and affront, the lowest,\" Petkovic said. \"It was by some way the worst thing that's happened to me, especially in the Fed Cup.\"\n\nThe song, the Deutschlandlied, became the official German anthem under the democratic Weimar Republic in the 1920s.\n\nBut after World War Two, the first, contentious verse was dropped and the Federal Republic adopted only the third verse beginning \"Unity and justice and freedom\".\n\nThe Fed Cup is the largest international team competition in women's tennis, and included 99 teams in 2015.\n• None How many national anthems are plagiarised?", "An appeal has been launched to save a cathedral on Malta where Queen Elizabeth II used to worship.\n\nAfter World War II, the then-Princess Elzabeth lived on the Mediterranean island while Prince Philip was stationed there as a Royal Naval officer.\n\nNow St Paul's Anglican Pro-Cathedral in Valetta is in need of a €3m (£2.6m) renovation.", "HTC Vive has been outselling the Oculus Rift\n\nI first tried the Oculus Rift virtual reality headset in the corner of a drab conference room in Las Vegas. I was convinced within seconds - despite feeling a little dizzy - that the device, held together by duct tape and hope, was destined for big things.\n\nA year or so later, I met the same company, Oculus VR, in a (slightly) fancier room at the E3 gaming event in Los Angeles. \"Hold this,\" I said, abruptly thrusting an audio cable into the hands of a young man who I thought was helping out - but was in fact the company's chief executive, Palmer Luckey. Again, I was blown away by the technology.\n\nThe next time I'd meet Luckey he'd be many, many millions of dollars richer, and Oculus would be a Facebook-owned company. But despite that very real marker of success, our topic of conversation each time we met remained the same: How are you going to convince people it's worth it? And isn't it going to be way too expensive?\n\n\"It isn't,\" he said the last time I asked him - but he's wrong.\n\nAt around $600 (plus a powerful PC) to get started, it is too expensive.\n\nBut money isn't the problem. The price of the technology will come down, and I'm still convinced virtual reality can be a success - but will it be Facebook's success? The company's strategy in this blossoming market is under question.\n\nThis week we learned that demo stations set up in Best Buy - the huge US technology retail chain - are being rolled back due to poor foot traffic.\n\nFacebook has described the move as a \"seasonal\" change, but suffice it to say, if they were shifting units they'd still be there. Instead, 200 of the 500 stations across the US are being shut down.\n\nIt's a potentially troubling moment for the company. Those who back virtual reality - myself included - always subscribed to the view that the key to selling them would be to get people to try it out. Once you've been in VR, we all assumed, you'd be hooked, and your wallet would follow soon after.\n\nGoogle's Daydream VR system could be a threat to Facebook's budget VR success\n\nBut that doesn't seem to have been the case. For whatever reason, too few people were bothering to even try the demo, let alone buy the product. There are a few theories for this, but the most likely, in my mind, was suggested by NPR's Molly Wood. The problem, she observed recently, might be the \"pink-eye factor”.\n\nShe said: \"It could be as simple as - and I have said this a million times - not wanting to go into a store and put something on your face that has been on a bunch of other people's faces.\"\n\nBut that wouldn't explain why the Oculus Rift is apparently performing poorly against its closest rival.\n\nAt the high-end of the virtual reality market, Oculus is up against HTC's Vive, an extremely capable device which has the involvement of Valve, the revered games publisher.\n\nUnofficial data (which I'm using as the companies themselves haven't shared sales figures with us) suggest that the Vive, despite being more expensive, is trouncing Oculus. Games research firm SuperData estimated that 420,000 Vive headsets were sold in 2016, compared to 250,000 sales for the Oculus Rift.\n\nThe lower end of the market is far more positive for Facebook. The Samsung Gear VR runs the Oculus VR experience, and that is by far and away the most popular device for VR on the market today, according to SuperData. But the hardware is all Samsung's and, for the most part, the headset itself (a simple plastic frame with lenses) has been given away with many smartphones.\n\nThe hope that the Gear VR might act as a kind of gateway drug into pricier VR experiences has yet to come to fruition.\n\nOr maybe it has, just not for Oculus: the middle ground in VR is Sony's PlayStation VR, $399 and works with the PlayStation 4. It's more powerful than the Gear VR, but less powerful than the high-end headsets. But here's where Facebook should be worried - it seems to be good enough for most gamers.\n\nAnd it's \"good enough\" that makes Facebook's strategy all the more precarious. Who is the Oculus Rift for, exactly? Super serious gamers are gravitating to the HTC Vive. Moderately serious gamers are happy with PlayStation VR. And at the budget end, the Gear VR, while popular now, faces a clear and present threat from Daydream, Google's new VR ecosystem which is far more open.\n\nWhile Gear VR insists you have a Samsung smartphone, Daydream is designed to eventually work with any sufficiently powerful Android device (and it wouldn't be too tricky to make it work with Apple's iOS, either).\n\nThis compatibility comes at a price, mind - the Daydream View headset is far less comfortable, in my experience, than the Gear VR. But it's comfortable enough, and the little handheld controller provides a far more intuitive way of navigating the VR world than tapping blindly at the side of your head, a la Gear VR.\n\nSo what are the next steps if Facebook is to get on top of this? I'd ask Palmer Luckey, but he's hard to reach at the moment - hidden away from public view after controversy surrounding his support of Donald Trump which involved funding a hateful trolling group.\n\nHe still works at the company, but Facebook and Oculus have repeatedly refused to tell me what his job actually is. (Palmer, if you're reading... my Twitter direct messages are open!)\n\nThe only public appearance he has made since that debacle has been to turn up in court where Facebook (unsuccessfully) defended against claims Oculus illegally used intellectual property belonging to games publisher Zenimax in the early days. A $500m bill for damages awaits, unless Facebook can win on appeal.\n\nIn a recent earnings call, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who is still incredibly enthusiastic about VR and what it means for his network's future, called for patience from his investors. \"It's not going to be really profitable for a while,\" he said.\n\nHe's never claimed otherwise, it has to be said. VR appears on Facebook's 10-year strategy, a slow burner with potentially big rewards.\n\nBut falling behind now would be a serious blow, which is why Zuckerberg has brought in Hugo Barra, a man most recently at Chinese firm Xiaomi, but before that, a major name at Google. He'll be in charge of Facebook's efforts in virtual reality from here on in.\n\nIn Barra, Oculus gains both a visionary and a safe pair of hands. He having worked on Android, today's most popular smartphone platform.\n\nAt Xiaomi, his role was to help the company expand globally - and while the company didn't, as some had expected, break into the US under Barra's watch, it did cement a reputation as making good quality devices.\n\nHe hasn't started his new role at Facebook just yet - he'll be at the company in a month or so, apparently excited to be back in California after a few years away.\n\nWhen he starts his first day - I feel those two questions I've been asking Palmer Luckey still stand: Isn't it still too expensive? And more importantly - how are you going to convince people it's worth it?\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook", "Also up for best actress was Emily Blunt (left), for her role in The Girl on a Train, and Meryl Streep, nominated in the same category for Florence Foster Jenkins. Completing the trio is Andrew Garfield, who was nominated for best leading actor for his role in Hacksaw Ridge.", "Kate and her Nanny Chat's wedding photos more than 60 years apart\n\nSocial media was captivated by a 150-year-old wedding dress that had been lost after a dry cleaners went bust.\n\nTess Newall, who had worn her great-great grandmother's dress at her wedding in June, posted a plea on Facebook to help find it, which was shared more than 300,000 times.\n\nLuckily her dress was found but what is the appeal for brides of choosing a dress once worn by a relative? Three women explained why they had ditched trawling the bridal shops for the perfect dress in favour of a borrowed gown.\n\nKate Ridgway, from Stockport, made the decision to wear her grandmother's wedding dress in 2014.\n\n\"I remember it from when I was a child,\" said the 27-year-old. \"I always knew nan had kept it and I tried it on for dressing up, but back then I thought it was a horrid lacy thing.\"\n\nHowever, when she got engaged to her now-husband Stu, Joan Chatfield, known as \"Nanny Chat\", asked if she would like to wear it on her big day.\n\n\"I was heavily pregnant at the time, so I couldn't try it on,\" said Kate. \"But she had always wanted me to wear it.\"\n\nThen, three days after Kate's eldest son was born, her nan passed away.\n\nWhen she travelled down to Sussex for the funeral, her mother handed her the box with the vintage wedding dress from 1951, and everything fell into place.\n\n\"When I tried it on, it fitted perfectly,\" she said. \"I had it cleaned but I didn't have to do anything else to it.\n\n\"I had tried on brand new wedding dresses and I had fallen in love with one, but this felt different and so special.\n\n\"It meant so much to us as a family for me to wear it and, as you can imagine, it made for a very emotional day.\"\n\nEmily Clark's dress was first worn by her mother Marilyn\n\nLondon-based digital designer Emily Clark also hopes to start a tradition of her own by using her mother's frock for her wedding this October.\n\nThe 33-year-old said her mother's dress, which was first worn in 1980, had played a big part in her childhood.\n\n\"I used to dress in my mum's wedding dress from the age of five or six to - if I'm truthful - until I was 15.\n\n\"It's one of a kind, it's a dress you wouldn't be able to find now and you wouldn't be able to replicate.\"\n\nThe dress was bought by her grandfather, who died last year. She said the dress would act as a way of commemorating him at her wedding to fiance Andrew Stewart.\n\nEmily and Andrew are due to get married in October\n\nThe dress is currently being altered, and when she heard that Mrs Newall's had gone missing at the dry cleaners she says she \"did panic\".\n\nShe added: \"I just think it's wonderful that they've had it returned.\"\n\nFor Rachel Cohen, from Edinburgh, the discovery of her grandmother's dress in the loft spurred on the idea to go retro.\n\n\"I knew there were dresses up there amongst a lot of random stuff,\" she said.\n\n\"I even found one dress which much have been from a previous generation, but it just couldn't have been worn.\"\n\nHowever, the one Granny Marie Waterston wore in the 1930s was in superb condition and perfect for Rachel's special day.\n\nMarie Waterston in the 1930s (L) and Rachel Cohen in 2009 (R)\n\n\"I had never been the type of person to dream of a big white dress, so when I found it, packed away all neat and tidy in a box, I had the idea to wear it,\" she said.\n\n\"I had to cut the sleeves off as she had such tiny hands, but otherwise it was the same.\"\n\nHaving her grandmother's dress meant a lot to Rachel when she married in 2009.\n\n\"My mother died when I was young and I looked after my grandmother when she was old, so we had a close relationship,\" said Rachel.\n\n\"It was special to have her dress there, even when she couldn't be.\"\n\nWhile those three brides opted for the personal touch with their dresses, they join growing numbers of people choosing vintage items more generally.\n\nLouise Croft, ethical fashion blogger at PaupertoPrincess.com - who will be wearing a 1940s gown for her wedding later this year - said going vintage had many benefits, from following fashion cycles to stopping garments ending up in landfills.\n\nShe said the growth of online sharing had also led to brides wanting to stand out even more, and going down the classic route often means the dress is one of a kind.\n\n\"It feels like giving a precious piece of history a moment in the limelight rather than it being in a museum or attic,\" added Louise.\n\n\"Of course, you always wonder what tales and secrets it holds and if it's from a family member then you are lucky enough to also have all these answers.\"\n\nSome brides choose to customise a handed down dress\n\nKat Williams, editor of Rock 'n Roll Bride, said although dresses have been passed down for many years, a lot more people were putting their own touches to them.\n\n\"We had one woman in the magazine who wore her grandmother's dress and customised it all to make it more modern,\" she said. \"She shortened it, added a big petticoat and made it more fitted.\n\n\"It looked great but offered that little bit of family history too.\n\n\"Even if you buy a dress from a vintage shop, it means you won't see lots of other brides wearing the same thing and a bride wants to feel unique.\"", "An Egyptian woman, believed to be the world's heaviest woman at 500kg (78.5 stone), has arrived in Mumbai, India, for weight reduction surgery.\n\nThe family of 36-year-old Eman Ahmed Abd El Aty said it was the first time she had left home for 25 years.", "With the highest concentration of dark sky sites in the British Isles, the Isle of Man is the perfect spot for stargazing.\n\nSee more on BBC Inside Out North West at 19:30 GMT on Monday 13 February.", "Women who breastfeed their toddlers say they are either branded \"hippy earth mothers\" or seen as \"weird and disgusting\".\n\nMany have applauded model Tamara Ecclestone for braving the backlash to post a photograph of herself breastfeeding her daughter, who is nearly three.\n\nThe NHS says most women in the UK wish they could breastfeed for longer than they do, yet only one in 200 mothers do so past their baby's first birthday.\n\nHere, five mothers who carried on breastfeeding share their stories.\n\nRebekah Ellis, 32, from Cambridge, breastfeeds both her six-month-old son and her daughter, who is three and a half.\n\nShe says: \"The reaction from the NHS has been supportive, albeit surprised. The midwives who attended my son's birth at home said 'Good for you,' when my husband explained.\n\n\"Most people don't know that I am still feeding my daughter. I know that I would get a negative reaction from the vast majority. Even nursing past a year old is often seen as weird, disgusting - despite the WHO [World Health Organisation] recommendation [that children should be breastfed until the age of two or older].\n\n\"When I nurse my son out in public (my daughter hasn't wanted milk during the day since the age of 18 months), I use a cover. This is more for me than for the benefit of others.\n\n\"People still look uncomfortable though, even when they can't see anything.\"\n\nKelly Lane, 38, from Redditch in Worcestershire, breastfed her daughter, now nine, and her son, now seven, until the age of two and a half.\n\nShe says her confidence took a knock after a friend's husband criticised her, telling her it was \"pointless\" - but she carried on because she could see the health benefits for her children.\n\nShe says: \"You do have to be dedicated to do it but I was happy to give that up for what was only a very short period of my life.\n\n\"The one quite hard thing is having a meal. I personally felt too uncomfortable to breastfeed in public and would use breast-feeding rooms or the toilet.\n\n\"But breastfeeding in toilets is horrendous - they're not hygienic, there's not enough space and you're conscious you are taking up space for someone who might be queuing.\n\n\"Both my children did not like having blankets thrown over them when feeding, as they like to look at Mummy and be talked to and, to be honest, rightly so. A child shouldn't be covered up when it's being nursed.\n\n\"I feel so sad that society is so negative and disgusted that a mother would be feeding her child the way nature intended in public, than actually congratulating her for doing a great thing.\n\n\"It's ok though for women to be up on billboards everywhere flashing every body part possible! The hypocrisy is astonishing!\"\n\nRebecca Alexander, 34, from Liverpool, still breastfeeds her son who will be three in April. She says she loves Tamara Ecclestone's \"continued support and promotion of breastfeeding\".\n\nShe told the BBC: \"I struggled feeding my elder daughter for more than three weeks first time around because of the lack of knowledge and support. Breastfeeding should be visible in our society. It's how we learn; by seeing others do it.\n\n\"I set out on this journey [with my son] thinking I would breastfeed till two years and then pump until four.\n\n\"When he has had big changes such as starting nursery, with a new childminder and me returning to work, breastfeeding has been his source of comfort and a way to reconnect after being apart all day.\n\n\"How anyone can see it as sexual completely shocks me, and I think it says more about our society, and the view of women than anything else.\"\n\nSarah Johnson, who breastfeeds her two-year-old son twice a day, says: \"I think it is a benefit for his health and also a nice bonding moment for us both, especially as I work away part of the week.\n\n\"I have decided to continue until he is ready to stop, but I am coming under pressure from family members to stop - grandparents - who say he is 'no longer a baby'.\n\n\"I tell them about the WHO guidelines for breastfeeding until two and beyond, but I guess in our Western culture you are seen as a hippy earth mother or odd if you still breastfeed a toddler - shame as in other parts of the world it is totally normal.\n\n\"When did something natural become unnatural? I don't judge mothers who choose to bottle feed, so would not liked to be judged either.\n\n\"Although the pictures [of Tamara Ecclestone] are rather posed, I commend her for posting them.\"\n\nSue Burgess, 57, from Oxford, breastfed her daughter until she was two and a half, and while she says she cannot understand why anyone would describe it as disgusting, she admits she only did it in public \"a handful of times\" as she found it \"embarrassing\".\n\nAlthough her daughter is now 16, Sue still cringes when she thinks about the \"worst time\" feeding her in a village square in Italy and feeling \"exposed\" as a solemn church procession took place close by.\n\n\"My daughter started to say 'A boo! A boo! A BOO!!!' at ever-increasing volumes, which was her way of asking for a breastfeed. I complied unwillingly.\"\n\nSue adds: \"Nonetheless, if other people feel the strength to take such experiences in their stride, I can only admire them.\"", "Violence has broken out at a protest in Paris in support of a young black man who was allegedly assaulted by police.", "The health secretary said he didn't want to make excuses about very long waiting times in A&E\n\nMy interview with the Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt struck an interesting note after a day of bleak news from NHS England.\n\nOfficial figures showed the worst performance in A&E units in December since records began in 2004.\n\nThe number of patients waiting on trolleys for more than four hours because beds were not free rose nearly 50% year on year.\n\nRather than hitting back with a raft of statistics on extra investment by the government, Jeremy Hunt acknowledged that progress had not always lived up to expectations.\n\nMr Hunt accepted the reality of the situation in some of England's hospitals, highlighted by images of patients waiting more than 13 hours for beds and a six-month delay discharging an elderly woman because of care shortcomings.\n\nThese were \"unacceptable\", he said, and \"bad for the NHS\".\n\nHe volunteered that \"it's incredibly frustrating for me\" and he \"didn't want to make excuses\".\n\nThis sounded like a health secretary who knew only too well that the NHS was under immense strain and there was no denying the real challenges facing staff and patients every day.\n\nI repeatedly asked Mr Hunt what he was doing about it. He emphasised the government's long-term moves to get health and social care working together and the \"big transformation programme\" aiming to treat more people in their local community rather than in hospitals.\n\nBut on the pressures right now in hospitals, Mr Hunt had little new to say apart from noting that some were a lot better than others at managing the flow of patients.\n\nSo what can the government do? Ministers are now focused on social care, where successive spending cuts have made it harder to look after the frail elderly at home. Mr Hunt told me the government recognised there was a problem and it was being addressed.\n\nAll roads for a move on social care now lead to the Budget on 8 March. Rumours that the Chancellor, Philip Hammond, will announce a new financial package on social care have been rife in Whitehall.\n\nThe sudden scrapping of Surrey County Council's referendum on a 15% council tax rise fuelled suspicions that its leader had been quietly tipped off about an impending announcement on social care funding.\n\nIntriguingly, when I asked the health secretary about what might happen in the Budget he said that was up to the prime minister and the chancellor. It sounded like a plea to Downing Street to come up with new money for social care.\n\nMr Hunt added, though, that a quick fix on its own was not enough and that a long-term answer was needed as well.\n\nThere is a danger in building up expectations which cannot be met on Budget Day.\n\nBut it feels like the health secretary and other ministers are resting their hopes on the chancellor. There is not much they can do about this winter's A&E pressures except to wait and hope.\n\nMost worryingly for the health secretary is the knowledge that this was supposed to be the \"year of plenty\" for NHS England with a \"frontloaded\" financial settlement. Even with a relatively generous allocation for this year, the hospital system is in trouble.\n\nMr Hunt knows that funding in the next couple of years will tail off. He will hope that promised and planned efficiency savings start to materialise soon.\n\nAn intervention by his former adviser, the American health guru Don Berwick, has lent weight to calls for more funding for the NHS.\n\nIn a BBC interview, Mr Berwick, commenting on the government's current financial plans for health, said: \"I have serious doubts whether you can have a healthcare which is universal, not rationed and responsive to needs at that target level - I am concerned.\"\n\nHe may also be alarmed that even with intense winter preparations in each area of England between local health and local care chiefs, some A&E units have struggled under the weight of patient numbers.\n\nThere were orders from on high for routine operations to be cancelled for four weeks but, even so, many hospitals had very few spare beds.\n\nUnderstandably, Mr Hunt stressed that the NHS was not alone in experiencing pressures of rising patient numbers and that French and German hospitals were under strain this winter.\n\nBut he knows he will be judged only on the performance of the NHS. He will hope the chancellor has something to offer.", "A tribunal found courier Maggie Dewhurst should be classed as a worker\n\nWhat is the so-called \"gig\" economy, a phrase increasingly in use, and seemingly so in connection with employment disputes?\n\nAccording to one definition, it is \"a labour market characterised by the prevalence of short-term contracts or freelance work, as opposed to permanent jobs\".\n\nAnd - taking opposing partisan viewpoints - it is either a working environment that offers flexibility with regard to employment hours, or... it is a form of exploitation with very little workplace protection.\n\nThe latest attempt to bring a degree of legal clarity to the employment status of people in the gig economy has been playing out in the Court of Appeal.\n\nA London firm, Pimlico Plumbers, on Friday lost its appeal against a previous ruling that said one of its long-serving plumbers was a worker - entitled to basic rights, including holiday pay - rather than an independent contractor.\n\nLike other cases of a similar nature, such as those involving Uber and Deliveroo, the outcome will now be closely scrutinised for what it means regarding the workplace rights of the millions of people employed in the gig economy in the UK.\n\nIn the gig economy, instead of a regular wage, workers get paid for the \"gigs\" they do, such as a food delivery or a car journey.\n\nIn the UK it's estimated that five million people are employed in this type of capacity.\n\nProponents of the gig economy claim that people can benefit from flexible hours, with control over how much time they can work as they juggle other priorities in their lives.\n\nWorkers in the gig economy may be delivering meals\n\nIn addition, the flexible nature often offers benefits to employers, as they only pay when the work is available, and don't incur staff costs when the demand is not there.\n\nMeanwhile, workers in the gig economy are classed as independent contractors.\n\nThat means they have no protection against unfair dismissal, no right to redundancy payments, and no right to receive the national minimum wage, paid holiday or sickness pay.\n\nIt is these aspects that are proving contentious.\n\nIn the past few months two tribunal hearings have gone against employers looking to classify staff as independent contractors.\n\nLast October Uber drivers in the UK won the right to be classed as workers rather than independent contractors.\n\nThe ruling by a London employment tribunal meant drivers for the ride-hailing app would be entitled to holiday pay, paid rest breaks and the national minimum wage.\n\nUber is appealing against the tribunal finding against it\n\nThe GMB union described the decision as a \"monumental victory\" for some 40,000 drivers in England and Wales. In December, Uber launched an appeal against the ruling that it had acted unlawfully.\n\nAnd in January this year, a tribunal found that Maggie Dewhurst, a courier with logistics firm City Sprint, should be classed as a worker rather than independent contractor, entitling her to basic rights.\n\nAnd, also towards the end of last year, a group of food takeaway couriers working for Deliveroo said they were taking legal steps in the UK to gain union recognition and workers' rights.\n\nOne difference worth noting is that workers in the gig economy differ slightly from those on zero-hours contracts.\n\nThose are the - also controversial - arrangements used by companies such as Sports Direct, JD Wetherspoons and Cineworld.\n\nLike workers in the gig economy, zero-hours contractors - or casual contractors - don't get guaranteed hours or much job security from their employer.\n\nChancellor Philip Hammond is looking for effective ways to tax workers\n\nBut people on zero-hours contracts are seen as employees in some sense, as they are entitled to holiday pay. But, like those in the gig economy, they are not entitled to sick pay.\n\nMeanwhile, the Department for Business is holding an inquiry into a range of working practices - including the gig economy.\n\nThe department says it wants to ensure its employment rules are up to date to reflect \"new ways of working\".\n\nThe status of gig economy workers is of importance to the government, as last November's Autumn Statement showed for the first time how it is cutting into the government's tax take.\n\nThe Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimated that in 2020-21 it will cost the Treasury £3.5bn.\n\nChancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond said then he would look to find more effective ways to tax workers in the UK's current shifting labour environment.\n\nFor more on the gig economy listen to In The Balance: Precarious Future on BBC World Service at 09:30 GMT on Saturday, 11 February.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nPremier League champions Leicester were plunged deeper into relegation trouble as they were beaten by Swansea, whose vital victory gave their own hopes of survival an enormous lift.\n\nAfter a cagey start, Alfie Mawson's thumping volley and an incisive team goal finished by Martin Olsson gave the hosts a commanding 2-0 half-time lead.\n\nLeicester offered more resistance in the second half - substitute Islam Slimani was denied by a fine save by Lukasz Fabianski - but fell to a fifth successive defeat, increasing the pressure on manager Claudio Ranieri.\n\nThe Foxes, who are just one point above the relegation zone, are the only side in the top four English divisions without a league goal in 2017.\n\nThey are also the first reigning champions to lose five consecutive top flight matches since Chelsea in March 1956 and now find themselves embroiled in a congested relegation battle in which the bottom six teams are separated by just five points.\n\nWinless in the Premier League in 2017 and without a goal in their previous five league outings, Leicester entered this fixture in apparent freefall.\n\nGoalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel described their faltering title defence as \"embarrassing\" after last Sunday's 3-0 home defeat by Manchester United, while Wednesday's FA Cup replay win over Derby was preceded by a dreaded vote of confidence from the club's board for manager Ranieri.\n\nThe Italian cut a forlorn figure on the touchline at the Liberty Stadium, standing motionless as he watched his side surrender two goals in a potentially defining eight-minute spell at the end of the first half.\n\nThere was little Schmeichel could do to stop Mawson's brilliant swerving volley, but the goalkeeper was at fault for Swansea's second.\n\nAttempting to launch a counter-attack, the Dane's throw landed at the feet of Swans midfielder Tom Carroll, who started a slick one-touch passing move which involved Fernando Llorente and Gylfi Sigurdsson and ended with Olsson, whose firm strike Schmeichel should have saved.\n\nAs impressive as the goal was from a Swansea perspective, it was indicative of Leicester's porous defence - a far cry from the solid backline which formed the foundation for their improbable title success last season.\n\nDespite starting the day a place below their opponents, Swansea's resurgence under new head coach Paul Clement was in striking contrast to Leicester's decline.\n\nThe Swans had won three of their five league games since Clement's appointment on 2 January, lifting them off the foot of the table and out of the bottom three to earn the former Derby boss the Premier League manager of the month award.\n\nThat accolade is meant to carry something of a curse - with managers often losing their next game after receiving the award - but Clement avoided such a jinx as he oversaw a polished performance.\n\nSwansea are far more organised defensively than they were under predecessor Bob Bradley, with the defence and midfield now structured and disciplined with and without the ball.\n\nThe home side's energetic pressing gave Leicester no time to settle, and their two brilliant goals gave them a firm foothold in the game they never looked like losing.\n\nA fourth win from six league games under Clement means Swansea climb up to 15th place, four points clear of the bottom three and with renewed hope of avoiding relegation.\n\nSwansea City boss Paul Clement: \"We have had a really good start and I'm very pleased with the players. We totally deserved that victory.\n\n\"The goal before half-time put us in strong position, we were solid all of the game. We had a couple of moments around 60/61 minutes where Leicester threatened but otherwise we were good.\"\n\nLeicester City boss Claudio Ranieri: \"Unbelievable. We started well. We wanted to make a good result against another team near the relegation zone. We make something good but the first shot on goal they score and then the second again. From there it was very difficult to get back.\n\n\"Our mind is on the Premier League. The FA Cup and Champions League is something different. We want to play well and be safe in the Premier League. Our main target is to be safe in the Premier League.\"\n\nWhen will Leicester score again? - The stats\n• None Leicester are the first reigning top-flight champions to fail to score in six consecutive league matches.\n• None The Foxes have gone over 10 hours without scoring in the Premier League, 610 minutes.\n• None No team in the top four tiers has won fewer points in 2017 than Leicester (one, level with Aston Villa, Coventry and Leyton Orient).\n• None Gylfi Sigurdsson has been involved in eight goals in his last eight home Premier League games (three goals, five assists).\n• None No defender has scored more Premier League goals in 2017 than Alfie Mawson (three, level with Marcos Alonso).\n• None Leicester have kept just two clean sheets in their last 18 Premier League games.\n\nBy the time Leicester City start their next Premier League game, they could be bottom of the table. The Foxes host Liverpool on Monday, 27 February (20:00 GMT) - with all three teams below them in action before then.\n\nSwansea's next game is a trip to leaders Chelsea in the Premier League on Saturday, 25 February (15:00 GMT).\n• None Attempt missed. Leroy Fer (Swansea City) left footed shot from more than 40 yards on the right wing is high and wide to the right.\n• None Attempt missed. Gylfi Sigurdsson (Swansea City) left footed shot from the centre of the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Martin Olsson with a cross.\n• None Attempt missed. Jamie Vardy (Leicester City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Islam Slimani. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Rebecca was anorexic and bulimic for 12 years.\n\nShe explains what helped her and what didn't, as well as some of the signs people can look for if they're worried someone they know may have an eating disorder.\n\nRebecca's story was featured on Trust Me I'm A Doctor on BBC Two - @BBCTrustMe on Twitter\n\nJoin the conversation - find BBC Stories on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Commons Speaker John Bercow insists his impartiality has not been affected after he revealed he had voted Remain in the EU referendum.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChelsea missed the chance to move 12 points clear at the top of the Premier League as they were held to a draw by a resilient Burnley at Turf Moor.\n\nThe hosts had won all four of their previous homes games without conceding but fell behind early on when Pedro finished off a sweeping attack.\n\nThe visitors dominated possession and it seemed only a matter of time before they added to their advantage.\n\nHowever, Burnley's record signing Robbie Brady - making his full debut following a January move from Norwich - equalised with a stunning free-kick.\n\nThe Clarets almost went ahead before the break but Thibaut Courtois superbly denied Matt Lowton from close range.\n\nChelsea did not have a single shot on target in the second half as Burnley took the game to the Premier League leaders, Andre Gray testing Courtois with a low drive when he was through one-on-one.\n\nIn the end, manager Antonio Conte will perhaps consider this a point gained as the Blues moved 10 points ahead of Tottenham. Manchester City can close the gap to eight points if they beat Bournemouth on Monday.\n\nChelsea's away form in the Premier League is unrivalled but this was always going to be a difficult test for the Blues.\n\nJust two sides have a better home record than Burnley - Chelsea and Tottenham - with 28 of the Clarets' 29 points collected prior to the visit of Conte's men coming at Turf Moor.\n\nInitially, it looked like the visitors had the measure of their opponents, swiftly turning defence into attack to catch the Clarets out of position and open the scoring.\n\nTo Burnley's credit, they did not abandon a system that had brought them so much success on home soil. They allowed Chelsea to dominate possession but closed them down quickly as soon as they approached the box.\n\nA disciplined four-man defence had the bustling Diego Costa and the mercurial Eden Hazard under control, limiting the Blues to just two shots on target in the whole game, both of which came in the first half.\n\nIt was only the second time all season they have dropped points against a side outside the top six. With just Manchester City and Manchester United left to face out of the leading group, it will take an almighty collapse to deny the Blues a fifth Premier League title.\n\nA key factor in Chelsea's impressive season has been consistency, with Conte rarely making changes to his side unless forced to.\n\nAgainst Burnley, he chose the same XI that started in the 3-1 home win against Arsenal last time out. That meant Cesc Fabregas - who scored against the Gunners - had to make do with a place on the bench.\n\nDespite Conte recently calling Fabregas \"a genius\" and likening him to Italy midfielder Andrea Pirlo, the Spanish midfielder has started just five games this season.\n\nN'Golo Kante and Nemanja Matic were preferred in midfield against Burnley but both are defensive-minded and it quickly became evident that Chelsea were lacking the creativity of someone like Fabregas.\n\nOnce again Fabregas climbed off the bench but with 20 minutes remaining against a determined Burnley side, it left him little time to make an impression.\n\nIt could be time for Conte to give Chelsea's 'Pirlo' his chance to shine for the run-in.\n\nBurnley's home form has all but guaranteed their Premier League status for next season, with Sean Dyche's side comfortably in mid-table and 10 points clear of the relegation zone.\n\nBut while their home form is as good as anyone's in the top flight, their away form has been on par with a side battling to stay up. They've collected just one point on their travels, a daunting record going into four consecutive away games.\n\nThe addition of Brady appears an astute signing and, along with Joey Barton, means they possess two players who are deadly from set-pieces.\n\nNo side have scored more goals from direct free-kicks than Burnley this season and that could represent their best chance of picking up some much-needed points on the road.\n\nWhat they said\n\nBurnley boss Sean Dyche: \"Chelsea are a fine side. They are the market leaders for a reason and we limited them to two shots on target and that is tough enough.\n\n\"We made four or five really good chances. I am very pleased overall. The mentality here, I am pleased about the growth in the side.\n\n\"We are maturing as a side as individuals and as a team. You need assuredness in the Premier League. I was super impressed with our reaction to their goal. We were not disappointed or stepping on the back foot.\"\n\nChelsea manager Antonio Conte: \"It is one point and for sure we must be disappointed. We tried to win. We started very well and scored a goal and created chances to score the second goal.\n\n\"We tried to win but we know Burnley at home are not easy. They have taken 29 points at home. Now it is important to continue to work.\n\n\"I think we tried to build and do our football for sure. Burnley tried to disrupt our play. They played long balls and the second ball is not easy. It is not easy to play against this team. It is very particular. At home they are very tough.\"\n• None Burnley have gone six top-flight games unbeaten at home for the first time since September 1975.\n• None Chelsea (19) have scored the first goal of the game more times than any other Premier League team this season and have yet to lose (W16 D3).\n• None Burnley have never won a Premier League encounter against Chelsea (D2 L4).\n• None Pedro has now scored nine times in all competitions for Chelsea this season, surpassing his total of eight in 2015-16.\n• None Robbie Brady is the first Premier League player to score a direct free-kick v Chelsea (in the PL) since Rickie Lambert in March 2013.\n• None Brady is the third Burnley player to score on his first Premier League start for the club alongside Scott Arfield v Chelsea in August 2014 and Daniel Fox v West Ham in February 2010.\n• None Diego Costa has failed to score in three consecutive Premier League appearances for the first time since April-May 2016.\n\nAfter hosting non-league Lincoln City in the FA Cup fifth round on Saturday [12:30 GMT], Burnley begin a run of four away games in a row when they travel to Hull City on 25 February.\n\nChelsea are also in FA Cup action at the weekend. They travel to Championship side Wolves [17:30] on Saturday before hosting Swansea in the Premier League the following weekend.\n• None Cesc Fàbregas (Chelsea) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Joey Barton (Burnley) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Ashley Barnes (Burnley) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Attempt missed. Pedro (Chelsea) right footed shot from the centre of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Cesc Fàbregas.\n• None Attempt blocked. Scott Arfield (Burnley) right footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Actor Alec Baldwin's impression on Saturday Night Live of Donald Trump tricked a national newspaper into thinking he was the real thing.\n\nEl Nacional in the Dominican Republic has now apologised for accidentally publishing a still of Alec Baldwin, captioned as the US president, next to Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu.\n\nThe image accompanied an article about Israeli settlements.\n\nThe paper has said sorry to readers and \"anyone affected\".\n\nThe picture was sent to the newspaper along with information about Saturday Night Live, the long-running US satirical programme.\n\nNo-one spotted the mistake, says El Nacional.\n\nSaturday Night Live is not Mr Trump's favourite TV programme. He says Baldwin's frequent impressions of him \"stink\".\n\n\"Not funny, cast is terrible, always a complete hit job. Really bad television!\" he once tweeted.\n\nJust to make it clear...the apology", "Up to 1,000 coloured drones flew through the sky in Guangzhou, southern China.", "A number of Lego creatures including this dragonfly have already been created for the map\n\nA Lego-mad couple renowned for creating giant Christmas decorations are using their love of the plastic bricks to raise funds for a wildlife project.\n\nMike Addis and Catherine Weightman will use 500,000 bricks to create a 10m (32ft) 3D \"map\" of Cambridgeshire wetland the Great Fen, complete with Lego \"native species\".\n\nThe land is part of a long-term Wildlife Trust conservation project.\n\nMore than 100 people have paid to help build Lego creatures to go on the map.\n\nThe Great Fen is a 50-year project to create a huge wetland between Peterborough and Huntingdon.\n\nThe creatures, like this Lego longhorn beetle and froghopper, are about 10cm in length\n\nManaged by the Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire, it is one of the largest restoration projects of its type in Europe.\n\nWorking with organisations including Natural England and the Environment Agency, they aim to transform the land and conserve its wildlife.\n\nIn the future, the Great Fen will include a fully-equipped visitor centre\n\nIt will, of course, include toilet facilities which have already been created in Lego\n\nEventually the Great Fen should cover 3,700 hectares (9,140 acres). About 55% of that land has been acquired so far.\n\nThe idea for a fundraising and awareness-raising giant Lego model came about as Ms Weightman works for Natural England and colleagues were aware of her love of Lego creations.\n\nThe 10m (32ft) x 5m (16.5ft) map base will be created on about 14 tables in the visitor centre at Hinchingbrooke Country Park from Sunday.\n\nCatherine Weightman with a few of the many boxes of Lego which will be used to make the map\n\nA Lego cardinal beetle is one of many which will be put on the map\n\nMs Weightman and Mr Addis have already made a few creatures such as dragonflies and spiders to populate the map, as well as buildings including a proposed visitor centre for Great Fen, complete with Lego public toilets.\n\nA number of sold-out sessions later in the week will see members of the public build their own creatures which will be added to the base.\n\nJo Dixon, from the Wildlife Trust, said: \"We aren't too particular, and if the odd dinosaur or alien turns up, we'll add it to the map anyway.\"\n\nA map showing the eventual extent of the Great fen - land in green has already been acquired\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Pictures were released of the UK's first 3D art exhibition, to open at the Forman’s Smokehouse Gallery in London later this month. Visitors will need to pick up 3D glasses on the way into the collection of Sara Le Roy's works.", "Could Jeremy Corbyn be replaced as Labour leader? And if so when?\n\nThose whispered questions have been echoing between Labour MPs and party apparatchiks at Westminster for weeks, for months. But today the guessing game has risen to a new pitch.\n\nIn BBC interviews, we have been given answers of a sort by two of the most prominent members of the shadow cabinet.\n\nYes, the Labour leader could be replaced. And the change could take place at the next election, \"if and when\" Mr Corbyn decides he has had enough.\n\nThis time, the helpful guidance was not contained in any unattributed, anonymous briefing from a \"senior MP\" or \"party source\", who may or may not be keen to hasten Mr Corbyn on his way. They were the words of the party's newly appointed election co-ordinator in the shadow cabinet, Ian Lavery.\n\nIn an interview with me for BBC Radio 5 live's Pienaar's Politics, I asked Mr Lavery if a report in the Sunday Times newspaper was true - that the party had conducted focus group research to gauge the potential appeal of two shadow cabinet colleagues, Rebecca Long-Bailey and Angela Raynor, as potential future leadership candidates.\n\nHis denial was as emphatic as it was unsurprising. It was, he said, \"political poppycock.\"\n\nIan Lavery said Labour had \"plenty\" of future leaders to choose from\n\n\"I think they are fantastic candidates. We have got lots of quality in the Labour Party and it's not just the two who have been mentioned,\" he added.\n\nMore interesting was what he said next. \"There's plenty of leaders to pick from, if and when Jeremy decides, of his own volition, that it's not for him at the election.\"\n\nHe concluded, again helpfully: \"That isn't the case at this point in time.\"\n\nSo, in the space of one brief moment, the man now appointed to guide Labour through what could become a torrid series of electoral tests has volunteered that, in his judgement, Mr Corbyn may conceivably decide to pass on the leadership \"at the election\". And that there had been no such decision on Mr Corbyn's part \"at this point in time\".\n\nAll of which can only crank up the volume of whispered speculation.\n\nAgainst this background, the verdict of Tom Watson, Labour's deputy Labour leader, in his interview with Andrew Marr, perhaps becomes a little more intriguing. He told Marr the party \"has got the leadership settled for this Parliament\".\n\nAs for the mood in the party, much depends on the coming Parliamentary by-elections in the once supposedly \"safe\" constituencies of Stoke-on-Trent Central and Copeland in Cumbria.\n\nThe new election co-ordinator, who replaced Jon Trickett amid a certain unease at the state of Labour's readiness for the fights ahead, was upbeat. Upbeat, at least up to a point.\n\n\"If you look at them separately, they are both relatively positive at this moment in time, despite what he polls might say, despite what individuals might say,\" he said.\n\nIt was not the most ringingly confident assessment I can remember from an election strategist.\n\nIf Labour loses one or both of these seats, expect the present simmering unease in the party to approach boiling point once again.", "In his third week as President Donald Trump turned his attention to Wall Street, judges and the press. The BBC's Jonny Dymond brings you the results.", "Winter pressures: A detailed look at how the NHS is coping Winter is the busiest time of year for the health service. The BBC looks at how hospitals are coping across the UK.", "Two parliamentary by-elections, two weeks away.\n\nIs Labour a sitting duck in its own heartland territory?\n\nA quick road-trip to the West Midlands and the Lake District was enough to conclude that Labour can look forward to a sweaty, and quite possibly a painful night on 23 February.\n\nBoth seats would normally be considered \"safe\" for Labour.\n\nBut \"normal\" now seems a long time ago. Stoke voted 70% to 30% to leave the EU. In Copeland the margin was 60% to 40%. That would be enough to give Remain-supporting Labour sleepless nights.\n\nBut add to that the fact that, in 2015, UKIP came second in Stoke - 5,000 odd votes behind Labour.\n\nThrow in Labour's long term deficit in the polls, which suggests former Labour voters have turned away from Jeremy Corbyn.\n\nThen, chat to people in Hanley town centre - in the Stoke-on-Trent Central constituency - before travelling north and doing the same in Whitehaven, the large coastal town in the sprawling, and beautiful, Copeland constituency in the Lake District.\n\nIf you don't hear enough cause for Labour to fear losing one or both of these seats, you're not listening.\n\nIn Copeland, the biggest employer by far is the Sellafield nuclear power plant.\n\nIn Whitehaven, where Sellafield has a large office block, Jeremy Corbyn's past opposition to nuclear power - which has since softened - comes up in almost every conversation.\n\nThe local grocer - whose family have run Kinsella's since the turn of the last century - told me customer after customer was switching allegiance away from Labour for that reason.\n\nCould UKIP leader Paul Nuttall win the party's second seat?\n\nThat, and the doubts about Mr Corbyn's fitness to lead which have handed him a quite dismal personal rating of minus 40.\n\nThat's 46 points behind Theresa May who was the only national leader with a positive rating in the survey conducted by Yougov last week.\n\nIn Stoke, the UK Independence Party's new leader, Paul Nuttall, is standing as a candidate. UKIP has a great deal invested in this fight.\n\nIt's not clear whether the perception of an outsider parachuting into the seat - a charismatic Scouser seizing his chance in an area with a strong identity of its own - will count against Mr Nuttall and his party.\n\nIf UKIP fails it will hurt, and suggests the party lost its way when it lost Nigel Farage as leader.\n\nSo Labour will throw everything into both campaigns. Jeremy Corbyn's visited both, and will visit again.\n\nVictory in both seats will buy time and space to try to regain ground, to try to recover from the visible splits which opened up so glaringly during debate and voting on the bill to begin Brexit.\n\nBut if Labour loses in either or both seats - each of which has been held by the party since 1935 - it means talk of existential crisis for the party.", "Donald Trump will visit the UK later this year\n\nMany column inches have been devoted to Commons Speaker John Bercow since he voiced his strong opposition to Donald Trump addressing both Houses of Parliament.\n\nBut according to the Sunday Express, Mr Trump plans to snub Parliament when he pays a state visit to the UK later this year.\n\nThe paper says the US president will \"speak to the people\" at a spectacular rally - and donate the proceeds of what he hopes will be a sell-out event to the Poppy Appeal.\n\nThe Express says venues in Birmingham, and even Wembley, are under consideration.\n\nAn accusation that Theresa May is putting Northern Ireland's peace process in jeopardy is carried in the Observer.\n\nThe claim is made by Bertie Ahern, the Irish leader who helped secure the Good Friday Agreement.\n\nIn an interview with the paper, Mr Ahern, who served three terms as taoiseach between 1997 and 2008, says the British government appeared to have resigned itself to the establishment of a border between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic once the UK leaves the EU with, the paper says, potentially devastating results.\n\nThe Mail on Sunday says it has seen what it describes as \"sexist\" text messages sent by Brexit Secretary David Davis regarding an encounter with Diane Abbott in a Commons bar last week.\n\nThe shadow home secretary is said to have rebuffed Mr Davis with strong language when he approached her after she had voted in favour of triggering Article 50.\n\nAccording to the paper, Mr Davis texted a Tory friend denying he had tried to hug Ms Abbott, adding \"I'm not blind!\"\n\nA spokesman for Mr Davis said the texts were \"self-evidently jocular and private\".\n\nFormer Deputy Prime Minister Lord Prescott has weighed into the debate over the future of the NHS and social care.\n\nWriting in the Sunday Mirror, Lord Prescott says, at 78, he is among a generation of people who are living longer, have more complex conditions and need more care.\n\nHe calls for all parties to sit down and work out a long-term way of funding a social care system based on need, not ability to pay.\n\nLord Prescott says tax rises will be necessary but the government could implement two measures immediately to ease the strain on the NHS - cancel corporation tax cuts and sack Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt.\n\nThe Sunday Times says Labour is conducting secret \"succession planning\" for Jeremy Corbyn's departure.\n\nThe paper reports that it has seen leaked documents that warn the party is facing meltdown under Mr Corbyn's leadership.\n\nParticipants in a focus group reportedly delivered a damning verdict on Mr Corbyn, describing him as \"boring\" and \"like a scruffy school kid\".\n\nWhile winning the Lottery may be a dream for many, Britain's youngest Euromillions winner tells the Sunday People it has ruined her life.\n\nSo much so, says the paper, that Jane Park is considering legal action against Lottery operators for negligence.\n\nMs Park was only 17 when she won £1m with her first-ever ticket in 2013.\n\nShe now complains of being sick of shopping for designer goods and staying in upmarket holiday resorts, struggling to find a boyfriend who is not after her money and being burdened with the stress of being a millionaire.\n\nThe paper is not entirely sympathetic. It describes her complaints as a \"breathtaking whinge\".", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nHead coach Eddie Jones said England had used up all of their \"get-out-of-jail-free cards\", after Elliot Daly's 76th-minute try secured a 21-16 Six Nations victory over Wales in Cardiff.\n\nThat followed a 19-16 win over France in their opening match, when the winning try came in the 71st minute.\n\n\"We don't want to be in that position again,\" said Jones.\n\n\"We are a gritty team with characters in there that don't know how to get beaten, and that was evident here.\"\n\nEngland, who have won a national record 16 Tests in a row, play Italy next.\n\nThe defending champions are yet to secure a bonus point in their first two games, and Jones said he wanted to \"put Italy to the cleaners\" at Twickenham in a fortnight's time.\n\nAfter Ben Youngs' early try for England, Liam Williams' slicing first-half try and 11 points from the boot of Leigh Halfpenny looked to have given Wales a deserved victory.\n\nBut Owen Farrell's penalties had kept them within two points, and with time running out his long flat pass put Daly away down the left to score.\n\nJones said the match-winner - who features in the centres for Wasps - was being deployed in a position that suited the team rather than the player.\n\n\"The boy's got gas and he's got that X-factor about him and that's what we like about him,\" Jones said.\n\n\"I don't necessarily think wing is his best position, but it suits us at the moment.\"\n• None 5 live In Short: England's backs 'more talented than Wilkinson era'\n\nThe Australian also returned to a topic that had featured heavily in the build-up to the match - the Principality Stadium roof.\n\nJones used the away team's veto to frustrate Wales' wishes and keep the match open to the elements.\n\nEngland have now won five out of six matches at the ground with the roof open, and lost four out of five when it has been closed.\n\n\"They can close the roof now,\" he said. \"The roof should be open unless the conditions are going to be absolutely terrible. That's how rugby should be played because it's a winter sport, so you play the conditions.\"\n\nCaptain Dylan Hartley, who was replaced by Saracens' Jamie George after 47 minutes, paid tribute to the influence of England's bench.\n\n\"I would have preferred to wrap it up a bit earlier. The finishers came on for us and showed great composure,\" he said.\n\nHow did the pundits view it?\n\nFormer England hooker Brian Moore: \"It shows again that if you do not put this England side away when you are on top they will make you pay.\n\n\"They were outplayed for long periods but when it came down to taking the opportunity from a poor Welsh kick, they found a way to win.\"\n\nFormer Wales fly-half Jonathan Davies: \"I felt that England looked far more threatening with ball in hand. When the opportunity came, they took it.\n\n\"They were so clinical in the opportunities they had. Wales had a lot of possession, a lot of territory and scored a great try in the first half, but unfortunately they couldn't turn that pressure into points.\"\n\nFormer England scrum-half Matt Dawson: \"I've never watched an England side with only 40-60% territory, under that much pressure, win a game. They didn't even nick it, they worked it.\n\n\"That game was absolutely superb. On that evidence, there is no gap now between the southern hemisphere teams.\"", "The town of Loveland, Colorado, in the lap of the white-tipped Rocky Mountains, is smitten with Valentine's Day, writes Andy Jones. Ask nicely and they'll even send you a card.\n\nIn the Loveland postal room, the thump-thump sound of ink stamp on pad serves as a drum beat to the crooning swoon of a barbershop quartet.\n\nThe singing foursome, suited in crisp pink and white, are cooing the melody of Let Me Be Your Sweetheart as a chorus of pensioners sift through piles of pink mail.\n\nFor two weeks every year, Loveland volunteers stamp and redecorate hundreds of thousands of letters from all corners of the globe, so that lovers can present the objects of their desires with letters postmarked in the land of love.\n\nThe missives come from as far away as China and the UK, and are forwarded to all kinds of famous addresses.\n\nPresident Obama received one at the White House, Hugh Hefner has them posted to his girls at the Playboy Mansion. Even TV star Oprah Winfrey is a fan.\n\nLocal businesses feed breakfast to the volunteers. An Elvis lookalike comes in to sing to them, and the stampers - like silver-haired Valentine's elves - busy away in the workshop, karaoke-ing along to toe-tapping bluegrass classics.\n\nAmong all the free pie and coffee, the head of the re-mailing programme, Mindy McCloughan, gushes: \"It's just like being at your grandma's house.\"\n\nThe Loveland re-mailing programme was born some 70 years ago, when a postmaster called Mr Ivers, a devoted philatelist, began re-addressing all mail \"From The Sweetheart City.\"\n\nCupid's bow now sends some 300,000 pieces of mail in Loveland's direction, each one them to be stamped with a unique poem, always a step up from the tired old \"Roses are Red, violets are blue.\"\n\nFrom the Sweetheart City in a land of love,\n\nWarm Thoughts of you are sent above.\n\nOn Wings they fly from land to sea,\n\nSearching and finding the one to be.\n\nAny broken hearts had better leave town for the week - Loveland's Valentines motto is: \"Go heart or go home.\"\n\nOn its neat, square boulevards, corner stores play slushy music, cake shops bake everything pink and even hardware stores try to add a little romance to the drills and saws.\n\nThere's a race to buy the best spot - some are sold off three months in advance - with the best pitches being those visible to all locals and drivers along the expressway to Estes Park.\n\nYou can almost picture a bitter sweetheart furious that her sign is three streets too far to the left.\n\nLocals Nicole and Dominic Yost, who have been together for 13 years, always buy each other a heart. It's a treasure hunt finding them.\n\nNicole's says: \"Dominic, you will always have my heart.\" In return, her husband's manfully boasts: \"Nicole, I love you more than bacon.\"\n\nIt's OK, she says - just like everyone in this part of America, where ranchers still herd cattle, meat is a big deal for Dominic.\n\nOn Valentine's night itself, as in every city, the occasion is an excuse to get drunk or get kissing. Couples queue up for Loveland Aleworks' specially brewed pink beer, or at Grimm Brothers for its sell-out Bleeding Heart brews.\n\nAn ice festival adds a macho tone - tattooed sculptors chainsaw naked ladies or Chinese Koi carp designs on to ice blocks. Rock bands crash out tunes to audiences perched on hay bales.\n\nBut the best seats in the house are in the postal room. The Loveland Chamber of Commerce even has a \"stamp camp\" so postal volunteers can learn the necessary wrist action to transfer ink to envelope.\n\nThere's a 70-person waiting list to take part and couples sit side-by-side stamping away, sealing far-off loves forever in ink.\n\nI'm told the only way most volunteers give up their seats in the postal room scheme is when a coffin carries them out of there. Till death us do part - a lot like love itself, then.\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Not many teams have tested Chelsea's three-man defence this season, but Burnley showed there is a way to get at Antonio Conte's side.\n\nThe Clarets were extremely clever in Sunday's 1-1 draw, especially in the way they targeted Chelsea's left flank, which is far less disciplined defensively than their right side.\n\nEden Hazard always wanders inside from the left - far more than Pedro does when he starts on the right - which is what happened at Turf Moor.\n\nThat leaves Chelsea's left wing-back Marcus Alonso to advance up the pitch and give them an option wide on that flank.\n\nBut, with Hazard often on the opposite side of the pitch, Alonso is sometimes left isolated when the Blues lose possession.\n\nAlonso is also not as strong as their right wing-back Victor Moses when it comes to getting back to help his centre-halves. I look at him and think he is more of a left winger.\n\nTouches in the first half v Burnley\n\nIt is a weak spot because it leaves space to exploit if teams can get the ball into that channel behind Alonso, but you usually have to do it quickly.\n\nBurnley managed it early on by playing long balls up to Andre Gray that forced Gary Cahill and David Luiz to come out wide, out of their comfort zone.\n\nThe Clarets had more success in the second half when Ashley Barnes intercepted a Chelsea header down that flank, with Alonso further up the pitch, and Hazard over on the right.\n\nCahill should have done better with his challenge on Barnes inside the Burnley half, and Luiz should have cut out the cross after Barnes had burst forward - but the ball still found Gray, who missed an excellent chance to put his side ahead.\n\nBurnley got their tactics exactly right on Sunday. Their attitude was spot-on too.\n\nTheir game plan, and the way they executed it, was an example of how the right system and attitude gives you a chance when you are facing a side with more technical quality.\n\nChelsea are always well organised under Conte as well, of course, but they struggled to control the game because of Burnley's approach.\n\nThe Blues' goal at Turf Moor was typical of the clinical counter-attacking play that has helped take Conte's side to the top of the table.\n\nBut the speed of Burnley's own transition from defence to attack meant they created chances that way too, especially in the first half.\n\nSean Dyche's side played a lot of long balls right from the start of the game, but they did not just lump the ball forward for the sake of it. Those passes had a purpose.\n\nIt meant they bypassed midfield - an area where Dyche knew his side would be over-powered - and got the ball to Burnley's two strikers as quickly as possible.\n\nBurnley were attacking very well for a lot of the game but those long balls were also a defensive tactic. They stretched the play.\n\nInstead of Chelsea winning back possession in midfield and launching attacks from there, which is what they wanted to do, they had to come at them from much further back.\n\nThat made it harder, especially against a team that does as much running as Burnley. The Clarets had more time to recover and get numbers back to hassle them outside their own area.\n\nFrom Burnley's point of view, most of the second half was more about digging in and working hard defensively, rather than asking more questions of Chelsea.\n\nBut Dyche's side did well at that too. They were extremely well organised and were very difficult to break down. Their 4-4-2 formation sometimes became a six-man defence.\n\nChelsea had lots of the ball in the second half, but they did not find much space or create lots of chances and, after the break, it was significant that Burnley goalkeeper Tom Heaton did not have to make a save.\n\nThe Clarets have an incredible home record this season and, although they were beaten by Arsenal and Manchester City, they caused them plenty of problems too.\n\nDyche's side have to work very hard for every point they pick up but they got their reward for it this time - and they fully deserved their draw.\n\nI think it was a good result for Chelsea too, because they could have lost. They did not play particularly well, but they still picked up a point, and they still have a very healthy lead at the top of the table.", "Sport is not doing enough to tackle homophobic abuse and authorities should issue lengthy bans to offenders, according to a report.\n\nThe report, published by the Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee, wants sports authorities to adopt a zero-tolerance approach at all levels.\n\nIn highlighting football, it said attitudes in sport in general are out of step with wider society.\n\nThere are no openly gay professional male players in British football.\n\nThe wide-ranging report said more should be done to show support for athletes who want to come out.\n\nIt also said match officials at all levels of sport should have a clear duty to report and document any kind of abuse, and sporting authorities should issue immediate one to two-year bans to indicate clearly that homophobic behaviour would not be tolerated.\n\nDamian Collins MP, chairman of the committee, said: \"From the evidence we have received in this inquiry, we believe there are many gay athletes who have not come out, because they are frightened of the impact this decision will have on their careers, and the lives of the people they love.\n\n\"That is not acceptable and should not be tolerated.\"\n\nThe committee said the report had been commissioned in part following Tyson Fury's inclusion in the shortlist for the 2015 BBC Sports Personality of the Year award.\n\nThe inclusion of Fury, who had made homophobic remarks, is \"symptomatic of homophobia not being taken seriously enough in sport, or the media that shows it\", according to the report.\n\nThe committee said it was \"very dissatisfied\" with BBC director general Tony Hall's response to the controversy.\n\nIn a statement, a BBC spokesperson said: \"The British public decides who becomes Sports Personality of the Year.\n\n\"A panel of experts in sport unanimously agreed that Tyson Fury should be on the shortlist for the public vote based solely on his sporting achievement in being crowned world heavyweight champion - we were clear it was not an endorsement of his personal views.\"\n• None There is a problem in schools and youth sports, with serious concerns over the effects of low participation among lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) youth on their mental and physical health and well-being.\n• None In the long term, it is very likely that a number of sports have been robbed of talent, and young players and athletes may feel that they have to choose between coming out or continuing to participate in their sport.\n• None National governing bodies should step up their commitment to anti-homophobic campaigns, giving greater funds and resources to visible interventions such as\n• None This should incorporate television and cinema advertisements, screens at football matches and outside advertising such as bus-stop advertisements. This must be a sustained effort over a significant period of time, rather than a short-term commitment.\n• None There is also a role for \"straight allies\" - straight players who act as champions for the cause and participate in education programmes and campaigns.\n• None Clubs and major sportswear brands could state their support for gay athletes and write into their agreements with players that there would be no termination or downgrading of their contracts as a result of a player coming out.\n• None Major sponsors should come together to launch an initiative in the UK to make clear that should any sportsperson wish to come out, they will have their support.\n\nA Football Association spokesperson said: \"We welcome the select committee's report on how to address homophobia in sport and we will review it in full.\n\n\"It is an issue that we take very seriously and, as the chairman has previously stated, tackling homophobia, transphobia and biphobia in football is one of his top priorities.\"\n\nWhat is the background?\n\nIn 2012, a Culture, Media and Sport Committee report on racism in sport found homophobia was emerging as a \"bigger problem in football than racism and other forms of discrimination\".\n\nResearch at the time found 25% of fans thought homophobia was present in football, compared to 10% who thought racism was.\n\nIn May 2015, the 'Out on the Fields' study - the first international study into homophobia in sport - found 73% of survey participants did not believe youth sports were a 'supportive and safe' place for LGB participants.\n\nA recent Stonewall survey reported 72% of football fans have heard homophobic abuse while, in October, a BBC Radio 5 live survey found 82% of supporters would have no issue with a gay player, but 8% said they would stop watching their team.\n\nDamian Collins MP, chair of the Culture, Media and Sport Committee\n\n\"No sportsperson should feel under pressure or feel 'forced' to come out, but sports authorities must create an environment, in the stadium and the locker room, where players and athletes at all levels feel it is a choice they can make, and that they will be supported and accepted if they do.\n\n\"More needs to be done by the authorities to address both the overt and latent homophobia that exists within sport.\n\n\"Sanctions appear to be left to the discretion of the club or governing body involved: a zero-tolerance approach to the use of all homophobic language and behaviours must be implemented with standardised sanctions across all sports.\"", "Arsene Wenger says he did not give any indication on his future as Arsenal manager to Ian Wright, after the Gunners legend claimed the Frenchman was \"coming to the end\".\n\nWenger, 67, was appointed as Arsenal manager in September 1996.\n\nWright told BBC Radio 5 live on Friday: \"He looks tired. I feel he will go at the end of the season.\"\n\nBut Wenger said: \"We had a little dinner, not the two of us. I appreciate you want me to rest but I'm not ready.\"\n\nHe added he could look tired because \"I get up early in the morning\".\n\nWright, who played under Wenger for two seasons between 1996 and 1998, reiterated during his analysis on Saturday's Match of the Day that he believes Wenger will go.\n\n\"We were at a question and answer session and the way he was speaking and his demeanour... it's my opinion. I could be wrong,\" said the 53-year-old.\n\n\"I still think he has some massive decisions to make and think it could be his last season.\"\n\n'My job is to make these people happy'\n\nWenger is the Premier League's longest-serving manager and his contract expires at the end of the season.\n\nThe Frenchman last won the Premier League title in 2004 and has been under pressure at the Emirates following league defeats by Watford and Chelsea.\n\nHowever, after his side's 2-0 win against Hull, he added: \"I focus on what is important: winning football games and getting the team to perform. The rest, I cannot influence.\n\n\"I have big respect for this country and this club, and I am grateful because I have worked here for 20 years. My job is to make these people happy and when I don't do that I feel guilty - that's why it's important for us to win.\"\n\n'It's too soon for Wenger to leave'\n\nFormer Arsenal defender Martin Keown on Match of the Day 2 Extra:\n\n\"What Wenger has to decide is, 'has he come to end of road in terms of his managerial qualities?'. I do feel if he was to go now, without a success plan, it would be too soon.\n\n\"I don't think the board and the club are ready for him to go.\n\n\"That end is coming but maybe it needs another one or two years. Wenger should be part of the decision around the next manager who comes in - who should be in the same mould.\n\n\"Everyone is thinking that the grass is greener but will it be any better under another manager? While you have got such a good man there I believe they will hang on to him.\n\n\"I am disappointed in what has been done on the pitch but also, we are realistic.\n\n\"Chelsea came in with their millions, Manchester City did it and they both changed the landscape.\n\n\"Leicester showed that to win the league you don't need money and that will hurt Wenger. He can't quite get the recipe right and that is the biggest mystery for me.\"", "The watch has a tiny, hidden microphone for a spy to secretly record conversations\n\nA vintage collection of secret service gadgets including a dagger disguised as a pen and a watch with a hidden microphone are to go on sale.\n\nThe items - designed for British spies and troops caught behind enemy lines - date from World War Two onwards.\n\nThe anonymous seller claims he was never a spy himself, simply a historian with a passion for anything from WW2.\n\nThe objects are expected to fetch a total of thousands of pounds when they are sold at auction in Kent on Tuesday.