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Write an article based on this "Georgia's Vladimer Khinchegashvili won Olympic gold in the men's -57kg freestyle wrestling with a hard-fought victory over Japan's Rei Higuchi." Article:
Media playback is not supported on this device Khinchegashvili, 25, won on countback after the final ended 3-3. The London 2012 silver medallist's victory gave Georgia a second gold of the Games, after Lasha Talakhadze's win in the men's +105kg weightlifting. Azerbaijan's Haji Aliyev and Iran's Hassan Rahimi won their respective bronze-medal bouts. Aliyev beat Bulgarian Vladimir Dubov while Rahimi saw off Cuba's Yowlys Bonne. Find out how to get into wrestling with our special guide. Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox.
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Text: Bruce Dickinson set up maintenance business Cardiff Aviation in 2012 at RAF St Athan, Vale of Glamorgan. He said it was after verbal assurances from the Welsh Government he could use a landing system that he still does not have access to. The Welsh Government said it will discuss the issue with Mr Dickinson. Mr Dickinson said the Ministry of Defence (which owns RAF St Athan) will not let the company use an instrument landing system (ILS). An ILS uses radio beams to give precision guidance to pilots as they approach the runway. Without it, Mr Dickinson said planes can only land and take off during week days, in office hours and in good visibility, which has stopped him being able to bid for lucrative contracts. He said he needs planes to land 24 hours a day and will have a meeting with the Welsh Government to discuss the issue. A Welsh Government spokesman said it had worked closely with Cardiff Aviation and Mr Dickinson "for a number of years". He added that officials will meet him next week to "discuss how we can continue to best support his business". "The introduction of an ILS procedure is a matter for the Ministry of Defence and we continue to lobby them on behalf of Cardiff Aviation and the wider enterprise zone to ensure a favourable outcome for what is one of Wales' flagship industries," he added. The MOD has been asked to comment. summary: An aviation company chaired by the Iron Maiden frontman is losing millions of pounds because of a dispute over landing rights, he has claimed. Text: Englishman Trump, 27, won five frames in a row to beat Thailand's James Wattana 6-2 in the first round at the York Barbican on Tuesday. Trump, the 2011 champion, told BBC Sport: "There is no real atmosphere so it's very hard. "It's not really enjoyable out there, but you just have to get through." Bristolian Trump plays Oliver Lines or Martin O'Donnell in the last 64, the stage when the BBC TV cameras arrive. "Until the TV kicks in, it doesn't really feel like a tournament, so everyone is just battling to get through. It's the same for everyone," said Trump. "Getting James was a tough draw. I didn't play great but it is probably a good thing that I didn't because it will make me go away and practise harder." Sign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app. summary: World number three Judd Trump says the UK Championship "doesn't really feel like a tournament" before the televised second round starts on Saturday. Text: Shed Simove called the app Shinder and said he built it to find himself a partner. However, when he tried to trademark it, a Notice of Threatened Opposition was filed to the Intellectual Property Office by dating giant Tinder. He also received a letter from lawyers representing the elevator firm Schindler. Schindler asked him to commit to refraining from entering the elevator or escalator market. Both firms were contacted by the BBC for comment. Tinder said it was aware of the situation. Its filing means that it could formally oppose the trademark at a later date. Mr Simove said that while he had no interest in the elevator industry he didn't believe he was a threat to Tinder either. "I think it's a case of a big corporate giant looking at an entrepreneur who sees the world differently and being punitive," he said. "It's unlikely that the female population will stop using Tinder and start using Shinder." The Shinder platform invites people to register via Facebook, and after a few questions, decides whether the potential date is a match with Shed Simove. Mr Simove, a serial inventor and speaker, said he had received 150 matches and been on three dates. However, he also said he had heard from others who wanted to create a similar platform for themselves which was why he decided to trademark it. "I think there might be commercial possibilities for it," he said. "I have to keep my eye on that. If it was 'white label ' - that would mean if I chose to I could take the raw guts of the code and allow people to have their own versions. Jane could have Jinder, and so on." He added that he had not decided whether he would be able to fund a court case. In 2016, Tinder, which is owned by Match Group, sued UK platform 3nder (pronounced Thrinder) - an app for non-monogamous couples - for copyright infringement because of its name. summary:
Tinder has filed a legal objection to a dating platform created by a British man on which he is the only male date.
