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Write a summary of this document. | Wawrinka withstood a fightback from the world number one, who was struggling with a back problem, to come through 6-3 6-2 3-6 6-3.
The 28-year-old becomes only the second Swiss man to win a Grand Slam singles title after 17-time champion Roger Federer.
"Nadal could have easily walked off court but he didn't and it added to the match. I was impressed at how Wawrinka had the mental capacity to finish off the match. For a while it looked like he was getting nervous, tired, missing easy shots and screaming at his team. It is hard to beat an injured player, especially an injured Rafa. To beat a Rafa at 60% is not easy. It was a fantastic gutsy effort from both of them."
And he is the first man outside the 'big four' of Nadal, Federer, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray to win a Grand Slam since Juan Martin Del Potro at the 2009 US Open.
Fortunes fluctuated wildly over the course of two hours and 21 minutes as Wawrinka opened in scintillating form before a tearful Nadal appeared close to quitting at two sets down, only to stage a remarkable recovery in the third.
The Spaniard, 27, showed great spirit to hit back once again from a break down in the fourth, but a forehand winner gave Wawrinka the decisive break at 5-3 and he served out the biggest win of his life with a love game.
"I still think that I'm dreaming," said Wawrinka. "It's a strange feeling. I saw so many finals. I always try to watch the finals of Grand Slams because that's where the best players are playing.
"Before today, for me it wasn't a dream. I never expected to play a final. I never expected to win a Grand Slam. And right now I just did it."
Nadal, who revealed he felt the back problem in the warm-up, said: "It is a tournament that I really had some troubles physically in my career and is something that is painful for me.
"But that's part of life. That's part of sport. It's not the end of the world. Is just another tough moment."
"The last thing that I wanted to do was retire. No, I hate to do that, especially in a final.
"It's not the moment to talk about that. It's the moment to congratulate Stan. He's playing unbelievable. He really deserved to win that title."
Wawrinka had never won a set, let alone a match, in 12 previous attempts against Nadal, and was making his Grand Slam final debut against a man in his 19th.
But Nadal's travails in the second half of the match should not overshadow what was a magnificent performance from Wawrinka for much of the contest.
He coped brilliantly with the Spaniard's fizzing forehand in the early stages, using his backhand to return the fire, and 12 winners almost helped him to a 5-1 lead.
Some nerves were finally revealed when he tried to close out a set against Nadal for the first time, failing to make a first serve as he fell 0-40 down, but the 2009 champion could not get a return in play as Wawrinka hit back to seal it with an ace.
Three sweeping forehands helped the Swiss break at the start of the second on a run of 12 straight points, and it was when serving at 2-0 down that Nadal first appeared to feel the problem with his back.
After leaving the court for treatment, to the annoyance of Wawrinka and boos from some sections of the crowd, Nadal returned unable to serve at anything like full speed, and at one stage was close to tears.
"Wawrinka's first-set performance was of such a high quality that we may have been deprived of a classic duel - and who is to say that the man who took out Djokovic wouldn't also have been able to take out a fully fit Nadal. The world number one at half speed was a more perplexing conundrum, but when given the chance to serve for the title, Wawrinka illustrated the self-belief that has underpinned his surge up the rankings."
Another visit from the physio followed after game five, and when Wawrinka took the second set almost unopposed, the 13-time Grand Slam champion appeared close to calling it quits on a long walk back to his chair.
What followed was remarkable, with Nadal staging the unlikeliest of fightbacks - possibly as the pain killers kicked in - while Wawrinka completely lost his rhythm with victory apparently his for the taking.
The Swiss made 19 unforced errors and, despite still not moving freely, Nadal managed to increase his service speed just enough to keep the misfiring Wawrinka at bay and clinch the third set.
It now appeared to be a test of Wawrinka's nerve as much as Nadal's fitness, because the Spaniard was clearly not about about to give up, and he clung on magnificently.
Two break points were saved at the start of the fourth, and a break recovered at 4-2 down, but Wawrinka made the decisive move with a brilliant forehand into the corner to break for 5-3 and raced through the final game.
Check out a selection of pictures from the final and comment on the match on the BBC Sport Facebook page. | Switzerland's Stanislas Wawrinka won his first Grand Slam title with victory over an injury-hit Rafael Nadal in the Australian Open final. |
Please summarize the following text. | The two are alleged to have chased Zyed Benna and Bouna Traore, leading them to take refuge in a power substation.
It is alleged the officers failed to raise the alarm even though they knew the youths were in danger.
Defenders say the boys knew the danger and police are being scapegoated to appease ongoing anger over the riots.
The officers are to face a jury eight years after the deaths of the youths, aged 15 and 17, following a high court decision to repeal earlier rulings blocking them from trial.
The BBC's Hugh Schofield in Paris said the delay in bringing them to court highlights the sensitivities that surround the case in France.
The October 2005 incident in Clichy-Sous-Bois, a low-income suburb of Paris largely populated by North African immigrants and their French-born descendants, inflamed existing tensions between residents and police.
Violence escalated and spread to other housing estates across France with nightly clashes causing damage to hundreds of public buildings and leading to thousands of arrests.
At the height of the riots, then President Jacques Chirac declared a national state of emergency.
Jean-Pierre Mignard, a lawyer for the families of two teenagers, said he was reassured by the decision to try the police officers.
"This is all that we wanted," he told Le Monde newspaper.
The two officers are accused of "non-assistance to people in danger". It is alleged that they started chasing the two teenagers for no particular reason.
French police reports at the time of the incident said there was no chase and the two teenagers entered the substation as a result of a tragic misunderstanding.
A third youth who had accompanied Benna and Traore but escaped with injuries was later quoted by police saying they had all been aware of the danger, which was clearly signposted at the station. | Two police officers are to go on trial for failing to help two teenagers whose 2005 death by electrocution in Paris triggered huge riots in French suburbs. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | More than 7,000 visitors attended events such as battle re-enactments.
Tourists from 18 different countries exploring their heritage brought in a net total of £390,000 last year.
Clan chief Alexander Leslie, vice-convener of the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs, said there had been a renewed level of interest over the last 18 months.
About 50 million people globally claim to have Scottish ancestry.
Mr Leslie, vice-convener of the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs, said many "overseas Scots" were visiting each year.
He said: "The clan network and clan societies bring a lot of overseas Scots to Scotland every year and within the last year or 18 months there's also been a renewed level of interest in Scotland itself in which clan people belong to, which is very encouraging to see.
"We work hard with the Scottish Government on this issue and see it a win-win situation that Scotland as a whole, Scotland as a brand and Scotland as a destination will benefit."
The Scottish Clan Event Fund, administered by EventScotland, gives clans and clan societies up to £5,000 for gatherings, battle re-enactments and other associated heritage events.
The Scottish Government allocated £23,000 to the fund in 2015/16 and has announced up to £70,000 will be available in 2016/17.
There will be six supported events taking place across Scotland in 2016.
Tourism minister Fergus Ewing said: "The market for ancestral tourism in Scotland is considerable and creates opportunities for communities to benefit.
"I am pleased to see the fund has already had such a strong positive impact, capturing visitors' imagination and helping to inspire and promote fun, colourful and inspiring events across the country." | 'Clan' tourism generated nearly £400,000 for Scotland's economy in 2015. |
Summarize the following excerpt. | It comes as extra funding has been released for the UK's security services to help combat Islamic State terrorism.
Mr Cameron, who is meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin, told BBC News he was hopeful of an agreement with Russia over the future of Syria.
It comes as the French prime minister said the attacks were planned in Syria.
Manuel Valls said the authorities believed new terror attacks were being planned in France and other European countries.
A total of 129 people, including one Briton, were killed in Friday's attacks on bars and restaurants, a concert hall and the Stade de France. So-called Islamic State (IS or ISIL) claimed it was behind the killings.
A minute silence for the victims will be held in the UK at 11:00 GMT, to coincide with a Europe-wide silence at midday French time.
UK reaction to Paris attacks: Live coverage
Paris attacks: Latest updates
Who were the victims?
Briton Nick Alexander from Essex has been confirmed dead and Home Secretary Theresa May said other Britons had been injured.
Mr Cameron said people should be "vigilant" against those who want to "change our way of life and destroy our way of life".
"Remember that our freedom depends on showing resolve and carrying on with our way of life, which is exactly what we ought to do," he added on Radio 4's Today programme.
Mr Cameron is meeting Mr Putin in their first face-to-face talks for a year, at the G20 summit in Turkey.
He said dealing with Russia over the future of Syria was "difficult" and that there had been some "profound disagreements", but added that Mr Putin recognised the threat IS posed to his country.
Civil war erupted in Syria four years ago, and now President Bashar al-Assad's government, IS, an array of Syrian rebels and Kurdish fighters all hold territory. Millions have been displaced and more than 250,000 people killed as a result of the fighting.
The new funding measures will allow MI5, MI6 and GCHQ to recruit an extra 1,900 officers, and a doubling in funding for aviation security is also expected to be agreed this week.
The funding for the 15% increase in staffing for the three intelligence agencies was revealed ahead of the publication of the government's Strategic Defence and Security Review, which is expected next week.
BBC home affairs correspondent Daniel Sandford said this was an increase on the number previously briefed to the media by the Treasury.
The intelligence agencies already have about 12,700 staff.
The extra funding for aviation security is expected to be used to pay for more experts to assess airport safety in countries with large numbers of British visitors, among other measures. The UK currently spends about £9m a year on this issue.
Lord Carlile, a former independent reviewer of terrorism laws, told BBC News Islamic State could be "exterminated" if there was international will.
"The Secretary of State for Defence Michael Fallon has been absolutely right in recent weeks in calling for parliamentarians to support more vigorous bombing of ISIL," he said.
"We must destroy them otherwise this will go on for a generation.
"If people start what is in effect a war then they must reap the consequences for people around them I'm afraid. This is not a group one can talk to or negotiate with."
Meanwhile, officers from the Metropolitan Police's Counter Terrorism Command unit are interviewing people returning to the UK from France who may have information about the Paris attacks.
The Met is also appealing for any potential witnesses to contact its anti-terrorist hotline, on 0800 789 321.
Mr Alexander, 36, from Colchester, died in the attack at the Bataclan concert hall, where he had been selling merchandise.
His family described him as "generous, funny and fiercely loyal".
Friends also paid tribute to him on social media. Joe Trohman, lead guitarist of the rock band Fall Out Boy, described him as a "great guy".
Tributes: Nick Alexander 'clever and charming'
More than 80 people died at that concert hall, one of a number of locations targeted by attackers.
The US band Eagles of Death Metal were playing a gig when militants burst into the venue and opened fire, but the band themselves survived unscathed.
Other bands, including U2, Motorhead and Foo Fighters, have cancelled gigs in Paris. | The British public must show "resolve" and "carry on with our lives" in the wake of the terror attacks on Paris, Prime Minister David Cameron says. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | Concerns were raised about the A354 Rodwell Road, commonly known as Boot Hill, at a public meeting in the Old Town Hall on Tuesday.
Several residents also complained about resulting health problems and demanded improvements.
Dorset Highways said it plans to make improvements in March.
During the meeting, the road was highlighted as having the worst air quality in the borough according to 2014 figures from Weymouth and Portland Borough Council Public Health.
"The sheer amount of traffic using that road now is unbelievable," said Phil Hoskins, who has lived on Boot Hill since 1970.
"I should be able to park outside my house, but now I've got no chance."
June Pope, who has been a Boot Hill resident since 1956, described the situation as "terrible".
"You can't go in the garden because of the pollution and the noise - you can't hear the television sometimes," she said.
Green Party county councillor for Rodwell, Clare Sutton, who chaired the meeting, said changes to the traffic system in Weymouth prior to 2012 Olympic sailing events held in the town had "exacerbated" the situation.
Dorset Highways said improvements would be made to the layout of the junction at the foot of Boot Hill in March.
Mike Harries, director for environment at the county council, said: "We hope that by changing the phasing of the traffic lights at the junction at the bottom of Boot Hill, we will see an improvement to the overall flow of traffic, a reduction in congestion and, importantly, improve air quality."
Warburton, 28, has not played since injuring a knee on 7 April.
The Wales flanker, who has been training with the Lions, could return next week if the Blues beat Stade.
"I think he's progressing very well and hopefully he'll be back fit soon," said Cardiff Blues head coach Danny Wilson.
"It's hard to see past Friday night. We have a rough idea of where things might be but, once you know the result from Friday night, you know how the planning will go.
"From Sam's point of view, you go day by day. Will he be fit next week? There's definitely a chance he will be but how big that chance is I couldn't tell you."
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If Blues beat Stade they will meet the winner of Northampton v Connacht for the chance to play in Europe's top-tier club competition in 2017-18.
Almost two-thirds of the 41-man Lions squad are currently with their clubs, regions and provinces ahead of Aviva Premiership, Guinness Pro12 and Champions Cup play-offs next weekend.
Warburton is expected to be fit for the Lions' first game of their summer tour of New Zealand, against New Zealand Provincial Barbarians on 3 June.
Should the Blues win in Paris, the 2013 Lions captain will be assessed further with a view to potentially playing against Northampton or Connacht.
"The assessment for next week, if we win this weekend, we'll see if he's available in terms of fitness for the second game should we make it," Wilson added.
"He's not fit for this game and how next week pans out we'll wait and see. There's a result that needs to happen first and then decisions around his fitness." | Residents have said they cannot go in their gardens or park outside their homes because of "unbelievable" traffic and pollution in an area of Weymouth.
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Injured British and Irish Lions captain Sam Warburton will miss Cardiff Blues' European Champions Cup semi-final qualifier against Stade Francais on Friday. |
Summarize the following excerpt. | The sports car was towed away after it was stopped outside a police station in Cambridge in August.
The Huracan model was pulled over by Cambridgeshire police close to its Parkside base.
Police said the company that hired out of the vehicle was "not at fault" and would not face any penalty.
In a Freedom of Information response on 26 November, Cambridgeshire police said the driver had been reported for a "traffic offence" that had yet to be finalised.
A Cambridgeshire Police spokesman confirmed the driver had now been offered the chance to accept a £100 fine for driving without a front number plate, plus a £300 fine and six penalty points for having no insurance.
If the driver refuses to accept the penalty, the case could be taken to court.
In a tweet at the time of the offence, Cambridgeshire's roads policing unit said: "Even Lamborghinis need insurance." It added: "He was stopped outside the station!"
The vehicle, which retails from about £180,000, was later collected by the hire firm.
Mearl C Waswick was a tail gunner on a B-17 which made an emergency landing in Strathaven, South Lanarkshire, in 1943.
His niece, Vicki Graham, 63, and her husband Barry, 65, from South Dakota, visited the field at Braehead farm where the Flying Fortress came down.
They also spoke to Archie Watt, 84, who saw the plane land when he was an 11-year-old boy working in a nearby field.
Mr Watt said: "They just came out of the blue. The first I heard was the tops of the trees getting stripped off by the plane passing through them and then it did a bellyflop and landed without the undercarriage coming down.
"We went across and when we got there they were all out. The crew were fine as I remember. It was a perfect landing under the circumstances. They picked the right field. There was hardly a mark on the plane.
"It's very nice to meet the Grahams. I didn't get to know any of the crew but I'll never forget it. It was the biggest fright of my life. Every time I see a plane flying it flashes through my head."
The crash also remained a secret in the Graham family for decades until their daughter Carrie wrote a story about her great-uncle, who died in 1999.
He produced a penny he took as a reminder of the crash, which she now wears on a necklace, and told her a little of what happened.
Standing at the crash site on Wednesday, her mother Vicki said: "It's very emotional. It was part of my uncle's history and I kind of wish he could have been able to come and see the place and meet the people and meet Archie again.
"He didn't talk a lot about his war. He was a very shy and quiet man.
"My uncle was the only injury. They all got out the top of the plane and when they were getting out one of the guys stood on his face. He didn't tell us that, it was his friend, another crew member.
"He said the people around here were wonderful."
The B-17 was heading from Newfoundland to a base in Polebrook, Northamptonshire, via Prestwick, South Ayrshire, when it lost an engine 1,000 miles out in the Atlantic and then ran out of fuel on being diverted from fog-bound Prestwick.
Mrs Graham said the pilot told the crew to parachute out but they stayed with him as he brought the plane down safely.
The couple were driven to the site by Glasgow Taxis, which also arranged for them to meet Mr Watt there.
Gloucestershire Police said a murder investigation has been launched after the man's body was found at an address on Walkley Hill on Friday.
A spokesman said it was "now clear" the man died of stab wounds.
A 47-year-old man from Stroud was arrested in Southsea, Hampshire on Sunday. The coroner has been informed and a post-mortem examination has been completed, the spokesman added. | The driver of an uninsured Lamborghini seized outside a police station could avoid court action by accepting a fine and penalty points, police have said.
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An American couple have made an "emotional" visit to a field where a relative survived a WW2 air crash.
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An 82-year-old man has been found stabbed to death in Stroud. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | The awards of the 2018 and 2022 events to Russia and Qatar have been tainted by allegations of corruption.
Infantino, who was elected Fifa boss last month, wants to begin bidding for the 2026 World Cup within three months.
"We have to get the 2026 bidding process absolutely right," Infantino told BBC Sport.
"It's certainly the commitment that I want to give; that I will do everything I can to make sure that this happens because I think that the credibility of Fifa is, as well, at stake here.
"We need to make sure that we do everything we possibly can, not only to prevent strange things to happen around bidding processes but also to prevent the perception that strange things could happen.
"We need to make sure that bidding process that we put in place is absolutely bullet-proof."
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Every World Cup bidding process since 1998 has been the subject of allegations of corruption and bribery.
The bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 tournaments is the subject of an ongoing Swiss criminal investigation, while there is also a US inquiry following the arrest and indictment of several top Fifa executives by the US Department of Justice on corruption charges.
In October last year, Blatter appeared to suggest there had been an agreement in place for Russia to host the event - before the vote took place.
On Friday, a report into 2006 World Cup corruption allegations failed to completely rule out the possibility that a payment of 6.7m euros from the German football federation (DFB) to world governing body Fifa in April 2005 was used to buy votes.
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Infantino, 45, was elected as Fifa chief following the suspension of predecessor Blatter, who had been in charge of the governing body since 1998.
Following his election, the former Uefa boss denied that promises to the United States over who would host the 2026 World Cup secured his election win.
He insisted it was now time to focus on making the next two World Cups a success.
"I am a pragmatic person," he said. "Fifa needs to deliver two World Cups, one in two years and one in six years, for decisions which have been taken six years ago.
"There has been a lot of speculation and a lot of allegations but not one single fact, in six years. At some stage we have to say 'let's focus on working'. I want to work and help Russia and Qatar host the best World Cups ever, as we always say."
The Great Exhibition of the North will get £5m, with "public and private funders" providing any further budget.
The Department for Culture, Media and Sport said a £15m "legacy fund" to attract cultural investment in the North would also be provided.
The competition will run until June, with the winner announced in October.
A board has been set up to handle applications to host the two-month show, chaired by the chief executive of Welcome to Yorkshire, Sir Gary Verity.
Sir Gary said he hoped to see bids from the "many towns and cities across the north of England that have what it takes to host the Great Exhibition of the North".
"We will be showcasing our art, design and culture to the world in 2018 and high quality bids are an essential part of ensuring that we deliver an incredible Great Exhibition."
The funding for the exhibition was confirmed in March's Budget, having originally been proposed in 2014's Autumn Statement.
28 January 2016 Last updated at 14:25 GMT
The social network's chief executive Mark Zuckerberg hopes the buttons will allow members to express their feelings in a more nuanced fashion.
Read more: Will you like Facebook's new Reactions? | Fifa president Gianni Infantino says it is the responsibility of the governing body to ensure the bidding process for future World Cups is "bullet-proof".
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A competition for towns and cities in northern England to host a Government-funded exhibition promoting northern art, culture and design has opened.
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Facebook is rolling out a range of Reactions to replace its iconic Like button. |
Write a summary for this information. | Mr Keiller will take over from Crawford Gillies at the economic development agency in January.
It was announced last month that Mr Keiller was to retire as Wood Group chief executive officer.
Scottish Enterprise chief executive Dr Lena Wilson said he had a "wealth of leadership and business experience".
Dr Wilson added: "I would like to take this opportunity to thank Crawford Gillies for his commitment and leadership over what has been nearly seven years."
Riot police fired tear gas to try to disperse the protesters, many of whom hurled stones at the police lines.
Tahrir Square was the epicentre of February's revolt that led to President Hosni Mubarak being toppled.
Many of the protesters were calling for the prosecution of former officials to be speeded up.
As dawn broke, stones and broken glass littered the streets around Tahrir Square. Witnesses said it was worst violence in the square for weeks.
The confrontation started on Tuesday when police cleared a sit-in outside the state TV building by families of those killed in February's uprising, activists said.
The protesters later regrouped outside the interior ministry and clashes broke out with police.
Fighting escalated and moved to Tahrir Square where lines of riot police carrying shields sealed off the main streets and dozens of security vehicles parked in side streets.
As volleys of tear gas rained down, injured demonstrators were seen lying on the ground, some dazed and bloodied.
"The people want the fall of the regime," some of the demonstrators chanted.
Ahmed Abdel Hamid, 26, who was among the protesters, said people were angry that court cases against senior officials were being delayed.
Last week, Egypt's former Trade Minister Rachid Mohamed Rachid was sentenced to five years in prison in absentia for embezzling public funds.
Earlier this month, former Egyptian Finance Minister Yussef Boutros Ghali was sentenced to 30 years in prison in absentia, also on corruption charges.
Former President Mubarak, in custody at a military hospital, is due to go on trial on 3 August alongside his sons, Alaa and Gamal.
Mr Mubarak is charged with the deaths of protesters during Egypt's uprising. | Scottish Enterprise has named its new chairman as Bob Keiller, who is retiring from oil services firm Wood Group.
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Egyptian police have clashed with hundreds of anti-government protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square, leaving several people injured. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | The hosts were in control from start to finish and opened the scoring through Luis Suarez's overhead volley.
Messi swept in a quick second from Suarez's cutback before making it 3-0 with a fierce volley.
Sevilla were reduced to 10 men in the 90th minute when Vitolo was sent for a second booking after a foul on Neymar.
Substitute Pablo Sarabia had Sevilla's two best chances with powerful long-range drives in the second half but the visitors never really looked like scoring.
Relive Barcelona's win against Sevilla
It was ultimately a routine win for Barcelona, who slowed the tempo after scoring their third, mindful of a packed April fixture list that includes the two legs of their Champions League quarter-final with Juventus.
The three points mean Luis Enrique's side go top of La Liga, although they will drop back to second if Real Madrid beat Leganes later on Wednesday.
Match ends, Barcelona 3, Sevilla 0.
Second Half ends, Barcelona 3, Sevilla 0.
Corner, Barcelona. Conceded by Sergio Rico.
Attempt saved. Neymar (Barcelona) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top right corner. Assisted by Javier Mascherano.
Second yellow card to Vitolo (Sevilla) for a bad foul.
Neymar (Barcelona) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Vitolo (Sevilla).
Neymar (Barcelona) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Vitolo (Sevilla).
Lionel Messi (Barcelona) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Joaquín Correa (Sevilla).
Sergio Busquets (Barcelona) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Joaquín Correa (Sevilla).
Andrés Iniesta (Barcelona) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Joaquín Correa (Sevilla).
Foul by Neymar (Barcelona).
Vitolo (Sevilla) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Carles Aleñá (Barcelona) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by Carles Aleñá (Barcelona).
Steven N'Zonzi (Sevilla) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Foul by Lionel Messi (Barcelona).
Sergio Escudero (Sevilla) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Andrés Iniesta (Barcelona) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Matías Kranevitter (Sevilla).
Attempt missed. Stevan Jovetic (Sevilla) left footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the left.
Substitution, Barcelona. Carles Aleñá replaces Ivan Rakitic.
Foul by Lucas Digne (Barcelona).
Mariano (Sevilla) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Ivan Rakitic (Barcelona) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by Ivan Rakitic (Barcelona).
Sergio Escudero (Sevilla) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Attempt missed. Ivan Rakitic (Barcelona) left footed shot from the centre of the box is too high.
Attempt saved. Paco Alcácer (Barcelona) left footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Andrés Iniesta with a through ball.
Substitution, Barcelona. Lucas Digne replaces Gerard Piqué.
Substitution, Sevilla. Stevan Jovetic replaces Vicente Iborra.
Foul by Javier Mascherano (Barcelona).
Vicente Iborra (Sevilla) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Corner, Sevilla. Conceded by Samuel Umtiti.
Sergio Busquets (Barcelona) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by Sergio Busquets (Barcelona). | Lionel Messi scored twice as Barcelona brushed aside Sevilla to keep up the pressure on Real Madrid in the La Liga title race. |
Summarize this article briefly. | However, he denied doing so for "malicious intent" - a practice known as doxxing.
Ren Bostelaar apologised for his actions but said the photos had already been posted elsewhere on the net by the women themselves.
Toronto Police is investigating but no charges have been made.
The allegations were made on social media by several women who claimed they were contacted by men after their photos and details appeared on 4Chan.
Some of their stories date back to 2005, they claim.
They say the images were never intended for public viewing and were shared in closed groups.
It is unclear whether Mr Bostelaar was the original photographer.
Under the Canadian Criminal Code it is illegal to distribute images "knowing that the person depicted in the image did not give their consent to that conduct".
The photographer issued an apology on Facebook in which he described his behaviour as "reprehensively bad" but has since deleted all his social media accounts.
"Mr Bostelaar is deeply remorseful for his actions," said his lawyer Sam Goldstein in a statement.
"The photographs he re-posted were photographs that the women themselves had posted on the internet in public forums such as Facebook, Reddit, or Tumblr.
"He did not deliberately disseminate private details for malicious intent."
Mr Goldstein added that "not every personal moral failing requires judicial intervention".
Ren Bostelaar is one of the writers in a successful satire group called Stats Canada.
The group tweeted to its 603,000 followers that his behaviour was "completely inexcusable". | A Canadian photographer and comedian has admitted posting explicit images of women along with their names on controversial internet forum 4Chan. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | This is not just a crime that shocked the Muslim community in Rochdale where Jalal Uddin was bludgeoned to death.
It's also the second in less than a year in which one Muslim has killed another for not being Muslim enough - a form of sectarianism that we haven't really noticed in the UK.
Syeedy drove the getaway care for his alleged accomplice, Mohammed Kadir, who the trial heard had wielded the hammer in a children's park. Mr Kadir fled the UK to Turkey - and is now probably in Syria.
Why Syeedy didn't follow is a mystery - he'd recently renewed his passport and both were shown in court to be supporters of the self-styled Islamic State group.