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This fountain pen concealed a dagger and could be worth up to £500\n\nThe James Bond-style collection of sinister yet ingenious items includes a badge which unscrews to reveal a compass, which is expected to fetch up to £120.\n\nThere is also a key with a secret compartment for hiding things such as cyanide pills, which could be worth up to £200.\n\nMatthew Tredwin of C&T Auctioneers said: \"Most people that buy this stuff are historians who want to keep the story of these people alive.\"\n\nThe vendor said he would be \"over the moon if they fetched the estimates placed on them\".\n\nBut he added: \"Money is not the concern. I would like to think they will go to a collector who will cherish them as much as I have over the years.\"\n\n\"I have had the pleasure of owning them and feel it is time that another collector or museum has the opportunity,\" he added.\n\nThe collection includes a button with a compass inside and a key with a secret compartment\n• None Spy gadgets up for auction. Video, 00:00:43Spy gadgets up for auction\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A collection of items used by British spies during the Second World War is going up for auction.", "The mass stranding of whales on a remote beach in New Zealand has taken a turn for the worse as 240 more arrived.", "In the world of viral news, it's a relative baby - but it's already become so controversial that a Nato spokesperson told BBC Trending that Sputnik is an agent of Russian misinformation.\n\nSputnik was set up in 2014 and puts out podcasts, radio shows and text stories which are shared thousands of times a day on Twitter and Facebook. It's recently been adding international bureaux, including a UK headquarters in Scotland.\n\nBut at the same time Sputnik has also been on the receiving end of criticism - by US intelligence agencies, the British defence secretary, and now by Nato, who says it is part of a \"Kremlin misinformation machine.\"\n\n\"Outlets like Sputnik are part of a Kremlin propaganda machine which are trying to use information for political and military needs,\" Nato spokesperson Oana Lungescu told BBC Trending. \"It is a way, not to convince people, but to confuse them, not to provide an alternative viewpoint, but to divide public opinions and to ultimately undermine our ability to understand what is going on and therefore take decisions if decisions need to be made.\"\n\n\"It's extremely unfair but we've been on the receiving end of other similar accusations in the past, without any substantive evidence being provided,\" says Nikolai Gorshkov, Sputnik's UK editor. \"We prefer to leave those inclined towards this kind of conspiratorial thinking to it.\"\n\nSo what's the truth about Sputnik?\n\nMany stories on Sputnik, whose motto is \"Telling the Untold\", are news items. Like other international broadcasters, it sees itself as a gift to the world to diversify the media diet - in this case, funded by the Russian government.\n\nBut Western officials and outside observers say that Sputnik follows an anti-West, pro-Russia, pro-Trump line in its selection of stories, in the way it frames them, and its choice of commentary. On Friday evening, for instance, Sputnik's top story was headlined \"Americans 'Don't Buy' Media Criticism of Trump Following Years of Pro-Obama Bias\".\n\nA recent US intelligence report on alleged Russian interference in the American election described the editorial line of Sputnik and the TV station RT, which like Sputnik is funded by the Russian government-owned news agency Rossiya Segodnya. \"RT and Sputnik consistently cast President-elect Trump as the target of unfair coverage from traditional US media outlets that they claimed were subservient to a corrupt political establishment,\" the report said.\n\n\"The question of balance is really important - particularly if you're a public service broadcaster,\" says Ben Nimmo, a research fellow at the Atlantic Council, an international affairs think tank based in Washington DC. \"Balance is where so much of the time I see Sputnik falling down. It will quote one side but it won't give an appropriate screen time, column inches or airtime to the other side and that's the big difference.\"\n\nNimmo and others suggest that Sputnik's UK base in Edinburgh - rather than London, where most international media companies set up shop - is an attempt to encourage Scottish independence and stoke up discontent towards the British government.\n\nThat's just not true, according to Sputnik themselves. Gorshkov says the reason for the Scottish base is more pragmatic. He cites the high cost of property prices in London and says he'd rather invest in journalists.\n\n\"We're not trying to influence Scottish thinking, because being based in Edinburgh, we do now realise how fiercely independently minded the Scots are,\" he says. \"You can't influence a Scot.\"\n\nHear this story in full on the BBC World Service, or download our podcast\n\nIn addition to its news coverage, Sputnik's sharply opinionated blogs have also been the subject of criticism.\n\n\"If you look at the byline of people who write commentaries for Sputnik or RT, a lot of them are extremely obscure individuals connected to the far right or the far left, or so-called specialists or experts who nobody's heard of,\" says Lungescu, the Nato spokesperson. \"You can always find somebody to say anything, but that doesn't make it journalism.\"\n\nOne of the bloggers heavily featured on the site, Angus Gallagher, specialises in pro-Russia, pro-Donald Trump pieces sharply critical of the West, with headlines such as \"7 ways the EU-NATO Axis is Sabotaging Western Civilisation\" and \"Sacrificed for the EU-NATO Axis: Europe's Women Branded Whores and Liars\". The latter article accuses Western think tanks of conspiring to play down reports of sex attacks by migrants, in an anti-Russian plot.\n\nAmmon Cheskin, a professor in Central and Eastern European studies at Glasgow University, says the posts are typical of the \"paranoid perspective\" of commentators on the site.\n\n\"No one is quite sure who this individual is or if he actually exists,\" he says.\n\nBut Sputnik's UK editor Gorshkov told us that bloggers, including Gallagher, aren't members of staff, but rather are volunteers who use the Sputnik platform to write their opinion pieces. He says he's never met Gallagher and doesn't oversee the blogs section of the website. But he insisted that he is indeed a real person.\n\n\"He reflects the views of a good chunk of the audience,\" Gorshkov says. BBC Trending left Facebook messages left for Gallagher himself, but they went unanswered.\n\nThe Russian embassy in London denied the accusations that the Kremlin is behind a misinformation machine.\n\n\"In our view, the claims of perceived 'Russian misinformation campaign to undermine the West' are a way to avoid an open and reasoned debate of the issues raised in British and American societies,\" the embassy press office wrote in an email. \"Obviously, sticking labels of 'fake news' and 'misinformation' testifies to the lack of [a] positive agenda.\"\n\nGorshkov says the criticisms against Sputnik have cascaded down from governments and think tanks because the establishment in Western countries feels threatened.\n\n\"They don't like the emergency of a mass media outlet which is giving more context, more background, more angles to stories. They probably think it's a threat to their view of the world,\" he says.\n\nAnd he hopes that Sputnik will reach Westerners disaffected by the mainstream media.\n\n\"Are they all Russian stooges who voted for Brexit or for Trump? Are they all useful idiots? That's really preposterous,\" he says. \"I think that's really an offence against them, all those millions.\"\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.\n\nNext story: The alt-right's war on Netflix and Trump court memes\n\nWhy are some followers of the alt-right cancelling their Netflix accounts? READ MORE\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nScotland's search for a first win in Paris since 1999 goes on after France emerged victorious from a tense Six Nations contest at the Stade de France.\n\nStuart Hogg's 16th Test try gave the Scots an early lead but Gael Fickou's try put France 13-5 clear before two Finn Russell penalties made it 13-11.\n\nTim Swinson's try regained the lead for the injury-hit visitors before Camille Lopez's third penalty tied it at 16-16.\n\nRemi Lamerat had a try ruled out before two late Lopez kicks sealed victory.\n\nScotland salvaged a bonus point despite suffering a host of injuries, with captain Greig Laidlaw, flanker John Barclay, his replacement John Hardie and hooker Fraser Brown all trooping off.\n\nThey must now regroup for the visit of Wales on 25 February (14:25 GMT), while France head to Dublin to face Ireland on the same day (16:50 GMT).\n\nThis was a surreal Test, a day when Scotland's scrum was routinely demolished - it gave France six penalties and a free-kick - and when the visitors lost one captain, Laidlaw, to injury, lost his deputy, Barclay, then lost Barclay's replacement Hardie.\n\nThe Scots dropped like flies and yet they hung on gamely. They lived off scraps and yet were still banging away at the death hoping against hope for an opening that never came.\n\nIt all began with a Lopez penalty quickly cancelled out by a Hogg try when Huw Jones drew in Lopez and off-loaded to the full-back, who fixed Baptiste Serin and went over in the corner. Laidlaw's conversion hit the crossbar and stayed out.\n\nLopez put the French back in the lead at the end of the first quarter and it was then that Laidlaw went off, a cruel blow for Scotland, a setback that was only added to when Fickou scored on the half-hour.\n\nIt had been coming. France had threatened and had wasted some opportunities beforehand, but when the Toulouse centre went in under Hogg's tackle there was no stopping him.\n\nThe conversion was added and the gap stretched to eight points. Credit Scotland. Tommy Seymour won the restart and the Scots forced a penalty, which Russell put over.\n\nThen he banged over another one just before the break. Quite how they were only two points down was a mystery.\n\nThe second injury blow had landed by then, the stand-in captain, Barclay, exiting with a head knock.\n\nHardie came on and went off again within minutes of the second half beginning. Another head knock. Poor Hardie. The man has suffered badly with concussions in his career.\n\nRemarkably, Scotland brushed off that upset and hit the front again a few minutes later. A brilliant offload from Russell released the razor-sharp Seymour up the right touchline, chipping and chasing and getting the benefit of a kindly bounce in his tussle with Scott Spedding.\n\nSeymour found Swinson steaming downfield on his lonesome and no sooner had he come on the field for Hardie, he scored.\n\nEven more remarkably, Russell missed the conversion from almost touching distance of the posts. The kicking tee took too long to reach him and when it did he lost composure, with someone - believed to be Scotland resource coach Nathan Hines - urging him to 'Take it, take it'.\n\nThe ball was placed unsteadily on its mark, then flopped over as Russell was about to kick it. His effort had a dead duck quality, going under the posts instead of over.\n\nScotland had precious little ball after that. The French took control and those scrum horrors carried on. The visitors were clinging on from a long way out.\n\nLopez made it 16-16 with the boot and as Scotland became ragged under pressure, and started making some poor decisions, the fly-half steered them home. Two more penalties - in the 71st and 76th minutes - gave France their win.\n\nOn a monstrously testing day, Scotland contented themselves with a losing bonus point. In the circumstances, it was an achievement.\n\nScotland head coach Vern Cotter: \"It was a physical encounter. Quite a few times we came off second best.\n\n\"The boys stuck in defensively and defended our line well. But a couple of times maybe we weren't accurate enough.\"\n\nOn Finn Russell's missed conversion: \"It was only two points and it didn't really matter. At the end it was a six-point game.\"\n\nFrance full-back Scott Spedding: \"It was a scrappy affair and we made a lot of mistakes in the first half. We couldn't get our game-plan into place.\n\n\"But we desperately needed a win. We are disappointed with our performance but happy with the win.\"\n\nWhat did the pundit make of it?\n\nFormer Scotland international Andy Nicol: \"There was a lot of good stuff from Scotland. They were up against a huge French pack, there was some really courageous defence, but ultimately they lost the game.\n\n\"This is where Scotland are at the moment, they have the confidence and ability to win these tight games now. They didn't today, but it will come.\"\n\nReplacements: 16-Christopher Tolofua (for Guirado, 79), 17-Rabah Slimani (for Atonio, 46) 18-Xavier Chiocci (for Baille, 59), 19-Julian Le Devedec (for Maestri, 59), 20-Damien Chouly (for Goujon, 60), 21-Maxime Machenaud (for Serin, 56), 22-Jean-Marc Doussain, 23-Yoann Huget (for Vakatawa, 53)\n\nReplacements: 16-Ross Ford (for Brown, 66), 17-Gordon Reid (for Dell, 44), 18-Simon Berghan (for Fagerson, 59), 19-Tim Swinson (for Hardie, 41), 20-John Hardie (for Barclay, 37), 21-Alistair Price (for Laidlaw, 25), 22-Duncan Weir (for Russell, 75), 23-Mark Bennett (for Dunbar, 57-61).", "In most western armies women are taking a more and more prominent place on the front line, and in Israel, there are already mixed gender infantry battalions.\n\nThe BBC travelled to a training base in southern Israel and spoke to some of the soldiers being recruited.", "Manager Jurgen Klopp is delighted by Liverpool's \"fantastic\" 2-0 win over Tottenham and looks forward to a \"perfect Sunday\" now his side's winless league run ends after five games.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Facebook could be fined in Germany, if it refuses to remove stories which are proved false\n\nI have been in Dortmund and Berlin this week, investigating how Germany is leading the fightback against fake news.\n\nThere have been some high-profile cases here. Breitbart reported that a mob attacked Germany's oldest church, St Reinold's Church in Dortmund. The website has subsequently published a lengthy defence of its original article, together with an admission that it is not in fact the oldest church in Germany.\n\nI visited the church and spoke at length to locals, including a pastor who works in the city (and was named in the Breitbart report), and a local refugee support worker. They were unanimous in the view that the Breitbart report misrepresented true events in service of an anti-Islamist agenda that was divisive and unjust.\n\nIn Berlin, I spoke to Anas Modamani, a 19-year-old Syrian who enjoys taking selfies. So much so that three weeks after turning up in the German capital, having come from the outskirts of Damascus via a boat trip, Turkey, Greece and Macedonia, he took a selfie with Angela Merkel, who was visiting his hostel. It promptly went viral, together with the false claim that he was a terrorist. He is now suing Facebook.\n\nGermany's political class wants to take action. Lars Klingbeil, a fast-rising star of the Social Democratic Party who is a close associate of Martin Schulz, told me his plan to tackle fake news. Perhaps Damian Collins, the Tory chairman of Parliament's culture select committee here, who has launched an inquiry into fake news, could pick up some ideas.\n\nAnas Modamani's selfie with Angela Merkel led to him being falsely accused of being a terrorist\n\nFacebook now employs independent fact-checkers here. Correctiv is a smart outfit whose employees are mostly young. Correctiv monitors suspicious stories, looking at how much they are being liked and shared.\n\nIf the headline looks suspicious, or it appears on a website known to be dubious, the Correctiv team will contact the original sources for the story, to verify if it's true or not. They then mark it true or false, and send a message to all German users of the social media platform, indicating its rectitude or otherwise.\n\nThey don't accept money from Facebook, because they want to retain total editorial independence. But they too are a sign of how, outside of America, Germany is leading the fight against fake news.\n\nBased on my conversations here, there are several reasons why Germany has got ahead of the curve on this important issue.\n\nFirst, Mrs Merkel's refugee policy is hugely controversial, and has galvanised that part of the political spectrum that, thus far, has shown the greatest propensity for creating fake news internationally: the nationalist far-right. It turns out letting in a huge number of refugees is a good way to mobilise purveyors of fake news.\n\nSecond, because of Germany's 20th Century history, there is a hyper-sensitivity about the rise of that far-right. The success of Alternative for Germany, a nationalist party, and the ever-present but low-level threat from neo-Nazi groups make many Germans determined to act fast.\n\nThird, the traditional media sector here is very different to those of Britain and America. The most influential newspapers are staid rather than raucous; the cable news channels are more BBC or CNN than Fox News, and talk radio has nothing like the oomph that is generated by the likes of Rush Limbaugh or, now on LBC, Nigel Farage.\n\nGermany's most influential newspapers are considered to be staid\n\nGermany's conventional media market has created an opening for fake news, which of its very nature is salacious and exciting.\n\nFourth, there have been several high-profile cases. The Modamani case is perhaps the most notorious. Groups like the Resistance of German Patriots have been happy to spread nationalist propaganda, with a limited regard for facts.\n\nFifth, my sense is that Germany retains a strong belief in the competence and capability of government. If there is a social problem, goes this thinking, perhaps it is capable of a political solution, by virtue of smart regulation.\n\nThat was the impression Mr Klingbeil gave, but the belief that fake news should be combated by regulation is not restricted to social democrats: Mrs Merkel's Christian Democrats are also putting pressure on Facebook to make it easier for users to flag suspicious content and delete posts, while those targeted by fake news would be given a right of reply.\n\nSixth, there are local and national elections coming. Fearing a repeat of America's recent experience, where fake stories went viral and may have influenced some voters, Germany believes prevention is better than cure. And Facebook, damaged by the fallout from fake news about Donald Trump, appears to agree.\n\nFake news is not a problem that is going to disappear soon; nor is it one that any journalist can ignore, or be neutral toward. It behoves all of us in this trade - at least those of us who retain a belief that truth is possible and necessary - to wish Germany success in this fight.\n\nYou can watch my report on the News at Ten on BBC One tonight.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nAdam Rooney hit a hat-trick as Aberdeen cruised three points clear of third-placed Rangers following a mauling of a woeful Motherwell side.\n\nThe Dons cashed in on terrible defending as Jonny Hayes, Andy Considine and Rooney made it 3-0.\n\nRyan Christie curled in a sublime fourth before the break and Rooney added a penalty and a tap-in.\n\nRyan Bowman and Stephen Pearson hit back for Well and Aberdeen substitute Peter Pawlett rounded off the scoring.\n\nAs well as moving three points and 19 goals clear of Rangers in the battle for second place, Aberdeen also reduced the gap on leaders Celtic to 24 points.\n\nMotherwell, meanwhile, are in ninth spot.\n\nThe home side were utterly ruthless and exuded attacking threat. Well were simply atrocious at the back and their late rally did little to disguise their obvious deficiencies on the night.\n\nWhen Hayes drilled home a left-foot effort after two minutes it looked ominous.\n\nMotherwell briefly suggested they would not fold but fold they did - and much of it was self-inflicted despite Aberdeen's brilliance.\n\nConsidine nodded the second at the back post from Niall McGinn's corner, after Well keeper Craig Samson came and failed to get near the delivery. The big defender rejoiced in celebrating his goal and his recently extended contract.\n\nThe third goal was simply ludicrous.\n\nStevie Hammell knocked the ball towards the bye-line as he tried to deal with a cross into the area and in a moment of madness for an experienced player, Keith Lasley attempted to keep it in but fluffed it. It fell to Hayes, who squared to Rooney for an easy finish.\n\nOn-loan Celtic attacking midfielder Christie started in place of the suspended Graeme Shinnie and he excelled, with his strike proving the pick of the bunch.\n\nFrom a well-worked corner, Considine laid the ball off to Christie who found a pocket of space and guided a delightful finish into the top corner.\n\nRooney's penalty, after Shay Logan was clipped by Elliott Frear, added to Motherwell's misery and the Irishman completed his treble soon after from close range following another McGinn corner.\n\nThe home side were in imperious form with Hayes, McGinn, Kenny McLean and Ryan Jack among the top performers in a side that was motoring for most of the night.\n\nDespite Aberdeen's dominance, Motherwell did manage to get two goals, but they were no consolation to the dejected players.\n\nBowman nodded their first after home keeper Joe Lewis inexplicably misjudged a high ball and Stephen Pearson volleyed home from close range to make it 6-2.\n\nKeeping count? Well, it was a five-goal cushion again in 82 minutes, 60 seconds after Pearson's goal.\n\nThis time it was Pawlett who showed great pace and a cool head to beat keeper Samson.\n\nMotherwell manager Mark McGhee was also sent to the stand, to the delight of the home fans, on a night to forget for the Fir Park men.\n\nThey will hope this a one-off. The problem is they travel to table-topping Celtic on Saturday.\n• None Attempt saved. Jayden Stockley (Aberdeen) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Attempt saved. Ash Taylor (Aberdeen) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner.\n• None Attempt saved. Miles Storey (Aberdeen) right footed shot from the left side of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Goal! Aberdeen 7, Motherwell 2. Peter Pawlett (Aberdeen) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the centre of the goal. Assisted by Jonny Hayes.\n• None Goal! Aberdeen 6, Motherwell 2. Stephen Pearson (Motherwell) right footed shot from the right side of the six yard box to the top right corner. Assisted by Louis Moult following a corner.\n• None Attempt missed. Jayden Stockley (Aberdeen) right footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the right.\n• None Attempt saved. Kenny McLean (Aberdeen) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the bottom right corner.\n• None Attempt missed. Ryan Bowman (Motherwell) right footed shot from outside the box is just a bit too high.\n• None Goal! Aberdeen 6, Motherwell 1. Ryan Bowman (Motherwell) header from the centre of the box to the bottom right corner. Assisted by Richard Tait following a set piece situation. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Last updated on .From the section Wales\n\nDefending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan blew a 3-0 lead to lose to Mark Davis in the Welsh Open second round.\n\nWorld number 31 Davis looked to be heading out as O'Sullivan established a commanding lead in the best-of-seven contest.\n\nDavis took the next four frames to complete a remarkable comeback on a day of shocks at the tournament.\n\nLee Walker pulled off a surprise as he came from 3-1 down to beat world number seven Neil Robertson 4-3.\n\nFormer world champion and 2016 finalist Robertson made 143 - the highest break of the tournament - on the way to a two-frame lead before Walker came back.\n\nThe Welshman, ranked 94, won the next three straight frames to seal victory.\n\nMeanwhile, 15-year-old Welsh schoolboy Jackson Page reached the last 32 with a 4-3 win against John Astley.\n\nIt is the teenage amateur's second win in the tournament after beating Jason Weston 4-3 in round one.\n\nPage will now play world number four Judd Trump, who edged past Malta's Alex Borg 4-2.\n\nElsewhere, Northern Ireland's Mark Allen eased past Thailand's Boonyarit Keattikun 4-1, Ross Muir thrashed Marco Fu 4-0 while Anthony Hamilton beat Jamie Cope 4-1 to set up a third-round tie against Craig Steadman, who defeated Sam Baird.\n\nWorld Grand Prix finalist Ryan Day was knocked out by Thailand's Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, who reached the third round of the tournament for the first time.\n\nSign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app.", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nSacked tennis commentator Doug Adler is to sue broadcaster ESPN, claiming he compared Venus Williams' tactics to a \"guerilla\", rather than a \"gorilla\".\n\nAccusations of racism were made by viewers, who alleged he used the word \"gorilla\" to describe Williams during her Australian Open second-round match against Stefanie Voegele in January.\n\nAdler apologised but insisted he had said: \"Venus moved in and put the guerilla effect on.\"\n\nHowever he was later dismissed by ESPN.\n\nAdler's lawyer David M Ring said that \"guerilla tennis\" was a common phrase in the sport to describe an aggressive match, citing a Spike Jonze-directed advert featuring Andre Agassi and Peter Sampras that was named after the term.\n\nAdler had worked for ESPN since 2008 and was a professional tennis broadcaster for six years prior to that.\n\nHe claims he suffered \"emotional distress\" after the accusations of racism.\n\nAn ESPN spokesman told BBC Sport: \"We have not been served and are declining further comment.\"", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nA decision on the future of Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger will be made at the end of the season - but a new contract remains on the table.\n\nDespite Wednesday's Champions League last-16 first-leg thrashing at Bayern Munich, there is currently no prospect of Wenger leaving before the summer.\n\nIt is expected the decision for him to stay or leave will be mutual between the club and the Frenchman, 67.\n\nWenger, in charge since 1996, was offered a new deal earlier this season.\n\nHe typically makes his decisions at the end of a campaign, when he is able to reflect on how the year has unfolded and what needs to happen next.\n\nHis current contract with the Premier League club expires at the end of the season.\n\nArsenal have not won the league since 2004, though Wenger has consistently guided them to Champions League qualification, reaching the knockout stages 14 years running.\n\nHowever, the Gunners will almost certainly exit the competition at the last-16 round for the seventh straight year after the 5-1 defeat at Bayern Munich.\n\nThe nature of the loss, coupled with successive league defeats by Chelsea and Watford, has prompted several former Arsenal stars - some of whom played under Wenger - to suggest his time at Emirates Stadium is coming to an end.\n\nThe Gunners ended a nine-year wait for a trophy by beating Hull City in the 2014 FA Cup final, and won the competition again the following season,\n\nSpeaking after the 4-0 win over Aston Villa at Wembley in 2015, Arsenal's players said they were convinced the consecutive titles would herald greater success, but failure to secure further silverware has seen pressure on Wenger grow.\n\nAfter the Gunners lost 3-1 to Premier League leaders Chelsea earlier this month - a result that left them 12 points behind the Blues - ex-England defender Danny Mills said Arsenal \"have settled for fourth again\".\n\nEarlier, former striker Ian Wright, who scored 185 goals for the club between 1991 and 1998, said he believed Wenger's time as Arsenal boss was \"coming to the end\", although the Frenchman later denied giving any indication of his future plans.", "Donald Trump has just finished the fourth week of his presidency. What happened?", "Peruvian artist and photographer Christian Fuchs is obsessed with his illustrious ancestors and spends months painstakingly recreating portraits of them, posing for them himself whether the ancestors were men or women.\n\nIt's an unusual way to get close to your forefathers, but it works for Christian Fuchs.\n\nThe walls of his elegant apartment overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Lima's bohemian Barranco district are covered with paintings of his aristocratic European and Latin American ancestors.\n\nBut if you look closer, you soon realise that many of the portraits are, in fact, photographs of the 37-year-old himself, dressed up as his relatives.\n\nIt all started when Fuchs was 10 years old.\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-great-grandfather led a distinguished military career and participated in the Peruvian war of independence\n\nHis mother was diagnosed with schizophrenia and admitted to a psychiatric hospital, where she died five years later. His father left the family, remarried and disappeared.\n\nFuchs and his brother and sister were brought up by their paternal grandparents.\n\n\"I grew up with portraits and objects that had been in my family for up to five generations,\" he explains.\n\n\"As a child I looked at the portraits and played with them. If I didn't know the names of the characters, I invented them. I remember watching them for hours and feeling that they were watching me back. Sometimes I would talk to them, and eventually that led to my reinterpretations of them.\"\n\nFuchs's grandmother, Catalina del Carmen Silva Schilling, played a very important part in all of this. Born in Chile of German ancestors, she too was brought up by her grandparents.\n\n\"She would tell me stories about our relatives from Chile and Germany, and I learned to look at things through her eyes,\" Fuchs says.\n\n\"It was magical. She told me about relatives like my granny's great-grandmother, Marie Schencke, who also came from Germany. Her family brought electricity to the Chilean town, Osorno.\"\n\nYears later Fuchs went to university to study law, but after a few months working as a lawyer he quit to become an artist and found himself once again gazing at the portraits.\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-great-grandmother, Luise Friederike Charlotte Eleonora Chee, was his first recreation\n\n\"I was looking at one of the family portraits from 1830 of Eleanora, my grandmother's great-great-grandmother\" he says.\n\n\"I began to think, 'Considering we share the same genes, could I actually look like her?' That afternoon I went to the hairdresser and got them to put my hair up in ringlets. I thought it was a cool idea for a new project.\"\n\nThe process of reinterpreting his ancestors can take many months.\n\nFuchs reads their letters and talks to relatives about them. He takes photos of their portraits to a local tailor who tries to imitate the garments - some of which date back to the 18th Century - as faithfully as possible, and to a jeweller who creates replicas of the jewellery.\n\nDressing up as a woman can be especially problematic Fuchs says, and not only because he finds the corsets very uncomfortable.\n\n\"It's complicated because I have to wax,\" he says, \"and I have tons of hair.\"\n\nIt took Fuchs's great-great-grandfather Carl Schilling three months to sail from Germany to Chile. He lived there until his death in 1923 aged 93\n\nMaking up his face can also take between three and five hours, depending on the character.\n\nFuchs says that his most difficult project was recreating \"the family's patriarch\" Carl Schilling, his grandmother's great-grandfather, who arrived in Chile as a 19-year-old in 1850, on a boat full of German immigrants.\n\n\"He went down south to work as an estate manager for an aristocratic family called Buschmann and ended up marrying their daughter, Johanna,\" says Fuchs.\n\n\"Carl was a real character. He learned the native language so he could talk to the indigenous Mapuche people, and he was one of the founders of the German school in Osorno - one of the oldest German schools in the world.\"\n\nTo become his great-great-great-grandfather Fuchs had to grow a beard. It was slow work - taking more than a year - and when it was finally long enough to be dyed white he had a severe allergic reaction to the chemicals.\n\nBut Fuchs says that he knew the transformation had been a success when on a trip to the bank he was asked if he wanted to join the special queue for elderly people.\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-great-grandmother Dona Natividad Martinez de Pinillos Cacho y Lavalle. Her brother-in-law was President of Peru, Luis Jose de Orbegoso\n\nAlthough the finished works look very much like paintings they are, in fact, digital photographs taken under very bright lighting, which makes Fuchs's made-up skin appear very pale, almost like porcelain.\n\nThe photographs are then printed on matt, cotton paper and, as a final touch, Fuchs displays them in frames which are appropriate to the period in which the person he is recreating lived.\n\nHe exhibits and sells his recreations to art collectors around the world, but for him the project is primarily a means to help him connect with his past.\n\n\"At first my family thought I was strange,\" Fuchs says, \"but now they really like the pieces and want to find out more about their relatives.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. See how Fuchs is able to transform himself into his ancestors\n\nFuchs is currently working on transforming himself into his great-great-great-great-great-great-aunt, Dorothea Viehmann, who was born in Kassel, Germany, in 1755.\n\nThe daughter of an innkeeper, she heard many tales from the guests at her father's tavern. The Priest of the Huguenot church introduced Viehmann to the Brothers Grimm, and with that her work as a muse began.\n\nMost of Viehmann's tales were subsequently published in the second volume of the Brothers Grimm Fairy Tales.\n\nTo achieve a good likeness, make-up artist Juan Diego Peschiera painstakingly applies layer upon layer of liquid latex to Fuchs's face.\n\n\"The eyes are the most difficult part of the face to do,\" he explains.\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-grandfather Eulogio Elespuru y Martinez de Pinillos lived in Paris for many years\n\n\"Wrinkles go in different directions, so we have to make the latex go in different directions to create that effect. If we do it in just one layer it looks fake, so we need to build up lots of different layers. At first I apply alcohol-based make-up and then the liquid latex, it's translucent and you can see all the different capillaries under the skin.\"\n\nFuchs has recreated 11 ancestral portraits so far and has many more in mind, including Queen Elizabeth I, Mary Queen of Scots, and William Shakespeare. Fuchs believes they are all distantly related to him and plans to confirm that using a genetic genealogy website.\n\nBut there is one very special person he would particularly like to transform himself into, his grandmother, Catalina del Carmen.\n\nCarmen, who was like a mother to Fuchs, died just after Christmas and he is still grieving.\n\n\"It will be really hard to do her justice,\" he says, \"she was so pretty and had a much smaller nose than me, but I definitely want to try.\"\n\nFuchs's great-great-great-aunt Benjamina was friends with many famous poets and authors, including novelist and diplomat Alberto Blest Gana\n\nAll images courtesy of Christian Fuchs unless otherwise indicated\n\nListen to Christian Fuchs speaking to Outlook on the BBC World Service\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Nato members will want to be reassured by General Mattis\n\nThis meeting of Nato defence ministers is the first formal alliance get-together since the arrival of the Trump administration in Washington. Mr Trump's initial suggestion that Nato was in some sense \"obsolete\", along with his stated desire to do deals with Moscow, set alarm bells ringing in many capitals, where Russia is seen as a re-emerging strategic threat.\n\nMany in Europe see elements in the Trump administration as having an in-built antipathy towards multilateral institutions. There were also fears about certain officials' closeness to Moscow - a worry that the US might seek a strategic dialogue with Russia over Europeans' heads. Accordingly, the resignation of the president's controversial National Security Adviser Michael Flynn will not prompt many tears in Europe.\n\nAmerica's European allies will, though, at least to some extent, have been reassured by the subsequent noises that have come out of Washington. But they will want to hear direct reassurance from Gen James Mattis - Mr Trump's new defence secretary - that the alliance retains its centrality in US security thinking.\n\nThey will also want confirmed that all of the steps that the Obama administration took to reinforce deterrence in Europe - the deployment of additional combat brigades and an intensive series of exercises - will continue under the new man in the White House.\n\nPoland is one of just five Nato members to meet spending the spending benchmark in 2016\n\nOf course Gen Mattis will come with some messages of his own. President Trump - indeed the US Congress - wants to see the European allies shoulder more of the cost of their own defence.\n\nWashington has shown that it is willing to stump up troops and equipment, but while collective Nato expenditure is rising, too many Nato governments have been sluggish in bringing their expenditure up to the agreed target of 2% of GDP. According to the latest Nato figures only five allies, Estonia, Greece, Poland, the UK and the United States met or exceeded the 2% benchmark in 2016.\n\nThe demand from Washington that its allies spend more on their collective defence has been a consistent one over recent years. As a former Nato commander, Gen Mattis knows the alliance well and he has heard all of the excuses before. He will deliver the familiar message with more punch and with a clear implication that this time the US administration expects to see prompt action.\n\nGen Mattis also wants to see Nato become more agile and better at decision-making especially at times of crisis. Washington wants to see the alliance playing a greater role in international efforts to defeat terror and to help prop up failing states.\n\nThis is a difficult area which causes divisions among the alliance's European members as much as between European capitals and Washington. Iraq - where Nato has already agreed to conduct a small amount of training - could become a test case.\n\nThe Americans are already thinking about what will happen after Mosul is fully re-captured. As the situation on the ground transitions from all-out war-fighting, there will be a continuing need to build Iraqi capabilities. Here there are lots of things that the US believes Nato countries could do - training for border patrolling, instituting defence reforms and so on. So far the response among allies to the small-scale effort in Iraq has been, shall we say, limited.\n\nAs far as Washington is concerned, Nato countries don't just need to spend more - they need to significantly enhance their capabilities and be relevant to the sort of real-world tasks in which the US wants its partners to be engaged.\n\nNato's response to a more assertive Russia is all very well but it threatens to open up fissures between northern and eastern allies, on the one hand, who directly face Russia's modernising forces and countries on Nato's Mediterranean flank, on the other, who confront a very different set of challenges.\n\nThe alliance is faced with a more militarily assertive Russia\n\nAs the paroxysms in Syria and Libya have shown, the migrant or refugee crisis has repercussions throughout the Middle East and much of Europe.\n\nAt this meeting, Nato ministers want to apply a small corrective to enhance the focus on threats from the south. It's a modest start - a small command hub at the joint forces headquarters in Naples whose job will be to explore what Nato can contribute to dealing with the complex security challenges on its southern flank.\n\nBut as well as a demand for a more dynamic Nato agenda the US is eager to reassure its allies. A senior US Congressional delegation is visiting the Nato headquarters this week. The Nato meeting is followed by Europe's premier annual security event - the Munich conference - after which the US vice-president himself will also be stopping by at Nato.\n\nIt is all something of a curtain-raiser for the US president's own first visit to the alliance which will take place in late May. That looks set to be a fairly brief event - little more than a lunch - in Nato's brand new headquarters building, which inconveniently will not be finished in time for the summit.\n\nBy then it is hoped that Mr Trump will have fully made his peace with Nato. If not, a reduced scale summit in an unfinished building holds risks as well as opportunities. The headline writers could have a field day.\n\nThe hope is that this Nato ministerial meeting will set the course for more harmonious relations between the alliance and its most important, albeit mercurial member.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "President Trump told Israeli PM Netanyahu there will be a need to compromise with Palestinians on a peace plan.", "She's best known for falling over and breaking \"the fourth wall\" on her BBC One sitcom.\n\nNow Miranda Hart is making her West End theatre debut in the musical Annie.\n\nThe Call the Midwife star, who will play orphanage owner Miss Hannigan, described it as \"a dream role\" that she never thought would become a reality.\n\n\"But here we are and I have a newly found musical theatre-esque spring in my step,\" she said.\n\nSet in 1930s New York during the Great Depression, Annie tells the story of an 11-year-old girl who wants to escape from a life of misery at Miss Hannigan's orphanage and find her parents.\n\nThe score includes the songs It's A Hard Knock Life, Tomorrow and Easy Street.\n\nThe sitcom Miranda began on BBC Two in 2009 before moving to BBC One\n\n\"I hope people will leave the theatre feeling life is a little better and dreamier and jollier after watching it, as much as we feel that performing it,\" added Hart, who broke the \"fourth wall\" by addressing the audience directly in her sitcom Miranda.\n\n\"Now if you'll excuse me, I have some leg-warmers to put on.\"\n\nThe show will begin previews at London's Piccadilly Theatre on 23 May. Further casting will be announced shortly.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nZlatan Ibrahimovic scored his first hat-trick for Manchester United and the 17th of his career in a Europa League win over Saint-Etienne at Old Trafford.\n\nIbrahimovic's deflected free-kick wrong-footed goalkeeper Stephane Ruffier and dribbled over the line for the opener, and he tapped home from close range after good work from Marcus Rashford, as well as adding a late penalty - his 23rd goal of the season.\n\nSaint-Etienne caused United problems on the break in the first 45 minutes, particularly with Romain Hamouma's pace, while Henri Saivet and Nolan Roux both clipped efforts narrowly off target.\n\nRuffier's double save denied Juan Mata, Anthony Martial forced the visiting goalkeeper into sharp saves and Paul Pogba headed against the crossbar from close range.\n\nThe two sides meet for the second leg on Wednesday, 22 February (kick-off 17:00 GMT).\n\nThere were question marks over the signing of veteran striker Ibrahimovic on a free transfer from Paris St-Germain in the summer, but the former Sweden international has responded by taking his tally to 23 for the season.\n\nThe 35-year-old former Juventus, Barcelona and AC Milan man has now netted 17 career hat-tricks. It was his first since joining United, his second in European competition and his third against Saint-Etienne.\n\n\"Every time I have played against Saint-Etienne, with hard work there has been a couple of goals,\" Ibrahimovic said after the game. \"I have scored a couple of goals tonight and hopefully I can do the same next week.\"\n\nThe Ligue 1 side will be pleased to see the back of Ibrahimovic when he retires having scored 17 times against them during his career.\n\nIbrahimovic has 11 titles and three domestic cups to his name, but a major European trophy remains missing from his illustrious CV.\n\nLike Ibrahimovic, United have never won this competition, but the result keeps alive their hopes of a cup treble this season. They face Blackburn in the FA Cup fifth round on Sunday and Southampton in the EFL Cup final the following week.\n\nIn his first season at Old Trafford, Jose Mourinho's side are just two points off a Champions League spot in the league, but triumph in the Europa League would give them an automatic passage through to Europe's elite club competition.\n\nAgainst Saint-Etienne, the Red Devils tested Ruffier on numerous occasions but he was left floundering for the first goal, while his parry into the danger area allowed the second.\n\nOn the other hand, the Ligue 1 side carved United's backline open with ease at times, with defender Eric Bailly looking particularly suspect, but they failed to work goalkeeper Sergio Romero into a single save with their 14 shots.\n\nThe world's most expensive player, Paul Pogba, was up against his brother Florentin, who was signed by the French side for 500,000 euros in 2012.\n\nMother Yeo and third brother Mathias watched from the stands as the two shared a warm embrace before kick-off, with the elder sibling Florentin sporting a number 19 on one side of his head and his brother's six on the other.\n\n\"It is something very magical, it does not happen every day and I really enjoyed playing against my brother,\" said the United player.\n\nFrance international Paul showed why the club spent £89m to sign him from Juventus in the summer with a dominant midfield performance in which he controlled the tempo of the match.\n\nHowever, on one occasion he inadvertently gave the ball away to Florentin, whose burst forward eventually saw the ball reach Saivet, but the on-loan Newcastle man could not find the target with his shot.\n\nFlorentin's rising drive in the first half almost saw him nick an away goal for his side, while Paul wasted good chances in the second period, the best of which came as he headed against the woodwork when unmarked.\n\nThe Saint-Etienne defender's evening ended early as he hobbled off with an injury with 12 minutes remaining.\n\nWhile his side ran out comfortable winners in the end, Mourinho was not happy with the start his side made, and accused his players of lacking focus.\n\n\"In the first half, we played so bad, and we managed to finish it winning 1-0 when we don't deserve,\" he said.\n\n\"It was down to lack of concentration. I had the feeling immediately in the dressing room - too noisy, too funny, too relaxed. Then my assistants had the feeling in the warm-up, with some of the guys not really focused on getting the right adrenaline in their bodies.\n\n\"So, lack of concentration. And when you don't have it, it's difficult to recover it. So the first half was hard. We were lucky to be winning 1-0. I am not happy with it. I always think we have to play every game with the same attitude.\"\n\nHe said the second half was a \"different story\" and brushed off suggestions the players lacked focus because they were playing in the less-heralded Europa League than the premier European competition, the Champions League: \"We don't play Champions League, so if that is the case I would prefer to play in the Europa League than be at home watching TV. So I think with the players it is the same.\"\n\nUnited watertight at the back - the stats\n• None Zlatan Ibrahimovic has had a hand in 18 goals in 17 appearances at Old Trafford this season (12 goals, six assists).\n• None Jose Mourinho has kept five consecutive clean sheets as a manager for the first time since November 2011 when he was Real Madrid boss.\n• None Goalkeeper Sergio Romero has kept six consecutive clean sheets for United and hasn't conceded a goal since an Alex Revell penalty for Northampton in September 2016.\n• None The Red Devils have won three consecutive European games without conceding a goal for the first time since November 2010 under Sir Alex Ferguson.\n• None Despite not registering their first shot until the 30th minute, Saint-Etienne had 11 shots in the first half, the most by an opponent at Old Trafford in the first half of a match since Athletic Bilbao had 13 in March 2013.\n\nManchester United striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic told BT Sport: \"We created good chances. It was important to get a good win at home and we bring it with us in the second leg. It was a good game but I think we can do better.\n\n\"We are winning but in a short time everything can change. It's important to keep getting the wins we need. Everything can change but we're happy at the moment.\n\n\"This is the decisive moment for the season. We are still in all four competitions. The fifth we already won [the Community Shield].\"\n\nManchester United travel to Blackburn Rovers in the FA Cup on Sunday (kick-off 16:15 GMT), while Saint-Etienne face Montpellier in Ligue 1 on the same day (kick-off 16:00 GMT).\n• None Attempt missed. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left from a direct free kick.\n• None Offside, St Etienne. Kevin Malcuit tries a through ball, but Nolan Roux is caught offside.\n• None Goal! Manchester United 3, St Etienne 0. Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United) converts the penalty with a right footed shot to the bottom left corner.\n• None Penalty conceded by Kévin Théophile-Catherine (St Etienne) after a foul in the penalty area.\n• None Kevin Malcuit (St Etienne) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Attempt blocked. Henri Saivet (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt blocked. Henri Saivet (St Etienne) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Attempt blocked. Jesse Lingard (Manchester United) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Paul Pogba with a cross. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Keira Knightley and Hugh Grant will reprise their original roles\n\nRomantics rejoice - the cast of Love Actually is reuniting for a short sequel to raise money for Comic Relief.\n\nRed Nose Day Actually will be written by Richard Curtis and star Hugh Grant, Keira Knightley and Colin Firth.\n\nLiam Neeson, Bill Nighy and Rowan Atkinson will also appear in the film, which sets out to discover what the original characters are doing in 2017.\n\nThe 10-minute sequel will be shown on 24 March on BBC One as part of the Red Nose Day appeal.\n\nIt comes 14 years after Love Actually was released.\n\nLove Actually scriptwriter Emma Freud, Curtis's partner, has asked for ideas for the plot, saying the follow-up is still being written.\n\nMany have suggested a tribute to the late Alan Rickman, who starred in the original.\n\nAnother suggestion tweeted to Freud involved Atkinson's character, who was seen in the original as a shop assistant.\n\nAnd one fan wanted a happy ending for Emma Thompson's character, after the hard time she had in the first film.\n\nCurtis said: \"I would never have dreamt of writing a sequel to Love Actually, but I thought it might be fun to do 10 minutes to see what everyone is now up to.\n\n\"We hope to make something that'll be fun - very much in the spirit of the original film and of Red Nose Day.\"\n\nThe writer said he was \"delighted\" that so many of the original cast could take part, adding: \"It'll certainly be a nostalgic moment getting back together.\"\n\nMartine McCutcheon, Andrew Lincoln, Lucia Moniz, Thomas Brodie-Sangster and Olivia Olson will also reprise their original roles.\n\nThe original film, set at Christmas time, followed an extensive cast of characters, whose lives intertwined in various ways.\n\nAmong them was Hugh Grant's character, David - the prime minister at the time - who was seen getting together with Natalie, played by McCutcheon, at the end of the original film.\n\nSam (played by Game of Thrones star Brodie-Sangster, who was 13 at the time), was seen chasing Joanna, played by Olivia Olson, through the airport at the end of the last film to declare his love.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "At a senate hearing on Wednesday, a visibly emotional Ashton Kutcher urged US lawmakers to support efforts to help bring an end to child sexual exploitation.\n\nHe said it was time for \"society and government\" to defend the vulnerable, adding that he had been exposed to things \"no person should ever see\".\n\nMr Kutcher was speaking as chairman of Thorn, an organisation that develops software to locate victims of abuse.", "Women are fighting back against sexism in an industry steeped in a history of hyper-sexualised female characters.\n\nSome in the comics community aren't happy with this push for gender parity in the work place, online and on the page but one way or another, the industry is changing.\n\nThis video can only be viewed in the UK for copyright reasons.\n\nThanks to Thought Bubble in Leeds and Gosh! Comics in London.", "A stiff upper lip, a pot of tea and a nice orderly queue. So far, so British. But the great British pastime of standing in line may not be as simple as it seems.\n\nAccording to academics if you want to truly master the art of the queue, you need to follow the rules.\n\nIt's all about the power of six, professors say.\n\nPeople will wait for six minutes in a queue before giving up and are unlikely to join a line of more than six people, researchers at the University College London found.\n\nSix is also the magic number when it comes to spacing - gaps of fewer than six inches between people can spark anxiety or stress.\n\nBut the biggest faux pas of all is the push-in; queue jump at your peril.\n\nThe report's author, Adrian Furnham, Professor of Psychology at UCL, said the public nature of queuing means that queue jumping sparks a \"huge sense of injustice\" among those in line.\n\nHe pointed to previous research by Dutch psychologist Geert Hofstede, which claimed: \"The British believe that inequalities between people should be minimized, and everyone should have the autonomy to pursue goals with equal opportunity.\"\n\nThe UCL study was based on a review of academic literature on queuing at banks, cash points and supermarkets.\n\nOther queue no-nos include striking up a conversation while queuing and standing on the wrong side of escalators - though this was mainly a complaint of Londoners who feel tourists \"misuse\" the Underground.\n\nThe report found the most confusing rule for foreigners could be the practice of one person offering their place in the queue to another.\n\nProfessor Furnham said: \"The British have a well-established culture of queuing and a very specific type of queue conduct, one that has been known to confuse many a foreign visitor.\n\n\"In a time when Britain is changing rapidly, and the ways in which we queue are shifting, the psychology behind British queuing is more important than ever - it is one of the keys to unlocking British culture.\"\n• None Is forming an orderly queue really the British way?", "Donald Trump's willingness to build better relations with Russia is threatening to turn US foreign policy on its head. His openness towards Vladimir Putin has dismayed most of the foreign policy establishment in Washington. But it's now shared by some European politicians, not all of them far-right extremists, in France, Italy, Hungary, the Czech Republic and elsewhere. They can't all be Kremlin agents - so what's the new pull of Putin for some in the West?\n\nThe two politicians, one American, one Russian, put down their drinks and clasped hands across the pub table. Then they both pushed. But there was no real contest.\n\nThe arm-wrestling match was over in a second and the winner was the deputy mayor of St Petersburg, a man who'd built up his strength through years of judo training. Few outside Russia had ever heard of him. But five years later he would become its president.\n\nUS Congressman Dana Rohrabacher still laughs when he recalls his brief duel with Vladimir Putin in 1995, when the Russian came over in an official delegation. He hasn't met Mr Putin since. But for many years he's been the most consistent voice for détente on Capitol Hill, often effectively in a minority of one.\n\n\"I don't see Putin as a good guy, I see him as a bad guy. But every bad guy in the world isn't our enemy that we have to find ways of thwarting and beating up,\" Congressman Rohrabacher says.\n\n\"There are a lot of areas where this would be a better world if we were working together, rather than this constant barrage of hostility aimed at anything the Russians are trying to do.\"\n\nMr Rohrabacher doesn't condone Russian hacking during the US election campaign or the Kremlin's military incursions into Ukraine. But he believes Russia is the victim of Western double standards.\n\nUS Congressman Dana Rohrabacher believes the West should co-operate more with Russia\n\nAnd that view is shared by some Western experts on Russia, though the vast majority stress how aggressive the country has become under President Putin.\n\nRichard Sakwa, Professor of Russian and European politics at the University of Kent, in the UK, is in the minority camp. \"We are living in a huge echo chamber which only listens to itself,\" he says. \"The key meme is 'Russian aggression' and it's repeated ad nauseam instead of thinking.\n\n\"When we have national interests, that's good. But when Russia tries to defend its interests, it's illegitimate, it's aggressive, and it's dangerous for the rest of the world.\"\n\nRussia's 2014 takeover of Crimea and military support of separatists in eastern Ukraine is widely taken as evidence that Mr Putin seeks to extend his country's borders.\n\nBut Prof Sakwa sees the Ukrainian crisis as a symptom of the failure after the Cold War to establish a new international security system that would have included Russia.\n\nMeanwhile Stephen Cohen, Professor Emeritus of Russian Studies at New York University, argues that the \"vilification\" of President Putin in the West stems originally from disappointment that the Russian leader turned his back on some of the Western-inspired reforms of his predecessor, Boris Yeltsin: reforms that many Russians blame for the lawlessness and falling living standards of that period.\n\n\"Putin is a European man trying to rule a country that is only partially European,\" Cohen says. \"But we demand that the whole world be on our historical clock.\"\n\nDid President Putin turn his back on Boris Yeltsin's reforms?\n\nProf Cohen is a rare liberal voice for detente. Most Americans who want better relations with Russia are on the political right.\n\nSome are neo-isolationists who dislike what they see as their country's attempts to \"export democracy\", whether to Iraq, Syria or Russia. In that, they're at one with the Kremlin, which opposes any outside interference in the affairs of sovereign states.\n\nOthers are \"strategic realists\" who argue that great powers, including Russia, will always have \"spheres of influence\" beyond their borders.\n\nAmerica's Monroe Doctrine sought to prevent outside military and political involvement in the New World.\n\nThe opposite argument is that independent states have the right to belong to whatever alliances they like. Most former Soviet-bloc countries in Eastern Europe joined NATO and the EU after the Cold War.\n\nAnd some present and former leaders of those states have warned Trump that any attempt to strike a grand bargain with Mr Putin would endanger the region's security.\n\nBut one central European government - Hungary's - takes a different view. \"We don't see Russia as a threat to Hungary,\" its foreign minister Peter Szijjarto says. \"If Russia and the US cannot work together on global issues, then that undermines security in Eastern Europe.\"\n\nHungary's Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto says his country doesn't regard Russia as a threat\n\nHungary also wants to end the Western sanctions imposed on Russia following its annexation of Crimea. It says they've been counter-productive, leading to Russian counter-sanctions which have damaged European export industries.\n\nPeter Toth, head of the Hungarian association of breeders of mangalica pigs - whose fat is much prized in Russia - says his members are among those now suffering.\n\nBut the Hungarian government, which has been widely criticised for curtailing some democratic checks and balance, also shares other interests with Russia. Prime Minister Viktor Orban has said Europe must keep its \"Christian values\" in the face of immigration from Muslim countries.\n\nThe Kremlin has also made much of the need to preserve national identity and Christian values in its rhetoric, leading nationalists in the West to see Moscow as an ally.\n\nMany, particularly on the right, believe the threat from mass immigration, and terrorism, is now greater than that from Russia.\n\nCongressman Rohrabacher says: \"To say Russia is the enemy, when they too are threatened by radical Islamic terrorism, is exactly the wrong way to go.\"\n\nArguments like that, reinforced by President Trump, seem to be swaying some Americans. By the end of last year, more than a third of Republican voters viewed President Putin favourably, according to a YouGov poll, compared to only a tenth in 2014.\n\nIt found however that Democrats dislike Mr Putin more than ever. Prof Stephen Cohen believes Donald Trump will have great difficulty selling a new policy on Russia.\n\n\"If Trump says we need a detente with Putin for the sake of our national security,\" he explains, \"it's going to be very hard to get people in the centre and the left to support it, because they'll be called apologists for Putin and Trump. It's a double whammy.\"\n\nTim Whewell's BBC Radio 4 programme, The Pull of Putin, is available to listen to via BBC iPlayer.", "The rejection by the Church of England's ruling body of a statement that marriage in church could only be between a man and a woman is one of the main topics in the day's papers.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph believes the Church of England has now moved a step closer towards allowing gay marriages. It also says the vote exposes deep divisions within the Anglican church.\n\nThe Church of England's general synod rejected a report that maintained church marriages should be between men and women\n\nThe Times calls it a \"historic vote\" which narrows the gap between the law of the land and the doctrine of the established church.\n\nAccording to the Times, the warning by Donald Trump's defence secretary, James Mattis, that Nato members in Europe must increase their defence spending \"heralds a bruising new phase in the transatlantic relationship\".\n\nThe paper says his message reinforced Mr Trump's refusal on the campaign trail to confirm that the US would meet Nato's commitment to help a member nation if it was attacked.\n\nMeanwhile The Guardian says Palestinians are angered and bewildered by President Trump's apparent break with two decades of US commitment to a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.\n\nThe paper describes it as \"a casual abandonment of of a pillar of US-led peace efforts.\" Its correspondent in Jerusalem, Peter Beaumont, talks of Donald Trump \"discarding decades of diplomacy\" while showing an apparent ignorance of the subject he was addressing.\n\nIt says half a million small businesses, shops, pubs, GP surgeries, schools and colleges will be \"hammered\" and compares that to revelations that big companies like Amazon will pay less.\n\nIt says figures \"slipped out\" on Wednesday show that the Treasury will benefit to the tune of an extra £1bn despite claims that the changes are revenue neutral.\n\n\"In his budget next month,\" says the Mail, \"Phillip Hammond should announce a freeze on business rates, pending a root and branch overhaul of an archaic, bonkers system that is destroying the quality of life for millions.\"\n\nThe Daily Express leads on figures released on Wednesday showing that the ranks of foreign-born workers in Britain rose by 431,000 last year - while the number of British-born workers fell by 120,000.\n\nThe paper says it's vital the the UK establishes a migration policy \"that ensures that British workers feel the benefits of the government's job creating policies\".\n\nOne of the heroes of England's 1966 World Cup winning squad, George Cohen, has told the Daily Mirror he'll donate his brain to help research into dementia in footballers.\n\nA study yesterday linked heading balls to the condition. He says he'll do whatever will help, and his brain will be no use to him after death. Cohen also lends his support to calls for under-tens to be banned from heading footballs.\n\nForeign Secretary Boris Johnson is considering pursuing foreign governments through the international courts - to force them to pay London's congestion charge, according to the Times.\n\nDiplomats from 145 countries apparently have outstanding bills totalling £100m. Transport for London has written to Mr Johnson requesting that the issue is passed to the International Court of Justice in The Hague, to clarify the law over diplomatic immunity.\n\nForeign Secretary Boris Johnson is considering pursuing foreign governments who have not paid London's congestion charge, the Times says\n\nThree-quarters of nations do pay the fee, the Times says. Among those who don't, the worst offenders are the US, Japan, Nigeria, Russia, India and Germany.\n\nBut not just any drone - one that can carry a human passenger.\n\nDubai's transport agency, it says, has bought a number of them and the \"self flying taxis\" will be in use from July.\n\nPassengers can summon an air taxi with a mobile phone app, hop in and be flown to their destination. The drone's propellers fold inwards on landing to enable it to fit into a single car parking space.", "The London Dungeon tourist attraction has apologised for a promotional Twitter campaign that backfired.\n\nA graphic joking about a murdered sex worker, and another about infecting a partner with a sexually transmitted disease were posted on the attraction's Twitter feed.\n\nCritics said the collection of images was sexist and offensive.\n\nMerlin Entertainment said it was \"very sorry\" for the campaign and has deleted the tweets.\n\nThe group said it had wanted to run a \"dark Valentine campaign\" to promote the London Dungeon, in which visitors are taken on a tour through London's dark history.\n\nOther messages in the series joked about sex acts, sex workers and body-shamed women\n\nBut many Twitter users complained that many of the images tweeted were in poor taste and inappropriate for a family tourist attraction.\n\nRebecca Reid, a columnist for the Telegraph, said: \"The biggest issue here is taking violence against women and turning it into a joke or a cheap marketing ploy.\"\n\nShe told the BBC: \"Just because these rapes and murders happened in the past doesn't mean they are fair game.\n\n\"Violence, rape and murder are all still a very brutal reality of life for modern day sex workers and these flippant tweets show no awareness or respect for that.\"\n\nMerlin Entertainment said: \"Our brand tone of voice tends to divide audiences. However, we recognise that we've upset some people and for that we're very sorry.\"", "Captain Bjorne Kvernmo, who first began hunting seals more than four decades ago, guides MS Havsel into the harbour of Tromso, the Norwegian city that owes its existence to his trade.\n\nBut his vessel is not arriving laden with dead seals. Rather, he and his crew are in Tromso for the premiere of a documentary about Norway's last seal-hunting expedition to the dangerous ice edge off the coast of Greenland.\n\nSealers - One Last Hunt is an unashamed celebration of a controversial industry that a century ago numbered more than 200 ships. Their owners, captains and crews did much to shape the economy of coastal Norway, which stretches north of the Polar Circle towards Russia and the Barents Sea.\n\nAlong with many locals, the documentary's producers lament the demise of the seal-hunting industry.\n\n\"People buy meat in the store that's packed in plastic, and they don't want to see how animals are killed,\" says co-producer Trude Berge Ottersen. \"Seal hunting is an old culture and tradition. It's been a big part of northern Norwegian culture. So for me it's better to eat seal meat than to eat chicken or produced salmon.\"\n\nAccusations of animal cruelty have long been levelled at seal hunters in the Arctic by campaigners.\n\nThe International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) describes the commercial hunts as \"cruel and wasteful\". The Humane Society refers to \"defenceless pups [that] die a cruel death\". Greenpeace is opposed to what it calls an \"inhumane and cruel industrial hunt\", while defending traditional hunting by Arctic Indigenous communities.\n\nSeal hunting has been a big part of northern Norwegian culture\n\nImages of bleeding seals purportedly clubbed to death by brutal hunters have been a persuasive feature of anti-sealing campaigns that eventually brought the Norwegian seal-hunting industry to its knees.\n\nAnd while the film also features pools of red-hot seal blood as it mixes with pristine white snow and blue ice, it paints a more nuanced picture by offering an insight into the harsh conditions endured by the Arctic hunters.\n\nMr Kvernmo believes the protesters who have shaped public opinion have misunderstood the situation. \"I know a lot of their information is wrong - it's not a real picture of what's going on,\" he says.\n\nGry Elisabeth Mortensen, who co-produced the documentary with Ms Ottersen, agrees.\n\nSeals are no longer clubbed to death, she explains. Rather, high-powered guns with expanding bullets are used to deliver a swift death.\n\n\"I think it's perhaps the most ethical meat you can have,\" Ms Mortensen argues. \"The seals are lying on the ice, maybe sleeping, and then they get a shot in the head, and that's it.\"\n\nAfter the seals have been shot, dedicated \"jumpers\" use the hakapik hunting tool - a heavy wooden club with a hammer head and a hook. The jumpers deliver blows to the animals' heads to ensure they are dead, before hooking them and dragging them back to the boat.\n\n\"Jumpers\" approach the seals after they have been shot to deliver the final blow with a club\n\n\"We are doing it in the most humane way that it could be done,\" Mr Kvernmo says.\n\nHowever, the entire debate about whether Norwegian seal hunting is cruel has been rendered largely irrelevant by a 2009 European Union ban on trade in seal products. That includes skins that are made into boots and jackets, omega 3-rich oil used in food supplements, and meat that has been served in restaurants or cooked in homes across the Arctic region.\n\nSeal-skin boots can still be bought in Tromso's shoe shops, but probably not for much longer.\n\nBoots made from seal skin can still be bought in Tromso\n\n\"It's over,\" says Mr Kvernmo as he heads into the cinema for the screening of the documentary. \"In Norway, there's nobody hunting anymore. The protest industry has been the winner.\"\n\nHowever, the withdrawal in 2015 of a 12m kroner (about £1m) Norwegian government subsidy means the practice is no longer economically viable. Subsidies had accounted for up to 80% of sealers' income.\n\nMore lucrative opportunities now await Mr Kvernmo. These days, his boat is kept afloat by fees from film crews, which help ensure seasoned seal hunters' knowledge about the Arctic lives on.\n\nSealers are now having to look for other opportunities\n\n\"Throughout all these years on the ice and at sea, Bjorne really has a lot of knowledge and respect for the nature and the animal life there,\" says Ms Ottersen.\n\nMr Kvernmo is also working for the oil and gas sector, again putting him at odds with environmentalists.\n\n\"We don't think there's any room for oil in the Arctic,\" Jennifer Morgan, executive director of Greenpeace, told the recent Arctic Frontiers conference in Tromso.\n\nGreenpeace is one group opposing oil exploration in the Arctic\n\nNorwegian energy giant Statoil has been exploring the Arctic for oil and gas. Bjorn Otto Sverdrup, its head of sustainability, defends its policy and says there has to be a gradual shift to renewable energy. \"We cannot change that system overnight.\"\n\nThe Norwegian government also argues that oil and gas exploration can take place safely in the Arctic.\n\n\"We have shown that it is fully possible to combine ocean-based industries, such as fisheries, aquaculture, shipping and energy, and a healthy marine environment,\" Prime Minister Erna Solberg told the Arctic Frontiers conference. \"But it is crucial to set high environmental standards and ensure that these are met.\"\n\nNorway is also set to announce a national ocean strategy. \"Sustainable use of ocean resources is the very foundation of Norway's prosperity and well-being,\" Ms Solberg said.\n\nAlthough the formerly lucrative seal hunt has become a thing of the past, Norway's Arctic gold rush appears to be far from over.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "The NHS has apologised to a Devon woman who was asked the wrong questions when she dialled the non-emergency service NHS 111.\n\nMichelle Perryman rang for help saying she felt violently ill but said she was frustrated by the service which asked about 40 questions over a 10 minute call.\n\nThe non-emergency service call handler repeatedly tells Mrs Perryman: \"The computer is asking the questions.\"\n\nSouth West Ambulance, which lost the service in 2016 after a damning report, said the the call handler selected the wrong \"pathway\".\n\nRead more on this story here and click here for more stories from around Devon and Cornwall.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "When I first read Mark Zuckerberg's 5,500-word letter to the Facebook community, I was struck by two things.\n\nHow far it ranged - over subjects as diverse as globalisation, the people who feel left behind, our spiritual and communitarian well-being - as well as the rather more obvious social media issues of fake news, polarisation and sensationalism.\n\nAnd secondly, that this letter could be described very fairly as a manifesto.\n\nIt is not just a statement of where Facebook as a business is going. It is also a statement of the type of world Facebook believes it can help create.