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Kieran McGrath, 26, was attacked after leaving the Sheldon Arms, Ashton-under-Lyne, Greater Manchester on 4 October 2014. He managed to drive to a local police station but collapsed and died outside. Remi Adams, 34, was ordered to serve a minimum of 30 years at Manchester Crown Court. Three other men have received life sentences over the killing. Adams, of Dartmouth Road, Whitefield, was convicted of murder at a retrial after the jury at the original trial in April was unable to agree on verdicts. He was put on trial again with Scott Chapman, 28, of Leng Road, Manchester, who was cleared of murder. The sentences of Anthony Henry, Troy Beckford and Jace Smith, who were all found guilty of murder, as well as Henry's girlfriend Bretony Gallimore, who was convicted of assisting an offender, could only be reported after the conclusion of the re-trial on Wednesday. Henry, 32, of Kenwyn Street, Miles Platting - who orchestrated the shooting - was ordered to serve a minimum of 33 years by Liverpool Crown Court. Beckford, 24, of Lowerfields Gardens, Warrington, must serve a minimum of 30 years and Smith, 32, of Charlestown Road, Manchester, at least 31 years. Henry's girlfriend Bretony Gallimore, 25, of Stanhorne Avenue, Manchester, was sentenced to three years. Police said Henry bought two mobile phones and Beckford fitted a tracker to Mr McGrath's Audi S3 as part of the murder plot. On the night of his death Smith and Adams lay in wait on a motorcycle, said police, with Adams pulling the trigger when he left the pub. Karen Tonge from the Crown Prosecution Service said Henry "orchestrated" the "premeditated murder" of Kieran McGrath and "recruited Adams as the gunman" because of their "longstanding dispute". She said all the offenders "played an integral role in the murder". Adams "pulled the trigger" with Smith the driver of the motorcycle and Beckford "assisting" Henry in the plan to kill Mr McGrath. This article was about:
A murderer who shot a man outside a pub in a "bitter feud" has been sentenced to life imprisonment.
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6 September 2016 Last updated at 06:40 BST His side beat Slovakia 1-0 on Sunday in England's first World Cup qualifier in their FIFA 2018 World Cup qualifying campaign. But do you know who else applied for the top job? Well, Naz has the answer... And watch out for a surprise visit from big man Sam himself... What was that article about?
We all know Sam Allardyce is the new England boss.
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Question: Article:More than £4bn of UK aid goes to global organisations such as the World Bank. In an interview in Kenya with the BBC's James Landale, Ms Patel also said that she wanted to use the aid budget to help pave the way for trade deals. But Labour said Ms Patel had "no mandate" for changing how aid was given and called on her to abandon the plans. Ms Patel, who was speaking on her first visit to Africa since she was appointed to her new role, witnessed what some of her department's £12bn budget is supporting on the ground. She saw humanitarian aid being delivered, via a payment card that gives Kenyan women £20 a month from the British taxpayer to buy the food they need to survive. She said: "We have to make sure that our aid works in our national interest and also that it works for our taxpayers. Much more openness, much more transparency and much more accountability." She is about to publish a review of the work of big multinational aid organisations that spend money on behalf of the UK, and said she would cut off funding if they did not meet new performance targets by spending better and wasting less. "The government's approach is focused on ensuring that we drive taxpayer value - so when it comes to multilateral organisations, focus on performance agreements," she said. "If they are not performing then obviously we'll look at the contributions that we give to them. We need to be challenging." Ms Patel was referring to agencies such as the World Bank, the European Union and other smaller bodies. They spend 40% of the UK's aid budget. It is the first time this multilateral funding has been reviewed as a whole for five years. Our diplomatic correspondent says Ms Patel also wants to use bilateral aid to secure new trade deals and make allies in the World Trade Organization, which the UK will need after Brexit. She also hopes to use aid to reduce the flow of migrants to Europe. Ms Patel said: "British soft power is exactly where DfID (the Department for International Development) and our aid and other relationships around the world come together to deliver in our national interest and deliver for Britain when it comes to free trade agreements but also life post-Brexit." Government officials would not name specific projects potentially at risk in the Multilateral Aid Review but pointed to criticism levelled at the World Health Organisation for its handling of the Ebola crisis as an example of where reform was needed. Ms Patel has been a longstanding critic of some aid spending and her remarks will unnerve many multilateral agencies and non-governmental charities opposed to the idea of further so-called "conditionality" being imposed on their spending, our correspondent says. She told him she wanted to use Britain's aid budget to boost economic development, announcing a £30m programme to encourage more job-creating