Everyone I spoke to in Rochdale said Mr Uddin was a kind man who had lived a simple life, providing religious education to the young and spiritual support to the sick, elderly and grieving.
But for Syeedy and his alleged partner, the imam was guilty of a crime against God.
Why? Because he practised a form of spiritual healing called Ruqiya which involves special spiritual amulets. The video below explains what they are:
But Syeedy didn't agree that this was spiritual - he thought it was akin to black magic.
He adhered to a violent with-us-or-against-us ideology known as "takfirism" - it's basically the belief that one has the right to declare another Muslim not to be a Muslim.
Its followers, be they supporters of the self-styled Islamic State group, al-Qaeda or another AK-47-toting outfit, believe they have the right to be the judge, jury and executioner of others, according to their interpretation of Islamic Sharia law.
So if you don't agree with their way of being a Muslim, you've abandoned the faith. And if you've abandoned the faith, the penalty is death.
This horrible crime may read like an isolated bizarre incident, but it's not.
It's the second murder in a year in the UK of someone who identifies themselves as a Muslim, by another Muslim, for purely sectarian reasons.
Shopkeeper Asad Shah was the first. He was killed in different circumstances - he belonged to a particular sect that other Muslims don't regard as being actually Islamic.
His killer was so incensed by what the shopkeeper had put online that he got in his car in Bradford, drove 200 miles to Glasgow, and stabbed him to death.
"The murder in Rochdale is a reflection of what I believe has been happening in the UK and around the world - there is a civil war within Islam right now," says Haras Rafiq of the Quilliam Foundation counter-extremism think tank.
"There are people who have been carrying out the blasphemy law and killing people who they deem not to be Muslim enough. This is something that I think we are going to see more of." | On Friday a jury at Manchester Crown Court found Mohammed Syeedy guilty of murdering a 71-year-old imam - because he wasn't Muslim enough. |
What is the brief summary of the provided content? | The Magal is a holy day for the Mouride sect, which overwhelmingly practises a moderate Sufi version of Islam, emphasising the power of hard work. It is marked by travel over long distances, feasting and expressions of brotherly love.
They issued separate appeals in the Journal du Dimanche (JDD) newspaper, as France remains in shock from the murder of a priest by Islamist extremists last week.
The 41 prominent Muslims and Mr Valls said a French Muslim foundation set up in 2005 must be relaunched.
Mr Valls's stance drew some criticism.
Two politicians in the right-wing opposition party The Republicans - Eric Ciotti and Christian Estrosi - accused Mr Valls of hypocrisy for failing to prevent the opening of a Saudi-funded mosque in Nice.
Mr Valls was booed at a commemoration in Nice on 18 July for the 84 people killed by a lorry which ploughed into a holiday crowd on the city's beachfront promenade. The Tunisian driver is believed to have been inspired by so-called Islamic State (IS).
There is widespread concern in Europe about the influence of Saudi Arabia's ultra-conservative Wahhabi version of Islam.
In his appeal in JDD (in French), Mr Valls said the French state must avoid "any paternalism" towards Islam, but "there is an urgent need to help Islam in France to rid itself of those who are undermining it from the inside".
"To do that, we have a duty to build a real pact with Islam in France, and give the foundation a central role."
He did not give details of what the foundation's role would be or how it would interact with mosques.
Mr Valls, a Socialist, warned that "if Islam doesn't help the Republic to fight those who challenge public freedoms, it will get harder for the Republic to guarantee this freedom of worship".
Separately, 41 prominent French Muslims issued a joint statement in JDD saying "we must speak up now because Islam has become a public issue and the current situation is intolerable".
The signatories included former ministerial advisers, entrepreneurs, lawyers, scientists and academics.
They deplored the spate of attacks by jihadists in France, including those in Paris last year, the Nice attack and the murder of an elderly priest in a church in a Rouen suburb.
"We Muslims were silent before because we understood that in France religion is a private matter," they said - a reference to the French state's strict secular policy.
"A Foundation for Islam in France was set up more than 10 years ago and now it is time to reactivate it," they said. "It has never worked properly... but now it should be empowered to collect donations."
They called for "a cultural battle against radical Islamism among the youth". It should include transparent funding of mosques, proper training and salaries for imams and theological work, they said.
In 2004 the French government said the country's imams must all learn French and widen their education because, it argued, a majority of them were from outside France.
How France is wrestling with jihadist terror
What we know about church attack
Tributes to Fr Jacques Hamel
The jihadists stalking the French Riviera
On Sunday two men were arrested over the murder of Father Jacques Hamel, 86, during a church service.
Farid K, 30, a cousin of attacker Abdel Malik Petitjean, was arrested on suspicion of "terrorist association".
The other man, Jean-Philippe Steven J, 20, was put under formal investigation for allegedly attempting to travel to Syria in June with Petitjean.
Petitjean and accomplice Adel Kermiche, both 19, were shot dead by police. | Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims descended on Senegal's holy city of Touba for the annual Magal festival over the weekend.
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Dozens of prominent French Muslims and Prime Minister Manuel Valls have called for a national drive to promote mainstream Islam and combat the radicalisation of young Muslims. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | The 20-year-old, who has yet to make a first team appearance for the Reds, played 13 times during a loan spell with Portsmouth in 2015-16.
Fulton could start the season as Spireites number one, with Tommy Lee due to undergo shoulder surgery.
The Scotland youth international has travelled to Hungary to join up with the club's pre-season training camp.
Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.
Part of a lecture given by former Black Caps captain Brendon McCullum appeared on the MCC website headlined 'McCullum on Cairns match-fixing'.
Cairns won a libel case in 2012 over match-fixing allegations and was cleared of perjury in 2015.
The MCC said it has 'withdrawn its allegations completely' and apologised.
The video clip from the annual Spirit of Cricket lecture remained on the website for 11 hours before it was removed.
Cairns, 45, successfully sued Lalit Modi after the cricket administrator accused him on Twitter of match-fixing in the Indian Cricket League.
McCullum appeared as a witness at the 2015 trial when Cairns was charged with perjury stemming from allegations made in the libel case.
Cairns was subsequently acquitted of perjury and perverting the course of justice.
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Grampian Police said Moray had taken the brunt of the weather. Heavy snow has also fallen across the Scottish Borders, but roads remained passable.
A mountain rescue team was called to assist a group of nine people - including six teenagers - left stuck by the snow in the Cairngorms.
They were later flown to safety in Braemar by a Royal Navy helicopter.
The group - from Belgium - had been climbing in the Ben Macdui area.
About 400 homes remain without electricity in the north east.
Scottish Hydro said engineers were at work on the problem and they hoped to have everyone reconnected by Tuesday evening.
The firm said Aboyne and Elgin were among the areas worst affected when the heavy snow brought down power cables.
The return of wintry weather follows the mildest March ever recorded in Scotland.
A week ago the temperature in the Aberdeenshire town of Aboyne reached 23.6C - the warmest March day on record.
The high in Aboyne on Tuesday was 3.2C - but it felt much colder in the biting wind and snow.
The Met Office issued amber warnings for much of Scotland.
Police in the north east said up to 25cm (10 inches) of snow had accumulated in places. Across lower parts of the central belt, about 1cm (0.4in) to 4cm (1.6in) fell.
Transport Minister Keith Brown said: "This kind of weather is much more normal for Scotland than the superb weather we have had over the previous days. So we have had, for example, 124 gritters out overnight."
By James CookScotland Correspondent, BBC News
The minister praised forecasters for getting the conditions "spot-on" and giving warnings to people.
He said the Easter school holidays had helped ease the traffic management problem because the numbers on the road were much lower than normal.
"We think the snow will push through into the north of England today and behind that we will have some colder air later on today," Mr Brown said.
"That is something to be aware of because that can bring its own challenges in terms of freezing on roads.
"Beyond that we expect it to return to normal circumstances later on tonight and into tomorrow."
The late fall of snow has given Scotland's ski areas hope of more business after a disappointing winter.
Colin Matthews, operations manager at Cairngorm Mountain, said: "It's very wintry, I'm glad to say - very cold at the top of the mountains - minus six and drifting snow.
"It's very unusual not to have skiing in April so this is looking good." | Chesterfield have signed goalkeeper Ryan Fulton on a season-long loan deal from Premier League side Liverpool.
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The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) has apologised to former New Zealand all-rounder Chris Cairns for publishing a video linking him to match-fixing.
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Wintry weather has returned to much of Scotland - with 15cm (6in) of snow in Aberdeenshire. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | The Sixth Form Colleges Association also said more than a third of colleges feared that without better funding they could cease as going concerns by 2020.
It sent online questionnaires to all 93 colleges; 72 responded and of these 26 said they feared for their viability.
Last month the government announced a review of post-16 education.
Sixth-form colleges have faced deeper cuts to their budgets than any other group of institutions, the association's report said, with some losing a third of their funding between 2011 and 2016.
The future is "equally bleak", as the government has decided not to protect the 16-19 education budget from spending cuts.
"Further reductions are highly likely," the report said.
In addition, sixth-form colleges are not eligible to reclaim VAT, meaning institutions have lost out, on average, to the tune of £317,964, the report said.
The Department for Education said moving to provide funding on a per-student basis had ended unfair differences between schools and colleges.
The association's questionnaire asked each college to report the cumulative impact of the funding cuts introduced since 2011.
Of the 72 colleges that responded, 52 said they had dropped courses as the result.
A-levels in modern languages have been cut in 28 colleges - more than a third - while 17 - just under a quarter - reported cuts in science, technology, engineering and maths subjects.
Colleges "have responded creatively and decisively" to the financial squeeze, says the report - but 68 out of 72 said they were "concerned" or "extremely concerned" about their financial health.
Asked about the year 2016-17, 50 colleges believed their funding would not be enough to provide a high quality education, while 59 said they would not be able to provide support for disadvantaged students.
Sixth-form colleges outperform school and academy sixth forms while educating more disadvantaged students and receiving less funding, says the report, but it continues: "The sector has reached the point where it cannot absorb any further reductions."
Sixth Form Colleges Association deputy chief executive James Kewin said funding inequalities between sixth-form colleges and school and academy sixth forms should end.
"The sector cannot survive on starvation rations... and will be unable to provide young people with the high-quality education they need to progress to higher education and employment," he said.
The government's review of post-16 education, announced last month by the departments for education and business, innovation and skills, will aim for greater efficiency in the sector.
"A major reform of post-16 education and training institutions is now necessary," said the announcement.
"We will need to move towards fewer, often larger, more resilient and efficient providers."
The review will focus on further education and sixth-form colleges, "although the availability and quality of all post-16 academic and work-based provision in each area will also be taken into account".
The announcement also promised early action on financial stability, with possible solutions including asking colleges to review market position, financial management and informal twinning arrangements with other institutions.
A Department for Education spokesman said the government had "ended the unfair difference between post-16 schools and colleges by funding them per student, rather than discriminating between qualifications.
"We have provided sufficient funds for every full-time student to do a full timetable of courses and increased support for those who successfully study four or more A-levels and large TechBacc programmes."
Thousands more students now stay in education or training after the age of 16, the spokesman added.
Tristram Hunt, Labour's Shadow Education Secretary, called the findings "deeply troubling".
"Modern languages and science are an essential part of a 21st-century curriculum. We need to widen young people's horizons, to equip them with the broad range of knowledge and skills they need to thrive in the new digital world.
"Once again this shows how David Cameron's education policy is holding Britain back."
Afrobasket 2015 is being held in Rades, on the outskirts of the capital Tunis, having moved from the coast after two deadly attacks on tourists this year.
In June, an Islamist gunman killed 38 people at the beach resort of Sousse.
The winners of this year's tournament will be crowned African champions, as well as qualifying for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.
The other three semi-finalists will go into an Olympic qualifying tournament next year.
The opening match of the event is between Egypt and Gabon.
Defending champions Angola are favourites to win the tournament. | Sixth-form colleges in England say they have had to cut the number of science and foreign language courses they offer, because of financial pressures.
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Africa's biggest basketball tournament is under way in Tunisia, after a venue change due to security concerns. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | It said 105 prisoners were freed in the pre-dawn raid in Bama, Borno state.
Bama's police station, military barracks and government buildings were burned to the ground, said the military and witnesses.
Correspondents say extremist attacks are common in the region but the scale of bloodshed makes this raid stand out.
This strike - coming on the back of other deadly attacks - undermines the suggestion that the military operation against the militants has diminished the threat they pose, says the BBC's Will Ross in Lagos.
President Goodluck Jonathan has set up a committee to agree the terms of an amnesty for the rebels but Boko Haram's leader, Abubakar Shekau, has so far rejected the idea.
Tuesday's raid in the remote town began when some 200 heavily-armed suspected members of Boko Haram arrived in buses and pick-up trucks at about 05:00 (04:00 GMT), said Musa Sagir, a military spokesman based in Maiduguri, some 70km (44 miles) from Bama.
"Some of the gunmen attacked the military barracks but they were repelled. Ten of them were killed and two were arrested," he told AFP news agency.
"But the gunmen broke into the prison, freeing 105 inmates, and killed all prison warders they could see except those who hid in a store where cooking utensils were kept," he said.
Some of the attackers wore army uniforms for the assault, which continued for almost five hours, he added.
By Will RossBBC Nigeria correspondent
In late 2012 you could have argued that the military operation against the Islamist militants had diminished the threat. But not any more.
Coming on the back of other deadly attacks, this is probably the most significant strike against the state apparatus since the Kano bombings in January 2012. The army says it was the work of Boko Haram. If that is true, by targeting the police, army and a prison with such devastating effect, the group appears to be sending out the defiant message that it cannot be defeated by the state security forces. There are reports that the militants have acquired more powerful weapons.
The suggestion that some politicians are fuelling the conflict or even backing the Islamist extremists is not fading.
The current military offensive is not working. So what is the way forward? President Goodluck Jonathan appears to have put his faith in God and the unlikely prospect of all the Islamist militants accepting an amnesty. His predecessors have faced daunting security challenges but this one is on a different scale.
Twenty-two police officers, 14 prison wardens, two soldiers and four civilians are said to have died along with 13 members of Boko Haram.
Bama police commander Abubakar Sagir was quoted as saying the civilians comprised a woman and three children.
Police and public buildings - reportedly including a magistrate's court - were razed to the ground.
"The call to prayer was just being said at about 05:00 when the Boko Haram started shooting from all directions and we ran for our lives," a witness, Amina Usman, told Reuters.
"One woman who could not run burned to death," Ms Usman added.
Boko Haram, as it is popularly known, has its roots in this region of Nigeria. It is fighting to overthrow the government and set up an Islamic state.
Late last month the military launched a raid to hunt down militants in Baga, also in Borno state, after Boko Haram militants attacked a military patrol.
Nearly 200 people died in the raid, and thousands of buildings were destroyed, leading to claims by rights groups that the military had used excessive force. The army put the number killed at 37. | Fifty-five people have been killed in the north-east of Nigeria in co-ordinated attacks by the Boko Haram militant group, the Nigerian army says. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | The Shrimpers were undone by two set-plays in Tuesday's 2-0 Bradford loss.
"I think there's a little bit of confusion within the ranks about what style we play. I can't have that. My job now is to get clarity," said Brown.
"We've still got a great opportunity this year. But at the end of the day we're losing it with set-pieces, nothing else."
Brown's side, who also lost 1-0 to Scunthorpe on Saturday after a goal from a corner, are three points off the League One play-off places despite the defeat, having been promoted from League Two last year.
But Brown continued to BBC Essex: "When you're not playing so well you've still got to grind out results and that's what we didn't do on Saturday or Tuesday - that's what you've seen from Bradford and Scunthorpe.
"Has it been a good first 31 games for Southend United? Yeah, it's been OK. But the bottom line is we're losing the race for the play-offs and we've got to seriously think about arresting the situation and that comes against Burton on Monday.
"If we don't defend set-pieces properly, you can forget about all the good play, all the intricate passing, the systems, the personnel - we've got to have the right mentality when it comes down to corners, wide free-kicks and even free-kicks in front of goal.
"Whether we are a good football team or not doesn't matter to me, it's about winning.
"If you think you're a good footballer and you get dispossessed or pick the wrong pass out you're not a good footballer - we've got to get that clarity back into everyone in the ranks, not just the first 11." | Southend are at the risk of missing out on the play-offs because of poor set-piece defending, says boss Phil Brown. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | The fish were found dead in the water at the weekend. It is thought that there have been two separate kills in the river.
In 2013, almost 5,000 fish were found dead after the river was polluted in a farm incident.
Ian Kittle, secretary of the Inler Angling Club, said it was devastating news.
"We are devastated, especially after the last fish kill in 2013," he said.
"The river was starting to recover and we had been busy restocking it. This incident is not as bad.
"But at the same time, we have lost juvenile fish and more. Our resident brown trout are dead and we also found a large sea trout that had been coming up from the lough to spawn."
Mr Kittle said he was first made aware of the fish kill on Friday evening.
There appeared to have been two separate kills, he said. One is upstream parallel to the Belfast Road, Comber. A lot of the dead fish are at the lower end of the river, under the new Comber bypass bridge.
A government department is investigating. | Up to 300 brown and sea trout have died after a fish kill at the River Enler in County Down. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | Dr Aijaz Bashir Ashai admitted causing his victim to engage in sexual activity at the La Mon hotel in Belfast on 14 July.
At the time, Ashai was working for the Nepalese cricket team who were playing T20 World Cup qualifiers at Stormont.
Ashai, 42, was sentenced to four months in prison, suspended for three years.
At Newtownards Magistrates Court, a prosecuting lawyer told how Ashai's victim had twice spurned his "sexual advances" during a massage at the hotel spa.
"She shouted 'no,' left the room immediately and told the manager, who saw the injured party exit the treatment room in a distressed state," said the lawyer.
Immediately after the incident, Ashai "apologised repeatedly" but was arrested by police who had been alerted.
The court heard that after he apologised for his behaviour, Ashai offered the woman a £10 tip, which was refused.
When arrested and questioned by police, Ashai, from Mumbai in India, accepted he had gone for a massage, but denied behaving in any sexual way.
He initially claimed the only time he touched the woman was to move her arm away from his inner leg as it became painful as she used her elbow on the muscle.
However in court, Ashai accepted his guilt and the prosecutor said that until now he had no convictions.
A defence solicitor told the court that he had been "expressly instructed to express his sincere remorse for the upset and distress that was suffered by this young lady," adding that it was "commendable" she had gone back to work so quickly after her ordeal.
He agreed that Ashai was "very fortunate" his victim had written what the judge said was "one of the most balanced victim impact statements I have seen".
The solicitor also agreed that it was "surprising" and an aggravating factor in the case "for a man in his position" to have behaved in this way, but he said that unlike many similar cases, there was an absence of other aggravating factors.
He revealed that Ashai had already been served with a notice that he will no longer be permitted to stay in the UK and that when he does return to India, he may have further professional sanctions.
The judge also ordered Ashai to pay £1,000 in compensation.
Huw "Badger" Norfolk, 27, is wanted over a communications mast fire last year and an attack on the Bristol Post's headquarters in 2011.
Police said he had links to anarchist communities and the areas of Bristol, Bath, Cheltenham, Pembrokeshire and London but may not be in the UK.
Crimestoppers has also offered a £10,000 reward for information.
The Bathampton mast feeds television and radio broadcasts to 80,000 homes.
Two years earlier, 17 windows at the newspaper had been smashed and paint was thrown at the building.
A group later claimed responsibility, saying it deliberately targeted the paper, but did not reveal its identity.
"Norfolk is wanted in connection with these two serious crimes and we're asking the public to help us to find him," said Det Chief Insp Andy Bevan, from Avon and Somerset Police.
"The arson attack at Bathampton mast on January 3 2013 caused damage worth several hundred thousand pounds and affected TV, radio and mobile phone signals to thousands of homes and businesses including sole and small-scale traders and independent businesses that rely on their telephones to work and trade.
"It robbed many people of their only lifeline in the event of an emergency and put the lives of thousands of innocent adults and children at risk."
He said damage totalling thousands of pounds had been caused to the newspaper officers.
"Both incidents caused huge disruption to the lives of innocent people and we're taking them extremely seriously," he added.
The force said the two incidents were part of a much wider investigation into more than 100 incidents of arson and criminal damage.
Anyone who knows where Mr Norfolk is being asked to contact police. | A former international cricket physiotherapist has been given a suspended prison sentence for a sexual assault on a hotel masseuse.
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Police have named a man they want to speak to in connection with a series of attacks linked to anarchists. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | L/Cpl Trimaan "Harry" Dhillon denies murdering 24-year-old Alice Ruggles at her flat in Gateshead in October.
The jury was shown CCTV footage of him accosting Eniko Nemeth after she ended their relationship, in which he called her a bitch and spat in her face.
Police were called and he was later given a year-long restraining order.
Prosecutor Richard Wright QC said the 26-year-old signaller confronted Ms Nemeth in a street in Faversham, Kent, demanding to know why the relationship had ended.
He said: "She warned him she would call the police but he continued to block her path, he appeared worked up and tense.
"She was joined by a male friend and he said 'is this who you are sleeping with? I cannot believe you would leave me for this. Why did you take my girlfriend away?'"
Police were called and he was charged with common assault, but the case was discontinued after he accepted a restraining order.
The trial had previously heard that Mr Dhillon - a serving soldier with the 2 Scots, who lived in barracks outside Edinburgh - had been given official warnings by police and the Army to stay away from Ms Ruggles.
Beginning his defence, he told the jury that he had been "behaving immaturely" when he was given the restraining order against Ms Nemeth.
He said that his relationship with Ms Ruggles had begun over Facebook while he was serving in Afghanistan.
Under questioning from the defence QC, Jamie Hill, he said: "She brought marriage up, she showed me a ring with a blue gem on it and said do you like this kind of ring?"
He claimed she was insecure and accused him of looking at other women, making him delete as Facebook friends girls he had previously dated.
The trial continues. | A soldier accused of cutting his ex-girlfriend's throat had a restraining order against a previous partner, Newcastle Crown Court has heard. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government wants to set in stone the date of the next general election - which has previously been up to the prime minister of the day to decide. Under their proposals the next general election will be held on 7 May 2015.
Criticism of the current system tends to centre on the fact it gives an advantage to the prime minister of the day, who can choose to call an election at the most advantageous time for him or her as long as it is within five years of the previous election. It also means there is a period of uncertainty, before an election is called, which some say damages the conduct of politics. A recent example was the feverish speculation that Gordon Brown intended to call a snap election in 2007 to take advantage of a poll surge shortly after succeeding Tony Blair as prime minister. In the end the poll lead was cut and he did not call an election until two and a half years later.
Some are worried that knowing the date a long time in advance will lead to longer election campaigns, a lack of flexibility and the possibility of a "lame duck" government limping on longer than it should. There is also the possibility that a government might still find a way of triggering an election when it wanted one by engineering a vote of no confidence and deliberately trying to lose it.
A commitment to a fixed-term parliament was part of the coalition deal between the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats. The Lib Dems pledged to introduce them in their manifesto - but they wanted a four-year fixed term. The Labour manifesto also said it would introduce fixed term parliaments, but did not say how long they would be. Fixed term parliaments were not in the Conservatives' 2010 manifesto but David Cameron said in 2009 that his party would "seriously consider the option of fixed-term parliaments when there's a majority government".
Deputy PM Nick Clegg argued that five years was "going with the grain of some of the founding texts of our unwritten constitution" - referring specifically to legislation which set the maximum limit at five years. He also said it followed "the precedent set by the immediate outgoing government" and he said it would "give any government of whatever complexion enough time to govern and deliver a programme of change and reform". But the proposal could prove controversial. Constitutional experts told a committee of MPs examining the Fixed Term Parliaments Bill that four years would be better. Other UK elections to the devolved Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland governments are four-yearly and there might be an argument to have them held on the same day as general elections.
Yes, there are two ways this could happen. An early election would follow if no party or combination of parties could command the confidence of the House of Commons. To avoid allowing a "zombie government" to stagger on for years, unable to muster a majority to pass any new laws, the Fixed Term Parliaments Bill, says an election will be called 14 days after a lost confidence vote if no alternative government is able to show they have the confidence of MPs. Alternatively, MPs themselves could vote for an early dissolution - a power currently in the hands of the prime minister. Under the bill two thirds of the total number of MPs must back dissolution for an election to be called. | MPs are debating legislation to introduce five-year fixed term parliaments, part of a series of constitutional changes planned by the coalition government. |
Summarize the content given in the passage. | The proposal would see the carrier docked next to aquarium The Deep, for Hull's City of Culture celebrations in 2017.
The 20,000-tonne carrier is due to be retired, after 32 years of service.
Mr Johnson, the Hull West Labour MP, said there was a "pressing need" to secure the future of the vessel.
As part of the plans, the 700ft long (215m) ship would be based on the River Tyne, at the former Holburn Dock, for the "next two years" before berthing in Hull for two years, from 2017.
A statement on the MP's website said if the plans were a success, HMS Illustrious would be available as an "immersive, inspiring and exciting visitor experience" during 2017 and 2018.
A Ministry of Defence spokesperson said: "HMS Illustrious has a long and proud history with the Royal Navy.
"During her 32 years of service she has protected our nation's interests in the Falklands, Bosnia, Iraq, Sierra Leone and most recently the Philippines."
The ministry was considering bids to re-home HMS Illustrious and preserve the carrier as a "lasting tribute" to the personnel who served on all three of the Invincible-class aircraft carriers, introduced in the 1980s, the spokesperson added.
It is a condition of sale that HMS Illustrious must remain in the UK, the ministry said.
Last month, the ship returned to its home port in Portsmouth for the final time. | Plans to turn the Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious into a tourist attraction in Hull have been backed by MP Alan Johnson. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | Fire crews were alerted to a smoke alarm sounding at a property in the Midstocket area of Aberdeen at around 17:.10 on Wednesday.
Officers entered the house and extinguished a small kitchen fire but also found the body of an elderly woman.
No one else was in the property and no neighbouring homes were affected, the fire service said.
Guardian Systems Ltd, which was based in the Springkerse Industrial Estate, had a turnover of £1.5m, but saw a fall in orders during the summer.
The company said this had led to "major cash flow problems and unsustainable losses".
An associate company, Guardian Soft Furnishings Ltd, has also been placed into liquidation.
Guardian Systems Ltd, which supplied the residential and commercial market, was founded in 1993.
Accountants Campbell Dallas said it would provide "every possible support" to employees affected by the closure.
Derek Forsyth, head of restructuring and insolvency, said: "It is unfortunate that a number of factors created significant problems that ultimately caused both businesses to be placed in liquidation."
Mark Donnelly, 22, from Greencastle Road, Omagh, County Tyrone, denies manslaughter.
This week the jury failed to reach a verdict in the case.