\n\nAs such, it is political (although carefully crafted to contain no direct reference to the new US president).\n\nAnd when I interviewed Mr Zuckerberg, the same sense of political purpose was clear. And the same care not to reference Donald Trump.\n\nOf course, many will find talk of \"connectedness\", \"community\" and \"bringing people together\" very easy to dismiss.\n\nHere is a very rich man running a very powerful - and often controversial - company, who, one assumes, might find it hard to relate to the ordinary concerns of the ex-steel workers of Monessen, Pennsylvania, or the former pottery workers of Stoke in the west Midlands.\n\nBut in an era of technology giants like Facebook which have so much \"reach\" - 28.5m users in Britain alone - the rebuttal is simple.\n\nBetter that Mark Zuckerberg is public about his vision for his company - agree or disagree with that as you like - than the alternative of corporate silence.\n\nIn my interview with him, I did push on taxes paid (or not) and privacy violations. Mr Zuckerberg answered that he wanted Facebook to be a \"good corporate citizen\".\n\nAnd on fake news it is clear that Facebook, and other technology giants, have been ill-prepared for the type of editorial controls necessary in an era when millions of people receive their news via their chosen \"filter bubble\" with little mediation.\n\nFacebook, Google and others have a central philosophy - act quickly to launch new products and then \"iterate\" if there is a problem.\n\nThat has led to mistakes, which Mr Zuckerberg does admit to.\n\nThis is a century when the most powerful are not simply the elected leaders or dictators of the world, but are the corporate leaders who can do so much to influence - and control - what billions of people experience every day.\n\nSpeaking publicly about how they view that role is, for many, better than the alternative.\n\nWe can then at least test his company, this global behemoth, against the standards Mr Zuckerberg has set himself.\n\nDoes the Facebook founder want to be a politician? Particularly given that he sounds so much like one - and I mean that in the broadest sense, not pejoratively.\n\nNot yet, certainly. And maybe not ever.\n\nAs the head of a company with 1.86 billion active users a month, he is probably well aware that he has plenty of power already.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nArsenal midfielder Mesut Ozil believes he is being made the scapegoat for the club's problems, says his agent.\n\nOzil, 28, was criticised again after Arsenal suffered a 5-1 defeat at Bayern Munich in Wednesday's Champions League last-16 first leg.\n\n\"But Mesut feels people are not focusing on his performance; they are using him as a scapegoat for the team after bad results.\"\n\nOzil joined Arsenal from Real Madrid in 2013 for a club-record £42.4m, and came with a reputation as one of the game's leading playmakers.\n\nBut his displays have often been questioned and the Germany international has come under increased scrutiny in recent weeks.\n• None I will be managing next season, here or elsewhere - Wenger\n• None 21 years and out? Key questions for Arsenal and Wenger\n\n'Was he the reason Arsenal conceded five?'\n\nAgainst Bayern, the 20 passes that Ozil completed was the same amount as home goalkeeper Manuel Neuer.\n\n\"Bayern had 74% possession,\" said Sogut, who is Ozil's lawyer and representative. \"How can someone in the No.10 position create chances if you don't have the ball?\n\n\"In these games people usually target a player who cost a lot of money and earns a lot of money - that is Mesut. But he can't be always be the scapegoat. That's not fair.\n\n\"Football is a team sport and Arsenal are not performing well as a team. Eleven players were on the pitch but Mesut was singled out for criticism. Was he the reason that Arsenal conceded five goals?\n\n\"It started before the match, throughout the week leading up to the game. People started discussing: 'Should he play? Should he be dropped?'.\n\n\"It was as if everyone knew Arsenal would not make it through and we needed a scapegoat. This is not right. You win as a team and you lose as a team.\"\n\n'People say he has poor body language but that's how he is'\n\nOzil has scored 29 goals in 146 Arsenal appearances and last season created more chances in a single campaign (137) than any other player in Premier League history.\n\nIn January, the German was named as his country's player of year for a fifth time in six years, having helped them to the semi-finals of Euro 2016 and World Cup glory two years earlier. But many have accused him of underperforming when it matters most.\n\n\"I don't agree that Mesut has not had an impact on big matches,\" Sogut said.\n\n\"What about the win at home to Chelsea this season and Manchester United the year before? What about the games for Germany against Italy and France at Euro 2016?\n\n\"People are always saying Mesut is not fighting or tackling, that he has poor body language, but that is how he is.\n\n\"Believe me, he is desperate to succeed. If it doesn't work, he shows his anger and expressions. Was his body language an issue when Arsenal were playing well?\n\n\"He is not someone who runs around aimlessly and tackles just so everyone thinks he is fighting. If it doesn't make sense to run somewhere he will keep that power for the next run.\"\n\nRecent defeats by Watford and Chelsea saw Arsenal lose ground in the Premier League title race and they currently sit in fourth place, 10 points behind leaders Chelsea.\n\nThey face a trip to non-league Sutton United in the FA Cup on Monday.\n\nOzil is out of contract in 2018 and there has been no breakthrough on talks over a new deal, but Sogut insisted his player is fully focused.\n\n\"I don't think the criticism has affected his performance or his mental state,\" the agent added.\n\n\"Mesut is committed to the club. There is no doubt that he will perform at 100%, with total professionalism and commitment as long as he plays for Arsenal. Nothing will change that.\n\n\"He is sorry to the fans, and he's sorry that he and his team-mates couldn't give the fans a better result in Munich.\"", "Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger has reached \"his lowest point\" and may quit the club this season, says his former Gunners captain Martin Keown.\n\nHe is one of several of Wenger's former players who feel they have seen a change in the long-serving boss.\n\nArsenal are facing a seventh successive last-16 Champions League exit following a 5-1 thrashing at Bayern Munich.\n\nEx-Arsenal defender Lee Dixon said: \"This team is getting no response from him. I've never seen him like that.\"\n\nFrenchman Wenger, at the helm since 1996 but whose contract expires at the end of this season, has not won the Premier League since 2004, but Keown told BT Sport: \"Arsene must be considering his future now.\"\n\nFormer England full-back Dixon added on ITV: \"He just seems so low.\n\n\"That is the first time where I've seen him where I've thought, 'he thinks it's time'. The fact that he hasn't been able to get a response from the players in the last few weeks might be the final straw.\"\n\nArjen Robben fired German champions Bayern into the lead at the Allianz Arena on Wednesday, but Arsenal fought back and equalised when Alexis Sanchez followed up and finished his own saved penalty.\n\nHowever, in the second half the Gunners capitulated, as Bayern excelled in a 10-minute period during which Robert Lewandowski restored Bayern's lead before Thiago Alcantara scored twice.\n\nSubstitute Thomas Muller scored late on to surely put the tie beyond the Gunners.\n\nKeown - a defender who made 449 appearances for Arsenal - said recently he expected his former manager to get one more season. However, after watching the Bayern defeat as a pundit for BT Sport, Keown questioned whether he should stay.\n\n\"It's almost embarrassing. Outclassed, outplayed,\" he said. \"I can't ever say I'd like to see him go (but) this is his lowest point ever as Arsenal manager.\"\n\nLast week, former striker Ian Wright, who scored 185 goals for the Gunners from 1991-98, told BBC Radio 5 live he did not expect Wenger to stay on next season.\n\nAfter the drubbing in Germany, Wright posted his frustrations on social media and declared he was \"not watching anymore\".\n\nBob Wilson, goalkeeper in the first Arsenal side to win the double in 1971, told BBC Radio 5 live on Thursday: \"I wouldn't be at all surprised that Arsene now, with the amount of headlines that are coming his way, will look at that and say 'two decades'.\n\n\"He might just look at that and say 'OK enough is enough' because I think as a human being you can only take so much.\n\n\"He's a very sensitive guy and he's hurt, I doubt he will sleep very much between now and a horrible game on an artificial pitch at Sutton.\"\n\nArsenal's next fixture is an FA Cup fifth-round tie at non-league Sutton United on Monday (19:55 GMT kick-off).\n\nArsenal's only major silverware in recent years has been consecutive FA Cups in 2014 and 2015.\n\nSuccessive defeats by Watford and Chelsea dented their league campaign, and although Wenger's side returned to winning ways with a 2-0 victory over Hull last weekend, the Gunners are fourth in the table, 10 points behind leaders Chelsea.\n\nFormer Chelsea winger Pat Nevin was at the Allianz Arena for BBC Radio 5 live and described Arsenal's performance as \"shambolic\".\n\n\"The negativity before the game feels more like a realism,\" he said. \"Arsenal were totally outplayed by a team who are good but weren't utterly brilliant.\n\n\"The one team at the top level they have beaten is Chelsea with that 3-0 (at the Emirates in September).\n\n\"Other than that, they've got draws, they've been beaten and it's the top ones - I include Everton in that as well - they don't seem to be able to overcome them.\n\n\"It's exactly the same in the Champions League and it's a real shame, it just feels very close to the end. I've never said it before about Arsene but it does feel that way now.\"\n\nFormer Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand said Arsenal showed no fight or aggression.\n\n\"They looked spineless,\" the ex-England captain said on BT Sport. \"You want to see fire in their belly and that's the most disheartening thing for me.\"\n\nThe Times' chief football writer Henry Winter described the Gunners as a \"laughing stock\", adding that he felt Wenger's best days are behind him.\n\n\"He has lost his leadership skills, there's no invincible streak in him any more,\" he said.\n\n\"From top to bottom there's no leadership. They have a silent owner who is sleepwalking towards the abyss. Wenger has been overtaken by Conte, Klopp and other managers.\"\n\nHow did the papers react?\n\n... and what you said\n\nCollated from comments below the match report\n\nHarry Martin: Wenger gave Arsenal the greatest run of success they will ever have. His time in charge is as good as it gets for them and at 67 he's not going to improve. Football is cyclical and Arsenal's run of success (CL every year) is coming to a close. Be grateful for what you've had Gooners because you won't find a better manager than him prepared to come to Arsenal. These are the glory years.\n\nThePundit: Has anyone seen Mesut Ozil? He has been missing since last November, last seen strolling around the Emirates against a mediocre Premier League team. If found, please contact A. Wenger.\n\nBlueIsTheColour: Arsenal are a laughing stock in Europe, there is no point qualifying for the Champions League just to make up the numbers. Arsenal are more interested in their balance sheet than their trophy cabinet.\n\ncliffbayfan: Pathetic, I think it sums this up. Spineless, lack of talent, gave up, and totally out-thought and outclassed. Whether time is up for Wenger, I don't know... but this was an embarrassment.\n\nXTStevie1873: Tonight proves that English teams are only good in England as this Bayern side like Barcelona have been on the slide and are nowhere near as good as they have been over the last 4-5 years. But they still whacked Arsenal at a canter...", "President Donald Trump has made a dig at the BBC in a sharp exchange during a heated White House press conference.\n\n\"Here's another beauty,\" said Mr Trump after asking BBC North America editor Jon Sopel which organisation he represented.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nA playful exchange between President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu actually said a great deal about the dim prospects of a successful negotiation with the Palestinians under current circumstances.\n\n\"I think we're going to make a deal,\" President Trump said on Tuesday as he rolled out the red carpet for Mr Netanyahu at the White House.\n\nThe contrast in the tone of the US-Israeli relationship was tangible given the well-documented tension between Mr Netanyahu and Mr Trump's predecessor, Barack Obama.\n\n\"It might be a bigger and better deal than people in this room even understand. That's a possibility,\" Mr Trump added. \"So let's see what we do.\"\n\n\"Let's try,\" responded Mr Netanyahu. When Mr Trump chided him for not sounding sufficiently optimistic, the prime minister quipped, \"That's the 'art of the deal'.\"\n\nActually, it's the reality of the Middle East peace process, a hall of mirrors with a grim regional reality, a host of historical grievances, and zero-sum politics that make the odds of a meaningful negotiation remote, much less an actual agreement.\n\nUS President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, here next to wives Melania and Sara\n\nNotwithstanding the obvious chemistry between Mr Trump and Mr Netanyahu - and a longstanding personal connection between Mr Netanyahu and Mr Trump's designated Middle East envoy and son-in-law, Jared Kushner - there is no chemistry between the Israeli leader and his Palestinian counterpart, President Mahmoud Abbas.\n\n\"As with any successful negotiation, both sides will have to make compromises,\" Mr Trump observed correctly.\n\nHowever, the parties themselves are farther apart on the substance of the process - the borders of a Palestinian state, Israeli security arrangements within a Palestinian state, the right of return for Palestinian refugees and the status of Jerusalem - than they were at the end of the Clinton administration.\n\nBoth the Bush and Obama administrations expended considerable effort to close existing gaps and achieve at least a framework agreement that would set the stage for a final deal. Neither was successful. Obstacles were less about substance than politics.\n\nThe centre of Israeli politics has moved markedly to the right; the left that embraced the essential bargain of the Oslo process, land for peace, has receded.\n\nThe existing Israeli governing coalition is not wired to make concessions. In fact, it is pushing Mr Netanyahu to increase the settlement presence in the West Bank while accelerating construction in East Jerusalem.\n\nAn Israeli soldier stands inside a guarding booth in the Gush Etzion Israeli settlement block in the occupied West Bank\n\nIn 2009, the Obama administration demanded a freeze to all settlement activity. Israel reluctantly agreed, although some growth continued within settlements Israel would keep in any final deal.\n\nRather than accelerate negotiations, settlements became a bone of contention within them. When the 10-month settlement moratorium ended, so did direct negotiations.\n\nSecretary of State John Kerry tried to achieve a framework agreement during Mr Obama's second term, but his one-year effort fell short.\n\nIn a parting shot at Israel, when a resolution came before the UN Security Council declaring settlement activity to be an impediment to peace, the Obama administration abstained.\n\nPresident Trump criticised the \"unfair and one-sided\" treatment of Israel at the UN, a gesture Mr Netanyahu welcomed.\n\nDays before the meeting, the Trump White House cautioned the Israeli government that expansion of settlements beyond their existing borders was not helpful.\n\nMr Netanyahu may moderate the current pace of settlement activity but he is not going to stop it. The Palestinians will continue to see settlement activity as a fundamental problem.\n\nA woman in the US during a \"Muslim and Jewish Solidarity\" protest. Mr Netanyahu is nicknamed \"Bibi\"\n\nThe Palestinians are deeply divided. In 2006, Hamas won an unexpected majority of seats in the Palestinian legislature over Mr Abbas' Fatah Party. The Palestinians have lacked political unity ever since.\n\nToday, Hamas, not the Palestinian Authority, is the de facto government in Gaza. Full elections have not been held in more than a decade.\n\nThe bottom line is that both sides prefer the status quo to making the politically painful concessions that a negotiation would require.\n\nBoth Mr Trump and Mr Netanyahu hope to pursue an \"outside-in\" strategy, building on shared regional concern regarding Iran and radical extremists including the Islamic State group to create momentum to solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.\n\nWhile reasonable in theory - Mr Netanyahu spoke of partnership with Arab states in opposition to Iran - co-operation at the governmental level does not necessarily translate to popular support. For many in the region, the plight of the Palestinians continues to resonate.\n\nGiven the limited prospects confronting a two-state solution - progress that likely requires different leaders and mandates on both sides - President Trump made a small, but significant adjustment in US policy, expressing a willingness to support a one-state solution if both parties agree.\n\nBut the two sides have very different visions of what a one-state solution looks like.\n\nA Palestinian man watches a joint press conference in the West Bank city of Hebron\n\nA key Netanyahu prerequisite for any deal is preservation of Israel as a Jewish state.\n\nOn the other hand, in any agreement, Palestinians would insist on citizenship, voting rights and a government of and for the people - all of them. This could redefine Israel's identity.\n\nPresident Trump may see his one-state acknowledgement as the opening gambit in a lengthy negotiation.\n\nBut a one-state solution potentially presents Israel with an existential choice. It can be a Jewish state or a democracy, but not both.\n\nThat is a choice the United States has never wanted Israel to confront since the answer could have grave implications for the US-Israeli relationship.\n\nPJ Crowley is a former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State and now a Professor of Practice at The George Washington University and author of Red Line: American Foreign Policy in a Time of Fractured Politics and Failing States.", "Great Britain's track star Laura Muir talks about her lifelong love for animals and her medal ambitions for 2017.\n\nWatch Laura Muir in action at the Birmingham Indoor Grand Prix on BBC One and the BBC Sport website from 13:00 GMT on Saturday.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nTottenham's Europa League hopes have been dealt a blow after Jeremy Perbet's goal gave Gent a surprise victory in their last-32 first-leg meeting.\n\nFrench striker Perbet controlled and slotted into the corner from Danijel Milicevic's pull-back on the hour.\n\nA strong Spurs line-up were poor for most of the evening, although Harry Kane clipped the post after half-time.\n\nGent, eighth in the Belgian league, almost added a second as Milicevic's shot was tipped on to the post.\n\nThe second leg is at Wembley on Thursday, 23 February.\n\nGent's 20,000-capacity stadium, the Ghelamco Arena, is host to a Michelin-starred restaurant, but there was little to feast on for Tottenham, who turned in a strangely listless performance.\n\nMauricio Pochettino had spoken before the match about how keen his players were to put behind them a poor display in losing 2-0 at Liverpool in the Premier League on Saturday.\n\nWith that in mind, Pochettino selected a very strong side - with only two changes to the team beaten at Anfield.\n\nDele Alli skimmed an early shot wide from just outside the penalty area after good build-up involving Harry Winks and Ben Davies, but that was as good as it got in the opening half.\n\nPochettino's decision to move midfielder Moussa Sissoko out to the left at half-time led to a lively spell from the visitors, during which Kane clipped the post.\n\nBut Sissoko looked increasingly lost, and the Tottenham head coach was prompted into more tactical tweaks in an attempt to find an equaliser.\n\nNothing worked - and Tottenham's frustration was summed up as Alli picked up a needless yellow card for dissent.\n\nThe Gent fans were singing \"we're going to Wembley\" during the second half, in anticipation of next week's second leg at England's national stadium.\n\nThey may have more reason than Tottenham to look forward to their big night in north London.\n\nSpurs stumbled at their temporary European home in this season's Champions League - failing to qualify from their group after losing at home to Monaco and Bayer Leverkusen.\n\nHaving gone into the match in Belgium as second-favourites to win the Europa League, behind only Manchester United, Pochettino's team now need a good Wembley performance just to stay in the competition.\n\nThe Spurs boss will be hoping that Kane is fit for that match, having picked up an injury in the second half. Pochettino indicated that the forward may not be risked when Spurs visit Fulham in the FA Cup on Sunday.\n\n\"We need to assess Harry Kane, he got a knock on his knee,\" Pochettino said.\n\n\"We need to refresh the team. In the end, it is Tottenham that will play Fulham on Sunday, it's not about the name of the player.\"\n\nGent boss Hein Vanhaezebrouck - celebrating his 53rd birthday - caused something of a surprise with his team selection, making five changes and leaving his 15-goal top scorer Kalifa Coulibaly on the bench.\n\nIt suggested that Vanhaezebrouck was prioritising a top-six Belgian league place - and qualification for the domestic championship play-offs - above European progress.\n\nYet his decision to select the 32-year-old journeyman Perbet in attack paid off handsomely.\n\nEven before Gent took the lead, the players selected were full of energy, pressing Tottenham into mistakes and enjoying plenty of possession.\n\nThey created decent openings; centre-back Samuel Gigot shanked an effort wide from the edge of the penalty area, while Toby Alderweireld had to block a shot from midfielder Kenny Saief, who made an adventurous run from the left after a poor Kyle Walker pass.\n\nBetter chances came after half-time, with Milicevic slicing wide as Spurs switched off at a throw-in moments before Perbet's goal, and unmarked centre-back Stefan Mitrovic spurning an opportunity to make it 2-0 as he headed over from a corner.\n\nTottenham defender Eric Dier told BT Sport: \"We did show more aggression than Saturday against Liverpool. I don't think we created enough chances to win.\n\n\"In the first half, they were the better of the two sides but after half-time we were better until the goal. It stopped us in our tracks. We could not get going again. They sat back and we could not get the away goal.\n\n\"When you go a goal down, you want to give everything to get back into the game. Maybe we were erratic at times and could have been a bit calmer and waited for our chance. That is something for us to work on.\n\n\"I don't see why we cannot turn it around. This team gave everything against us, we did that but lacked a bit of quality. At home we will be better.\"\n\nTottenham head coach Mauricio Pochettino told BT Sport: \"I am disappointed yes because we had a lot of opportunities before we conceded, but the tie is open.\n\n\"It's true that maybe it was not a good performance but we need to understand that it's always difficult to play in the Europa League.\n\n\"We need to find a way to go to Wembley and win the game and go to the next round.\"\n• None This was the seventh consecutive first leg of a knockout match that Tottenham have failed to win in the Europa League (drawing three, losing four).\n• None Tottenham have never won a European match in Belgium (two draws, three defeats).\n• None Spurs have lost back-to-back matches in the Europa League for the first time since November 2011.\n• None Jeremy Perbet's goal was Gent's first shot on target in the match in the 59th minute.\n• None Perbet has scored in two of his last three home Europa League appearances for Gent.\n• None Spurs have now scored only one goal in their last four games in all competitions, having scored 12 in the four prior to this run.\n• None Of the last eight matches in which Tottenham have failed to score, four have been in European games.\n\nBefore next Thursday's second leg at Wembley, Tottenham visit Fulham in the fifth round of the FA Cup on Sunday, when Gent travel to fellow mid-table side Standard Liege in the Belgian league.\n• None Attempt missed. Christian Eriksen (Tottenham Hotspur) left footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Kyle Walker.\n• None Offside, Tottenham Hotspur. Dele Alli tries a through ball, but Son Heung-Min is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Christian Eriksen (Tottenham Hotspur) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Assisted by Victor Wanyama. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "TV comedy star Matt Lucas has been awarded an honorary degree by his former university.\n\nThe actor studied Theatre, Film and Television at Bristol University in 1993 but did not complete the course.\n\nHe took a year long sabbatical to join television show Shooting Stars and did not return.\n\nAfter high-fiving the chancellor, he said comedy partner David Walliams, also a university alumnus, would be fuming.\n\nDavid Walliams and Matt Lucas created characters such as Charles Gray and Vicky Pollard for Little Britain\n\nHe and Walliams later wrote comedy sketch show Little Britain which became a huge hit.\n\nAfter being awarded the honorary degree, Lucas high-fived university chancellor Sir Paul Nurse.\n\nMatt Lucas described himself as a \"charlatan\" who had left Bristol University before completing his course\n\nHe said: \"I stand here before you in receipt of this great tribute. You fools.\"\n\nHe said he quickly realised he had enrolled on a \"serious course\" but while other students found and challenged themselves, he just \"walked up and down nearby Whiteladies Road with a cough\".\n\n\"I was also just generally useless at university life. I had few friends and rarely left my room, unless it was to go and cook something in the kitchen.\n\n\"Today, you bring the entire university honours system into question by celebrating a charlatan who left university a year early in 1995, when most of this year's graduates were still in nappies, so that he could indeed wear a romper suit of his own, appear in a Cadbury Creme Egg advert and then do a sketch show with his friend,\" he said.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "A steward appears to spit at a player before being chased and then tackled by his team-mates after an Argentina Cup match between Central Norte and Talleres de Perico.", "Scientists from the University of Freiburg have designed a treadmill specifically for ants - with the aim of revealing their navigation secrets.\n\nDesert ants are able to locate and travel to their nest very quickly; with their brains keeping track of the number of steps they have taken and their orientation.\n\nThe researchers, who published their design in the Journal of Experimental Biology, plan to use their unique set-up to record directly from ants' brains as they navigate - research that could help in the development of miniature robots.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "When Jen found out her husband needed a kidney transplant she wanted to give him one of hers but they weren't a match.\n\nThen they heard about a scheme that could save his life.\n\nJen and Elliot's story is featured in #Hospital at 21:00 on Wednesday 15 Feb on BBC Two.\n\nJoin the conversation - find BBC Stories on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "Courtesy of the Museum of Broken Relationships One heartbroken person sent a collection of font examples they \"mutually loved\" with their partner\n\nAfter a relationship ends, even the most mundane objects can become painful reminders. One museum in Los Angeles puts them on display.\n\nWhen you're heartbroken, everything reminds you of the person who's no longer there. So do you burn your love letters? Throw away your wedding dress after a divorce? Send back that single mismatched sock?\n\nAt the Museum of Broken Relationships in Hollywood, everyday stuff is exhibited as art along with each object's story of betrayal or loss. The result is a moving collection of heartbreak.\n\nOne woman from San Francisco crammed her wedding dress into a pickle jar after her husband of five years left her. Even though her dress was \"non-traditional\" - meaning the kind you could wear again - she never did.\n\n\"I hate throwing perfectly functional items in landfills but would hate to see someone walking around in my once beautiful but now sadness-infused dress,\" the woman wrote on a card now on display next to the jar.\n\nThe jar was used mainly for space, she wrote, but \"any sort of appropriate pickle metaphors can also be invoked\".\n\nAll of the items at the museum are exhibited anonymously. The museum, which opened this summer, was created by a lawyer who visited the original Museum of Broken Relationships in Croatia and wanted to bring the concept to Los Angeles.\n\nTwo artists opened the Croatian museum after breaking up and deciding to curate the debris from their relationship.\n\nThe exhibits in the LA museum are donated from around the world.\n\nA Norwegian donated an iron with the short story: \"This iron was used to iron my wedding suit. Now it is the only thing left.\"\n\nOne exhibit displays an expensive bottle of wine a British couple having an affair planned to drink once they both left their spouses. But the wine remains untouched, the bottle never opened.\n\nWhat happened to their marriages, or if their spouses knew about their infidelity, is left unsaid.\n\nA Slovenian donated a key - a small gift from a friend. The story behind the key says: \"You turned my head; you just did not want to sleep with me. I realized how much you loved me only after you died of Aids.\"\n\nThe museum attracts both the broken-hearted having a cathartic cry and couples on dates, says Alexis Hyde, the director of the museum.\n\nBut she was surprised that it's become a family destination for parents looking for ways to talk about love with their teenage children.\n\n\"It becomes this really safe place to talk about sex and relationships in a way that's not like 'Gross, mom stop talking to me,'\" Ms Hyde says.\n\n\"It's a really beautiful way to open a dialogue about what is OK and what is not,\" she says.\n\n\"You're going to have your heart broken and that's normal. Even though you feel so alone, you're actually very normal.\"\n\n\"It's a little less isolating I think.\"\n\nOne of the more unusual exhibits is a pair of sizeable silicone breast implants a woman says she felt pressured to get by an ex-boyfriend. Her body rejected the implants and she had to have multiple surgeries to remove them and reconstruct her body.\n\nCourtesy of the Museum of Broken Relationships\n\n\"She held on to them to remind herself don't change for someone else. You have to love yourself to be loved and be in a productive relationship,\" Ms Hyde says, adding that the woman hoped her donation would inspire others to have healthier relationships.\n\n\"She was hoping that people would read this and take the cautionary tale.\"\n\nThe museum also includes a broken promise ring and a collection of tins, boxes and books with examples of the \"mutually loved font\" of a former couple.\n\nThere's a dress bought by a girl who planned to wear it to impress a boy. But the boy killed himself before she had the chance.\n\nMix tapes - a sign of love - now in the museum\n\nThere's also a drawer full of mix tapes on display. If you don't remember mix tapes, they were the ultimate romantic gesture of the 1980s - painstakingly-made collections of music put together by recording songs off the radio on to cassette tapes.\n\nIf you missed the start of the song you planned to record, you had to wait for the DJ to play it again the next hour or day, depending on the song's popularity.\n\nThe collection is not what people have come to expect from a museum on Hollywood Boulevard, where tourists frequent Madame Tussauds wax museum and where actors dressed as Chewbacca and Spider-Man hustle tourists for photos.\n\n\"This museum cuts through to the truth of the human experience now like a scalpel. I think that it's a very sophisticated, conceptual art museum even though maybe the objects that compose it themselves individually might not be necessarily considered art,\" says Ms Hyde.\n\nAlexis Hyde says the museum \"cuts through to the truth of the human experience\"\n\nVisitors here are more from the local Los Angeles art scene than tourists.\n\nInside, it's a quiet, cathartic museum and many visitors walk the museum alone, quietly crying.\n\nMany visitors say they come to feel less alone and more connected to their fellow lonely hearts.\n\nBut one visitor says the experience is overwhelming.\n\n\"I'm feeling their pain,\" he says of the people who donated items to the museum.\n\n\"I just feel so alone in here.\"", "Churchill wrote the first draft in 1939, as Europe headed towards war\n\nA newly unearthed essay by Winston Churchill reveals he was open to the possibility of life on other planets.\n\nIn 1939, the year World War Two broke out, Churchill penned a popular science article in which he mused about the likelihood of extra-terrestrial life.\n\nThe 11-page typed draft, probably intended for a newspaper, was updated in the 1950s but never published.\n\nIn the 1980s, the essay was passed to a US museum, where it sat until its rediscovery last year.\n\nThe document was uncovered in the National Churchill Museum in Fulton, Missouri, by the institution's new director Timothy Riley. Mr Riley then passed it to the Israeli astrophysicist and author Mario Livio who describes the contents in the latest issue of Nature journal.\n\nChurchill's interest in science is well-known: he was the first British prime minister to employ a science adviser, Frederick Lindemann, and met regularly with scientists such as Sir Bernard Lovell, a pioneer of radio astronomy.\n\nThis documented engagement with the scientific community was partly related to the war effort, but he is credited with funding UK laboratories, telescopes and technology development that spawned post-war discoveries in fields from molecular genetics to X-ray crystallography.\n\nIn the essay, Churchill outlines the concept of habitable zones - more than 50 years before the discovery of exoplanets\n\nDespite this background, Dr Livio described the discovery of the essay as a \"great surprise\".\n\nHe told the BBC's Inside Science programme: \"[Mr Riley] said, 'I would like you to take a look at something.' He gave me a copy of this essay by Churchill. I saw the title, Are We Alone in the Universe? and I said, 'What? Churchill wrote about something like this?'\"\n\nDr Livio says the wartime leader reasoned like a scientist about the likelihood of life on other planets.\n\nChurchill's thinking mirrors many modern arguments in astrobiology - the study of the potential for life on other planets. In his essay, the former prime minister builds on the Copernican Principle - the idea that human life on Earth shouldn't be unique given the vastness of the Universe.\n\nChurchill defined life as the ability to \"breed and multiply\" and noted the vital importance of liquid water, explaining: \"all living things of the type we know require [it].\"\n\nMore than 50 years before the discovery of exoplanets, he considered the likelihood that other stars would host planets, concluding that a large fraction of these distant worlds \"will be the right size to keep on their surface water and possibly an atmosphere of some sort\". He also surmised that some would be \"at the proper distance from their parent sun to maintain a suitable temperature\".\n\nChurchill also outlined what scientists now describe as the \"habitable\" or \"Goldilocks\" zone - the narrow region around a star where it is neither too hot nor too cold for life.\n\nChurchill supported the development of game-changing technologies such as radar\n\nCorrectly, the essay predicts great opportunities for exploration of the Solar System.\n\n\"One day, possibly even in the not very distant future, it may be possible to travel to the Moon, or even to Venus and Mars,\" Churchill wrote.\n\nBut the politician concluded that Venus and Earth were the only places in the Solar System capable of hosting life, whereas we now know that icy moons around Jupiter and Saturn are promising targets in the search for extra-terrestrial biology. However, such observations are forgivable given scientific knowledge at the time of writing.\n\nIn an apparent reference to the troubling events unfolding in Europe, Churchill wrote: \"I for one, am not so immensely impressed by the success we are making of our civilisation here that I am prepared to think we are the only spot in this immense universe which contains living, thinking creatures, or that we are the highest type of mental and physical development which has ever appeared in the vast compass of space and time.\"\n\nChurchill was a prolific writer: in the 1920s and 30s, he penned popular science essays on topics as diverse as evolution and fusion power. Mr Riley, director of the Churchill Museum, believes the essay on alien life was written at the former prime minister's home in Chartwell in 1939, before World War II broke out.\n\nIt may have been informed by conversations with the wartime leader's friend, Lindemann, who was a physicist, and might have been intended for publication in the News of the World newspaper.\n\nIt was also written soon after the 1938 US radio broadcast by Orson Welles dramatising The War of the Worlds by HG Wells. The radio programme sparked a panic when it was mistaken by some listeners for a real news report about the invasion of Earth by Martians.\n\nDr Livio told BBC News that there were no firm plans to publish the article because of issues surrounding the copyright. However, he said the Churchill Museum was working to resolve these so that the historically important essay can eventually see the light of day.", "At the 2016 European Championships, violent clashes between Russian and English supporters in Marseille put the spotlight on Russian hooliganism.\n\nRussian hooligans injured over 100 English supporters, beating two into a coma.\n\nIt has raised serious concerns ahead of Russia hosting the 2018 World Cup.\n\nIn rare interviews with members of the Orel Butchers - who violently attacked English fans in Marseille - a world is revealed where brutal violence has become a mark of honour.\n\nWatch the full programme Russia's Hooligan Army, BBC 2, on iPlayer, first broadcast Thursday 16th February\n\nJoin the conversation - find BBC Stories on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter", "The long-awaited public inquiry into allegations of wrongdoing by undercover police could be delayed for years amid a growing legal row with Scotland Yard.\n\nNewly-published documents reveal the Metropolitan Police is questioning the unprecedented size of the probe.\n\nIt says it needs months to assess which former officers need their identities protected - and does not believe all of them should give evidence.\n\nPublic evidence hearings may not now start before 2018.\n\nSir Christopher Pitchford, the inquiry's chairman, says he needs to hear from all the officers.\n\nThe new delays have emerged a week after the Independent Police Complaints Commission said it was investigating whether a Metropolitan Police unit shredded a large number of files that were relevant to the inquiry.\n\nTheresa May, then home secretary, ordered the inquiry in 2015 after serious allegations against undercover officers.\n\nShe told Sir Christopher to report back by July 2018, something that is now impossible.\n\nDocuments published by the inquiry on Wednesday reveal months of tension building between its team and the Metropolitan Police over what the force should hand over.\n\nScotland Yard says it has so far disclosed one million pages and identified 116 surviving former undercover officers from the Special Demonstration Squad, the disbanded unit at the heart of many of the allegations.\n\nThe inquiry wants all of them to give evidence but Scotland Yard says that is unworkable because of the \"immense\" pressures it is under.\n\nIn detailed submissions to the inquiry, it says that the demands for evidence dating back 40 years are unprecedented. It is already spending the equivalent of 80 police constables' salaries on the inquiry and may need to have more than 100 officers and staff working full time.\n\n\"The Metropolitan Police Service recognises that a number of deployments [undercover operations] will be properly subjected to close scrutiny by the inquiry,\" says one of the force's letters. \"This does not mean however that each deployment will need to be subject to the same depth of review. Many officers are reluctant to engage with the inquiry process.\"\n\nIn a further twist, the documents reveal Scotland Yard proposed that an unnamed detective sergeant would explain to the inquiry how it was managing secret documents even though the officer had been accused of destroying files on the Green Party peer Baroness Jenny Jones.\n\nThe officer has since been cleared of wrongdoing but the inquiry has insisted the individual cannot give evidence.\n\nIn his response to the Met's plea for a delay, Sir Christopher said the Metropolitan Police would need to explain at a special hearing in April how the inquiry could work if it did not hear from all the former undercover officers.\n\n\"Their evidence is clearly relevant,\" he says. \"The Inquiry needs to see that evidence... it might have been otherwise if the Inquiry could be confident that the documentary records of the Special Demonstration Squad were fully preserved, but they were not.\n\n\"It seems to me clear that there is no reasonable prospect that the Inquiry will complete its work within the three year period originally envisaged in July 2015, and that it is unlikely that evidence hearings will take place in 2017.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Is this cool? Yes, it's ICE COLD\n\nWhat thoughts do the store Iceland conjure up? Luxury goods, lobsters for £6 and award-winning mince pies, considered better than Fortnum and Mason or Selfridges?\n\nOr rows of freezing aisles stalked by former girl band members in track suits, and your mum, who can't be found elsewhere, because she has, of course, gone to Iceland?\n\nFor a frozen goods specialist that's been around since 1970 and now has 900 stores, its image is remarkably fluid.\n\nBut for customers today, it is seen as having excellent customer service.\n\nThe consumer group Which? asked 7,000 people to rate the leading chains and they voted Iceland best for online - for the second year running.\n\nRespondents considered categories such as quality, value for money, service from delivery drivers, how easy it was to find products, and whether shoppers would recommend the retailer to a friend - and Iceland scored tops.\n\nRetail analysts have also got the Iceland message.\n\n\"You could have seen it as a bit of a dinosaur,\" says Paul Martin, head of retail at consultancy KPMG.\n\nBut now, he is remarkably impressed at how Iceland's management team have updated a business that was \"not seen as cool\".\n\nAnd it's not just the online service he admires. \"They have improved the look and feel of stores, there's a new website, [and] they focused more on the healthy side of frozen. You can also now buy fresh food - something that just didn't exist in the past,\" he says.\n\nBack in the 1970s, frozen food was hip. A chest freezer - the size you could put a body into - was the smart TV of its day. Not everyone had one, but if you could, you did.\n\nBejam was the go-to High Street supplier, and they even provided the freezer. Iceland bought the chain out in 1989.\n\nIt has ticked along outside the big league since then, changing ownership - neatly, actually owned by an Icelandic company at one time - but its core remains frozen food.\n\nBut frozen food hasn't been cutting it these days with the upper echelons of society. Style arbiter Peter York, who has advised many luxury firms and enjoys the high life himself, has always thought it's not quite his thing.\n\n\"I see frozen Christmas treats full of sugar. I don't see [Iceland] as having things that won't make you as big as a pig. The imagery of Iceland is the Atomic Kitten woman [Kerry Katona, who fronted its TV ads in 2008].\n\n\"I fear it wouldn't meet my metropolitan liberal elite needs.\"\n\nBut, given its popularity, even he would be willing to explore its range, as long as he didn't have to walk too far: \"I'd be in like Flynn if there was one near me. 'Dear Iceland, send us one - we the people of Pimlico want an Iceland.'\"\n\nI explained that its popularity was in fact for online shopping, and therefore he needn't extend his morning walk.\n\nPeter York's food assistant won't even have to push one of these... customers scored Iceland highest for its online delivery\n\n\"Oh,\" he says. \"I'm going to make the person who does my food ordering have a look.\"\n\nPerhaps it should not be a surprise that it scores so highly on home delivery. It started doing this in 1999 - way before its rivals got serious.\n\nNot a lot of people know that. And that could be why, says KMPG's Paul Martin, it scores highly. \"[Because it's not as popular as the Big Four supermarkets], it's easier to book a delivery slot.\"\n\nBut he has praise for both the design of the website and the \"very friendly\" drivers.\n\nIceland's joint managing director, Nick Canning, promises there will be more to notice the chain for in future. \"It feels like people are finally opening up their eyes to the quality we deliver, and we have much more innovation planned for the year ahead, so please stay tuned - Iceland's customers won't be disappointed.\"", "President Donald Trump denounces the previous administration at a news conference in the White House, saying he \"inherited a mess at home and abroad\".\n\nMr Trump cited American jobs being lost abroad, the Middle East and North Korea as evidence.", "JavaScript seems to be disabled. Please enable JavaScript to take full advantage of iPlayer.", "Rumours suggest that Nokia are planning to bring back their iconic 3310 phone.\n\nMobile users of a certain age have been getting very excited on social media about the return of this sturdy, reliable handset.\n\nIf you were in the market for a new phone in the year 2000, then the 3310 may have been on your wish-list.\n\nBut when Newsbeat contacted Nokia about the rumours, the company refused to comment.\n\n\"Though we're as excited as everyone else to hear their news, as we have often said about such stories, we do not comment on rumour or speculation,\" a spokesperson tells us.\n\nIf you ever owned one of these phones then the return of the 3310 may be exciting news to you\n\nIt may seem unlikely in the world of Android and iPhones that anyone would want a 17-year-old handset that was best known for playing Snake, but the experts believe there is a place in the market.\n\n\"I'm fairly confident my grandmother could use a 3310, but she wouldn't know where to start with an iPhone or Android,\" Alistair Charlton, deputy technology editor at the IB Times, tells Newsbeat.\n\n\"You can take a £20 phone to a festival and leave your expensive, glass-fronted iPhone at home.\n\n\"Backpackers and the like probably appreciate them too, given their tough build, cheap price and long battery life.\"\n\nMany smartphone users complain about their handset's battery and this could prove the main selling point for users.\n\n\"What an interest in the 3310 does show us though is that battery life is still a major concern for consumers, and one that's not being well-addressed by some smart phones, namely the iPhone,\" Elizabeth Varley, founder and CEO of tech community TechHub, tells Newsbeat.\n\nAnd let's not forget, when Adele revealed the video for Hello back in 2015, she was seen in it making a call on a retro flip phone - not a smart device.\n\nAround that time, the media reported a rise in people seeking old phones, as the 1990s were firmly back in fashion and people like Rihanna were walking round chatting on a chunky mobile.\n\nSo it's not just a phone for drug dealers, as many Twitter users seem to think.\n\nAlistair also backs the author of the original source of the 3310 rumours, VentureBeat writer Evan Blass, as a credible source for technology leaks.\n\nHe describes the journalist as \"a renowned tech leaker who is often accurate with his predictions.\"\n\nBut Alistair also says that to succeed in the current market, Nokia will need to update the 3310's basic features to be relevant in 2017.\n\n\"We don't communicate through calls and SMS as much as we did in the days of the 3310,\" he says.\n\n\"If it had an internet connection and access to WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger, then maybe it has a place.\"\n\nBut Elizabeth Varley doesn't believe Nokia's future can be built on models from the past.\n\n\"The best way forward is rarely backwards,\" she says.\n\n\"To really compete, innovation is the key.\"\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "The BBC's Jonathan Beale reports from the Arctic circle in Norway, where Russia is building up its forces - causing concern for the US, which has called its conduct there \"aggressive\".\n\nMeanwhile, US Defence Secretary James Mattis is expected to call on European nations to spend more on defence, when he attends a meeting of the NATO alliance in Brussels.", "Camila Morrone, Laura Love, Harley Viera-Newtorn and Emily Ratajkowski at the Michael Kors show\n\nNew York Fashion Week came to an end on Wednesday, marking the end of seven days of extremely good looking people wearing clothes we can't afford.\n\nNYFW is held twice a year - February and September - and this one focused on autumn/winter collections.\n\nWe'll leave aside the fact that Wednesday is nobody's idea of the end of the week and focus on some of the highlights instead.\n\nIn 2014, 30-year-old convicted felon Jeremy Meeks was arrested during a gun sweep in California. But then something unusual happened.\n\nHis mugshot went viral after it was posted on the Stockton Police Department's Facebook page.\n\nIt received more than 15,000 likes and several users left comments like \"hottest convict ever\" and \"Is it illegal to be that sexy?\"\n\nThe blue-eyed bandit, as some fans branded him, was quickly snapped up by a modelling agent and his Instagram account now has 834,000 followers.\n\nPhilip Plein must have been one of those who had his head turned, as Meeks has now popped up on the catwalk of the designer's autumn/winter collection.\n\nThe way things are at the moment, it would be much more groundbreaking if someone in the public eye didn't try to make a political statement.\n\nNonetheless, there were politics aplenty at NYFW, perhaps most notably on the runway for the Mara Hoffman collection.\n\nThe designer's show kicked off with opening remarks by the national co-chairs of the Women's March on Washington (pictured above).\n\nThe Women's March was an international protest against US president Donald Trump which took place last month.\n\nDesigners Public School also kitted out their models with hats reading \"Make America New York\" - a reference to President Trump's Make America Great Again campaign slogan.\n\nModels were also seen wearing shirts with slogans such as \"The Future is Female\" and \"We Will Not be Silenced\".\n\nIt's unusual for fashion to dip its toes into the world of politics, but it seems even the most high-profile designers are keen to have their say on President Trump and his policies.\n\nAshley Graham for Michael Kors and Candice Huffine for Prabal Gurung\n\nThis was not the first time that plus-sized models appeared at New York Fashion Week, but it may well be the most significant.\n\nPreviously, designers have included plus-size models, very often in frumpy outfits, to gain publicity for their show.\n\nThis time around, however, models like Ashley Graham (for Michael Kors) and Candice Huffine (for Prabal Gurang) were styled in a similar way to the other models.\n\nOr he might've done. We don't know, as he didn't allow any photographers into his Yeezy Season 5 runway show.\n\nFor all we knew he might have unveiled a new range of \"Taylor Swift Rules\" T-shirts.\n\nAll we had to go on from the show were some grainy photos and shaky mobile phone footage from those who flouted the photography rules.\n\nHowever, all of the designs have now been posted online, making the camera ban somewhat pointless.\n\nOne thing we do know is Kanye refused to walk the runway at the end of his show, as is customary for the designer.\n\nIt seems that's about as controversial as it got.\n\nNo recorded hip-hop or dance music for Michael Kors's show, oh no. He brought an orchestra.\n\nThis is a seriously classy touch.\n\nIndonesian Muslim designer Anniesa Hasibuan has made the hijab her trademark over the last two seasons.\n\nThis week, she built it into the outfits on display at her NY Fashion Week show, styling it with flowing gowns.\n\nAll of the models in Hasibuan's autumn/winter 2017 collection were seen with grey hijabs, signalling that such sightings on the catwalk could become more common.\n\nInterviewed backstage, the designer said her dream would be to dress Kate Middleton, adding that she admires the Duchess of Cambridge for \"her elegance\".\n\nRead more: When hijabs dazzled the New York catwalk\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nMark Clattenburg is quitting his job as a Premier League official to become Saudi Arabia's new head of referees.\n\nThe 41-year-old is widely considered to be one of the best referees in football and took charge of the Euro 2016 final, the Champions League final and the FA Cup final last season.\n\nHoward Webb, another former top-flight official, resigned as Saudi Arabia's head of refereeing 11 days ago.\n\nClattenburg is expected to leave before the next Premier League fixtures.\n\nHis new post will involve working with Saudi referees to improve performance and professionalise the set-up, while he will also take charge of some league games. He has signed a one-year rolling contract.\n\nSpeaking on a live broadcast on the Saudi Football Federation's Twitter page, Clattenburg said: \"This is an important move forward. We have professional referees in the country that I am leaving, which has been a big positive.\n\n\"One thing I'd like to do is work with the refereeing team and the president to make this happen so that it will be successful for many, many years to come.\"\n\nThe Premier League's referee body, Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL) said he had been \"a great asset\" and \"an inspiration to those who want to get into refereeing\".\n\nIts statement added: \"We understand this is an exciting opportunity for Mark, and it further underlines the high esteem for English match officials throughout the world game.\"\n\nClattenburg took charge of his first Football League game as a 25-year-old in 2000. Four years later, he was promoted to the Premier League's Select Group.\n\nUnusually for a match official, public attention has often been drawn to his life off the pitch.\n\nIn 2008, Clattenburg was suspended following an investigation into allegations he owed £60,000 as a result of a failed business venture, and he later had his elite referee status revoked.\n\nHowever, at an appeal in February 2009, his punishment was reduced to an eight-month suspension, backdated to August 2008.\n\nIn October 2014, he was dropped from officiating for two breaches of protocol - speaking on the phone with then-Crystal Palace boss Neil Warnock, before leaving a ground alone to drive to an Ed Sheeran concert.\n\nPGMOL says officials must travel to and from the ground together for integrity and security.\n\nAnd last summer he got two tattoos to commemorate refereeing the Euro 2016 and Champions League finals, and the Guardian reported he had a car with the registration plate: 'C19TTS'.\n\nIn an interview with Associated Press in December, he said he did not understand why \"people see [the tattoos] as a negative thing\", adding: \"I'm proud of what I've done.\"\n\nThe Saudi Professional League is one of west Asia's strongest domestic leagues, although the national team has not qualified for a World Cup since 2006.\n\nSaudi clubs have reached three Asian Champions League finals since 2009, with Al Hilal losing to Australia's Western Sydney Wanderers most recently in 2014.\n\nThe league is dominated by Saudi players, who rarely move abroad, while each club can field three overseas players and one Asian player.\n\nFormer Blackburn Rovers midfielder Carlos Villanueva, a Chile international, and Greek international winger Giannis Fetfatzidis are some of league's more notable foreign players.\n\nThe five biggest clubs - Al Hilal, Al Shabab and Al Nassr in Riyadh and Al Ittihad and Al Ahli in Jeddah - all have grounds that hold more than 60,000 fans.\n\nClattenburg indicated in December that he was prepared to work abroad, but the timing of his departure has still come as a big surprise to those in the game. The deal was concluded so quickly that it remains unclear if he has taken charge of his last Premier League game, and what this move will mean for his hopes of refereeing at next year's World Cup.\n\nClattenburg could be colourful and controversial. He made mistakes, yet he is widely respected in world football and questions will naturally be asked as to whether more could have been done to keep him in the English game.\n\nHis departure is a blow to the Premier League which has just lost its best referee in the prime of his career.", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nUefa has commissioned a research project that will examine the links between dementia and playing football.\n\nTentative research published earlier this week suggested repeated headers during a player's career may be linked to long-term brain damage.\n\nThe research examined the brains of six players renowned for heading the ball - all of whom later developed dementia.\n\nThe Football Association has said it will look at the area more closely, but is yet to announce its own study.\n\nEuropean football's governing body Uefa says the project, which will begin on Friday, \"aims to help establish the risk posed to young players during matches and training sessions\".\n\nOne Premier League club will be involved in the study.\n\nWhat is the FA doing?\n\nThe FA says it is committed to supporting research into degenerative brain disease among former players, but authorities in English football have been criticised over a perceived reluctance to confront the issue.\n\nSpeaking in April, the FA's medical chief Dr Ian Beasley said the organisation wanted Fifa to investigate.\n\nHe said it would be \"taking some research questions to Fifa imminently\" after it was revealed three members of England's 1966 World Cup squad - Martin Peters, Nobby Stiles and Ray Wilson - had Alzheimer's.\n\nIan St John, who played for Liverpool between 1961-71, says six of his teammates - from a group of about 16 players - now have Alzheimer's.\n\n\"I don't know why the FA and the PFA have covered this up for years,\" he said on the Victoria Derbyshire programme.\n\n\"I talked about it to the PFA a couple of years ago, and their answer was: 'Well, women get dementia, so therefore it's not an industrial injury'. Which is a load of nonsense isn't it?\"\n\nFormer England and West Brom striker Jeff Astle, died aged 59 suffering from early onset dementia. The inquest into his death in 2002 found that repeatedly heading heavy leather footballs had contributed to trauma to his brain.\n\nSpeaking to BBC Radio 5 live, his daughter Dawn Astle said: \"At the coroner's inquest, football tried to sweep his death under a carpet. They didn't want to know, they didn't want to think that football could be a killer and sadly, it is. It can be.\"\n\nBy the end he \"didn't even know he'd ever been a footballer\", she said, before adding: \"Everything football ever gave him, football had taken away.\"\n\nUefa's project follows similar initiatives in other sports.\n\nIn September, American football's National Football League (NFL) announced it would spend $100m (£80m) on medical and engineering research to increase protection for players, after agreeing a $1bn (£800m) settlement to compensate ex-players who had suffered brain injuries.\n\nThat figure was agreed in April following a lawsuit by 5,000 former players who successfully claimed the NFL hid the dangers of repeated head trauma.\n\nA UK RugbyHealth study is already examining the long-term health effects of playing rugby, including the effects of suffering frequent concussion.\n\nThat followed a World Rugby research project, which published findings of a potential link between frequent concussion and brain damage in 2015.\n\nHowever, its lead researcher said it was \"difficult\" to draw robust conclusions, adding \"further research was required\".\n\nWhat does the science say?\n\nResearchers from University College London and Cardiff University examined the brains of five people who had been professional footballers and one who had been a committed amateur throughout his life.\n\nThey had played football for an average of 26 years and all six went on to develop dementia in their 60s.\n\nWhile performing post mortem examinations, scientists found signs of brain injury - called chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in four cases.\n\nCTE has been linked to memory loss, depression and dementia and has been seen in other contact sports.\n\nBut the science is far from clear-cut. Each brain also showed signs of Alzheimer's disease and some had blood vessel changes that can also lead to dementia.\n\nResearchers speculate that it was a combination of factors that contributed to dementia in these players, but they acknowledge their research cannot definitively prove a link and are calling for larger studies.\n\nThe Football Association welcomed the study and said research was particularly needed to find out whether degenerative brain disease is more common in ex-footballers.\n\nDr Charlotte Cowie, of the FA, added: \"The FA is determined to support this research and is also committed to ensuring that any research process is independent, robust and thorough, so that when the results emerge, everyone in the game can be confident in its findings.\"\n\nMany former players have been critical of a perceived reluctance by the FA and others to take action over a potential link between football and dementia.\n\nProving a definitive link is difficult but new research shows there may be a causal connection between heading a ball and brain illnesses in later life.\n\nBut is it just a matter for players of a previous generation, who used heavy leather footballs? Or does the problem persist in the modern age?\n\nAnswers are needed. It is already too late for those suffering, potentially as a result of playing the game.\n\nIt may, however, help many worried about whether they will be afflicted as they get older.", "The inspiration for Chloe's letter had been internet research showing Google's offices including bean bags, go karts and slides\n\nAn \"entrepreneurial\" seven year old wrote to Google for a job and its CEO replied.\n\nAfter discussing her father's work, Chloe Bridgewater decided she would like to work for Google and penned a letter beginning \"dear Google boss\".\n\nIt was only the schoolgirl's second letter, after her first missive to Father Christmas, but the search engine's CEO Sundar Pichai wrote back.\n\nHer father Andy said the girl \"took it all in her stride\".\n\nGoogle CEO Sundar Pichai told Chloe to work hard and follow her dreams\n\n\"We were gobsmacked, but I don't think Chloe could understand the magnitude of the reaction she'd got afterwards,\" said father Andy, a sales manager from Hereford.\n\n\"She's got a great entrepreneurial spirit. Ever since nursery, she's always been told in school reports she's bright, hard-working and polite - we're very proud of her and her younger sister [Hollie, five] is similar,\" he said.\n\nChloe (centre left) with her sister Hollie and parents Julie and Andy\n\n\"Thank you so much for your letter. I'm glad that you like computers and robots, and hope that you will continue to learn about technology.\n\n\"I think if you keep working hard and following your dreams, you can accomplish everything you set your mind to - from working at Google to swimming at the Olympics.\n\n\"I look forward to receiving your job application when you are finished with school! :)\n\n\"All the best to you and your family.\"\n\nChloe took the reply 'all in her stride', father Andy said\n\nMr Pichai, who rose from humble beginnings in India, was appointed Google's CEO in 2015.\n\nThe inspiration for Chloe's letter had been internet research showing Google's offices including bean bags, go karts and slides but she also highlighted a keen interest in computers in her application.\n\nChloe also admitted to an interest in a job in a chocolate factory or as a swimmer at the Olympics in the letter, and Mr Pichai's reply said \"if she kept working hard and following her dreams, she could accomplish everything she set her mind to.\"\n\nMr Bridgewater said he and his wife Julie, a HR advisor, had seen Chloe's business acumen in action already.\n\nBesides her love of swimming - 20 lengths on Tuesdays with her mum - Chloe has also volunteered to clean the kitchen for 20p, he said.\n\n\"She is only young so she needs to play with her friends, jump on a trampoline but whenever she shows an interest in something else - like this letter - we want to encourage her,\" Andy said.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nChampionship clubs have agreed \"in principle\" to use goalline technology from the start of next season.\n\nClubs agreed to the decision on Thursday and it will be presented at the EFL annual general meeting in June.\n\nThe Premier League started using Hawk-Eye technology in 2013 and it is already used in the play-offs.\n\n\"This decision is about providing officials with as much support as possible,\" EFL chief executive Shaun Harvey said.\n\nThe system notifies the referee if the ball has crossed the goalline via a vibration and optical signal sent to the officials' watches within one second.\n\nGoalline technology is currently used in the Premier League, Serie A, Ligue 1, the Champions League, the World Cup and the European Championship.\n\nQueens Park Rangers boss Ian Holloway called for the Championship to start using the technology after his side were denied a goal at Blackburn earlier this month when replays showed the ball had crossed the line. The R's went on to lose the match 1-0.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nFormer British and Irish Lions captains Gavin Hastings, Martin Johnson and Brian O'Driscoll have backed Wales captain Alun Wyn Jones to lead the Lions tour to New Zealand.\n\nJones' credentials put him \"out on his own\" according to Scotland's Hastings, who led the 1993 tour to New Zealand.\n\n\"I think Jones is showing his characteristics as a leader of men,\" said Hastings.\n\nJones led the Lions in the decisive final Test in Australia in 2013.\n\n\"He's a guy that's been around the block more than once. No-one else (is in the frame),\" added Hastings, who was also part of the winning tour of Australia in 1989.\n\n\"I think Jones is out on his own. [England's] Dylan Hartley's gone backwards a wee bit.\"\n\nThe Wales lock, 31, is also seen as a front-runner by World Cup-winning captain Johnson and Ireland's O'Driscoll, even though he only took over the Wales leadership on a regular basis in 2017.\n\n\"The front-runner has to be Alun Wyn Jones, he captained the Lions in the final game in 2013, he's respected in New Zealand and you have to anticipate he's going to be a Test starter. He certainly would be on my team,\" said O'Driscoll, Lions captain in 2005 and 2009.\n\n\"Alun Wyn is probably the front-runner at the moment but there's lots to happen between now and the announcement of the squad.\"\n\nFormer England lock Johnson, who was victorious on the 1997 tour of South Africa and also led the 2001 trip to Australia, thinks Jones' performance in the Six Nations defeat to England in Cardiff has edged him ahead of Scotland's Greig Laidlaw, Hartley and Ireland's Rory Best.\n\n\"All four nations captains have a chance, though Greig is out of the tournament which is unfortunate,\" Johnson told BBC Wales Sport.\n\n\"You've got two hookers, but I thought Jones played really well so maybe he'll have his nose slightly in front.\n\n\"He's an experienced player, been out there before, playing pretty well.\"\n\nThe Lions tour to New Zealand kicks off on 3 June, with three tests on 24 June, 1 and 8 July in Auckland, Wellington and Auckland again.", "This video can not be played.", "Making glasses and sunglasses fashionable has been the key to selling them at a high price\n\nSince their impending merger was announced in January, there has been remarkably little comment about the huge proposed deal to combine Essilor and Luxottica.\n\nBut there certainly should be.\n\nThese are two of the biggest firms in the lucrative international business of making spectacles. France's Essilor is the world's number one manufacturer of lenses and contact lenses, while Italy's Luxottica is the leading frame manufacturer.\n\nIt is not obvious that the merger is in the public interest, though the two firms certainly think it is.\n\n\"The parties' activities are highly complementary and the deal would generate significant synergies and innovation and would be beneficial to customers,\" says Essilor.\n\nBut there seems to be growing disquiet in the industry.\n\nGordon Ilett, of the Association of Optometrists, says: \"This now allows the [enlarged] group to control all aspects of supply of product - from manufacture to the end user.\n\n\"Those businesses who remain as their customers will be indirectly controlled by the terms and conditions imposed by them.\n\n\"Whether their UK market share, following this merger, is sufficient for examination by the competition authorities is open to debate, but the effect of it will be reduced choice for the consumer, and will most likely result in reduced quality products longer term,\" Mr Ilett adds.\n\nIf the deal goes through later this year the new company, to be called EssilorLuxottica, will become a behemoth of the industry.\n\nIt will sell not only lenses and frames around the world but will also be stocking its own optician's shops as well, such as Sunglass Hut, and LensCrafters in the US and Australia, both currently owned by Luxottica.\n\nOne long-standing independent UK wholesaler, who asked to remain anonymous, says the merged firm would be so powerful it would probably squeeze out some competitors.\n\n\"If those two companies merged there would be a branded frame supplier offering you high-end branded frames, and also offering UK opticians a lens and glazing deal, to suit, so they will control almost everything [they offer] to both independent retailers in the High Street and even the chains,\" he argues.\n\nThe international chain Sunglass Hut is part of the Luxottica group\n\nIn his view this would amount, almost, to a stranglehold on the supply of high-end glasses, with some rivals giving up.\n\n\"I imagine it would knock out quite a few glazing houses in the UK, and it would probably knock out other fashion frame houses,\" he adds.\n\nUnless you know about the eyewear business, or take an interest in investing in big European companies (they both have stock market listings) the names of the two big firms will probably have passed you by.\n\nBut if you have been inside an optician's shop you will certainly have heard of the brands they own and make. For instance, the leading varifocal lens brand, Varilux, is made by Essilor.\n\nJust a year ago, in presenting its 2015 financial results to investors, Essilor boasted that it was \"an undisputed leader with only 25% market share\" of the combined world market for prescription lenses, sunglasses lenses and lenses for reading glasses.\n\nWhen it comes to just the prescription lenses, it has a 41% share of the world market.\n\nFor its part, Luxottica owns several of its own brand names such as Ray-Ban and Oakley, and it also makes, under licence, spectacle frames which carry high-fashion names such as Armani, Burberry, Bulgari, Chanel, Prada, Ralph Lauren and Versace.\n\nIn 2015 the Italian firm made almost 10% of the 954 million frames that were sold worldwide that year, and claims that about half a billion of its frames are currently perched on people's noses.\n\nThe overall industry internationally is in fact quite fragmented with hundreds of other smaller manufacturers and related businesses such as glazing laboratories.\n\nMarket research firm GFK describes the optical industry as \"a complex and extremely competitive market-space\".\n\nEven so, with the two firms having a combined turnover of more than 15bn euros (£12.8bn), of which 3.5bn euros were in Europe, on the grounds of size alone the proposed merger easily meets the requirements of the European Commission for a formal review.\n\nAn inquiry would see if the merged firm threatened to be too dominant, thus reducing competition and leading to higher prices for the customers.\n\nHubert Sagnieres (left), chief executive of Essilor, and Leonardo Del Vecchio, founder and chairman of Luxottica\n\nA Luxottica spokesman told the BBC that the firm was confident that any scrutiny would not hinder the deal.\n\n\"The transaction is subject to mandatory submission to a number of anti-monopoly authorities including the European one, as is customary in transactions of this size and nature,\" he said.\n\n\"We are confident that the transaction does not raise anti-monopoly issues and will fully co-operate with the anti-monopoly authorities to obtain the required clearance,\" he added.\n\nThe EU itself says it currently has no comment to make and it has not yet been formally notified of the merger deal under the requirements of its own rules.\n\nBut the leading chain of opticians, Specsavers, views the impending deal with caution.\n\n\"Mergers are a continuing trend in optics, but this is a significant development which will result in huge supply chain and retail implications for the industry and consumers worldwide,\" the firm says.