investment in Kenya. And she promised £95m to help Kenya break down barriers to trade, particularly by speeding up the flow of goods through the port of Mombasa. She said she would undertake joint missions overseas with International Trade Secretary Liam Fox to gather what she called "intelligence" about economic opportunities for British businesses. "We are a global leader when it comes to international development, we have a strong footprint overseas and it is right that we use that footprint in the national interest," she added. Kate Osamor, Labour's shadow development secretary, said "Priti Patel has no mandate or evidence to fundamentally change the way UK aid is distributed. "She seems fixated on imposing her dogma of the free market over the clear evidence that UK aid is the most efficient and effective in the world. "It reaches the people who need help, including many young girls and women." Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: Major multinational aid funding may be cut unless it provides better value for money, International Development Secretary Priti Patel has said. Question: Article:The Migration Advisory Committee report said the proposal could raise £250m to go towards helping train British-based workers in UK firms. It also suggested raising the minimum salary threshold for skilled workers coming to the UK by £9,200, to £30,000. Ministers are concerned about the rising number of "Tier 2" migrants. There are also concerned about companies' reliance on them to fill shortages in the labour market. As such, the government asked the Migration Advisory Committee - the independent public body which advises it on migration issues - to investigate possible changes to Tier 2 visa requirements. Currently, those wanting to work in the UK must be offered a starting salary of £20,800. There are some higher thresholds specific to individual roles. In 2014, 151,000 skilled workers and their dependants arrived in the UK or were allowed to stay on. The committee said raising the salary threshold to £30,000 would have excluded almost 28,000 people in 2014 - or about 18% of the total. The committee "strongly" supports the introduction of the so-called Immigration Skills Charge to incentivise employers to reduce their reliance on migrant workers and encourage them to invest in training British workers. The committee also recommends tightening the rules on intra-company transfers - overseas staff working for the same company in the UK - which have risen "very rapidly" in recent years. Professor Sir David Metcalf, committee chairman, said: "Skilled migrant workers make important contributions to boosting productivity and public finances, but this should be balanced against their potential impact on the welfare of existing UK residents. "Raising the cost of employing skilled migrants via higher pay thresholds, and the introduction of an immigration skills charge, should lead to greater investment in UK employees and reduce the use of migrant labour." Businesses should be "content" that £30,000 was a reasonable figure and the £1,000 charge would be put back into good UK firms, such as Rolls Royce, he told BBC's World at One. Neil Carberry, of the business lobby group, CBI, said businesses agreed that training British-based people to do jobs where there were shortages was the long-term solution. "But the question's more complex than that," he told the World at One. "We live in a global economy, we have short-term skills shortages, but we also have multi-national companies who frankly can base work in different countries and we want it to be attractive for these big companies to come and invest in the UK and create jobs here." The immigration skills charge is separate to the apprenticeship levy, due to be enforced in April 2017, which is payable by all medium and large companies. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer:
Bosses should pay an annual charge of £1,000 for every skilled worker brought in from outside Europe, migration advisers have told the government.
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Write an article based on this "The M1 was closed northbound in Nottinghamshire after a fire on a lorry carrying 1,000 crates of pre-packed food." Article:
It happened at about 03:00 GMT at Trowell services near junction 25 to Nottingham and Derby. The service station and at least one lane remained shut for most of the morning but fully reopened later. Traffic was diverted through Nottingham, causing problems on the bus network during rush-hour. Updates on this story and more from Nottinghamshire
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Police in Wyoming, Minnesota, tweeted on Sunday that drink drivers would be forced to watch Bieber's Super Bowl advert "the entire way to jail". The pop star is seen performing celebratory end zone dances in a tuxedo during the mobile phone commercial. Fortunately, no drink driving arrests were made on Sunday night. Canada police to punish drink-drivers with Nickelback Bieber's advert aired during the Super Bowl, in which he is heard saying: "This guy's got the shimmedy sham-sham shimmedy shake right there". Twitter users lauded the police for the tongue-in-cheek tweet, which was retweeted nearly 10,000 times. Wyoming Police Chief Paul Hoppe told the Pioneer Press that the tweet helped push the public service announcement about responsible drinking during the Super Bowl. "It gets people to actually