Mr McGovern was found dead at a friend's house after he was attacked on New Year's Eve 2012 in Omagh.
Mr Donnelly was in Dungannon Crown Court on Friday to hear a prosecution lawyer say his instructions were to proceed with a second trial.
The lawyer said he had taken instruction from the Director of Public Prosecutions.
A defence lawyer said he had consulted with his senior QC, and given the "intensive" media coverage, all they would ask is for a reasonable time to elapse before the case goes to court again.
The judge, who said it was a matter of balance, between that and having the case dealt with reasonably expediently, agreed to postpone the retrial until early in the New Year, possibly by the end of February.
Although there was a suggested date for the last week of February 2015, the prosecution lawyer said he would check on the availability of prosecution witnesses and report back to the court by next week in an effort to meet the new date.
Sri Lanka's cricket board said preliminary investigations suggested the motorcyclist was "flung into Mr Kulasekara's path" when he lost control while trying to overtake a bus.
It added the player was bailed "pending completion of the investigation".
Kulasekara, 34, retired from Tests in June to focus on limited-overs cricket.
He played three times for Sussex in the T20 Blast this season. | An elderly woman has been found dead after a house fire in Aberdeen.
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A Stirling-based window and door manufacturer has been placed into liquidation with the loss of 44 jobs.
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The County Tyrone man accused of the manslaughter of County Monaghan teenager Jason McGovern in 2012 is to face a retrial.
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Sri Lanka bowler Nuwan Kulasekara has been released on bail after he was involved in a crash in which a motorcyclist died. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | Shane Lay, 42, was walking his dog in Bridge Street, Bungay, at 01:40 BST on Friday when he was hit by a Nissan Qashqai.
He was taken to Addenbrooke's Hospital and died on Saturday night.
Suffolk Police said they are still seeking the driver and released CCTV images of Mr Lay, of Loddon Street, Broome. His dog was unhurt.
Insp David Giles said they had received a number of calls but wanted the driver to come forward.
"We are following up on information provided to date and are working to identify the person who was behind the wheel at the time of the collision.
"It is in their interests to come forward as soon as possible."
Officers are also keen to speak to anyone with details about a Qashqai that may have sustained front-end damage or anyone aware of such a car being driven in Bungay at the time. | A man who was fatally injured by a car which failed to stop has been named by police. |
Provide a summary of the section below. | 7 March 2016 Last updated at 21:01 GMT
It has challenged the world's top-ranked Go player to a set of matches running until March 15 to see whether man or machine comes out on top.
The tech firm's AlphaGo software has already beaten the European champion of the board game, but South Korea's Lee Se-dol should prove a tougher challenge, as BBC's Stephen Evans discovered.
George Porter headed the home side in front with a bullet header in the first 10 minutes, having freed himself at the back post to get on the end of a Blair Turgott corner.
The two sides then exchanged penalties in quick succession. Richie Bennett equalised for Barrow before Turgott smashed in a similarly confident spot-kick into the top corner to restore the Ravens' lead.
Tobi Sho-Silva then moved into double figures for the season, nodding in Lee Minshull's header across goal.
In a much quieter second half, Sho-Silva tapped in his second and Bromley's fourth.
Report supplied by the Press Association
Match ends, Bromley 4, Barrow 1.
Second Half ends, Bromley 4, Barrow 1.
Substitution, Bromley. Bradley Goldberg replaces Shane McLoughlin.
Goal! Bromley 4, Barrow 1. Tobi Sho-Silva (Bromley).
Alan Dunne (Bromley) is shown the yellow card.
Substitution, Barrow. Akil Wright replaces Lindon Meikle.
Substitution, Bromley. Alan Dunne replaces George Porter.
Substitution, Barrow. Ross Hannah replaces Liam Hughes.
Substitution, Barrow. Inih Effiong replaces Richard Bennett.
Jack Thomas (Barrow) is shown the yellow card.
Second Half begins Bromley 3, Barrow 1.
First Half ends, Bromley 3, Barrow 1.
Richard Bennett (Barrow) is shown the yellow card.
Goal! Bromley 3, Barrow 1. Tobi Sho-Silva (Bromley).
Goal! Bromley 2, Barrow 1. Blair Turgott (Bromley) converts the penalty with a.
Lee Minshull (Bromley) is shown the yellow card.
Goal! Bromley 1, Barrow 1. Richard Bennett (Barrow) converts the penalty with a.
Connor Dymond (Bromley) is shown the yellow card.
Goal! Bromley 1, Barrow 0. George Porter (Bromley).
First Half begins.
Lineups are announced and players are warming up. | Google's artificial intelligence wing hopes to make history over the coming days.
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Barrow's National League play-off aspirations were all but dashed as Bromley racked up a third straight win by triumphing 4-1 at Hayes Lane. |
Provide a concise summary of this excerpt. | Stephanie Clemons Thompson reportedly wrote on Facebook that students should "find compassion" for the "pain" of business student Abdul Razak Ali Artan.
Nearly 1,500 people had signed a petition by Friday morning calling for Ms Thompson to be fired.
Eleven people were injured in Monday's car and knife attack in Columbus.
"I pray you find compassion for his life, as troubled as it clearly was," Ms Thompson wrote, calling Artan a member of the Ohio State University "family".
"Think of the pain he must have been in to feel that his actions were the only solution," the assistant director of residence life wrote in the now-deleted Facebook post.
She went on to condemn students who shared images of Artan's dead body online and "celebrate his death".
The post ended with the hashtags #BlackLivesMatter and #SayHisName.
The petition calling for Ms Thompson's dismissal says: "We cannot allow someone in her influential position to be an apologist to these acts of violent terror.
"Stephanie Clemons Thompson used Facebook as a public platform to shame those who were grateful and relieved the terrorist was taken out so quickly, preventing even more unthinkable terror and destruction in his wake."
Benjamin Johnson, a university spokesman, told the BBC: "This post from this individual clearly is not an official statement of the university and represents her own personal viewpoint."
Authorities believe that Artan, a Somali-born refugee, who lived in Pakistan for seven years before coming to the US, may have self-radicalised online.
The so-called Islamic state claimed him as their "soldier", but authorities say there is no evidence Artan was ever in direct contact with any terrorist organisation.
President-elect Donald Trump earlier this week tweeted that Artan, who arrived in the US with his family in 2014, "should not have been in our country". | An Ohio State University administrator has provoked uproar after expressing sympathy for a student who carried out a campus rampage this week. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | Lee Min-bok said he had carried out the launches at night four times since January, most recently on Saturday.
The Seth Rogen comedy, about a fictional CIA plot to kill North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, enraged Pyongyang.
Sony initially pulled the film after a hacking attack and threats to attack cinemas which were screening it.
But it changed its mind and gave the film a limited cinema release after being accused of responding to an attack on free speech.
The FBI says North Korea was behind the hack and threats, though it denies this.
Mr Lee, a defector from the North, said he had tied the DVDs to balloons along with bundles of US dollars and leaflets criticising Mr Kim's regime.
He told AFP news agency: "I launched thousands of copies and about a million leaflets on Saturday, near the western part of the border."
He said the launches were all done in remote areas and without publicity but that the police "would have no right to stop me".
"'You know what's more destructive than a nuclear bomb? Words,' says North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (Randall Park), with a tear in his eye, in The Interview. It's a prophetic line in this otherwise limp comedy, which has stirred up a world of controversy it doesn't earn." Sara Stewart, New York Post
'Limp' and 'torture' - How critics reviewed The Interview
Mr Lee told CNN, which joined him on Saturday's launch, that he had not laughed at The Interview and found it vulgar.
But he said the North "hates this film because it shows Kim Jong-un as a man, not a God" and that he wanted to "tell the truth" to North Koreans.
Any North Korean who had access to a DVD player and was found to have watched the film would likely face a lengthy sentence in a prison camp.
South Korean activists have repeatedly carried out balloon drops across the border of material which they say shows the reality of life outside the restrictive country, in the hope of encouraging North Koreans to reject propaganda and stand up to their leadership.
The North has demanded the South stop such launches, saying they are provocative. Its border guards have in the past tried to shoot down the balloons.
But while South Korea says the activity is unhelpful - and potentially places people living near the border in danger - it says its citizens are entitled to distribute their opinions.
Hearn, World Snooker's chairman, has suggested that O'Sullivan should know better than to be so critical.
The five-time world champion argued that snooker is a "nothing-type sport".
Ronnie's latest comments are off the scale, even for him
Hearn told BBC Radio 5 live: "The game of snooker has never been in a stronger position. Prize money has trebled in the last five years."
On Monday, O'Sullivan said that, in order for it to thrive, snooker needs to embrace a more corporate image, similar to sports such as golf, tennis and Formula 1.
He also questioned the levels of prize money available to players, adding that the sport struggled to attract enough lucrative sponsorship.
The total prize money available on the tour this season has reached £10m for the first time as part of Hearn's revamp of the sport.
Find out how to get into snooker, pool and billiards with our fully inclusive guide.
Hearn, speaking on Tuesday, said: "Ronnie's a massive name. He lives on another planet sometimes, but he's a massive draw and a great asset to the game. His latest comments are off the scale, even for him.
"There are many, many sports that would cut their arm off to be in the position that snooker's in. We're on an upward trend.
"In terms of prize money, there was a time, maybe five or six years ago, where we spent 10 years in the doldrums, there's no question about it.
"The game has rebuilt and is going from strength to strength, particularly in China, Europe, and obviously within the UK."
Media playback is not supported on this device
Sign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app. | A South Korean activist says he has flown thousands of copies of controversial Sony film The Interview over the North Korean border.
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Snooker is in a better state than it has ever been despite Ronnie O'Sullivan's suggestion that the sport is a "car boot sale", Barry Hearn says. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | Nineteen people wrote to the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) about a scene in which actor Timothy Spall is seen "clenching" his buttocks.
Viewers felt the sequence, in which Turner had sex with his housekeeper, was inappropriate for a 12A film.
The BBFC said the "very low" number of complaints represented a "tiny portion" of the film's total audience.
It added that the scene was appropriate for a 12A because of "the lack of nudity, the relative brevity of the scene and its importance in terms of narrative".
Spall won a best actor prize for his role in Mr Turner at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.
Reviewers said his portrayal of the British landscape painter was "part Michelangelo, part Toad of Toad Hall" and likened him to "a moulting, phlegmy Gruffalo".
The BBFC described how, in the scene in question, his "clothed buttocks are seen clenching vigorously, before the scene cuts to a close-up of his face and his thrusting head and shoulders".
According to the BBFC report, Turner appears distressed during the sequence, which ends with him sobbing "almost in an exhibition of self-loathing."
In its report, the BBFC noted that "context is central to the question of acceptability", and maintained that the 12A certificate was warranted.
The film watchdog releases a list of the films that drew the most correspondence from the public every year in its annual report.
Last year, 12 Years a Slave was the second-most complained about film, drawing 12 contacts about the violence, particularly the sexual violence, in the true story of a free man forced into slavery in the American south.
The annual list is usually dominated by horror or action movies. Batman: The Dark Knight, which attracted more than 300 complaints after its release in 2008, is the most complained-about release of recent years.
In 2012, psychological thriller Black Swan drew 40 letters from the audience, with the BBFC noting that "some complainants had expected to see a film about ballet". | Mike Leigh's biopic of artist JMW Turner was the most complained about film of 2014, censors have revealed. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | An attempted murder investigation has been launched after the 16-year-old was found in Wayford Close in Meole Brace.
Police want to trace a group of up to four men, including one in a green t-shirt, who were seen running away from the area at 21:45 BST on Monday.
The teenager is being treated in hospital while Wayford Close and Stapleton Road remain cordoned off.
More on this and other stories from Shropshire
DCI Paul Moxley said: "This is thought to be a targeted attack and we have no reason to believe there is any wider threat to the community."
"A concerned member of the public found the boy on the floor, they called the ambulance service who called us," he said.
"The individual's family are at the hospital - they're a large family," he added.
Lauren Cox, 27, from Oxted, Surrey, pleaded guilty to four charges of sexual activity with a child under 18 while in a position of trust.
Croydon Crown Court heard that Cox formed a close relationship with the boy when he was 13 and began a sexual relationship with him in 2015.
Police said Cox, who will be sentenced next month, had shown no remorse.
Pc Laura Davies said Cox befriended the boy shortly after starting work at the school in Bromley, south-east London, in 2012, when he was 13.
She said: "She abused her position of trust as a teacher and groomed the boy, which went on to sexual abuse.
"The abuse has had an extremely adverse effect on the boy, with his studies suffering as a result."
PC Davies added: "It's most concerning that she showed no remorse. As professionals, teachers have a specific duty of care to young people, and this was abused."
Scotland Yard said Cox began having sexual contact with the boy in January 2015, sending him explicit pictures and videos of herself.
The relationship ended when the boy's parents suspected something was wrong and Cox was arrested in September the same year. | A teenager is in a critical condition after being stabbed in a Shrewsbury street in a "targeted attack".
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A teacher has admitted having sex with a 16-year-old pupil whom she groomed at the London school where she taught. |
Can you summarize this content? | It said its expectation comes after receiving advice from the Department of Culture, Arts and Leisure (DCAL).
As a result, most of the arts organisations it funds will get no additional grant money this year.
Of the 107 arts organisations that receive support from ACNI for running and programming costs, only five will receive more funding in 2016-17.
Those organisations are An Gaelaras, Community Arts Partnership, Ulster Youth Choir, Irish Traditional Music Archive and the Northern Ireland Piping and Drumming School.
Bob Collins, chair of the Arts Council, said the sector was facing another challenging year and criticised "ten years of disinvestment by government" in the arts.
The Arts Council's funding from the DCAL was cut by 11%, or £1.38m, in 2015-16 and it now faces a reduction of about £500,000 in 2016-17.
The council said it had found most of the savings required through shedding staff and moving headquarters from Belfast to Lisburn in County Antrim.
Mr Collins said the funding to the arts had been cut for a number of years.
"There has been a cumulative loss of £3.5m of exchequer funding for the arts over the last three years alone, a reduction of over 25%," he said.
"It is with sincere concern for the future that I call on the new minister and the new Northern Ireland Executive to begin to focus anew on the value of the arts, on their relationship to everyone in Northern Ireland and to begin a programme of reinvestment in the arts."
DCAL itself is being dissolved this year and its responsibilities taken over by the new Department of Communities.
About £8.7m which the council receives from DCAL will be used to fund running costs for arts organisations, while the Arts Council also distributes £4.7m from the National Lottery to cover arts activity.
Seven people died at the scene. They were found naked or half-naked. Another three people died on their way to hospital.
The attack took place in the municipality of Garcia.
Authorities say they are investigating links to organised crime, possible involving drugs cartels.
Mexico's El Universal newspaper said (in Spanish) that the attack happened in a centre that distributed Corona brand beer to shops in Garcia, 40km (25 miles) from the city of Monterrey.
The victims were believed to be employees at the centre.
An official said the gunmen entered the property, demanded money from the workers and then started shooting.
Nuevo Leon State Attorney General Javier Flores said a weapon and drugs were found in the warehouse.
Garcia is the hometown of the next governor of Nuevo Leon state, Jaime Rodriguez, who battled the Zetas drug cartel while mayor. | The Arts Council of Northern Ireland (ACNI) has said it expects its budget for 2016-17 to be reduced by almost 6%.
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Gunmen have shot dead at least 10 people in a beer distribution centre near the Mexican city of Monterrey and then stole from the bodies. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | Darren Brownlie headed Queens ahead and Lyle's shot doubled their lead before the break.
Another from Lyle continued the hosts' dominance and Harris then fired his first.
Harris struck again and then set up Iain Russell's effort as the Palmerston side ended a run of three straight defeats with a handsome win.
Court, a 24-time Grand Slam singles champion and now a Christian pastor, is an opponent of gay marriage.
Former world number four Sam Stosur hinted earlier on Tuesday that players may refuse to play in protest.
Asked if he would support a boycott, Murray said: "It'd be more beneficial to do something before the tournament."
The world number one added: "For players to be in a position where you're in a slam and boycotting playing on the court, that would potentially cause a lot of issues.
"If the players come to an agreement - if they think the name should be changed or whatever - that should be decided before the event starts.
"But I would imagine a lot of the players would be pretty offended by that."
Murray beat Russia's Andrey Kuznetsov in four sets to reach the French Open second round on Tuesday.
Court, 74, has said she will not fly on Qantas "where possible" in protest of its support of same-sex marriage.
"I think everyone can have their opinion. I don't agree with it, but I guess we'll cross that bridge when we get to the Australian Open," Stosur, 33, said earlier on Tuesday.
"We'll see who wants to play on Margaret Court Arena and who doesn't."
The Australian number one added: "I find it very hard to believe that the name would ever be changed - the court's named Margaret Court Arena because of what she did in tennis."
Tennis Australia have said they will not rename the Arena, stating that Court's personal views are her own.
The venue was originally called Show Court One when it opened in 1988 before it was renamed in 2003 in tribute to the multiple Grand Slam winner.
Stosur's fellow Australian player Casey Dellacqua, who has two children with partner Amanda Judd, tweeted her opposition to Court: "Margaret. Enough is enough".
And Stosur issued her support for friend Dellacqua, saying: "It's been pretty fiery. Casey was obviously very adamant, and I wanted to support my friend and that's why I sent out my first tweet in a very long time." | Derek Lyle and Alex Harris each scored twice as Queen of the South routed Dumbarton in the Scottish Championship.
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Britain's Andy Murray has called for a quick resolution to the row over the potential renaming of the Australian Open's Margaret Court Arena. |
What is the summary of the given information? | The Opera House issued a statement after the performance of Guillaume Tell apologising for any distress caused.
Director of opera Kasper Holten said: "The production intends to make it an uncomfortable scene, just as there are several upsetting and violent scenes in Rossini's score.
"We are sorry if some people have found this distressing."
Holten said the scene "puts the spotlight on the brutal reality of women being abused during war time, and sexual violence being a tragic fact of war."
Rossini's opera of the Swiss patriot, William Tell, who shoots an arrow that splits an apple atop his son's head, has been directed by Damiano Michieletto and stars Canadian baritone Gerald Finley as Tell and American tenor John Osborn.
Osborn told Reuters after the performance that the scene "maybe it went a little longer than it should have".
"But it happened and I think it's an element you can use to show just how horrible these people were that were occupying this town," he said.
"If you don't feel the brutality, the suffering these people have had to face, if you want to hide it, it becomes soft, it becomes for children."
The Stage gave the production one star. George Hall called it a "dire evening" in which the "gratuitous gang-rape" scene provoked "the noisiest and most sustained booing I can ever recall during any performance at this address".
"Intellectually poverty-stricken, emotionally crass and with indifferent stagecraft, the result is nowhere near the standard an international company should be aiming at", he said.
Michael Arditti, the Sunday Express theatre critic said the production represented a "new nadir" for the opera house and "heads should roll".
Eaves, which is a charity that supports women who have experienced violence, said "sexual violence in conflict can be dealt with in sensitive ways - not gratuitous entertainment - bad call."
The opera house put up an article on its website not mentioning the scene, but asking the audience what they thought of the production.
Tim Moorey responded, calling the production "a disappointment from beginning to end. No wonder it received calls of 'rubbish' and lots of boos during the performance and at the end.
"I should especially single our the gratuitous rape scene which was totally unnecessary and received almost universal disapproval and much booing."
But some were upset at the booing in the audience. Janice Evans wrote she was "in shock at this level of intolerance exhibited in the ROH".
"I felt abused by their aggression and ashamed of their disrespect for the performers."
Mark Valencia writing for What's on Stage pointed out that first night booing is "a fast-growing problem at Covent Garden" that doesn't happen at other opera houses.
"It's become standard practice for the director of practically every new production to be jeered by practised factions in the audience who object to ideas that go beyond the literal reading of an opera," he said.
But at last night's first night "the perpetrators did something unheard of: they booed during the music. And they did so loudly and long."
They also booed at the end of the performance when the production team came on stage for the curtain call. | The opening night of William Tell at the Royal Opera House has been marked by boos over a rape scene with nudity. |
Summarize the passage below. | The Nanjing Number One Secondary School has rolled out a scheme where student can "borrow" marks to top up low scores so they can pass their tests.
The school said it was aimed at reducing the stress of taking exams.
The scheme has become a talking point in China which has seen rising concern over an education system still reliant on high-pressure examinations.
According to media reports this week, the school introduced the scheme in November last year for 49 students in an elite programme aimed at grooming them for entry into US colleges.
They can "borrow" marks from the bank for certain subjects deemed to require more effort in studying, such as languages, biology, chemistry and history.
So far 13 students have taken part in the scheme.
They incur a debt when they "borrow" marks, and are expected to repay it with marks scored in subsequent tests.
To encourage students to improve in their subjects, they can be charged "interest" if they do not repay their loans quickly enough.
And just like in a real bank, the students will be given "credit scores", based on their behaviour records, school attendance and fulfilment of classroom cleaning duties.
Students can also be "blacklisted" from borrowing if they fail to repay their loans on time.
If teachers approve, they can even ask a classmate to pay their loans on their behalf.
"I missed some classes because I was sick, and I didn't do well in a geography test. But the 'marks bank' gave me a chance to save the situation," one student named Xiaozhu told Yangzi Evening Paper.
The school did not immediately respond to the BBC's request for an interview.
But director Huang Kan said in interviews with Chinese media that the scheme was aimed at changing China's exam culture and "exploring a new evaluation system".
"In past exams, scores have become everything, and the pressure on students has become immense," she said.
"The purpose of an examination is to measure, give feedback, correct, and elevate standards - and not to make things difficult, punish or damage a student's enthusiasm."
She added that the scheme would encourage students to have "greater responsibility and a greater aptitude for learning".
China's education system has often been criticised as being too rigid and reliant on tests such as the infamously gruelling Gaokao national exam.
A 2014 study by a Beijing-based non-profit education group found that most cases of student suicides could be attributed to pressure from school tests.
The "marks bank" has generated intense interest in Chinese media and online.
While some believe it is a good move, others have questioned whether it may inadvertently send the wrong message to students.
"Exams may lose their rigour. If you don't do well in a test you can just take it again. But life often doesn't give you second chances," said one Weibo user.
Beijing News quoted an education expert as saying that the scheme was a "double-edged sword" as some students may take exams less seriously and end up developing "inertia".
But Ms Huang has defended the idea.
"The 'marks bank' is not a charitable institution aimed at giving out marks to lazy students, rather it is a nurturing cradle aimed at giving opportunities to diligent students," she told Xiandai Kuaibao.
Reporting by the BBC's Tessa Wong
All kick-offs at 15:00 GMT unless otherwise stated
Bristol City v Cardiff (12:00)
Burnley v Blackburn (12:30)
Brentford v Charlton
Derby v Huddersfield
Ipswich v Nottm Forest
Leeds v Bolton
MK Dons v QPR
Preston v Brighton
Reading v Fulham
Sheff Wed v Rotherham | A Chinese high school has come up with an innovative way to help struggling students - a "marks bank".
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All of the previews for the weekend's Championship games, as league leaders Burnley host Blackburn while Brighton travel to Preston. |
Please summarize the given passage. | Conner Marshall from Barry, Vale of Glamorgan, died four days after a serious assault at Trecco Bay caravan park in Porthcawl on Sunday, 8 March.
David James Braddon from Caerphilly appeared at Bridgend Magistrates' Court on Monday morning.
He was remanded in custody and will appear before Cardiff Crown Court on 30 March. No bail application was made.
Police say they still want to speak to anyone in Trecco Bay between midnight and 07:00 GMT. | A 26-year-old man has appeared in court charged with the murder of an 18-year-old at a caravan park in south Wales. |
Summarize this article briefly. | The three nations were given full-time seats on the International Cricket Council's (ICC) decision-making executive committee in January 2014.
However, that decision was reversed at a meeting in Dubai on Thursday.
ICC chairman and India board president Shashank Manohar said: "No member of the ICC is bigger than the other."
Manohar, who replaced Narayanaswami Srinivasan at both the Board of Control for Cricket in India and the ICC, was among critics who said the 'Big Three' would take over the sport at the expense of other nations.
He has promised "a complete review" of the constitution and will be in charge of a five-member steering group which will look to put together recommendations to proposed changes at the ICC's annual conference in June this year.
"I am determined to make a meaningful contribution in this regard with support of all the members," Manohar said before adding the ICC chairman would not be allowed to hold a position in a member country board in future.
Meanwhile, the ICC has also reinstated Sri Lanka as a full member after the country held elections last month to appoint a new organisation to run the sport.
Sri Lanka had previously been sanctioned for government interference. | The power of England, Australia and India in world cricket is to be reduced as part of reform measures introduced by the sport's governing body. |
Can you write a short summary of this section? | Communications Minister Ayoub Kara alleged that the channel supported terrorism, and said both its Arabic and English-language channels would be taken off air.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accuses the broadcaster of "incitement".
Al Jazeera has condemned the decision.
The Israeli government said it was basing its decision on a similar ban by several Sunni Arab states, amid their diplomatic rift with Qatar, which hosts and funds Al Jazeera.
Mr Kara said cable TV providers had agreed to take the network off the air, but that closing its Jerusalem bureau would need further legislation.
"Al Jazeera has become the main tool of Daesh [the Islamic State group], Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran," he told a news conference.
Mr Netanyahu tweeted his congratulations to Mr Kara, "who on my instructions took concrete steps to end Al Jazeera's incitement".
An Al Jazeera official in the Qatari capital Doha told AFP that the channel "deplores this action from a state that is called the only democratic state in the Middle East, and considers what it has done is dangerous".
Mr Netanyahu had accused the pan-Arab TV channel of fuelling a recent crisis around a holy site in Jerusalem known to Muslims as al-Haram al-Sharif and to Jews as the Temple Mount.
New security measures imposed by Israel after two policemen were killed nearby sparked protests by Palestinians, and the Israeli government eventually removed the security apparatus, which included metal detectors.
The Israeli prime minister vowed in late July to "expel Al Jazeera" for its reporting of the issue, which he said had incited violence.
The Al Jazeera official defended its coverage, saying it was "professional and objective".
The network's editor in Jerusalem has accused Mr Netanyahu of collusion with his autocratic Arab neighbours in an attack on free and independent media.
Al Jazeera hits back at closure calls
Al Jazeera has come under attack from several governments in the region in recent months to the concern of free press campaigners.
Saudi Arabia and Jordan both shut bureaux of the Qatari-funded broadcaster against the tiny Gulf state.
Others, including the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, have blocked its channel and websites.
Israel's communications ministry said on Sunday that "nearly all countries in the region... have concluded that Al Jazeera incites terrorism and religious extremism".
The ministry added that it had become "ridiculous that the channel continued to broadcast from Israel".