\n\n\"It is unlikely that the impact of the merger will be felt by consumers straight away but we will watch with great interest how the new organisation will arrange itself.\"\n\nIf you have ever bought a pair of spectacles with anything other than the most basic frame and lenses, you may have gulped at the price, possibly coming to several hundred pounds.\n\nEssilor is the world's number one manufacturer of lenses and contact lenses\n\nOf course, not all spectacles are expensive and not all of the sale price goes to the manufacturers.\n\nOpticians and the wholesalers that supply them are businesses that seek to make a profit.\n\nThey also need to cover the costs of staff, equipment, shop and office space, stock and all that advertising.\n\nBut for the manufacturers such as Essilor and Luxottica, it is a stonkingly profitable business.\n\nOn worldwide sales of 6.7bn euros in 2015, Essilor made operating profits of 1.2bn euros.\n\nFor the same year, Luxottica sold goods worth 8.8bn euros and made operating profits of 1.4bn euros.\n\nWith cost-cutting at a merged business projected to save between 400m and 600m euros per year, profits could be boosted even further.\n\nWill customers benefit as well?", "\"Would you consider going fur free?\"\n\nThat's the challenge Sia issued to Kanye West, hours before he unveiled his latest fashion collection.\n\nThe pop star tweeted her question to Kanye, linking to a YouTube video that contained harrowing scenes of rabbits being slaughtered for their coats.\n\n\"This is the reality of fur ,\" said Sia. \"It's so sad.\"\n\nWest's Yeezy Season 5 appeared to include both fur coats and accessories.\n\nThe most striking item was a floor-sweeping fur coat, showcased by hijab-wearing model Halima Aden, who was the first Miss Minnesota contestant to compete wearing a hijab and burkini.\n\nVogue magazine said the garments were faux fur, although the BBC has been unable to verify that report.\n\nModel Halima Aden posted a photo of her fur coat on Instagram\n\nIt is not the first time that Sia - who worked with Kanye on songs including Wolves and Reaper - has challenged celebrities over animal rights.\n\nLast June, she tweeted the same video at Kanye's wife, Kim Kardashian, writing, \"Hey @KimKardashian I think you're lovely. Would you consider going fur free? This is what animals go through for it.\"\n\nIn December, after rapper Azealia Banks posted an Instagram video apparently showing the remains of several chickens killed in a witchcraft ritual, Sia tweeted, \"Sacrificing animals for your gain is the wackest [thing] I've ever heard.\"\n\nThe Australian singer is a vegan and supporter of animal rights' group Peta.\n\nKanye's show won praise from critics, who called it his most \"demure\" show yet and welcomed the fashion range's expanding colour palette - he added blues and reds to the line's traditional black and brown colour scheme.\n\nKim Kardashian was among the guests on the front row for the Yeezy Season 5 launch\n\nKanye did not make the traditional \"wave\" to his audience, but posed for a photo with ASAP Ferg (outside the bathroom)\n\nUnlike last year's show - a massive production that required models to stand still for hours in the middle of a New York heatwave, causing some to faint - the Season 5 launch was decidedly low-key, with images projected one by one onto the surface of a giant black rectangle, from a live feed of models standing on a turntable backstage.\n\nPhotographers were not allowed - and Kanye didn't even appear to take a bow at the end of the 13-minute spectacle.\n\nThe audience, apparently conditioned to expect more drama at the rapper's fashion shows, remained seated for almost five minutes after the lights went up before finally shuffling out to their next appointment at New York Fashion Week.\n\nAmong those watching the launch were Kim Kardashian, Kylie Jenner, Hailey Baldwin, Zoe Kravitz, ASAP Ferg, Anna Wintour, Pusha T and Teyana Taylor.\n\nThe collection itself featured a lot of denim, paired with knee-high boots and a new shoe dubbed the Yeezy Runner.\n\nHoodies and bomber jackets also featured heavily, many sporting the Adidas stripes, while sweatshirts were stamped with the phrase Lost Hills - the name of Kanye's forthcoming album with Drake.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "It's generally agreed that eating too much fat is bad for you, but exactly how much damage it can do depends on whether you are a man or a woman, writes Dr Zoe Williams.\n\nEating too much fat can make you put on weight and lead to heart disease - especially if you eat too much of the wrong kind of fat, such as the omega-6 fats found in many processed foods. But now it seems sausages, pastries and cakes are even worse for men than they are for women.\n\nA recent study measured how the two sexes responded when they spent a week eating large amounts of these foods and how it affected their ability to control blood sugar levels. I wanted to test this diet myself, and in order to compare my response to that of a man I persuaded the person behind the research, Dr Matt Cocks of Liverpool John Moores University, to join me.\n\nBefore we started, our body fat was measured and our blood sugar levels recorded. We were given glucose monitors to wear to keep track of our blood sugar throughout the week.\n\nThe food which Zoe had to eat during the week\n\nIn order to have an impact in just one week, our diet contained about 50% more calories than we would normally eat. A typical evening meal included a couple of sausages, some hash browns, a few slices of bacon, and a lump of cheese.\n\nTwice during the week, Matt and I also drank a sugary drink to introduce sugar into our blood stream. This mimics what happens when we eat carbohydrates which our bodies break down into sugars. The glucose monitors would be able to show us whether the diet was affecting our ability to clear this sugar from our blood.\n\nWhen we looked at the results we saw that, like the women in Matt's study, my ability to control my blood sugar levels didn't get any worse on the diet. Matt, however, got 50% worse at clearing glucose from his blood.\n\nThe same trend was apparent in Matt's research, where on average men got 14% worse at controlling their sugar levels.\n\n\"One of the first steps towards type 2 diabetes is poorer control of glucose,\" says Matt. \"So what we're seeing here, is that I've really lowered my control of sugar, and if I continued with that for a long time, that would probably progress me to type 2 diabetes.\"\n\nTrust Me, I'm A Doctor is on BBC Two at 20:00 GMT, Wednesday 15 February - catch up on BBC iPlayer\n\nThe diet Matt and I undertook was extreme but in the real world the same processes will be happening to a lesser extent in people who regularly over consume unhealthy fats.\n\nSo what can men do about it?\n\nThe best advice is to eat a balanced diet but exercise can also help.\n\n\"If you have a meal and then you exercise, then you're going to start to burn that meal,\" says Matt. \"So say you eat a very high fat meal or a sugary meal, you can start to remove the negative effects by going for a walk afterwards.\"\n\nJoin the conversation on our Facebook page", "Last updated on .From the section European Football\n\nArsenal's Champions League hopes lie in tatters at the last-16 stage yet again following a first-leg battering at Bayern Munich.\n\nThe Gunners, who have been eliminated in the first knockout round of the competition in each of the last six seasons, twice by Bayern, not only conceded five goals but over 75% possession in Germany.\n\nTheir challenge lasted until the break thanks to Alexis Sanchez, who followed up his own missed penalty to equalise after Arjen Robben's superbly-struck 25-yard opener.\n\nBut after Arsenal lost Laurent Koscielny to injury early in the second half, Bayern ran riot during a 10-minute period in which Robert Lewandowski headed home before Thiago Alcantara scored twice. Substitute Thomas Muller rubbed salt in the wounds with a late fifth.\n\nIt leaves Arsenal with a near impossible task in the second leg and heaps more pressure on manager Arsene Wenger, who now only has the FA Cup as a realistic source of silverware in what will go down as another failed season.\n• None Is it time for Wenger to go? Read the social media fall-out\n\nThere must have been a feeling of deflated dread for Arsenal when they were drawn to face Bayern in the first knockout round of this season's Champions League.\n\nFor the first time in five seasons, the Gunners claimed top spot in their group (ahead of PSG, who made this achievement even more impressive with their demolition of Barcelona on Tuesday) but nonetheless they were drawn against the Germans - their last-16 conquerors in both 2012-13 and 2013-14.\n\nTheir fears were fully realised on a chastening night in Munich, which further highlighted just how far behind Europe's leading lights they have fallen and how little progress has been made since their visit here last season, which also ended in a 5-1 hammering.\n\nRobben gave early warning of the horror to come when he cut inside from the right and fired into the top corner from range following a move that had involved nine of Bayern's 11 players.\n\nHowever, with the gates fully ajar, the flood failed to come as Arsenal were granted an unlikely way back into the game thanks to Lewandowski's clumsy challenge on Koscielny in the box.\n\nSanchez almost spurned it when his spot-kick was saved by Neuer but after fortunately receiving the ball back, he produced a neat finish through a group of players to level.\n\nThe equaliser prompted Arsenal's best period of the game, during which they remained largely without the ball but produced two clear-cut chances, both of which were wasted as Granit Xhaka and Mesut Ozil struck shots at Neuer after being handed a clear sight of goal.\n\nThe optimism Arsenal had accrued from their encouraging pre-break efforts were dashed in a 15-minute period early in the second half, that began with Koscielny - their best defender - limping from the field and ended with Thiago putting the tie beyond them.\n\nFour minutes after Gabriel had replaced his captain at the back, Bayern reclaimed the lead as Lewandowski rose high above Shkodran Mustafi to meet Philipp Lahm's excellent cross and head home his 31st goal in 34 games for club and country this season.\n\nThe Pole then turned provider for Thiago, backheeling the ball into his path for a simple finish before the Spaniard quickly added his second courtesy of a shot that deflected in off Xhaka's boot.\n\nOnly some lax finishing, the woodwork (from a deflected Lewandowski shot) and a superb David Ospina save to tip over Javi Martinez's header from a corner prevented further goals before late substitute Muller scored with essentially his first contribution, collecting from Thiago before sidefooting home.\n\nMuller's late goal surely represented the final nail in the Gunners' coffin and leaves Wenger now facing an uncomfortable, undesirable truth - that his side's season boils down to an FA Cup game on a plastic pitch in Sutton.\n\n'It is difficult to explain'\n\nArsenal boss Arsene Wenger, speaking to BT Sport: \"It is difficult to explain. I felt we had two good chances to score just before half-time.\n\n\"I felt we were unlucky for the second goal. The referee gave a corner for us at first. Then we concede the second goal and then the most important was that we lost Koscielny. We collapsed.\n\n\"Overall I must say they are a better team than us, they played very well in the second half and we dropped our level. We were a bit unlucky we dropped our level and they were better than us.\"\n\n5-1 at the Allianz again - the stats you need to know\n• None Bayern Munich have won their last 16 home Champions League games, the longest winning run in the history of the competition.\n• None Arsenal conceded five goals in a game for the first time since November 2015 - their last clash with Bayern (1-5).\n• None This is the first time that Arsenal have conceded five goals in a first leg of Champions League knockout match.\n• None Arsenal have conceded 3+ goals in four of their last six first-leg matches in the last 16 of the Champions League.\n• None It's also the first time that Arsenal have conceded four goals in a single half since facing Chelsea in March 2014.\n• None Alexis Sanchez has been directly involved in 33 goals in his last 31 games in all comps (20 goals, 13 assists).\n• None Robert Lewandowski has scored 15 goals in his last 13 Champions League games at the Allianz Arena.\n• None Arjen Robben has now scored in back-to-back Champions League appearances against Arsenal.\n• None Goal! FC Bayern München 5, Arsenal 1. Thomas Müller (FC Bayern München) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Thiago Alcántara.\n• None Attempt missed. Joshua Kimmich (FC Bayern München) right footed shot from the right side of the box is high and wide to the right. Assisted by Arjen Robben following a fast break.\n• None Attempt missed. Olivier Giroud (Arsenal) with an attempt from the right side of the six yard box misses to the left. Assisted by Mesut Özil with a cross following a corner.\n• None Philipp Lahm (FC Bayern München) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt saved. Douglas Costa (FC Bayern München) left footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Thiago Alcántara.\n• None Attempt saved. Arjen Robben (FC Bayern München) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the top left corner. Assisted by Philipp Lahm. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Theo Walcott scores his 100th goal for Arsenal as he doubles the Gunners' lead in their FA Cup fifth-round tie against non-league Sutton United at Gander Green Lane.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "One, zero, zero, one, zero, one. Zero, one, one…\n\nThat is the language of computers. Every clever thing your computer does - make a call, search a database, play a game - comes down to ones and zeroes.\n\nActually, it comes down to the presence (one) or absence (zero) of a current in tiny transistors on a semiconductor chip.\n\nThankfully, we do not have to program computers in zeroes and ones.\n\nMicrosoft Windows, for example, uses 20GB, or 170 billion ones and zeroes.\n\nPrinted out, the stack of A4 paper would be two and a half miles (4km) high.\n\nIgnoring how fiddly this would be - transistors measure just billionths of a metre - if it took a second to flip each switch, installing Windows would take 5,000 years.\n\nLt Grace Hopper using a new calculating machine invented by Howard Aiken for the US Navy's use during World War Two\n\n50 Things That Made the Modern Economy highlights the inventions, ideas and innovations that have helped create the economic world.\n\nEarly computers really were programmed rather like this.\n\nConsider the Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator, later known as the Harvard Mark 1.\n\nIt was a 15m-long (50ft), 2.5m-high concatenation of wheels, shafts, gears and switches.\n\nIt whirred away under instruction from a roll of perforated paper tape.\n\nIf you wanted it to solve a new equation, you had to work out which switches should be on or off, which wires should be plugged in where.\n\nThen, you had to flip all the switches, plug all the wires, and punch all the holes in the paper tape.\n\nProgramming it was not just difficult, but involved tedious, repetitive and error-prone manual labour.\n\nFour decades on from the Harvard Mark 1, more compact and user-friendly machines such as the Commodore 64 found their way into schools.\n\nYou may remember the childhood thrill of typing this:\n\n\"Hello world\" would fill the screen, in chunky, low-resolution text.\n\nYou had instructed the computer in words that were recognisably, intuitively human.\n\nIt seemed like a minor miracle.\n\nOne reason for computers' astonishing progression since the Mark 1 is certainly ever-tinier components.\n\nBut it is also because programmers can write software in human-like language, and have it translated into the ones and zeroes, the currents or not-currents, that ultimately do the work.\n\nThe thing that began to make that possible was called a compiler.\n\nAnd behind the compiler was a woman called Grace Hopper.\n\nNowadays, there is much discussion about how to get more women into tech.\n\nIn 1906, when Grace was born, not many people cared about gender equality.\n\nFortunately for Grace, her father wanted his daughters to get the same education as his son.\n\nSent to a good school, Grace turned out to be brilliant at maths.\n\nHer grandfather was a rear admiral, and her childhood dream was to join the US Navy, but girls were not allowed.\n\nThen, in 1941, the attack on Pearl Harbor dragged America into World War Two.\n\nThe US Navy started taking women. Grace signed up at once.\n\nIf you are wondering why the navy needs mathematicians, consider aiming a missile.\n\nAt what angle and direction should you fire?\n\nThe answer depends on many things: target distance, temperature, humidity, wind speed and direction.\n\nThese are not complex calculations, but they were time-consuming for a human \"computer\" armed only with pen and paper.\n\nAs Lt (junior grade) Hopper graduated from midshipmen's school in 1944, the navy was intrigued by the potential of an unwieldy machine recently devised by Harvard professor Howard Aiken - the Mark 1.\n\nThe navy sent Lt Hopper to help Prof Aiken work out what it could do.\n\nGrace Hopper with Howard Aitken (middle, bottom row) and the rest of the Harvard Mark 1 computer team in 1944\n\nProf Aiken was not thrilled to have a female join the team, but Lt Hopper impressed him enough that he asked her to write the operating manual.\n\nThis involved plenty of trial and error.\n\nMore often than not, the Mark 1 would grind to a halt soon after starting - and there was no user-friendly error message.\n\nOnce, it was because a moth had flown into the machine - that gave us the modern term \"debugging\".\n\nMore often, the bug was metaphorical - a wrongly flipped switch, a mispunched hole in the paper tape.\n\nThe detective work was laborious and dull.\n\nLt Hopper and her colleagues started filling notebooks with bits of tried-and-tested, re-useable code.\n\nBy 1951, computers had advanced enough to store these chunks - called \"subroutines\" - in their own memory systems.\n\nBy then, Grace was working for a company called Remington Rand.\n\nShe tried to persuade her employers to let programmers call up these subroutines in familiar words - to say things such as: \"Subtract income tax from pay.\"\n\nShe later said: \"No-one thought of that earlier, because they weren't as lazy as I was.\"\n\nIn fact, Grace was famed for hard work.\n\nGrace Hopper was posthumously granted the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2016\n\nBut what Grace called a \"compiler\" did involve a trade-off.\n\nIt made programming quicker, but the resulting programmes ran more slowly.\n\nThat is why Remington Rand were not interested.\n\nEvery customer had their own, bespoke requirements for their shiny new computing machine.\n\nIt made sense, the company thought, for its experts to program them as efficiently as they could.\n\nGrace was not discouraged: she simply wrote the first compiler in her spare time.\n\nAnd others loved how it helped them to think more clearly.\n\nKurt Beyer's book, Grace Hopper and the Invention of the Information Age, relates many tales of impressed users.\n\nOne of them was an engineer called Carl Hammer, who used the compiler to attack an equation his colleagues had struggled with for months.\n\nMr Hammer wrote 20 lines of code, and solved it in a day.\n\nLike-minded programmers all over the US started sending Grace new chunks of code, and she added them to the library for the next release.\n\nIn effect, she was single-handedly pioneering open-source software.\n\nGrace's compiler evolved into one of the first programming languages, COBOL.\n\nMore fundamentally, it paved the way for the now-familiar distinction between hardware and software.\n\nDr Telle Whitney co-founded the Grace Hopper Celebration in 1994 to encourage women into computing\n\nWith one-of-a-kind machines such as the Harvard Mark 1, software was hardware.\n\nNo pattern of switches would also work on another machine, which would be wired completely differently.\n\nBut if a computer can run a compiler, it can also run any program that uses it.\n\nFurther layers of abstraction have since come to separate human programmers from the nitty-gritty of physical chips.\n\nAnd each one has taken a further step in the direction Grace realised made sense: freeing up programmer brainpower to think about concepts and algorithms, not switches and wires.\n\nGrace had her own views of why colleagues had been initially resistant: not because they cared about making programs run more quickly, but because they enjoyed the prestige of being the only ones who could communicate with the godlike computer.\n\nShe thought anyone should be able to programme.\n\nAnd computers are far more useful because of it.", "Grace, a recovering alcoholic, is one of 16 young women living in Amy's Place\n\nSet up in memory of the late singer Amy Winehouse, Amy's Place is the UK's only recovery house dedicated to helping young women overcome their addictions. The BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme is the first to go inside and meet the women aiming to go clean for good.\n\n\"I'm not that long sober, but I've come so far. You forget that my life was sitting in a homeless hostel planning how to kill myself,\" Grace says.\n\nThe 19-year-old is one of the first occupants of Amy's Place - a recovery house established by the Amy Winehouse Foundation.\n\nShe is a recovering alcoholic, and has been dry for just over a year. It is a marked turnaround from the life she used to lead.\n\n\"It started when I had my first drink aged eight, and by 12, I was sneaking around doing things that I shouldn't have been doing,\" she says.\n\n\"Between 13 and 14 I went into care, and that's where [the drinking] took off and I could be more sneaky about it, as I didn't have my parents around.\"\n\nGrace says she drank as a coping mechanism, but it soon became a habit.\n\nThe problem \"rocketed\" when she began living in a homeless hostel, until one incident shook her into realising the full extent of the damage being caused.\n\n\"It was in November 2015, when I took 57 antidepressants on a litre of vodka and a litre of [liqueur], and nearly died. I woke up frothing at the mouth, terrified.\n\n\"They were detoxing me in 'resus' [resuscitation area] in hospital and they told me, 'It's a waiting game now to see if your organs are failing or not.'\n\n\"It was four days of me sitting in resus hoping and praying I wasn't dying.\"\n\nWatch Jean Mackenzie's full film about Amy's Place on the Victoria Derbyshire website.\n\nGrace decided to take steps to overcome her addiction but living in a homeless hostel meant it wasn't easy.\n\n\"When your room was next to somebody who is selling drugs, you can never get well in a sense,\" she says.\n\n\"You're always stuck in the conundrum of, 'Do I go back to my old habits or do I go to a [support] meeting?'\n\n\"I was living a life of recovery in a using and drinking world.\"\n\nJane Winehouse says the house's potential to change lives is a \"wonderful thing\"\n\nIt is stories like Grace's that motivated Amy Winehouse's step-mother, Jane Winehouse, to set up the house - designed to help young women stay clean while taking their first steps without drugs and alcohol once they have left rehab.\n\n\"We met people in treatment who were scared to death of what was going to happen when they finished treatment [in rehab],\" she says.\n\n\"For a lot of them, all they could think about was, 'If I have to go back to where I was before, I'm just not going to stand a chance.'\"\n\nSet up in partnership with the housing provider Centra, Amy's Place is the only recovery house in the UK designed specifically to help women under 30.\n\nWinehouse died aged 27 in July 2011 from alcohol poisoning. She had previously struggled with drug addiction for many years and had spent time in rehab.\n\nIn the London house each of the 16 occupants gets her own flat, paid for using housing benefit. They can stay for up to two years.\n\nThere is a strict policy of no drugs, no alcohol and no overnight guests and they must agree to random drugs tests - Grace passed her latest one.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Amy Winehouse home 'has given me a future'\n\nAnother resident, 26-year-old Judith Heryka, is also working towards a more stable future, without drugs.\n\nHer main motivation is her children, aged five and seven. The catalyst for her deciding to seek help came when she was told proceedings would begin to take them into the adoption system. She says it saved her life.\n\nJudith had become hooked on crack cocaine and says she had become \"very depressed… bitterly, bitterly, bitterly, like suicidal, depressed\".\n\nAs part of the programme at Amy's Place, the women must take part in activities outside the house that can help them stay clean and prepare them for living by themselves.\n\nIt could be re-entering education, doing voluntary work or - in Judith's case - finding a passion, such as kickboxing.\n\n\"I can really zone out, do something that I love,\" she explains, while taking part in a local class.\n\nJudith says the house is \"100%\" the reason why she is managing to stay clean and the first time she has lived somewhere and felt safe.\n\nHouse manager Hannah Crystal says she is \"really excited\" to see the women progress.\n\n\"I think the girls here are going to get to a point where they're ready to move on,\" she adds. \"And we'll have new arrivals, and I think we'll keep growing from strength to strength.\"\n\nThe road to recovery, however, is not without its difficulties. Some of the women in the house have relapsed, and Grace admits she recently came close to drinking.\n\nThe house is working with Grace to help her achieve her ambitions. She hopes to become a forensic psychologist one day and at the moment she's learning woodwork with the charity the Spitalfields Crypt Trust.\n\n\"Before, [the future looked] very black, without anything I was looking forward to. Now I realise I've got a very long life ahead of me,\" she says.\n\nFor Jane Winehouse, giving the women the tools to change their lives \"is the most wonderful thing\".\n\nEspecially, as she says, the house is \"in Amy's memory\".", "An eclectic collection of \"exploded\" bric-a-brac suspended from the ceiling of a former church in Norfolk aims to keep the building \"alive\" as part of a conservation project.\n\nSt John's Church, in Great Yarmouth, has not been used for worship in about a decade. Great Yarmouth Preservation Trust now plans to repair and conserve the Grade II-listed landmark as a cultural heritage hub.\n\nIts first exhibition - Suspended between Art, Architecture and Preservation - features a collection of everyday objects suspended on fishing lines to give the impression the entire nave is filled with floating items.\n\nBernard Williamson, chairman of the trust, said: \"The trust is blessed to be the custodian of this charismatic community building.\n\n\"We have already undertaken urgent roof repairs... and are now seeking external funding for its light-touch repair and conservation.\n\n\"In the meantime, through using it for events, exhibitions and installations, we hope to keep it ‘alive’, allowing people to access it again and engage with it, the artwork and each other.\"\n\nThe eclectic objects were put in place over the course of a week by architecture students from the University of Sofia, in Bulgaria, who were in East Anglia as part of the trust’s partnership work to share knowledge about traditional buildings skills and conservation.", "London Fashion Week has traditionally only been aimed at women, but seven of the major catwalk shows this season have mixed in menswear.\n\nAdded to that, we've seen men modelling women's wear, unisex clothing brands and androgynous designs that would work on anyone.\n\nIt seems like British fashion is going through a gender revolution at the moment.\n\nNewsbeat meets the designers leading the way.\n\nIrish-born designer Jonathan Anderson started his J. W. Anderson brand as menswear in 2008, before launching his first women's collection two years later.\n\nHe designs with the idea that men can borrow clothes from women and vice versa.\n\n\"It's something that we play with each season, this idea,\" he tells Newsbeat backstage at his London Fashion Week show.\n\n\"We'll do a mac on a guy and a mac on a woman. They are the same thing, but on a man and a woman they can mean different things.\"\n\nJ. W. Anderson used androgynous looks in both his men's and women's collections\n\nAnderson is seen by many in the fashion world as a pioneer for taking this unisex approach years ago.\n\nAlthough he now presents his women's and menswear collections separately, he says he doesn't want to dictate who should wear what.\n\n\"I can give you an idea of how I see it on both a man and a woman, but I'm not going to tell you if it's for a man or a woman.\"\n\nThe artistic director of Diesel, and founder of the unisex range Nicopanda, Nicola Formichetti was also Lady Gaga's stylist for three years (yes, he was responsible for the meat dress).\n\n\"Fashion has always been about mixing gender, but now it's becoming such an issue,\" he tells Newsbeat.\n\n\"Now there are products like jeans and hoodies and military jackets that are becoming very very unisex.\"\n\nHe thinks designers have a \"duty\" to create clothes that every gender can feel comfortable in.\n\n\"We have a voice and we need to use it.\"\n\nJulien Macdonald's sequin-studded ball gowns are a favourite with some of the world's most glamorous women, including Beyonce and Gigi Hadid.\n\nSo it surprised some in the fashion world when he launched a menswear collection in 2015.\n\nAnd at this London Fashion Week, male models walked alongside women in tight-fitting sequin jackets and lycra bodysuits - looks that would traditionally be considered very feminine.\n\nHe says men are becoming more comfortable experimenting with the way they dress.\n\n\"We live in a metrosexual community,\" he tells Newsbeat.\n\n\"When you see your girlfriend going out in an amazing dress, you think, 'I want to look just as good as you,' so men do want to have fun.\n\nJulien Macdonald featured men and women together on his catwalk\n\n\"Nobody cares if you look camp or gay - you know what? Now everybody's got a mixed community of friends. It doesn't matter.\"\n\nRobert and Oliver are both menswear designers who presented their debut collections as part of the Central Saint Martins MA show at London Fashion Week.\n\nRobert Sanders, 25, uses layers of recycled fabric to create tunics, skirts and shorts that drape over the models in an androgynous way.\n\n\"I grew up dressing up in my mum's clothes, and getting negative feedback off people,\" he tells Newsbeat.\n\nOliver Thame's collection featured bold clashing prints, and tops with cut outs that revealed the torsos of his male models.\n\n\"I presented it on men, but I feel like it could've been just as well presented on women,\" says the 25-year-old.\n\n\"I think in this day and age, is there really such a thing as gender specific fashion?\"\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "The red Devbot 1 completed the race, but the yellow Devbot 2 crashed\n\nA landmark race between two driverless electric cars has ended badly for one of the contestants.\n\nThe unfortunate Devbot vehicle crashed out of the Roborace competition after misjudging a corner while travelling at high speed.\n\nThe incident occurred ahead of the start of the latest Formula E electric car race in Buenos Aires.\n\nThe other vehicle managed to complete the course after achieving a top speed of 186km/h (116mph).\n\n\"One of the cars was trying to perform a manoeuvre, and it went really full-throttle and took the corner quite sharply and caught the edge of the barrier,\" Roborace's chief marketing officer Justin Cooke told the BBC.\n\n\"It's actually fantastic for us because the more we see these moments the more we are able to learn and understand what was the thinking behind the computer and its data.\n\n\"The car was damaged, for sure, but it can be repaired. And the beauty is no drivers get harmed because... there is no-one in them.\"\n\nPhotos of the resulting damage have been published by an Argentinian blog. Roborace also plans to upload footage from the event onto its YouTube channel this Friday.\n\nThe cars communicate with each other to avoid contact\n\nThe Devbots are controlled by artificial intelligence software - rather than being remote-controlled by humans - and use a laser-based Lidar (light detection and ranging) system and other sensors to guide themselves. They also communicate to avoid collisions with each other.\n\nRoborace's organisers had previously showed off one of their Devbots speeding round the UK's Donington Park circuit last August, but this was the first time they had publicly displayed two vehicles competing against each other.\n\nRoborace intends to replace the Devbots with sleeker models when the competition formally launches\n\nEven so, they billed the event as a test run ahead of future plans to pit 10 teams of robotic cars against each other, each powered by different AI software.\n\nMr Cooke stressed that crash barriers and a limit on the Devbot's top speed had meant spectators in the Argentine capital had not been put at risk.\n\nAnd he added that another incident involving the winning car illustrated built-in safety measures.\n\n\"A dog ran on to the track, and the car was able to slow down, avoid it and take another path,\" he said.\n\nThe winning Devbot 1 managed to avoid running over a dog\n\nRoborace's chief executive Denis Sverdlov will reveal more details about his company's plans, at the Mobile World Congress trade show in Barcelona next week.\n\nThe company then intends to show off its tech again at the next Formula E race, in Mexico City on 1 April.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Last updated on .From the section Formula 1\n\nMercedes Formula 1 boss Toto Wolff and non-executive chairman Niki Lauda have signed new deals to stay with the team until the end of 2020.\n\nTheir new contracts coincide with the duration of Mercedes' own current commitment to F1.\n\nIn common with the rest of the teams, Mercedes will begin negotiations for beyond 2020 with new owner Liberty Media during this year.\n\nWolff retains his 30% shareholding in the team and Lauda his 10% stake.\n\nTeam boss Wolff joined Mercedes from Williams in February 2013, and Lauda took up his position in late 2012.\n\nThe deals conclude a busy winter of off-track activity for Mercedes, who have dominated the sport since the advent of turbo hybrid engines in 2014 with three consecutive world title doubles.\n\nMercedes have signed Valtteri Bottas as Lewis Hamilton's team-mate this season, with the Finn replacing world champion Nico Rosberg, who announced his retirement five days after winning the title last November.\n\nExecutive director (technical) Paddy Lowe is on gardening leave before his departure from Mercedes and is to join Williams in the coming weeks.\n\nLowe's position as technical boss has been taken by James Allison, who has been given the title technical director, a new role within the team as part of a slight re-alignment of responsibility at the head of the company.\n\nWolff has run the team with Lowe as his right-hand man since the departure of former team principal Ross Brawn at the end of 2013.\n\nDieter Zetsche, the chairman and chief executive officer of Mercedes' parent company Daimler, said: \"In 2013, we restructured the management of the team with the clear goal of improving our performance.\n\n\"Since then, however, the results have exceeded our expectations. A key factor in this success has been the combination of Toto's entrepreneurial skills and Niki's experience.\n\n\"Their renewed commitment gives our programme important continuity for the next four years.\"\n\nF1 has introduced major regulation changes for this season in an attempt to make the cars faster and more dramatic - and to give the sport greater appeal.\n\nThe cars are wider with bigger tyres and are expected to be between three and five seconds a lap faster than in 2016.\n\nMercedes' new F1 car will be revealed to the public on Thursday, before the start of pre-season testing three days later.\n\nThe first 2017 car to be unveiled will be that of Swiss team Sauber on Monday, followed by the Renault on Tuesday, Force India on Wednesday and Ferrari, McLaren and Williams on Friday.", "Sutton United are getting ready to take on Arsenal in the fifth round of the FA Cup.\n\nThe teams will meet for the first time in their history at Gander Green Lane in front of 5,000 fans. Millions more will be tuning in to watch it on BBC One.\n\nArsenal players are paid millions but Sutton's players get £600 a week.\n\nThat means many of them have other jobs including teachers, carers, personal trainers and builders.\n\nDan Spence plays fullback for Sutton but he also works at a special needs school as a teaching assistant.\n\n\"It's completely different but it opens your eyes and it's very rewarding.\n\n\"There's a good bunch of 15 and 16-year-old boys who love football.\n\n\"Every playtime it's like we're going to do Sutton versus Leeds or Sutton versus Arsenal.\"\n\nDan says his students are fully behind his team too.\n\n\"It's a great buzz around the place - a few posters are up - they're really supporting us.\n\n\"The day after training normally you go into work and you speak to work colleagues about what you've been up to.\n\n\"To go in after playing Arsenal and telling them stories about the game... it's going to be amazing.\"\n\nDan Fitchett works in an office and sells life insurance.\n\n\"I work there full time apart from training here twice a week in the mornings.\n\n\"It is what it is and it works well with football.\"\n\nThe striker admits playing for Sutton United - and playing against a Premier League side - helps him get on well with his clients.\n\n\"I ask them if they like football - and I might mention I'm playing Arsenal - it kind of helps with my sales definitely.\n\n\"And there are quite a few Arsenal fans in the office.\n\n\"It's quite a comedown when you're back into the office after playing such big games.\"\n\nGoalkeeper Ross Worner is on to a good thing.\n\nHe frames football shirts for a living and is hoping to cash in on his club's big game against Arsenal.\n\n\"I've been framing all the boys' shirts from all the cup games.\n\n\"It's something I quite enjoy doing, being a footballer myself I had shirts I wanted framed, so I got into it.\n\n\"If I can get a few (Arsenal) shirts in, it'll help the cash flow.\n\n\"All the boys already said whatever shirt they get they want it framed, so work should be good for the next couple of weeks after the game.\"\n\nJamie Collins plays centre back for Sutton United but for three days a week he's a building supervisor.\n\n\"Sometimes I get my hands dirty and do a little bit of labouring for the lads if we're short on people.\n\n\"It's a lot different from the football days but it's a good break.\n\n\"You work one day then train the next - so it's a good mix.\n\n\"My boss has been sympathetic and has given me some days off before the game.\n\n\"He's a Tottenham fan so he's hoping we do him a favour and beat Arsenal.\"\n\nArsene Wenger gets paid £8.9m but Sutton United manager Paul Doswell manages Sutton United for free.\n\nIn fact he even took out a personal loan to pay for the club's pitch.\n\nPaul has a property business with 100 employees so he says he doesn't need another job.\n\nHe loves football that much.\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "A team of British soldiers are preparing to become the first large all-female group to walk across Antarctica.\n\nThey will have to endure temperatures of -40C and walk for up to nine hours a day carrying more than their own body weight in supplies.\n\nExercise Ice Maiden is currently training in Norway for the 80-day south pole challenge in September. Among the many challenges is coping with extreme cold when you need a loo break.\n\nMaj Sandy Hennis, from Cannock, Staffordshire, said she hoped the expedition would inspire girls and women everywhere.\n\nCorrection 24 February 2017: This report initially said they would be the first female team to complete the challenge. In fact Liv Arnesen and Ann Bancroft achieved a similar feat in 2001.", "Pepper awakes. \"Hi, I am a humanoid robot, and I am 1.2m [4ft] tall. I was born at Aldebaran in Paris. You can keep on asking me questions if you want.\"\n\nMichael Szollosy, who looks at the social impact and cultural influence of robots, has just switched on the new arrival at the Sheffield Robotics centre, at the University of Sheffield.\n\nHe asks: \"What do you do, Pepper?\"\n\n\"Of course not,\" says Pepper, \"but that shouldn't keep us from chatting.\"\n\nI say indeed not, and ask what he thought of Paris.\n\n\"You can caress my head or hands for example,\" is the reply. \"Very Parisian,\" I observe, stroking the sensors atop of Pepper.\n\n\"I like it when you touch my head. Ah, miaow.\"\n\nPepper is slim white robot, with skeletal hands, a plastic body and big black eyes.\n\nMr Szollosy says: \"Human beings don't need very much to identify something as alive.\n\n\"So a couple of black dots and a line underneath and we see a face every time.\n\n\"People say, 'Oh he's smiling at me,' - his mouth doesn't move. But that's what humans bring to the equation.\n\n\"We invent these things. I say robots were invented in the imagination long before they were built in labs.\"\n\nThis project is less about developing the technology and more about examining the way we relate to it - most people working in this field are convinced Pepper and and his kind will have huge implications for all of us, changing the way we work, the way we live, even the way we relate to each other.\n\n\"I think it is going to be increasingly the case that robots do more and more of the jobs that people used to do,\" says the centre's director, Prof Tony Prescott.\n\n\"We have lots of Eastern Europeans weeding fields because nobody in the UK wants to do that. It could be automated. It's a perfect job for a robot to do.\"\n\nWe are now at a tipping point.\n\nThe advances in AI (artificial intelligence) mean robots can now do much more.\n\nBut it hasn't developed in the way people might have expected 50 years ago.\n\nA computer can do really clever stuff - beating a chess grandmaster with ease, and now winning at Go.\n\nBut a robot butler, which could make you a cup of coffee and run your bath, remains out of reach.\n\nTaking jobs, not terminating humans, may be the biggest threat posed by robots\n\nThe very idea of robots excites and scares. It is part of the reason behind this centre.\n\nAfter the development of genetically modified (GM) food, also known in the tabloids as \"Frankenstein food\", and the backlash against it, they decided some education was called for.\n\nMr Szollosy says people are frightened by the wrong things. He bemoans the fact that any story about robotics is accompanied by a picture of the Terminator.\n\n\"If artificial intelligence does want to take over the world, eradicate the human race, there are much more efficient ways of doing it,\" he says.\n\n\"Gun-wielding bipedal robots - we could beat them no problem. Daleks can't go upstairs.\n\n\"My job is to make people understand what not to fear but also explain that robots may well take 60% of the jobs in 20 years' time and that is of deep concern, if we don't restructure society to go along with that.\"\n\nProf Prescott hopes robots are part of the solution to a problem that haunts politicians.\n\n\"We have a shortage of trained carers, and it is often migrant labour,\" he says.\n\n\"Those jobs are very poorly paid.\n\n\"The quality of life for people in care is low, the quality of life for the carers is also low.\n\n\"I would like to protect the right to human contact in law, but people with dementia may need a lot of physical help and a lot of that can be provided by robots.\"\n\nMilo, with a chunky body and a mobile face under anime-style hair, is designed to mimic human expressions to help autistic children.\n\nBut some of those he manages I've never seen on a real person.\n\nMiRo is much cuter, looking somewhat like a dog, a donkey or a rabbit.\n\n\"It's designed to mimic the behaviour of animals,\" says Sheffield Robotics' senior experimental officer Dr James Law.\n\n\"For patients, particularly the elderly, particularly with Alzheimer's and dementia it is akin to pet therapy, which can have a lot of value for people who need more social interaction in their lives.\"\n\nStill MiRo is not very cuddly. Unlike Paro.\n\nI would say he's a very sophisticated furry toy seal, squeaking as you stroke his sensors, flashing big black eyes as you caress him.\n\nDr Emily Collins is interested in using such robots in children's wards, where real animals and even fur is a danger.\n\n\"I'm very interested in what mechanism is going on between a human and an animal which results in increased neuropeptide release, so they need less pain medication,\" she says.\n\n\"Being able to replicate that in paediatric wards, where you cannot have animals, would be fantastic.\n\n\"I don't see the point in a humanoid robot, apart from the fact people like the form and the shape.\n\n\"As soon as you make a robot look like a human analogue, people have expectations that the robot is going to do the same as a person, and we can't replicate that.\"\n\nMany car production lines have been automated, but what next?\n\nIt is a really interesting debate, and one that maybe one day we'll have to face. But there are far more pressing problem.\n\nIf Mr Szollosy is right and robots take 60% of the jobs by 2037, what does he think will happen?\n\n\"The jobs are going to go,\" he says.\n\n\"There is going to be greater unemployment. Maybe we need to recast our society so that becomes a good thing, not a bad thing.\"\n\nProf Prescott says: \"If people aren't able to sell their labour, then the whole market struggles because the people producing still need people to buy.\n\n\"So maybe we need to pay people to consume, maybe through some basic income.\n\n\"I think it is inevitable that we go in that direction. It's good news.\n\n\"The possibility now exists we can put over a lot of the work we don't like to robots and AIs.\"\n\nThe idea of \"the basic\" would face huge political opposition.\n\nBut it's worth noting that many who work in the field think there are few alternatives, even if there has to be an economic crisis before it's taken seriously.\n\nThis is not the same as interesting questions for the future about robot rights or consciousness - these problems are coming toward us with, well, the speed and ferocity of the Terminator.\n\nMainstream politicians are only just beginning to take notice.\n\nYou can hear Mark Mardell's report for The World This Weekend, plus a debate about what the future holds for robots and jobs, via BBC iPlayer.", "David Bowie already has a plaque but who else deserves one?\n\nRock and pop's most influential figures are to be honoured with blue plaques on BBC Music Day this year - and you can decide who gets one.\n\nOver the next week, every BBC local radio station in England and the Channel Islands is accepting nominations for a local artist (or venue) that changed the course of musical history.\n\nThe winners will be honoured with a plaque on a building where they lived or a venue where they became famous.\n\nTo be considered the nominee must be:\n\nThe candidates will be submitted to The British Plaque Trust - and the 40 recipients will be unveiled on Friday, 9 June as part of BBC Music Day.\n\nSurprisingly few pop musicians have one - with a notable exception being David Bowie, who is honoured at the location of the photoshoot for The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust in London's West End.\n\nBut who else deserves one? To get you thinking, here are five people and places that could benefit from a blue plaque.\n\nLong before he could grow that designer stubble, George Michael met Andrew Ridgeley at Bushey Meads school and pop history changed forever.\n\nBonding over a love of music, the duo initially formed a five-piece band called The Executive, who played everything from ska to Beethoven's Fur Elise.\n\nTheir friendship was vital in sustaining George through the whirlwind success of Wham! and eventually giving him the courage to go solo.\n\nEstimated to be more than 100 million years old, Peak Cavern is undoubtedly the oldest music venue in the UK.\n\nThe natural limestone cavern has hosted gigs by the likes of Richard Hawley, Mystery Jets and The Vaccines, who all benefit from the site's remarkable acoustics.\n\nFun fact: It used to be called The Devil's Arse (because of the flatulent sound caused by flood water draining from the cave) but received a more demure name in 1880, so Queen Victoria wouldn't be offended when she visited for a concert.\n\nWhile Queen were still a struggling young pop band, Freddie Mercury ran a stall in London's Kensington Market with drummer Roger Taylor.\n\nThey sold clothes and bric-a-brac, as well as a thesis Freddie had written about Jimi Hendrix while attending Ealing College.\n\nThe stall did well enough to fund the band in their early days - so much so that they kept it going after Queen released their first album.\n\nDelia Derbyshire is one of the earliest and most influential pioneers of electronic sound.\n\nWorking in a time before synthesisers, samplers and multi-track tape recorders, the musician, assisted by her engineer Dick Mills, created not only the original Dr Who theme but countless other experimental and ground-breaking recordings.\n\nShe was born in Coventry, but was evacuated to Preston, Lancashire, during World War Two. A blue plaque at either of her childhood homes would be a fitting memorial.\n\nNot the most rock'n'roll of locations, Beachy Head nonetheless deserves its place in music history.\n\nDavid Bowie filmed elements of the video for Ashes to Ashes there; and The Cure used it as the backdrop for both Just Like Heaven and Close To Me.\n\nIndustrial noise terrorists Throbbing Gristle used it in the deeply-ironic cover for their album, 20 Jazz Funk Greats; and, most famously of all, it stars in the final scene of The Who's Quadrophenia, where the young Jimmy throws his scooter over the edge of those chalky cliffs.\n\nTo make your suggestion for a musical blue plaque, you can contact your BBC local radio station via email, Twitter or Facebook; or email localmusiclegends@bbc.co.uk. You can also share suggestions on social media using #localmusiclegends.\n\nThe British Plaque Trust criteria is to commemorate innovative, influential and successful people who have died - but any genre of music is permissible, and significant locations which have played a part in our musical heritage are also eligible.\n\nThe initiative is not a vote - so the final decision on who or what the plaques commemorate, and where they are located, will not be based on the number of suggestions received.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "Few small entrepreneurs have a contacts book as bulging as Catherine Gazzoli's.\n\nBut then not everyone has enjoyed an illustrious career involving working as chief executive of Slow Food UK, a not-for-profit body that promotes and supports local food networks across the world, as well as running food and agricultural programmes for the United Nations.\n\nSo when Ms Gazzoli, 39, spotted an opportunity for a Mediterranean-influenced organic baby food brand, she was able to get some big names from the food industry on board.\n\nHer business plan for Piccolo developed on the kitchen table of Green & Blacks co-founder Craig Sams.\n\nShortly before launching the brand last year, she won seed funding from an impressive list of investors including food campaigner Prue Leith, former Pizza Express chief executive Mark Angela and ex-Duchy Originals boss Andrew Baker.\n\nCatherine Gazzoli has continued to expand the number of products in the Piccolo range\n\n\"It was important for me to have investors who knew the food industry. While I was coming from a non-profit background which involved helping the public eat better, I needed support in creating a company that would be commercial as well as have social values,\" says Ms Gazzoli, who was born in Geneva to Italian parents and grew up in Rome.\n\nThe investment allowed Ms Gazzoli, who left Slow Food UK in 2014 after a six-year stint, to set up a development kitchen for testing recipes. \"Sometimes investment gets a bad rap but if it's the right investment it can help you,\" she says. \"The directors involved have helped steer the company and have been extremely important in the initial success.\"\n\nThe funds also helped Ms Gazzoli to attract the right talent. Her recruits included Alice Fotheringham as head of nutrition and product development, who had previously worked with the leading baby food author, Annabel Karmel. And Kane O'Flaherty - a former Itsu and Metcalfe's Food Company's design expert - joined as head of creative.\n\nMs Gazzoli reveals how she managed to poach Mr O'Flaherty: \"I kept making him his favourite dish - a Maltese rabbit stew - which takes 24 hours to make.\" Whether it was the cooking or her tenacity, Mr O'Flaherty eventually left MetCalfe's to join Piccolo.\n\nMs Gazzoli's aim was to create nutritious, organic baby food packed with flavour. For this, she turned to her Italian roots. \"My family had a grocery store in the north of Italy and I grew up with a room just for making pasta, where ravioli and fresh pesto was made every day,\" she says. \"I wanted to include lots of grains, pulses and herbs to create variety and a healthy balance.\"\n\nPiccolo started with six products, such as fruit and yogurt blends, and now has 16 offerings including vegetable risotto and sweet tomato and ricotta spaghetti that cost between £1 and £1.60 a pouch. The range - most of which are made in the Mediterranean - will rise to 30 products by the summer.\n\nSince launching in April 2016, the brand has found favour from both retailers and consumers. Piccolo products are available from 750 stores in the UK including Asda, Planet Organic, Whole Foods Market and Abel & Cole, and has just started selling in stores in China too.\n\nTurnover for its first year is expected to reach £2m, but the Covent Garden-based company is yet to turn a profit.\n\nAlthough the path from idea to production may appear smooth, Ms Gazzoli says the reality was more challenging as she hadn't done any negotiations with supermarkets before.\n\nThe slide in the value of the pound following the Brexit vote has also created problems. \"We source from all over the Mediterranean, for example, apples from the Dolomites, and there's price fluctuations... prices are all over and it's a difficult time for grocers too. It's a very special time to be learning.\"\n\nA recent vegetable shortage has been another spanner in the works. \"I've had these sourcing issues and trouble getting products on time. I can't change courgettes to peas [in her products], so it's a very complicated scenario.\"\n\nCatherine Gazzoli's daughter Juliet is often in the Piccolo office\n\nLike many business owners, Ms Gazzoli has to balance managing a fast-growing firm with childcare, raising her three-year-old daughter Juliet. \"During the week there's no separation between my child and the business,\" she says.\n\n\"Juliet is often in the office, and if I'm stuck in a meeting the staff help me with the nursery run. They're both my babies and are both interweaved. Juliet loves Kane and Alice, she's grown up with them. I don't think you can separate when you're a start-up.\"\n\nHer \"very supportive\" Italian husband and his parents help out with childminding duties as well.\n\nPiccolo products have arrived on shelves as sales in the baby food sector are now worth about £700m, according to market research firm Mintel.\n\nDaniel Selwood, food and drink editor at trade magazine The Grocer, says that while Ella's Kitchen - the top baby food brand - dominates the market, Piccolo still stands out.\n\n\"The focus on Mediterranean variants makes it a bit different to existing players. It offers a good rate of new variants, and also Catherine has got some pulse in the industry from being chief executive of Slow Food UK,\" he says.", "The BBC's Quentin Sommerville joins government forces as they resume their push towards western Mosul, the last major stronghold of so-called Islamic State in Iraq.", "US President Donald Trump has sought to explain why he referred to a security incident in Sweden on Friday which did not actually happen.\n\nSchool librarian Emma Johansen tells the Today programme she was in charge of the official @sweden Twitter account on Saturday night and found herself fielding hundreds of questions from concerned people in Sweden.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The BBC's Pallab Ghosh reports: The invention means the ketchup \"just glides out\"\n\nScientists in Boston have found a way to get every last drop of ketchup out of the bottle.\n\nThey have developed a coating that makes bottle interiors super slippery.\n\nThe coating can also be used to make it easier to squeeze out the contents of other containers, such as those holding toothpaste, cosmetics and even glue.\n\nThe researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) believe that their innovation could dramatically reduce waste.\n\nIt is always an effort getting that last drop of ketchup out of the bottle.\n\nEveryone has their own technique. Some karate chop the bottle, others furiously shake it and many simply bash it.\n\nBut the MIT team has developed a system that banishes all that frustration.\n\nWhen incorporated into the bottle, it enables the ketchup or any other liquid to just slide out without leaving a trace.\n\nIn its manufacture, the container must first be coated on the inside with a rough surface.\n\nA very thin layer is then placed over this. And, finally, a liquid is added that fills in any troughs to form a very slippery surface - like an oily floor.\n\nThe ketchup hovers on top and just glides out of the bottle.\n\nAccording to Prof Kripa Varanasi, who developed the slippery surface, the technology is completely safe.\n\n\"The cool thing about it is that because the coating is a composite of solid and liquid, it can be tailored to the product. So for food, we make the coating out of food-based materials and so you can actually eat it.\"\n\nThe technology's co-inventor Dr David Smith told me that it could also help reduce waste.\n\n\"With the manufacture of these sticky products there is about 200 million gallons of material each year that gets stuck to tanks and then gets washed off and thrown away. And in packages there are about 40 billion packs with material stuck in packages so the technology has the potential to significantly reduce waste.\"\n\nSome people may miss the ritual struggle with their ketchup. But like it or not when the super slippery bottle becomes available in a few years' time, meal times will be a little less tricky.\n\nIn this demonstration, the paint container on the left is untreated; on the right, the paint in the treated container slips easily off the sides to the bottom", "Richard Longhurst, co-founder of online sex toy business Lovehoney, shares what he's learned from starting up the business.\n\nShhh! Get all the #CEOSecrets on our website here and watch this video explaining the series.\n\nTo keep up to date with the CEO Secrets series and go behind the scenes, follow series producer Dougal Shaw on Twitter and Facebook.", "Unilever is behind some of Britain's best-known brands\n\nUK-based household goods maker Unilever has rejected a takeover bid of about $143bn (£115bn), one of the biggest in corporate history, from US giant Kraft Heinz.\n\nThe deal - if it was to eventually succeed - would be the biggest acquisition of a British company on record, based on offer value.\n\nSteve Clayton, fund manager at Hargreaves Lansdown, said such a deal would create enormous cost savings.\n\n\"Putting portfolios of brands together can create huge synergies across marketing, manufacturing and distribution, even before you think about cutting the combined HQ back to size,\" he said.\n\n\"Kraft Heinz are attempting a massive push on the fast forward button, for to acquire the sheer scale of brands that Unilever represents through one-off acquisitions could take decades.\n\n\"With debt cheap and abundant right now, Kraft have spotted their opportunity.\"\n\nGlobally, it would be the second-biggest deal behind Vodafone Airtouch's takeover of Germany's Mannesmann AG for $172bn (£138bn) in 1999.\n\nUnilever announced last month that annual pre-tax profit rose to 7.47bn euro (£6.3bn) from 7.2bn euro (£6.1bn) last year, but revenues dropped 1% to 52.7bn euros (£44.7bn), while underlying sales rose by a lower-than-expected 3.7%.\n\nUnilever clashed with supermarket Tesco in October over its attempts to raise prices to compensate for the steep drop in the value of the pound.\n\nWilliam Hesketh Lever, founder of Lever Brothers, wrote down his ideas for Sunlight Soap in the 1890s.\n\nIt was \"to make cleanliness commonplace; to lessen work for women; to foster health and contribute to personal attractiveness, that life may be more enjoyable and rewarding for the people who use our products\".\n\nIn 1887, William Lever bought the site where Port Sunlight would be built, a large factory on the banks of the Mersey opposite Liverpool with a purpose-built village for its workers providing a high standard of housing, amenities and leisure facilities.\n\nLever Brothers and Dutch business Margarine Unie signed an agreement to create Unilever in 1929.\n\nKraft merged with Heinz in 2015 to create one of the US's biggest food companies.\n• None Marmite owner: 'No merit' in US takeover\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "An exhibition tracing the changing styles of Diana, Princess of Wales is due to open in Kensington Palace.\n\nDiana: Her Fashion Story will display iconic outfits from throughout her life - from before she was married to after her divorce in the 1990s.\n\nCurator Eleri Lynn said the exhibition showed how the princess was \"growing in confidence throughout her life\".\n\nA \"White Garden\" celebrating Diana's life will also be planted in the palace grounds this summer.\n\nPrincess Diana commissioned this tartan coat and skirt from designer Emanuel for an official royal visit to Italy in 1985.\n\nThe boxy style may have been fashionable in the 1980s but many commentators thought little of the coat.\n\nThis silk chiffon evening gown was worn by Diana at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival, and for a performance of Miss Saigon at the Theatre Royal, London in 1989.\n\nIt was created by Catherine Walker who took inspiration for the dress from the gown worn by Grace Kelly in Alfred Hitchcock's 1955 film, To Catch A Thief.\n\nPrincess Diana hit the headlines when she danced with actor John Travolta at a state dinner in the White House in 1985.\n\nThe velvet silk evening dress which she wore that night was designed by Victor Edelstein and was said to be one of her favourites.\n\nThis cocktail dress, which Diana wore for a concert at the Barbican in 1989, was considered an unusual choice for a princess given it was based on a masculine tuxedo.\n\nDesigner David Sassoon said it was an example of how Diana started to \"break the rules\" as she experimented with styles and learned what clothes worked for different occasions.\n\nThis sequined evening dress created by Catherine Walker in 1986 was said to be typical of Diana's \"Dynasty\" phase when the media noted her taste for \"large shoulder pads, lavish fabrics and metallic accessories\".\n\nThe princess wore it for an official visit to Austria in 1986 as well as two charity balls in 1989 and 1990.\n\nDiana increasingly worked with Catherine Walker during her life to develop what the designer called her \"royal uniform\".\n\nShe wore this red day suit created by Walker for her famous visit to the London Lighthouse, a centre for people affected by HIV and AIDS, in October 1996.\n\nDiana: Her Fashion Story will open on 24 February\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Stuart Bingham held his nerve in a tense final frame to beat Judd Trump 9-8 and win his first Welsh Open title.\n\nThe Englishman, 40, took the last two frames, sealing victory with a break of 55 to claim his first ranking title since the 2015 World Championship.\n\nBingham had led 4-0 in the early stages and came through a scrappy final session that saw a highest break of 63.\n\n\"Unbelievable,\" said the world number two. \"To get my hands on another trophy means everything.\"\n\nCompatriot Trump, 27, cut the early deficit to 5-3 by taking the last frame of the afternoon session and moved 7-6 and 8-7 ahead in the evening.\n\nHowever, Bingham got back on level terms and, after Trump missed an early opportunity in the decider, it was the former world champion who prevailed with a clearance.\n\n\"I honestly felt that Judd outclassed me from the word go,\" said Bingham. \"The first two frames were massive but it was only from his mistake that I cleared up and won.\n\n\"I've been knocking on the door since October, playing pretty well. I thought it wasn't going to happen here and hats off to Judd, from 4-0 down a lot of people would have crumbled and given up.\"\n\nTrump said: \"It was tough. I missed a few chances early on. I kind of threw it away in the first four frames.\n\n\"I missed too many easy balls and even tonight when I was getting back into it, I missed another easy ball. On the whole I did well to get back into it, it was just the odd shot here and there that cost me.\"", "Angelina Jolie on her new film First They Killed My Father - based on the genocide in Cambodia - politics and her family.", "CCTV footage from an airport in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, apparently shows the killing of Kim Jong-nam, half-brother of North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un.\n\nHe is believed to have been attacked in the airport departure hall last Monday by two women, using some form of chemical.\n\nPolice believe he was poisoned and are looking for four North Koreans.", "Angelina Jolie is in Cambodia to promote her new film First They Killed My Father, which is based on the country's genocide.\n\nYalda Hakim met up with the actress and her children to try some of Cambodia's unusual delicacies.", "Lucas Perez gives Arsenal the lead in their FA Cup fifth-round tie against non-league Sutton United at Gander Green Lane.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "Scientists in the US may have found a solution to one of the classic dinner table problems - getting every drop of ketchup out of a bottle.\n\nAs the BBC's Pallab Ghosh reports, they say it is down to a non-toxic coating that makes the inside of bottles super-slippery.", "A mother has told BBC 5 live that her baby helped spot her breast cancer after he refused to be breastfed.\n\nSarah Boyle first noticed a lump in her right breast in January 2013, but was told it was a cyst by her GP.\n\nShe was later referred for a hospital scan and a biopsy by her GP. Two weeks later she was diagnosed with grade 2 triple negative breast cancer.\n\nSpeaking to Adrian Chiles, Sarah said that her prognosis is looking good and she hopes to make a full recovery.\n\n\"I'm doing really well to be honest. I get on with it because I'm a mother.\"\n\nThis clip is originally from 5 live Daily on Monday 20 February 2017", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nZlatan Ibrahimovic came off the bench to score the winner as holders Manchester United had to work hard to beat Championship strugglers Blackburn in the FA Cup fifth round.\n\nStriker Ibrahimovic was allowed too much time in the box to latch on to fellow substitute Paul Pogba's pass and tuck in from close range to set up a quarter-final tie against Premier League leaders Chelsea.\n\nDanny Graham had given the hosts the lead with a rising finish following excellent play by Marvin Emnes, who himself had tested Sergio Romero with a thumping effort moments earlier.\n\nIn response, Rovers goalkeeper Jason Steele pushed away Ander Herrera's fierce shot, but Marcus Rashford equalised for the visitors by going round the goalkeeper and slotting in from Henrikh Mkhitaryan's precise pass.\n\nRovers striker Anthony Stokes had a goal rightly ruled out offside following Romero's triple save late on.\n\nVictory for United maintains their hopes of a cup treble this season, as they travel to Saint-Etienne in the Europa League on Wednesday with a healthy last-32 first-leg advantage, and face Southampton in the EFL Cup final next Sunday.\n\nJose Mourinho's side did not have it all their own way at Ewood Park and were slow and sloppy in possession, while struggling to carve open clear-cut opportunities.\n\nBut they had summer signings Ibrahimovic and Pogba to thank as the two players combined for United's winning goal, with the side now losing just one of their last 10 away games in all competitions.\n\nWorld-record signing Pogba, who reportedly said he left the club in his first spell after failing to play against Blackburn in 2011, picked out Ibrahimovic with an inch-perfect pass, although the home defenders should have done better to close the Swede down for his 24th goal of the campaign.\n\nIt was also Mkhitaryan's incisive, outside-of-the-foot pass which opened up the Blackburn's defence for the opening goal. The excellent Armenian controlled much of the match with his intricate passing and pacy forward play, driving a strike narrowly wide in the first half.\n\nHarking back to the old days\n\nPremier League title rivals against United during the mid-1990s, Rovers have fallen on difficult times since and find themselves at the wrong end of the Championship, in real danger of being relegated to the third tier.\n\nWhen once they could boast the likes of Simon Garner, Alan Shearer and Andy Cole in their starting line-up, this side is mostly put together from free and loan signings.\n\nNomadic front man Graham, acquired for nothing from Sunderland, has impressed this term and rolled back to happier times for Rovers with a well-taken effort after 17 minutes, turning Chris Smalling and striking high past Romero for his 12th goal of the season.\n\nGraham's spin and shot when looking for a second provided no problems for the United goalkeeper and winger Craig Conway was wasteful by lashing over the crossbar from a promising position.\n\nDefeat means Owen Coyle's men have won only once in five games and now turn their attention to preserving their Championship status.\n\n'We conceded a brilliant goal' - what they said\n\nBlackburn boss Owen Coyle: \"We gave a very good account of ourselves but nobody likes losing games. We did enough to get another shot at it today.\n\n\"We now have to show that display week in, week out in the Championship.\n\n\"We know we have good footballers here, nobody could see they are short changed by us when it comes to entertainment.\n\n\"We showed great spirit and courage to try and get an equaliser at the end and we will need those qualities for the rest of the season.\"\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho: \"Did they give us a good game? More than good, they gave us a hard game and congratulations to them. Their approach was brave, strong. They had real competitors and if we didn't have the right attitude from everybody we would be in real trouble.\n\n\"For long periods of the game you couldn't feel which one was the strongest team, they were brilliant. If they transfer this quality to the Championship they will have a big chance to survive.\n\n\"We conceded a brilliant goal. It was a brilliant goal. The movement and shot was really good, it didn't affect any player individually for us. We kept stable and we then scored a great goal.\"\n\nBlackburn travel to Burton Albion in the Championship next Friday (kick-off 19:45 GMT), while Manchester United head to Saint-Etienne for the second leg of their Europa League last-32 tie on Wednesday (kick-off 17:00 GMT).\n• None Zlatan Ibrahimovic has now scored in the FA Cup, Coppa Italia, Copa del Rey and Coupe de France.\n• None The Swede is now Manchester United's joint-top scorer in all competitions since the start of last season (24 - joint with Anthony Martial), despite only joining this summer.\n• None No Premier League player has played more games in all competitions this season than Ibrahimovic and Nathan Redmond (both 36).\n• None All five of Paul Pogba's assists for Manchester United in 2016-17 have been for Ibrahimovic.\n• None Manchester United have progressed from each of their last 11 FA Cup ties against teams from a lower division.\n• None Danny Graham scored his first FA Cup goal since January 2013, which also came against top-flight opposition (Arsenal).\n• None Four of Henrikh Mkhitaryan's five assists for Manchester United have been in cup competitions (three in the League Cup and one in the FA Cup).\n• None Marcus Rashford has scored four goals in his six FA Cup appearances for Manchester United.\n• None Blackburn have kept just one clean sheet in their last 11 home games in domestic cup competition (FA Cup and League Cup).\n• None Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Offside, Blackburn Rovers. Marvin Emnes tries a through ball, but Anthony Stokes is caught offside.\n• None Attempt saved. Marvin Emnes (Blackburn Rovers) right footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.\n• None Attempt saved. Anthony Stokes (Blackburn Rovers) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the top centre of the goal.\n• None Attempt saved. Connor Mahoney (Blackburn Rovers) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Willem Tomlinson.\n• None Connor Mahoney (Blackburn Rovers) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Attempt blocked. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Zlatan Ibrahimovic. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Bottlenose dolphins were filmed surfing in South Africa for Blue Planet II\n\nSir David Attenborough will present the sequel to 2001's The Blue Planet, the BBC has announced.\n\nThe seven-part series, to be shown later this year, will aim to highlight recent scientific discoveries.\n\nFilming innovations include suction cameras fitted to the backs of orcas.\n\n\"I am truly thrilled to be joining this new exploration of the underwater worlds which cover most of our planet, yet are still its least known,\" Sir David said.