stop and read the message," Mr Hoppe said. After the New England Patriots won the game in a historic 34-28 comeback, the Wyoming police changed their message, poking fun at the way many Americans love to hate the Patriots. The alternative punishment is not the first time police have turned to Canadian artists to help deter drink driving. Last November, a Canadian police force threatened to force festive drink-drivers to listen to Nickelback, a local band often derided as the world's worst band. Sum: A Minnesota police force has threatened to punish drink drivers with Justin Bieber's dance moves if they get behind the wheel while intoxicated. An experimental Wales side lost their first warm-up match 35-21 to Ireland in Cardiff on Saturday. Gatland will cut the 46-man squad to "36 or 38" this week, before reducing it further on 31 August. "We've probably got half a dozen places in our minds, we're not too sure about when we do finally select the squad," said Gatland. "There are going to be some tough calls and we will see how training goes next week. Media playback is not supported on this device "Some players will need to have a pretty good look at their game." Gatland selected an inexperienced team against Ireland that included four debutants in Ross Moriarty, Dominic Day, Tyler Morgan and Eli Walker. The squad will travel to north Wales for another training camp this week and Gatland says the defeat by Ireland will have a bearing on his decision-making when he cuts the squad. "This was an opportunity for a lot of players to go out there and perform so it will definitely have some relevance," he said. "It was a bit hard for Tyler Morgan. He would have learnt a huge amount from that. "You've go to put that down to experience. I remember Jonathan Davies came out here against Australia and he looked like a rabbit in the headlights. "He got better from that and I'm sure Tyler will learn from that experience and Hallam Amos as well." Media playback is not supported on this device There was also a first cap for New Zealand born fly-half Gareth Anscombe, who replaced James Hook. "I thought the two half-backs who came on did really well," added Gatland. "Gareth Anscombe played nice and flat, taking the line." Gatland confirmed that centre and stand-in captain Scott Williams was replaced as a precautionary measure to guard against a "tight calf". Sum: Wales head coach Warren Gatland says there are six places up for grabs in the final 31-man World Cup squad. As well as the new cell block, the company which runs the prison G4S said a new visitors' centre, prison workshop and educational facilities would be built. An additional 78 jobs will be created. The Ministry of Justice gave the initial go ahead in January but more details were released in the wake of a series of announcements on UK prisons. Preparatory work has now started in Bridgend and the first prisoners in the new block - which has more than 200 cells - are expected to arrive by December next year. The prison, which opened in 1997, will see its eventual capacity increase to 1,723. The work will also include a new car park with 350 spaces, extended perimeter walls and security fencing. David Morgan, managing director of G4S Care and Justice Services, said: "This is an exciting time for the team at Parc and we are pleased to have been selected to deliver this project on behalf of the Ministry of Justice. "As well as providing new jobs for the area, the new house block when completed will allow more prisoners to be located nearer to their homes and families, which has been proven to be an important factor in helping prisoners in their rehabilitation on release." On Wednesday, the Ministry of Justice announced a former industrial site in Wrexham would be the location for a new 2,000-inmate super-prison. Sum: A £35m expansion of Parc Prison in Bridgend will see the privately-run jail expanded by 387 places. George Blackstock said he was held down and assaulted with a goalkeeper's glove smeared with Deep Heat - a type of muscular pain relief ointment. Mr Blackstock, 44, is seeking damages for loss of earnings of nearly £170,000 against the footballer and the club. Mr Fox and Stoke City deny all the allegations. Preston County Court heard Mr Blackstock's claim that he was twice given the punishment - known as "the glove" - during the 1980s. He said that after the alleged assaults Mr Fox said: "That will teach you a lesson." Mr Fox told the court he "could not remember" Mr Blackstock, who left his Belfast home after scouts spotted his talent at the age of 15. The court had heard that at least three other apprentices described the practice happening to them for such infringements as wearing someone else's boots or putting on the wrong studs. But Mr Fox denied that the glove abuse had taken place, saying: "That's what story they have come up with." He said if he had seen the practice taking place, he would have "stopped it and said something". Mr Fox's representative has said Mr Blackstock was "willing to lie for financial gain". Mr Blackstock's claim of £170,000 is on the basis that he would have played at least at Conference level for five years after leaving the club but for the alleged assaults. He says he suffers from post-traumatic stress because of what happened. Sum:
A former Stoke City trainee has told a court he was abused by then-goalkeeper Peter Fox for "serving cold tea" and "calling a bad decision on the pitch".