Shutting the network was on a list of 13 demands by the four Arab nations leading a boycott of Qatar that were tabled in June.
The Arabic-language news channel first launched in 1996, and shook up the media landscape in the Middle East by airing criticisms of governments and rulers in the region.
Al Jazeera says it was the first Arabic channel to feature Israeli politicians and commentators on the air.
Israel has however frequently accused it of being biased in reporting the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
The visitors hit the front early when Angelo Balanta seized upon a misplaced pass and beat goalkeeper Sam Johnson with the aid of a deflection.
Gateshead rallied quickly and equalised within a couple of minutes. Toby Ajala swung in a corner and Ryan Bowman headed home.
Neil Aspin's hosts had much the better of a goalless second period. Danny Johnson hit a free-kick that Grant Smith saved and also planted an effort just wide.
Wes York almost enhanced his fine start to the season with a swift turn and strike at goal, but Smith was again in form.
Report supplied by the Press Association.
Match ends, Gateshead 1, Boreham Wood 1.
Second Half ends, Gateshead 1, Boreham Wood 1.
Substitution, Gateshead. Sam Jones replaces Danny Johnson.
Substitution, Gateshead. Mitch Brundle replaces Toby Ajala.
Substitution, Boreham Wood. Jordan Chiedozie replaces Morgan Ferrier.
Second Half begins Gateshead 1, Boreham Wood 1.
First Half ends, Gateshead 1, Boreham Wood 1.
Ricky Shakes (Boreham Wood) is shown the yellow card.
Goal! Gateshead 1, Boreham Wood 1. Ryan Bowman (Gateshead).
Goal! Gateshead 0, Boreham Wood 1. Angelo Balanta (Boreham Wood).
First Half begins.
Lineups are announced and players are warming up. | Israel is seeking to close Qatar-based broadcaster Al Jazeera's offices in the country and revoke its journalists' media credentials.
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Both Gateshead and Boreham Wood continued their progress in the top half of the National League after a draw in the north east. |
Can you write a short summary of this section? | Footage allegedly shows badgers caught in snares and shot on Moscar Moor, near Bamford, Derbyshire, earlier this year.
The Hunt Investigation Team (Hit), which recorded the film, claim the animals were deliberately targeted.
The Duke and Duchess of Rutland, who run the estate, said they were unaware of any alleged illegal activities on their land.
Snares, which are not illegal in the UK, are used to catch foxes and rabbits, but are not permitted for catching protected species like badgers.
Hit, which wants to see grouse driven shooting banned, said during a four week period in spring the group covertly filmed on open moorland near Bamford Edge, and claim they discovered "horrific wildlife persecution".
They filmed two badgers caught in snares. The first, they believe, was shot by a masked member of the estate staff and buried in a nearby wood.
The second trapped badger is approached by another armed man who is seen trying to shoot off the snare, but the bleeding animal then runs off into the moorland with the wires still attached, the group said.
A spokeswoman for Hit, who did not want to be identified, said: "The sad thing is grouse eggs are not even a major part of a badger's diet, they're just a small part of it, so the persecution is completely disproportionate.
"Driven grouse shooting is not compatible with wildlife protection.
"What has been peddled as a traditional and respectable custom is actually at the expense of so much of the wildlife."
A spokesman for the Duke and Duchess of Rutland, from the Belvoir Estate in Leicestershire, said in a statement: "They were not aware of any alleged illegal activities being carried out on the land.
"They are horrified by these allegations and will investigate them fully."
Derbyshire Police said it had begun an investigation and would be examining the footage.
The Peak District National Park has not yet commented.
The mother of six from south London, who cannot be named, was found guilty of fraud and child abuse.
She was sentenced to seven and a half years after Croydon Crown Court heard she claimed £375,000 in benefits.
She duped doctors for over a decade - convincing them to insert feeding tubes into her son and daughter's stomachs.
The woman told specialists her daughter had stomach problems and her son had asthma.
Judge Elizabeth Smaller said she had forced the children to "live double lives to fall in with your deception".
She said doctors believed her "because why would a parent present their child as ill when they were not?"
Dr Eveline Knight-Jones, who prepared the paediatric overview for the trial, said: "In London it is all too easy for fabricated illness cases to attend several different hospitals some distance from their local hospital, because there are so many hospitals, particularly specialist hospitals."
Most of the health professionals the children saw took what the mother said about them "at face value," the court heard.
Jurors were told the mother was "resistant" to attempts to investigate the causes of the alleged symptoms and refused to allow one child to be admitted to hospital for a two-week review.
The defence claimed she suffered from a severe anxiety disorder, which caused her to "catastrophise" and overstate her children's medical symptoms.
The court heard she received £287,800 in income support payments between 2002 and 2013 as well as disability living allowance.
She also claimed to be a single mother but was living with her partner, the children's father.
Det Sgt Stuart Parsons, said: "It is staggering to think that the mother's wilful actions resulted in the children undergoing unnecessary surgical and medical interventions.
"She lied at every opportunity, presenting herself as a lone parent coping with ill and vulnerable children.
"The reality was that she resided with her partner and fabricated her children's conditions for personal financial gain."
A serious case review has yet to report its findings. | Police are investigating allegations protected wildlife has been killed on a shooting estate in the Peak District.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A woman who lied that two of her children were ill, subjecting them to unnecessary surgery as part of a benefits fraud scam, has been jailed. |
Provide a brief summary for the information below. | The rights group, along with the other activists, has called for an inquiry into the death of Solo Sandeng.
Another activist Fatoumata Jawara, who was detained with Mr Sandeng during protests on Thursday, is believed to have serious injuries, Amnesty said.
Several senior opposition leaders were arrested on Saturday after demanding answers from the authorities.
There has been no comment yet from the Gambian government.
Amnesty International says Mr Sandeng, the National Organising Secretary of the opposition United Democratic Party (UDP), and fellow UDP member Ms Jawara were among a number of people detained after taking part in a peaceful protest on Thursday.
The group said the circumstances surrounding Mr Sandeng's death are unclear, but that he died shortly after his arrest. They are also "deeply concerned" for the welfare of Ms Jawara.
"The tragic death in detention of Solo Sandeng must leave no space for impunity. The authorities must conduct an immediate, thorough and independent investigation," said Sabrina Mahtani, Amnesty International West Africa researcher.
Senior members of the UDP, including the leader Ousainu Darboe, held a news conference earlier on Saturday in which they demanded answers.
Along with around 150 supporters, they then began a protest march, but were swiftly rounded up by Gambia's security force who eyewitnesses said fired tear gas at the crowd.
Mr Sandeng had been calling for electoral reform when he was held. The protest happened while long-time leader Yahya Jammeh was out of the country.
The tiny West African nation is set to hold presidential elections in December. Opposition groups have called for reforms to enable the elections to be free and fair.
President Jammeh has ruled The Gambia since he came to power in a coup 20 years ago.
Human Rights Watch last September brought out a report in which it said Gambian forces routinely committed abuses, and political opponents and critics of the president were regular targets.
Five fire appliances and the forestry unit were involved in trying to stop the spread of the grassland blaze on the Glenrinnes Estate.
The fire coincides with warnings that the north east is at an increased risk of wildfires due to the warmer weather and dry conditions. | An opposition activist in The Gambia has died in detention, Amnesty International says.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
Firefighters were called out to tackle a major wildfire near Keith in Moray on Thursday night. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | Melissa Lawley scored the winner against two-time runners-up Liverpool.
City will meet Birmingham City in the final on Saturday, 13 May.
The Women's Super League and Continental Cup holders are also in the Champions League semi-finals and start the Spring Series later in April.
Manchester City Women, who have never appeared at England's national stadium, could have been more convincing winners against the Reds.
Jill Scott and World Player of the Year Carli Lloyd were both guilty of missing good opportunities, while Lloyd almost scored a fine solo effort with the game's final attack.
City are now aiming to become the first team to hold all three major domestic club honours at the same time since Arsenal in 2011.
Nick Cushing's side also face French side Lyon over two legs in a Champions League semi-final on 22 and 29 April.
Match ends, Manchester City Women 1, Liverpool Ladies 0.
Second Half ends, Manchester City Women 1, Liverpool Ladies 0.
Attempt missed. Carli Lloyd (Manchester City Women) left footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left.
Foul by Shanice van de Sanden (Liverpool Ladies).
Jill Scott (Manchester City Women) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Attempt saved. Caroline Weir (Liverpool Ladies) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the centre of the goal.
Ali Johnson (Liverpool Ladies) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Keira Walsh (Manchester City Women).
Sophie Ingle (Liverpool Ladies) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Foul by Carli Lloyd (Manchester City Women).
Attempt missed. Alex Greenwood (Liverpool Ladies) right footed shot from outside the box is too high.
Attempt missed. Carli Lloyd (Manchester City Women) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the left.
Alex Greenwood (Liverpool Ladies) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Foul by Melissa Lawley (Manchester City Women).
Attempt missed. Ali Johnson (Liverpool Ladies) header from a difficult angle on the right is too high.
Gemma Bonner (Liverpool Ladies) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Foul by Gemma Bonner (Liverpool Ladies).
Nikita Parris (Manchester City Women) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Substitution, Manchester City Women. Toni Duggan replaces Jane Ross.
Carli Lloyd (Manchester City Women) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Alex Greenwood (Liverpool Ladies) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Nikita Parris (Manchester City Women).
Sophie Ingle (Liverpool Ladies) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Jane Ross (Manchester City Women).
Caroline Weir (Liverpool Ladies) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Carli Lloyd (Manchester City Women).
Substitution, Liverpool Ladies. Ali Johnson replaces Niamh Charles.
Substitution, Liverpool Ladies. Caroline Weir replaces Katie Zelem.
Foul by Shanice van de Sanden (Liverpool Ladies).
Nikita Parris (Manchester City Women) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Substitution, Manchester City Women. Nikita Parris replaces Isobel Christiansen.
Kate Longhurst (Liverpool Ladies) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Foul by Carli Lloyd (Manchester City Women).
Attempt saved. Carli Lloyd (Manchester City Women) right footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.
Ashley Hodson (Liverpool Ladies) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Foul by Melissa Lawley (Manchester City Women).
Goal! Manchester City Women 1, Liverpool Ladies 0. Melissa Lawley (Manchester City Women) right footed shot from the centre of the box to the centre of the goal. Assisted by Lucy Bronze.
Attempt missed. Lucy Bronze (Manchester City Women) right footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the right.
Attempt missed. Melissa Lawley (Manchester City Women) header from the left side of the six yard box is close, but misses to the left.
Isobel Christiansen (Manchester City Women) wins a free kick in the defensive half. | Manchester City Women kept alive their hopes of winning five trophies in the space of nine months by beating Liverpool to reach their first FA Cup final at Wembley. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | Martin McLeman has told parents that Wimborne's Queen Elizabeth's School will have a budget shortfall of £286,000 in the next academic year.
It comes as a report reveals schools across England are facing their first real-terms cuts in more than 20 years.
The Department for Education (DfE) admitted the system for distributing funds was "unfair and outdated".
Mr McLeman, who is asking parents to help raise money for the school, said: "Dorset is one of the worst-funded authorities in the whole country.
"Our costs have gone up 12.5%, our income is stable. We have to fund National Insurance increases, pension increases, salary increases and even the apprenticeship levy is going to cost our school £20,000 next year and we just do not have the money for that."
A statement from the DfE said: "The government has protected the core schools budget in real terms since 2010, with school funding at its highest level on record at more than £40bn in 2016-17.
"But the system for distributing that funding across the country is unfair, opaque and outdated.
"We are going to end the historic postcode lottery in school funding and under the proposed national schools funding formula, more than half of England's schools will receive a cash boost."
But, Mr McLeman said the proposed change to the formula would only increase the school's funding by 1.1%.
"It's completely inadequate to sustain the levels of teacher recruitment and teacher placement in schools - it's just a disaster," he said.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies report found spending per pupil will fall 6.5% by 2019-20 on 2015-16 levels.
Parents have until 22 March to take part in a government consultation about the national funding formula. | Funding for secondary schools in Dorset is "a disaster", according to one of the county's head teachers. |
Give a brief summary of the following article. | The number of people aged 100, or over, has quadrupled over the last two decades, according to Office for National Statistics figures for 2015.
In the last decade alone, the number of centenarians has risen by 65% or 5,720
There has also been a dramatic increase in the number of people aged over 105. Last year there were 850 reaching the age of 105, up from 130 in 1985.
The figures come as statisticians publish information on the life expectancy of the UK population.
Those born between 2013 and 2015 can expect to live to the age of 79 if they are a boy and 82 if they are a girl.
This was working on the assumption that mortality rates remain the same as they are now, the ONS said.
Life expectancy had increased by 13 weeks a year since the 1980 to 1982 period for males and by 9.5 weeks a year on average for females, the ONS said.
There are half a million people aged 90 or over in the UK.
The size of this age group has increased over time, and seven out of 10 of them are women.
Responding to the figures, minister for pensions Richard Harrington said: "It is fantastic news that more people are living longer lives.
"I want everyone to be able to enjoy their retirement, but as people live longer it's even more important that they have a pension to help provide financial security in later life."
He added that saving into a workplace pension was one of the best ways for this to be achieved. | A record number of people in the UK, some 14,570, are surviving to the age of 100, the latest official data shows. |
Please summarize the document below. | The 17-year-old blindside won her first cap off the bench against New Zealand in the opening game of Pool A.
In all, coach Rowland Phillips has made nine changes to Wales' starting XV.
Losses to New Zealand and Canada mean Wales can only reach the play-offs to decide fifth to eighth places.
Hong Kong have yet to score a point in the competition and have conceded 219 points in their two games.
Full-back Jodie Evans and inside centre Robyn Wilkins make their first starts of the tournament, while Jasmine Joyce and Keira Bevan return on the wing and at scrum-half respectively.
Two changes to the front row see loose-head Cerys Hale and tight-head Meg York pack down either side of captain Carys Phillips.
Lock Siwan Lillicrap also makes her first start of the Women's Rugby World Cup, as does number eight Shona Powell-Hughes.
Loose-head prop Gwenllian Pyrs could make her Wales debut from the bench.
"We've surpassed many people's expectations in terms of our performances against two of the world's best teams, but we're always looking to improve standards," said Phillips.
"We're not content with just putting up a fight. We're working towards winning big games.
"Our commitment and improvement was there for everyone to see against Canada. We pushed a very good team all the way, and we've got to take inspiration from that.
"The main thing now is to keep up that momentum in this competition, starting with Hong Kong."
Wales: Jodie Evans (Scarlets); Jasmine Joyce (Scarlets), Gemma Rowland (Dragons), Robyn Wilkins (Ospreys), Jess Kavanagh-Williams (RGC); Elinor Snowsill (Dragons), Keira Bevan (Ospreys); Cerys Hale (Dragons), Carys Phillips (Ospreys), Meg York (Dragons), Siwan Lillicrap (Ospreys), Mel Clay (Ospreys), Lleucu George (Scarlets), Sioned Harries (Scarlets), Shona Powell-Hughes (Ospreys).
Replacements: Kelsey Jones (Ospreys), Gwenllian Pyrs (RGC), Caryl Thomas (Scarlets), Rebecca Rowe (Blues), Rachel Taylor (RGC), Sian Moore (Dragons), Elen Evans (RGC), Dyddgu Hywel (Scarlets). | Teenage flanker Lleucu George will make her first start for Wales in their final Women's Rugby World Cup pool match against Hong Kong on Thursday (17:15 BST) at the UCD Bowl in Dublin. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | Sale flanker Cameron Neild crashed over and Nev Edwards added a second try before Leicester's Tommy Bell dotted down to make it 17-13 at half-time.
A thunderstorm early in the second half then saw play suspended for 10 minutes.
Leicester's Vereniki Goneva powered over to level the scores but Danny Cipriani's solo try won it for Sale.
Fly-half Cipriani, who will return to former club Wasps in the summer, was instrumental throughout the afternoon with the boot.
But, he also demonstrated his brilliance with the ball in hand as he weaved through Tigers' defence to squeeze down in the corner.
Leicester camped themselves within a few metres of Sharks' try-line in the final few minutes, but were unable to find a way through to rescue a draw.
The thrilling finish was part of a second half which also saw referee Tom Foley left with little choice but to take the players from the field with fork lightning and torrential rain lashing Greater Manchester.
Heavy showers and strong winds also made handling and kicking difficult before the break as Leicester, who welcomed back England trio Dan Cole, Ben Youngs and Manu Tuilagi after Six Nations duty, looked out of sorts.
Sale took advantage with a couple of well-crafted tries but appeared to have a stroke of luck for Edwards' score as replays suggested Sam James, who played a part in the move, was out of touch when he picked the ball up.
Goneva gave Leicester a chance of completing a fine turnaround when he used all of his pace and power to make it 20-20, but Cipriani made sure Sale took their unbeaten home run beyond 11 months.
Sale director of rugby Steve Diamond on Danny Cipriani:
"Danny will be replaced and we have replaced him already. The announcement will be made in the next week or so.
"Danny sees his future elsewhere and it has been written about for months now, so good on him.
"The good thing was that we had a sit down and he wants to get us as high up in the league as he can. You saw in his performance today that he doesn't look like a lad who wants to leave."
Leicester director of rugby Richard Cockerill on the decision to suspend the game in the second half:
"The television match official decided it was a health-and-safety risk, which is a bit bizarre really in a contact sport.
"But I suppose it was a sensible thing to do and Sale played well and took their opportunities.
"We'll take the point and we live to fight another day, but I think that takes our top-two ambitions out of the equation and you're fighting for top four."
Sale Sharks: Haley; Addison, James, Tuitupou, Edwards; Cipriani, Stringer; Lewis-Roberts, Taylor, Cobilas, Evans, Mills, Nield, Seymour (capt), Easter.
Replacements: Briggs, Harrison, Mujati, Ostrikov, Lund, Mitchell, Ford, Brady.
Leicester Tigers: Bell; Tait, Tuilagi, Williams, Goneva; Burns, B. Youngs; Ayerza, Thacker, Dan Cole, Barrow, Kitchener, Pearce, Croft, Crane (capt).
Replacements: Bateman, Genge, Balmain, De Chaves, Fonua, Harrison, Betham, Veainu. | Sale Sharks maintained their unbeaten home record this season with victory over Leicester Tigers in horrendous conditions at the AJ Bell Stadium. |
Can you write a brief summary of this passage? | He made the remarks during his weekly general audience at the Vatican, which was devoted to the role of fathers in the family.
The Pope outlined the traits of a good father, as someone who forgives but is able to "correct with firmness" while not discouraging the child.
Some child welfare campaigners have questioned his comments.
The Pope said: "One time, I heard a father in a meeting with married couples say 'I sometimes have to smack my children a bit, but never in the face so as to not humiliate them.'
"How beautiful," he added. "He knows the sense of dignity. He has to punish them but does it justly and moves on."
Jon Bird, a spokesman for the National Association for People Abused in Childhood (NAPAC), said it took a zero tolerance approach to the corporal punishment of children.
Referring to the Pope's comments, Mr Bird said: "I don't know what he had in mind when he said this. It's about interpretation and where you draw the line."
NAPAC's founder, Peter Saunders, who is part of a Vatican commission on protecting children from abusive priests, will attempt to raise the issue with the Pope during a meeting on Friday.
Mr Bird added: "There is room for discussion and I'm sure Pete will have that discussion today."
The Church's position on corporal punishment came under criticism last year during a grilling by members of a UN human rights committee monitoring implementation of the UN treaty on the rights of the child.
The Vatican argued that it in no way promoted corporal punishment, and the head of the delegation said he would take the recommendations back to Rome for review. | Pope Francis has backed parents who smack their children, providing the child's "dignity" is maintained. |
Please summarize the document below. | The 31-year-old is set to miss his side's first four Championship games.
Bresnan played for the champions in their defeat by the MCC last week.
"He will now start an intense period of rehabilitation on his torn calf and we hope to have him back fit and strong during the middle of May," physio Kunwar Bansil told the club website.
She had complained about how she was treated after returning to work after maternity and sick leave because of a disability related to her pregnancy.
The woman brought her disability and sex discrimination case, aided by the Equality Commission.
The PSNI said it accepted the findings of the commission's report.
When the woman returned to work, she was given restricted duties and called to appear before an all-male attendance panel.
She was given an informal warning for unsustainable absence, but it was rescinded when she appealed the finding.
A new, mixed-gender panel that was convened five months later also found her attendance was unsatisfactory.
It issued an informal note of concern that was to remain live for two years and limited her options for applying for promotion.
In settling the case, the PSNI has also removed the note of concern from her personnel record, granted full mitigation for her period of absence, and adjusted her records and duties to take account of her disability.
The officer said: "This was an extremely difficult and stressful time for me and the way I was treated when I returned to work made it much worse."
She added: "I hope that this will lead to other officers who are faced with such difficulties being treated better by the organisation in future."
The Equality Commission's Eileen Lavery said: "Coping with ill health immediately after the birth of a child can be a very difficult experience and it is important that employers make all necessary arrangements to enable a returning member of staff resume her duties and career."
"In this case, the PSNI agreed to meet with the Equality Commission to review its policies, practices and procedures, and to consider recommendations the commission might make."
ACC Mark Hamilton, head of the PSNI's human resources department, said: "It is important to note that the PSNI were actively reviewing their attendance management policy at the time this case was settled.
"This review, which has now been completed, was not as a direct result of this discrimination case.
"That said, as a result of this particular case, we will apply learning from it in an effort to prevent any recurrence for other officers and staff." | Yorkshire and England all-rounder Tim Bresnan will miss the opening six weeks of the County Championship season with a torn lower calf.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
The Police Service of Northern Ireland has settled a discrimination case brought by a female officer for £11,250, without admitting liability. |
Give a brief summary of the provided passage. | 8 March 2016 Last updated at 14:13 GMT
Now superstar boxer Nicola Adams has given Newsround her three top tips when in the ring.
See what she thinks young boxers should focus on to improve their chances. | She's got an Olympic medal and an MBE so she knows a thing or two about success. |
Please summarize the given passage. | The affiliate, which calls itself Sinai Province, said it had acted in retaliation for what it says is Israeli support for the Egyptian army.
Israel said two rockets landed in the south of the country, causing no casualties or material damage.
At least 17 Egyptian soldiers and 100 IS militants have died in fighting in northern Sinai since Wednesday.
The clashes were triggered by a co-ordinated mass assault of IS militants on the town of Sheikh Zuweid.
Sinai Province claimed the rocket attack on social media on Friday.
The group said it had fired Grad rockets towards "occupied Palestine".
The Israeli military later said that two missiles landed in open areas in Israel's Negev region, causing no damage.
Sirens were heard in communities in Israel's Eshkol regional council, near the Gaza border.
"I trust the army and am certain that it will take all necessary measures to protect communities in the South," council leader Eshkol Gadi Yarkoni was quoted as saying the Haaretz newspaper.
Israel accuses Hamas, who run Gaza, of providing support for Sinai Province - a claim the Palestinian group denies.
Israel has a 240km (150 miles) border with the Sinai peninsula.
On Wednesday morning, militants launched near-simultaneous attacks against at least five military checkpoints and a police station in and around Sheikh Zuweid.
The attack was one of the largest co-ordinated assaults so far by the jihadists in Sinai.
Eyewitness reported seeing militants roaming the streets of the northern town, clashing with armed forces.
An Egyptian military spokesman, Brig-Gen Mohammed Samir, later told state TV that the situation was "100% under control".
Jihadists based in the restive region stepped up their attacks after the military overthrew Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in July 2013.
At least 600 police and armed forces personnel have since been killed. | A group affiliated with Islamic State has said it fired three rockets into Israel from Egypt's Sinai peninsula. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | Several loud blasts were heard in the town of Bardere at dawn and the bodies were found later, they said.
A Kenyan official has withdrawn his statement that one of those killed was the mastermind of April's deadly attack on Garissa university.
Bardere is one of the few Somali towns still controlled by al-Shabab.
The al-Qaeda-linked group has not yet commented, but a source in the group told a BBC reporter that those killed were al-Shabab commanders.
Al-Shabab carried out the attack on Kenya's Garissa university which killed 148 people.
Kenyan Interior ministry spokesman Mwenda Njoka has tweeted that he was mistaken when saying a "mastermind" of that attack was among four al-Shabab commanders killed.
He said he had mixed up the mastermind, known as Gamadheere, with the al-Shabab commander, named Jamaa Adhere.
African Union and Somali government troops are reported to be advancing on the area in Gedo region.
The US has killed several senior members of al-Shabab in drone strikes in the past.
The BBC's Moalimu Mohamed in the capital, Mogadishu, says the telecommunications network to Bardere has been cut off since the attack, but residents in the village nearest the town have been contactable.
They said that after the blasts, well-armed al-Shabab fighters rushed to the scene in Bardere, near the Juba River about 460km (285 miles) west of Mogadishu, where the dead men were found.
The names of the commanders believed to have been killed are Ismael Jamhad and Jama Dere, a Somali military officer travelling with the African Union troops in the area has told the BBC.
Somalia has seen clan-based warlords, rival politicians and Islamist militants battle for control since the fall of long-serving ruler Siad Barre in 1991.
African Union troops have been in the country since 2007 helping various UN-backed governments fight al-Shabab.
Over the last four years, the militants have been driven from most of the key towns they once held but they still control rural areas in the south. | At least two senior commanders from the Islamist militant group al-Shabab have been killed in a drone strike in south-west Somalia, residents say. |
Summarize the following excerpt. | Robert Marchand has clocked up 105 years and now a new record for the furthest distance cycled in one hour.
The French cyclist managed 22.547km (14 miles) at the national velodrome, taking the top spot in a new category - for riders over 105.
Mr Marchand already holds the record for those aged over 100 - 26.927km - set in 2012.
He "could have done better", he says, but missed a sign showing 10 minutes to go.
"My legs didn't hurt," he told BFMTV. "My arms hurt but that's because of rheumatism."
To be fair, he had admitted before the event at the Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines velodrome near Paris that breaking his previous hour record would be tough.
"I'm not in such good shape as I was a couple of years back," he told AFP news agency.
"I am not here to be champion. I am here to prove that at 105 years old you can still ride a bike," he said.
Hundreds of spectators cheered him on trackside.
Born on 26 November 1911, Mr Marchand puts his fitness down to diet - lots of fruit and vegetables, a little meat, not too much coffee - and an hour a day on the cycling home-trainer.
A prisoner of war in World War Two, he went on to work as a lorry driver and sugarcane planter in Venezuela, and a lumberjack in Canada.
No stranger to sport outside cycling, he competed in gymnastics at national level and has been a boxer.
The current men's hour record is held by the UK's Bradley Wiggins - 54.526km - which he set in June 2015.