\n\nSir David said he was \"truly thrilled\" to be involved in the new series\n\nThe BBC's Natural History Unit spent four years filming off every continent and in every ocean for Blue Planet II, with support from marine scientists.\n\nJames Honeyborne, the series' executive producer, said: \"The oceans are the most exciting place to be right now, because new scientific discoveries have given us a new perspective of life beneath the waves.\n\n\"Blue Planet II is taking its cue from these breakthroughs, unveiling unbelievable new places, extraordinary new behaviours and remarkable new creatures. Showing a contemporary portrait of marine life, it will provide a timely reminder that this is a critical moment for the health of the world's oceans.\"\n\nFilm-makers captured giant cuttlefish in Australia gathering in their thousands for their annual mating aggregation\n\nAmong the recent discoveries caught on camera are a tuskfish that uses tools and a new species of crab with a hairy chest - nicknamed the \"Hoff crab\" after Baywatch star David Hasselhoff.\n\nThe Natural History Unit's new filming techniques include \"tow cams\" that can capture predatory fish and dolphins head-on, suction cams which attach to the back of whale sharks and orcas for a creature's-eye view, and a probe camera that can record miniature marine life.\n\nThe BBC said the crew caught unusual examples of marine behaviour on camera, such as a coral grouper and reef octopus with sophisticated hunting techniques, a giant trevally fish that catches birds in flight, and a dive with a sperm whale mother and her calf.\n\nA walrus mother and pup appear in the series, resting on an iceberg in the Arctic\n\nIt said the series would also explore new landscapes from methane volcanoes erupting in the Gulf of Mexico to the Antarctic deep at 1,000m, filmed using manned submersibles.\n\nThe Blue Planet was watched by more than 12 million people in 2001 and won Baftas and Emmy awards for both cinematography and music. The sequel will be broadcast on BBC One later this year.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester City manager Pep Guardiola wants his players to embrace the pressure of their Champions League last-16 tie against Monaco - even though he knows the club's critics will \"kill them\" if they do not progress.\n\nEx-Barcelona and Bayern Munich boss Guardiola has won the competition twice as a coach, and never failed to reach the semi-finals in seven attempts.\n\n\"To be here is not easy,\" he said.\n\n\"I want to convince the players to enjoy that moment. It is beautiful.\"\n\nWhile Guardiola's previous two employers have been European champions 10 times between them, City reached their first semi-final last season and have progressed to the knockout round only four times.\n\n\"People can think Manchester City have to be here but a lot of big clubs are not here,\" said the 46-year-old. \"We are lucky guys.\n\n\"Our recent history is quite good but over the long history, Manchester City was not here for a long time.\n\n\"All of Europe will watch us, to analyse us, to kill us if we don't win or say how good we are if we do.\"\n\nDe Bruyne 'doing well' despite fewer goals\n\nCity midfielder Kevin de Bruyne goes into the game having scored five goals in 32 appearances for the club this season.\n\nLast term - his debut campaign having joined from Wolfsburg for a club-record £55m in August 2015 - he scored 18 goals in all competitions.\n\nThe 25-year-old Belgian says he is not interested in the figures because he is \"playing better\" this season.\n\n\"It doesn't bother me at all that I haven't scored as often,\" he said. \"Not everyone sees I am playing lower on the pitch.\n\n\"I know how well I am doing for the team and if we can win a title, I will be very happy.\"", "Angelina Jolie on her new film First They Killed My Father, based on the Cambodia genocide, and also talks about her family.\n\nShe was speaking in an exclusive interview with the BBC's Yalda Hakim.", "The battle for western Mosul is expected to be slow and difficult\n\nIraq's campaign to take back the western section of its second-largest city, Mosul, from so-called Islamic State (IS) will be Baghdad's last major showdown with the group, which, at its height, had controlled a third of the country's territory.\n\nThis will also be the toughest fight yet, as losing its most cherished prize will present IS with an existential challenge incomparable to any other loss it has suffered over the past two years.\n\nFour months ago, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced the official start of comprehensive operations to retake all of Mosul - east and west.\n\nThe timing of the announcement of the latest phase of the campaign has more to do with rallying the morale of his beleaguered forces than any significant changes in military strategy.\n\nThe fight for the east proved more difficult and time consuming than the Iraqi government had predicted.\n\nThe initial hope from the Barack Obama administration had been that Mosul would be liberated before the handover of power in Washington.\n\nIt is becoming clear that liberating all of Mosul will take several more months.\n\nAbu Bakr al-Baghdadi appeared at the Great Mosque in west Mosul in July 2014\n\nIn taking the east of Mosul, the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) suffered considerable losses. According to Pentagon insiders, the casualty rates for certain forces on the front line was as high as 50%.\n\nWhile this figure is denied by Iraqi military personnel in Baghdad, the government is concerned with attrition rates.\n\nIn battle, a winning side could be expected to suffer a much lower casualty rate. Incurring considerably more losses would heighten the risk of combat ineffectiveness.\n\nFor Prime Minister Abadi, just as important as weapons and funding is ensuring that his fighters on the frontline maintain battlefield morale and so far they have done so.\n\nTime, however, is not on his side, as a prolonged campaign could erode troop resolve.\n\nMosul is the IS heartland. It was here, in the west, that the group's leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, made his first and only public appearance, at al-Nuri mosque.\n\nWhat has become clear from the battle thus far is that IS fighters will not retreat as easily from Mosul as they did in Falluja and Ramadi.\n\nTo them, losing the city means losing a capital.\n\nEven before the group declared its caliphate, it was an underground organisation with a strong presence in western Mosul.\n\nResidents recall that its fighters began performing public executions in the old market long before June 2014, without any punitive action from the provincial council.\n\nAnother challenge for the ISF will be the risk of civilian casualties. As many as 800,000 residents could be trapped in the densely populated and narrow streets. They are staying put as the battle rages.\n\nRather than fighting in the outskirt villages, IS is looking to draw the ISF to the urban centres of the west.\n\nFor the ISF, this means having to go door-to-door to flush out IS fighters, who are hiding among the population. The battle is already being dubbed the \"war of the streets\".\n\nIS fighters are also relying on car bombs, which drive towards ISF troops and checkpoints. The jihadists would send up to 10 suicide bombers per day in the east.\n\nTo divert attention away from looming defeat, the IS leadership is looking to make a show of strength elsewhere.\n\nWhen the ISF began operations in western Mosul, IS fighters launched attacks in the east, which Iraqi forces liberated over a month ago.\n\nBy doing this, IS looks to discredit ISF victories, and challenge the idea that Iraqi government forces are truly in control there.\n\nBeyond Mosul, IS has also increased its attacks in other Iraqi cities. This includes recently liberated cities such as Falluja, but also, the capital, Baghdad.\n\nThe July 2016 bombing in Karada district, for instance, left more than 300 dead - becoming one of the largest attacks since 2003.\n\nSince the beginning of this year, IS has killed almost 100 people in bombings in Baghdad alone.\n\nAlthough challenging, short-term military successes are the easy part. The key to a sustainable victory is the political settlement.\n\nUnlike most battles raging in the Middle East, in Mosul everyone bar IS is on the same side, albeit as uneasy bedfellows in some cases.\n\nThis includes Shia and Sunni Muslims and Kurds, as well as Iranians, Americans and others.\n\nThe various anti-IS groups in Mosul are uneasy bedfellows\n\nDespite that, each party is looking to gain the most out of a victory. This contest for power may squander successes.\n\nIS emerged not only because of its military prowess, but also because a considerable portion of Iraq's Sunni Arabs felt disenfranchised by the Shia-led government in Baghdad, as well as their own Sunni leaders.\n\nAlthough many of these original supporters have since grown wary of the harsh IS rule, they will cautiously re-engage with their liberators, in hope of a better settlement.\n\nPolitical infighting is the fuel that IS needs to survive, as military power alone will not do it for them.\n\nAt the moment, though, there are no clear signs of this settlement, as Prime Minister Abadi will have to juggle powerful competing forces all vying for influence in a post-IS Iraq.\n\nRenad Mansour is an Academy Fellow at the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House. He is also a Senior Research Fellow at the Iraq Institute for Strategic Studies, and lectures on the Middle East at the London School of Economics (LSE).", "A protester lobs a brick at police during protests in Washington during the inauguration of Donald Trump\n\nIn a divided America, two groups at the extreme ends of the political spectrum are doing battle online, and on the streets.\n\nThe alt-right - a disparate group of pro-Donald Trump provocateurs who critics say are bigoted white nationalists - has a reputation for trolling and online bullying. Now some believe they may have met their match in the form of a group of left-wing anarchists whose tactics are arguably more extreme.\n\nThey're called \"antifa\", short for \"anti-fascist\". The movement has its roots in 1930s Europe, but has had a low profile for much of the intervening period. Now the recent surge in nationalist movements across the globe has given it a new enemy to fight.\n\nAntifa activists say they are committed to fighting fascism and racism in all its forms. Some aren't averse to violence, and the movement wasted little time in making its presence felt. Protests held during Donald Trump's inauguration turned violent. Restaurant windows were smashed, a car was set on fire and objects were thrown at the police. More than 200 arrests were made.\n\nA Trump campaign hat set on fire by protesters during demonstrations in Washington\n\nBut the video which went viral that day wasn't of the rioters; it was one that featured the white nationalist Richard Spencer being punched by a masked man. Almost immediately mocking memes flooded the internet, including a number of videos of the attack set to music.\n\nFar from condemning the attack, many antifa activists revelled in it.\n\n\"Every time anyone replays that video, 11 million ghosts rejoice along with them,\" an anonymous activist who runs an antifa Reddit group told BBC Trending. The 11 million figure, they say, refers to the victims of fascist regimes through the ages. \"We as a society are so unwilling to condone Neo-Nazi philosophies ... that the video has become a part of the popular zeitgeist is a beautiful thing.\"\n\nNot surprisingly, the fact that an act of violence has been turned into a propaganda coup infuriated many on the alt-right, amongst them Chuck Johnson, an influential figure in the movement.\n\n\"We've certainly reached a very tribal point in the culture where people cheer on violence,\" he told Trending. \"Richard is not my favourite person on the right, but you should be able to give an interview on the street without being assaulted.\n\n\"I thought that was pretty disturbing to say the least.\"\n\nHear this story in full on the BBC World Service, or download our podcast\n\nLast week the alt-right got a measure of revenge when Johnson published, on his website, the names, dates of birth and addresses of the 223 people who've been charged in connection with the Washington protests.\n\nIn internet speak, this is called \"doxxing\" - publishing someone's details without their permission, potentially laying them open to the threat of being harassed by anyone with a personal or ideological grudge against them.\n\nIt's a tactic used both by the alt-right and antifa. Johnson himself is perhaps most famous for publishing the home addresses of New York Times reporters and trying to reveal the personal information of a woman who was subject of a retracted Rolling Stone article about an alleged campus rape. He runs another site which crowdsources \"bounty\" rewards for actions against liberals. Some of the rewards are offered for revealing personal information.\n\nJohnson defended the doxxing of the Washington protesters to BBC Trending.\n\n\"I don't have an issue with accused criminals having their addresses published,\" he says. \"I don't think it's a problem.\"\n\nThe antifa activist whom we spoke to was equally unapologetic.\n\n\"Antifascists absolutely do engage in doxxing active members of hate groups.\" the anonymous activist said. \"To ensure the safety of those who they would victimise from the shadows, we must bring them into the light.\"\n\nAt the same time, they don't like doxxing - when it happens to them.\n\n\"Many of those arrested in DC had absolutely no connection to any illegal action,\" the activist claimed. \"Now, they face the threat of harassment by the most hate filled elements of society.\"\n\nOnline, there's a constant cat-and-mouse game. On alt-right and antifa message boards there's waves of trolling, spies, and constant rumours about infiltration. But the fight is also happening on the streets. In addition to the Washington protests, in recent weeks there have been a number of incidents in which both sides say they have been targeted for attack solely on the basis of their political beliefs.\n\nNext story: The most eligible black woman in America?\n\nAfter 16 years, the ABC reality TV show franchise The Bachelor has cast its first African-American lead.READ MORE\n\nYou can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.", "Former boxing champion Spencer Oliver has described a suspected car-jacking attack on his friend and fellow former boxer Michael Watson.\n\nOliver told 5 live: “Michael has some burns when he was dragged down the road in the car. It was a crazy incident and thankfully no one was seriously hurt.”\n\nA police spokesman confirmed: \"Two men, aged in their 50s, informed officers that they had been sprayed in the face with a suspected noxious substance by two suspects who attempted to steal the car.\n\n\"The male suspects fled the scene in a different vehicle.\"\n\nThis clip is originally from 5 live Breakfast on Sunday 19 February 2017.", "Footage released by Syria Civil Defence - also known as the White Helmets - shows a girl being pulled alive from rubble, apparently in Damascus' Tishreen neighbourhood on Sunday.\n\nActivists have reported air strikes in two other neighbourhoods, Qabun and Barzeh, over the weekend.", "It's a delicious structure consisting of a small sponge with a chocolate cap covering a veneer of orange jelly. It is arguably Britain's greatest invention after the steam engine and the light bulb. But is a Jaffa Cake actually a biscuit, asks David Edmonds.\n\nThis question reheats a confectionery conundrum first raised in 1991. A tax is charged on chocolate-covered biscuits, but not on cakes. The manufacturer, McVities, had always categorised them as cakes and to boost their revenue the tax authorities wanted them recategorised as biscuits.\n\nA legal case was fought in front of a brilliant adjudicator, Mr D C Potter. For McVities, this produced a sweet result. The Jaffa Cake has both cake-like qualities and biscuit-like qualities, but Mr Potter's verdict was that, on balance, a Jaffa Cake is a cake.\n\nHe examined a dozen possible criteria. There was, for example, the name. They are called Jaffa Cakes, not Jaffa Biscuits. This, Mr Potter concluded, was a trifling consideration, though he noted that Jaffa Cakes are more biscuit than cake in several ways. They are packaged like biscuits, and they are marketed like biscuits: they are usually found in the biscuit aisle in shops.\n\nOn the other hand, they have fundamental cake-esque qualities. Thus, they have ingredients of a traditional sponge cake: eggs, flour and sugar. And when Jaffa Cakes go stale they become hard, unlike biscuits, which become soft.\n\nDoes size matter? Jaffa Cakes are more biscuit-sized than cake-sized. Linked to this, cakes are often eaten with a fork, while biscuits tend to be held in the hand. To test the significance of size, I asked the winner of The Great British Bake Off 2013, Frances Quinn, to bake the most ginormous Jaffa Cake the world has ever seen - the size of a flying saucer, at 124cm in diameter, weighing in at 50kg, and containing 120 eggs and 30 litres of jelly.\n\nTim Crane, Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at Cambridge University, does not believe that this XXXXXXXXXXXL Jaffa Cake is any more cake-like than its normal-sized Jaffa Cake sibling. \"These days you see all sorts of tiny cakes for sale, some of them much smaller than Jaffa Cakes,\" he says. \"And there's nothing incoherent about a giant biscuit.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. How do you make the world's biggest Jaffa Cake?\n\nThe immediate implication of Mr Potter's ruling was financial. But Prof Crane says the question \"Cake or Biscuit?\" touches on a profound philosophical problem. \"How do our concepts relate to reality?\" Which aspects of our classification of the world come from the world itself and which come from us?\n\nThere is no record of the 20th Century philosopher, Ludwig Wittgenstein, ever tasting a Jaffa Cake, though there is evidence that he was partial towards a bun. But his ideas are relevant to the Jaffa Cake puzzle.\n\nWe are tempted to think that every concept must have a strict definition to be useable. But Wittgenstein pointed out that there are many \"family-resemblance\" concepts, as he called them. Family members can look alike without sharing a single characteristic. Some might have distinctive cheek bones, others a prominent nose, etc. Equally, some concepts can operate with overlapping similarities. Take the concept of \"game\". Some games involve a ball, some don't. Some involve teams, some don't. Some are competitive, some are not. There is no characteristic that all games have in common.\n\nAnd there is no strict definition of \"cake\" or \"biscuit\" that compels us to place the Jaffa Cake under either category.\n\nPonder the philosophy of the Jaffa Cake in the Philosopher's Arms on BBC Radio 4 at 20:00 on Monday 20 February\n\nAnother temptation is to believe that all that is at stake here is an arbitrary issue of semantics. It is, the thought goes, a mere verbal convention whether one labels a Jaffa Cake a cake or a biscuit. It has nothing to do with the real world.\n\nThe distinction between statements that are true as a matter of convention or language (\"All triangles have three sides\"), and those that make a claim about the empirical world (\"It is possible to eat 13 Jaffa Cakes in a minute\") - is a longstanding one in philosophy. But in the middle of the last century the American philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine disputed whether such a rigid distinction could be maintained - and Tim Crane agrees with him that it cannot.\n\n\"Do you know what an Umiak is?\" Tim Crane asks? \"No? Well, it's a flat-bottomed Inuit canoe. So have I told you something about the word, or have I told you something about the world? Well, I think you've learned something about both.\" And if it's true to say, \"a Jaffa Cake is a cake\" (or \"a Jaffa Cake is a biscuit\") then that also tells us something about the world, i.e. about the properties of a Jaffa Cake, as well as about the meaning of the word \"cake\".\n\nBut could Jaffa Cakes be neither cakes nor biscuits - and instead something in between?\n\nIt may be interesting to compare Jaffa Cakes with people here, even though they differ in several ways - most Jaffa Cakes have no opinion about how they should be identified, for example, and most humans are not topped by a thin but scrumptious layer of chocolate.\n\nUntil recently, people have not been free to choose their gender, and have been restricted to being described as either male or female.\n\nMore and more discoveries in science are undermining this binary mapping. It used to be thought that men were defined by their having a Y chromosome. Now we know that whether an embryo develops as a male depends upon a single gene: the SRY gene. It's possible for a person with XY chromosomes to have the appearance of a woman if they are lacking this gene. Similarly, a person with XX chromosomes can have the appearance of a male if they carry this gene.\n\nThere are many genes at play when it comes to the male versus female development. Genetics, hormones, chromosomes can all combine to complicate a complicated picture. As a result, says Dr Helen O'Neill, a geneticist at University College London, \"I think we should revise our definitions of male and female, there are many gradations in between\". In fact, for some purposes, she thinks we should get rid of the male-female distinction, for example on passports. After all, she says, we are all homo sapiens.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Is it a cake or is it a biscuit?\n\nMultifaceted expressions of identity inject a further layer of complexity. Mx Pips Bunce, who is married with two children and works for Credit Suisse as head of Global Markets Integration Components, identifies as \"gender-fluid\". Sometimes Pips wakes up choosing to express as Pippa and other times as Phil.\n\nThe world at present is set up for binary categorisation despite as many as 4% of people now identifying as non-binary, according to some studies. Two obvious and tricky areas are bathrooms and sport. Pips uses the female bathrooms as Pippa and the male ones as Phil, whereas some people who identify as non-binary or trans would rather bathrooms were intersex. The topic of which bathrooms transgender people use is highly contentious.\n\nEqually contentious are intersex athletes in sport, like the South African Olympic 800m champion, Caster Semenya, who competes as a woman. Is it possible, or desirable, to break down the binary categories in sport - to introduce new categories perhaps? The idea is not preposterous. Boxing, with its different weights - flyweight, heavyweight etc. - is one of several sports carved up into more nuanced groupings than simply male/female.\n\nBut back to the Jaffa Cake mystery. Cake or biscuit? \"Definitely cake,\" says Tim Crane, echoing the judgement of Mr Potter. This is an assertion about the world, not just about language. A Jaffa Cake, in its essence, is more cake-like than biscuit like. Its cake features are more elemental than its biscuit features.\n\nAnd with that riddle solved, the Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy shrinks the world's largest Jaffa Cake by taking a giant bite.\n\nDavid Edmonds is the producer of The Philosopher's Arms on BBC Radio 4", "David Tennant's new West End role will show him in a new light, according to the play's writer and director.\n\nThe Broadchurch and Doctor Who star is going to be a \"real anti-hero\" in Don Juan in Soho, says Patrick Marber - the man behind Oscar-nominated film Closer.\n\nIt's been described as a \"savagely funny and filthy\" update of Moliere's 17th century tragicomedy Don Juan, with the action taking place in modern-day London.\n\nMarber says Tennant has been known for playing \"decent\" people in recent years, but all that will change when he takes on the title role.\n\n\"It's a great part for him,\" says Marber as rehearsals get under way at Wyndham's Theatre.\n\n\"I think it's going to be very funny and very rude. It's really exciting to see my play again.\"\n\nThe play was first staged in 2006, with Rhys Ifans playing Don Juan as the seducer who's hell-bent on pleasure, and couldn't care less about the consequences.\n\nOf the new Don Juan, Marber - who's also been an actor and comedian - says: \"It's a part we haven't seen David play before, really.\n\n\"The man is an amoral hedonist, and is wicked. You love to hate him, and hate to love him - he's a real anti-hero.\"\n\nPatrick Marber says Don Juan in Soho is 'naughty but nice'\n\nAnd, according to Marber, Tennant is funny - very, very funny indeed.\n\n\"He's always a great comedian,\" he says.\n\n\"When I met him 20 years ago, he was the best light comedian I'd ever seen at the time. This is an opportunity to give full rein to his comic skills.\"\n\nAsked quite how rude Don Juan is going to be, Marber replies: \"I think it's naughty but nice. I don't think it's shocking.\"\n\nIt's a busy time for the playwright. He directed the just-opened West End transfer of Tom Stoppard's Travesties, which enjoyed a sell-out run at London's Menier Chocolate Factory last year.\n\nFans can also see his version of Hedda Gabler at the National Theatre, with Affair star Ruth Wilson giving what Marber describes as \"one of the greatest performances\" he has ever seen.\n\nSo how is he getting through this hectic period?\n\n\"I'm getting as much sleep as I possibly can and drinking a lot of coffee,\" he says.\n\nTravesties stars Rev's Tom Hollander as Henry Carr, a man recalling his memories as a diplomat living in Zurich in 1917, and the people he met there - including James Joyce and Lenin.\n\n\"I think it sold out on the two Toms names - Hollander and Stoppard. It's a really nice combination of people,\" said Marber.\n\n\"It's not been on in London since the early 1990s. so I think there's some curiosity there too.\"\n\nHe described it as a \"very funny play\" which is \"about universal things like love, sex, art and politics\".\n\nIt is especially relevant in 2017, he added.\n\n\"At the time it's set, in Europe 1917 - exactly 100 years ago - the world is at war.\n\n\"It talks to that anxiety, that feeling that the world is disturbing and troubled. And it feels increasingly relevant, the play.\n\n\"I think that in troubled times, people want to be entertained, and it's a very entertaining evening at the theatre. It wears its politics lightly.\n\n\"It speaks to the soul and intellect, the heart and the head.\"\n\nTravesties is at the Apollo Theatre until 29 April. Don Juan in Soho is at Wyndham's Theatre from 17 March.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.", "A disused and forgotten platform beneath Glasgow Central station offers a glimpse of the past.\n\nGuided tours of the tunnels have attracted thousands of people over the past couple of years.\n\nBut plans are afoot to try and restore part of the platform to how it looked in its heyday.\n\nPaul Lyons of Glasgow Central Tours took BBC News on a tour of Glasgow's ghost station.", "Thousands of men wearing just loincloths gathered at the Saidaiji Kannon-in Temple, Okayama, Japan for an annual festival.", "Russian gold medal winners at the biathlon world championship in Austria had to sing their national anthem after an old, Yeltsin-era anthem was played by mistake.\n\nAleksei Volkov, Maksim Tsvetkov, Anton Babikov, and Anton Shipulin were handed the microphone when organisers played the old anthem.", "Badminton is one of seven sports to have lost appeals against UK Sport funding cuts for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic cycle.\n\nThe decision comes despite Marcus Ellis and Chris Langridge winning bronze for Great Britain in the men's doubles at the Rio 2016 Olympics.\n\nArchery, goalball, fencing, table tennis, weightlifting and wheelchair rugby will also receive no funding.\n\nHowever, powerlifting was successful in its appeal to UK Sport.\n\nIt means the sport's £1.3m funding will be managed by British Weightlifting and not the English Institute of Sport, as was the case before the 2016 Olympics.\n\nGB Badminton said it was \"staggered\" by the decision to reject its appeal.\n\nBut UK Sport chief executive Liz Nicholl said none of the seven sports had provided \"critically compelling new evidence\" that changed the assessment of their medal potential.\n\nMike Reilly, CEO of Goalball UK, said his organisation was hopeful UK Sport would find \"other ways to help us secure a clear and sustained talent pathway\" to Tokyo 2020.\n\nWheelchair rugby has been stripped of £750,000, and BBC Sport understands the Rugby Football Union (RFU) will not step in to increase support for its disability counterpart.\n\nThe RFU gives about £100,000 per year to the sport known as 'murderball', and England full-back Mike Brown headed a recent campaign to help raise funds, but there are now fears its elite team could fold.\n\n'It's going to be tough for the sport'\n\nCompared with the four-year build-up to the Rio Games, badminton is the biggest loser in cash terms, as it was given £5.7m last time.\n\nThe cut comes despite the sport hitting its medal target thanks to Ellis and Langridge winning only Britain's third Olympic badminton medal.\n\nIt is heart-wrenching - we're super devastated Gail Emms, who won an Olympic badminton silver medal in 2004\n\nGB Badminton said in a statement: \"Given the strength of evidence we were able to present to justify investment, we cannot believe UK Sport has concluded they should stand by their decision and award zero funding to our GB programme.\n\n\"We have players who are on track to win medals for the nation at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and our belief in those players remains as great as it's ever been. We will now take some time to consider our next steps.\"\n\nGail Emms, a silver medallist for Great Britain at Athens 2004, said she was \"gutted\".\n\nShe said: \"It is heart-wrenching. It was bad enough in December when the initial decision was made but now we are super devastated.\n\n\"The players out there were really pinning their hopes on this. I was such an optimist; I thought it was going to be OK. We put forward a strong case. It is going to be tough now for the sport.\"\n\nUK Sport's money has transformed Britain into an Olympic and Paralympic superpower, but its 'no-compromise' approach is under more scrutiny than ever.\n\nWith falling ticket sales hitting crucial National Lottery funding, resources are undoubtedly stretched but, for the first time, sports with real podium potential are being excluded from funding, and many are now asking whether the focus on medals has gone too far.\n\nHow have the other sports reacted?\n\nTable tennis was another sport to be disappointed, despite Britain winning a bronze medal at the 2016 World Team Championships.\n\nSara Sutcliffe, Table Tennis England chief executive, said: \"We're naturally disappointed, having made what we believe was a very strong case for a relatively small amount of funding.\n\n\"We overachieved on everything we were asked to do in the 2016 cycle, and did so without funding. We were left without funding because, effectively, the goalposts were moved. We will take time to absorb this decision before we decide on the best course of action.\"\n\nGeorgina Usher, chief executive of British Fencing, said the organisation would try to hold fundraising events to support its athletes.\n\n\"This has been an incredibly difficult period for the athletes and programme staff,\" she said.\n\n\"Our staff, coaches and athletes have worked incredibly hard to have got to the point where we are absolutely good enough to target an Olympic medal. Having to explain to them why the programme funding will be coming to an end is extremely tough.\n\n\"We will be appealing against this decision as we owe it to our athletes to pursue every avenue open to us to challenge this funding decision process.\"\n\nGoalball chief executive Reilly was more upbeat, saying: \"Though we did not fit the UK Sport criteria to move up categories, and so secure funding, we were very much encouraged by their response to our representation.\n\n\"There is certainly a sense of the board understanding the difficulties we face and an acknowledgement of our incredible success.\"\n\n'We don't take these decisions lightly' - UK Sport's reaction\n\nNicholl said: \"The sports that made representations were unable to provide any critically compelling new evidence that changed our assessment of their medal potential for Tokyo.\n\n\"Their position in our meritocratic table therefore remains unchanged and they remain in a band we cannot afford to invest in.\n\n\"This is the first time we've been unable to support every sport that has athletes with the potential to deliver medals at the next Games. We don't take these decisions lightly as we're acutely aware of the impact they have on sports, athletes and support personnel.\n\n\"To support those affected, we have put in place a comprehensive transition and support package and are working closely with these sports to help staff and athletes move out of UK Sport funding.\"\n\nWhat is the background?\n\nIn December, UK Sport announced the funding for the cycles for the Olympics and Paralympics in Tokyo in 2020.\n\nArchery, badminton, fencing, goalball, table tennis, weightlifting and wheelchair rugby appealed to UK Sport to review the decision on what they had been awarded.\n\nUK Sport says it must prioritise sports with the strongest medal potential for Tokyo and the appeal process was essentially a second opportunity for officials to demonstrate why they deserve funding.\n\nA total of £345m will be invested in 31 Olympic and Paralympic sports - £2m less than the record £347m allocated for the Rio Games.\n\nUK Sport has set Team GB a target of winning between 51 and 85 Olympic medals, and 115 to 162 Paralympic medals in 2020.\n\nUnderstandably, the headlines will be dominated by news of the seven sports - including British Weightlifting's Olympics team - who have not been able to overturn UK Sport's initial funding decisions.\n\nHowever, the victory for British Weightlifting's Paralympic programme should not be overlooked. UK Sport had planned to move control of the funding award for the disability sport set-up to the English Institute of Sport (EIS). This would not only have seen the closure of the entire GB Weightlifting programme (for Olympic and Paralympic athletes), but also potentially set a new precedent for how funding could be allocated in the future.\n\nThe EIS is essentially an extended arm of UK Sport - looking after anything from nutrition to physiotherapy and athlete lifestyle/welfare. Figures from several other Olympic and Paralympic sports have told me of their concerns about what giving EIS greater power would have meant for future funding decisions beyond Tokyo.\n\nAs it stands, those concerns will have been allayed somewhat - but it will be interesting to see whether UK Sport will continue to push in this direction and essentially seek greater control and governance of the funding it awards over each four-year-cycle.", "The sister of the young man who was allegedly sexually assaulted by French police, has spoken to the BBC.\n\nEleanor has said that there will be further violence unless justice is seen to be done.", "Alec Jones aspires to one day work for 'exciting' tech giants\n\nIt's been nearly a year since Microsoft's Satya Nadella proclaimed \"bots are the new apps\".\n\nYet despite the promise of a revolution in how we interact with services and companies online, progress has been utterly miserable - the vast majority of chatbots are gimmicky, pointless or just flat out broken.\n\nBut this week I was given great cause for optimism, in the form of Alec Jones, a 14-year-old from Victoria, Canada.\n\nFor the past six months, Alec been working on Christopher Bot, a chatbot that helps students keep track of homework they've been given over the course of a week.\n\nTo set things up, a student shares his or her schedule with Christopher Bot, and from then on it will send a quick message at the end of each lesson asking if any homework had been set.\n\n\"Do you have homework for maths?\" it asked 30-year-old me pretending to be a child for the sake of this piece.\n\n\"Your teacher needs to chill out on the homework,\" came the auto-response, adding, \"what homework do you have?\"\n\nThe chatbot takes answers in from messages and adds it to a homework schedule\n\nThrough this interface, I'm able easily insert \"algebra\" - urgh - into a weekly schedule that I can then refer back to at any point to see what I need to get done.\n\nOnce I complete a piece of homework, I tell Christopher Bot, and it congratulates me, automatically removing the homework from my list of things to do. The best bit? The bot keeps quiet during the holidays.\n\nWhat makes me so impressed by this is that, of all the experiments I've seen so far, it is the first time a chatbot has genuinely been the best way to tackle a problem.\n\nOther chatbots are a lesser experience of something else. The CNN news chatbot, for example, is worse at giving you the news than any of CNN’s other products.\n\nAnd popular weather bot Poncho, while cute and well-branded, has a habit of telling me it's about to rain five minutes after water started falling on my head.\n\nBut Christopher Bot shows the potential for producing a service that is completely at home within chat - removing the need for students to access some extra tool to keep track of what needs doing, and interacting in a way that (slightly) lessens the unavoidable chore of homework.\n\n\"I wanted it to not just sound like a robot,\" Alec told me.\n\n\"I wanted it to sound kind of like my friends would. If you get homework, everyone always just shakes their heads and says 'that sucks'.\"\n\nAnd it does this within an app his friends are already likely using (though perhaps Snapchat would be a more useful place for it, one day).\n\nIn short, it's a product those companies banking on chatbots being a winner should seek to emulate.\n\nIt's extremely difficult, for now, to measure the success of chatbots. Ad industry magazine AdAge noted that: \"Bot analytics and bot-building software companies all have shortcomings, largely because this technology is in its infancy.\n\n\"Few benchmarks exist, especially when trying to compare data across platforms.\"\n\nSo without data, we can't say what's working just yet - though there are some clues to what isn't.\n\nGoogle's AI-powered messaging app Allo, since being launched to much fanfare last year, has failed to make even a minor dent in a messaging app market dominated by Whatsapp and Facebook Messenger.\n\nAnd that's because there's no compelling reason to bother with Allo. None of its features - like asking it for directions - provide enough of a benefit beyond what you'd get from just tapping in your request the \"old fashioned\" way. Users have an incredibly short fuse for chatbots not working exactly as we expect.\n\nMost big companies are missing the point, Alec told me. \"There are a lot of chatbots made by these big companies that are supposed to help you interact with their service more and give you more functionality,\" he said.\n\n\"But it feels like they just saw this new platform, bots, and thought 'oh that's cool, people are looking at these now, let's build a bot'.\n\n\"It feels like they've just made a compromised version of what they're actually trying to build.\"\n\nEarlier this week, Alec's bot was shared on Product Hunt, a website I profiled recently, where it gained rave reviews and a fair share of feature requests.\n\n\"You're solving a problem many students have,\" read one reply.\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Mark Zuckerberg said bots offered advantages over using dozens of specialised apps\n\n\"Fellow 14 year old here,\" began another. \"Great job man! That's sick that you’re my age and made such a cool and useful product. Awesome!\"\n\nLike any good developer, Alec has aspirations to build on the what he’s made - he wants to make it work for people in the working world, too.\n\nBut first he feels Facebook and others must do more to prove the usefuless of chatbots to people.\n\n\"I think that the real problem is that not enough people on Facebook who aren't 'techies' don't know what a bot is, and then they don't use it. More people need to know what a bot is,\" he said.\n\nWhen Mark Zuckerberg took to the stage in front of his developers last year, he said he was opening up Messenger so that anybody could make great apps. I bet he didn’t think it would be a 14-year-old who would show him how it’s done.\n\nFollow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook", "At a different time, in another country, it was effectively a death sentence.\n\nBeing branded an \"enemy of the people\" by the likes of Stalin or Mao brought at best suspicion and stigma, at worst hard labour or death.\n\nNow the chilling phrase - which is at least as old as Emperor Nero, who was called \"hostis publicus\", enemy of the public, by the Senate in AD 68 - is making something of a comeback.\n\nIn November, the UK Daily Mail used its entire front page to brand three judges \"enemies of the people\" following a legal ruling on the Brexit process.\n\nThen on Friday, President Donald Trump deployed the epithet against mainstream US media outlets that he sees as hostile.\n\n\"The FAKE NEWS media (failing New York Times, NBC News, ABC, CBS, CNN) is not my enemy, it is the enemy of the American People!\" he wrote on Twitter.\n\nThe reaction was swift. \"Every president is irritated by the news media. No other president would have described the media as 'the enemy of the people'\", tweeted David Axelrod, a former adviser to President Barack Obama.\n\nGabriel Sherman, national affairs editor at New York magazine, called the phrase a \"chilling\" example of \"full-on dictator speak\".\n\nSteve Silberman, an award-winning writer and journalist, wondered whether the remark would prompt Trump supporters to shoot at journalists.\n\nAnd that might not be a far-fetched concern. Late last year, a Trump supporter opened fire in a pizza restaurant at the centre of a bizarre conspiracy theory about child abuse.\n\nThe US president's use of \"enemies of the people\" raises unavoidable echoes of some of history's most murderous dictators.\n\nUnder Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, out-of-favour artists and politicians were designated enemies and many were sent to hard labour camps or killed. Others were stigmatised and denied access to education and employment.\n\nAnd Chairman Mao, the leader of China who presided over the deaths of millions of people in a famine brought about by his Great Leap Forward, was also known to use the phrase against anyone who opposed him, with terrible consequences.\n\nThe president was widely criticised for his choice of words.\n\n\"Charming that our uneducated President manages to channel the words of Stalin and fails to hear the historical resonance of this phrase,\" tweeted Mitchell Orenstein, a professor of Russian and East European studies at the University of Pennsylvania.\n\nCarl Bernstein, a reporter who helped to bring down Richard Nixon with his reporting on the Watergate scandal, tweeted: \"The most dangerous 'enemy of the people' is presidential lying - always. Attacks on press by Donald Trump more treacherous than Nixon's.\"\n\nMr Trump is not the first US president to have an antagonistic relationship with the media - Nixon is known to have privately referred to the press as \"the enemy\" - but his latest broadside, with all its attendant historical echoes, is unprecedented.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nNewcastle United scored a goal in each half to beat Aston Villa and go a point clear at the top of the Championship.\n\nYoan Gouffran netted the opener from four yards and another goalmouth scramble resulted in Henri Lansbury turning the ball into his own net.\n\nBut Newcastle's victory was soured by the loss of top scorer Dwight Gayle, who limped off after 33 minutes.\n\nVilla striker Scott Hogan was carried off on a stretcher late on and they are now winless in nine league matches.\n\nHogan, who cost £12m from Brentford in January, landed awkwardly after challenging for a header at a late Villa corner.\n\nGayle - the Championship's leading scorer with 20 league goals this season - appeared to suffer a recurrence of the hamstring problem which had kept him out for six matches.\n\nVilla remain six points above the relegation zone, having collected only one point in 2017, although Steve Bruce's side had more than matched the Magpies until they fell behind.\n\nIceland midfielder Birkir Bjarnason went closest for the visitors, failing to hook in Hogan's flick-on from close range and later having a shot saved by Karl Darlow.\n\nNewcastle's opening goal came soon after Gayle's departure, with Villa failing to properly clear a Matt Ritchie cross and French winger Gouffran tapping in.\n\nAfter that, the hosts took control and often looked likely to extend their lead, although the second goal which took them above Brighton in the table came in fortunate circumstances.\n\nJamaal Lascelles met Jonjo Shelvey's corner and his effort hit Lansbury, who was stationed at the near post, before ricocheting into the net.\n\nNewcastle manager Rafael Benitez told BBC Radio Newcastle: \"This is a very difficult division. Every game is tough and we were playing against a good team with very good players.\n\n\"They pressed well at the beginning and it wasn't easy for us to play how we wanted. We needed to score to open up the game, and after the second goal it was more open. We had more chances and more control of the game.\n\n\"Dwight Gayle seemed like he wasn't comfortable from the beginning and then he said he was feeling something in his hamstring. We don't know how serious it is. We have to wait.\"\n\nAston Villa manager Steve Bruce told BBC WM: \"Scott's injury compounded the night, because we obviously fear the worst.\n\n\"He's definitely turned his ankle over and we don't know how serious it is until we see X-rays and scans. The consequences of losing him are huge, but let's hope it's not as bad as what we think.\n\n\"I thought we were decent in the first half, Newcastle hadn't been near our goal, and yet we gave a poor goal away. After the restart, we've given another one away and the second one was comical.\n\n\"And the two or three opportunities we've had, we've not taken them. That's where we are at the moment.\"\n• None Attempt missed. Jonjo Shelvey (Newcastle United) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Matt Ritchie.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Scott Hogan went off injured after Aston Villa had used all subs.\n• None Delay in match Scott Hogan (Aston Villa) because of an injury.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Jonathan Kodjia (Aston Villa) because of an injury. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Stand-up comedian David Baddiel has invited cameras to film his father over the past year – to show the reality of his life living with a rare form of dementia called Pick’s disease.\n\nSymptoms include excessive swearing and inappropriate sexual behaviour, which means the comedian had to stop his children visiting their grandfather.\n\nThe Trouble With Dad is on Channel 4 on Monday 20 February at 9pm.\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Migrant workers have signed up to a labour boycott to highlight the role they play in British society.\n\nPeers are debating the bill to pave the way for the start of Brexit.", "The Iranian Foreign Minister, Javad Zarif, has called on the United States to stop threatening Iran.\n\nIn an interview with the BBC's Chief International Correspondent, Lyse Doucet, he said moves in Washington to prepare new sanctions were an effort to provoke and agitate his country.", "US President Trump invited one of his supporters on stage during his \"campaign rally for America\" event in Florida.\n\nWhile the Republican was giving a speech, he recognised the man in the crowd that he had seen \"on television just now\", and let him deliver a few words at the podium to the Trump supporters.", "Facebook's new bereavement leave policy was announced by Sheryl Sandberg\n\nFacebook last week doubled its bereavement leave allowance for its staff. Employees can now take up to 20 days off with pay to mourn the death of an immediate family member.\n\nThe new policy was announced by Facebook's chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, who has spoken publicly about mourning her husband, Dave Goldberg, who died in 2015.\n\n\"We need public policies that make it easier for people to care for their children and aging parents and for families to mourn and heal after loss,\" Ms Sandberg posted on Facebook.\n\nShe added that companies that stand by the people who work for them do the right thing and \"improve their bottom line by increasing the loyalty and performance of their workforce\".\n\nThe move has sparked huge debate on social media and has been lauded as extremely generous. Is it enough? We asked the views of four people dealing with grief in the workplace.\n\nChad Andrews and his family returned home from an Alaskan cruise three years ago when his eight-year-old son, Connor, was rushed to hospital a few days later.\n\nConnor had mild flu symptoms that suddenly worsened. He was placed in intensive care but deteriorated rapidly.\n\nIn June 2014, he died of myocarditis - an inflammation of the heart stemming from a virus.\n\nMr Andrews told the BBC that his life became a blur. He had lost an \"exceptional, brilliant and beautiful\" son and was left in shock.\n\nBut he forced himself to return to work a fortnight later even though he admits he wasn't very productive.\n\n\"When you're paralysed by grief and it's all your mind can absorb, the last thing you care about is work,\" he says. \"I had no capacity to be in control or function in the everyday world.\"\n\nMr Andrews works at IBM where he builds technology platforms for video content. Officially, the company gives staff three days of bereavement leave but he says there was never any pressure for him to return.\n\nAfter many stops and starts, it took him seven weeks to resume work full-time.\n\nWhile he believes there is no magic formula, he says Facebook's 20 days bereavement leave \"seems like a good best effort to set an effective benchmark\".\n\nBut he adds that it depends on when the individual can function again.\n\nChad Andrews and his family on holiday in Alaska. His son Connor (right) died a week later\n\nChan Lay Lin has been a social worker and family therapist for more than 20 years.\n\nShe is a principal medical social worker at Singapore's Institute of Mental Health and says most organisations in Singapore will allow about three days of compassionate leave when a staff member suffers a bereavement.\n\nIn her experience, this is adequate when the circumstances are not overly traumatic. But she says in exceptional cases experienced by around one in seven people, a longer grieving period may be needed, with the approval of a doctor or therapist.\n\nThe factors considered, she says, include the relationship with the deceased, the level of attachment and dependency and the nature of the death. Sudden and unexpected deaths are all the more traumatic.\n\nMs Chan says in severe cases some people may never feel like they get back to normal and can fall into depression, making them unable to go back to work for a long time.\n\nFor those people the grief may never end, even if it gets easier to bear. But she stresses these are very rare and extreme cases.\n\nPeter Wilson believes 20 days bereavement leave would be \"excessive\" if it became law\n\nPeter Wilson has been a boss working in human resources for 33 years, and is the chairman of the Australian Human Resources Institute.\n\nAccording to him, the standard for bereavement leave in democratic, Western cultures is between two and five days.\n\nWhen his own parents died he used compassionate leave to take one day off for the funeral and another to grieve with his family. He took an extra week of annual leave in each instance, which he describes as a \"fair balance\".\n\nMr Wilson believes Facebook's bereavement leave policy is unusual and doubts it will be adopted widely. Twenty days amounts to nearly 10% of the working year, which he says would be \"excessive\" if it became law.\n\nHis concern is that it would put pressure on employers to increase other categories of leave too. \"This could have a knock-on effect which could make companies uncompetitive,\" he says.\n\nHe favours a \"sensible, minimum standard which the government prescribes and the discretion to give more leave on a case-by-case basis\".\n\nTen years ago, he granted three months' paid leave to an indigenous employee on cultural grounds.\n\nMr Wilson says most employers will extend leave provisions where there's a good case for it.\n\nA company's compassionate leave policy can give an insight into its ethics, says headhunter Dan Clements\n\nDan Clements is the managing director of the technology executive recruitment firm, Identify, and says most people probably do not factor in bereavement leave when they are deciding whether to join a company.\n\nHowever, he believes a firm's compassionate leave policy could give potential employees insight into its culture and ethics. Firms that take a mature and humane approach stand to attract great talent because employees want to be treated fairly and with kindness, he says.\n\nMr Clements surveyed the compassionate leave policies of 10 multinational companies. They all offered between three and 10 days, with five days being the most common.\n\nOne firm went further, giving its managers discretion to grant staff more days off for a bereavement.\n\nBut he says companies can do more by offering flexible working arrangements such as remote or part-time working, as well as job sharing to help staff in need of more time to grieve.", "Could the UK be going where it has never been before? Detailed plans to create the country's first spaceports are set to be unveiled.\n\nThey could see commercial satellites being launched within three years, and even lead to the start of space tourism.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nMore than 5,000 people travelled on the first timetabled steam train service on the Settle to Carlisle railway line in 50 years, Northern Rail has said.\n\nTornado, the newest steam locomotive in Britain, pulled 12 Northern services over three days from 14 -16 February.\n\nThe company described the event as \"a remarkable success\" and has not ruled out running similar services again.\n\nIt was part of celebrations to mark the upcoming reopening of the line after landslides closed a long stretch.\n\nPaul Barnfield, Northern Rail regional director, said: \"During the three days just over 5,500 people travelled on the steam services and it was great to see so many entering into the spirit of the celebration.\n\n\"This was the first timetabled steam service in England for almost 50 years and to be able to bring Tornado to such an iconic and visually stunning line, as a way of saying thank you, was a genuine pleasure.\"\n\nGraeme Bunker, of the Darlington-based A1 Steam Locomotive Trust, which built Tornado, said: \"To see the many thousands who travelled and many thousands more enjoying the event at the line side made the endeavour very worthwhile and delivered a welcome boost to the local community after recent challenges.\n\n\"I am very proud of my team for their part in ensuring the services ran so successfully.\"\n\nThe landslip was caused by heavy rain\n\nDouglas Hodgins, of the Friends of Settle to Carlisle Line, added: \"There must be lessons here about the demand for steam, scenery and rail travel in general. It was the perfect curtain-raiser for the reopening of the line on 31 March.\"\n\nIt took 18 years for the trust to build the £3m Tornado 60163, which can achieve speeds of 75mph (120km/h). It was completed in 2008.\n\nThe Appleby to Carlisle stretch of line closed in February 2016 after a 500,000-tonne landslip at Armathwaite.", "Watch the best of the goals from the FA Cup fifth round, including Rudy Gestede's acrobatic volley for Middlesbrough, a cheeky free-kick from Oxford's Chris Maguire and a lovely finish from Blackburn's Danny Graham.\n\nWatch all the best action from the FA Cup fifth round here.\n\nAvailable to UK users only.", "As peers begin debating the Brexit legislation, the Guardian says it has been told by European politicians that British attempts to \"blackmail and divide\" EU countries in the run-up to Brexit negotiations will lead to a disastrous \"crash landing\" out of the bloc.\n\nThey say the approach being pursued by Theresa May's government will leave the UK without a free trade deal and facing perilous consequences, reports the paper.\n\nThe Daily Express is concerned there is a plot by \"remainer\" Lords to delay Britain's exit from the EU.\n\nIt leads with a warning from Tory MP Philip Davies that any attempt by peers to block Brexit could lead to the demise of the House of Lords.\n\nElsewhere, there are divergent views on the value of advice from New Labour's elder statesmen after Lord Mandelson urged the House of Lords not to \"throw in the towel\" over Brexit.\n\nAccording to the Sun, Lord Mandelson may think it fine to treat voters as an annoying irrelevance, but for them, that is exactly what he has become.\n\nThe Daily Mail accuses him of acting like an 18th Century aristocrat planning a last stand against the peasantry.\n\nBut Matthew d'Ancona in the Guardian welcomes Tony Blair's earlier decision to take on Brexit. \"If not him, then who?\" he asks.\n\nAnd the Daily Telegraph reports Brexit could lead Oxford University to break with more than 700 years of tradition by establishing its first foreign campus.\n\nThe paper says French officials met senior staff at Oxford to discuss proposals that they hope will guarantee future EU funding for a satellite base in Paris. Other universities, including Warwick, are also said to have been approached.\n\nThe Times says ministers risked enraging small businesses over April's business rate revaluation.\n\nIt says it has seen a private letter to Conservative MPs in which ministers claim that a growing revolt over changes to business rates is being fuelled by lies.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph says Theresa May is facing a Cabinet split over the issue. An unnamed cabinet source tells the paper: \"The last thing you want to do is whack the confidence of small businesses.\"\n\nMeanwhile, the Daily Mirror reports Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has paid for what it describes as \"a massive secret opinion poll on his leadership\" as rumours grow that he might quit before 2020.\n\nIt says he has ordered a 10,000 person survey but will keep the results secret from all but his closest ally, the shadow chancellor John McDonnell.\n\nThe Mirror believes it is a legitimate exercise, but that keeping the findings confidential is less defensible, saying they should be shared, \"warts and all\".\n\nThe main news in the Daily Telegraph is a warning from Defence Secretary Sir Michael Fallon that millions of refugees will head to Europe from Afghanistan unless British troops maintain their roles in training local forces.\n\nHis words, says the Telegraph, are a stark reminder that, whether we like it or not, the consequences of previous Western interventions continue to this day.\n\nAccording to the lead in the Daily Mail, a report has revealed that the NHS in England has cut 15,000 beds over the past six years.\n\nThe paper says that amounts to the equivalent of closing 24 hospitals at the same time as demand for beds is soaring due to the pressures of the social care crisis, immigration and an ageing population.\n\nBut ministers are disputing the accuracy of the British Medical Association's findings and NHS England tells the paper that modern treatment advances mean patients need to spend less time in hospital.\n\nFinally, the Daily Mail, reports on research carried out by Hungarian scientists studying the effects of separating young people from their mobile phones.\n\nMore than 80 18 to 26-year-olds were wired up to heart monitors.\n\nThe paper says researchers found that if their phones were taken away for even a short time they exhibited heartbeat patterns usually associated with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nArsenal avoided an FA Cup giant-killing and spared manager Arsene Wenger further pressure with a hard-fought fifth-round victory over non-league Sutton United at Gander Green Lane.\n\nWenger made seven changes from the side thrashed 5-1 at Bayern Munich in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie - and his players had enough to see off a team 105 places below them on English football's ladder.\n\nLucas Perez's cross-shot gave Arsenal the lead after 26 minutes and Theo Walcott doubled the advantage from close range 10 minutes after the break with his 100th goal for the club.\n\nVictory set up a home quarter-final with another National League side, Lincoln City, who beat Burnley on Saturday.\n\nSutton had their moments, particularly when Adam May wasted a first-half chance from keeper David Ospina's poor clearance, and Roarie Deacon's fierce 25-yard drive struck the bar in the second half.\n\nThe result may have gone against them but the hosts emerged from this tie, and this FA Cup run, with huge credit.\n• None 'Sutton players will go down in history'\n\nArsenal get the job done\n\nArsenal were on a hiding to nothing after a turbulent week in the wake of their Champions League mauling in Munich, which leaves them on the brink of elimination in the last 16 once more.\n\nThe Gunners walked out here with speculation mounting over the future of Wenger and familiar questions being asked about Arsenal's stomach for the fight when the season reaches its pressure points.\n\nTheir performance was uncertain and hardly designed to banish the criticism, although allowances must be made for a tricky artificial surface that was heavily saturated before kick-off and again at half-time.\n\nIt was simply a question of getting the job done and avoiding embarrassment. There was never going to be any credit in this for Arsenal. And on that basis this can be judged a satisfactory night.\n\nWenger's troubles were illustrated by the swarm of photographers that surrounded his dugout when he made his entrance - usually the sign of a manager under scrutiny.\n\nThe Frenchman, like his players, just needed to get out of Gander Green Lane unscathed and not fall victim to any further humiliation after the harrowing encounter in Munich's Allianz Arena.\n\nThis was not a sparkling Arsenal show but they now have what looks like an inviting path to Wembley.\n\nLincoln may have ousted Burnley, but it takes a huge leap of the imagination to see them denying Arsenal and Wenger a place in the FA Cup semi-finals.\n\nArsenal still have the chance to add to their tally of 12 FA Cup wins - and Wenger to his total of six.\n\nSutton United's FA Cup adventure may have ended at the fifth round - but the club, players and staff will have stories that will be part of their history forever.\n\nThey are struggling to make an impact in English football's fifth tier but have left an indelible mark on this year's FA Cup with their victory here against Championship giants Leeds United and this meeting with a member of the Premier League elite.\n\nInevitably, they did not possess the class to rattle Arsenal for long periods but they stuck to their task and even had moments when they gave the Gunners serious concerns in the first half, notably when May failed to take advantage of Ospina's poor clearance.\n\nAnd even when Walcott gave Arsenal a two-goal advantage, Sutton refused to go quietly, as Jamie Collins headed narrowly over and Deacon rattled the woodwork.\n\nThe fairytale was unlikely to materialise but Sutton's approach to the game, not just the team but the entire club, did them great credit.\n\nThe atmosphere was buzzing hours before kick-off, the organisation was excellent and everyone entered into the spirit of what was, for them, a huge occasion.\n\nSutton now return to the more routine business of a trip to Torquay United next weekend before welcoming Boreham Wood.\n\nIt was a shame a rather pointless pitch invasion at the end was allowed to linger, but this should be placed in context. The moment of glory may have passed but the memories will remain.\n\nWhat they said\n\nSutton manager Paul Doswell: \"The support we've had has been amazing. Everyone here is a volunteer, remember that. We're not a League Two club in non-league, we're a traditional non-league club.\n\n\"Lincoln and Sutton have done our competition very proud. Best wishes to Lincoln. Go and have your day in the sun like we have.\"\n\nArsenal boss Arsene Wenger: \"We did the job. It is very different on this kind of pitch. It was not an easy game at all. We have to give them credit because every error we made they took advantage of. They played very well.\n\n\"It is basically division five and when I arrived here 20 years ago, in division five they were not as fit physically as they were today. They were organised and had a huge desire. If we were not mentally prepared we would not have gone through.\"\n• None Walcott became the 18th player to score 100 goals in all competitions for Arsenal.\n• None Walcott has scored six times in his past three away FA Cup games for the Gunners.\n• None Arsenal have won 10 and lost none of their past 12 FA Cup matches against non-league sides.\n• None The Gunners have reached the sixth round for the fourth season in a row; a feat they last achieved in 2005 (five in succession).\n• None Arsenal have lost just one of their past 20 FA Cup games, winning 17 (D2 L1).\n• None Sutton United have won as many FA Cup games (excluding qualifiers) this season (four), as QPR have in the past 20 years.\n• None Sutton midfielder Nicky Bailey made more tackles (eight) and interceptions (six) than any other player.\n\nWhile Sutton visit Torquay in the National League on Saturday, the Gunners are not in action until 4 March, when they travel to Liverpool in the Premier League.\n• None Attempt blocked. Lucas Pérez (Arsenal) left footed shot from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Alexis Sánchez.\n• None Offside, Sutton United. Ross Worner tries a through ball, but Bradley Hudson-Odoi is caught offside.\n• None Offside, Arsenal. David Ospina tries a through ball, but Lucas Pérez is caught offside.\n• None Attempt missed. Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (Arsenal) right footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Assisted by Theo Walcott following a corner.\n• None Attempt blocked. Gabriel (Arsenal) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Lucas Pérez.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Simon Downer (Sutton United) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt blocked. Bradley Hudson-Odoi (Sutton United) right footed shot from the left side of the box is blocked. Assisted by Roarie Deacon.\n• None Attempt missed. Alexis Sánchez (Arsenal) right footed shot from the right side of the box is high and wide to the left. Assisted by Gabriel.\n• None Attempt saved. Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (Arsenal) right footed shot from the left side of the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Alexis Sánchez. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Call it overspending, underfunding or deficits, the latest news from NHS Improvement involves plenty of red ink on the books of hospitals and other trusts.\n\nAnd the picture is worse than it looked last November, which will lead to speculation that NHS finances in England are close to being out of control.\n\nAs recently as November, Jim Mackey, head of the regulator NHS Improvement, was saying that trusts in England would run up a total deficit of £580m for the full financial year.\n\nNow that has been revised up to a range of £750m to £850m. That will hardly win him many friends at the Department of Health where ministers are anxious to demonstrate that a tighter grip has been applied to the NHS purse strings.\n\nNHS Improvement is pointing the finger at higher than expected patient demand, with emergency hospital admissions 3.5% higher in the final three months of 2016 compared to the same period in 2015. The regulator had anticipated an increase of more like 2%.\n\nSocial care problems are also being blamed. NHS Improvement says there was a 28% jump in the number of \"bed days\" lost because of problems discharging medically fit patients, who had to be kept in hospital when they were medically fit to leave. Difficulties finding the right community or social care were cited as reasons for that increase.\n\nRising numbers of non-urgent operations and procedures were cancelled because of bed shortages. That hit hospital finances as trusts lost the flow of income they would normally have received for carrying out the operations.\n\nIt's easy to see why NHS England leaders and hospital chiefs have been calling for urgent action on social care. A delayed transfer is bad news for the patient stuck in the hospital bed, frustrating for the patient who has an operation postponed, and a real headache for hospital finance directors who lose income.\n\nNHS Improvement argues that more cost controls have been applied, resulting in a 24% lower bill for agency staff in December compared to 12 months earlier.\n\nPaul Briddock, of the Healthcare Financial Management Association, said staff had done a \"remarkable job in trying to keep services going while also delivering over £2bn of efficiencies\".\n\nA deficit overshoot of a few hundred million pounds should of course been seen in the context of total trust revenue of nearly £80bn and annual NHS spending in England of more than £100bn.\n\nTo get to the real picture, though, you need to take into account the £1.8bn \"sustainability fund\" run by NHS Improvement. This, in effect, is financial support for trusts who follow the regulator's plans for cost reduction. Add that to the possible year end deficit of £850m, as already stated, and you get to a total overspend of around £2.6bn which would be higher than last year.\n\nA year ago we reported the pressure being exerted from on high on trusts to ensure they did not end the year too far into the red. The Department of Health has to ensure that trust deficits are covered by surpluses elsewhere so it does not overspend the budget agreed by Parliament. The process went to the wire last year and seems set to do so again.\n\nRemember this was supposed to be the \"year of plenty\" for NHS funding with annual increases tailing off in future years.\n\nThe fact that trusts are struggling now is alarming.\n\nThe government will argue the NHS could be more efficient and make better use of its resources. Critics will say the service in England is underfunded.", "The seized Sailing Yacht A is among the creme de la creme of private yachts - seen here off Denmark\n\nGibraltar has impounded a Russian billionaire's superyacht - one of the world's biggest - because the German shipbuilder says he still owes 15.3m euros (£13.3m; $16.3m) in fees.\n\nThe claim has kept Andrey Melnichenko's Sailing Yacht A stuck in Gibraltar, a British territory, since Wednesday.\n\nHis spokesman voiced confidence that the order would be lifted soon.\n\nThe Bermuda-registered vessel, built by Nobiskrug, left the Kiel shipyard in northern Germany two weeks ago.\n\nIt is 143m (469ft) long and has three masts, the main one 100m high.\n\nThe superyacht, boasting a gross tonnage of 12,600, is reported to have cost at least €400m. Nobiskrug says it has an underwater observation pod, hybrid diesel-electric propulsion and \"state-of-the-art\" navigation systems. It was designed by Philippe Starck.\n\nAccording to documents seen by Germany's NDR news, Nobiskrug is demanding an outstanding payment of €9.8m, as well as €5.5m for subcontractors and interest charges. Valla Yachts Ltd, a Bermuda company, is the yacht's registered owner.\n\nA top Gibraltar court official, Admiralty Marshal Liam Yeats, told the BBC on Monday: \"The vessel is under arrest and is currently at anchor in British Gibraltar Territorial Waters.\"\n\nA spokesman for Mr Melnichenko described it as \"a technical problem\".\n\nHe told the BBC: \"We are confident that the yacht will be handed over to the owner's project team in the coming days and this unfortunate episode will be over.\"\n\nThe wealthy Russian also owns Motor Yacht A - seen here next to HMS Belfast on the Thames\n\nMotor Yacht A was an imposing sight on the Thames last September\n\nMr Melnichenko, an industrialist with big stakes in Russia's fertiliser, coal and energy sectors, has a $13.2bn fortune, business website Forbes reports.\n\nMr Melnichenko also owns a 5,500-tonne superyacht called Motor Yacht A, which is reportedly up for sale. It was built by Germany's Blohm & Voss shipyard and launched in 2008.\n\nIt is 119m long - smaller than Sailing Yacht A - and was also designed by Philippe Starck. In September 2016 it moored alongside the old British light cruiser HMS Belfast on the River Thames, in central London.\n\nWhat happens when a ship is arrested?\n\nThe Gibraltar Port Authority says ship arrests happen when \"banks and creditors seek recompense from shipowners who find themselves unable to pay up on mortgages or loans\".\n\n\"Most arrested ships are sold in a sealed-bids auction within six to eight weeks, once the claim has been proved and judgment given.\"\n\nIn a statement on its website, it says \"we put 'ship keepers' on board - two security guards to protect the vessel and its contents.\n\n\"We provide the crew with everything, from bunkers (fuel storage compartments) so they can keep the generators going, to provisions of food and water.\"\n\nA launch is also arranged \"so that the crew, who would otherwise be stuck onboard, can have some shore leave\".", "Mark Clemmit is shown around the away dressing room at Sutton United by manager Paul Doswell, which Premier League side Arsenal will be using during their FA Cup fifth-round match on Monday.\n\nWatch live coverage of Sutton v Arsenal, Monday 20 February, 19:30 GMT on BBC One and the BBC Sport website.", "A telephone used by Adolf Hitler during World War Two has been sold for $243,000 (£195,744) at a US auction.\n\nThe identity of the buyer, who bid by phone, has not been revealed. The bidding in Chesapeake City, Maryland, started at $100,000.