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The Scottish Independence Convention is hosting the "Build" meeting at the Radisson hotel in the city. MPs and MSPs from the SNP and the Scottish Greens will join activists and academics in speaking at the event. First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has ruled out an independence vote in 2017, with opposition parties calling for it to be taken off the table altogether. The Scottish Independence Convention (SIC) was active in campaigning during the 2014 referendum and held a "reassembly" as part of events to mark the second anniversary of that vote. Tickets for the "Build: strategy - policy - movement" event have sold out, but it will also be streamed online. Cabinet secretary Angela Constance will open the event, alongside actress and SIC convener Elaine C Smith and Scottish Greens co-convener Maggie Chapman. Ms Smith said the independence movement "needs to start chatting again". She said: "To win another independence referendum, we'll need everyone to come together and bring their own skills and knowledge. "There's lots to get done and 2017 is going to be a very important year. So it should begin with a proper get-together of everyone in the independence movement to plan a way forward." SNP MP Tommy Sheppard added: "Everyone needs to look with fresh eyes and open minds about what options are now available to us to build a better Scotland. "We can never have too many ideas and I hope this conference will focus minds on practical strategies for the year ahead." There will also be discussion of the independence white paper project set up by think tank Common Weal. The first draft of the paper drawn up by the group charts the possible process of independence, including proposals for a new Scottish currency and a referendum on a written constitution and EU membership as part of a three-year transition. It also includes "very rough" estimates of the economics of an independent Scotland, suggesting that there would be an £18.8bn one-off cost of setting up the institutions of a new state and that the country would run an £8.8bn deficit in its first year. Nicola Sturgeon has commissioned research of her own via a national survey and a "growth commission" headed by former MSP Andrew Wilson. She has ruled out holding a referendum in 2017, but has insisted she is "not bluffing" about holding one over Brexit. Her predecessor Alex Salmond has predicted a referendum in Autumn 2018. The Conservatives, Labour and the Lib Dems all oppose independence, and want a second referendum taken off the table altogether. Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson has accused Ms Sturgeon of "leaving Scotland in limbo", saying she should "ditch her draft referendum bill" and "move on from constitutional navel-gazing". And Labour's Kezia Dugdale backs a federal UK with a "new Act of Union" to "safeguard our family of nations for generations to come". This article was about:
A conference of independence activists aimed at preparing Scotland for another referendum is being held in Glasgow.
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Brewers boss Clough, who was sacked by the Rams in 2013, masterminded a display that ensures the hosts slipped 10 points outside the play-off spots after three home games without a win. Darren Bent wasted Derby's best chance, somehow shooting over from two yards. Burton frustrated the hosts after the interval but barely threatened. The closest they came was when former Rams attacker Luke Varney headed an effort straight at Scott Carson just after Bent's miss. Jacob Butterfield did force a fine save from visiting keeper Jon McLaughlin after the interval, but they could not create a telling opportunity and Burton held on for a point which takes them five points clear of the Championship relegation zone. Derby County manager Steve McClaren: "We are very disappointed with two points from three games when our home form has been excellent. We talked about a target but we've not achieved that. "It was a yellow brick wall of four and six but I can't fault the players, we kept plugging away but it wasn't our night. "Burton came for a draw and got it and it's been a frustrating night all round. Sometimes you can play for two days and not score and I think that was the situation tonight. "When we came here we were fourth bottom and just dreaming of getting away and the players have done a marvellous job to go on a run, but I knew after the first three or four games this would be a frustrating season." Burton Albion assistant boss Andy Garner: "Proud is a bit of an understatement. It's incredible. We worked incredibly hard, we're honest enough to say we came for a point and for us to get that at Derby is absolutely unbelievable. "That's what we are all about, honesty and hard work. We're not particularly good at times and the players will tell you that as well, but we dig deep and everybody works for each other. "Nigel is in the dressing room, it's quite an emotional day for the gaffer. We had four magnificent years here, love the club and the fans so it's very emotional coming back for the first time and little Burton have taken four points off them so we're delighted. "We didn't want to lose tonight, we set up for a point, worked all week training to get a point so I think it's good management really because we are going home with a point." Match ends, Derby County 0, Burton Albion 0. Second Half ends, Derby County 0, Burton Albion 0. Attempt missed. David Nugent (Derby County) right footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the left. Assisted by Darren Bent with a headed pass. Foul