Unconfirmed reports said at least two people had been killed by Cylcone Evan, which hit Samoa on Thursday.
In the capital, Apia, homes were flattened and the Vaisigano River burst its banks, washing away cars, trees and other debris.
But fears the cyclone might hit Samoa a second time have receded.
New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully told reporters that "the best guess" was that the cyclone would not return.
Samoa's Disaster Management Office said power was off throughout the country.
"Tanugamanono power plant is completely destroyed and we might not have power for at least two weeks," it said.
The village of Lelata, just outside Apia, was also ravaged by the cyclone.
The village looked "like a tsunami has struck" it, local reporter Keni Lesa was quoted as saying by the Associated Press news agency.
New Zealand's high commissioner in Apia, Nick Hurley, said the cyclone was bigger than other tropical storms he had experienced in the region, and its strength was unexpected.
"The unpredictable nature of this one has made it quite different," he said.
"The forecast winds did not give any indication of how strong the impact was going to be."
The cyclone generated winds of up to 165km/h (100 mph) as it hit Samoa. | He may not be the fastest cyclist round a velodrome, but he is easily one of the oldest.
[NEXT_CONCEPT]
A powerful cyclone has caused widespread destruction on the Pacific island of Samoa, cutting power, uprooting trees and triggering floods. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | Fe gollodd Llafur reolaeth ar gynghorau Pen-y-bont a Blaenau Gwent ac fe fyddan nhw hefyd yn gorfod aros i weld a ydyn nhw'n cadw eu gafael ar Ferthyr Tudful - oherwydd marwolaeth un ymgeisydd mae isetholiad eto i'w gynnal.
Llwyddodd Llafur i gadw rheolaeth ar ddinasoedd Caerdydd, Abertawe a Chasnewydd.
Ar ddiwedd y cyfrif roedd gan y Blaid Lafur 472 sedd ar draws Cymru, 107 sedd yn llai o'i gymharu â 2012, tra bod ymgeiswyr Annibynnol, y Ceidwadwyr a Phlaid Cymru wedi gweld cynnydd.
Mae'r Ceidwadwyr wedi cipio rheolaeth lawn yn Sir Fynwy, cyngor roedden nhw'n ei arwain mewn clymblaid gynt.
Ond mae'r gogwydd yng Nghymru o Lafur i'r Ceidwadwyr wedi bod yn llai nag yn Lloegr, ble mae etholiadau lleol hefyd wedi bod yn cael eu cynnal mewn nifer o ardaloedd.
Dywedodd y Prif Weinidog Carwyn Jones ei bod hi wedi bod yn noson "heriol" i'w blaid, tra bod y Ceidwadwyr a Phlaid Cymru wedi croesawu'r canlyniadau "calonogol".
Mae Llafur wedi cadw eu gafael ar Gasnewydd a Chastell-nedd Port Talbot, ond gyda llai o fwyafrif.
Fe wnaeth y blaid golli tir yn Wrecsam, gyda'r grŵp Annibynnol yn dod yr un mwyaf ar y cyngor ond heb reolaeth lwyr.
Daeth Llafur yn agos at gipio grym yn Sir y Fflint gan gynyddu nifer eu seddi.
Ac maen nhw wedi llwyddo i ddal eu gafael ar Gaerdydd, yn ogystal ag Abertawe, Torfaen, Rhondda Cynon Taf a Chaerffili.
Mae'r sefyllfa ym Mro Morgannwg yn aros fel yr oedd hi, gyda'r un blaid wedi llwyddo i sicrhau rheolaeth lawn, ond y Ceidwadwyr yn ennill tir.
Mae Plaid Cymru wedi cadw'u gafael ar Gyngor Gwynedd, ond dyw sefyllfa heb newid yng Ngheredigion ble maen nhw'n parhau i fod y blaid fwyaf, ond heb fwyafrif.
Maen nhw hefyd wedi dod o fewn trwch blewyn i gipio cynghorau Sir Gâr ac Ynys Môn, ar ôl dod o fewn dwy sedd i fwyafrif yn y ddwy.
Ym Mhowys mae'r grŵp Annibynnol wedi colli eu mwyafrif, yn dilyn enillion i'r Ceidwadwyr a'r Democratiaid Rhyddfrydol sy'n golygu nad oes gan yr un blaid reolaeth lwyr.
Ond mae'r grŵp Annibynnol wedi llwyddo i ddal eu gafael ar Gyngor Sir Penfro, er eu bod wedi gostwng mewn nifer.
Does dim un plaid wedi ennill rheolaeth lwyr ar Gyngor Sir Ddinbych, ond mae'r Ceidwadwyr wedi disodli'r blaid Lafur fel y blaid fwyaf.
Canlyniad Cyngor Sir Conwy oedd yr olaf i ddod i law a does dim un plaid wedi ennill rheolaeth lwyr yno.
Y cyfrif wedi dod i ben
Fe gipiodd Plaid Cymru 202 o seddi ar draws Cymru, 33 yn fwy na'r tro diwethaf.
Mae ymgeiswyr Annibynnol wedi cipio 322 sedd, 13 yn fwy na'r tro diwethaf, tra bod y Ceidwadwyr wedi cipio 184 sedd, 80 yn fwy nag yn 2012.
Gwelodd y Democratiaid Rhyddfrydol gwymp o 73 i 62 yn nifer eu seddi, tra bod UKIP wedi colli'r ddwy oedd ganddyn a'r Gwyrddion wedi ennill un. | Mae'r Blaid Lafur wedi dioddef colledion ond nid cynddrwg â'r disgwyl yn dilyn canlyniadau etholiadau lleol yng Nghymru. |
Give a brief summary of the content. | Steven Cook, 20, from Sandbach, Cheshire, was last seen outside a pub in Malia, Crete, asking for directions.
Cheshire police said Greek authorities had now confirmed the remains found in a well belonged to him after forensic examination.
The force said its priority was to ensure Mr Cook "is flown home to the UK as soon as possible".
The family said on Facebook they had learned their "much loved and missed son, brother, uncle, nephew, and friend will be finally coming home to be with us once again".
He brought "laughter, love and happiness" over 20 years and "shone amongst us," they said.
"Whilst we always carried hope in our hearts that Steve would come back much sooner and once again be able to share in our lives... sadly we will be bringing him home to say our farewells," the statement on social media added.
Det Insp Gary McIntyre said the family was "very appreciative" of all the support the media and the public had given them over the years.
Mr Cook's remains were taken to a nearby hospital after being found.
The 10ft (3m) high portrait was created by a group of local street artists in 2014 as part of a festival celebrating his birth.
The image, close to the entrance to the Laurel and Hardy Museum, was daubed with green fluorescent paint.
A museum spokesman described the attack as "disappointing".
Cumbria Police are investigating.
The museum spokesman said: "The mural was done as a live installation by some local artists during a one-day festival to celebrate Stan's birthday last year called Another Fine Fest.
"It has been hugely popular since it was done, with hundreds of photos taken and shared via social media, a real advert for the town.
"We are pretty gutted at what's happened. One of the things we aim to do is inject our amazing town of Ulverston with some extra added colour, beauty and original, awe-inspiring art. The fluorescent green is colourful, but it certainly isn't beautiful, artistic or original."
A spokesman for Primal Science, the group of street artists that created the painting, added: "Thank you to our fellow street artists for their contribution, but unfortunately their efforts have left a lot to be desired.
"We are fans of spontaneous artistic expression, but only when done with skill and creativity and with respect to the surroundings and others' artistry."
The group said they planned to restore the painting free of charge.
Stan Laurel was born in Argyll Street, Ulverston, in June 1890, the son of a showman, before going on to star in 106 films with his partner Oliver Hardy. | Human remains found on a Greek island are those of a man who went missing in 2005 on holiday, police have confirmed.
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A painting of comedian Stan Laurel, that hangs outside a museum in his home town of Ulverston in Cumbria, has been damaged by vandals. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | 19 January 2017 Last updated at 19:51 GMT | Martin McGuinness: "I don't remember the last time I ever heard a member of the DUP use the word reconciliation' |
Please provide a short summary of this passage. | On the penultimate day of competition, Oscar Pistorius won gold in his 400m title as the Stadium hosted 2012 action for the last time.
Crowds at the Olympic Park today basked in temperatures of up to 27C ahead of Sunday's closing ceremony.
As competition started on Saturday the host nation was sitting second in the overall table with 114 medals.
Cyclist David Stone added to the tally in the morning session, successfully defending his Paralympic mixed T1-2 road race title at Brands Hatch.
Swimmer Ellie Simmonds won silver in S6 100m freestyle event, failing to retain her crown.
The 17-year-old set a new personal best of 1:14.82, but was beaten by the USA's Victoria Arlen.
Simmonds finished the Games with two gold medals, a silver and a bronze.
Great Britain surpassed their 103-medal target for the 2012 Paralympics in emphatic style on Thursday as Hannah Cockroft, David Weir and Jonnie Peacock picked up medals.
Hopes are high that Weir will bring home his fourth gold medal when he competes in the London wheelchair marathon on Sunday.
Weir, 33, known as The Weirwolf of London, has already won the 800m, 1500m and 5,000m.
Competitors in the men's and women's marathons will start and finish in The Mall, completing one short and three long loops during the 26.2-mile race through central London.
Once the sport has concluded, the closing ceremony will bring the curtain down on what has been one of the most successful Paralympics in the event's history.
Organisers have sold some 2.7 million Paralympic tickets - beating targets by 200,000 and predicted sales by £10m.
Stars due to perform at Sunday's sold-out ceremony include Jay-Z and Rihanna and hundreds of performers in bandstands across the UK are expected to join in a rendition of Coldplay's Viva La Vida.
The live broadcast of the ceremony is due to start at 20:30 BST and organisers hope it will finish by 23:00 BST.
Speaking at a press briefing on Saturday the show's director Kim Gavin promised a festival of the flame.
He said: "We are known as a nation for having the most festivals.
"The festival approach is purely to celebrate the last night of the Games, and we will pay tribute to all the human spirit and achievement of the last two weeks."
He said the athletes would be on the field of play when the show starts and added: "Through Coldplay's music we are going to take you through the seasons from autumn to summer".
He said there would also be a tribute to Help for Heroes and that the Union Jack would be revealed for the national anthem in a "special way".
"I wanted this ceremony to feel less spangly and more raw," he said.
"It's more about the people and their performances."
British stars of the Olympics and Paralympics will then celebrate their success during a victory parade through the streets of London on Monday. | London's Olympic Park is playing host to hundreds of thousands of people on the final weekend of the Paralympics. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | The seven-piece, back together after 12 years, performed a medley of their biggest hits including S Club Party.
It was during that modern masterpiece there was one momentous moment, carried off by Paul Cattermole.
During his four seconds of 'Paul's getting down on the floor', he managed to throw some shapes that David Brent would have been proud of.
Inevitably, his dancing was soon being compared to the genius of Ricky Gervais' character.
During Newsbeat's chat with the band, we brought up the comparison and Paul gave a wide, cheeky smile.
"Fair play," he said. "I saw another Vine which had me and him side-by-side. There is a massive similarity between the two things. There is!"
To date, a Vine of the clip has had more than 300-thousand loops.
Tina chipped in: "Can I say that is my favourite bit from Friday. Paul's little 'Paul's getting down on the floor' dance."
Bradley too: "My mate called me up saying that Paul's bit was wicked too."
When we asked Paul whether he could actually carry out the action from S Club Party, he told us that in his "old, geriatric age" he "can't really get down anymore."
Following their TV reunion, the band announced a 2015 arena tour.
Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube.
Water levels at the lake are at a 30-year-high after recent heavy rain.
At Oxford Island on the lough's southern tip, flood waters are knee-deep and several business properties have been badly damaged.
One MLA has said the Northern Ireland Executive must give more help to businesses damaged by floods.
A warning is in place from the Met Office for more heavy rain on Wednesday night and businesses at Kinnego Marina at Lough Neagh say they are worried they would face more problems.
The firms employ 20 people and are unable to trade due to floods at their premises.
The water level in Lough Neagh is controlled by flood gates at Toomebridge in County Antrim, which the Rivers Agency has said have been fully opened since early November.
But business owners at Kinnego Marina have said they want to know if that was done in advance of recent severe storms so that the lough could accommodate the additional water.
One man, Paul Quinn, said his business was "inoperable" and he had not seen the water level as high in over 40 years.
"This is going to take us months to clean up and get back on track again, and this is our busiest time of year," he said.
"It's really going to have a big effect on all four businesses.
"Our biggest predicament is the rainfall coming later this evening and tomorrow morning.
"And if the wind rises, we're going to get a wave effect off the lough, and that's really worrying us."
The SDLP's Dolores Kelly said an emergency executive meeting was needed to discuss how to help business across Northern Ireland affected by floods.
She said she had contacted government agencies to get help for the traders at Kinnego Marina but was told that "commercial properties were well down the pecking order" when it came to receiving assistance.
The businesses had lost stock worth "tens of thousands" of pounds, she said, and one of the shops had recently spent £10,000 on renovations.
"These businessmen have invested in these properties and they really are distraught as to what they're going to get in terms of help today and coping with the aftermath when [flood waters] recede," Ms Kelly said.
"I find it incomprehensible that in GB, [Prime Minister David] Cameron on St Stephen's Day held an emergency meeting regarding the floods in Cumbria, but it's my understanding that the next executive meeting isn't until 21 January.
"I've called on the executive to release additional funding to help commercial properties."
David Porter of the Rivers Agency said "repeated winter storms" were putting pressure on the lough and its outlets.
"The gates have been opened fully since early in November to let as much water out of the system as we possibly can," he said.
"But more rain keeps falling within the catchment." | Many pop fans rejoiced at S Club 7's reunion during BBC's Children In Need.
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Flood-hit businesses on the shores of Lough Neagh have questioned whether enough was done to prevent rising waters brought on by winter storms. |
Give a brief summary of the following article. | Murray's wife Kim is due to give birth in the second week of February, with the Australian Open finishing at the end of January.
"It would be disappointing if I was to get to that position, not being able to play the final," Murray said.
"But I'd be way more disappointed winning the Australian Open and missing the birth of the child.''
Murray has been a losing Australian Open finalist four times, including last year when he lost out to Novak Djokovic.
The world number two is planning to take the whole of February off to be with Kim and the new baby.
Murray has considered the potential dilemma should the baby arrive early, but says after discussing it with his wife ''it was an easy decision to make'' to be with his family, although added that he hopes a situation whereby he is forced to pull out of the Australian Open does not arise.
The Scot was speaking to Eurosport after beating Kenny De Shepper of France 6-2, 6-2 in his opening Hopman Cup match in Perth.
On his win over De Schepper, Murray said: '''It was good, I played well today. I got off to a quick start and that settled me down a bit, and I played some good stuff.''
The British number one appeared to be in some discomfort in the second set, holding his right hip, but he played down any concerns about his fitness.
"It's just a little sore, but I was able to move around well," Murray added. | Andy Murray says he would miss the final of the Australian Open to attend the birth of his first child. |
Summarize the following content briefly. | The Exiles have not won in six home matches this season, are bottom of League Two and host leaders Plymouth Argyle on Saturday.
"It's up to us to step up to the plate," said Westley, who managed Peterborough in League One last season.
"The home record over the last couple of years hasn't been good and we need to start putting that straight."
Saturday's opponents Plymouth are three points clear at the top of the table having won nine of their 13 league games this season.
"Our home needs to be a place that people fear coming to and it will be," Westley, who succeeded the sacked Warren Feeney on 7 October, told BBC Wales Sport.
"With respect to any team in League Two, they're a League Two team. Last year I faced some big clubs in League One and there were some really tough challenges.
"We're in League Two facing League Two opponents and of course we must not underestimate them - but we must not overestimate them.
"We've got a lot of experience and good quality players here and I'm sure we're capable of playing like a top of the league team."
Newport conceded in the 80th minute as they lost 1-0 to Yeovil in Westley's first game in charge of the club, but the 48-year-old is confident letting in late goals will not become a habit.
"My sides are notorious for being strong late on and scoring lots of late winners," he added.
"They're certainly not notorious for conceding late goals, so it won't be an issue."
3 July 2017 Last updated at 16:51 BST
So if you are one of the lucky few who got tickets for day one, it's not surprising you'd be pretty happy about it.
Ayshah's been chatting to some of the children who got to enjoy the big names playing on the first Monday of Wimbledon.
Who are they most excited to see play?
The pictures show the north and south poles of the gas giant - images that no previous mission has managed to show in such detail.
Juno took the images last weekend as it made its first close pass of the planet since it went into orbit in July.
Naz spoke to space scientist Dr Jonathan Nichols from the University of Leicester, who is a member of the Juno mission's science team.
He told Newsround: "We're learning about the formation of Jupiter and that's really important for the formation of the Solar System as a whole."
Juno's quest is to investigate the secrets of the Solar System by finding out more about its biggest planet - Jupiter.
The spacecraft is currently flying around Jupiter on a course that takes 53 days to complete.
The 20-year-old was three spots outside automatic qualification when the entry lists were released earlier this month.
But Frenchman Gasquet, the world number nine, has pulled out with a back injury.
It follows the earlier withdrawal of Argentina's Juan Monaco and Australian youngster Thanasi Kokkinakis.
Edmund, who is ranked 102 in the world, came through qualifying in Melbourne this year before losing to American Steve Johnson in the opening round.
He thought he had done enough for automatic qualification this year but missed out after five players used protected rankings to gain places at the year's first Grand Slam, which starts on 18 January.
Edmund was part of the Great Britain squad which beat Belgium last month to win the Davis Cup for the first time in 79 years. | Newport County boss Graham Westley has vowed to make Rodney Parade "a place that people fear coming" to.
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It's the most famous tennis competition in the world.
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Nasa has released spectacular new images of Jupiter taken by its Juno probe.
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British number three Kyle Edmund has been handed a place in the main draw of next month's Australian Open following Richard Gasquet's withdrawal. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | Jordan Lee Francois, who was freed from Wandsworth jail on Thursday, was found in Edmonton, north London at 05:35 GMT, the Metropolitan Police said.
The Ministry of Justice earlier confirmed the 18-year-old had been released "in error".
Police had offered a £10,000 reward for information leading to Mr Francois's arrest.
The MoJ said: "Releases in error are a very rare but regrettable occurrence.
"The number of incidents have fallen significantly in recent years with figures down by a quarter compared to 2009-10, but every incident is taken extremely seriously and we are not complacent."
A European court upheld a 2013 ruling that said the MacCoffee trademark of a Singaporean company, Future Enterprises, was invalid.
It said that MacCoffee unfairly benefited from the branding of the US burger giant.
The move could make it tricky for any other company to use the "Mac" or "Mc" prefix for food or beverages.
The court agreed with McDonald's that MacCoffee's branding would be wrongly linked to that of the US burger giant.
It said the use of the "Mac" by Future Enterprises in its products would "associate that trademark with the McDonald's "Mc" family of trade marks and mentally establish a link between the trade marks at issue".
"It is highly probable that MacCoffee rides on the coat-tails of McDonald's in order to benefit from its power of attraction, its reputation and its prestige, and exploits, without paying any financial compensation," the judgement said.
The judgement said that members of the public could establish a link between the trademarks of the two businesses "and could transfer the image of the McDonald's trademarks to the goods covered by MacCoffee".
The ruling was regarded as positive for McDonald's.
"The court's judgement is very favourable to McDonald's as it's saying that the Singapore company is gaining from its reflected glory," said Chris McLeod, director at the Institute of Trade Mark Attorneys.
The MacCoffee trademark was registered in 2010 by the European Union Intellectual Property Office, but McDonald's applied to have the trademark named invalid on the basis of the similarity to its main EU trademark and 12 other trademarks that McDonald's uses in the jurisdiction.
MacCoffee still sells its products in some EU cities, and the judgement does not prevent it from doing so, but the US burger giant may take steps to prevent it doing so, McLeod said.
"They've [successfully] applied to knock it off the register and that opens the door for a claim or request to cease the use of the prefixes." | A teenage attempted murder suspect who was released from prison by mistake has been found and arrested again.
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McDonald's has won a case that could stop another company using the "Mc" or "Mac" prefix on its food and drink. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | The £200m scheme will give Northern Ireland greater access to generating capacity in the Republic.
Approval was granted in December 2016 but was challenged by the North East Pylon Pressure Campaign.
The judge said there was "no lawful reason" to overturn the planning permission.
The Utility Regulator has said the scheme is needed to ensure security of supply, particularly as some older power stations in Northern Ireland are due to be decommissioned.
The scheme will involve connecting the two power grids via 138km of overhead lines between Moy in County Tyrone and County Meath.
The Planning Appeals Commission (PAC) held a public inquiry into the northern element of the the project in February.
The PAC is due to make a recommendation later this year.
The Northern Ireland section is being overseen by System Operator for Northern Ireland (SONI).
Robin McCormick of SONI welcomed the court decision and said the inter-connector was needed to address security of supply problems facing Northern Ireland.
"This decision is encouraging and means our colleagues in EirGrid can now engage with landowners in the project area in the south," he said.
Angela McGowan, CBI Northern Ireland Regional director, said it was a welcome development but stressed that "urgent clarity" on the northern section of the project was needed.
"We would encourage the Planning Appeals Commission and the Department for Infrastructure to reach a positive decision on the planning application as soon as possible," she said. | The High Court in Dublin has upheld planning approval for the southern element of the north-south electricity interconnector. |
Can you provide an overview of this section? | Chasing 320, the visitors were bowled out for 191, with Sanderson taking 4-31 to add to his first-innings 5-52.
Tom Taylor (69) prevented a more convincing loss for Derbyshire, who had been 58-6, before Nathan Buck (3-38) accounted for most of the tail.
Earlier, Northants lost their last six wickets for 17 runs to finish 277 all out in their second innings.
Teenage paceman Conor McKerr took 5-54 to end with match figures of 10-141.
Northants' fourth win in six matches strengthened their fourth position in the table and moved them within seven points of third-placed Worcestershire, who lost heavily to Glamorgan.
Derbyshire remain winless in the County Championship in 2017, although they received positive news regarding Luis Reece, who has been discharged from hospital after being taken ill on day one.
Medical staff believe Reece has been suffering from a viral infection, the club said in a statement.
Reece posted on Twitter: "Thank you for all the messages over the past few days. I'm now out of hospital with a short period of rest but all is okay. Thank you again." | Northamptonshire beat Derbyshire by 128 runs in Division Two, with paceman Ben Sanderson again key to their success. |
Summarize the information in the following document. | Bala Chinda, 25, denies murdering 36-year-old Nkechi - also known as Jessica - McGraa at a flat in Union Terrace in Aberdeen in February.
Mr Chinda faces a separate accusation of attempting to defeat the ends of justice.
It is claimed he stole two phones and disposed of them, as well as a handset he is said to have used to contact Ms McGraa.
At the High Court in Glasgow, judge Lady Rae set a trial for December. | A man is to stand trial charged with the rape and murder of a woman. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | Banjong Pongphon was a "key suspect" in the investigation who "wielded great influence" in the area, police said.
The UN refugee agency said on Friday that 25,000 migrants boarded people smugglers' boats from Myanmar and Bangladesh in 2015's first quarter.
This was about double the number who left over the same period in 2014.
Banjong Pongphon is mayor of Padang Besar, a sub-district in southern Songkhla province where 26 bodies were exhumed from mass graves last week.
Smugglers' camps in the forests and plantations surrounding Padang Besar are among the main destinations of the migrants, according to a report by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
It is not yet clear what those exhumed from the graves discovered in Songkhla died from. The UNHCR report said that over half of the migrants interviewed by the UN who had travelled since October last year knew at least one person who had died in the smugglers' camps, mainly as a result of illness, beatings or being shot for trying to escape.
Police chief General Somyot Poompan told a meeting at Thailand's police headquarters in Bangkok on Friday that police will be dealt with severely if they are found to be colluding or ignoring people smuggling.
"If you are still neglecting, or involved with, or supporting or benefiting from human trafficking networks - your heads will roll," he said.
Referring to the transfer on Thursday of dozens of police pending an investigation, Gen Somyot said: "To remove about 50 officers from their posts isn't something I want to do, but it's something I have already warned you about.
"I have warned you but you didn't listen. I have warned but you still did it," he said.
In addition to the 50 officers removed, eight people, including Mayor Banjong, have been arrested.
Those found in the graves are thought to be migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh. Those from Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, are thought to be minority Rohingya Muslims fleeing persecution in their own country.
The Thai military junta has given local authorities until the end of next week to eradicate camps used by smugglers. | A prominent Thai mayor has been arrested over a human trafficking scandal exposed by the discovery of mass graves in southern Thailand. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | Andrew Main, 47, pleaded guilty to four counts of arson at a hearing at Oxford Crown Court.
Main, of Rokemarsh near Wallingford, pleaded not guilty to a further charge of arson with intent to endanger life.
South Oxfordshire District Council's office, an undertakers and a thatched cottage were set alight on 15 January.
At their peak, 27 crews were tackling the fires in Rokemarsh and Crowmarsh Gifford which started within 10 minutes of each other shortly after 03:00 GMT. No-one was hurt.
In the first blaze, Jean Gladstone, 80, escaped unhurt from her thatched cottage on Quakers Corner in Rokemarsh.
Minutes later, a second fire was reported at Howard Chadwick Funeral Service in the village of Crowmarsh Gifford.
The third blaze engulfed the nearby council offices.
No explanation as to why Main started the fires was given in court, though at the time there were suggestions it was in connection with a planning row.
It was revealed in court that he has mental health issues.
A decision on whether a trial will proceed over the count of arson with intent to endanger life will be made next month.
He has been remanded in custody.
Main set the fires using gas cylinders. The burnt-out wreckage of a car that ploughed in to the council building moments before it became engulfed in flames was found in the foyer.
Gas canisters were found at all three fire sites as well as at Main's home.
Four hundred staff worked at the offices. The fire completely destroyed the planning department and badly affected the environmental health department and housing department.
Planning applications and comments submitted in the days before the fire were destroyed and had to be resubmitted
The complex also housed about two-thirds of the Vale of the White Horse District Council's staff.
The authorities' websites were also temporarily offline after the blaze.
The funeral parlour reopened last month following £100,000 of repair work.
The council has been operating out of Vale of the White Horse District Council offices in Abingdon since the fire.
Staff are due to move into rented offices in Milton Park, Didcot at the end of May.
Fourteen people died and another 49 were injured on Monday afternoon.
St Petersburg is the second largest city in Russia.
The explosion happened as the train travelled between two underground stations.
The driver continued to the next stop, which allowed passengers to be helped more easily by emergency services. His actions have been praised as helping to save further lives.
Russia's emergency services quickly arrived on the scene and took people to hospital.