\n\nThe red phone, which has the Nazi leader's name engraved on it, was found in his Berlin bunker in 1945.\n\nSoviet soldiers gave it to British officer Sir Ralph Rayner as a souvenir shortly after Germany surrendered.\n\nThe phone was sold by auction house Alexander Historical Auctions.\n\nAuction house officials said the phone was a \"weapon of mass destruction\", as it was used by Hitler to give orders that took many lives during the war.\n\nA porcelain figure of an Alsatian dog, also owned by Hitler, fetched $24,300. It was bought by a different bidder.", "Germany's Angela Merkel, seen here with US Vice-President Mike Pence, asked in a speech whether countries would return to \"parochial policies\"\n\nThe Munich Security Conference is at one and the same time an annual jamboree for senior officials and think-tankers and a place where former officials and corporate movers-and-shakers meet up.\n\nBut it also affords an opportunity for a whole series of behind the scenes bilateral meetings. And once every four years it is the place where Europe takes stock of a new US administration.\n\nThis year the meeting had added significance since the man in the White House, Donald Trump, is unlike any other president in living memory.\n\nHis supporters believe he is the man to overturn the \"establishment\" in Washington and to get things done.\n\nHis detractors believe he is unfit for high office, his erratic behaviour leading some even to question his mental state.\n\nRemember this was a man who on the campaign trail described Nato as \"obsolete\" and who said that he would end the free ride that he believed many allies - especially in Europe - were taking at the American taxpayers' expense.\n\nSo this encounter in Munich was an opportunity for Nato allies to weigh up the new Trump team and to try to gauge the new administration's likely direction. Mr Trump sent his Vice-President Mike Pence to Munich to deliver a series of clearly worded messages.\n\nAnd to avoid any doubt his new defence chief, General James Mattis, provided a warm-up act at Nato headquarters at the end of last week - and to ensure nobody mistakes the message Mr Pence himself will be heading to Brussels, the seat of Nato, once the Munich conference is over.\n\nMr Pence used his Munich speech to bring a message of reassurance from the new president. \"The US,\" he said, strongly supports Nato and will be \"unwavering in its commitment to the trans-Atlantic alliance\" .\n\nMike Pence's words were an attempt to calm nerves ruffled when President Trump called the alliance 'obsolete'\n\nBut with so few allies actually meeting the agreed target for defence spending, there was a warning too.\n\n\"Let me be clear on this point,\" he stressed, \"the president of the United States expects our allies to keep their word to fulfil this commitment and for most that means the time has come to do more\".\n\nThis statement was met with hesitant applause - an indication that many Europeans do not welcome being bullied by the Trump White House.\n\nEarlier, German Chancellor Angela Merkel had emphasised that military spending alone was not the only measure of the Europeans' commitment to security.\n\nShe calmly - but pointedly - took issue with many of the Trump team's putative policies, noting the importance of international multilateral institutions like the EU and the UN (both of which have been condemned by Mr Trump).\n\nIndeed at the end of her speech she seemed to take on the central tenet of the Trump campaign - enshrined in the slogan \"America First!\" Looking to the future she posed a fundamental question. \"Will we be able,\" she asked, \"to act in concert together or (will we) fall back into parochial policies?\"\n\nOne of Europe's greatest fears has been Mr Trump's apparent willingness to do a deal with Moscow - not to mention his evident admiration for Russia's leader Vladimir Putin. Mr Trump's emissaries pretty much convinced their European hosts that on key issues - at least for now - there would be no change.\n\nGeneral Mattis insisted that Russia had to abide by international law and US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, on a recent visit to Bonn, stressed that agreements like the Minsk accords to end the fighting in Ukraine had to be fully implemented by all sides - including Moscow.\n\nSergei Lavrov, represented Russia, who were almost bystanders at this Nato conference\n\nVice-President Pence emphasised the message saying here in Munich that the US would continue to hold Russia to account, even as it searched for areas of common ground.\n\nThe Russians have almost been bystanders here watching the internal Nato debate from the sidelines. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov returned to a familiar theme - that Nato was essentially an institution of the past. The expansion of the Atlantic Alliance, he said, had led to an unprecedented level of tensions. What was now needed was what he called a \"post-western world order\".\n\nSo there seems little chance here for President Trump's hope for fresh understanding with Moscow - or at the very least that it will not come at the expense of the European Nato allies, or perhaps even of Ukraine. If there is a deal to be done between Washington and Moscow it will lie elsewhere, perhaps over Syria.\n\nThis Munich conference will end on Sunday with many of the concerns of the Europeans only partially stilled. For they relate more to the character and outlook of the new US president himself.\n\nOne of his tweets can undermine policies that have received bipartisan support in Washington for decades. And its not just a style thing: many of Mr Trump's policies remain unclear, even as so many positions inside his team remain unfilled.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nLincoln City will play Arsenal in the FA Cup quarter-finals as reward for their stunning fifth-round victory over Burnley.\n\nThe fifth-tier club became the first non-league team in 103 years to reach the last eight with the biggest shock of the competition so far on Saturday.\n\nMiddlesbrough face Manchester City or Huddersfield, who drew 0-0 on Saturday.\n\nArsenal reached the last eight with a 2-0 win at Sutton.\n\nThe replay between Manchester City and Huddersfield is provisionally set for Tuesday, 28 February at Etihad Stadium.\n\nThe quarter-final matches will take place on the weekend of Saturday, 11 March.\n\nThere are 88 places between National League leaders Lincoln and Arsenal.\n\nLincoln boss Cowley said his side had achieved a \"football miracle\" after beating Burnley 1-0 at Turf Moor with an 89th-minute winner.\n\nIt is the first time in the club's 133-year history that they have reached the quarter-finals.\n\nTheir next match is away to North Ferriby United on Tuesday, while they are also still in the FA Trophy and play Boreham Wood for a semi-final place on Saturday.\n\nQueens Park Rangers, who joined the Football League in 1920, were the last non-league team to make the FA Cup last eight, in 1914. They were beaten 2-1 by Liverpool in their quarter-final at Anfield.", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The SpaceX rocket was launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida\n\nPrivate rocket firm SpaceX has successfully launched a rocket carrying a cargo ship for the International Space Station following the postponement of take-off on Saturday because of technical problems.\n\nWitnesses said the rocket was only briefly visible before making its way into the clouds.\n\nThe launch was made from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.\n\nThe rocket booster successfully landed nine minutes after taking off.\n\nThe touchdown is part of the company's strategy of returning rockets to earth so they can be reused rather than jettisoning them in the ocean after a single launch.\n\nMoments after the rocket landed, the SpaceX Dragon supply ship successfully reached orbit, prompting cheers inside the SpaceX Mission Control room.\n\nWitnesses said the rocket was only briefly visible before making its way into the clouds\n\nThe Dragon is now making its way to the International Space Station, and is expected to arrive on Wednesday.\n\nOn 14 January SpaceX resumed flights by launching a Falcon 9 vehicle from the Vandenberg Air Force Base on the California coast.\n\nIt was the first mission by the company since one of its vehicles exploded on the launch pad in September.\n\nElon Musk, the founder of SpaceX, wants his company to be at the forefront of the race involving several companies to deploy satellite-based internet services over the next few years.\n\nThe company also has a long queue of customers all waiting for a ride to orbit - including America's civil space agency (Nasa), the US military and multiple outfits in the commercial sector.\n\nBut September's launch pad mishap was a spectacular reminder of just how unpredictable rockets can be sometimes.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland all-rounder Ben Stokes became the Indian Premier League's most expensive foreign player when Rising Pune Supergiant bought him for £1.7m.\n\nTymal Mills went for £1.4m to Royal Challengers Bangalore, while fellow England bowler Chris Woakes was bought by Kolkata Knight Riders for £504,140.\n\nEngland one-day captain Eoin Morgan has gone to Kings XI Punjab for £240,066.\n\nInternational team-mates Jason Roy and Chris Jordan were sold to Gujarat Lions and Sunrisers Hyderabad respectively.\n• Read more: Where the IPL contract money goes (Telegraph)\n\nStokes, 25, had a base price of £240,000 (20 million rupees) but was the subject of bids from Mumbai Indians, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Delhi Daredevils and Sunrisers Hyderabad before Pune emerged successful.\n\nHis fee overtakes that of former England duo Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff, who were sold for $1.55m (£1.1m) each in 2009.\n\nStokes, Roy, 24-year-old Mills and Woakes, 27, will be playing in the eight-team Twenty20 competition - which takes place between 5 April and 21 May - for the first time.\n\n\"It's a life-changing amount of money,\" said Stokes. \"Seven times my base amount - that's mental but pretty cool to think about.\n\n\"It was hard to follow on Twitter. I wasn't sure how much a Crore [Indian unit of measurement] was - people were retweeting stuff, and it was complete carnage.\n\n\"I'm just seriously excited about getting going.\"\n\nJos Buttler was retained by Mumbai Indians and Sam Billings was kept on by Delhi Daredevils during the first round of 2017 IPL auction held in Bangalore, but batsmen Alex Hales and Jonny Bairstow went unsold.\n\n\"Great day for English cricket and a few lads in particular. Congrats boys,\" said Buttler.\n\nLeft-arm pace bowler Mills will be available for the whole tournament as he is limited to playing T20 cricket because of back pain.\n\n\"When it finished I did not know how much it was worth,\" he said. \"When I worked it out I could not believe it - it did not seem real.\n\n\"It's an amount of money that can change your life. It will for me.\"\n\nEngland's other players may not be available for the 10th edition of the competition because of international commitments as England host Ireland in one-day matches on 5 and 7 May.\n\nThey then host South Africa in a three-match ODI series, with the games scheduled to take place on 24, 27 and 29 May, before the ICC Champions Trophy starts in England on 1 June.\n\nWe've been lacking this one genre of player,\" he said. \"We have many heroes but this is the one hero that we were lacking.\n\n\"We knew he was going to be expensive. We do believe he is going to be there for the first 14 games.\"\n\nStokes helped England reach the final of the World Twenty20 in 2016, but they were beaten by the West Indies after the all-rounder was hit for four consecutive sixes in the final over by Carlos Brathwaite.\n\nThe Durham player was also part of England's winter tour of India and were beaten 4-0 in the Tests series, 2-1 in the ODIs and 2-1 in the T20 series.\n\nHe has become one of England's best performers and was named vice-captain of England's Test team after Joe Root took over as skipper from Alastair Cook earlier this month.\n\nMills is England's fastest bowler but has played only four T20 games at international level.\n\n\"We really needed bowlers, especially with Mitchell Starc not being available for this edition and, therefore, Tymal Mills was a great buy,\" said RCB chairman Amrit Thomas.\n\n\"He suits the playing conditions in Bangalore and we would have done absolutely whatever was required to get him.\"\n\nIn other notable highlights from the auction, all-rounder Mohammad Nabi became the first Afghanistan player to be bought in the IPL, with Sunrisers Hyderabad picking him up for £36,000.", "An American student who graded his ex-girlfriend's break-up letter says he now regrets that it went viral.\n\nNick Lutz decided to get a red marker out and critique the four-page note before sending it back to his former partner.\n\n\"I feel a little but guilty but at the same time, I don't believe the letter at all,\" he told Newsbeat. \"I've been lied to before by her.\n\n\"I feel like it was another way to make me feel like I was stupid.\"\n\nWhen Newsbeat asked him if he regretted sharing the personal letter on social media, Nick said: \"Yes I do. I would say so.\"\n\nNick who studies at the University of Central Florida, says he received the apology shortly after calling time on the relationship and admits it probably wasn't the best decision to tweet it.\n\nIn his critique, he starts off by saying the introduction is too long and that there's lots of repetition.\n\nThe 20-year-old says his ex needs to show reasoning when saying she ended up failing to keep the relationship working.\n\nHe also says she needs to back her claims up with proof, like saying she never cheated on him.\n\n\"It came to an end after she told me she was going to a theme park with her best friend, who's a girl, but I later found out she went with a dude,\" he said.\n\n\"I haven't spoken to her since this happened but I am not planning on talking to her anytime soon.\n\n\"We started dating in February of last year and dated for about eight months.\n\n\"Four months in she started hiding her phone and I heard she had code names for guys in her contacts list.\"\n\nThe second page calls for his ex-girlfriend to provide more details after this line: \"I took all the promises we had and broke them.\"\n\nThen there's a spelling mistake with \"loose\" changed to \"lose\".\n\nNick then calls his ex out when she says she has \"no reason to hide, lie or hold anything back\" from him.\n\nHe writes in the margin: \"If there is no reason to lie, why isn't the truth being told?\"\n\nNick says he decided to annotate the letter as a \"joke\" between him and his friends.\n\nBut his original tweet where he graded the letter has been shared more than 100,000 times.\n\n\"She's not the happiest but I didn't expect it to go viral. She talks to my mum but I haven't spoken to her and I'm not sure I will.\"\n\nHe says he hasn't thought about her when she asks if he has and again accuses her of \"using useless fillers\" to pad out her letter.\n\nNick even says she used \"lackadaisical\" handwriting near the end of her note.\n\nThe final page contains a question mark after \"I love you\" and also the rest of Nick's final conclusion.\n\n\"If you want to be believed, back it up with proof,\" he writes.\n\n\"You claimed that cheating never occurred, but place blame on yourself - then what for?\n\n\"Need to stop contradicting your own story and pick a side. While this gesture is appreciated, I would prefer details over statements.\n\n\"Revision for half credit will be accepted.\"\n\nOther people pointed out other mistakes in the letter too.\n\nAfter posting the note on Twitter, Nick was asked out on a date.\n\nNick also told another Twitter user that his ex-girlfriend had seen the changes and was \"okay with her grade\".\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby League\n\nJoe Burgess scored a hat-trick of tries as Wigan beat Cronulla Sharks to win a record fourth World Club Challenge.\n\nVictory for the Warriors also completed a 2-0 World Club Series win for Super League over Australia's NRL.\n\nOliver Gildart also crossed as an English club became world champions for the first time since Leeds in 2012.\n\nWigan's success was aided by a superb defensive effort, with Cronulla's only score coming from Jesse Ramien midway through the second period.\n\nHowever, the Sharks had two marginal video referee decisions go against them when claiming tries of their own during the first half.\n\nNational Rugby League clubs had won all six matches since the inception of the expanded World Club Series in 2015, but Super League champions Wigan followed up Warrington's victory over Brisbane Broncos to secure a first series win for the northern hemisphere's domestic competition.\n\nWigan won three of the first five World Club Challenge contests but had not been victorious in the annual fixture since 1994.\n\nBurgess, in his first home match since returning to the club following a year playing in Australia, enjoyed the perfect homecoming for the Cherry and Whites.\n\nHe is only the second player to score a hat-trick in a World Club Challenge, following Michael Jennings' treble for Sydney Roosters against Wigan in 2014.\n\nEngland winger Burgess, a scorer for the Warriors in that loss three years earlier, acrobatically touched down for their opening score and he grabbed his second at the end of a thrilling passage of play.\n\nThe home side survived two punishing sets of six tackles near their own try line, before going the length of the field to establish a 10-0 lead.\n\nSharks second-rower Luke Lewis had already seen his effort ruled out for offside and there was more disappointment for the reigning NRL champions as Kurt Capewell was deemed to have scraped the whitewash with the ball as he grounded it in the corner.\n\nGildart's score, adding to his try in last season's Grand Final victory over Warrington, gave Wigan some valuable breathing space but any hopes of becoming the third World Club Challenge winners to prevent their opponents from scoring were ended when Ramien touched down a grubber kick in the corner.\n\nAs well as Wigan's defence performed, Cronulla - who do not begin their league season until the start of March - were guilty of several handling errors and the Warriors were able to see out time with little alarm.\n\nAnd Burgess was able to produce a dream finale, getting a fingertip onto a low kick in the last minute to complete his hat-trick.\n\nWigan Warriors head coach Shaun Wane told BBC Radio 5 live sports extra: \"It's a fantastic feeling and I'm so pleased. The staff work hard but the players do their business out on the park.\n\n\"We did too much defending. I'm trying to stay positive and not think about how we played. I'm just glad to get the win.\n\n\"One thing we're good at in this country is looking for negatives. Let's be positive. Tony Smith did a great job with Warrington on Saturday and we won fair and square. Let's give Super League a pat on the back.\"\n\nCronulla head coach Shane Flanagan: \"Wigan played really well and I thought it was a good game of footy. I wasn't happy with the refereeing, but Wigan took their opportunities and good luck to them.\n\n\"It's a great experience to come over here and play. The hospitality we've been shown has been fantastic and the game's in good shape when we can get games like this on in a packed stadium.\n\n\"We've had a great time. A lot of our players have never been to the UK and they'll be better players for it.\"", "Model Jillian Mercado has broken the mould and is signed to a mainstream agency\n\nActing and modelling are notoriously fickle industries often trading on perfection, but in the 1990s one woman challenged the status quo by setting up a professional talent agency for disabled people.\n\nIt was 1993 when Louise Dyson's agency was approached by Sunrise Medical for disabled models to promote its wheelchairs.\n\nShe was stumped. At that time the Louise Dyson Agency Ltd dealt only in providing flawless models for clients such as Rolls-Royce and Laura Ashley.\n\n\"We didn't know any models with a disability and I immediately thought that was such an obvious thing for advertising - to be representative of the consumer,\" she says. \"But until that point it had never crossed my mind.\"\n\nThe request led to Dyson helping to organise the Sunrise Model in a Million competition - the UK's first professional modelling contest for people with disabilities - which was won by Sharron Murray and Jason Ward who both received modelling contracts.\n\nThe popularity of the contest piqued Dyson's interest and she put out a call for disabled models and actors interested in representation - she was flooded with more than 600 requests.\n\nEmboldened by the response she took a leap of faith, sold shares in her first agency and established VisABLE - an agency for disabled actors, presenters and models.\n\nBut the doors were not as open as she had anticipated.\n\n\"Although everybody said all the right things I knew they thought I'd gone mad and no one gave us any business in advertising for a long time.\n\n\"We really had to make a business case as to why to include disabled people in advertising.\"\n\nIt's a situation she is still perplexed by given that the market surrounding disability - known as the Purple Pound - is worth an estimated £249bn in the UK.\n\n\"If you use a disabled actor in a campaign it means not only will disabled people support a company, so will friends and relatives.\" Crucially, she says, \"It's a way of distinguishing against your competition.\"\n\nSigned to Dyson's books is Shannon Murray, the original winner of the Sunrise competition. She took the crown aged 17, three years after she was paralysed from the waist down in a diving accident.\n\nShannon Murray has appeared in series such as Co-Owner Of A Lonely Heart\n\nMurray had harboured dreams of becoming an actress but gave up on them after her accident \"because there weren't any actors in wheelchairs on TV\".\n\nThe modelling career thrust upon her gave her a chance to challenge that.\n\n\"I loved doing shoots but I wanted to put out a much stronger message, that fashion should be inclusive.\n\n\"I was very aware that the teenagers I was meeting in the spinal injuries unit were still young, fashionable, wanting to go to nightclubs and had dilemmas over boys but that wasn't what I saw in the media.\"\n\nHer moment in the spotlight, which challenged perceptions, was warmly received, but she says, only because the fashion houses had requested a model in a wheelchair. \"If I'd turned up wanting to walk down the runway it would have been a slightly different reaction.\"\n\nIt is this exclusive inclusivity that is the challenge facing the industry in 2017.\n\nShannon Murray continues to work both in the modelling and acting industries\n\nThe notion that a fashion house or casting agent would request a woman in her 40s to play a mother, regardless of whether she is disabled or not is the ideal they are aiming for.\n\nMurray says: \"Lots of people are talking about it and saying they're prepared to do it, but it hasn't happened yet.\n\n\"It's the place we want to be in, the same way that black or Asian actors would like colour-blind casting, so we're chosen on our skill.\"\n\nIn New York model Jillian Mercado seems to have cracked the surface. The 29-year-old, who has muscular dystrophy, is signed to the mainstream IMG Models and was used by Beyonce in a recent merchandise campaign which Murray describes as \"brilliant\" and proves \"we're getting there\".\n\nMurray, a model-turned-actress, who has appeared in the likes of CLASS and Casualty, says the acting world is a little ahead of the fashion industry.\n\n\"Fashion is about trying to sell an aspirational view but in acting there's much less focus on looks, it's what you can do to bring the character off the page, and writers are finally waking up to the fact that there is drama in disabled lives.\"\n\nDyson agrees that TV was more open with a greater \"desire to embrace diversity\" and many of her clients have appeared in dramas including Casualty, Silent Witness and Downton Abbey.\n\nJillian Mercado during a fashion shoot ahead of New York Fashion Week\n\nBut VisABLE's aim remains to seek work for its clients where their disability is \"incidental\".\n\n''The whole point of VisABLE is to persuade advertisers and producers to offer bookings to artists irrespective of the fact that they have characteristics,\" Murray says.\n\n\"If someone's advertising a product like shampoo and they happen to have a disability which is not directly relevant it's the perfect form of inclusivity.\"\n\nTwenty-three years into the business and Dyson says the situation has \"improved massively\" since her first days with the business expanding globally with recent work in Mexico, South Africa and France.\n\n\"It began to improve just before the Paralympics,\" she says. \"That gave a boost to everybody regarding preconceptions and disability.\"\n\nDrama schools and theatre spaces have also been brought up to date and made much more accessible, but Dyson says improvements still need to be made.\n\n\"The biggest obstacle in everything we're trying to do is that people still tend to think of a disabled role and who they can put into that role instead of seeing it the other way round.\n\nEddie Redmayne received praise from many for his depiction of Stephen Hawking but should a disabled actor have been given a shot at the role?\n\n\"They should see everyone for every role and filter out people because of their unsuitability. If they need a 70-year-old, everyone under 70 is unsuitable. Disability shouldn't be the reason to exclude people, everyone should be considered for each role.\n\n\"Then if the person isn't good enough, fair enough.\"\n\nBroadcasters have set up initiatives over the years aimed at improving the on-screen presence of disabled people.\n\nThe BBC is hoping to hit a target of quadrupling the number of people on screen by the end of the year and 2016 was the Year of Disability for Channel Four.\n\n\"There are some moves in that direction but in practice it hasn't happened much yet,\" Dyson says.\n\n\"I try to stun them with the professionalism and capabilities of artists from VisABLE and leave them reviewing their own preconceptions.\"", "Museums are searching for unusual ways to raise money\n\nFancy learning how to practise taxidermy on roadkill? Or visiting the lawnmowers of the rich and famous? As our arts centres and museums suffer funding cuts, several are seeking innovative ways to increase income and footfall. But can quirky fundraisers keep our tourist attractions afloat?\n\nYears ago, a day out at a museum may have meant trawling round glass cases full of dusty but worthy exhibits, before stopping in the teashop for a stale scone and a lukewarm drink.\n\nBut pitch up at some of England's museums nowadays and you could find yourself wandering into a film set or a cocktail bar.\n\nThe former head of Arts Council England, Sir Peter Bazalgette, suggests arts venues need to be imaginative about raising funds\n\nFunding cuts have meant England's 1,300 accredited museums have had to find imaginative ways to raise money.\n\nIndeed, the former head of Arts Council England, Sir Peter Bazalgette, suggested museums go even further if they want to survive.\n\nHe said theatres should open charity shops, art galleries should run bed and breakfasts and museums should become film sets to make more money.\n\nSir Peter pointed to examples such as the Roses Theatre in Tewkesbury, which runs a charity shop and Islington Mill, an arts centre in Salford, which runs a B&B.\n\nSome museums say they might have limited appeal as a B&B\n\nAlistair Brown, policy officer for the Museums Association, the sector's membership organisation, said: \"Lots of museums are looking at new ways to generate income and are being quite creative about it.\n\n\"But it's probably a mistake to think that is the best way of saving them. The levels of income they are losing through cuts are greater than the amount they are able, in the short term, to raise through entrepreneurial activities.\"\n\nSo what are the quirkiest ways museums have found of raising funds? And is opening a guesthouse or running as a film set feasible for all of them?\n\nThe Grant Museum is not, at first glance, an obvious stand-up comedy venue\n\nAn Edwardian library jam-packed with animal skeletons and jars of pickled frogs might not seem, on the face of it, a barrel of laughs.\n\nBut the Grant Museum of Zoology, in London, decided its quirky setting was the perfect location to stage stand-up comedy gigs.\n\n\"It's a cabaret-style comedy night. We hold three of them a year and they are hugely popular,\" said Jack Ashby, the museum manager.\n\n\"The events are compèred by a professional comedian who introduces different members of staff to the audience. We have people working here who get particularly nerdy about animals nobody has ever heard of - and audiences find that pretty entertaining.\"\n\nThe museum holds other events, such as improvised opera nights and animal adoption schemes, to raise funds and make its displays of everything from elephant skulls to jars of tapeworms slightly more accessible.\n\nBut Mr Ashby has a word of caution as museums try to diversify.\n\n\"Museums have to think very carefully about what they can do to make money,\" he said.\n\n\"Some museums take a significant amount from weddings or corporate hire but you really have to invest in the staff to support those events. And realistically, you can only offer your venue as a film set if there is a film industry in your town or city.\"\n\nOutdoor museums make ideal film sets, as the Black Country Living Museum has found\n\nSeveral museums have sought extra funds by offering up their locations as film sets.\n\n\"We've always had filming at the museum,\" said Laura Wakelin, deputy chief executive of the Black Country Living Museum in Dudley. \"But previously it was much more sporadic.\n\n\"When I arrived in 2013, we decided we needed to start actively promoting the museum as a unique venue for filming.\"\n\nSince then, the museum has famously been the backdrop for BBC drama Peaky Blinders and the ITV period adaptation Arthur and George, as well as reality shows and a Bollywood movie.\n\nIn 2015 alone, filming raised about £50,000 for the museum, which has also capitalised on its raised profile in other ways.\n\nThe museum is capitalising on its appeal by holding themed weekends for visitors\n\n\"As Peaky Blinders took off, we started to see flat caps in our gift shop and we run Peaky Blinders nights,\" said Miss Wakelin. \"They usually sell out and bring in a slightly younger demographic.\n\n\"It's about finding what works for your venue. Yes, we have wonderful assets here but we are in the middle of quite an economically disadvantaged area so we do have to pitch these things right.\"\n\nThe Pathology Museum, in London, is hosting taxidermy workshops\n\nThe idea of setting up as a bed and breakfast or a film set might be tempting if your attraction is charmingly photogenic.\n\nBut such ventures would not work for every location, explains Carla Valentine, technical curator of the Pathology Museum, in London.\n\n\"This isn't the kind of museum that has space to be a B&B and we couldn't do that anyway as it contains human remains,\" she said.\n\nHowever, the museum, which showcases medical specimens owned by Queen Mary University London, does put on macabre fundraising events.\n\nThe classes have a wide appeal, according to the museum\n\nAmong the most successful have been its Stuff and Nonsense beginners' taxidermy classes.\n\nAmanda Sutton, who runs them, said: \"They are very popular and tend to sell out. I think it's the experience of doing something so unusual that appeals to people.\n\n\"We are running a special class for Valentine's Day. People come as couples and work together on their animals, which is quite sweet in a weird kind of way.\n\n\"When we set these classes up, some other London museums didn't seem to think it was very appropriate but they have now started running their own weird events. I don't think museums can just run stuffy events for academics - they need to appeal to the general public.\"\n\nThe Museum of Curiosities venue includes a cocktail bar that it hires out\n\nOf course, online communities bring added scope for museums to reach out to like-minded enthusiasts and nowhere is this better demonstrated than in a Hackney basement, which plays home to London's Museum of Curiosities.\n\nThe museum, which revels in the incoherence of its collections - ranging from dodo bones to fast food collectables - was initially funded by 500 people on Kickstarter and it has also used crowdfunding to add to its displays, most notably with a mummy.\n\nIts premises include a small cocktail bar, which it hires out to raise funds. Mr Wynd also meets running costs via sponsorship.\n\nViktor Wynd says it is important museums are self-reliant\n\nFounder Viktor Wynd is passionate about such enterprises being relatively self-reliant.\n\n\"The government's involvement in the arts is often disastrous,\" he said. \"It creates vast bureaucracies and the money would be better spent on the police or NHS.\n\n\"Museum culture in the UK has centred around the misguided idea that funding should only come from the government, meaning that most cultural bodies put huge amounts of resource into getting grants - resources that if applied successfully to raising money from the private sector would probably do just as well.\n\n\"I believe the government ought to support a handful of major national collections - but even those should be encouraged to generate as much of their revenue as possible.\"\n\nCelebrity donations, such as comedian Lee Mack's dibber, helped the museum broaden its appeal\n\nDiversifying some museums would be a push too far, according to Brian Radam, the curator of the British Lawnmower Museum in Southport.\n\n\"I can't see the British Lawnmower Museum becoming the latest blockbuster set - especially as most of our exhibits were destined for the scrapyard,\" he said.\n\n\"As for the idea of a B&B - well, they would be extremely uncomfortable to sleep on.\"\n\nFinding funding to keep the museum going is exhausting work, Mr Radam says.\n\n\"Over the last 25 years we have become experts on saving money, running the museum on a shoestring,\" he said.\n\nBrian Radam says keeping the museum going is exhausting work\n\nThe venue does not receive public funding so relies on its visitors and innovative ideas to secure its future.\n\nAs well as ticket sales, the museum also makes money through restoring beloved family grass-cutting heirlooms.\n\n\"One of our ideas was to create an exhibition of lawnmowers of the rich and famous,\" said Mr Radam.\n\n\"We had Prince Charles and Princess Diana's mower, Brian May's and Albert Pierrepont's on display,\" he said.\n\n\"Lawnmowers are not the sexiest of subjects but the exhibition created a lot of interest and revenue.\"\n\nBut as museums and public arts venues face significant financial pressures, is it realistic to say that all can find ways to raise funds independently?\n\nThe Museums Association believes there are more than 2,500 museums across the UK but says more than 60 have closed in the past 10 years.\n\n\"The bulk of closures are happening in areas that are less well-off, where there has been a severe decline in public spending,\" said Mr Brown.\n\n\"We have also seen several museums opening over that time - these tend to be small, independent museums that are volunteer-run.\n\nDozens of museums have closed over the past decade\n\n\"A lot of our museums date from the 19th Century at a time of great national and civic pride.\n\n\"I don't think the number of museums is unsustainable but clearly there is a trend for some types of museums - particularly those run by local authorities - to close at the moment.\n\n\"It feels as if museums are being asked to make an extremely quick transformation into business organisations, but that can't take place overnight.\n\n\"There's also a philosophical question about what the role of museums is and the extent to which they should be focusing their energies on generating income or on their public role of inspiring and educating people.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "There was a good team effort from players at a Leicester rugby club who had to push an ambulance off the pitch when it got stuck in the mud.\n\nPlayers from Aylestone Athletic and Aylestone St James dug in to move the ambulance which had been called for an injured player.\n\nThe man suffered head and neck injuries on Saturday afternoon but his team mates were on hand to ensure the ambulance got off the muddy pitch.\n\nA spokeswoman for East Midlands Ambulance Service said: \"Thanks to the help of the rugby team we were not stuck for long and it did not cause any delay to the patient.\"\n\nHe was eventually taken to Leicester Royal Infirmary as a \"precautionary measure\" but is now \"fine\", a spokesperson from Aylestone St James RFC said.", "The north Indian state of Punjab is due to hold polls on Saturday for a new government.\n\nHowever, the biggest issue confronting voters is not jobs or the economy, but a massive drugs problem.\n\nNearly two thirds of households in the state are said to have at least one user of hard drugs, such as heroin.\n\nFilmed and produced by Neha Sharma and Kunal Sehgal", "\"Halal snack pack\" has been named People's Choice Word of the Year 2016 by Australia's Macquarie Dictionary.\n\nA snack pack, also known as an HSP, is a hearty pile of kebab meat, chips and sauce which has become a staple of Australian takeaway shops.\n\nIt's perhaps an unlikely platform for political debate, but this year the dish rocketed into Australia's national consciousness, becoming a symbol of peaceful multiculturalism for many, but for others, an unwelcome sign of the growing influence of Islam.\n\nPolitician Pauline Hanson takes the view that halal meat is unacceptable in Australia\n\nThis year the dish, made to Islamic religious standards, found its way into politics, after right-wing anti-Islam politician Pauline Hanson refused an invitation to eat one.\n\nIn congratulating her on her election to the Senate in July, Labor Senator Sam Dastyari - a \"non-practising Muslim\" - told Ms Hanson: \"I'll take you out for halal snack pack out in Western Sydney, whenever you want.\"\n\nMr Dastyari was arguably slightly trolling Ms Hanson, whose One Nation party believes that by \"buying halal certified products, it means that you are financially supporting the Islamisation of Australia\".\n\n\"It's not happening, not interested in halal, thank you,\" she replied, arguing (without evidence) that \"98% of Australians\" were also against halal.\n\nThe dish subsequently enjoyed a surge in popularity. One Melbourne kebab shop even added \"The Pauline Hanson\" to its menu - \"Lamb kebab roasted to perfection in the rotisserie, mint yoghurt, chilli sauce, cheese, beer battered chips\".\n\nThe halal snack pack is an Australian creation, but its creators were immigrants or descendants of recent immigrants from the Middle East and Europe.\n\nIt's a fusion of these cuisines, and even has its own appreciation society on Facebook, for \"sharing great snack pack stories and discussing possible best snack pack in world\".\n\nThe forum asks members to \"show us a sick pic of ur halal snacky, whered ya get it?, is it sick?, is it halal? and salrite or na? also, is it a halal snack pack mountain or na?\"\n\nThe group, which has close to 180,000 members, was inspired by a visit its founders made to Oz Turk Jr, a kebab shop in Sydney.\n\n\"Before, we used to sell 10 kebabs for one snack pack, now it's 10 snack packs to one kebab,\" says owner Ufuk Bozouglu.\n\nAn Australian Muslim of Turkish origin, he credits his mum for the popularity of his snack packs, saying \"she taught me you should only sell what you'd eat\".\n\nMr Bozouglu says his customers are mainly students living locally - who'll queue for up to 40 minute at peak times - but one boy travels two-and-a-half-hours each week to buy one of his snack packs, which cost about A$10.50 each ($8; £6.30), with cheese.\n\nHe says he's never seen anyone be perturbed by the fact his meat is halal.\n\n\"Where we live, it's very multicultural, and people see it doesn't matter if you're Christian, Hindu, whatever. You become friends and have respect for each other.\"\n\n\"The people that it does matter to, they're usually from small areas so they only thing they see [about Muslims] is what they read in the paper.\n\n\"People around this area, they're all together,\" he says. \"Sometimes, you go on Facebook and it's just hate towards Muslims,\" he says, but on the snack pack appreciation forum, it's all about the food.\n\nKeysar Trad, president of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, says normalising words used by other languages can only be a good thing.\n\n\"Especially if you're able to find it in the dictionary, it takes away the mystery,\" he said.\n\n\"It brings people comfort and satisfaction that there's nothing sinister about the word halal. It's all about what's positive, what is good and wholesome.\"\n\nThe popularity of halal snack packs \"demystifies the word, demystifies the culture from which those words are borrowed and hopefully, helps built harmony in society\".\n\nThe Macquarie committee said the choice of the halal snack pack as word of the year \"tells us about something once confined largely to the Muslim community that is now surfacing throughout the broader Australian community\".\n\nThe dictionary's editor, Susan Butler, even said it was \"the duty of lexicographers to, as much as is humanly possible, eat the food items that they put in the dictionary\".\n\n\"How can you write the definition of HSP with enthusiasm if you have never sampled it? So today I ate my first HSP.\n\n\"I can understand why this dish has become the fast food item of the day. It is carbo-loaded, calorific sinfulness. Once started on it, you cannot stop.\"\n\nReflecting similar trends, the dictionary committee last week named \"fake news\" it's Word of the Year, saying it \"captures an interesting evolution in the creation of deceptive content as a way of herding people in a specific direction\".", "It may have started out as a dispute between a track cyclist and her former coach.\n\nBut 10 months after Jess Varnish first made allegations of sexism, discrimination and bullying against Shane Sutton - and British Cycling - it is not just the reputation of the country's most successful and best-funded Olympic sport that is on the line.\n\nThe claims were denied by Sutton, and he was cleared of all but one of nine specific allegations of using discriminatory and inappropriate language by an internal investigation.\n\nBut Varnish's portrayal of a \"culture of fear\" at British Cycling has been backed up by female riders such as Nicole Cooke and Victoria Pendleton, along with para-cyclists and former staff members - triggering an independent review of the culture at its world-class performance programme.\n\nThe panel is headed by Annamarie Phelps, chair of British Rowing and is due to publish its findings later this month.\n\nIf well-placed sources are to be believed, the much-anticipated report - now delivered to British Cycling's board - could make for grim reading for the governing body.\n\nBut it could also raise serious questions for Britain's sporting establishment, the entire approach of funding agency UK Sport, and whether, through its 'no-compromise' approach to the pursuit of medals, standards of behaviour towards elite Olympic and Paralympic athletes are in desperate need of review.\n\nImagine if the report finds evidence that there has indeed been an institutionalised culture of bullying at what was held up as a model governing body. That would seriously raise the stakes for some of British sport's best-respected and most powerful individuals and organisations...\n• Sir Dave Brailsford for instance; a man already under severe pressure over former rider Sir Bradley Wiggins' use of therapeutic use exemptions (TUEs) before major races, and his handling of the furore over the delivery of medication for Wiggins in France in 2011. Performance director at British Cycling from 2007 to 2014, and until recently heralded as the country's leading sports thinker, he denies presiding over any bullying, insisting he was merely uncompromising as he masterminded Team GB's cycling triumphs in successive Games.\n• None For the man who effectively replaced Brailsford at British Cycling, former technical director Shane Sutton, who continues to deny any wrongdoing, and who has plenty of high-profile backers of his own, but who resigned in the wake of Varnish's allegations.\n• Ian Drake, stepped down from his position two months early , having announced his resignation last year. He did so amid questions over whether he (and other board members) were aware of claims of bullying and discrimination against Sutton. In 2012 the man he replaced, former chief executive Peter King, took anonymous statements from 40 personnel as part of a report that was never made public. The report may reveal more about this, and examine whether enough was done in the wake of those testimonies. Drake has said he never heard of any complaints relating to Sutton's behaviour in the past.\n• Brian Cookson , president of British Cycling for 16 years until 2013, when he became the most powerful man in the sport, elected President of world federation the UCI after campaigning to restore the sport's credibility. At the time Cookson spoke proudly of his time in charge of British Cycling, hailing it a \"well-run, stable federation governed on the principles of honesty, transparency and clear divisions of responsibility.\" A man who, when asked whether he had presided over any bad behaviour, surprised some observers by saying \"I don't want to comment on any individual\", but then did so anyway, expressing his \"great respect\" for Sutton.\n• British Cycling, which is already under investigation from UK Anti-Doping over allegations of wrongdoing following revelations that one of its former coaches, Simon Cope, delivered that mystery medical package to ex-Team Sky doctor Richard Freeman in 2011. Dr Freeman now works for British Cycling. Both men deny wrongdoing but to appear in front of the Commons' Culture, Media and Sport (CMS) Select Committee later this month. The governing body has had to defend its support of women's cycling after a blistering attack by former world road champion Nicole Cooke, who recently told the CMS Committee that British Cycling was\n• UK Sport, who say they are considering helping fund Cookson's forthcoming UCI re-election campaign this year [they gave him £78,000 to help him get elected in 2013], despite co-commissioning the investigation into the culture of an organisation that he headed up for 16 years. The wisdom of using National Lottery funds to help pay for the election campaigns of British sports administrators has already been questioned. Despite their crucial role in distributing the billions of pounds that have helped bring about Britain's remarkable rise as a sporting superpower in successive Olympic and Paralympic Games, UK Sport's 'no-compromise' approach is already under serious scrutiny after cutting off funding to sports like badminton, table-tennis and wheelchair rugby, whose appeals will be heard later this month.\n\nThere is a growing sense that the time may have come for British sport to give as much thought to welfare as it does to winning.\n\nThis whole saga has also shone a light on the contracts and rights of elite-level athletes who are part of performance programmes funded by UK Sport. Varnish believes her contract was not renewed because she had publicly criticised her coaches after her team failed to qualify for the Rio Olympics. Sutton denies this, insisting it was simply down to her performances not being good enough. But regardless of this, and whoever is in the right, some observers are increasingly concerned that the current system is too heavily weighted in favour of the governing bodies. Under the terms of their UK Sport contracts, athletes are not employees, and therefore they lack certain rights afforded to other workers.\n\nVarnish, for instance, amid the devastation of being told she was being axed, claims she was initially given just 48 hours to serve notice whether she wanted to appeal. Often, athletes face that deadline to actually present their case too. And even then, they can only appeal against the process rather than the decision. Athletes who want to challenge selection decisions that determine their livelihoods tend to find their appeals are heard by internal panels made up of officials from the governing body, rather than external, independent arbitrators.\n\nDefenders of the system will argue that in the tough and demanding world of international sport, it has to be this way. Public funding is at stake after all, and coaches like Sutton sometimes have to make tough selection decisions, but do so in order to get results. Staying the right side of the line when it comes to delivering bad news, and the language used, is not always easy. Disappointment is inevitable, and many argue that as long as athletes perform well they are safe - the system is meritocratic. British Cycling also says it extended the appeals process deadline for Varnish.\n\nBut it is still easy to see why athletes could feel they are in a vulnerable position. Concerns were heightened last year for instance, after the leak of an email sent by Andy Harrison, British Cycling's technical director, warning riders they could jeopardise their futures by speaking out to the media about the various scandals afflicting the governing body. Harrison later apologised for his \"poorly constructed\" wording, and British Cycling then said that riders were free to talk to the media without fear, but the damage had been done.\n\nHave governing bodies become too powerful? Does there need to be a greater duty of care towards athletes? More thought given to their lives after their contracts come to an end? Is their an imbalance in the relationship between competitor and coach? Are there cultures of fear at some governing bodies? These are the questions Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson has been wrestling with over the past year. Her government-commissioned review into safety and wellbeing in sport is due to report in the next few weeks.\n\nYou may not have heard about it, but in the aftermath of what looks like being an explosive report by Phelps, and the shocking child sex abuse scandal in football, the publication of Grey-Thompson's recommendations could prove highly significant.\n\nNo one can deny that the demanding, uncompromising approach adopted by bodies like British Cycling has contributed to medals, and plenty of them. It partly explains how Team GB rose to second place in the Rio medal table. But at what cost?\n\nBritish Rowing's coaching culture was described on Wednesday as \"hard and unrelenting\" but cleared of bullying by an internal inquiry. But it also urged more care to be taken of athletes' well-being.\n\nThere is a growing sense that the time may have come for British sport to give as much thought to welfare as it does to winning. And in doing so, usher in a new era in the country's sporting evolution.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nElliot Daly has been named on the wing for England's Six Nations opener against France on Saturday, with the in-form Jack Nowell on the bench.\n\nNowell missed two days of training this week for personal reasons.\n\nMaro Itoje will start a Test for the first time on the flank, and is named alongside Tom Wood and Nathan Hughes in the back row.\n\nJoe Launchbury and Courtney Lawes start in the second row, after George Kruis was ruled out with a knee injury.\n\nHughes is at number eight in place of the injured Billy Vunipola while prop Joe Marler, who has recovered from a fractured leg, starts. Flanker James Haskell is among the replacements.\n\nDaly, who has also played at centre for England, was sent off on his last appearance for his country against Argentina in December, having started the previous Autumn Internationals against South Africa and Fiji.\n\n\"Elliot did superbly for us in the autumn,\" said England coach Eddie Jones. \"He's got genuine pace and can play as a third centre. Jack's absence had nothing to do with selection.\"\n• None Six questions for Eddie Jones to tackle\n• None Get rugby news as it happens by signing up for our new alerts\n• None BBC coverage of the 2017 Six Nations\n• None Matt Dawson scored 12 - can you beat him on our rugby quiz?\n\nThere are eight changes from the starting line-up that sealed England's first clean sweep of the Six Nations in 13 years when the teams met in Paris in March.\n\nMako Vunipola (knee) and Chris Robshaw (shoulder) are unlikely to play a part in England's title defence, while winger Anthony Watson (hamstring) and second row Kruis (knee) have been sidelined for the tournament opener.\n\nDespite the disruption to his preparations, Jones wants his side to take risks.\n\n\"In rugby terms you've traditionally got two contrasting styles - French flair and England's dogged conservative approach, but we want to be absolutely daring against the French in this first game and set the standard for the tournament,\" he said.\n• None Wales make five changes for trip to Italy\n• None Strauss in for Scotland to play Ireland\n\n\"Guy Noves likes a big team. He picks a traditional French forward pack with squat front-rowers who scrummage well, big locks who give a lot of ballast and athletic back-rowers.\n\n\"It's based on size and crunching that gain line, getting an offload and then playing with flair.\n\n\"Of course, this gives you an opportunity when you've got a big forward pack against you and we intend to exploit that.\"\n\nEngland's attacking threat was evident in the series whitewash of Australia in the summer and the autumn internationals, scoring 35 or more points in five of their past seven games.\n\nHowever, despite 13 straight victories since taking charge last year, Jones has told his team to be tighter in defence.\n\nJack Nowell has been in outstanding form for his club Exeter this season, but after missing Tuesday's training session he has to make do with a place on the bench as the versatile Elliot Daly starts.\n\nMaro Itoje's selection on the flank is eye-catching, as is James Haskell's return to the squad after his long injury lay-off.\n\nAnd while George Kruis' injury is a blow, England are extremely well-stocked in the second row, with Joe Launchbury and Courtney Lawes a high-quality pairing.\n\nFrance start with six players beaten by Jones' side in Paris during March.\n\nThe loss of Wesley Fofana to a torn achilles will see Gael Fickou switch roles, while there will be a focus on 22-year-old Baptiste Serin, playing his first Six Nations game at scrum-half.\n\nSerin has captained his country at under-20 level and impressed in his early outings for Les Bleus at senior level.\n\nFlanker Kevin Gourdon and loose-head prop Cyril Baille will also play in the competition for the first time as coach Guy Noves looks to improve on a fifth-placed finish last year in what is his second campaign in charge.", "Here's an exclusive first look at David Hockney's masthead for Friday's edition of the Sun. What do you think?\n\nNewspapers are forever doing cool stunts with their front pages and mastheads.\n\nWhen he was editor of the Independent (my former parish), Simon Kelner designed several memorable front pages, often with the help of celebrities such as Bono or Tracey Emin.\n\nIn my time as editor we had the odd stunt too. They tended to be aimed at promoting charitable causes. Sometimes proceeds from the sale of the paper would go to charity.\n\nFor the Sun on Friday, this is more about boosting circulation with a souvenir edition.\n\nFor Hockney, it will help to raise awareness of his forthcoming exhibition at Tate Britain, which opens on 9 February.\n\nFor what it's worth, I think the redesigned logo is terrific. It is true to the essence of the original but takes it in a playful and childish (in the best sense of that word) direction.\n\nHockney was photographed for Friday's edition in his Los Angeles studio by Arthur Edwards, the Sun's celebrated royal photographer.\n\nIn my view, newspapers should do front page stunts much more often. They generally have a relationship with their readers that is sufficiently deep and trustful for them to get away with it - and they do have the habit of turning particular editions into souvenirs, which can help boost circulation and increase impact on our culture.\n\nIndeed the Sun's front page on the birth of Prince George was, to my mind, close to genius. Of course, editors have to decide how often is too often.", "There is universal condemnation in Friday's papers for the lawyer struck off after he was found to have acted dishonestly in bringing murder and torture claims against British Iraq War veterans.\n\nThe Daily Telegraph thinks Phil Shiner should now be investigated by the criminal authorities \"with the same vigour they showed in investigating those he falsely accused\".\n\nIt says he was \"on a crusade; a mission, it seemed, to tear apart the reputation of the British armed forces\".\n\nThe Times says he has been made a \"pariah of his profession\", and calls for proper safeguards for soldiers so they cannot in future be subjected to allegations based on \"cooked-up evidence\".\n\nThe Daily Mail agrees, saying the \"witch-hunt\" extends as far as Northern Ireland, where police are investigating more than 300 killings by the Army during the Troubles.\n\nThe paper says Mr Shiner \"is a stain on the legal establishment\".\n\nThe Guardian has discovered that there is a ban on non-urgent surgery in West Kent until the new financial year begins, in April.\n\nIt says around 1,700 people will be affected by the decision, which has been prompted by a cash crisis.\n\nThe Royal College of Surgeons tells the paper the policy will prolong patients' suffering and may even cost more in the long term as conditions worsen.\n\nThe group which commissions treatment in the area says no patients will have operations cancelled as a result of the measures.\n\nRationing of a different kind is on the front page of the Daily Mail.\n\nIt says some supermarkets have begun imposing limits on the number of vegetables customers can buy due to the shortages caused by bad weather in the Mediterranean.\n\nIceberg lettuces are being rationed in Tesco and Morrisons, which is also capping the purchase of broccoli.\n\nFor the Guardian, it is \"just the tip of the iceberg\".\n\nIt says: \"British shoppers have already been warned that shortages of courgettes, aubergines, salad and celery will continue until the spring - and they can expect to pay substantially higher prices for the stock that is available.\"\n\nThe Mirror leads with an investigation into the poaching of gorillas in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where populations have fallen by 80% in 20 years.\n\nThe paper says the animals are being shot for bush meat by militia groups and miners looking for a rare metal used in the manufacture of mobile phones and games consoles.\n\nIt is calling on the international community to act now to stop the slaughter.\n\nThe Times, meanwhile, is urging the government to bring about a housing revolution by allowing more development of the Green Belt.\n\nIt reports that a white paper on housing - due out next week - is expected to relax building height restrictions, among other measures.\n\nHowever, the paper thinks the Tories should go further - and have the stomach for a fight in its heartlands, where the Green Belt is seen as sacrosanct.\n\nStaying in the countryside, a new study about the benefits of camping is widely reported.\n\nApparently a night under canvas can help with insomnia by resetting the body's circadian rhythm, or internal clock, because campers are forced to adapt their sleeping patterns to the natural light.\n\nHowever, the Telegraph warns there is a price to be paid for new-found health: it only works if there's strictly no peeking at the mobile phone.\n\nSeveral newspapers reveal the possible secret of Donald Trump's remarkable hair.\n\nAccording to the Times, it's an issue which has fascinated Americans throughout his career. Meanwhile, the new US president's head of hair is described in the Daily Express as a \"gravity-defying bouffant\".\n\nIts mystery, though, may have been solved by his long-time doctor.\n\nDr Harold Bornstein told the New York Times that the president takes a prostate-related drug that stimulates hair growth.\n\nHe confirmed the president's hair was all real, but said it was helped to grow by a small dose of the drug finasteride, which lowers levels of prostate-specific antigen.\n\nThe doctor said: \"He has all his hair. I have all my hair.\"", "The BBC's revelations about the illegal trade in baby chimpanzees triggered an outpouring of emotion on social media about the cruelty suffered by these adorable animals\n\nAnd this raises questions about how our attitudes to our closest relations in the natural world have changed.\n\nSome people who contacted me volunteered to adopt Nemley Jr, the infant rescued from traffickers after the BBC investigation.\n\nMany expressed outrage at the wealthy buyers in China, South East Asia and the Gulf states whose demand encourages poachers to go on raids in the jungles.\n\nThere has also been a new burst of fury at celebrities posing with chimps.\n\nMore recently, Louis Tomlinson, of One Direction, was criticised for using one in a video.\n\nAnd a small number on Twitter and Facebook were so disturbed by the heart-breaking scenes in our videos that they wanted to see anyone trading endangered animals immediately locked up or even killed.\n\nWhat this represents is the latest episode in a long and often shameful relationship between chimps and humans.\n\nNemley Jr, the infant rescued from traffickers after the BBC investigation\n\nStrange though it seems, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were able to become the first humans to walk on the Moon because of a legacy of rocket development that depended on chimpanzees.\n\nAs it happens, the BBC's coverage of chimp trafficking aired on the very anniversary of the launch of Ham the Astrochimp, the first primate to reach orbit, back in January 1961.\n\nHe had been captured in the jungles of Cameroon, strapped into a Mercury rocket and blasted into an unknown still deemed too risky for people.\n\nHe survived, but other space-faring chimps had a far tougher time.\n\nEnos, the second Nasa chimp sent into space, was given tasks to perform - and, if he got them wrong, his feet would be given a small electric shock.\n\nBut the equipment malfunctioned, according to the account that emerged years later.\n\nSo even when Enos performed properly, by pulling the correct levers when prompted, he was still electrocuted 33 times in all.\n\nNone of this killed him, but his space capsule then landed off course.\n\nUS astronaut Alan Shepard with chimpanzee Ham, who preceded him in space\n\nThe truth was, chimps were deemed bright enough to stand in for people but were seen as expendable.\n\nMedical researchers also used to turn to chimps and other great apes to seek answers to fundamental questions about physiology and the brain.\n\nThat work stopped in the UK many decades ago, and in several European countries more recently, but was phased out in the US only after a major scientific report in 2011 concluded there was no benefit from it.\n\nAccording to Sir Colin Blakemore, professor of neuroscience and philosophy at the University of London and a long-time defender of the use of animals in research, discoveries in the 1950s and 60s revealed how chimp brains were \"uncannily\" like ours.\n\n\"The structures, the folds, the similarity was amazing,\" he says.\n\n\"Great apes were being used as models for humans, but the model came back to bite the researchers because of that shocking similarity\n\nThe more the brains of chimps and other great apes were seen to be like ours, the harder it became to justify conducting experiments on them, and a ban became the inevitable outcome.\n\nBritish primatologist Jane Goodall is perhaps the world's leading authority on chimpanzees\n\nProf Blakemore lists a range of useful outcomes derived from research on chimps:\n\nAnd he highlights the work on HIV - carried out under massive public pressure at the start of the Aids epidemic - as an example of an apocalyptic scenario that might conceivably justify the use of great apes in the years ahead.\n\n\"One could imagine that if the future of mankind is threatened by some terrible pathogen, then work on great apes might offer the possibility of saving the human race,\" he says.\n\nAnother long-standing - and popular - use of chimps has been for entertainment.\n\nDuring our investigation, we heard of baby chimps performing in zoos in China.\n\nThat sounds outrageous to us now, but the same happened for decades in the UK.\n\nChimpanzee tea parties were a big attraction - and they were only phased out at Twycross Zoo in the 1970s.\n\nThe zoo's chimps became famous for appearing in hugely popular TV commercials for the tea brand PG Tips.\n\nThe last of the animals to feature on air, a female known as Choppers, died last year.\n\nSharon Redrobe, the zoo's chief executive, says a change in attitudes came as zoos faced having to cope with older chimps disturbed by their experiences and as conservation became more of a priority.\n\nTwo chimpanzees at a \"tea party\" at Whipsnade Zoo in April 1937\n\n\"There's been a massive sea-change in the zoo community,\" she says.\n\n\"In the 80s, there was a wake-up call that we needed to be part of the solution not the problem.\"\n\nAnd, looking ahead, she says, celebrities \"need to get the message that chimps don't make pets and that hugging them does them real harm\".\n\nFor Will Travers, president of the Born Free Foundation, it was the growing scientific understanding of chimps - through the work of Jane Goodall and others - that turned opinion against exploiting the animals, and he gives a poignant example.\n\n\"There had been a misunderstanding that grimaces were smiles, but they were not,\" he says.\n\n\"We now know they represented fear. Enjoyment is the lips pressed together. This was a turning point.\n\n\"We've shot them into space, used them in experiments, dressed them up and pretended they're little humans, but the one thing we haven't done is the one thing they need: protection from us.\"\n\nAll eyes are now on the potential buyers of baby chimpanzees.\n\nChina, a huge market for ivory, was persuaded to introduce a ban on it last Christmas, which could help choke off demand.\n\nThe same kind of edict might help to save the chimpanzees as well.", "A woman raised by drug-addicted parents has written a letter to thank them.\n\nChelsea Cameron's parents missed many important moments as she grew up, like exam results and prize giving.\n\nShe told the Victoria Derbyshire programme why she's grateful.", "James Ibori was released from a UK prison in December after serving four years of a 13-year sentence\n\nA Nigerian politician is appealing against his British conviction for corruption, claiming the Metropolitan Police investigation was itself mired in corruption.\n\nJames Ibori was released in December after four years in a British prison, but prosecutors have since admitted they have documents suggesting police officers involved in the case took bribes.\n\nThe UK government spent years and millions getting Ibori out of Nigeria and into a British court in one of the most expensive and complex police investigations undertaken.\n\nMinisters wanted to prove their determination to tackle corruption in Africa.\n\nIbori, a former London DIY store cashier, was jailed for fraud totalling nearly £50m in April 2012.\n\nBut now the tables have been turned with Ibori claiming the British authorities were themselves corrupt.\n\n\"I have been unfairly treated, that's all I can say,\" Mr Ibori told the BBC, confirming that he plans to appeal against his conviction for money laundering.\n\n\"Yes, I am, of course. I have made that decision personally and I have instructed my solicitors.\"\n\nIbori was extradited from Nigeria to London in 2010\n\nIbori was believed to have laundered large sums in the UK, just part of hundreds of millions of dollars it was claimed he had embezzled from the Nigerian people.\n\nOn a state salary of just £4,000 a year he had bought a fleet of luxury cars and expensive properties. He was also looking to buy a private jet.\n\nIn 2005 the Department for International Development funded a special police unit inside Scotland Yard to go after corrupt African politicians.\n\nIts prime target was Ibori. Its aim: to get him into a British court and convict him for corruption.\n\nHaving been extradited to London in 2010, Ibori was convicted and sentenced to 13 years for money laundering two years later.\n\nBut since he was jailed, documents have emerged suggesting that at least one officer involved in the Ibori investigation had taken thousands of pounds in bribes.\n\nLast year, after repeatedly telling judges there was no evidence of police corruption, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) admitted they had found substantial material that supported the allegations.\n\nLast summer, defence lawyers learned more about an undercover Scotland Yard investigation called Operation Limonium.\n\n\"There exists intelligence that supports the assertion that [a police officer] received payment in return for information in respect of the Ibori case,\" the CPS admitted.\n\nThe officer in question has always denied taking bribes and internal police investigations have previously exonerated him.\n\nDetails of how Scotland Yard tapped phones and conducted covert surveillance on a number of officers in the unit investigating Ibori emerged for the first time.\n\nIbori bought expensive properties and cars, including this Bentley, on a salary of £4,000 a year\n\nOther documents alleging officers had taken bribes were sent to the authorities anonymously in 2011 by a lawyer convicted as part of the Ibori case.\n\nFormer solicitor Bhadresh Gohil says he was trying to alert them to the police corruption.\n\n\"I brought this case to the attention of the Met police, the commissioner of the Met police Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, I brought it to the attention of Alison Saunders, the head of the CPS. I also drew it to the attention of the then Home Secretary Theresa May,\" Mr Gohil says.\n\n\"Unfortunately, no-one did anything about this.\"\n\nWhat they did do was attempt to prosecute Mr Gohil for perverting the course of justice by faking the documents. With the CPS release of the new documents, that case collapsed.\n\nThe British authorities managed to get their man before a judge in 2012, but now James Ibori is willingly returning to the courts looking to put the reputation of the UK's criminal justice system on trial.\n\nThe irony will not be lost on government ministers.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nGabriel Jesus scored his first Manchester City goal as they tore West Ham apart at London Stadium.\n\nCity, who left striker Sergio Aguero and goalkeeper Claudio Bravo on the bench, led when Kevin de Bruyne played a one-two with Jesus before stroking home.\n\nFour minutes later, they doubled their lead when the impressive Leroy Sane beat two defenders and his deflected cross was tapped home by David Silva.\n\nAnd the game was as good as won before half-time when Raheem Sterling squared the ball to Jesus to tap home.\n\nYaya Toure added a fourth after the break from a penalty when Hammers debutant Jose Fonte brought down Sterling.\n\nWest Ham, who made errors to lose possession for each of City's three first-half goals, have been beaten heavily by City twice at home in 2017, having lost 5-0 in their FA Cup meeting last month.\n\nCity are now only behind fourth-placed Liverpool on goal difference, 10 points behind leaders Chelsea.\n\nCity boss Pep Guardiola revealed before the game that he had decided to stick with goalkeeper Willy Caballero and his front three of Sterling, Sane and Jesus - all of whom started Saturday's 3-0 win over Crystal Palace in the FA Cup.\n\nAnd it worked in sensational style the trio - aged 22, 21 and 19 respectively - ripped the Hammers to shreds.\n\nJesus, making his first Premier League start following his £27m move from Palmeiras this month, assisted the opener as City broke from their own half at speed with De Bruyne. The Brazilian exchanged passes before the Belgian, who was also impressive throughout, guided the ball past Darren Randolph.\n\nThe second goal was made by Sane, who has recently hit form following a slow start after his £37m summer move from Schalke, with the German skinning two Hammers defenders and crossing, via a touch from Randolph, for Silva to tap home.\n\nThe dynamic front three all had a hand in the third, with Sane playing in Sterling, who passed the ball across goal for a Jesus tap-in.\n\nTheir second-half performance was still dominant albeit less sensational, perhaps because it did not need to be, but they got their fourth when Sterling was brought down by Fonte and Toure narrowly beat Randolph.\n\nIn goal, Caballero kept his third clean sheet of 2017, having only played three matches, in contrast to the benched Bravo, who had conceded the last six shots on target he had faced.\n\nWest Ham have now conceded 12 goals to City this season, including nine in 2017 - all at London Stadium.\n\nAnd while City were brilliant, the Hammers played a huge part in their own downfall.\n\nAaron Cresswell gifted the ball to City for their first, then lost a 50-50 before the second goal and Pedro Obiang gave the ball to Sane for the third. Centre-back Fonte marked his debut, following his £8m move from Southampton, by conceding a penalty for Toure's second-half penalty.\n\nThey only forced Caballero to save the ball once - a simple fourth-minute stop from Michail Antonio.\n\nSlaven Bilic's side - who only had 30% possession - did have the ball in the net once, although Antonio was offside when he latched on to debutant Robert Snodgrass's through ball to fire home.\n\nManchester City boss Pep Guardiola to BBC Sport: \"Our high pressing was good. We were so aggressive without the ball.\n\n\"Gabriel Jesus is a fighter with instinct for the goal. He's good at assists too.\n\n\"We played a front three with an average age of 20. I like the fans to be excited. Those players are the future of the club. Leroy Sane had some problems at the beginning but now he's settled. They will be important players for the next few years.\"\n\nWest Ham boss Slaven Bilic told BBC Sport: \"It's like a copy and paste from the FA Cup game. It's very frustrating. We made such mistakes for the first and third goal. If you give the ball away in those areas, they'll punish you.\n\n\"When it's 3-0, it's hard to play against them. You are hoping if you score you can turn a game around. But at 3-0 it's more likely you'll concede more as they'll gain confidence.\n\n\"It's a heavy defeat for us but we can't let it hurt us a lot. We have to bounce back like we did after the FA Cup defeat.\"\n\nAnalysis - 'City will be found out'\n\n\"I think if Manchester City play the team they did tonight away from home against other team, they will be found out.\n\n\"They are far too open. Yaya Toure, as the holding midfielder, won't get around enough against decent teams.\n\n\"West Ham are the perfect team for Manchester City. They played 4-4-2 and were destroyed in midfield.\n• None Gabriel Jesus became the first player to both score and assist a goal on their first Premier League start for Manchester City.\n• None Jesus also became the second youngest Brazilian player to score his first Premier League goal (19yrs 304days), after Rafael for Manchester United in November 2008 (18yrs 122days).\n• None David Silva scored his third away Premier League goal against West Ham - his highest tally of away goals against another opponent in the competition.\n• None West Ham have shipped four or more goals in three of their 12 Premier League games at London Stadium - the same number as in their final 106 top-flight games at Upton Park.\n• None Yaya Toure has scored all 11 of his Premier League penalties - the best 100% record in the competition.\n• None In his 50th Premier League game, Kevin de Bruyne recorded his 30th goal involvement in the competition (11 goals, 19 assists).\n• None City have scored nine goals in two games in all competitions at London Stadium - just half the number West Ham have (18) in 17 games there.\n\nBoth clubs are back in Premier League action this weekend.\n\nCity host Swansea on Sunday (13:30 GMT), while the Hammers go to Southampton on Saturday (15:00 GMT).\n\nHow the papers saw Jesus' performance\n• None Attempt blocked. Robert Snodgrass (West Ham United) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Offside, West Ham United. Mark Noble tries a through ball, but Robert Snodgrass is caught offside.\n• None Attempt blocked. Edimilson Fernandes (West Ham United) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked.\n• None Offside, West Ham United. Robert Snodgrass tries a through ball, but Michail Antonio is caught offside.\n• None Offside, Manchester City. David Silva tries a through ball, but Sergio Agüero is caught offside. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "The researchers dragged volunteers on to a camping trip in the midst of a Colorado winter\n\nSpending a weekend out camping resets the clock inside our bodies that influences sleeping habits, scientists at a US university have discovered.\n\nThe team argue that time in the great outdoors could help those struggling to get up in the morning and boost health.\n\nThe researchers said swapping bricks and mortar for canvas was not a long-term solution.\n\nBut exposing ourselves to more bright light in the day (and less at night) could help.\n\nOur body has a daily \"circadian\" rhythm that anticipates day and night to co-ordinate how our body works.\n\nIt alters alertness, mood, physical strength, when we need to sleep and even the risk of a heart attack as part of a 24-hour cycle.\n\nLight helps the clock keep time, but modern life with artificial light, alarm clocks and smartphones has altered our sleeping habits.\n\nThe report is published in Current Biology and Dr Kenneth Wright, from the University of Colorado Boulder, told the BBC: \"We're waking up at a time when our circadian clock says we should still be asleep.\"\n\nHe says this is damaging to health with studies suggesting links with mood disorders, type 2 diabetes and obesity.\n\nAnd it also simply makes us really groggy and sleepy when we try to get up in the morning.\n\nSo Dr Wright organised a series of camping expeditions for a small group of volunteers.\n\nThey had to wear special watches that recorded light levels and had blood tests to analyse the sleep hormone melatonin.\n\nAnd the only artificial light they were allowed was the glow of a campfire, even a torch was banned.\n\nThe first thing they learned on a week-long camping trip in winter was people were exposed to 13 times more light than at home, even though it was the darkest part of the year.\n\nTheir melatonin levels also started to rise two-and-a-half hours earlier than before the expedition and they went to bed earlier too.\n\nThe campers were now sleeping and waking in tune with their body clocks.\n\nAnother camping trip showed most of that benefit could be gained by just going away for a weekend.\n\nDr Wright said: \"We're not saying camping is the answer here, but we can introduce more natural light to modern life.\n\n\"It is something we as a society can regulate without people having to change behaviours.\"\n\nHe thinks homes, offices and schools could be designed to allow in more natural light.\n\nAnd the new generation of \"tuneable\" light bulbs - that can be made far brighter in the day and dimmer at night - could also be used.\n\nHowever, at the moment, people's body clocks would start to shift back to their old rhythm once the tent was packed up.\n\nIn order to continue to benefit from the camping reset, people would need to get a large hit of light in the day - for example by going out for a walk before work - and cut down in the evening by using less artificial light.\n\nAnd if you want to watch your favourite TV show \"record it\", says Dr Wright.\n\nThe researchers also picked up clues that our body clocks alter during the year and that may affect how our body functions.\n\nIn a week of summer camping, melatonin production was altered by two hours, in winter it was altered by 2.6 hours.\n\nIt is a suggestion there is something different about the way our bodies react to the longer or shorter day.\n\nAnd we already know that some people suffer from low mood with seasonal affective disorders.\n\nDr Wright added: \"We have a hint there's something there and maybe at one point it time it was critical and now, in a modern environment, maybe we don't need to worry about putting on more weight in winter, but the impacts may still be hardwired in our physiology.\"", "A British woman has told the Victoria Derbyshire programme that the police in Dubai are refusing to hand over her passport so she can fly back to the UK for urgent cancer treatment.\n\nLuisa Williams said she was diagnosed with advanced kidney cancer two weeks ago.\n\nShe said authorities in the United Arab Emirates want to deport her for carrying out charity work which was against the law.\n\nBut they won't let her leave unless she goes to a detention centre first, where she is concerned her condition may worsen.\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Katie Kendrick says she was originally told her home's freehold would cost between £2,000 and £4,000\n\nWhen putting pen to paper to buy a new home, most people expect to know how much they will need to pay to own it outright. But thousands of families in England and Wales are discovering the new-build houses they bought are not all they seemed.\n\nKatie Kendrick bought her new-build home from Bellway in Ellesmere Port, Cheshire, three years ago for £214,000.\n\n\"It was supposed to be our forever home,\" she tells the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme, sitting in the living room of her four-bedroom house. \"But it's the biggest mistake I've ever made.\"\n\nKatie knew the house was leasehold - meaning she owned the property for the 150-year length of her lease agreement - but claims she was told by the sales representative that because of the long lease it was \"as good as freehold\"; a property owned outright.\n\nShe thought nothing of it, and says she was told she would be able to buy her freehold after two years, believing it would cost between £2,000 and £4,000.\n\nBut a year and a half later, she received a letter from Bellway saying her freehold had been sold to an investment company, which was now quoting £13,300 for her to buy it.\n\n\"At the moment I feel completely blind and in a corner and don't know which way to turn. There's legal action but that is very costly,\" she says.\n\nWhat Bellway has done - selling a new home as leasehold, and then selling the freehold separately to an investment company without informing the family living there - is not illegal.\n\nIn England and Wales, the \"right of first refusal\" applies to flats, but not houses. So it was not legally obliged to tell Katie it would do this.\n\nFor an investment company, buying groups of freeholds is a safe long-term investment. Receiving regular payments for ground rents - over leases that number well over 100 years - means safe, steady incomes, to fund things like pensions.\n\nThe campaign group Leasehold Knowledge Partnership estimates this business is worth up to £500m to the developers each year.\n\nThe leasehold system has existed for a long time in England and Wales, especially in blocks of flats. Many leaseholders have long leases, for example for 999 years, and experience no problems.\n\nBut the trend for new-build houses being sold as leasehold has accelerated in recent years. While not all house builders use this model, those that do argue it helps make developments financially viable.\n\nBut nowhere on Bellway's website is this system made clear to potential buyers, and Katie feels these facts were not made clear to her. She also says the solicitor - recommended to her by Bellway - made no mention of this possibility either.\n\nKatie says because she bought the house through the government's Help To Buy scheme, she felt she could trust the process.\n\nBellway has not responded to requests for comment.\n\nHomeground - the company that now manages Katie's freehold on behalf of the investment company - said in a statement it \"can usually informally negotiate a price which can often save both time and some of the professional fees\".\n\n\"In the rare event we cannot agree, the leaseholder still retains the right to turn to the statutory process, which will establish the price as well as the legal fees they have to pay.\"\n\nIt's likely thousands of homeowners could be in a similar position to Katie. Lindsay, who lives on the same estate, bought a house from developers Taylor Wimpey.\n\nThe company did ask Lindsay if she wanted to buy her freehold - for £2,600. She declined because she was on maternity leave and felt financially it was not possible.\n\nTwo years later she asked about buying it but found it was now £32,000.\n\n\"I rang them and said, 'I'd like to buy it now.' And they said, 'It's not for sale - there's a private investor who owns it. They've got a long-term interest in your property,'\" Lindsay explains.\n\n\"I turned around and said, 'I've got a long-term interest in my property. It's my family home, it's my son's inheritance, and it's not yours to just line your pockets with.'\n\n\"I feel like I've let everybody down because it wasn't right to buy it when it came. But nobody said this was a one-time offer.\n\n\"It might be legal, but it's not even questionable that it's immoral,\" she adds.\n\nWatch the Victoria Derbyshire programme on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.\n\nTaylor Wimpey said as it no longer owned the freehold to Lindsay's house, it did not set the price of the freehold or benefit from the ground rent.\n\nIt added that, since the start of this year, houses on its new developments would be sold as freehold-only, except in a small number of cases where it did not own the freehold to the land.\n\nBut other developers are still selling new-build houses as leasehold.\n\nKatie and Lindsay do have the option to negotiate with the companies who own their freeholds, but say they do not wish to go down this route. They feel the original prices should still stand.\n\nThe law does allow a leaseholder to force their freeholder to sell after two years - if both sides cannot agree a price, a tribunal will decide how much the leaseholder should pay.\n\nHowever, the leaseholder can also be liable for the legal fees of both parties, meaning further expense to people like Katie and Lindsay.\n\nA spokesman for the Department of Communities and Local Government has told the BBC \"it is unacceptable if home buyers are being exploited with unfair charges and unfavourable ground rent agreements prior to purchase.\n\n\"We are aware of this issue and will announce radical proposals to reset the housing market in our forthcoming White Paper.\"\n\nBeth Rudolf, from the Conveyancing Association, says that if the developers were not clear about the leaseholds, it may be a case of misrepresentation.\n\n\"Anyone marketing a property is covered by consumer unfair trading regulations, which means that if there is anything that would affect their decision-making process, then they should be advised of that before viewing the property,\" she says.\n\nBeth Rudolf believes developers should be clear about the leaseholds from the start\n\n\"It's too late when they move into the house to find that out, it's too late when they become legally liable to purchase it.\n\n\"It's too late really at the point when they've viewed it, because they've already fallen in love with it.\"\n\nThe fight goes on for Katie and Lindsay, who worry their homes are now \"unsellable\" while this shadow hangs over them.\n\n\"Hindsight's a wonderful thing,\" says Lindsay. \"I wouldn't have done it if I had known.\"", "MPs have voted by a majority of 384 to allow Theresa May to get Brexit negotiations under way.\n\nThey backed the government's European Union Bill, supported by the Labour leadership, by 498 votes to 114.\n\nBut the Scottish National Party and the Liberal Democrat leadership opposed the bill, while 47 Labour MPs and Tory ex-chancellor Ken Clarke rebelled.", "This video can not be played\n\nTo play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland need to work on how they play spin bowling after their tour of India ended in a crushing Twenty20 defeat, says head coach Trevor Bayliss.\n\nEngland lost eight wickets for eight runs in 19 balls to lose by 75 runs in Bangalore, with spinner Yuzvendra Chahal taking 6-25 in his four overs.\n\nThe loss sealed a 2-1 T20 series defeat for England, who also lost the Test and one-day series during the tour.\n\n\"We're certainly not world-class players of spin,\" admitted Bayliss.\n\n\"We're playing against players that are very good players of spin, and they've got very good spinners themselves.\n\n\"When you don't grow up on it, as players here do, it is difficult. It's a learning process.\"\n• None Eight wickets for eight runs - how the collapse unfolded\n\n'One of our worst performances in a while'\n\nEngland lost 86 wickets to spin across all formats on their tour of India, having also struggled against it in their previous tour in Bangladesh.\n\nChasing 203 to win on Wednesday, they were still in the game at the halfway stage of their reply, but after Chahal dismissed both skipper Eoin Morgan and vice-captain Joe Root, the tourists collapsed.\n\n\"It is a little bit disappointing the way we finished our series,\" said Bayliss. \"It doesn't reflect the type of cricket we have played over here. But it's what can happen in a T20 match when you're chasing a big total.\"\n\nMorgan said: \"Everybody is gutted. Today was a big game for us. There was a series on the line and we wanted to produce a good performance but in fact we have produced one of our worst in a long time.\n\n\"If we can take anything from it, it is that it is the first time it has happened in two and a half years.\"\n\n'Still a lot of work to do'\n\nEngland won only three of their 13 matches during the tour - one ODI, one T20 and a tour match against India A.\n\nHowever, they produced their best cricket in the limited-overs series, scoring more than 300 in each of the ODIs and producing some improved bowling displays in the T20s.\n\n\"The results haven't gone the way we'd have liked,\" said Bayliss. \"We've played some pretty good cricket here at times.\n\n\"We've still got a lot of work to do - the boys have been very honest about where they stand.\n\n\"We've got to put together a batting and a bowling performance in one game - we seem to bat well in some games, and bowl well in others.\"\n\nMorgan added: \"There hasn't been a lot between the sides, particularly in the one-day series. There was 15-20 runs between the winning and losing of the series.\n\n\"The improvements we have shown since then have been considerable in our bowling department. When you are going well you have to take advantage of it.\n\n\"But we are really strong at the moment. Home advantage is huge, around the world. We have pushed India right to the cusp in both [limited-overs] series.\"\n\n'Up to Cook if he continues as captain'\n\nIn the wake of the 4-0 Test series defeat in India, Alastair Cook said he had \"questions\" about his role as England captain, admitting Root was \"ready\" to be his successor.\n\nAustralian Bayliss said he had not spoken to Cook since he departed the tour but said he would contact him in due course.\n\n\"I'm heading home to Australia for a little while in the next day or so,\" added Bayliss. \"I'll put the feet up for a little bit and I'm sure I'll speak to him at some stage.\n\n\"I'll give it a couple of days - I'm sure we'll exchange a text message or something.\n\n\"As I said to him when he left, and there was a lot of speculation, it is totally up to him. He will know if it's time to step down.\n\n\"I'm happy either way, whether he stays or goes. There is plenty of time.\"", "Thai customs officials have seized their biggest ever haul of smuggled pangolin scales, after a crackdown on illegal wildlife trade.\n\nThe scaly mammals are illicitly transported from Africa to meet demand in Asia for their supposed medicinal value.\n\nThis has led to their numbers falling drastically and all eight species are protected under international law.", "Last updated on .From the section Cricket\n\nEngland's Ben Stokes could earn \"millions\" when he enters the Indian Premier League auction, says India batsman Yuvraj Singh.\n\nThe auction for the 20-over franchise competition is scheduled to be held in Bangalore on Monday, 20 February.\n\nWhen asked how much Stokes was worth, Yuvraj, who went for a record £1.6m in 2015, said: \"A couple of million.\n\n\"He's a quality hitter, fast bowler and fielder. He'll definitely get the big bucks. He brings a lot to the table.\"\n\nYuvraj, 35, has lined up against Stokes, 25, in the recent one-day and Twenty20 series between India and England, and has enjoyed watching England's talisman close up.\n\n\"I always see Ben and Virat [Kohli] having a go at each other,\" Yuvraj told BBC Sport. \"It's great for cricket to have passion.\n\n\"We always have banter with the English. My old battles were with Andrew Flintoff.\"\n\nThis year the IPL will run from 5 April to 21 May, with England's players available for much more of the tournament than usual because of the lack of a Test match in May.\n\nThis availability, coupled with eye-catching performances in limited-overs cricket, mean England's players could be highly sought.\n\nSam Billings and Jos Buttler are already signed to teams, but the likes of Stokes, Chris Woakes, Jason Roy, Chris Jordan, Tymal Mills and Alex Hales could attract interest.\n\n\"If these guys come and play the IPL, their skills will improve,\" Yuvraj added. \"The more they play in different conditions, the better they will become.\"\n\nStokes could become the subject of a \"bidding war\", according to freelance T20 journalist Freddie Wilde.\n\nWilde believes Kolkata Knight Riders may target the Durham player now West Indies all-rounder Andre Russell is suspended following a doping code violation.\n\nHowever, he might not be the only player to swell his bank balance.\n\n\"Jason Roy could be hot property at this auction too,\" said Wilde.\n\n\"Over the past year, Roy has established himself as one of the leading opening batsmen in the world and his form in the England-India ODI series, as well as the World T20 last year, proves he can do it in Indian conditions.\n\n\"Tymal Mills is the most likely of the England bowlers to be picked up. High pace is valuable in India, where the pitches generally offer little in the way of lateral movement to seamers.\n\n\"I also think Chris Woakes could prove to be a useful, perhaps under-valued, acquisition for somebody.\"\n\nRead more: Where the IPL contract money goes (Daily Telegraph)\n\nStokes much more than a batsman or bowler...\n• Ben Stokes of any player in the 2016 World T20.\n• Jason Roy has a strike-rate (runs per 100 balls) of 132 in the Powerplay.\n• Alex Hales' strike-rate in the Powerplay is 130, in the middle overs it is 135 and in the death overs it is 156.\n• Tymal Mills has taken 3-33 from 28 slower balls in his T20 international career.\n• None Since the start of 2016, Chris Jordan is England's leading wicket-taker in T20 internationals with 17.\n\nThe IPL had a television audience of 347 million in India last year, with more than a third of that believed to be female viewers.\n\n\"It's quite simply one of the biggest tournaments in the world - not just in cricket,\" said Isa Guha, a former England women's international who is now an IPL commentator and analyst for television.\n\n\"All eyes are on it right across the globe because it's where cricket meets entertainment.\n\n\"I liken it to a sitcom because families sit down and enjoy it when they get home from work. It's not just father and son. It's wife and daughters too.\n\n\"The Indian public buy into the heroes and villains. AB de Villiers, for example, is revered. They'd be excited to see Ben Stokes play in the IPL.\"\n\nSo who excites you?\n\nIs Ben Stokes really worth millions? Perhaps you agree that Chris Woakes offers value for money?\n\nHave a little fun with our ranking tool, which allows you to pick the three English players you think should attract the most attention at the IPL auction.\n\n* This article was amended on 3 February after Kevin Pietersen withdrew from the IPL auction\n\nPick your top three IPL signings from our list.", "The claim: Air pollution in London last week was worse than it was in Beijing.\n\nReality Check verdict: Some one-off readings were higher in London last week, but this was an unrepresentative snapshot and Beijing is generally far worse.\n\nOn 22 January, recordings of particulate air pollution were higher in London than in Beijing.\n\nRuth Cadbury is the Labour MP for Brentford and Isleworth, a part of London that has seen unusually high levels of air pollution recently.\n\nLast week saw the highest level recorded in the capital since April 2011.\n\nThe spike was attributed to cold, calm and settled weather, meaning winds were not dispersing local pollutants.\n\nDifferent countries measure air pollution in different ways.\n\nThe UK government uses a one (lowest) to 10 (highest) scale.\n\nLast week's levels in London were a 10.\n\nAnother measure is the Air Quality Index (AQI).\n\nLast Monday, according to this measure, some parts of London showed particulate levels a bit higher than in Beijing.\n\nBut this was just a snapshot and not the case for most of the week.\n\nOn Wednesday afternoon, the overall AQI level in Beijing was about three times higher than in London, and recordings were even higher on the Chinese city's industrial outskirts.\n\nThe World Health Organization gathers average particulate levels from cities around the world.\n\nThey suggest that Beijing's levels are about five times worse than London's.\n\nThe cities with the dirtiest air are Zabol in Iran and Onitsha in Nigeria.\n\nIn the UK, overall emissions of all types of air pollution have fallen dramatically since 1970.\n\nPollution in Beijing is much worse than in London - or in Stockholm, where the same claim was made this week.", "Last updated on .From the section Welsh Rugby\n\nCoverage: Live on S4C, BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru & BBC Sport website and BBC Sport app, plus live text commentary\n\nWales have made five changes from the team that beat South Africa in November for Sunday's Six Nations opener against Italy in Rome.\n\nScrum-half Rhys Webb returns after injury, while former captain Sam Warburton is named on the blind-side flank by interim coach Rob Howley.\n\nProps Nicky Smith and Samson Lee come in to the team, with Jake Ball in for the injured Luke Charteris at lock.\n\nBath number eight Taulupe Faletau has failed to recover from a knee injury.\n\nScott Williams is preferred at centre to Jamie Roberts, who is on the bench, while Dan Biggar will partner Webb at half-back.\n\nThe Ospreys scrum-half missed the autumn Tests against Argentina, Japan and South Africa after injuring a knee against Australia on 5 November.\n\nLock Alun Wyn Jones leads the team for the first time since taking over from Warburton as skipper.\n\nNone of the uncapped players in the extended squad have made the match day 23, with interim coach Rob Howley saying it was important to start the tournament with a win.\n\nIn fact Howley's starting XV averages more than 45 caps a man.\n\n\"We've gone with a lot of experience with 10 out the XV who started against South Africa,\" he said.\n\n\"It's important to start well hence the selection you see.\n\n\"We've been there as coaches and some of the players have - 2009 comes to mind - when we made a number of changes and given opportunities but we just feel for the start of the campaign we want to start well.\n\n\"We believe the Six Nations is going to be about momentum and we wanted to pick a rather experienced team to start the tournament.\"\n• None Five changes for Wales women's team to play Italy\n• None Keep up to date with BBC Six Nations alerts\n• None How to watch and follow the Six Nations with the BBC\n\nMeanwhile Italy coach, Conor O'Shea, has made five changes from the team that beat South Africa in November for the Wales clash.\n\nThere are no uncapped players in the Italian squad as captain Sergio Parisse returns to lead the side and win his 122nd Test cap.\n\nWales in the 2017 Six Nations", "Last updated on .From the section Tennis\n\nFriday's coverage: Watch live on BBC Red Button, Connected TV and online from 20:00 and BBC Two from 23:05, plus follow text updates on the BBC Sport website.\n\nDan Evans will play 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov in the opening rubber of Great Britain's Davis Cup first-round tie against Canada in Ottawa.\n\nFriday's second singles rubber will be between Kyle Edmund and Vasek Pospisil.\n\nJamie Murray and Dom Inglot will contest Saturday's doubles rubber against Daniel Nestor and Pospisil.\n\nCaptain Leon Smith has confirmed world number one Andy Murray will not compete for Great Britain this weekend, saying it is the \"right thing for him to do\".\n\n\"We all miss Andy because he is such a great influence on the team both on and off the court,\" said Smith.\n\n\"Like we saw last year [in the match against Serbia when he watched as a spectator], he puts a lot of interest and care into this team.\"\n\nWorld number three Milos Raonic pulled out of the Canadian team with an injury, meaning the hosts are without a top-100 singles player.\n\nThe draw was conducted at the home of the Canadian Parliament by the Speaker of the House. The match court is about three miles from Parliament, and it is nearly possible to make the entire journey on skates as the Rideau Canal is frozen solid and open to skaters.\n\nThe absence of Milos Raonic hits Canada very hard. Denis Shapovalov won last year's junior Wimbledon and is an exciting prospect, but it is a huge ask for him to win a five-set match at the age of 17.\n\nKyle Edmund will also start favourite against Vasek Pospisil, although the Canadian was a top 40 player this time last year.", "Police in Los Angeles have carried out their biggest-ever operation to find girls and young women who were forced into commercial sexual exploitation.\n\nOfficers made almost 500 arrests and rescued more than 50 young people.\n\nThe BBC's Angus Crawford was given exclusive access.", "The Kilauea volcano in Hawaii has been active since 1983, but scientists have filmed an unusual phenomenon.\n\nDramatic footage shows lava as it flows through a crack in a sea cliff, and into the Pacific Ocean.", "John buried a Matchbox car and a halfpenny in his time capsule\n\nMany people around the world make time capsules with items included in them, hoping someone will find them many years later.\n\nA Blue Peter Millennium time capsule has been accidentally dug up 33 years earlier than planned. It was buried under the Millennium Dome, now the O2 Arena, in 1998 and was not supposed to be unearthed until 2050.\n\nWe asked people to share their stories and to tell us what they included in their time capsules. Here are some of the responses we received.\n\nJohn Carver, 59, buried his time capsule 51 years ago. It included many items including crayons as he thought there would not be colours in the future. He never found the capsule.\n\n\"I buried a time capsule when I was about eight. The contents included, as far as I can remember, crayons, a halfpenny and a Matchbox car.\n\n\"They were 'securely' packaged in a Marmite jar which then came with a metal lid. It was buried in the lawn of the family home, which has recently been sold, never to be seen again.\n\n\"Within a very short time the hole I had dug disappeared and I could never accurately pinpoint where it was.\n\n\"It was the family home for 56 years and over the years, I have always thought about it.\"\n\nMike Simpson and his son Thomas created a time capsule hoping that a boy from the future would find it one day and read it. The capsule included a list of Thomas's favourite things, ranging from his favourite meal to his favourite TV show, which is Doctor Who.\n\n\"Thomas was just starting to get interested in history so this was a project that helped him to understand the passage of time and consider how a house can be home to many different families over a century,\" Mike says.\n\n\"Eight years ago when Thomas was five we moved into our present home, which dates from the 1890s. Removing old plaster to add a damp course revealed some gaps between the Victorian bricks where mortar had crumbled.\n\n\"We created a letter to a little boy from the future, listing Thomas's name, school, favourite food, favourite TV show among other things.\n\nThomas pictured with his favourite items, some of which he buried in the time capsule\n\n\"We carefully folded this up and sealed it in a plastic bag with one of his school photos and a penny dated that year. This was pushed between two bricks and then plastered over.\n\n\"Hopefully decades from now someone will find a message from the past.\"\n\nAged about 10, Angus Macdonald, now 50, buried his time capsule in his parents' back garden in Singapore in 1976.\n\n\"It was a big glass jam jar, buried only about a foot down, and it contained the front page of that day's newspaper and a few other personal bits and pieces.\n\n\"I imagine it has probably been found by now and probably thrown away as junk. Or else it has broken and its contents long decomposed.\n\n\"One day, I would like to go back and see whether it is still there, but I guess it would be a bit odd to ask the current occupants of the house whether I could dig up their garden!\n\n\"I think time capsules are a great idea - but you need to do it properly, bury them in a place where they are unlikely to be discovered, set a date for opening them that is not too far away and ensure the fact of their existence is recorded somewhere, especially with family or friends.\"\n\nRay Green's staircase where he hid his time capsule\n\nRay Green placed a time capsule under his home's staircase in 1992. While altering the staircase of his then new house, he took photos of the construction work at the time, along with a picture of him and his wife and other items.\n\n\"In the capsule there are pictures of me and my wife, a copy of the Liverpool Echo, pictures of the construction and a letter I wrote explaining the work that was carried out.\n\n\"There was also a good luck message to anyone finding it and deciding to alter the staircase again, mainly because I had such a swine of a job doing it.\"", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Blue Peter presenters Katy Hill and Richard Bacon bury the trove in 1998\n\nA Blue Peter time capsule has been accidentally dug up by construction workers 33 years earlier than planned.\n\nThe Millennium Time Capsule was buried under the Millennium Dome, now the O2 Arena, in 1998.\n\nFilled with viewers' mementos of the time, it was not supposed to be unearthed until 2050.\n\nThe O2 has said despite being damaged, the capsule's contents are safe. The BBC said the capsule will be re-buried.\n\nA Tellytubby, Blue Peter badge and Tamagotchi were among the items buried\n\nFormer Blue Peter presenters Katy Hill and Richard Bacon buried the capsule in June 1998.\n\nA spokesperson for the BBC said: \"Although a little earlier than anticipated, we're looking forward to sharing these memories with our viewers and making new ones as we return the capsule to the earth so that it can be reopened in 2050 as originally planned.\"\n\nIn a competition, viewers had been asked to submit ideas for items they would like put inside.\n\nThe winning entries included roller blade wheels, an asthma inhaler, Tellytubby dolls, a France 1998 World Cup football, a picture of a dove to symbolise peace in Northern Ireland and a Roald Dahl book.\n\nDawn of the Dome: Fireworks light up the sky on 1 January 2000\n\nA spokesman for the O2 Arena said: \"The team at The O2 and our contractors ISG have been searching for the Blue Peter time capsule since we started construction work in 2016.\n\n\"We found it yesterday but sadly it was accidently damaged during excavations. The capsule and its contents are safely stored in our office and we've let the team at Blue Peter know.\n\n\"We're going to work with them to either repair or replace the capsule and bury it again for the future.\"\n\nThe BBC said: \"We are looking forward to sharing these memories with viewers and making new ones as we rebury the capsule until 2050.\"\n\nA Spice Girls CD was among the other items locked away in the capsule...\n\n...as was an insulin pen...\n\n...and a set of British coins, in what was a pre-£2 coin era\n\nPhotos of the Oblivion ride in Alton Towers were also preserved...\n\n....along with an asthma inhaler...\n\n...and a picture of Princess Diana, who had died a year earlier in a road accident", "A current family fad is playing that word-association game in which you respond to the previous player's word with a relatable one of your own, eg me: \"Annoying.\" Son: \"Dad.\" Wife: \"Bald eagle.\"\n\nAnd so on. We've played a lot recently, such that I've started to react to the daily news in a similarly tangential way, where related but seemingly random thoughts pop into my head over and above more conspicuous concerns.\n\nFor instance, while everybody else was discussing the significance of a potential state visit to the UK by President Trump, I had two immediate thoughts in my mind:\n\nNo need to dwell on point one.\n\nOne look at the photographs of Donald Trump's Manhattan Penthouse in Trump Tower confirms George IV's extravagant tastes and those of the current US President are simpatico.\n\nThe art question is harder (should that be his choice of gift).\n\nAs potentially treacherous presents go, giving a work of art to someone you don't know is right up there with buying underwear for a work colleague or deodorant for your mother-in-law: the likelihood of causing offence and/or embarrassment is high.\n\nTaste in art is a hard one to call, as the well-meaning Germans found out in 2015, when they attempted to combine their penchant for modernist expressionism with Her Majesty's passion for horses and family life.\n\nThe Queen seemed bemused by the gift of a painting of her and her father, George VI\n\nIt fell to President Joachim Gauck to present the painting by Nicole Leidenfrost to the Queen during her fifth state visit to Germany.\n\nThe president stood proudly to the side of the easel on which the painting rested.\n\nIt depicted the Queen as an eight-year-old girl sitting on a blue horse while her father, George VI, held its reins.\n\nMr Gauck smiled enthusiastically, made a gesture with his left arm in a magician's \"ta-da\" sort of way, and invited the British monarch to inspect the splendid piece.\n\nThe Queen's response was, shall we say, muted.\n\nShe looked over to the Duke of Edinburgh with a bemused smile on her face and a question in her eye that appeared to be asking if this was a practical joke.\n\nHer husband leant in to look at the picture, held his position, and said nothing, leaving his wife with the task of filling the awkward silence.\n\n\"It's a strange colour for a horse,\" she said.\n\nThe German president laughed charmingly but unconvincingly, as did others in attendance.\n\n\"And that's supposed to be my father, is it?\" Her Majesty enquired.\n\nThe Trump Tower in New York was built on the site of an art-deco department store\n\nThat hurt. But Mr Gauck remained calm and courteous and duly confirmed the figure on the left was meant to be her father.\n\nThe chances of President Trump trotting off in the same direction and opting for a German expressionist aesthetic are slim.\n\nThis is a man who once described a painting by Chris Ofili featuring the Virgin Mary amid cut-up backsides from pornographic magazines as \"degenerate,\" which is a loaded word to choose to describe an artwork, as it was so infamously used by the Nazis to describe Jewish and German expressionist paintings, which they exhibited and mocked in the 1937 Degenerate Art show.\n\nArt deco is out too, even though the American president is a New Yorker and has therefore spent his life surrounded by some the greatest examples of it in it the world.\n\nMy grounds for this assertion go back to an incident in 1980 when he was about to demolish the Bonwit Teller Department Store on Manhattan's 5th Avenue in order to build Trump Tower.\n\nBefore the wrecking balls swung into action, he was asked by the Metropolitan Museum of Art to save the art deco bas-reliefs on the building's facade.\n\nNewspaper reports from the time claim he said he would, but then he did not - later explaining to the press (having allegedly taken on the persona of an invented PR man called John Barron - a surname he would later give his son as a Christian name) there were too many health and safety issues to overcome.\n\nPresident Trump has inspired a number of works of art\n\nAs for modern art, I think I can confidently say the president is not a huge fan on the whole.\n\nIn his book Art of the Deal, he said: \"I've always felt a lot of modern art is a con.\"\n\nThis could explain why he missed out on what would have been a great art deal in 1981, when he rejected Andy Warhol's series of Trump Tower screen-prints the artist had made for him on spec (Warhol said: \"Mr Trump was very upset that it wasn't colour coordinated.\")\n\nI think baroque could be his thing.\n\nIt has everything he seems to like.\n\nIt is big, sweeping, grand, historic and tumultuous.\n\nIt has the Louis XIV kitschy campness he goes for.\n\nBetter still, it is dramatic.\n\nPresident Trump is a showman; he understands the power of the spectacle.\n\nIt is no surprise to me that he flirted with a career as a Broadway producer in his early 20s, and perfectly possible that he considers his work in property development as a more lucrative form of theatre, with his enormous buildings providing the set for urban dramas to unfold in and around.\n\nSo, a baroque offering that is all about scale and showmanship - I suppose he could revisit his onetime collaboration with the Russian artist Zurab Tsereteli, whose colossal statue of Christopher Columbus he planned to make the totemic landmark of his West Side Yards development in New York.\n\nHe told the New Yorker magazine in that \"it's got $40m [£30m] worth of bronze in it\" and the artist was \"major and legit\".\n\nJeff Koons' sculpture Puppy. Might something like this grace Buckingham Palace?\n\nMost importantly perhaps, it was 6ft (1.8m) taller then the Statue of Liberty, itself a whopping work of art that was given to American by the French as a state gift.\n\nIn the end, New York rejected Tsereteli's statue, so did Boston and Miami.\n\nIt was finally erected in Puerto Rico last year.\n\nBut that took years, and Donald Trump may have only months before his visit. So, what to do?\n\nMaybe he could pop round to Jeff Koons's studio in New York.\n\nHere is a contemporary American artist in touch with his baroque side, who has even exhibited at Versailles, and whose artistic vision is to \"communicate with the masses\" - a populist manifesto I imagine to be close to the president's heart.\n\nWhat's more, he makes massive sculptures and loves dogs nearly as much as the Queen.\n\nProof for which can be found in his famous 40ft (12m) high plant-encrusted sculpture of a West Highland terrier puppy (1992), which he could reconceive in 2017 for the Queen as a 50ft (15m) high corgi that would take pride of place at the front of Buckingham Palace.\n\nAlternatively, the president could scale back on this ambitious plan and ask Koons to make a corgi doorstop instead.\n\nIt might not generate the same amount of column inches, but at least it should receive a warmer welcome than the unfortunate blue horse.", "Women in America walked in the shoes of Muslim women by wearing a hijab for World Hijab Day.\n\nThe BBC asked non-Muslim women why they decided to don the headscarf.", "The car was parked outside Workington police station after the owner had taken ill\n\nA police force carried out a controlled explosion on a \"suspicious\" car outside a station, not realising its own officers had parked it there.\n\nA bomb squad was called after concerns about an unattended Vauxhall Corsa at Workington police station, Cumbria.\n\nRoads around the building, in Hall Brow, were sealed off and an explosion carried out at 08:00 GMT.\n\nThe force blamed \"an internal communications error\" and apologised to the owner.\n\nCumbria Police said other officers on duty were not aware colleagues had parked the car outside the station after helping its owner, who had been taken ill.\n\nThe building was evacuated, a 100m cordon put in place and the vehicle blown up.\n\nInsp Ashley Bennett said: \"We have made contact with the owner of the vehicle, explained the situation and have apologised to him.\n\n\"The officers who dealt with this morning's incident did so with public safety in mind and followed the appropriate procedures in respect to an unoccupied suspicious vehicle.\n\n\"The constabulary will review this incident and will take on board any learning.\"\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "After decades of debate, years of acrimony over the issue in the Conservative Party, months of brutal brinksmanship in Westminster, and hours of debate this week, MPs have just approved the very first step in the process of Britain leaving the European Union.\n\nThere are many hurdles ahead, probably thousands of hours of debate here, years of negotiations for Theresa May with our friends and rivals around the EU, as she seeks a deal - and possibly as long as a decade of administrative adjustments, as the country extricates itself from the EU.\n\nOn a wet Wednesday, the debate didn't feel epoch-making, but think for a moment about what has just happened.\n\nMPs, most of whom wanted to stay in the EU, have just agreed that we are off.\n\nThis time last year few in Westminster really thought that this would happen. The then prime minister's concern was persuading the rest of the EU to give him a better deal for the UK.\n\nHis close colleagues believed the chances of them losing, let alone the government dissolving over the referendum, were slim, if not quite zero.\n\nThen tonight, his former colleagues are rubber stamping the decision of a narrow majority of the public, that changed everything in politics here for good.\n\nThis isn't even the last vote on this bill. There are several more stages, the Lords are likely to kick up rough at the start.\n\nBut after tonight, for better or worse, few will believe that our journey to the exit door can be halted.\n\nAs government ministers have said in recent days, the moment for turning back is past.\n• None Trump and May 'committed' to Nato", "The mother of a transgender pupil is taking legal action against a school which she claims treated her child like \"a freak\".\n\nJackie* said the treatment had been \"appalling\". Her child Aidan*, 16, who was born female, claims he was effectively excluded by Hereford Cathedral School, which refused to let him wear a boy's uniform.\n\nThe legal action is currently going through the courts.\n\nIt is understood as part of the school's defence, it claims Aidan was withdrawn by his family before a final decision was made by the school about whether it could accommodate his needs.\n\nIn a statement it said: \"The continued happiness, wellbeing and safety of our pupils is the top priority.\"", "The British Antarctic Survey's Halley research station has been towed 23km across the Brunt Ice Shelf.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho says he is being judged by different rules to other Premier League bosses.\n\nThe Portuguese appeared to be frustrated by the performance of referee Mike Jones during Wednesday's 0-0 draw with Hull at Old Trafford.\n\nAnd Mourinho highlighted Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp's exchange with fourth official Neil Swarbrick during their 1-1 draw with Chelsea on Tuesday.\n\n\"You know clearly I am different. The rules for me are different,\" he said.\n• None 5 live podcast: 'Mourinho no better than LVG'\n\nKlopp apologised after shouting in Swarbrick's face during the second half of Tuesday's match at Anfield, and said the official told him: \"No problem, I like your passion.\"\n\nFormer Chelsea boss Mourinho, who had earlier walked out of a BBC TV interview, said: \"Yesterday a fourth official told a manager: 'I enjoy very much your passion.' Today, I am told to sit down or I am going to be sent to the stand.\"\n\nArsenal manager Arsene Wenger is serving a four-match touchline ban after being found guilty of verbally abusing fourth official Anthony Taylor, remaining in the technical area after his dismissal and then making physical contact with Taylor during Arsenal's home win over Burnley last month.\n\nMourinho has served two touchline bans this season, for speaking about Taylor prior to his side's trip to Liverpool in October, and kicking a water bottle during a home draw with West Ham in November. Both actions are against Football Association rules.\n\nThe 54-year-old was given a stadium ban in November 2015 while managing Chelsea after he was found guilty of going to referee Jon Moss' dressing room during a London derby at West Ham.\n\nHis long-time assistant Rui Faria served a six-game stadium ban when he had to be pulled away from referee Mike Dean during Chelsea's game against Sunderland in April 2014.\n\nMourinho said: \"I watch my team from the hotel. I was forbidden to go to the stadium. My assistant had six matches stadium ban. I didn't touch anyone.\"\n\nHull goalkeeper Eldin Jakupovic made a string of fine saves at Old Trafford as the Tigers frustrated United.\n\nMourinho said: \"I don't criticise my opponent. They are fighting for their lives. Every point for them is gold. They have to fight with everything they have. They tried to see what they were allowed to do.\"\n\nHe told reporters at the post-match press conference: \"Tell the truth. It is as simple as that. You will be doing a public service, I think. If I speak I am punished. I don't want to be punished.\"\n\nIn trying to avoid getting himself into trouble with the FA, Jose Mourinho may have done exactly that.\n\nHis frustration was obvious during a first half in which he had three long conversations with fourth official Stuart Attwell, then one more in the second, to express his concern at Hull's perceived time-wasting.\n\nHe evidently had no desire to speak with colleagues on Match of the Day judging by his hasty exit at the first opportunity just 90 seconds into his post-match interview.\n\nHis news conference lasted five minutes, during which time he told journalists to \"write the truth\" because he feared for the consequences if he said what he thought.\n\nThat is all fine.\n\nBut in stating he gets different treatment to rival managers, Mourinho may have crossed the line.", "JavaScript seems to be disabled. Please enable JavaScript to take full advantage of iPlayer.", "Radcliffe (right) appears with Joshua McGuire in the Old Vic production\n\nHarry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe has revealed he's yet to see the stage play of JK Rowling's eighth Potter story.\n\n\"I just feel it would not be a relaxing evening at the theatre,\" he said of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.\n\n\"I assume every night there are 1,000 Harry Potter fans in the audience,\" he continued, adding it was \"fantastic\" they were there to see the play.\n\nRadcliffe is shortly to return to the London stage in an Old Vic revival of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead.\n\nThe 27-year-old said he had read Sir Tom Stoppard's play \"at a fairly formative age\", having studied it while on the Harry Potter set, and could remember being \"baffled and delighted\".\n\nFirst staged in 1966, the play replays Shakespeare's Hamlet from the point of view of two hapless minor characters.\n\nRadcliffe plays Rosencrantz in the 50th anniversary production, while Joshua McGuire plays Guildenstern.\n\nJamie Parker plays the adult Harry in the two-part Cursed Child stage play\n\nSpeaking to the BBC's Rebecca Jones, Radcliffe said he had studied Shakespeare at school but had never performed it on stage.\n\nHe said Sir Tom's play, which features the scenes from Hamlet in which Rosencrantz and Guildenstern appear, was \"an amazing introduction\" to the Bard of Avon's work.\n\n\"It's a play so full of ideas there's always going to be something new to play with,\" he went on, adding he was \"starting to enjoy the poetry\" of the Shakespeare sections.\n\nThe actor also revealed he would \"probably just ignore\" fans who attempt to record his performance, recalling that people had tried to talk to him on stage when he made his theatre debut in Equus.\n\nDirected by David Leveaux, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead runs from 25 February to 29 April.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "Peter Capaldi is bowing out at Christmas after four years playing Dr Who\n\nThree years is the maximum length of time anyone should stay in a job, declared actor Peter Capaldi when he explained why he was stepping down from the Dr Who role after four years.\n\n\"I've never done one job for three years. This is the first time I've done this and I feel it's time for me to move on to different challenges,\" he said.\n\nIt's a pretty short tenure compared to the old days when people secured a job after leaving school or university and then stayed there until they collected their golden carriage clock.\n\nBut increasingly, changing one's job every few years is considered the norm.\n\nIn fact, a UK worker will change employer every five years on average, according to research by life insurance firm LV=.\n\nIn the US, it's even shorter with people staying with a single employer for just over four years, according to official statistics.\n\nBut is there a magic number, one that will make sure you don't stop progressing, but also doesn't make you look too, well, flighty?\n\nAlmost a quarter of employed people are currently looking for new roles, according to HR body the CIPD\n\nClaire McCartney, adviser for the CIPD, the professional body for HR and people development, says there's no such thing.\n\n\"It's very specific to the person. It depends on their career plans, assuming they have any career plans and whether they feel they get the right amount of challenge and flexibility,\" she says.\n\nMs McCartney does, however, believe there's a minimum tenure, saying just three months in one role before moving on wouldn't look good, unless it was driven by a change in personal circumstances.\n\nShe also says the size of an organisation can often be a factor in determining how long a person stays, with a smaller company often offering less opportunity for people to progress than a larger rival.\n\nVictoria Bethlehem, the group head of talent acquisition at recruitment firm Adecco, says she looks favourably on a prospective employee who has changed roles every three to five years.\n\n\"Immobility is never desirable in a curriculum. This does not necessarily mean that the candidate needs to have changed several companies and employers.\n\n\"What's important is to see the candidate has an open attitude to change and a continuous learning approach, driving him or her to embrace new challenges,\" she adds.\n\nChanging jobs regularly is seen as positive if it moves your career forward, say experts\n\nIn certain sectors, regular change is not only desirable, but a necessity, according to Robert Archer, regional director of human resources at recruitment firm PageGroup.\n\n\"In technology, advertising and public relations, where professionals are known to change jobs every few years or even months, job hopping can be considered to be a necessity in order to keep up with changes in the market,\" he says.\n\nBut Nigel Heap, managing director at recruitment firm Hays UK & Ireland, warns \"there can sometimes be a stigma associated with 'job hopping'.\"\n\n\"Constantly moving to new roles without demonstrating a good reason might make new employers wary. They may question your ability to commit to an organisation and it may appear that you cannot adapt to new environments and challenges.\n\n\"If you do move jobs frequently it's important that you clearly outline how long you were in each job on your CV, and support this with clear evidence of what you have learned in each role and what value you can bring to future employers,\" he says.\n\nBy far the most influential element driving how often you change jobs is age.\n\nIn the US, the average tenure of workers aged 55 to 64 was 10.1 years, more than three times the 2.8 years of workers aged 25 to 34, according to the most recent US statistics.\n\nThe UK doesn't record such data, but London-based Dr Clare Gerada is an example of an older worker who has stayed at the same place for many years. She has worked for the NHS for 40 years and spent 25 years at the same practice.\n\nClare Gerada started working for the NHS when she was just 14 years old\n\nDr Gerada says this is partly down to her role which offers lots of flexibility and change, but she believes people are inherently designed to put roots down.\n\n\"Of course when you're young you should move around and do things and experiment, gain experience, but there has to be a point I think that you put roots down and actually start to grow in that job,\" she told Radio 4's Today programme.\n\nBut so-called millennials, those born between 1980 and 1999, have very different expectations about jobs.\n\nSeveral surveys suggest that these younger workers aren't motivated by the same factors as previous generations, such as a job for life, but instead value a good work-life balance and a sense of purpose beyond financial success.\n\nJob hopping too often could make new employers question your commitment\n\nIt's a drastically different outlook from the generations before who are used to the more traditional hierarchy of large corporate firms - staying at the same firm and working a set number of years in a particular post before progressing.\n\nAlmost a quarter of employed people are currently looking for new roles, according to the CIPD's latest Employee Outlook survey which polled 2,000 UK employees.\n\nFor companies of course it poses a challenge. Constantly losing staff and their knowledge and having to recruit and retain replacements is costly.\n\nMs McCartney says firms need to do more to try and retain staff, for example holding regular casual chats with staff on career progression.\n\n\"Companies need to be more creative. There might not be room for promotion, but cross-function working, opportunities to work on special projects and secondments are all ways of boosting skills,\" she says.\n\nBut she also says it's important for firms to stay on good terms with departing staff, who may decide to return later on in a different role adding wider experience to their existing knowledge of the firm.\n\n\"It's not about organisations holding on to people at all costs,\" she says.", "Last updated on .From the section Scottish Rugby\n\nJosh Strauss, Glasgow team-mate Fraser Brown and Stormers centre Huw Jones come in to Vern Cotter's Scotland starting XV for the Six Nations opener at home against Ireland on Saturday.\n\nStrauss plays at number eight as Ryan Wilson moves to blind-side flanker.\n\nJones replaces Mark Bennett, having recovered from the foot injury that ruled him out of the final autumn Test against Georgia in November.\n\nBrown's inclusion means a place on the bench for Edinburgh's Ross Ford.\n\nEdinburgh prop Simon Berghan is the only uncapped player in the squad.\n\nIn front of Strauss and Wilson, Hamish Watson holds down the openside role he occupied throughout the autumn Tests, and brothers Jonny and Richie Gray are paired once again in the Scotland second row.\n\nProps Allan Dell and Zander Fagerson, with only seven caps between them, are either side of Brown in the front row.\n• None Stuart Hogg: It will be a tasty Six Nations\n• None John Barclay: I want to be part of Scots' best days\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\nJones became the first Scot to score two tries against Australia, when he made his first start for Scotland at Murrayfield in November, but he was injured against Argentina a week later.\n\nHe and Alex Dunbar combine again in midfield, and Cotter has opted for a familiar set of backs as Greig Laidlaw, Finn Russell play at nine and 10 respectively, and full-back Stuart Hogg and wingers Sean Maitland and Tommy Seymour form the back three.\n\nScotland in the 2017 Six Nations\n\nHead coach Cotter welcomed having the enthusiasm of an uncapped player and \"some reasonably new players\" in the squad.\n\n\"We've been growing our depth and our versatility within that, so we have a number of different options that allow us to continually attack the opposition, which is our main focus,\" said the New Zealander ahead of his final Six Nations in charge of Scotland.\n\n\"Facing Ireland first up doesn't get much harder.\n\n\"They are at the top of their game and will come here with confidence after beating some of the best teams in the world, including the All Blacks and Wallabies and having won the tournament twice in the past three years.\"\n\nJohn Barclay's omission for Josh Strauss is the main talking point in this Scotland team. The Scarlets back-row has started nine of the last 10 Tests while Strauss has been a bit of a peripheral figure this past year. Strauss is in on the back of some powerful stuff for Glasgow in Europe. The need for ball carriers is massive in this match and Strauss, at his best, is better at that side of the game than Barclay, who can count himself unlucky.\n\nFraser Brown makes it ahead of Ross Ford. Brown has been superb of late. He's another ball-carrier - a stratospheric 14 carries in Glasgow's rout of Leicester - and offers more than the centurion Ford.\n\nHuw Jones is in despite not having played since November. Cotter is hoping his game-breaking class will not be lessened by a lack of match sharpness.\n\nIreland's team is formidable, despite Johnny Sexton not being in it. It's an illustration of their depth that Donnacha Ryan, a standout in the second-row in the victory over New Zealand, can't now get into the 23. Jared Payne and Jordi Murphy, two more heroes from that historic victory, are long-term injuries, but Ireland are still loaded with class, power and experience.", "Mr Heywood posted a picture of his ticket bonanza on Twitter\n\nNewcastle United's army of fans is used to long journeys, and one found a way to cut the cost of a trip to Oxford - but it needed 56 separate rail tickets.\n\nJonny Heywood booked split tickets from Tyneside for the Magpies' fourth round FA Cup clash last weekend.\n\nMr Heywood said he saved £56 by not buying one ticket for the whole trip - but was left with a stack of seat reservations and returns.\n\nHe and his girlfriend were left juggling 28 tickets each.\n\nIn his tweet, Mr Heywood, of Washington, jokingly thanked his friend for the \"worst advice\" he said he had ever received.\n\nThe tweet prompted other people to tell of their own thriftiness, including a football fan who posted a picture of a mound of tickets for a trip to see Southampton, which he said saved him £30.\n\nSplit tickets can save passengers money as separate fares for each leg of a journey - all on the same train - are sometimes cheaper than one ticket covering the entire trip.\n\nOn Wednesday, the Rail Delivery Group (RDG) which represents train operators announced a trial of a scheme that will automatically offer the cheapest possible fare to passengers.\n\nAs for Mr Heywood, although he saved money he had to endure a 3-0 pummelling at the hands of League One Oxford.\n\nHave you ever bought a similar number of tickets to make a rail journey? Email your comments to haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk\n\nOr you can contact us in the following ways:\n\nSMS/MMS: 61124 or if you are outside of the UK +44 7624 800 100", "Eddie Jones' England appear to have minimal problems: reigning Six Nations champions, 14 wins on the spin, a summer spent whitewashing Wallabies, an autumn of being tested and pulling through every time.\n\nAnd yet. As they prepare to get their title defence under way against France this Saturday, Jones has been in typically restless mood - decrying his players' global standing, downplaying the team's decorated past year, and being as likely to appear satisfied as he is to tarmac Twickenham.\n\nThese are the six key questions the old schemer knows he has to answer:\n• None Daly and Launchbury in for England\n• None Follow the Six Nations across the BBC\n\n1. How does he combat complacency?\n\nEngland haven't lost at home to France in the Six Nations for 12 years. They have won four of their past five meetings with Wales. Scotland last won at Twickenham when Margaret Thatcher was in her first term as prime minister; Italy, even buoyed by the charisma and drive of Conor O'Shea, have a record against the men in white of played 22, lost 22.\n\nAll of which might lead England supporters to think this championship will all come down to the final match in Dublin, and all of which means Jones - 13 matches in charge, 13 wins - is making sure his players do not fall into the same trap.\n\n\"Nothing in our team is permanent,\" he has said of his 100% men.\n\n\"No-one owns the jersey; no-one owns their position in the team. It's something you borrow, and something you've got to cherish.\"\n\nIt is why he has claimed that his squad doesn't yet contain a single player good enough to make a world XV, no matter how many caps, Premiership trophies, European Cups or French scalps there might be among the 34 names. It is why he has quoted Sir Alex Ferguson, who said that he only managed two world-class players in his 27 years at Manchester United.\n\nNo matter that Ferguson actually said there were four (Eric Cantona, Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs and Cristiano Ronaldo). It is the headline rather than the small print that matters in Jones' message. No-one is safe. Everyone can do better.\n\n2: How does he improve leadership in the team?\n\nEveryone can do better, including a captain who, less than a year ago, became only the second man in 19 years to lead England to a Grand Slam.\n\nDylan Hartley's successes in the role have bought him only the slightest insurance. With his six-week ban for an illegal tackle on Leinster's Sean O'Brien having only expired last week, he is seriously short of match time but has retained the armband for the Six Nations.\n\nBeyond the championship, there are no guarantees. There is the pressure at hooker from the consistently excellent Jamie George, Tommy Taylor and Luke Cowan-Dickie, and there are Jones' repeated hints that his captain for the games leading up to the next World Cup may not be a 33-year-old.\n\nJones has talked of \"leadership density\" - of having eight or nine generals throughout the ranks, as the World Cup-winning side of 2003 could boast, and he may already have earmarked the man most likely to lead them all, Owen Farrell.\n\nOne of Jones' first acts as head coach was to promote Farrell from the ranks to vice-captain, a move in keeping with his decision, when in charge at Saracens, to give him a debut against Llanelli just 11 days after his 17th birthday. A greater promotion yet may come early again.\n\nIn other words: stick or twist? You might think only the bravest or most cocksure of coaches would change a winning team. The Six Nations does not tend to reward the experimental or the untested.\n\nBut what if those wins were not enough? What if the stated long-term aim of winning the World Cup in Japan in 2019 outranks this oldest of tournaments?\n\nAnd so suddenly there are dilemmas everywhere. Does Jones move Farrell inside to 10, breaking up his partnership with George Ford to create fresh options at centre, or does he look at the continued injury problems of Manu Tuilagi and the international inexperience of Ben Teo'o and keep old friends together?\n\nMike Brown will be 34 by the time of that World Cup. Isn't Anthony Watson his natural successor at full-back, particularly bearing in mind the surfeit of options on the wing? Yet Brown is rock-solid under the high ball, beats a man every time he attacks with ball in hand and brings the grunt and aggression that Jones so appreciates in his charges.\n\nIs this the time to let the outstanding Maro Itoje run free in the back row, leaving the second row in the combative and athletic hands of Courtney Lawes, George Kruis and Joe Launchbury? Or does the sensible coach let his superman fly where he has excelled so far in his brief international career?\n\nJames Haskell, like Brown, will be 34 by 2019 - so there is the question as to should he return to the flanks whenever fit. Jones must also consider if it realistic to expect another 30-something, Chris Robshaw, to remain a first choice when his spell out with a shoulder problem ends this spring.\n\nEngland's head coach knows that to win the World Cup, he needs more than one world-class side. He may need more than two; unless injury rates dramatically and unexpectedly drop, he requires both cover and a fitting replacement for that cover, as his current problems at loosehead prop illustrate.\n\n4. How does he manage expectation?\n\nEngland expects, as another successful captain of the ship once remarked. Jones' team have set high standards over the past 12 months, beating every major rugby nation bar the one they did not meet, New Zealand.\n\nSo will supporters giddy on that long unbeaten stretch feel disappointed if England fail to win a second successive Grand Slam? If they lose to Ireland yet win the Six Nations title, is that no longer enough, despite the fact it would have been very welcome during the run of four successive second-place finishes for which they had to settle from 2012 to 2015?\n\nAnd what if that remarkable run goes on? If England win every one of their matches in this Six Nations, they will break New Zealand's all-time record for most consecutive Test victories. English teams and those who cheer them have not generally reacted well to sustained success; England's cricket team won only one of their next four Test series having attained the world number one ranking in 2011, while the rugby team's World Cup and Grand Slam triumph of 2003 was followed by a third place in the 2004 Six Nations, a fourth in 2005 and another fourth in 2006.\n\nIt may be a happy problem for Jones to have, when so little was expected for so long, when the past two World Cups have seen the team fall apart and the head coach sacked. But a problem it may be, now the bar has been raised.\n\n5. How does he improve England's attacking game?\n\nJones made no secret his first Six Nations campaign was about tightening the defence. England had, after all, shipped 33 points in Australia's last match at Twickenham, 28 in their last home game against Wales, and 35 on France's previous Six Nations visit. Jones also wanted to buttress a set-piece that had gone from traditional strength to Achilles heel during that World Cup disaster of 2015.\n\nThat England scored five fewer tries in the tournament last year than they had in coming second in 2015 mattered less than the bigger Slam scenario. Now, in his second, Jones wants to revitalise the offensive element of his team's make-up in the same way.\n\nThere has been the appointment of Rory Teague as full-time skills coach, but Jones understands that more developments must follow - perhaps a different balance of personnel in the backs, maybe a more expansive gameplan, almost certainly a ruthlessness when chances do appear.\n\nThe theory is unarguable. The reality - in what are likely to be cold, wet conditions, in the most ferociously competitive tournament in world rugby, when every other nation and all their support are looking forward to knocking England off their throne - may be several degrees harder.\n\n6. How does he deal with defeat?\n\nIt will come at some stage, perhaps in Cardiff, where England have won only twice in the Six Nations in a decade, or Dublin, where they have been victorious in the tournament just once in 14 years. It may come on tour in Argentina, while Jones' best players will be absent as they join up with the British and Irish Lions in New Zealand. It may happen beyond that still, should the Jones magic continue to cast its spell.\n\nWhen it does, how will his side react? Will it feel worse to players and supporters because of the long unbeaten run that preceded it, and will its manner deflate some of the good feeling which Jones has created since his appointment?\n\nBecause the end is not the end. Maybe a truly world-class team never countenances defeat, but a truly world-class team also develops from one - from the lessons that reverse has taught, from the weaknesses it exposes, from the players who fall short.\n\nAs Jones said last month: \"If we lose a few battles on the way, it will help us win the war.\"\n\nJones and England have been like a married couple who have enjoyed the most extraordinary start to their relationship. When the first fight happens, when the first door slams, will it strengthen the bond between them, or will they forever be looking back to when it all seemed so special, so untarnished?", "Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull said he was disappointed that details of the call he had with President Trump - which he described as \"very frank and forthright\" - had been made public.\n\nHe told a Sydney radio station that \"the report that the president hung up is not correct\".", "Less than two weeks into Donald Trump's presidency, it seemed the only news from here on out would be political.\n\nThe new president and his flurry of executive orders and swift-moving, substantive changes to US policy and procedure seemed to leave little oxygen for any other headlines.\n\nBut even President Trump lacks the star power of Queen Bee.\n\nPrior to the inauguration, some fans joked that Beyonce should drop an album as Trump was being sworn in, and in doing so steal the spotlight from the new commander in chief.\n\nBeyonce did one better: she announced, via a resplendent photo on Instagram, that she would be dropping something else - two something elses, in fact.\n\nThat's right - Beyonce is having twins. And the news has been welcomed by more than eight million of her followers - making it Instagram's most-liked post of all time.\n\n\"I literally tripped and fell at a formal Fulbright dinner because I found out Beyonce was pregnant with twins,\" wrote one woman on Twitter.\n\nOther social media users were less articulate, relying on gifs and emojis to showcase their elation.\n\nThe photo showed Beyonce kneeling in front of a giant hedge of roses, wearing blue satin knickers and a maroon bra. She is covered with a long green veil, and is already heavily pregnant.\n\n\"This pic is a powerful statement on bodies, maternity & the sacred. Beyonce continues to push us to reimagine womanhood. A feminist icon,\" gushed writer Laura Rankin.\n\nIt's fitting that Beyonce used Instagram to relay her news.\n\nTwitter has become an all-out war zone between alt-right egg accounts and the professional left.\n\nFacebook is full of posts from friends and relatives begging people to call their Senators, sign a petition, or attend the next march.\n\nInstagram has remained a social media Switzerland: there, it's nothing but home-decorating photos, artfully staged food and cute babies - an apolitical oasis in these troubled times.\n\nBeyonce's news was powerful enough to bring some of the Insta-tranquility over to the rest of social media, and for a brief hour or so political Twitter was tempered with jokes about Beyonce's baby shower and several plays on \"Betwice\".\n\nPossible name suggestions included Yellow and Red Ivy - her five-year-old daughter with Jay Z is Blue Ivy Carter.\n\nIt was almost like 2016 again.\n\nThat's not to say her announcement was strictly apolitical.\n\nAs one comedian on Twitter noted, \"there are more black people in Beyonce right now, than in Trump's entire cabinet team.\"\n\nSome also saw a hint of politics in the timing: the news came on 1 February, the first day of Black History Month.\n\n\"BEYONCE WAITED UNTIL BLACK HISTORY MONTH BECAUSE SHE LOVES US SO\" wrote New York Magazine writer Rembert Brown, who is not usually given to all caps.\n\nIt was a more fitting kick off for many than the address given by President Trump earlier in the day, in which he called Frederick Douglass, America's most significant abolitionist, \"someone who has done a terrific job that is being recognised by more and more people\".\n\nThat had some wondering if he even knew who Douglass was.\n\nWhen a reporter asked Mr Trump's press secretary for more clarity, it only got worse, and as a result Douglass was trending on Twitter today, too.