The St Petersburg metro system was shut down and three days of mourning were declared.
Another device was found at a different metro station, but was safely defused.
The Russian government has said it is introducing extra security measures.
Details are still coming out about who was behind the bomb.
The Russian Prime Minister, Dmitry Medvedev, has described the explosion as a "terrorist act", but officials say they are investigating all other possibilities too.
So far, no group has said it carried out the attack.
Russian authorities have said they have identified a suspect, who is thought to have also died in the explosion.
The Russian President Vladimir Putin was in St Petersburg - his home city - when the blast happened.
He visited the scene on Monday evening and laid flowers at a makeshift shrine.
People lit candles and placed flowers at the entrance to the metro station following the incident.
A service was held at a chapel in Russia's capital city Moscow, with prayers for those affected by the blast.
Many world leaders have condemned the attack.
UK Prime Minister Theresa May said she had written to President Putin to offer her condolences.
"I'm very clear, as the people of the UK were after the attack in London, that we will prevail. The terrorists will not win."
The White House said US President Donald Trump had spoken to Mr Putin by phone and offered "full support" in bringing those responsible to justice.
It's important to remember that things like this are still extremely rare - that is why they're in the news.
If you're feeling worried then it's best to talk to someone you trust, like a parent or teacher.
There's more advice here on what to do if you're upset by the news. | A man has admitted starting a series of overnight fires in Oxfordshire, including one that caused major damage to council offices.
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An investigation has started after an explosion on a train in the Russian city of St Petersburg. |
What is the summary of the given information? | The Welsh Language Commissioner Meri Huws said she had seen a "significant increase" in complaints about the services offered to Welsh speakers at banks over the past weeks and months.
She said she would use a statutory review to try to find out how improve the experiences of Welsh customers.
She is inviting members of the public to give her feedback.
"As part of the review I will also gather evidence from the banks and experts in the banking sector," the commissioner added. | Welsh language services offered by banks in Wales are to be reviewed by a watchdog |
Write a short summary of the following excerpt. | Eyewitness Simon Crowcroft, from Jersey, told the Islington Gazette he came across the "strange scene" on Upper Street while in the city on Tuesday.
The Met Police said officer Dan Smith was helping a man who had collapsed. He was treated at the scene.
A force spokesman said the officer's horse, Invictor, was "showing he's a team player".
The Met said its mounted horse unit carries out day-to-day patrols and is tasked like any other unit.
A London Ambulance spokesman added: "We were to reports of an unwell person on Upper Street. We treated a man at the scene but did not take anyone to hospital." | A horse appearing to get on a bus bemused a passer-by in north London. |
Provide a brief summary for the information below. | The Brazilian won on Easy Touch, Dashing Dart, Mr Stunning, Victor Emperor, Cool And Neat, Beat The Clock, Mighty Maverick and Prawn Baba.
Moreira rode in 10 of the 11 races on the card.
"The feeling I have now is something special," he told the South China Morning Post. "Today has to share the top spot as my best day in racing."
Moreira had eight winners from eight rides at Kranji in Singapore in 2013 and also rode eight in a day in his native Brazil in 2008. | Jockey Joao Moreira has broken a record in Hong Kong by riding eight winners on a single card at Sha Tin. |
Give a concise summary of the following information. | Officers carried out door to door inquiries and reviewed CCTV after Mr McLaren was reported missing from his Letham home on 25 February.
His body was recovered on 8 April in the river near to the Friarton Bridge after police were alerted.
Mr McLaren's family said that he would be greatly missed and they were understandably upset by their loss.
The chancellor announced a package of measures in the March Budget, including a cap for the most vulnerable firms who were facing huge hikes in their bills.
Business rates are a property tax based on rental values.
Changes to the rates came in in April after a revaluation of property values for England and Wales last year.
Although most businesses overall have seen their bills either stay the same or decrease, the government was forced to act following reports that some small companies faced rate rises of up to 3,000%.
These are the so called "cliff edge" businesses which Philip Hammond promised to help.
He announced that firms losing small business rate relief - a discount given to businesses with properties below a certain rateable value - would not see their bills increase by more than £50 a month.
The government set aside £25m this year to pay for the pledge.
Whitstable florist Jane Antoniades felt a huge wave of relief when she heard her rates bill would not go up by more than £50 a month, having faced a 353% increase over five years.
But nearly three months on since the start of the new tax regime in April, she's still waiting for her bill to be adjusted.
"So far I've had to pay £437.08 per month, instead of just over £200. It's a huge difference.
"We haven't got the capacity to pay this extra money. It's going to have a real impact on our business if we can't claw this money back soon and start paying the right amount," says Jane.
She's not alone.
According to rates specialist, CVS, 24,986 small businesses have lost all, or part, of their small business rates relief.
Despite Mr Hammond's announcement, the money has yet to flow to most, if not all, of these businesses which are in need of the greatest support.
So why the delay?
For starters, the government's U-turn on rates was announced after the new bills were already printed and just days before they were posted.
Canterbury Council said it was working to update its system to enable new bills to be sent out.
But councils across England have told the BBC that they are awaiting further guidance from the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG).
Although local authorities are legally able to go ahead and adjust existing bills, without the necessary published guidance from government they have no guarantee they will receive the money back from Whitehall.
And the general election has held things up.
"A common sense approach here is needed," says Mark Rigby, Chief Executive of CVS.
"The money to help those most in need is coming from the government and there is no reason why revised tax demands shouldn't have been sent out by local councils by now.
"These delays are simply causing panic, confusion and alarm for small firms,"
Councils have been left in limbo and have been pushing the government for guidance.
But within the last few days, the DCLG has reportedly written to local authority chief financial officers in England with the necessary paperwork.
A Local Government Association spokesperson said: "After receiving guidance, councils have now been able to begin working with businesses in their local areas to identify those eligible for this new discretionary relief funding."
A spokesperson for the DCLG also confirmed that help should soon be on the way.
"We have also published guidance on the additional relief available to support small businesses and have encouraged local authorities to inform businesses that are eligible as soon as possible."
That can't come soon enough for Jane and her small flower shop. Like other rate payers, she's got another big bill in the next few days.
"How long are they going to hold on to my money?
"We need this relief now. The rates system is such a problem for the whole High Street, and it's small independent traders who are bearing the brunt."
Bolasie, 27, injured his right knee during the Toffees' 1-1 draw with Manchester United on 4 December.
Dutch manager Koeman said on Wednesday: "It will be around 11-12 months before he is back. That is a big disappointment but he will come back."
Bolasie is due to have a second operation - on his anterior cruciate ligament - in the coming weeks.
More to follow. | A body recovered from the River Tay has been formally identified as missing Perth pensioner Robert McLaren.
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Thousands of small businesses in England who were promised financial help to ease the burden of hikes in business rates are still waiting.
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Everton winger Yannick Bolasie could be out for a year with a knee injury, says manager Ronald Koeman. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | Senior lawyer John Quinn has served as acting attorney general since 2013 after his predecessor Stephen Harding was suspended on charges of perjury and committing acts against public justice.
Mr Harding was acquitted of all charges in 2014 but retired on grounds of ill health in September.
Mr Quinn, an advocate with 30 years' experience, said it was a "great honour to be appointed by HM the Queen".
He added: "I will endeavour to serve the Crown and the Isle of Man community to the best of my abilities."
The position is a Crown appointment and not a government post.
The attorney general acts as legal adviser to the Lieutenant Governor, Council of Ministers and all government departments and represents the Crown in the prosecution of offences and drafting of legislation.
Mr Quinn has a seat on the Isle of Man's Legislative Council but cannot vote in Tynwald.
The government said arrangements are being made for an official swearing-in ceremony. | A Manx advocate has been appointed as the Isle of Man's new law chief. |
Write a summary for the following excerpt. | The Ironmen are playing under a new name having competed for the past decade as South Wales Scorpions.
The club are also relocating to Wern Sports Park, the home of Merthyr RFC.
Byrne helped Wales win rugby union's Six Nations Grand Slam in 2008, while he also played for Ospreys, Newport Gwent Dragons and Clermont Auvergne.
The 36-year-old retired from playing in April 2015 after failing to recover from a shoulder injury.
His appointment is due to be followed by news of player recruitment, with the Ironmen set to announce signings from Australia and New Zealand on Tuesday.
The club will play in League One of the Kingstone Press League, two tiers below the Super League, in 2017. | Former Wales and British and Irish Lions back Lee Byrne has been appointed director of rugby at rebranded rugby league side South Wales Ironmen. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | It follows the apparent suicide in September of activist Elliott Johnson, who had claimed he was bullied by party youth organiser Mark Clarke.
Number 10 said the PM was awaiting the results of an internal investigation, but Mr Johnson's father has called for an independent and external inquiry.
Mr Clarke denies all the allegations.
Allegations of bullying, sexual assault and intimidation have engulfed the party since 21-year-old Mr Johnson was found dead in September.
Mr Cameron said it was a "tragic loss of a talented young life".
He said: "I feel deeply for his parents it is an appalling loss to suffer... There needs to be and there is a proper inquiry where we ask all the questions, interview all the people who've come forward - that will take place.
He said an independent lawyer was overseeing the whole process to "make sure it reaches clear conclusions from the evidence that comes through".
His father, Ray Johnson, called for an external inquiry to be set up saying he believed the current investigation was "a cover up" and that he had no confidence in current party chairman Lord Feldman, who is conducting the inquiry.
He also called on Lord Feldman and former party chairman Grant Shapps to resign over claims they ignored repeated warnings about Mr Clarke - who was in charge of a campaigning initiative which bussed young volunteers around the country.
"I can't see how their inquiry can have any veracity at all... I complained that an inquiry run by themselves without independent oversight can't possibly be considered to be valid," he told BBC Newsnight.
"I want to get to the bottom of what happened to my son and I will fight for justice for him and for the other activists."
The Conservative Party has said that it received no written complaints until this summer about Mr Clarke's behaviour.
However, former chairwoman Baroness Warsi says she wrote to Mr Shapps, her successor, in January asking for action to be taken against Mr Clarke.
Lady Warsi has published the letter containing her concerns in the Guardian. In it she complained that Mr Clarke had sent a tweet which implied she had offended a Jewish member of a local Conservative Party.
Mr Clarke has said Lady Warsi is pursuing a personal vendetta against him.
The BBC's Newsnight programme has also seen an email written by a young Conservative activist, sent to the party in July last year, that complains of threats at the hands of Mr Clarke. The activist says nothing was done with the complaint.
Earlier this month, Mr Clarke was banned for life from the Conservative Party.
He says he strongly refutes all allegations of bullying, harassment, assault or attempted blackmail.
"I believe that these false allegations and this media firestorm are related to the events surrounding Elliott's sad death," he said.
"As such I will be co-operating with the coroner and providing him with the fullest information. This is the proper process. After the inquest I will look to take legal action for defamation in respect of these allegations."
The Conservative Party said it would not comment until it could "establish the facts". | The Conservative Party will hold a proper inquiry into allegations of bullying within its youth wing, Prime Minister David Cameron has said. |
Summarize the content provided below. | Tommy McGlinchey said a fire crew took more than an hour to find the hydrant close to his plant near Londonderry.
He said he is angry with the Stormont department responsible for cutting grass along public roads.
He is now facing a £400,000 repair bill as a result of the delay, he claimed.
A fire started at his Brickkiln Waste Ltd site on Heather Road on Tuesday 7 July, in a building containing a shredding machine, waste paper and cardboard.
Mr McGlinchey told BBC Radio Ulster's Stephen Nolan Show that he had to use a digger to scrape overgrowth from the hydrant along the roadside for firefighters to find and access it.
"It took them an hour, hour-and-a-half for them to connect to [the hydrant], and in the meantime the fire brigade couldn't deal with the fire properly," he said.
Had the grass along the verge been cut, he said, "the fire could've been out, saved us a lot of money and probably saved jobs, too".
He added that the fire service was "not to blame" for being unable to find the hydrant.
However, it is the responsibility of the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service (NIFRS) to "inspect fire hydrants periodically".
In response to a freedom of information request last year, NIFRS said it has a "rolling programme of hydrant inspections", and "endeavours to inspect high-risk sites annually where possible".
NIFRS reports fire hydrants that require attention to Northern Ireland Water, which then carries out the work.
But maintenance of the ground and vegetation around fire hydrants does not fall within NI Water's remit.
The responsibility for grass-cutting along roadsides lies with Transport NI, a body within the Department for Regional Development (DRD).
Transport NI has had its budget cut from about £40m to £12.8m, and an internal document seen by the BBC last month revealed that grass verges will only be cut once a year.
DRD told the BBC it would be "happy to respond to any requests for assistance" from NIFRS regarding overgrowth at hydrants.
A spokeswoman for the department said that there was "no budget available" for grass-cutting.
But she said DRD Minister Danny Kennedy had given the go-ahead for one cut this year because "he cannot allow road safety related maintenance to be stopped".
Mr McGlinchey described the situation as "ridiculous".
"This could've been a building with people in it, and the fire engines couldn't get the water. They need to sort this out," he said.
"I would advise them to take another look at it. It's dangerous."
UKIP MLA David McNarry, who sits on Stormont's regional development committee, said he had warned about the dangers caused by the cutbacks to roadside maintenance.
"The risks are far too great to put lives and property bottom of the list," he said.
"We have verges looking like jungles and weeds growing like triffids.
"[The department] needs to identify, with the fire service, where these hydrants are, particularly in rural areas, and they need to tend to them.
"They need to move now to prevent serious loss of lives."
Oliver McMullan, a Sinn Féin MLA, said more compensation claims for damage caused as a result of reduction to road maintenance would to be inevitable.
"If the minister doesn't stop and turn around his policy, we're going to be spending more and more of his budget in the courtrooms instead of out on the roads."
The win moved Barnsley level on points with sixth-placed Gillingham.
Posh were reduced to 10 men when Chris Forrester picked up two bookings in the space of 20 first-half seconds.
Ben Alnwick looked to have denied the hosts the win with a string of fine saves before Williams nodded in Adam Hammill's cross with seconds to go.
Media playback is not supported on this device
He took charge of the Welsh National League Division One West match between Gowerton and Crymych.
In Twickenham the All Blacks were 34-17 winners over Australia.
At the Athletic Ground in Gowerton today, the home team emerged 28-18 victors over their west Wales opponents. | A businessman who watched his recycling plant burn as firefighters struggled to find a water hydrant on an overgrown grass verge has blamed government cuts for the damage caused by the blaze.
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George Williams scored a late winner to secure a vital three points for Barnsley against Peterborough in their pursuit of a League One play-off spot.
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A week after officiating New Zealand's World Cup final win over Australia, Nigel Owens returned to action in Wales. |
Please summarize the following text. | He was found guilty of tax evasion by a court in his home country last June.
The ruling led to him being disqualified from involvement with Leeds under the Football League's owners' and directors' test.
His ban was deferred and the Football League will now discuss the matter at Thursday's board meeting.
Italian newspaper L'Unione Sarda reports that Cellino's acquittal was a result of a change in Italian law, which saw the offence he was charged with being decriminalised.
Leeds ended the Championship season in 13th place. | Leeds United chairman Massimo Cellino has been acquitted on appeal for failing to pay VAT on a Range Rover imported into Italy from the USA. |
Please provide a short summary of this passage. | The facilities at Ysbyty Gwynedd and Wrexham Maelor hospital are intended to free space at emergency departments and reduce demand for ward beds.
Patients will then be monitored for 24 hours before being sent home or admitted to hospital.
A similar unit is planned for Ysbyty Glan Clwyd at Bodelwyddan.
Dr Linda Dykes, consultant in emergency medicine at Ysbyty Gwynedd emergency department, said: "Staff in the emergency departments provide initial treatment and carry out any necessary tests, following which suitable patients can be transferred to the units."
She said this will reduce emergency department overcrowding as well as reducing the demand for specialty ward beds.
"Most patients admitted to the the units will simply require a period of observation before they can go home to be returned to the care of their GP, but a few may need to be admitted to hospital for a longer stay."
The units will also provide patients with an alternative to spending many hours in the main emergency department according to Lynn Roberts, senior nurse at Ysbyty Gwynedd emergency department.
"[They will provide] a much more appropriate and comfortable environment," she added.
Christine Lynes, associate chief of staff for primary, community and specialist medicine said the units would provide a "more effective service".
"This is an important development in reducing pressures on emergency departments and ensuring that we keep hospital beds free for those patients who really need them," she added. | Units have been opened at two north Wales hospitals for people who need extra monitoring after being admitted to emergency departments. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Denbighshire firm Clifford Jones Timber said just 100 hectares (250 acres) of new woodland was planted here last year.
The Welsh Government's target is 2,000 hectares a year.
The environmental agency, Natural Resources Wales, said commercial timber operations remained "a high priority".
But Clifford Jones' purchasing director Penny Lloyd said timber planting was now "vital for the survival of our industry".
"Back in the 1970s we were planting over 7,000 acres of trees every year - in recent years it's been less than 250 and this is a crop that takes 20 years plus to grow to maturity," she said.
The company produces 2.5 million fence posts at its plant in Ruthin and also in Scotland, and employs over 80 staff.
According to Welsh Government figures, the wood manufacturing industry in Wales is worth nearly £175m a year - and combined with forestry, provides work for up to 11,000 people.
"There's a huge market for our timber. Every sawmill in Wales would double or treble production if the timber was there to feed that mill," said the Clifford Jones chairman Richard Jones.
"We are constantly looking at ways of diversifying so that we get the maximum from the timber we bring in through the gates but that is in increasingly short supply because of lack of investment since the 1990s."
Natural Resources Wales has insisted it is committed to helping the industry.
It manages about 117 hectares of Wales' 306 hectares of woodland.
"This year we are restocking more than 1,200 hectares of the Welsh woodland estate - which compares favourably with any of the previous five years," said Ruth Jenkins, head of natural resource planning at NRW.
"In that time, we have had to deal with a massive outbreak of P ramorum, which has had a devastating effect on Welsh forests - proportionately more than the rest of the UK - but we are responding to this by creating a far more diverse and resilient woodland.
"During this time we have worked closely with the timber industry to create new markets for the additional larch which has come to the market." | Wales needs to plant more trees to protect the home grown timber industry, one of the UK's largest fencing producers has warned. |
Summarize the information given below. | Mary Mitchell O'Connor made the comment during a parliamentary debate on Thursday.
She said she "met a number of people who are negotiating the Brexit deal for the UK".
She added: "They do not know what they are doing and they do not know when they will be invoking Article 50."
Mrs O'Connor was in London on Wednesday where she met Secretary of State for International Trade, Liam Fox, and the Secretary of State for Business, Greg Clark.
The idea is based on The Cube in Brisbane, Australia, which has 48 multi-touch screens across two storeys.
Dinosaurs, physics and data relevant to the local area are among the subjects visitors can interactively explore.
A Swansea version would go on the civic centre site and form part of the city centre's £500m regeneration.
It is being explored between Swansea council, Swansea University and site developers Trebor.
This site would also include a national public aquarium, an aquatic science research facility and a science gallery.
"The Cube at the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane has been phenomenally successful, bringing science to life by using 21st Century interactive, unlimited multi-touch technology for the benefit of local schools, communities and visitors," said council leader Rob Stewart.
"We're exploring the potential to introduce something similar on the seafront in Swansea.
"This proposal would attract many thousands of visitors, open up jobs, benefit Swansea residents of all ages, and help keep talented Swansea University graduates in Swansea."
Swansea University's Prof Chris Allton said: "The university's fascinating research into marine life, climate change, computer technology and a host of other activities could be explored by using innovative, ground-breaking technology like that developed in The Cube. The opportunities are endless."
The other part of the city centre regeneration has gone out to public consultation.
Residents are being asked to give their views on the St David's site which has been renamed Swansea Central.
It will include a digital arena, cinema, cafes, restaurants, shops, a hotel and apartments.
A public exhibition took place in the city centre at the weekend. | Ireland's enterprise minister has said the UK's Brexit negotiators "do not know what they are doing".
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A centre housing the world's largest interactive digital screens for learning about science and technology could be heading to Swansea. |
Summarize the provided section. | Concerns have emerged about how the department is being run with 23 academic staff leaving since 2013.
Several past and present employees told the BBC they were unhappy with the way they were treated.
The claims have been made against the school's dean Professor Nigel Piercy. The university has declined to comment on the specific allegations.
Bethan Jenkins, AM, has called for an external review.
The School of Management is headed by Professor Nigel Piercy who began his role as dean in 2013. In the two years since, 23 academic staff - the majority at senior level - have left with several citing the way the department was being managed as the reason behind their departure.
A number of current and former staff have spoken anonymously to BBC Wales' Newyddion 9 programme for S4C alleging poor management.
One academic described the school's management as being "a dictatorship" while another told the programme there was a culture of exclusion within the school.
"Staff have been called human garbage, told we're toxic, miserable old dogs, hippy dippies... so the language is totally inappropriate for the work place. Runs totally contrary to the dignity at work policy and of course is very upsetting for those who are being referred to," they said.
"People... are excluded from meetings, activities, events... it sends a clear message that those people are not wanted and do not have a place in the future of the school," they added.
Another academic explained the reasons for leaving the school: "I left because of a change in management that I found very difficult cope with - it changed very abruptly, very dramatically and it was quite traumatic really," they said.
"There was always a looming fear, I think, that very much started to venture towards a culture of bullying.
In October 2014, students raised concerns with a petition attracting more than a thousand signatures. In February 2015, there was a demonstration calling for change.
In an internal document seen by BBC Wales, Prof Nigel Piercy wrote: "Certain senior individuals have created themselves into a cancer - that must now be removed to allow the rest of the school to survive."
Sir Roderick Evans, a pro-chancellor at the university, was asked to conduct a review into the running of the school by the university's council. He found the complaints "were sufficiently consistent and credible as to require investigation."
BBC Wales understands that an investigation is under way.
The university said the school was going through a period of change to improve, which had seen increased applications to study at the school and it rise up the league tables.
"The staffing in the School of Management has been substantially expanded, with almost 90 new appointments, to add new teaching and research capabilities and enhanced professional services to support students," the university said in a statement.
Adding: "We cannot comment on individual cases, but we are an equal opportunities employer and take seriously any allegation of harassment and bullying."
South Wales West assembly member, Bethan Jenkins, was also contacted by individuals at the university following several incidents at the school.
She said: "It has been detrimental to their good name, and that is why others and myself are hoping we can get an external review, not an internal review, an external review to look into all of this, so that we can come to a positive conclusion." | An investigation into Swansea University's School of Management is under way, the BBC understands. |
Give a concise summary of the passage below. | There are 1.2 million people over 50 in Wales and more than a third of 50 to 64-year-olds are not working.
Chairman William Graham said this was "alarming" while work was "now a necessity - not a choice for the majority of this age group".
There was a need to dispel "myths" that older workers were less productive.
In Wales, 53,000 people aged 65 and over are employed, an increase of 14% over the year to March 2014.
People over 50 are more likely to be unemployed for more than a year than any other age group in Wales, the committee found.
Older People's Commissioner Sarah Rochira told AMs she found this "quite alarming".
They were "undervalued, underappreciated and very much an afterthought" in terms of programmes to help them.
The proportion of over 50s out of work in Wales is the highest in the UK, apart from in Northern Ireland.
Of those who are working, one in three are working part-time, with women more likely to be working part-time than men.
Barriers included care responsibilities but also ageism, and stereotypes that the over 50s are in poor health, are less productive or are slower to adapt to new technologies.
Prime Cymru, a charity which helps older workers find work or set up their own businesses, told the AMs that the employers' group the CBI has forecast that the UK will need 13.5 million new workers in the next 10 years and that there are only 7 million young people entering the workforce.
The report makes 11 recommendations, including:
A Welsh government spokesperson said: "We will consider the report and respond in due course."
CASE STUDY - A NEW DAWN - FROM 'SCRAPHEAP' TO BUSINESS OWNER
Dawn Wilcox helped children struggling with reading in schools when she was made redundant at the age of 52.
Her daughter, 26, was also made redundant at the same time in March 2014 and they pooled their redundancy money to start their own cafe business in Ystrad, Rhondda Cynon Taff.
"I was quite scared when they delivered the news. When you lose your job it drains you of everything, you feel so worthless. You think 'all these years I've put into training and that's not needed anymore'.
"I had a lot of family commitments besides so I didn't feel like going through the retraining route.
"It's nice to come into work knowing you're your own boss and doing something totally different." | There is an urgent need for policies to improve the job prospects for the over 50s, the Welsh assembly's enterprise and business committee has warned. |
Write a brief summary of the document. | The world champion beat team-mate Nico Rosberg by 0.543secs in a breathless final few minutes on a drying track.
Rosberg will start sixth after a grid penalty for a gearbox change following a crash in practice.
That moves Force India's Nico Hulkenberg up to second on the grid. McLaren's Jenson Button qualified fifth but will start third.
Reaction: Drivers split over kerbs after crashes
Button benefitted from Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel also being penalised five places on the grid for an unauthorised gearbox change.
The mixed-up grid promises an exciting race, with Rosberg and Vettel coming through the field, Button trying to hold on to his position and the Ferrari and Red Bull drivers starting the race on the super-soft tyre rather than the ultra-soft tyre of everyone else in the top 10. As long as it doesn't rain...
Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen was sixth fastest ahead of Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo, and they will be promoted to fourth and fifth on the grid.
The rest of the top 10 was occupied by Williams' Valtteri Bottas, Red Bull's Max Verstappen and Williams' Felipe Massa.
"It was a really fun session, said Hamilton. "Those sessions that start dry and then go wet, and here it dries up so quickly."
Button, who excelled as always in the ever-changing conditions in a final session that started wet but dried enough for slicks halfway through, predicted that it would be a "tough day" because the teams lacked knowledge about the tyres.
His team-mate Fernando Alonso will be quietly fuming, after being sent out by mistake on used tyres for the one lap he got in second qualifying, on which he was inevitably 0.6secs slower than Button.
Attempts to improve on new tyres were thwarted by yellow caution flags and then rain, and the Spaniard will start 14th.
"Really happy," said Button. "Those mixed conditions are tough. When you have to find your feet every corner you get to, it is a lot of fun."
The rain, which hit in the closing minutes of the second part of qualifying, was only one reason for the high-octane action.
Another was a further two suspension failures, for Force India's Sergio Perez and Toro Rosso's Daniil Kvyat, following Rosberg's crash in final practice for the same reason.
Perez managed to get back to the pits but Kvyat, whose suspension failed on the exit of Turn Eight, had a heavy crash from which he emerged unhurt.
The failures appear to have been caused by excessive loads caused by a new kerb design at the Red Bull Ring.
Kvyat has called for the kerbs to be changed.