\n\n\"Beyonce would commemorate the first day of Black History Month by letting us all know she's bringing more black person magic into the world,\" wrote one Twitter user.\n\nIn an era when many activists are concerned that Donald Trump's policies and his pick for attorney General, Jeff Sessions, will be detrimental to American civil rights, a supersized Beyonce pregnancy was a welcome distraction - and a reminder, however slight, that time marches on.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nEldin Jakupovic made a string of fine saves as Hull frustrated Manchester United by claiming a goalless draw in the Premier League at Old Trafford.\n\nThe hosts dominated the match but could not find a way past the Tigers goalkeeper, who brilliantly kept out Zlatan Ibrahimovic's long-range strike and Paul Pogba's driving effort in the first half.\n\nIn between, Harry Maguire should have done better with a header which he put wide of goal.\n\nIbrahimovic hooked an effort wide in the second half and Jakupovic made his best save to prevent Juan Mata from scoring at the back post, as well as keeping out Paul Pogba's curler.\n\nThe visitors could have won it with five minutes to go, but on-loan Lazar Markovic's clipped shot came back off the post and Abel Hernandez struck tamely at David de Gea.\n\nThe point keeps United in sixth place, but allowed Hull to move off the bottom of the table.\n\nThe rules are different for me - Mourinho\n\nRelive the entertaining draw from Old Trafford\n\nJakupovic made a total of six saves, punching the air in delight with each effort he kept out and taking the acclaim of the jubilant away supporters at full-time.\n\nHull have shipped 47 goals this season - only Swansea (52) have conceded more in the division - and this was just their second clean sheet in 23 league games.\n\nAsked by BBC Sport if it was his best game in a Hull shirt, Jakupovic replied: \"I try to be my best for the team all the time but today I caught a good day.\n\n\"The striker celebrates when he scored, and I celebrated to myself with some saves.\"\n\nUnited striker Ibrahimovic was not impressed by the Hull player's performance. The Swede said: \"I did not see any chances where it was difficult for the goalkeeper. It was not a good save from Mata, it was a bad finish. Some saves he made for the cameras.\"\n\nUnited had seen all the top four sides drop points in this round of fixtures as they chase a Champions League spot, but failed to capitalise even though they had 66% possession in the match.\n\nDespite extending their run to 14 games unbeaten in the top-flight, they have drawn their last three games and are four points adrift of Liverpool in fourth place.\n\nUnited only had themselves to blame in a wasteful performance. Marcus Rashford, who completed a full 90 minutes for the first time since November, highlighted his team's sloppiness by losing possession 21 times - more than any other player on the pitch.\n\nWayne Rooney was brought off the bench at half time, but failed to change the game, having become the club's leading all-time goal scorer in the previous league match at Stoke.\n\nManchester United manager Jose Mourinho: \"We didn't score. You don't score, it is not possible to win.\n\n\"We needed to score, we needed more time to play. If you played 35-40 minutes in both halves, it is a lot. I think Hull City tried to see where they could go, the way they could behave and tried to see what the referee would allow them to do.\n\n\"They had the feedback and were comfortable to do what they did. I am not critical of that. They are fighting against relegation and every point is gold.\n\nAsked by BBC commentator Martin Fisher what upset him about referee Mike Jones' performance: \"If you do not know football, you should not have a microphone in your hand.\"\n\nBefore this game, Hull had lost nine straight away games, with their last point on their travels coming at Burnley in early September.\n\nBut under new boss Marco Silva they have shown enough improvement to suggest they can preserve their top-flight status.\n\nThe Portuguese has led Hull to a win and a draw in his first three games - with a defeat coming against leaders Chelsea - and lie four points away from safety.\n\nHaving beaten United in the second leg of their EFL Cup semi-final last week, Hull may even feel disappointed by not taking all three points with Markovic coming agonisingly close to clinching the winner late on.\n\nHowever, striker Oumar Niasse was lucky not to be given a red card after making late challenges on Michael Carrick and Daley Blind, having earlier received a yellow card.\n\n'Sometimes you have to suffer'\n\nHull boss Marco Silva: \"It is a very good result for us against a very good team. We played like a team with great attitude, spirit and character. What we showed tonight again, I am happy.\n\n\"Sometimes you have to suffer in moments but we have to play as a team.\n\nFirst Old Trafford shutout since 1952 - the stats\n• None Manchester United are on the current longest unbeaten run in the Premier League this season (14 games - won seven, drawn seven).\n• None Hull City have picked up just two points in their 10 Premier League meetings with Manchester United (won zero, drawn two, lost eight).\n• None Man Utd have attempted 85 shots (including blocks) against newly promoted sides at Old Trafford this season but have found the net just twice.\n• None This is the first time United have failed to beat two different newly promoted clubs at home in a Premier League season since 1994-95 (Nottingham Forest and Leicester).\n• None Hull kept their first clean sheet at Old Trafford in all competitions since January 1952.\n• None The Red Devils have only lost once in their last 20 home Premier League games (won 12, drawn seven) - against Manchester City in September 2016.\n• None In fact, United have now gone unbeaten in 18 home games in all competitions (won 12, drawn six). It is their longest run since October 2011 (37 games).\n• None Hull have won four points in three Premier League games under Marco Silva, one more than they managed in the previous nine under Mike Phelan.\n\nUnited travel to champions Leicester City on Sunday (kick-off 16:00 GMT), while Hull host title challengers Liverpool on Saturday (15:00 GMT).\n• None Attempt blocked. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Daley Blind with a headed pass.\n• None Attempt saved. Paul Pogba (Manchester United) right footed shot from the left side of the box is saved in the top right corner. Assisted by Daley Blind with a headed pass.\n• None Attempt saved. Marcos Rojo (Manchester United) header from the centre of the box is saved in the top left corner. Assisted by Paul Pogba with a headed pass.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Andrea Ranocchia (Hull City) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt saved. Abel Hernández (Hull City) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Tom Huddlestone. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "A booklet published by the British Medical Association suggests that its staff should use the phrase \"pregnant people\" instead of \"expectant mothers\" in order to show sensitivity towards intersex men and trans men who get pregnant. The BBC's Siobhann Tighe spoke to one trans man for his view on the BMA's guidance.\n\nIt's impossible to get figures about how many trans men in the UK want to be pregnant, or go through pregnancy. The handful of gender identity clinics in the UK won't give out statistics, although one consultant psychiatrist says the figure is \"tiny\".\n\nOnly one transgender man in the UK, Hayden Cross, has spoken publicly about his pregnancy. Cross had hoped to freeze his eggs before completing his transition, but when the National Health Service refused to pay he decided to get pregnant with donor sperm and temporarily put gender reassignment surgery on hold.\n\nI spoke to another trans man, Freddy McConnell, who has thought about what he might do if and when he wants his own children.\n\nHe's not ready to start a family yet, but if and when the time comes, he says carrying the baby will certainly be an option. He identifies as a gay man and has a partner who describes themselves as non-binary.\n\n\"That means that they don't identify as a male or a female - but they are on the masculine side of the spectrum,\" Freddy says.\n\nFreddy, 30, made the physical transition from female to male four years ago with the help of testosterone. Even now he gets testosterone injections once every 12 weeks. He also had an operation performed in the States which removed his breasts and gave him a male, contoured chest.\n\nBut crucially he didn't have \"lower\" (genital) surgery, and that means that he has some options when it comes to having a family.\n\n\"I've always wanted kids and a family and I've thought about this a lot,\" he says.\n\n\"When trans men wants to have kids and they're on testosterone, they have to come off it. Then you'd have to wait for your menstruation cycle to kick in, and hopefully you'll be able to conceive. If you don't, it may be because you have a pre-existing fertility issue.\"\n\nBut stopping your testosterone is risky for a trans man because it could lead to gender dysphoria - described by the Terence Higgins Trust as an intense feeling of sadness, low mood and uncertainty.\n\nOften this is what causes a person to transition in the first place, and for Freddy, it's a real concern.\n\n\"A lot of the changes that testosterone makes to your body are permanent. So, if you came off testosterone your voice wouldn't become high again and you wouldn't lose your facial hair,\" Freddy says.\n\n\"But the things that can change back once your system is running on oestrogen again is your fat distribution and muscle growth, and that could cause dysphoria and be challenging.\n\n\"If I was going to carry a baby that would worry me, because I really like the physical changes that testosterone has given me.\n\n\"It makes life a lot easier for me to be 'read' as male all the time, and I worry about losing that and the security it gives me in my identity.\"\n\nThis video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.\n\nFreddy acknowledges that there aren't many people like him in the UK.\n\n\"The trans community is small, the trans male community is smaller and then the number of trans men who've had babies is vanishingly small,\" he says.\n\nThis means that social media sites, particularly from America or Canada, are particularly useful when it comes to getting information, providing support and sharing feelings.\n\n\"People who've been through this experience talk about feeling worried, and they're frightened that they'll be judged,\" says Freddy.\n\n\"And so they look to the community itself for information. That's where you know that people won't talk in a way that's disrespectful and won't be shocked, and they'll use inclusive language.\"\n\nSo when it comes to the BMA advice about referring to \"pregnant people\" instead of \"expectant mothers\" Freddy feels it's uncontroversial and factually correct.\n\n\"What they're saying in this document is: 'If you're talking to a trans man or an intersex man about being pregnant, don't call him an expectant mother.'\n\n\"If you call me that, it's incorrect and it's going to make me feel like you're not talking about me, you don't see me, you don't get where I'm coming from and I wonder where it is going to leave me as a patient under your care. It signals rigidity and closed-mindedness.\n\n\"But it's really important to say we're not interested in redefining motherhood, or taking away that word. We're just trying to be seen.\"\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter\n• None The transgender family where the father gave birth", "Luke Mosson bought a flat for £150,000, but later realised that a clause in his contract meant the ground rent over the whole lease would cost more than £1.3bn.\n\nHe is now negotiating with his landlord to be released from that clause.\n\nWatch the full report on leasehold contracts here.\n\nThe Victoria Derbyshire programme is broadcast on weekdays between 09:00 and 11:00 on BBC Two and the BBC News channel.", "Speaking at a National Prayer Breakfast in Washington DC, President Donald Trump has brushed off reports of \"tough phone calls\" he had recently with the Mexican and Australian leaders.\n\n\"Believe me, when you hear about the tough phone calls, don’t worry about, just don’t worry about it, they’re tough, we have to be tough,” he said.", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nCoverage: Live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live and text updates on the BBC Sport website. Highlights: Watch on BBC Two and online from 18:00 GMT on Sunday.\n\nLock George Kruis is out of England's Six Nations opener against France on Saturday with a knee ligament injury.\n\nThe 26-year-old Saracens second row suffered the injury in training on Tuesday and will see a specialist on Thursday to determine its severity.\n\nEngland head coach Eddie Jones said: \"We are not ruling him out of the Six Nations at this stage.\"\n\nCourtney Lawes and Joe Launchbury are now expected to pair up in the second row, with Maro Itoje at flanker.\n\nJones will name his starting XV for Twickenham on Thursday.\n\nDefending champions England then face Wales at the Principality Stadium on 11 February, with Kruis' inclusion in that game now unclear.\n\nFrance centre Yann David, 28, has also pulled out of the England match with a thigh injury and is a doubt for their second game against Scotland on 12 February.\n\nFrance head coach Guy Noves now has to select between Gael Fickou, Remi Lamerat and Mathieu Bastareaud to form his centre partnership against England.\n\nDavid is the latest France player to withdraw through injury, with flanker Raphael Lakafia, hooker Camille Chat, loose-head prop Eddy Ben Arous and centre Wesley Fofana all previously ruled out.", "Rex Tillerson, the former chairman and chief executive of Exxon Mobil, has been sworn in as President Donald Trump’s secretary of state.\n\nThe 64-year-old was cleared for full Senate approval in a 56-43 vote.", "Tim Steiner has an elaborate tattoo on his back that was designed by a famous artist and sold to a German art collector. When Steiner dies his skin will be framed - until then he spends his life sitting in galleries with his shirt off.\n\n\"The work of art is on my back, I'm just the guy carrying it around,\" says the 40-year-old former tattoo parlour manager from Zurich.\n\nA decade ago, his then girlfriend met a Belgian artist called Wim Delvoye, who'd become well known for his controversial work tattooing pigs.\n\nDelvoye told her he was looking for someone to agree to be a human canvas for a new work and asked if she knew anyone who might be interested.\n\n\"She called me on the phone, and I said spontaneously, 'I'd like to do that,'\" Steiner says.\n\nTwo years later, after 40 hours of tattooing, the image spread across his entire back - a Madonna crowned by a Mexican-style skull, with yellow rays emanating from her halo.\n\nThere are swooping swallows, red and blue roses, and at the base of Steiner's back two Chinese-style koi fish, ridden by children, can be seen swimming past lotus flowers. The artist has signed the work on the right hand side.\n\nCollectors can buy the pig skins tattooed by Wim Delvoye once the pigs have died of old age\n\n\"It's the ultimate art form in my eyes,\" Steiner says.\n\n\"Tattooers are incredible artists who've never really been accepted in the contemporary art world. Painting on canvas is one thing, painting on skin with needles is a whole other story.\"\n\nThe work, entitled TIM, sold for 150,000 euros (£130,000) to German art collector Rik Reinking in 2008, with Steiner receiving one third of the sum.\n\n\"My skin belongs to Rik Reinking now,\" he says. \"My back is the canvas, I am the temporary frame.\"\n\nAs part of the deal, when Steiner dies his back is to be skinned, and the skin framed permanently, taking up a place in Reinking's personal art collection.\n\n\"Gruesome is relative,\" Steiner says to those who find the idea macabre.\n\n\"It's an old concept - in Japanese tattoo history it's been done many, many times. If it's framed nicely and looks good, I think it's not such a bad idea.\"\n\nDelvoye worked for 40 hours to complete the piece\n\nBut this aspect of the work often sparks intense debate.\n\n\"It becomes a huge discussion matter every time, and those confrontations with people have been very exciting and interesting,\" Steiner says.\n\n\"People are either very into the idea, or say it's going too far - they're outraged or say it's against human rights. They come with ideas of slavery or prostitution.\"\n\nAs part of his contract, Steiner must exhibit the tattoo by sitting topless in a gallery at least three times a year.\n\nHis first exhibition took place in Zurich in June 2006 - when the tattoo was still a work-in-progress. When the 10th anniversary fell last year, he was in the middle of his longest-ever exhibition, a whole year at the Museum of Old and New Art (Mona) in Hobart, Tasmania, working five hours a day, six days a week.\n\nThat came to an end on Tuesday.\n\n\"Sit on your desk, with your legs dangling off, straight backed and holding on to your knees for 15 minutes - it's tough,\" he says.\n\n\"I did this for 1,500 hours. It was by far the most outrageously intense experience of my life.\n\n\"All that changed throughout the days was my state of mind - sometimes heaven, sometimes hell, always totally alert.\"\n\nThe only thing separating Steiner from visitors to the gallery is a line on the floor - a line that that in the past some have crossed.\n\n\"I've been touched, blown on, screamed at, pushed and spat on, it's often been quite a circus,\" he says. \"But I wasn't touched a single time on this trip, it's a miracle.\"\n\nSteiner takes in the view during his first stint at Mona in 2012\n\nWhen people try to speak to him he doesn't move or reply. He just sits still. \"Many people think I'm a sculpture, and have quite a shock once they find out I'm actually alive,\" he says.\n\nBut he rejects the idea that this is performance art. \"If the name Wim Delvoye was not attached to this tattoo, it would have no artistic relevance,\" he insists.\n\nIt is part of Delvoye's intention, though, to show the difference between a picture on the wall and a \"living canvas\" that changes over time.\n\n\"I can get fat, scarred, burned, anything,\" Steiner says. \"It's the process of living. I've had two lower back operations.\"\n\nOne of the joys of working at Mona has been having the gallery to himself before opening time.\n\n\"To be in there by myself, with my headphones in, roaming around and doing my stretches surrounded by stunning art in this mystical building was surreal,\" he says.\n\nAnd he will be back there in November, for a six-month stint, after appearances in Denmark and Switzerland.\n\n\"This whole experience has convinced me that this is what I am here to do. Sit on boxes,\" he says.\n\n\"And one day TIM will just hang there. Beautiful.\"\n\nTim at the Louvre in 2012\n\nJoin the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.", "Last updated on .From the section Cycling\n\nDubai Tour leader Marcel Kittel says he will not accept an apology after Ukrainian rider Andriy Grivko punched him on the third stage of the race.\n\nGrivko has been disqualified from the race and his Astana team apologised to Kittel and his Quick Step Floors team.\n\nGerman sprinter Kittel posted a picture on Twitter with blood on his face, and wrote: \"I won't accept an apology. That has nothing to do with cycling.\n\n\"What Grivko did is a shame for our beautiful sport.\"\n\nThe incident happened early on the 200km stage from Dubai to Al Aqah.\n\n\"When we passed a construction site, the sand began blowing and as soon as we went into the crosswinds we were fighting for position, which is always stressful, and Andriy Grivko punched me,\" Kittel said on his team's website.\n\n\"I get that riding in the crosswinds is always tense, but it gives him no right to act like that. He could have hurt my eye.\n\n\"In the finale, my mind wasn't 100% on the sprint, but I am happy I have no big injuries and I kept the lead.\"\n\nGrivko later posted a statement on his Facebook page, in which he claimed Kittel had first pushed both himself and team-mate Dmitriy Gruzdev.\n\nHe said that created \"a very tense and dangerous situation that could cause not only my fall, but a big crash in the peloton.\"\n\nGrivko, who also accused Kittel of spitting at him, added: \"I responded with aggressive action to aggressive action from the other side.\n\n\"Perhaps I got emotional and it has nothing to do with cycling, but in extreme situations, when exists a question of safety, it is difficult to stay calm.\"\n\nKittel had won the opening two stages but finished outside the top 10 on day three, as John Degenkolb of Trek-Segafredo took stage honours.\n\nMark Cavendish (Dimension Data) also finished outside the top 10 in an untidy sprint finish, with Aqua Blue Sport's Adam Blythe the best-placed Briton in ninth place after his team-mate Mark Christian spent most of the day in the break.\n\nKittel retained the overall race lead by eight seconds from Dylan Groenewegen of Team Lotto NL-Jumbo.", "Kris Marshall said his family were unable to join him to film the current series\n\nWorking for six months a year on a Caribbean island might sound like the dream job - but now Kris Marshall, the star of BBC One's Death in Paradise, has decided to leave the show.\n\nMarshall has played DI Humphrey Goodman on the detective drama, which is filmed on Guadeloupe, for four years.\n\nThe actor, who made his name on sitcom My Family, said he wanted to spend more time with his wife and young children.\n\nA new detective will arrive in his place, played by Ardal O'Hanlon.\n\nO'Hanlon is best known for his roles in Father Ted and My Hero.\n\nIn a BBC press release, Kris Marshall said: \"Death in Paradise has been an incredible experience, six months every year filming on a tropical island in the sunshine - what's not to love!\n\n\"Humphrey was socially awkward and clumsy but also brilliant, I'll miss him but it's time to hand over to someone new and spend more time with my family.\n\n\"I know Ardal will do a superb job and I just hope Humphrey gets a happy ending!\"\n\nMarshall's character will be seen for the final time when the show's sixth series ends on Thursday 9 February.\n\nHe has said this was the first series where his family didn't join him in Guadeloupe for the filming. He and wife Hannah have a four-year-old son Thomas and a younger daughter, Elsie.\n\n\"We did Skype about once a week,\" he told The Sun about filming the current series.\n\n\"But my son got bored very quickly. It's like: 'Seeing your face is one thing, but if you can't play with me then you're no real use to me so I'm gonna go off and do something else.'\n\n\"You just end up coming off FaceTime feeling quite bereft and actually quite empty.\"\n\nIn 2015, before Elsie was born, he told Radio Times: \"I'm not sure I could do the show if my son and my wife weren't with me.\"\n\nO'Hanlon will be seen as Marshall's replacement, playing DI Jack Mooney, on Thursday's episode (2 February), and will take over as the main detective on the sun-drenched, murder-afflicted fictional island of Saint Marie next year.\n\nO'Hanlon said: \"I am delighted to be joining Death in Paradise and exploring what's made Mooney up and leave London for a life in the Caribbean. I've already had a taste of filming in Guadeloupe and can't wait to get back.\"\n\nAn average of 8.7 million viewers watched the first three episodes of the current series.\n\nMarshall has been seen solving crimes on Saint Marie since the third series, when he took over from Ben Miller, who starred in the first two series.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n• None Marshall on 'the luckiest job in TV'", "This video can not be played.", "The Romanian capital, Bucharest, has seen one of its largest ever anti-government protests after a decree was passed that could free dozens of officials jailed for corruption.\n\nSome protesters in the capital threw firecrackers and smoke bombs at police who responded with tear gas.", "The Church of England has admitted it failed \"terribly\", after claims of physical abuse by a former colleague of the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby were not reported to police for over 30 years.\n\nChannel 4 News alleges 22 boys were beaten by former Christian charity head, John Smyth QC, in the 1970s.\n\nOne of his daughters told the BBC that having boys around the house was a normal part of her childhood, though she never saw any abuse.\n\nHer interview has been voiced by an actor to protect her identity.", "Drake is promising to refund 20,000 fans after Travis Scott fell into a hole on stage at his gig at the O2 in London.\n\nThe 24-year-old was joining the Canadian as a special guest on his Boy Meets World tour.\n\nHe was performing Goosebumps when he tripped into the cavity in the middle of the stage, damaging part of the set.\n\nHe disappeared for a few seconds before Drake helped him back out.\n\nTravis didn't seem hurt but apparently it meant a huge globe was broken and couldn't come out on stage.\n\nThis Instagram picture shows how the globe should have looked...\n\nDrake then told fans he was doing this \"for free tonight\" and he'd \"deal with it later\".\n\n\"You can pay for it later,\" he said.\n\nHe repeated the offer at the end of the gig saying: \"London England, I love you, I hope you enjoyed your free show\".\n\nThere's no word from his people yet though, so it's not clear if fans at the O2 arena will actually be getting a refund.\n\nHe could definitely afford it though. Forbes magazine estimates he's worth £47m.\n\nTravis later tweeted the gig was fun and \"London is wild\".\n\nEarlier this month, Drake has postponed the opening UK dates of the tour.\n\nThree dates - two in Glasgow and one in London - were rescheduled from the end of January to March because of \"unforeseen production setbacks\".\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. The decline of coal has led to a revival of rural traditions in Asturias\n\nThe sons and daughters of miners in the deserted coalfields of northern Spain face two choices: leave to find work, or innovate to be able to stay.\n\nNow, they have developed an online barter economy, which they say is helping them return to their rural roots. But can it really work?\n\nJavi Fernandez's small house is surrounded by edible plants. Among traditional winter crops grown in this area, like verza, a kind of cabbage, there's also mustard, Jerusalem artichokes, and shiitake mushrooms.\n\nIt's a small patch of bounty amid miles of empty, rolling hills.\n\nRather than study engineering to work in the coal mines like both his father and grandfather, Mr Fernandez studied agriculture in Cuba.\n\n\"I couldn't afford to go to a paying university so I studied for free at the ISCA University, in San Jose de las Lajas,\" he beams, digging through the 400 sq m (4,300 sq ft) of artichokes he has planted.\n\nAsturias became a centre for coal production in Spain in the late 19th Century, but waves of closures have left whole towns deserted and hundreds of thousands of miners unemployed.\n\nAnd the EU is ending all subsidies for the coalfields by 2018, sounding the death knell for the industry in the region.\n\nCultivating mushrooms enables Javi Fernandez to get things he needs through barter\n\nJavi brings a range of produce to market, thanks to skills he learnt in Cuba\n\nJavi Fernandez uses a traditional Asturian technique to grow his mushrooms: harvesting branches from the forest, drilling small holes and impregnating them with spores, before covering the holes in beeswax and leaving them in the dark for a year. Then he makes shiitake pate, dries and cures the mushrooms, and powders them so they can be taken in pill form.\n\nFor all his work, he earned no money at all until recently. Instead, he put his produce into an online barter economy, trading it for other things he needs.\n\n\"Up in the mountains there's a serious liquidity problem,\" he says. \"People find it easier to barter because money simply isn't available.\"\n\nTwice a month, he takes his produce to a local village market, with a sale already agreed online.\n\nOther young people, also trying to survive in the mountains, come with a wide range of offers, from building, teaching and manual labour to giving legal advice and translation.\n\nSpain is far from the only country where barter is gaining traction at the margins of the economy.\n\nBarter is probably the oldest form of commerce, involving trade of goods or services with no money involved. And in this area of northern Spain, networks such as Rastru have developed that allow users to go online to match offers and needs, in a digital twist on an ancient tradition.\n\nThe system adopted by Rastru - which stands for Asturian network of barter communities - equates one trade-point known as a \"copin\" to one euro. It enables users to barter directly, or rack up the digital currency to get goods and services from others in the community. To attract business, users can also deal in a mix of euros and points.\n\nAsturias miners saw the pits close, leaving a tough legacy for their children\n\nAsturias is littered with relics of its coal-mining heyday\n\n\"Barter means you can leave the bureaucracy alone, and that people who wouldn't otherwise have access to money have a way of surviving in the countryside,\" says Sergio Palacio Martin, who helped found the initiative and is also the son of a miner.\n\n\"The first stories that appeared about what's happening said we were all hippies. Now they're calling us entrepreneurs.\"\n\nAcross Asturias there are 78 municipalities, divided into nodes, he explains. Each one works autonomously. Since it started four years ago, nearly 1,500 users have shifted €350,000 (£300,000; $375,000) of produce between them.\n\nAn old photo of Asturias miners: Coal was an integral part of everyday life\n\nUntil the mid-19th Century, most people from Asturias lived in smallholdings similar to that of Javi Fernandez. As coal and steel mining took hold, rural areas were abandoned and the central cities and industrial centres became overpopulated.\n\nBut Mr Fernandez says that has all changed and speaks of a big movement. \"People from Asturias are returning to the mountains. They are having to learn about their rural environment, because there's nothing else for them, there's no work.\"\n\nVioleta is happy that local people are returning to their rural roots\n\nFurther up the mountain, Violeta cuts pumpkins and turnips for a stew she's making for her kids. \"It's not really new, this movement to the countryside,\" she says. \"People were already rural, but then they moved to the city. Now a generation's moving back. It's just another episode; a return to their roots.\"\n\nAnd there are opportunities here too. Asturias boasts 200,000 hectares of virgin, chestnut forest - Europe's biggest, says Javi. For now, the chestnuts drop to the ground and are eaten by wild boars.\n\nThe mild climate and rich soil are good for farming. \"We have all we need here,\" says Violeta. \"We came to make a future for ourselves, because in the city the future's dark and there are no possibilities. Here the possibilities are endless. There's forest, there's water, there's sun. We have what we want. \"\n\nThe bartering activity is modest, and will not provide a lasting solution to these young people's problems. But it is a start and offers a chance to navigate a period of uncertainty and industrial decline.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nCameroon will face Egypt in the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations final after two second-half strikes saw off Ghana.\n\nBoth sides had gone close to breaking the deadlock before Michael Ngadeu-Ngadjui took advantage of atrocious defending from a free-kick to lash in the opener in the 72nd minute.\n\nWith seconds remaining Christian Bassogog sealed victory when he applied a deft finish to a counter-attack.\n\nI am more than unhappy - we wanted so much to be in the final\n\nGhana went close through Wakaso Mubarak and Christian Atsu.\n\nPanathinaikos midfielder Wakaso tested keeper Fabrice Ondoa will a brilliant bending free-kick, and Newcastle's flying winger Atsu saw his angled strike drift past Cameroon's upright by inches.\n\nRelive the action as it happened\n\nAside from those two chances, the Black Stars - who last won the competition in 1982 - underwhelmed against a side who were clear second favourites going into the match.\n\nAs for coach Hugo Broos' Indomitable Lions, they are into their first final since they lost to Egypt in 2008.\n\n\"It is a real dream for us to get to the final,\" said the Belgian coach.\n\n\"Ghana have more experience than us - look at what they have done in recent tournaments. But since the start of this tournament we have shown we keep going right to the end in every game.\n\n\"I am very happy, especially for the team. They are an exemplary group on and off the field and they deserve to be in the final.\"\n\nTheir build-up to the match was clouded by a dispute between the team and the national association over pay, but on Gabon's Franceville stadium pitch their focus rarely wavered from the task in hand.\n\nCameroon defended brilliantly, nullifying the threat of Andre Ayew and brother Jordan - and, later on, substitute Asamoah Gyan.\n\nThey also caused Ghana several problems at the other end.\n\nSlavia Prague defender Ngadeu-Ngadjui was both a rock in defence and a menace on set-pieces in attack, highlighted when he fired in from the angle to give his side the lead.\n\nA free-kick was swung into the area and both Ghana defender John Boye and keeper Razah Brimah flapped at the delivery, allowing Ngadeu-Ngadjui to thrash home.\n\nAs Ghana, coached by former Chelsea boss Avram Grant, searched for the equaliser they left space at the back, which was exploited in the third minute of stoppage time when Aalborg forward Bassogog sprinted into the area and poked in past the reach of Razak.\n\n\"I am more than unhappy. We wanted so much to be in the final,\" said Grant.\n\n\"We did everything to be there and in the second half we completely dominated. Congratulations to Cameroon of course but we were the better side and we lost.\"\n\nThe Black Stars will meet Burkina Faso in Saturday's third place play-off in Port Gentil.\n• None Goal! Cameroon 2, Ghana 0. Christian Bassogog (Cameroon) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom left corner. Assisted by Vincent Aboubakar following a fast break.\n• None Attempt missed. Vincent Aboubakar (Cameroon) right footed shot from the right side of the box is just a bit too high. Assisted by Christian Bassogog following a set piece situation.\n• None Jacques Zoua (Cameroon) wins a free kick on the right wing.\n• None Delay over. They are ready to continue.\n• None Delay in match Fabrice Ondoa (Cameroon) because of an injury.\n• None Attempt blocked. Asamoah Gyan (Ghana) header from the left side of the six yard box is blocked. Assisted by Jordan Ayew with a cross. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Rowling has never shied away from expressing her political views on social media\n\nHarry Potter author JK Rowling has hit back at Twitter users who threatened to burn her books following her criticism of President Trump.\n\nRowling's recent Twitter feed has been filled with her retweets criticising the president's recent travel ban.\n\nSome followers have taken umbrage with her stance, with several saying they have burned her books or plan to do so, and one suggesting she \"should stay out of politics\".\n\nBut the novelist has proved a match for her critics with her mocking responses.\n\nRowling has more than nine million followers on Twitter\n\nOne Twitter user said they would now \"burn your books and movies, too\".\n\nRowling hit back: \"Well, the fumes from the DVDs might be toxic and I've still got your money, so by all means borrow my lighter.\"\n\nAnother said she had \"just burned all their Harry Potter books after being a fan for 17 years\".\n\nRowling's riposte? \"Guess it's true what they say: you can lead a girl to books about the rise and fall of an autocrat, but you still can't make her think.\"\n\nRowling joked it was like going back to the 1990s, when her books were first published - and burned by a minority\n\nAnother Twitter user posted: \"You're a grown ass woman whose entire career is based on stories about a nerd who turns people into frogs. Stay out of politics.\"\n\nRowling responded: \"In - Free - Countries - Anyone - Can - Talk - About - Politics.\n\n\"Try sounding out the syllables aloud, or ask a fluent reader to help.\"\n\nIt isn't the first time people have burnt or threatened to burn JK Rowling's books.\n\nIn the late 1990s, not long after the first couple of Harry Potter books were published, some had concerns about the magic and supernatural references, which they believed went against Bible teachings.\n\nA pile of Potter books was set alight in New Mexico in December 2001 by a religious group who claimed Harry was \"the devil\".\n\nAnd a preacher in Maine in the US marked The Chamber of Secrets' release by holding a party in which he shredded copies of Potter books.\n\nFollow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.\n\nThe BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.", "In Australia, campaigners are calling for an end to the use of shark nets at beaches, because they are killing dolphins and turtles.\n\nMore have been installed after a recent spate of shark attacks on the east coast - but some nets have been cut deliberately by those who oppose them.", "NHS staff using Google's search engine has triggered one of its cybersecurity defences.\n\nNHS Digital confirmed so many NHS staff use the search engine that it had started asking them to take a quiz to verify they were \"not a robot\".\n\nNews site the Register reported one NHS Trust had told staff to \"use Bing\" instead.\n\nGoogle indicated its systems were designed to spot unusual traffic and were working as intended.\n\nDetecting suspicious traffic from one network can help defeat potential cyber-attacks, such as attempts to try to overwhelm a website.\n\nThe BBC understands Google is not deliberately singling out NHS traffic.\n\nA Google spokeswoman said: \"Our systems are simply checking that searches are being carried out by humans and not by robots in order to keep web users safe. Once a user has filled out the Captcha [security check], they can continue to use Google as normal.\"\n\nThe NHS is one of the biggest employers in the world, with more than a million members of staff.\n\nAn email sent by an NHS system administrator suggested the number of staff using the search engine was \"causing Google to think it is suffering from a cyber-attack\".\n\nNHS Digital told the Register: \"We are aware of the current issue concerning NHS IP addresses which occasionally results in users being directed to a simple verification form when accessing Google.\n\n\"We are currently in discussion with Google as to how we can help them to resolve the issue.\"\n\nNHS Digital was unable to suggest what NHS staff may be searching for using Google.", "Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho walks out of his BBC interview after the 0-0 draw with Hull City, telling reporter Martin Fisher: \"If you don't know football, you shouldn't have a microphone.\"\n\nREAD MORE: Hull hold Manchester United at Old Trafford", "The entrepreneurs will step down at the end of the current series on BBC Two, with their last episode on 26 February.\n\nNick Jenkins, who founded greeting card website Moonpig.com, and Sarah Willingham, who made her money investing in restaurant chain The Bombay Bicycle Club, joined the show in 2015 with Touker Suleyman.\n\nTouker, Deborah Meaden and Peter Jones are understood to be staying.\n\nSarah Willingham, 43, said: \"Being part of Dragons' Den has been one of the best experiences of my life.\n\n\"At the end of last year my husband Michael and I decided to finally put into action our long-held dream to spend a year travelling the world with our young children.\n\nPeter Jones is still the only original entrepreneur to be taking part in the show\n\n\"Sadly this means that I've had to step down from my role as a Dragon.\n\n\"It's been a great privilege to be part of such a fantastic show and I wish everyone on it continued success.\"\n\nNick Jenkins, 49, said: \"I have thoroughly enjoyed making Dragons' Den but I want to focus more on my portfolio of educational technology businesses and that would make it difficult to take on any more investments from the Den.\"\n\nPatrick Holland, channel editor at BBC Two, said: \"Nick and Sarah have both been terrific Dragons, using their nous and insight to make some great investments and produce some compelling entertainment in the process.\n\n\"As they step down from the show I want to thank them and wish them all the very best for the future.\"\n\nSarah Willingham's husband paid tribute to his wife in an Instagram post.\n\nDuring her time on the show, Sarah Willingham invested in a craft gin subscription business, a coconut product firm (with Nick Jenkins), a beauty product subscription service (with Nick Jenkins), a coffee-based body scrub, science-themed children's birthday parties and workshops (with Nick Jenkins) and a skin foundation for vitiligo sufferers.\n\nNick Jenkins put money into a home appliances retailer (with Deborah Meaden), a magnetic dog and equine lead connector, an online double-dating app, freshly cooked baked beans, \"slap-on\" wrist watches and a gourmet pork scratching snack company.\n\nFind us on Instagram at BBCNewsbeat and follow us on Snapchat, search for bbc_newsbeat", "Beyonce and her husband Jay Z say they \"have been blessed two times over\", using Instagram to announce that she is expecting twins.\n\n\"We are incredibly grateful that our family will be growing by two,\" the pair wrote, and \"we thank you for your well wishes\".\n\nThe post, signed \"The Carters\", has a photo of Beyonce with a baby bump, wearing lingerie and a veil.\n\nThe couple already have a daughter, Blue Ivy, who has just turned five.\n\nBeyonce has been nominated in nine categories for the 2017 Grammy Awards, extending her lead as the most-nominated woman in Grammys history.\n\nThe star, 35, is due to headline the Coachella music festival in southern California in April.\n\nThe announcement gave no indication of the babies' due date.\n\nIn 2011, Beyonce revealed her pregnancy to fans during the MTV Awards.\n\nShe opened her performance of Love On Top by announcing: \"I want you to feel the love that's growing inside of me.\"\n\nDuring the closing bars of the song, she opened her jacket to reveal her baby bump. The camera then cut to Jay Z, who was being congratulated by Kanye West.\n\nBlue Ivy went on to inspire a song on Beyonce's self-titled album, and appeared several times in last year's Lemonade.\n\nJay Z revealed in the lyrics to his track Glory that Beyonce suffered a miscarriage before the birth of Blue Ivy.\n\nBeyonce and her husband Jay Z married in 2008", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nHuddersfield showed their promotion credentials with an impressive home win over Brighton, who missed the chance to extend their Championship lead.\n\nThe Seagulls remain one point ahead of second-placed Newcastle.\n\nTommy Smith's angled shot put the hosts in front before Tomer Hemed rounded the goalkeeper to equalise.\n\nNahki Wells fired into the top corner and Elias Kachunga nodded in to make it 3-1 before half-time, and Lewis Dunk's red card added to Brighton's misery.\n\nCentre-back Dunk was sent off for a second yellow card midway through the second half for a lunging challenge on Izzy Brown, having been booked in the first period for a foul on the same player.\n\nThe Terriers' seventh win in nine league matches keeps them fifth, but they are now just two points behind fourth-placed Leeds, who they play at home on Sunday.\n\nBrighton, knocked out of the FA Cup by non-league Lincoln five days earlier, were uncharacteristically poor in defence and conceded three goals in a league match for the first time in almost 12 months.\n\nThe outstanding Rajiv van La Parra had already hit the post before full-back Smith's attempted cross landed back at his feet, and his subsequent shot flew in at the near post.\n\nHemed pounced on a poor back header from Huddersfield's Aaron Mooy to level, but that proved to be the only clear chance they created in the entire 90 minutes.\n\nWells' excellent finish from just inside the box was his 100th goal in English football, and it was the former Bradford forward's shot which goalkeeper David Stockdale palmed into the air for Kachunga to head in Huddersfield's third from close range.\n\nAfter Dunk's dismissal, the fifth of his career, there was still time for Australian midfielder Mooy to strike the upright from long range and Stockdale to tip over a powerful attempt from substitute Kasey Palmer.\n\n\"It was a good one, maybe one of the best this season. We scored three goals and had chances for more, and conceded a sloppy goal which was easy to avoid, but it was very good.\n\n\"We are fresh and still very hungry and greedy, even when we are humble and we know we're playing against the best team in the division.\n\n\"We gave ourselves no limits, we try our best and today our best was very good.\"\n\n\"Every now and again you get a real bad one, and that was a real bad one.\n\n\"We were nowhere near the levels you need to play any game in this division, never mind one as good as Huddersfield, and on their own ground too.\n\n\"If we put in another performance like this at Brentford on Sunday, we will lose again. We need to be far better.\n\n\"Lewis Dunk has played the ball but he was already on a yellow and he's given the referee a decision to make. It's another one for him and something he has to learn from. We are going to miss him. It's a blow.\"\n• None Attempt saved. Joe Lolley (Huddersfield Town) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by Collin Quaner.\n• None Attempt missed. Kasey Palmer (Huddersfield Town) right footed shot from outside the box is too high from a direct free kick.\n• None Attempt saved. Kasey Palmer (Huddersfield Town) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Elias Kachunga.\n• None Offside, Huddersfield Town. Aaron Mooy tries a through ball, but Nahki Wells is caught offside.\n• None Aaron Mooy (Huddersfield Town) hits the left post with a right footed shot from outside the box. Assisted by Elias Kachunga.\n• None Oliver Norwood (Brighton and Hove Albion) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.\n• None Attempt saved. Kasey Palmer (Huddersfield Town) right footed shot from the right side of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Elias Kachunga. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page", "Former Chelsea and England midfielder Frank Lampard has retired, bringing to an end a 21-year professional career.\n\nThe 38-year-old, who spent last year with New York City in Major League Soccer in the US, announced his decision on social media on Thursday.\n\n\"Whilst I have received a number of exciting offers to continue playing, at 38 I feel now is the time to begin the next chapter in my life,\" said Lampard.\n\n\"I'm grateful to the Football Association for the opportunity to study for my coaching qualifications and I look forward to pursuing the off-field opportunities that this decision opens.\"\n\nHe won 11 major trophies, including three Premier League titles and the Champions League in 2012. Lampard also won four FA Cups, two League Cups and the Europa League.\n• None Lampard v Gerrard - who was better? Read the stats and cast your vote\n• None Listen: Lampard will go to the very top of management - Redknapp\n• None Only Ryan Giggs (632) and Gareth Barry (615) have made more Premier League appearances than Lampard (609).\n• None His total of 177 goals is the Premier League's fourth highest behind Alan Shearer, Wayne Rooney and Andy Cole.\n• None He has scored more goals from outside the box than any other Premier League player (41).\n• None Lampard scored against a record 39 different teams in the Premier League.\n• None No England player has scored as many penalties as Lampard (nine), excluding shootouts.\n\nFrank Lampard's legendary status and standing as one of the greatest players of the modern era is cemented by statistics.\n\nWhen he left Chelsea in the summer of 2014, he was the club's record goalscorer with 211 goals from 649 appearances - a truly remarkable return for a consummate professional plying his trade in midfield.\n\nLampard was central to the most successful spell in Chelsea's history as he and they completed a clean sweep of trophies at home and abroad, a haul that reflected his stellar contribution.\n\nHe was the model of consistency, respected and admired by team-mates and opponents alike.\n\nLike his great contemporary Steven Gerrard he struggled to transfer club successes to his England career, but he was still a fine performer on the international stage.\n\nLampard's next step looks certain to be into coaching - and with the knowledge gained over a lifetime from his father Frank Sr as well as working with managers such as Jose Mourinho, Carlo Ancelotti and Guus Hiddink, few would bet against him adding to his successes in this phase of his career.\n\nLampard joined Chelsea from boyhood club West Ham for a fee of £11m in 2001.\n\nHis club-record 211 goals helped the Blues win the Champions League, three Premier Leagues, four FA Cups, two League Cups, the Europa League and a Community Shield.\n\nHe played a pivotal role as Jose Mourinho's side delivered Chelsea's first top-flight championship in half a century, scoring 13 goals including both in the title-winning 2-0 victory at Bolton in April 2005.\n\nHe added 16 league goals the following season as Chelsea retained their title, finishing runner-up to Barcelona forward Ronaldinho in both the Ballon d'Or and Fifa World Player of the Year awards.\n\nLampard scored 10 or more Premier League goals in 10 successive seasons for Chelsea, reaching 22 as he collected a third Premier League winner's medal in 2009-10.\n\nChampions League success finally followed in 2011-12 as Lampard captained the side to a penalty shootout win over Bayern Munich in the absence of the suspended John Terry.\n\n\"He was definitely a world-class player for a long period of time,\" said BBC football analyst and former Chelsea winger Pat Nevin. \"I don't think we rate him as highly as we should do.\n\n\"He is kind of remembered just for scoring goals. That he was phenomenal at. There are very few people on the planet who can score that number of goals from midfield.\n\n\"He was a better all-round footballer than he was given credit for. When he was moved further back at the end of his career for Chelsea, he realised that his passing, short and long, was exceptional.\"\n\nLampard played a key role in bringing success back to Stamford Bridge, but he was unable to help replicate that trophy-laden touch with the national side.\n\nHe made his England debut against Belgium in 1999, going on to win the same amount of caps as Sir Bobby Charlton, but missed out on a place in both the Euro 2000 and World Cup 2002 squads.\n\nLampard scored three times as England reached the Euro 2004 quarter-finals, and finding a way to fit him and Steven Gerrard into the same midfield was seen as the solution to the national side's problems.\n\nThe pair formed the core of what was tagged England's 'golden generation', but both missed a penalty in a World Cup quarter-final shootout defeat by Portugal in 2006 and England failed to qualify for the Euros two years later.\n\nA last-16 exit followed against Germany in the 2010 World Cup and Lampard missed Euro 2012 through injury, before playing his final major tournament for England in Brazil in 2014, when England went out in the group stage.\n\n\"From an England point of view he was pretty spectacular,\" added Nevin. \"There were times when he got a lot of stick. He still got all those caps and still scored a whole bunch of goals.\"\n\nLampard began his career at West Ham, making his debut in January 1996 having progressed through the club's youth system. But the presence at the club of his dad Frank Lampard Sr, and uncle Harry Redknapp as manager, meant the teenager was singled out for criticism.\n\nLampard even claimed in his autobiography that some Hammers fans cheered when he broke his leg during a game against Aston Villa.\n\nLater he would face a frosty reception when he controversially arrived at Manchester City after agreeing to join New York City - the MLS franchise set up by the Premier League club and the New York Yankees baseball team - in 2014.\n\nLampard refused to celebrate when he scored against Chelsea, and while his performances in Manchester saw his deal at Etihad Stadium extended, it prompted an angry reaction in New York.\n\nLampard finally made his MLS debut in August 2015, but critics were underwhelmed by his performances and, after returning from an injury this season, he was jeered by his own fans and described as \"the worst signing in MLS history\".\n\nBut he rediscovered his scoring touch and the city celebrated Frank Lampard Day in September after he scored his 300th career goal. He went on to reach double figures in the MLS before announcing his time at New York had come to an end.\n\n\"It was an incredible career when you consider he was written off right at the start and told he might not go that far,\" said former Scotland international Nevin.\n\nNevin, a key member of the Chelsea side that won promotion from English football's second tier in 1984, says Lampard is capable of doing anything he wants to in the game.\n\n\"He's a hugely intelligent guy,\" said Nevin. \"He could actually go into an area where he could be running part of a club. If he wants to go down that route he is perfectly capable.\n\n\"Looking at his capabilities, anything within the game is possible for him, be it coaching, be it managing, be it working with the FA.\n\n\"I hope the game doesn't lose him, but I don't think it will. I think he loves the game too much.\"\n\nMatch of the Day presenter and former England international Gary Lineker recently went to New York to speak to Lampard about his future.\n\n\"Lampard says he is very keen on getting into coaching, which is not a path too many English players of his calibre have taken recently when their playing days ended,\" said Lineker.\n\n\"Part of that is down to them having other options. Punditry is one of them and I am sure he would be very good at it - there would be plenty of people trying to get him to work for them.\n\n\"But it would be nice to see someone like Lampard go into the coaching game, with his intelligence and passion and especially because he wants to test himself as a manager.\"\n\nFormer Chelsea midfielder and assistant manager Ray Wilkins told BBC Radio 5 live: \"Frank's been exceptional and ranks among best that have ever played for Chelsea with his goals, his creativity, his work ethic. He's everything anyone wants as a coach or manager.\n\n\"I would love him to go [and manage] a Premier League side and not anywhere else. He knows what the Premier League is all about. Go in where you know - he knows top-quality international footballers. Give him the opportunity to do his stuff.\"", "The University of California at Berkeley has cancelled a talk by the editor of the right-wing Breitbart News website, Milo Yiannopoulos, after hundreds of students protested against his visit.\n\nMr Yiannopoulos is an outspoken supporter of President Donald Trump.\n\nAt least one fire was started and police fired tear gas, as the campus was put on lockdown.", "Is your freezer jam-packed full of mysterious foods from a time long-forgotten? Maybe your freezer is a stop on the way to the bin for all kinds of odds and ends you don't know what to do with. With a few simple tricks, you can eliminate waste and save money on food.\n\n1. Save your leftovers by flat-packing them in bags that stack easily.\n\n2. Make using up leftovers easier by writing the expiry date on the bags, not the day you froze it. Most cooked foods keep for 3 months. You'll find it easier to grab something that needs using up quickly, without doing the math.\n\n3. Save leftover stock, coconut milk, chilli, ginger in ice cube trays to make an instant soup, straight from the freezer. Just add straight-to-wok noodles, coriander and any other vegetables you fancy.\n\n4. Flash-freeze loose items like sliced bananas, berries, sliced chillies or ginger if you want to use a little at a time. Place the food on a baking tray and freeze before transferring to a sealable freezer bag. Then you can use as much or as little as you need.\n\n5. Know how long you should keep meat and fish to avoid the straight-to-bin syndrome:", "Last updated on .From the section Rugby Union\n\nAs the start of the Six Nations nears, the respective coaches spent as much time talking about who wouldn't feature in the opening weekend as would.\n\nThe duration of Ireland fly-half Johnny Sexton's absence was a theme for coach Joe Schmidt, while England counterpart Eddie Jones' - sporting a shiner of his own - updated the media on his host of walking wounded.\n\nScotland's Vern Cotter rued the absence of props WP Nel and Alasdair Dickinson, while Wales' Rob Howley is without first-choice forwards Luke Charteris and Taulupe Faletau.\n• None Get rugby news as it happens by signing up for our new alerts\n• None BBC coverage of the 2017 Six Nations\n• None Matt Dawson scored 12 - can you beat him on our rugby quiz?\n\nSexton will miss Saturday's meeting with Scotland with a tight calf, but Schmidt raised the prospect that the 63-cap Leinster fly-half could also miss Ireland's second match against Italy on 11 February.\n\n\"Realistically, Johnny is an outside chance for Italy. He's probably played about 82 minutes in the last eight test matches,\" said Schmidt.\n\n\"In the three Six Nations I have been involved in, Johnny has dominated the number 10 position so we're still hopeful that he can come back in and do that for us.\"\n\nPaddy Jackson, who deputised for Sexton in Ireland's autumn Test win over Australia, has been given another chance to stake his claim, while flanker Sean O'Brien is fit again at openside.\n\nBefore taking on the England role, Jones had suggested that flanker Chris Robshaw was short of international class.\n\nBut, with Robshaw out for the tournament with a shoulder injury, Jones admits Maro Itoje, who has been switched to six from the second row, has a tough task to match up to the Harlequin in the opening match against France.\n\n\"Itoje has got big shoes to fill,\" said Jones. \"Chris Robshaw has been one of our integral players with his work-rate but Maro has trained well in that position and we believe he can make a really good fist of it.\n\nProp Joe Marler, meanwhile, has claimed that drinking two pints of milk a day is behind his rapid recovery from a leg fracture that was expected to rule him out of the team's first two fixtures.\n\n\"Your mum always says milk is really good for you and you don't really believe it until you need it because you've got a broken leg, so I just drank loads of it,\" he said.\n\n\"I drank two pints a day and it's something I'll keep doing because it's really tasty.\"\n\nCotter is keen to keep his Scotland players' feet on the ground after winning four out of five of their matches since last year's Six Nations and coming within a point of Australia in their solitary defeat.\n\n\"Can we win the whole thing? I think the trap is every year that Scotland get talked up,\" said the New Zealander.\n\n\"We are realistic. We know which teams are ranked ahead of us, we know what the rugby hierarchy is at the moment. It's up to us to change that.\"\n\nHooker Fraser Brown will make only his fourth start ahead of 102-cap Ross Ford and Cotter says that the Glasgow man's defensive skills swung selection.\n\n\"Fraser is very good defensively and close around ruck time. We know Ireland go to one-pass or two-pass plays and we need to be robust around that area.\"\n\nWebb returns as Wales make five changes\n\nWith Wales' opening match followed six days later by defending champions England's visit to Cardiff, interim head coach Howley has put his side through two full-contact training matches to get them match ready.\n\nWelshman Nigel Owens, who took charge of the 2015 World Cup final, officiated the 50-minute, 15-a-side matches and Howley believes the approach has worked.\n\n\"There has been a lot of energy and enthusiasm over the past two weeks, and we are excited going into Sunday,\" he said.\n\nWales XV to face the Azzurri have collected a total of 677 caps and Howley believes that experience is crucial.\n\n\"The side that's been selected has about a 70% winning ratio in the Six Nations. They know what winning looks and smells like in the Six Nations,\" he said.\n\nFrance coach Guy Noves will give 22-year-old Bordeaux scrum-half Baptiste Serin his Six Nations debut and only third start in the team against England on Saturday.\n\n\"We're convinced we can count on him in the future but we want to try him out in a difficult situation.\" said Noves.\n\n\"If we trust him, he has to show his qualities in the toughest situations. To only play in the lesser matches, that doesn't seem smart to me.\"\n\nMaxime Machenaud drops to the bench despite starting in each of France's three autumn Tests.\n\nFormer Harlequins head coach Conor O'Shea, who took charge in June, wants his Italy side to build on their first-ever win over South Africa in November.\n\nItaly have not beaten Wales since a 23-20 success in Rome in 2007.\n\n\"We want a great, great performance this weekend to make everyone understand that we are on the right track,\" said O'Shea.\n\n\"It is possible to change our history. Sport is very strange and can very quickly change.\"", "\"We have lift-off\" is the Daily Mail's front page headline on Wednesday night's Brexit vote in the Commons.\n\nIt describes the vote - by 498 to 114 - as a \"crushing majority\" to start the formal process of leaving the European Union.\n\nIts front page - complete with union flags, a picture of Sir Winston Churchill's statue and Big Ben - heralds a \"momentous day for Britain\".\n\nThe Daily Telegraph, meanwhile, says the period of \"phoney Brexit\" is now over, adding that at the point of the vote \"our bridges were burned and there's no way back\".\n\nThe paper's editorial goes on to say there is \"no point pretending that the process is going to be straightforward\".\n\nIt adds that one ambition must be to \"avoid it seriously damaging relations with the rest of Europe\".\n\nThe Financial Times reports that even as Theresa May celebrated victory, there were warnings of the difficulties to come from her former EU ambassador, Ivan Rogers.\n\nHe said resolving demands from Brussels for a £60bn exit payment could descend into name-calling and a diplomatic \"fist-fight\".\n\nThe Guardian is one of a number of papers to highlight the split that has emerged in the Labour Party - with more than a fifth of its MPs defying Jeremy Corbyn's orders and voting against the Brexit legislation.\n\nThe paper's editorial says the party's difficulties were \"etched\" on the face of shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer, as he wove his way through what it called the \"mess of conflicting ambitions that constitute current party policy\".\n\nThe editorial says: \"We would rather that the party had voted with its heart than, as it perhaps did, with an eye on its electoral prospects in leave areas like Stoke and Copeland.\"\n\nAway from the Brexit debate, UKIP could face a £500,000 bill over claims it misused EU cash, according to the Times.\n\nThe paper says Nigel Farage, Paul Nuttall and six other party MEPs are under investigation.\n\nIt adds that they could be told to pay back the money if their full time European parliamentary assistants were found to have also been working for a national party.\n\nSeveral papers, including the i newspaper and the Guardian have a picture of the party's former leader Nigel Farage speaking at the European parliament yesterday.\n\nAlso visible in the photo is the Labour MEP Seb Dance.\n\nHe is holding up a piece of paper with an arrow pointing towards Mr Farage with the words \"he's lying to you\".\n\nThe Telegraph reports that a major overhaul of the Official Secrets Act is under way in the face of what it calls a \"growing threat from Russia\".\n\nSpies and civil servants who leak secrets would face up to 14 years in jail, according to the paper.\n\nIt says the proposals aim to replace existing laws with a modern espionage act and a data disclosure law.\n\nUnder the new system, foreign spies who steal information from government departments and leak it - or those who snoop on British embassies - would face prosecution in British courts for the first time.\n\nThe original Teletubbies ran from 1997 to 2001\n\nBuilders have accidentally dug up and smashed a Blue Peter time capsule.\n\nAccording to the Sun, presenters Richard Bacon and Katy Hill buried items picked by the viewers under the Millennium Dome - now the O2 Arena - in 1998.\n\nThe capsule was supposed to remain underground until 2050.\n\nHowever, workers laying cables at the O2 Arena unearthed it on Tuesday.\n\nItems inside included a set of Tellytubby dolls, a Tamagotchi, a Spice Girls CD and, of course, a Blue Peter badge.", "Last updated on .From the section Football\n\nManchester City's signing of Gabriel Jesus was like buying a watermelon, said manager Pep Guardiola after the Brazilian's first goal for the club.\n\nThe 19-year-old, who joined from Palmeiras, scored one and assisted another on his first Premier League start as City thrashed West Ham 4-0.\n\n\"You never know. It's like a watermelon. You have to open to see if it's good or not,\" said Guardiola.\n\n\"The prospect was good. Jesus is a fighter with instinct for the goal.\"\n\nCity signed the striker in the summer for £27m, but he spent the rest of 2016 with his Brazilian club - helping them to win their domestic title.\n\nSince joining up with City last month, he has started twice and made one substitute appearance, scoring one goal and assisting two.\n\nGuardiola told BBC Sport: \"He played a few minutes against Tottenham and created chances and it's not easy to play at Crystal Palace. He's good at assists too. He made a marvellous assist against Palace and today with Kevin de Bruyne.\"\n\nThe City manager added: \"He has dreams about what he wants to do in his future career. He wants to become something in world football, and we're going to try to get it for us.\"\n\nGuardiola left top scorer Sergio Aguero on the bench, starting Leroy Sane, Raheem Sterling and Jesus up front - and the trio impressed, linking up well and playing a part in all four goals.\n\nDe Bruyne opened the scoring after a one-two with Jesus, Sane set up David Silva for the second, and Sterling squared for Jesus to make it 3-0 before half-time.\n\nYaya Toure added a fourth from the penalty spot after Hammers debutant Jose Fonte brought down Sterling.\n\n\"We played a front three with an average age of 20,\" said Guardiola. \"In Europe, nobody has strikers this young. I like the fans to be excited. Those players are the future of the club.\"\n\nAsked if Aguero would have to get used to life on the bench, Guardiola said: \"No. I'm a guy who likes to involve as many players as possible.\"\n\nWhile discussing Jesus, the former Barcelona boss was repeating a phrase Leeds owner Massimo Cellino said in June 2014 about new coach David Hockaday.\n\n\"Coaches are like watermelons, you only know [how good it is] when you open it,\" said the Italian.\n\nHockaday was sacked after six games.\n\nHow the papers saw Jesus' performance", "At least three clubs are at risk of missing a self-imposed deadline to improve access for disabled fans, the Premier League has said.\n\nA report suggests Bournemouth, Chelsea and Watford may not fulfil a pledge to meet standards by August 2017.\n\nIt stressed clubs have been \"working hard on delivery\" since a 2014 BBC report found that 17 of 20 clubs did not provide enough wheelchair spaces."], "link": ["http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/39034268", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/39044833", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/articles/39025086", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/articles/38997208", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/39034850", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38991904", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-39046587", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-39009072", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/39046962", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-39034093", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-39030811", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-39036138", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-39026040", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-39031258", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/39033729", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-39046583", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-39035512", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-39031171", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-39041300", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-39032192", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38952752", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/athletics/39040088", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38992373", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-39038417", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/horse-racing/39042339", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-39001801", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-the-papers-39047697", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-39037547", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-38985820", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-39026239", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-39045147", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-39044933", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/39045017", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-39026845", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-39004782", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-39028030", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-39034391", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-39032105", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-38961027", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/39044853", 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"http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-39035668", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-39032655", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/39037374", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/39025307", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-39034097", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-38852723", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38842491", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-the-papers-38850445", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-38830223", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/articles/38851599", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/38859441", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/38851744", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-38855685", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38847787", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-the-papers-38863523", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/golf/38859242", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/38844538", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-38827661", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/38863841", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38852720", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/golf/38852149", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38852000", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38845752", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38838033", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38830552", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cumbria-38838653", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38853350", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/38862964", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38023336", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-38844102", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38845238", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-38863194", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38852721", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-38849078", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38827272", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38857960", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-38859824", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-38853200", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/athletics/38852377", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-38856986", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/38748058", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38848691", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/38847806", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-38831313", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-38861415", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38834621", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/horse-racing/38862543", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-38829663", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38862780", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-38853399", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-38852715", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-38854333", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/38844632", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38847355", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38847949", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-38771806", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-38845772", "http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38856081", 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