The Russian said: "Once you're on those kerbs you're not in control if the suspension breaks. At least on the AstroTurf, you had control.
"At the last corner, everyone is going off [with] four wheels - they wanted to make it better but actually they made it worse."
Hamilton added on the kerbs issue: "For me, looking at it, obviously those yellow kerbs are quite dangerous, we have now seen a couple of incidents.
"I don't know how many more it will take before someone ends up in the wall and gets hurt.
"The idea is good because we don't want to be off the circuit but perhaps another solution is needed."
Austrian Grand Prix qualifying results
Austrian Grand Prix coverage details
Fire crews said the man fell about 20ft from the roof of the building in Broxburn's Greendykes Road and got stuck at about 03:30.
They were eventually able to reach him through a shop on the ground floor and brought him out on a stretcher.
The man has been taken to Edinburgh Royal Infirmary with a suspected back injury. | Lewis Hamilton took a sensational pole position in a dramatic, rain-hit qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix.
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A man who fell from a roof in West Lothian and became trapped is being treated for spinal injuries. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Police will be able to seize valuables worth more than 10,000 kroner (1,340 euros; £1,000) from refugees to cover housing and food costs.
MPs also approved plans to delay family reunions for asylum seekers.
A spokesman for UN chief Ban Ki-moon criticised the decision, saying refugees deserved compassion.
"People who have suffered tremendously, who have escaped war and conflict, who've literally walked hundreds of kilometres if not more and put their lives at risk by crossing the Mediterranean should be treated with compassion and respect, and within their full rights as refugees," said Stephane Dujarric.
The bill has been widely criticised by human rights groups.
Why are countries seizing refugees' valuables?
Migrants feel chill of tighter borders
Europe's migrant crisis
The prospect of refugees having possessions seized has drawn comparisons to the confiscation of valuables from Jews during World War Two.
The government has said that items of sentimental value, such as wedding rings, will be exempt. It also raised the amount refugees will be allowed to keep from 3,000 kroner to 10,000 following objections.
The government has said that the policy brings refugees in line with unemployed Danes, who also face having to sell assets above a certain level to claim benefits.
However, critics have said that many Danes have unemployment insurance that saves them having to sell assets, and anyway would not face the kind of searches proposed under the new law.
The new measures also mean the period migrants will have to wait before applying for relatives to join them will be extended from one year to three - a move aimed at discouraging new arrivals.
Temporary residence permits will be shortened and the conditions for obtaining a permanent permit will be restricted.
Denmark received more than 21,000 asylum seekers in 2015.
MPs approved the measures by 81 votes to 27 following a lengthy, and at times angry, debate. One MP abstained and 70 others were absent. The centre-left opposition Social Democrats and the anti-immigration Danish People's Party both voted in favour.
Martin Henriksen, immigration spokesman for the Danish People's Party, described the numbers of migrants entering Europe as an "exodus".
"More needs to be done. We need more border controls, we need tighter immigration rules," he said.
But Johanne Schmidt-Nielsen, of the opposition left Red-Green Alliance that opposed the bill, said it was "a symbolic move to scare people away".
Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen of the centre-right Venstre party had previously shrugged off criticism of the proposals calling them "the most misunderstood bill in Denmark's history".
The UN refugee agency (UNHCR), the European Commission and other groups have criticised the proposals.
Amnesty International regional director John Dalhuisen described the vote as "mean spirited".
"This is a sad reflection of how far Denmark has strayed from its historic support of international norms enshrined in the Refugee Convention," he said.
Andreas Kamm, of the Danish Refugee Council, said they were concerned about the new limitations on family reunification.
"It hampers the integration process for those who already arrived and it leaves alone those who are back in the region, as vulnerable groups," he said.
"It's very worrying and it's very inhumane."
Denmark is not the first European country to demand the assets of asylum seekers.
Earlier this month, Switzerland was criticised by a refugee group for seizing assets from some 100 people in 2015. Under Swiss rules, asylum seekers have to hand over assets above $1,000 (£700; €900). | The Danish parliament has backed a controversial proposal to confiscate asylum seekers' valuables to pay for their upkeep. |
Can you provide a summary of this content? | More than 100 people have already arrived from refugee camps and are living in Leeds, Bradford, Kirklees, Calderdale, Sheffield and Hull.
All 21 councils have agreed to accept refugees as part of UK plans to house 20,000 people from Syria.
The government will meet the cost of housing and supporting the refugees.
Migration Yorkshire is the group tasked by the Home Office to establish which local authorities in the region will take Syrian refugees.
Its head, Dave Brown, said: "Every single local authority has signed up to this. That's quite a staggering agreement.
"I think the people of Yorkshire should be quite proud that we are doing this collectively."
Councils have provided a breakdown of how many refugees they will be accepting after being contacted by the BBC.
1,500
refugees in total
225 settling in Leeds
110 to 130 arriving in Kirklees
100 coming to East Yorkshire
Leeds - 225
Kirklees - between 110 to 130
Wakefield - 100
Bradford - 50
Calderdale - 50
East Riding - 100
Hull - 80
North East Lincolnshire - 10
North Lincolnshire did not supply information.
Barnsley, Rotherham and North Lincolnshire councils did not provide figures.
Migration Yorkshire said details with some authorities were still being finalised but the total number would be around 1,500, with the majority arriving over the next three years.
Mr Brown said each individual authority had decided how many refugees it would take based on factors such as housing, school availability and public support.
He said it was up to councils to decide how best to house them, whether that was in council properties or private rented accommodation.
York - 60
Harrogate - 50
Scarborough - 34
Hambleton - 28
Selby - 26
Craven - 18
Ryedale - 16
Richmondshire - 16
Sheffield - 50
Doncaster - fewer than 10
Barnsley and Rotherham did not supply information.
In Leeds, 50 refugees have arrived in the city so far.
The council said the majority of these had be given homes in the private rented sector.
One family from Syria said they were happy to be safe and had received a warm welcome from their children's school.
Imad and his family fled after bombing in Qunaitra which injured one of his three young children.
He said: "In Syria the kids were frightened, they can't even sleep because of all the noise of the bombs.
"If you go to work they (warring factions) stop you and ask where are you going."
He said eventually he took his family to Lebanon but after four years of living in tents, he concluded "there was no work, no education and no services".
Imad said his family had been treated well in the UK and the children were being given an education.
He said he did not think it would be possible to return to Syria in the short term
"Look at Iraq, it's been over 15 years and look at the situation over there and how destroyed it is," he said.
Mr Brown said the resettlement programme had gone well so far.
"I was at the airport last week when people came in and you can't help wonder what's going through their minds after they've been through so much," he said.
"The overwhelming memory for me is they're just normal people. They're coming through thinking what they want for their family, how they're going to get on with their lives.
"They don't want to talk politics... they just want to be in a safe place to bring up their children and be normal like the rest of us." | Councils in Yorkshire and the Humber region are to take around 1,500 Syrian refugees as part of the government's resettlement programme. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | The Health Foundation review of official NHS data between 2011-12 and 2016-17 found longer waits for cancer, A&E and routine operations.
Last year the NHS missed all three targets for the first time in its history - and researchers warned it could get worse before it improves.
But the Conservatives said investment was being made to improve services.
"Under Theresa May's leadership, the NHS has more doctors, more nurses and record funding," a spokesman added.
The Health Foundation chose the last five years because 2012 is when the most recent target - the 18-week wait for routine operations - came into force.
It found growing numbers of people were waiting longer than the official target times for each of the three measures:
Researcher Tim Gardner said: "Maintaining, let alone improving, the quality of care provided is going to be very difficult in the current financial climate.
"Funding for the NHS in England will need to increase if these hard won gains to the quality of patient care are to be upheld and built upon in the future.
"Waiting time targets for A&E, cancer and consultant-led treatment are a useful barometer of pressure on the NHS."
The four-hour A&E target was established in 2004 - although the way it was measured changed in 2010.
Currently 95% of patients are expected to be seen and treated or admitted in four hours, but that was achieved in only 89.1% of cases last year - the worst performance since the target was introduced.
The 2.5 million patients who waited more than four hours was seven times higher than the numbers who waited that long a decade ago.
On hospital operations, which includes things such as knee and hip replacements, 92% of patients should get treatment within 18 weeks of going on the waiting list.
That was introduced in 2012 - another target was used previously for routine care - and has been met each year since, until 2016-17 when 90.7% were seen in that timeframe.
The cancer target dates back to 2009. It measures the length of time between an urgent referral from a GP to the point at which treatment starts. This is meant to take no longer than 62 days in 85% of cases.
But last year only 81.8% of patients were seen that quickly, according to the Health Foundation.
England is not unique in that it is struggling to hit its targets. The way performance is measured is different in the rest of the UK.
For example, Wales only aims to carry out hospital operations in 26 weeks rather than 18.
But on each of the three measures, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have been struggling to achieve what they have set themselves.
The full year figures are not yet available for any of them. But looking at monthly performance, it is clear that Northern Ireland has the worst.
On A&E performance some months have seen over a quarter of patients waiting longer than four.
Scotland - on a month-by-month basis - has tended to have the best performance. | Hospitals waiting times in England have deteriorated markedly in the past five years, an analysis shows. |
Can you provide a brief summary for this document? | Paul French, who has written on North Korean state control, told BBC World News that Hyon's execution was about the "total obliteration of someone, and of any opposition, and therefore having total control".
The idea "is to render a person a non-person... so there isn't even a corpse left to give to the family for burial," said Alexander Neill, a senior fellow with think tank II-SS.
"What underlies all this is the psychology of the identity of an individual in a regime, and once they are disloyal they are effectively a non-entity."
North Korea is not alone in conducting brutal executions.
When Argentina's last military government was in power from 1976 to 1983, it executed people by throwing them out of planes into the ocean, in a practice known as "death flights".
Other countries have a history of abusing a prisoner's corpse after execution.
In Sudan and Saudi Arabia, prisoners can be crucified as punishment but it is usually done after he or she is killed by a more conventional method such as hanging or decapitation.
Ugandan despot Idi Amin reportedly fed the bodies of dead prisoners to crocodiles.
Public humiliation
Brutally executing someone in the public eye is designed as "humiliation of the highest order", said Mr Neill.
In a similar vein, China has held mass show trials of prisoners accused of terrorism in Xinjiang.
These involved prisoners paraded in trucks in sports stadiums and physically restrained so that they are forced to bow.
These "reinforce that the collective is more important than the individual, and it's about controlling thoughts rather than behaviour," said Mr Neill. | Amid reports of Hyon Yong-chol's death by anti-aircraft gunfire, analysts say North Korea clearly wanted to send one clear message - that no one person can be more important than the state. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | Naweed Ali, 29, and Khobaib Hussain, 25, both of Sparkhill, Birmingham, and Mohibur Rahman, 33, of Stoke-on-Trent, were convicted at the Old Bailey.
They were arrested last August in an undercover police sting.
A fourth man, Tahir Aziz, 38, from Stoke-on-Trent, was found guilty of the same offence.
They will be sentenced on Thursday.
Police say the men, who had all denied preparing terrorist acts, were inspired by so-called Islamic State, also known as Daesh.
They were described as "dangerous men" who were committed to carrying out a "mass casualty attack".
Officers said the case was "one of the most complex counter terrorism investigations in a number of years".
The court heard how the members of the gang called themselves the Three Musketeers when exchanging encrypted messages on the Telegram app.
Evidence found on the men's phones and other devices showed they had shared "radical and extremist beliefs" in messages.
They were caught after counter-terrorism officers set up a fake courier firm, called Hero Couriers, where Hussain and Ali were offered driving shifts.
Ali arrived for his first shift at the fake firm in August last year, leaving his Seat Leon car at the Birmingham depot, where MI5 officers searched the vehicle with a view to bugging it.
However, inside they found a JD Sports bag containing a partially-constructed pipe bomb and meat cleaver with the word "kafir" - meaning non-believer - scratched on it.
An imitation gun, cartridges, a 9mm bullet, latex gloves and industrial tape were also recovered.
The trial was told when police searched Aziz's car they found a samurai-style sword next to the driver's seat.
All four men were arrested on 26 August.
The men claimed the incriminating evidence was planted by an undercover officer, known as "Vincent", who posed as the boss of the fake courier firm.
The officer, who gave evidence anonymously, was cross-examined for 12 days and repeatedly rejected the allegations.
The jury heard how the defendants had been looking at violent material online, joined extremist social media groups and bought new mobile phones to help them further their plans.
Neighbours Ali and Hussain have previously been jailed for terrorism offences.
They had attempted to join an al-Qaeda training camp in Pakistan in 2011. However, when they arrived back in the UK they were arrested and the following year both pleaded guilty to engaging in conduct in preparation of terrorist acts.
The trial heard the pair first met Rahman - who had been convicted of possessing an al-Qaeda magazine - while in prison.
Responding to the verdicts, Chief Superintendent Matt Ward, head of the West Midlands Counter Terrorism Unit, said: "Back in 2010 and 2011, they were inspired by al Qaeda.
"Since they've come out of prison, they've been inspired by the Daesh ideology.
"They shared lots of material regarding that ideology, lots of very violent material, they were trying to encourage others to join them on that journey."
He said the men had "carefully planned and took steps to avoid drawing attention to themselves", including leaving their mobile phones at home when they travelled to meet in Stoke.
Mr Ward also defended his officers, including one who was accused in court of planting evidence.
"Throughout the trial the defence made a number of accusations," Mr Ward said.
"Many of those accusations were groundless, they went against the integrity of the undercover operatives, they went against the integrity of the wider investigation.
"What I would say is just because a defence lawyer says something in court, doesn't make it true."
The four-month trial was held partly in secret in the interests of national security and two anonymous witnesses gave evidence behind closed doors.
Sue Hemming, from the CPS, said the men "shared the same radical belief in violent jihad".
"Recent attacks have demonstrated the kind of horror these defendants could have caused had they not been stopped," she added. | Three men who dubbed themselves the Three Musketeers have been found guilty of plotting a terror attack on a police or military target in the UK. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | 2 February 2017 Last updated at 06:42 GMT
Campaigners are calling for an end to the use of shark nets at beaches. They are used to stop sharks getting close to people but they are killing dolphins and turtles too.
More have been installed after a number of recent shark attacks on the east coast - but some nets have been cut deliberately by those who don't like them.
Watch Ricky's report to find out more. | There is a big debate going on in Australia about how to protect people from sharks. |
What is a brief summary of the information below? | Kadiatu Harris was caring for Matthew Simmonds, 39, at his Hampshire home where he died on 6 July 2011.
His ventilator, which should have been switched over on a shift change with another nurse, was turned off.
Ms Harris originally denied causing his death but changed her case at the Nursing and Midwifery Council hearing.
Ms Harris previously admitted contributing to Mr Simmond's death and reducing his chances of survival.
However, Rory Mulchrone, who presented the case to the conduct and competence committee on behalf of the Nursing and Midwifery Council, said Ms Harris changed her case on the basis that "but for her actions in contributing to the death of Patient B [he] would not have died when and how he did".
Mr Simmonds, from Chandlers Ford, was suffering from von Hippel-Lindau disease - a genetic form of cancer.
An inquest found the lack of ventilation had caused his death, the hearing at Stratford in London was told.
However, a police investigation had not led to the CPS prosecuting either Ms Harris or the nurse she had taken over from, Ms Harris' lawyer told the hearing. | A nurse who continued doing agency work while signed-off sick from her job at Dorset's Poole Hospital has admitted causing the death of a patient. |
Can you summarize the following content in brief? | Dominic Cole OBE said he aimed to create "more natural habitats and settings" for the Leicestershire zoo's animals and visitors.
The zoo is renowned for its primates and supplied chimps for the PG Tips television adverts for about 30 years.
Mr Cole has been commissioned as part of a £55m project to transform the zoo over the next 20 years.
He said he would be helping the team to "realise their vision of changing the feel of the zoo, from looking at animals in artificial environments, to creating more natural habitats and settings that feel right for animals and visitors".
The landscaping work will be done piece by piece over the next decade, so the huge 88-acre site can remain open during the work.
Claire Oldham, director of discovery and learning at Twycross Zoo, said she would like to see "really dense planting that surrounds the visitors".
"At the moment we are quite an open, flat site," she said.
"What we are trying to do is bring some height and some different typographies into the site that means it's going to feel much more like a journey of discovery for our visitors if they walk around our animal habitats." | Twycross Zoo is to be transformed by the landscape architect who designed the masterplan for the Eden Project. |
Can you summarize the following paragraph? | The seven Ukrainians and one Lithuanian have had to stay with the MV Nicola in Invergordon after the vessel got into difficulty in the Pentland Firth.
The boat's owners also went bankrupt, but following a takeover by a new company the seamen will be able to return home on Thursday.
During their time in Scotland they were taken to Ross County games in Dingwall.
Drew Anderson, Invergordon's port chaplain, said the eight had become keen supporters of the SPFL team.
He told BBC Alba: "They went to all the home matches at Ross County.
"The club was kind enough to give them hats and scarves and tickets for the matches.
"They are now staunch Ross County supporters."
During the sailors' spell in the Highlands, Ross County ended a string of defeats with a run of five wins and a draw - one of the best performances in the SPFL.
The men also volunteered at the Blytheswood charity depot in Evanton, near Invergordon.
The eight have been able to return home following the acquisition of the boat's owners by a Dutch shipping company.
Mr Anderson said: "It's been difficult for them being so far from home and in a foreign country, and sometimes short of money.
"They are really looking forward to seeing their wives and children." | Eight sailors have been stuck in Scotland for more than four months after their ship broke down. |
What is the summary of the provided article? | Clive Lewis, David Lammy and Geraint Davies have supported the new Labour Campaign for Free Movement - as have two MEPs and some union leaders.
Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn has said freedom of movement "ends when we leave the European Union" and should be replaced by "fair" managed migration.
However the campaign says ending free movement would be "counterproductive".
Its founding statement says it is committed to "defending and extending" free movement of people "in the context of the debate around Brexit".
"The UK is at a crossroads in its relationship to the rest of the world and so is our party," the statement says.
"Immigrants and free movement are being scapegoated by a political and economic elite that is subjecting ordinary people to cuts and austerity... Labour should respond with clarity, humanity and solidarity," the campaign added.
At the moment, citizens from the other 27 EU member states have the right to come and work and live in the UK.
But immigration was one of the central topics of last year's EU referendum campaign, and ministers have promised to "take back control" of the UK's borders as they negotiate Brexit.
Labour's official position is that freedom of movement will end after Brexit.
Its 2017 manifesto said the party would "develop and implement fair immigration rules".
Among others signing up to the pro-free movement Labour campaign are the general secretaries of the TSSA, UCU, and BFAWU trade unions; the MEPs Julie Ward and Lucy Anderson; the chairman of the left-wing think tank Compass; and various people from the national coordinating group of Momentum - formed after Mr Corbyn's successful 2015 leadership campaign.
Ms Ward, MEP for North West England, said: "Labour must stand up for freedom of movement, for a pluralistic society, and for the rights of EU nationals who live, work, study and pay into our tax economy.
"We must never cede greater benefits for capital and goods than we do for people," she added.
Manuel Cortes, general secretary of the TSSA (Transport Salaried Staffs' Association), said Labour should campaign to end the exploitation of workers, not end free movement.
But a Conservative MP and Brexit supporter, Andrea Jenkyns, said the campaigners were "out of touch with the country and their own party".
"The referendum result was a clear vote to take back control of our borders, and the Labour manifesto itself pledged to end free movement," she said.
The government has said freedom of movement will end when the UK leaves the European Union at the end of March 2019 - although Chancellor Philip Hammond has suggested full controls could take "some time". | Three Labour MPs have backed a campaign for the party to champion continued freedom of movement after Brexit. |
Please summarize the passage below. | Roy Devine told a council meeting on Tuesday that the airport will not break even until 2021/22.
It is currently running at a £2.145m loss per year, paid for by Derry City and Strabane District Council ratepayers.
While this subsidy has reduced by £1m since 2010, a further £1.3m is owed in charges on historic capital loans.
Mr Devine said that they were in discussions with other airlines to try to attract new routes to the airport, following a number of recent losses.
They have included routes from Derry to Birmingham and Alicante, while a proposed Derry-Dublin Citywings flight was scrapped last month following the Brexit vote.
Mr Devine told the meeting that an "over-supply" of airline routes flying to and from Belfast, an increase in business rates incurred by the airport and cash-strapped customers in the region were all pressing challenges.
"I do acknowledge things are challenging at the moment but we do believe there are better days ahead and we would ask council to stay with us," he added.
"I think the airport is vital to the infrastructure of the north west. I think the city would be poorer without having it."
Mr Devine added that extra costs outlined in a new five year business plan related to money needed to cover staff wages, and cover the recent loss of the Birmingham route.
However, Independent councillor Paul Gallagher said the airport now looked like "a vanity project for this area", the "burden" of which is being endured by ratepayers.
"As a business plan, I would say this concedes more than it gives. It concedes that we need to pay airlines to attract routes and that there is an inability to attract funding and attract and maintain new routes," Mr Gallagher said.
"CODA (City of Derry Airport) cannot keep coming back to this area and just looking for subvention, subvention, subvention."
Those comments were dismissed by SDLP councillor, John Boyle.
"We need connectivity; we have a very poor roads network here. For anyone to say we should give up and wave the white flag, to my mind would be ridiculous," he said.
"We have a responsibility to ratepayers to keep the airport running as well. There are many, many large businesses who depend upon it." | City of Derry Airport will not generate a profit for the next five years, according to the company's chairman. |
Provide a concise overview of the following information. | The scam involves transferring stolen money through children's bank accounts to hide it from the authorities.
According to The Times, the Met Police wrote to parents warning that pupils were being approached outside school gates and on social media.
Det Ch Insp Gary Miles said the Met wanted to "make parents aware so they can discuss this with their children".
In a statement, he added: "Children are getting accounts at a younger and younger age - 13-year-olds now have access to money that they didn't have before."
According to fraud prevention service Cifas, the number of so-called "misuse of facility" frauds involving people under 21 has almost doubled in the last year.
It said there were 4,222 cases in the first half of 2017, compared to 2,143 in the same period last year.
Cifas has previously reported that young people are increasingly tempted by fraudsters who offer a small cash fee in return for transferring money through their bank accounts.
Allowing a bank account to be used in this way carries a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison and could affect credit ratings, police said.
A force spokesman said: "The Met would always remind people not to allow anyone access to their bank accounts and that requests for money transfers should be declined unless you are certain you know where and from whom it has come." | Children are being targeted by criminals to act as money mules, police have warned. |
Please provide a short summary of this passage. | A hundred years ago during World War One, Germany declared unrestricted submarine warfare and started targeting hundreds of ships without warning.
The submarines shown were surrendered by Germany at the end of the war and sank off the coast of Cornwall.
The images from 1921 have been donated to Historic England.
More on the stranded submarines, and other news
The German submarines - known as U-boats - wrecked on the Cornish coast in Falmouth and some remains can still be seen.
German forces surrendered the submarines in 1918 and having been stripped of their engines, they became difficult to tow and occasionally sank or wrecked on British beaches.
In the year before unrestricted submarine warfare was declared by Germany, 431 ships were sunk by U-boats worldwide.
The following year, that number reached 1,263.
Roger Bowdler, from Historic England, said the declaration was "a decisive moment" in World War One.
He said: "It was seen as uncivilised, ungentlemanly and ultimately brought the might of the United States into the war."
The pictures were taken by naval officer Jack Casement and donated to the Historic England Archive by his family.
One third of the Submarine Service's total personnel died during World War One, the highest proportion of any branch of the armed services.
To commemorate their lives, the National Submarine War Memorial was unveiled in 1922, at Temple Pier on the Thames in London.
The memorial has now been upgraded to Grade II* listed status, which means it has an "above-average level of special interest". | Previously unseen pictures of German submarines stranded on the English coast have been released to mark the centenary of a wartime turning point. |
Give a brief summary of the following article. | Media playback is not supported on this device
He is just one of the many visually impaired tennis players benefitting from people helping put on their regular sessions in Finsbury Park in London.
Jessica Bavington, who started volunteering in the role about six years ago, is one of those.
"I was just absolutely fascinated by how it was even possible that someone could play tennis with potentially someone who's blind," she said. "It was just profoundly inspiring.
"Some people will see barriers in volunteering and actually there are not that many."
Do you know a local sports volunteer who deserves some much-needed recognition?
Nominate your local BBC Unsung Hero here - but hurry as entries close on Sunday, 23 October!
The 2016 Visually Impaired and Blind National Tennis Championships take place at the National Tennis Centre in Roehampton on 15-16 October.
The province's Home Minister Sarfraz Bugti said unidentified militants boarded the vehicles travelling to Karachi on Friday evening.
Passengers were then ordered off and shot dead, officials said.
Balochistan has seen a long-running conflict between separatists and security forces.
No group has yet said it carried out the attack on the two buses, which happened near the town of Mastung, south of the provincial capital, Quetta.
"The armed men were wearing the uniforms of the security forces," Mr Bugti told Reuters.
An operation was launched after reports of the incident emerged, and at least five people have been rescued, officials say.
However, the number of passengers abducted from on board remains unclear, Dawn newspaper reports.
Fighting is ongoing in the area between the attackers and security forces.
Those killed were mostly ethnic Pashtuns, a local official told the BBC. They are natives of northern Balochistan.
While separatists have regularly attacked government and military targets, attacks on Pashtuns are a rarity, the BBC's M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad says.
He says officials believe this may be a tactical move by insurgents to put pressure on security forces who have recently carried out several "search and kill" operations against insurgents in the region.
Rebels in Balochistan have been fighting for greater autonomy from Islamabad, and a bigger share of the region's natural resources.
Are you in Balochistan? Have you been affected by the issues in this story? You can share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.
If you are available to speak to a BBC journalist, please include a telephone number.
Cardiff and Vale University Health Board closed the unit after three babies tested positive for the highly-contagious Acinetobacter baumannii.
The exact cause of the infection is not known and investigations are ongoing.
Fourteen babies are being cared for in the unit and those who have received treatment are responding well.
The unit was closed in August when 12 babies tested positive for infections and reopened a few weeks ago.
The health board said at the time enhanced infection prevention control measures had been put in place.
Ruth Walker, the executive nurse director for Cardiff and Vale University Health Board, said: "I know staff are continuing to work hard and show a high level of commitment to resolving this.
"But we are continuing to do all we can to keep these babies safe and are working with our colleagues across the neonatal network to make sure expectant women are properly cared for." | "None of this would be possible without the lovely volunteers," says Naqi Hiader Rizvi.
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Gunmen in Pakistan's restive Balochistan province have attacked two buses, killing at least 19 passengers, officials have said.
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The neonatal unit at University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff has closed to new admissions because of an infection. |
Provide a brief summary of this section. | None of the 10 ethnic minority candidates standing in Wales for one the four parties with MPs at Westminster is in a seat where their party came first or second in 2010.
No black or Asian MP has ever been elected in Wales.
Race Council Cymru chair Ray Singh said Wales was "still staggering behind".
The candidates from a BAME (Black, Asian and minority ethnic) background include five Lib Dems, three Conservatives, two Plaid Cymru and none from Labour. UKIP refused to provide details.
The ratio of BAME candidates - one in 16 - is slightly better than the one in 20 of the Welsh population of BAME heritage recorded by the 2011 Census.
But Mr Singh said BAME candidates should be given more winnable seats.
"Wales is a multicultural, multiracial country and we need inclusiveness," he said.
Labour's deputy health minister Vaughan Gething - one of two BAME assembly members - said: "We haven't broadened or deepened our pool of talent that's available to realistically be selected and elected."
A Welsh Conservative spokeswoman said they had three "fantastic" BAME candidates "campaigning hard for victory".
Plaid Cymru chair Dafydd Trystan said the party was "welcoming and open to new members from all backgrounds" but added there was "more to be done specifically in those communities that aren't so politically engaged".
Welsh Lib Dems equalities spokesman Peter Black said his party had more BAME candidates in Wales than the other major parties, but added "there's so much more we can do", pointing to a leadership programme to encourage candidates from under-represented backgrounds.
UKIP Wales said it did not carry out diversity monitoring of its candidates, saying it wanted opportunities "to go to people based solely on merit".
There were 333 primary and secondary schools in the top "green" category in 2015, up from 236 in 2014.
"Red" schools, those needing the most improvement, fell from 81 to 58.
But a group of north Wales primaries have claimed the system unfairly penalises small schools, where the performance of a single child can see a school judged in need of improvement.
Under the system, schools are placed in one of four categories - green, yellow, amber or red - reflecting the levels of support needed.
Click here for green
Click here for yellow
Click here for amber
Click here for red
Education Minister Huw Lewis said: "This is not about crude league tables or labelling schools - it is about directing the right support to schools that need it and ensuring improvements right across our school system.
"Ultimately it is about raising standards and supporting our schools to self improve.
"Categorisation is also a system that delivers for all learners. Schools cannot just rely on the performance of their top students as any school performing below the agreed minimum standard for its free school meal pupils will not be put into the green category."
David Evans, secretary of teaching union NUT Cymru, welcomed the results as a "snapshot", but warned: "We shouldn't make any specific judgements on the basis of categorisation results alone.
"Schools in the green category may still need support in certain areas, while there is undoubtedly excellent teaching and learning taking place within aspects of those schools placed in yellow, amber and red.
"We must see categorization as part of the wider evaluation of schools, and more specifically as a way of identifying what support is needed, rather than a simple mechanism for judgement."
The Welsh Conservatives' Shadow Education Minister Angela Burns said: "In many ways, these rankings tell us what we already know, and what Estyn said earlier this week - that the gap between schools doing well and those that are not is too wide.
"Indeed, the performance of secondary schools across Wales remains worryingly inconsistent."
Plaid Cymru education spokesman Simon Thomas urged Labour ministers to give underperforming schools the help they needed.
"It is concerning that some schools identified as needing help last year seem to remain stubbornly stuck and not improving, and also that other schools, even with support, have declined," he said.
Liberal Democrat AM Aled Roberts said: "The new system is certainly an improvement on banding [the previous process] but it still does not take into account variations within a specific school.
"A green grade overall can mask any number of shortcomings in individual departments in the same way as a red grade can mask examples of excellence in a school." | The lack of black and Asian MPs in Wales is a "huge problem" which the parties need to take seriously, a race equality campaigner has said.
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More schools have been rated as performing well in the second year of a colour-coded rating system. |
Please provide a summary for the content below. | National Numeracy has developed a game based in a virtual film set with the player taking on the role of runner on their first day of work.
The game - Star Dash Studios - requires players to use everyday maths to tackle problems involving money, percentages, measurements and estimates.
The free game is aimed at 16- to 25-year-olds.
National Numeracy says teenagers need to learn to apply maths in practical contexts and see the relevance of it to their everyday lives.
It hopes introducing maths by stealth will help youngsters engage with the subject.
The charity's chief executive, Mike Ellicock, said: "All the evidence shows that too many teenagers feel disengaged from school maths and don't see its relevance to their future lives.
"We urgently need to crack this problem - and that means a better thought through approach to functional maths, in order to build young people's confidence, interest and practical skills.
"It's against this background that we have developed our new app.
"This is the perfect medium for persuading young people that numeracy is part of every job - whether that's on a film set, in an office or on a building site."
Anne Haworth, who chairs the Association of Teachers of Mathematics's general council said: "National Numeracy does great work in schools, in the community and in the workplace, helping people to be more confident and competent in their use of everyday mathematics.
"I would expect the app to be a useful means of engaging learners of all ages with numeracy, which can only be a good thing."
The court heard that Aaron Millar from Barnewall Place in the city was stopped and searched on his way into the courthouse on 9 April.
Security staff found £230 worth of cannabis in his backpack.
He admitted two charges of possessing cannabis and cannabis resin. Millar was given a four-month prison sentence suspended for two years.
Security staff said they found a tin containing 46 grams of cannabis in Millar's backpack.
When security staff found the tin, Millar ran off, the court heard.
He told police that the amount in the tin would have been two week's supply.
Millar said he had been to see his psychologist on the day in question and had wanted to speak to his solicitor.
The court heard that Millar was being questioned about another matter on 21 May when he asked police: "Why are you questioning me about a wee bit of cannabis when I brought a whole lot more into court?"
A defence solicitor said his client had been taking "a huge amount" of cannabis at the time but was since making progress.
He said the cannabis intake was causing him "massive damage" and the solicitor said that anyone trying to bring drugs into the courthouse "sums him up."
Millar's defence lawyer said he was now receiving counselling. | A maths charity hopes its new mobile gaming app will help boost numeracy skills among young people.
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A 22-year-old man has received a suspended sentence for trying to bring cannabis into Londonderry courthouse. |
Write a concise summary for the following article. | Richard David Curtis, 57, from Bawtry, South Yorkshire, was stopped at the Port of Dover in November 2013.
He failed to attend trial at Maidstone Crown Court in November 2016 and was found guilty of evading more than £1.3m in excise duty.
He was jailed for three years nine months in his absence.
More on this and other Yorkshire stories
A total of 5,729,900 cigarettes were found hidden under boxes of chips in Curtis' HGV. He told customs officers in Dover he had spent the weekend in Belgium before collecting the food, and was unaware the lorry contained illicit cigarettes.
A warrant was issued for his arrest after he failed to appear at court.
Curtis has links to Doncaster, the South Yorkshire area and Nottinghamshire.
HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) are appealing for anyone who knows where he is to contact 0800 595 000.
Alan Tully, of the HMRC fraud unit, said: "Richard Curtis gambled with his liberty in a brazen bid to profit from smuggling illicit cigarettes into the UK.
"He lost and now he must face up to his crime and come forward to begin his time behind bars."
Mr Gaburici had earlier demanded that the prosecutor-general resign, along with top bank officials, after $1bn (£645m) disappeared from three banks.
Many Moldovans live in dire poverty.
Mr Gaburici only became PM in February. "The issue of my school diploma... will be removed from the agenda," he said, announcing his resignation on TV.
Moldova, an ex-Soviet state, signed a far-reaching association agreement with the EU in 2014, angering Russia.
Moldova, bordering on Ukraine, is one of Europe's poorest countries and has been plagued by political instability.
The capital Chisinau saw angry demonstrations in May when news of the banking scandal broke.
Pro-Russian separatists have run a breakaway region, Trans-Dniester, since a war with Moldova in the 1990s, and they have Russian backing.
Mr Gaburici was appointed to head a minority coalition government, formed by two pro-EU parties.
"I would like the government to focus on the fight against corruption, depoliticisation of all institutions and on ensuring the security of the financial and banking sector," he said in his resignation address.
On Monday prosecutors said they suspected that a signature and a stamp on two of his school documents had been forged.
In May, an Israeli-born businessman, Ilan Shor, was placed under house arrest in connection with the $1bn that went missing from Unibank, Banca Sociala and Banca de Economii.
Details of the alleged scam were contained in a report by the financial consultancy Kroll, leaked in April. The missing amount is equivalent to one-eighth of Moldova's national output (GDP). | A lorry driver is on the run after being caught smuggling more than five-and-a-half million cigarettes into the UK under boxes of frozen chips.
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Moldova's Prime Minister Chiril Gaburici has resigned after prosecutors questioned the authenticity of his school-leaving certificate. |
What is the summary of the given information? | The fact that complete, permanent borders still have not yet been drawn around Israel 60 years later is testimony to the rancour of its relations with neighbouring Arab states.
Jordan and Egypt have signed treaties with Israel, turning some of the 1949 ceasefire lines into state borders. But the absence of final settlements with Syria, Lebanon and the Palestinians mean most of Israel's boundaries remain potential flashpoints and the state itself is unstable.
In 1948, when British rule of Palestine ended, Israeli forces managed to push most of the Arab forces that joined the war to the former Mandate boundaries, which became temporary ceasefire lines.
The exceptions were what we now know as the West Bank, which remained under Jordanian control, and the Gaza Strip, which was controlled by Egypt.
Thus Israel came into being on 78% of the former Palestine, rather than the 55% allocated under the UN partition plan.
Parts of Israel's central region were just 15km (9 miles) wide, and strategic Jordanian-held territory overlooked the whole coastal region.
Fast forward to 1967, when Israel captured both the West Bank and Gaza Strip, as well as Syria's Golan Heights and Egypt's Sinai peninsula.
Israeli-controlled land now stretched from the Jordan Valley in the east and the Suez Canal to the west; it completely enclosed the Sea of Galilee in the north, and gave it a foothold on the Straits of Tiran in the Red Sea.
The Sinai was exchanged for peace with Egypt in the early 1980s (at about the time Israel occupied south Lebanon, where it remained until withdrawing unilaterally in May 2000).
So it was that, more than 30 years after the foundation of Jewish state, Israel acquired its first recognised international border with an Arab neighbour.
Jordan became the second treaty holder with Israel, agreeing river borders in the north and a demarcated desert border south of the Dead Sea.
The boundary between Jordan and the occupied West Bank was also agreed, but "without prejudice to the status of the territory".
Such deals are the exception, and the state of Israel and its neighbours have had to live with the insecurity of moveable boundaries and an assortment of different coloured lines ("green", "purple" and "blue").
Politically, the most important of the Green Lines - as the 1949 ceasefire lines were called - is the one dividing Israel from the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
Occupying the West Bank in 1967 was an important strategic gain in Israeli eyes, and successive governments have ignored the Green Line and built numerous Jewish settlements on the territory.
The settlements are illegal under international law, but Israel disputes this and has pressed ahead with its activity despite signing various agreements to curb settlement growth.
Today, more than 430,000 settlers live in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Settlements have separate civil infrastructure to surrounding Palstinian areas and are protected by a vast military infrastructure.
The land is strategically significant, but in Judaism is also religiously and historically so.
An Israeli settlement in close-up
In the shadow of an Israeli settlement
The first settlers were religious Jews who remained in Hebron after celebrating Passover there in 1968.
The settlement movement has become closely affiliated to Jewish religious nationalism, which claims boundaries of modern Israel based on Genesis 15:18: "God made a covenant with Abram and said, 'To your descendants I give this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river, the Euphrates'."
On both political and religious grounds, therefore, it has been extremely sensitive for Israeli politicians to dabble in land-for-peace negotiations.
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin pushed for a two-state solution in the 1990s, and was made to pay for it with a Jewish nationalist assassin's bullet.
Successors Ehud Barak and Ariel Sharon unilaterally pulled out of south Lebanon and Gaza, respectively - both of which moves were followed by a resurgence of violent confrontation in subsequent years, discrediting that approach.
Benjamin Netanyahu managed to put the brakes on Rabin's historic drive for a two-state solution in the 1990s and has been in no rush to get to the negotiating table during his second term.
From the Arab viewpoint, the mininum acceptable territorial solution for a Palestinian-Israeli settlement is complete withdrawal from all the land occupied in 1967.
Saudi Arabia has proposed such a formula in return for Israel gaining normal diplomatic relations with all Arab countries.
Israel has sought to ring-fence East Jerusalem from any territorial retreat, and it hopes to annex the largest settlement blocs on the east side of the Green Line, which house a large majority of settlers.
This would involve adjustments to the Green Line, perhaps involving Israel swapping its territory for the settlements Ariel, Modiin Illit, Maale Adumim, Gush Etzion, etc.
Removing thousands of hardline settlers from other smaller, more isolated outposts would be a difficult task, however, even for the most secure of Israeli governments.
Further territorial compromises (having already been squeezed into 22% of pre-1948 Palestine) could also be a bitter pill for the Palestinian faction that favours a two-state solution, the Fatah party led by Mahmoud Abbas.
Not all Palestinians, however, want a two-state solution.
Hamas, which won the 2006 Palestinian parliamentary election and holds sway in Gaza, wants to avoid at all costs a negotiated deal with Israel that involves drawing permanent borders along the Green Line. Its wider aim is to establish a single, Islamic state within the whole of pre-1948 Palestine.
It believes such a state, with the return of 1948 refugees, would have an impregnable and growing Arab, Muslim majority, and would spell the end of Israel as a Jewish state.
In the long term, therefore, Israel's reluctance to accept the existing Green Line in some ways plays into the hands of militant Islamist groups such as Hamas. | The modern Israeli state was forged in the fires of the first Middle East war in 1948-1949, but from the beginning it was a state without clear borders. |
Please provide a short summary of this passage. | The midfielder, who won her 100th cap in April, suffered knee and ankle injuries while playing for her club Seattle Reign at the start of July.
"The rehab is going very well. Everybody's really happy with the progress I'm making," she said.
"Hopefully I'll be back in early August. We have a fantastic team here, and I'm super lucky with that."
She added: "The only reason I would not be fit for Kazakhstan is if I get a separate injury. As long there's no setbacks I'll be available for selection."
Fishlock sustained a grade two MCL sprain to her knee after landing awkwardly, and she admits she initially feared the worst.
"Whenever you get a sharp pain around your knee the first thing you always think about is the cruciate ligament," she said.
"Straight away my medical team were on it, and within 24 hours I knew what the situation was.
"That quickly put my mind at ease, I got straight back on the rehab plan, and I'm hoping for a nice smooth return to play."
As well as Kazakhstan, Wales have been drawn in the same World Cup qualifying group as Bosnia-Herzegovina, Russia and England.
Fishlock said the decision to leave her out of Wales' squads for friendly matches against Portugal and the Netherlands was made with her health and fitness in mind.
"I had a very open and honest conversation with Jayne Ludlow (manager) and Rehanne Skinner (assistant manager) they were absolutely fantastic and so supportive," Fishlock added.
"And the viewpoint was the travel would have been a huge injury risk. And the consensus from Seattle and Wales was it was a risk that wasn't worth taking.
"It was a collective decision, and it was the right thing to do at that time." | Jess Fishlock says she will be fit for Wales' opening World Cup qualifier against Kazakhstan on 17 September. |
Summarize the information in the following section. | This week, the sport holds its first world championships since its Olympic debut was confirmed for Tokyo 2020.
"We're on the back foot compared to other countries but we're getting better the last few years," Dillon told BBC Sport.
"With inclusion in the Olympics hopefully the sport will rise and we'll get up there soon," he added.
Dillon, 22, was a prodigious junior before joining the senior professional tour at the start of 2016.
The Newquay man broke into the world's top 150 in his rookie season and hopes to push into the top 100 in the next year before ultimately appearing for GB at the Tokyo Games.
I don't have a surf coach; I've just learned by myself watching videos
"Going for an Olympic medal is something that athletes dream of," said Dillon.
"To even have myself in that bracket I'm really proud. But now it's there I kind of want to go and get it."
Ordinarily, Dillon would have been competing in Japan this week at a prestigious, and potentially lucrative, six-star event on the World Surfing League circuit.
However, he has decided to compete for his country at the World Surfing Games in France - which is run by the same organisers of the Tokyo 2020 event.
He says other high-ranked professionals are joining him, such is the excitement surrounding the Olympic inclusion.
"I know guys in the top 32 in the world who are going to France to prove a point to then hopefully go to the Olympics and get this Olympic medal," said Dillon.
"This is a really big opportunity for surfers all over the world."
Although Dillon is progressing year-on-year his route to Tokyo will not be easy.
Great Britain is still playing catch-up to more traditional surfing nations such as Australia, the United States, Brazil and even France when it comes to the professional scene.
"I don't have a surf coach; I've just learned by myself watching videos," Dillon explained.
"I live from competition to competition, with nothing in between, and save all my money and try to work it out on the budget I've got.
"A lot of the other guys I'm competing against are on six-figure contracts.
"The Australians and Americans have had a structure in place for a couple of decades now.
"They have surf coaches, personal trainers, nutritionists, they get massages after every heat.
"Here, we're kind of getting the building blocks now.
"But I'm staying in touch with these guys with what I'm doing now so if I can improve a little bit, get some good people around me, then I think I can get up there." | Britain's number one surfer Luke Dillon says the Olympic Games is a chance for the sport to grow its appeal in the UK. |
Write a concise summary of the provided excerpt. | The financial technology company made £17.5m for the year to the end of February.
First Derivatives employs around 1,200 people across the world.
It is one of only two publicly listed companies in Northern Ireland.
It has had a busy year in terms of acquisitions.
It bought a series of companies including Kx Systems in California in October 2014.
And it has made a further three purchases since the start of this year - Prelytix in Massachussetts, Dublin software firm ActivateClients and Affinity Systems in Ontario.
Seamus Keating, chairman of First Derivatives, said the purchase of a majority stake in Kx Systems enabled the group to "broaden its strategy".
He said: "The subsequent investment across the business, including three strategic acquisitions in 2015, positions First Derivatives as a leading player in big fast data across multiple vertical markets.
"This has been achieved while maintaining a strong focus on current trading, with a strong second-half performance from both our consulting and software activities, enabling the group to report record results and upgrade expectations for the current financial year." | The Newry-based firm First Derivatives has reported a rise in pre-tax profits of 120%. |
Please give a summary of the document below. | Media playback is not supported on this device
Wales edged a tense last-16 match at the Parc des Princes in Paris courtesy of Gareth McAuley's own goal.
Coleman's side will face Belgium or Hungary in the last eight.
"These boys, the good thing about them is they have a bit of spirit about them and when they're not playing so well they can hang in," Coleman said.
"We showed a lot of heart, a lot of courage and showed another side to our game.
"We came through it and it is a fantastic achievement - it feels brilliant."
Northern Ireland had frustrated Wales with a resolute defensive display until McAuley's 75th-minute own goal.
And Coleman conceded Michael O'Neill's side, also appearing in their first European Championship finals, were the better team on the day.
Media playback is not supported on this device
"Northern Ireland were the underdogs and you wouldn't have thought that looking at the game," Coleman told BBC Sport.
"Northern Ireland are very organised. Michael has got them working very hard for each other and they're dangerous.
"We had to be patient and we hung on in there. The performance does not put a downer on it.
"I would rather be standing here, in the quarter-final, having not played at our best."
Real Madrid forward Gareth Bale, whose cross led to the winning goal, hailed Wales' achievement in reaching the quarter-finals as "incredible".
Wales are playing in a first major tournament since the 1958 World Cup.
"We knew it was going to be an ugly match and no disrespect to Ireland, but they make it difficult to play and we knew that, we knew it from the start," Bale said.
"We knew that up top we were not going to get much service, there is not much space, but we worked hard and did everything we could.
"We knew one goal would likely be enough to win the game and thankfully it came for us.
"You can't ask for any more than this - it is incredible."
Wales ended the contest with skipper Ashley Williams suffering with an apparent arm injury.
Williams already seemed to be moving tentatively before a bruising collision with team-mate Jonny Williams floored and rattled him late on.
Substitute James Collins was ready to enter the game, but Williams insisted he stayed on the field.
"He's a bit tender with his shoulder. The next 24-48 hours will be key," Coleman said.
"It will be crucial whether it's bruising, whether it's impact or - hopefully not - there's damage to any ligaments or a tear in his muscle."
Having apparently recovered from the collision, Williams briefly sat down on the pitch as play continued, leading Coleman to ready a substitute.
"I thought he was struggling because he couldn't move his arm," he said. "I was going to take him off - he said he was OK to continue so, of course, I trust my captain.
"We were right to keep him on. He still made some important interceptions."
Northern Ireland manager Michael O'Neill felt Wales deliberately made the most of Williams' situation.
"I was disappointed with the time-wasting. The bench told Ashley Williams to sit down," he told BBC Sport. | Manager Chris Coleman says Wales showed "heart and courage" as they reached the Euro 2016 quarter-finals with a 1-0 win over Northern Ireland. |
Provide a brief summary for the information below. | The former environment minister demanded the secret ballot by Tory members in South Suffolk after the association's committee voted not to re-adopt him as a candidate.
Mr Yeo promised his "unqualified support" to his successor.
The result of the count comes three days after fellow Tory MP Anne McIntosh was deselected.
David Cameron had backed Mr Yeo, saying he would be a "great loss".
The 68-year-old, an MP since 1983, was cleared last year of breaking parliamentary rules on lobbying.
He stood aside temporarily as chairman of the Commons Energy and Climate Committee while an investigation was carried out following a newspaper story.
Mr Yeo returned to the role, but the executive committee of the South Suffolk Conservative Association voted in December against re-adopting him as a candidate.
Reports suggest this reflected frustration among some members that he had not devoted enough time to the constituency while the standards inquiry was going on.
But Mr Yeo, who said he was proud of his career and happy to be judged on his record, challenged the committee's verdict.
This led to a postal vote by the association's 600 members, which was counted on Monday afternoon at Conservative headquarters in London.
Party sources said there had been an 82% turnout in the ballot, but refused to give details of the margin of defeat.
After the result was announced, Mr Yeo said the vote had been "on a knife edge".
On his disagreements with activists, he told BBC Radio 4's PM: "There were a number of individual issues where I took a very strong view on principle and will continue to do so."
Mr Yeo, who is in favour of the UK remaining in the European Union and a strong believer in climate change, said some of his opinions were "not widely supported".
He said: "It has been a privilege to serve as MP for South Suffolk since 1983. I will continue to work for all my constituents until the general election next year.
"I am immensely grateful to all those Conservative Party members who voted for me to continue as their MP.
"I now ask them all to campaign for my successor with the same loyalty and dedication they have shown to me. I will give my full and unqualified support to whoever is chosen as the candidate here in South Suffolk. I wish him or her every success."
Mr Yeo also served as a minister in the Home Office, Foreign Office and Department of Health in John Major and Margaret Thatcher's governments in the 1980s and 1990s.
He won the Suffolk South seat with an 8,689 majority at the last general election.
Toby Kramers, chairman of South Suffolk Conservative Association, said: "This has been a difficult time for the association. Our priority now is to work together for success in the European elections later this year."
A Conservative spokesman said selection for the South Suffolk constituency, which was created in 1983 as a result of boundary changes, would "be opened in due course".
For Labour, shadow Cabinet Office minister Jon Ashworth said the vote was "a blow to David Cameron's credibility" after he expressed his support for the MP.
Last week, Ms McIntosh lost a vote of confidence among Conservative members in Thirsk and Malton, following a long-running dispute with constituency officials.
She insisted she still planned to run again for Parliament at the 2015 general election as an independent.
Reacting to the spate of de-selections, Conservative MEP Daniel Hannan tweeted that they were a recognition by activists that "there's a better candidate out there".
7 April 2017 Last updated at 08:39 BST
The attacks were aimed at forces that support Syria's President Assad.
The American President, Donald Trump ordered the attacks because he believes that President Assad was behind a chemical weapons attack in Syria last week.
There has been a war in Syria for more than 6 years. Learn more about it with Newsround's guide.
You can find out more about chemical weapons here.
And if anything in the news upsets you, read our advice and helpful guide.
Here is what we know so far about the attacks. | Senior Conservative MP Tim Yeo has lost his fight against being deselected by party activists.
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US forces have launched missile attacks on Syria, a country in the Middle East. |
What is the summary of the document provided? | They featured on a shortlist of three nominees including Hallé Orchestra music director Sir Mark Elder.
In a ballot of university staff and former students, Mr Sissay received 7,131 votes while Sir Mark polled 5,483 and Lord Mandelson gained 5,269 votes.
Mr Sissay said: "My primary aim is to inspire and be inspired."
He added: "Reach for the top of the tree and you may get to the first branch but reach for the stars and you'll get to the top of the tree."
The writer, who has authored plays and books of poetry, is also an associate artist at London's Southbank Centre.
He will start the seven-year role on 1 August, replacing current chancellor, property developer Tom Bloxham MBE, the founder of Manchester-based company Urban Splash.
"I am proud to be Chancellor of this fantastic University and extremely grateful to everyone who voted for me," he added.
Mr Sissay recently campaigned successfully for a police investigation after complaints of historical physical and sexual abuse at a former children's home in Wigan.
Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, who is president at the university, congratulated Mr Sissay on his role, adding it was a ceremonial office, which involved "significant ambassadorial responsibilities in helping to promote the university's achievements worldwide".
"Each one of the nominees had excellent credentials and would have made a fine ambassador for the University."
A university spokesman said there could be "other ways" that Sir Mark and former Labour cabinet minister Lord Mandelson could support the institution, which has nearly 38,000 students.
Lord Mandelson, who was a key figure in the Labour governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, recently said he wanted the post "because the city of Manchester is becoming the most exciting, edgy place to be around in England".
An installation ceremony will be held at the university in October.
Factfile: Lemn Sissay
Source: Lemn Sissay blog and British Council
Costica Voedes was arrested following the attack on the 17-year-old in Epsom, Surrey, at about 22:30 BST on Friday.
Mr Voedes, 32, of High Street, Epsom, was remanded in custody and is due before magistrates on Monday.
The girl was stabbed in the abdomen and her condition is serious but not life-threatening, Surrey Police said.
Mr Voedes is accused of two counts of wounding with intent, two counts of rape, kidnap, false imprisonment, possession of an offensive weapon, affray and common assault.
He is due to appear at South East Surrey Magistrates' Court on Monday.
The victim is being treated at St George's Hospital in Tooting.
A Pizza Hut staff member, who tried to help her, suffered injuries to his arm which are not believed to be serious. | The writer Lemn Sissay has beaten former politician Lord Peter Mandelson in the election for the chancellorship of the University of Manchester.
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A man has been accused of a series of offences including rape and kidnap after a teenage girl was dragged out of a Pizza Hut and stabbed. |