by Julien de Sart (Derby County). Lloyd Dyer (Burton Albion) wins a free kick on the left wing. Corner, Derby County. Conceded by Lloyd Dyer. Tom Ince (Derby County) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Foul by Tom Ince (Derby County). Tom Flanagan (Burton Albion) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Richard Keogh (Derby County) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Chris O'Grady (Burton Albion). Attempt blocked. Tom Ince (Derby County) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Cyrus Christie. Corner, Derby County. Conceded by Jon McLaughlin. Attempt saved. Tom Ince (Derby County) right footed shot from a difficult angle on the right is saved in the bottom right corner. Assisted by David Nugent. Attempt missed. Marvin Sordell (Burton Albion) left footed shot from outside the box misses to the right. Assisted by Tom Naylor. Substitution, Burton Albion. Chris O'Grady replaces Luke Varney. Foul by Max Lowe (Derby County). Marvin Sordell (Burton Albion) wins a free kick on the right wing. Corner, Derby County. Conceded by Luke Varney. David Nugent (Derby County) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Lasse Vigen Christensen (Burton Albion). Foul by Cyrus Christie (Derby County). Matthew Palmer (Burton Albion) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Substitution, Derby County. David Nugent replaces Will Hughes. Offside, Burton Albion. Tom Flanagan tries a through ball, but Luke Varney is caught offside. Offside, Derby County. Alex Pearce tries a through ball, but Darren Bent is caught offside. Tom Naylor (Burton Albion) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Abdoul Camara (Derby County) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Tom Naylor (Burton Albion). Attempt missed. Lloyd Dyer (Burton Albion) left footed shot from a difficult angle on the left misses to the right. Attempt saved. Tom Ince (Derby County) left footed shot from outside the box is saved in the top centre of the goal. Assisted by Jacob Butterfield. Tom Ince (Derby County) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Luke Murphy (Burton Albion). Attempt blocked. Abdoul Camara (Derby County) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Jacob Butterfield. Attempt blocked. Jacob Butterfield (Derby County) left footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Will Hughes. Attempt blocked. Julien de Sart (Derby County) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Max Lowe. Corner, Derby County. Conceded by Marvin Sordell. Substitution, Derby County. Abdoul Camara replaces Ikechi Anya. Substitution, Burton Albion. Marvin Sordell replaces Cauley Woodrow. Attempt missed. Tom Ince (Derby County) left footed shot from the right side of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Jacob Butterfield. This article was about:
Derby County dominated but could not find a way past Nigel Clough's gutsy Burton Albion side, who earned a point from their first game at Pride Park.
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The US Federal Reserve is not expected to raise rates on Wednesday, but all eyes will be on whether it gives any clues as to the timing of rate rise. The Bank of Japan meets on Friday and there has been speculation it might expand its stimulus programme. Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 closed down 0.9% at 18,777.04. In Australia, the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 finished the day barely changed, down just 0.03% at 5,346.20. Shares in one of the country's biggest lenders, National Australia Bank (NAB), were halted from trade on Tuesday. The announcement on the Australian Securities Exchange was made pending news of a "material transaction". The bank had been discussing a possible life insurance deal with Nippon Life Insurance. NAB is due to release its full year results on Wednesday when it is also expected to update the market regarding its plans to exit its operations in the UK. In South Korea, the benchmark Kospi index closed down 0.17% at 2,044.65. In China, shares traded mixed with the Shanghai Composite closing up 0.1% at 3,434.34, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index ended down 0.1% at 23,142.73. Sum: Shares in Asia fell, with investors remaining cautious ahead of meetings of the US and Japanese central banks later in the week. Mr Davis helped persuade Mrs May to call a "snap election" to strengthen his hand in Brexit talks. But he now says the party did not have enough time to prepare "and some very significant mistakes were made". It comes after ex-Tory chairman Grant Shapps called the party's manifesto the "worst in the world". Speaking to an audience of business leaders in London, Mr Davis said: "What went wrong was a badly designed campaign in a nutshell," adding both the party's lead and Mrs May's own personal lead in the polls had been "undermined by a set of relatively simple mistakes". He said parties normally have several years to prepare for an election campaign but it was "collapsed into a couple of weeks and some very significant mistakes were made". Mr Davis singled out "the social care proposals, which pretty much switched off a very large Tory vote in the elderly sector" as well as "the proposals on doing away with free school meals for certain categories of children" which, he said, "hit another Tory vote sector in the sort of middle age group". That, he said, had "knocked the whole campaign off balance and forced us into a U-turn which, in turn, undermined her (Theresa May's) standing, and the rest is history". Mr Davis also praised Labour for managing to "galvanise a left-of-centre youth vote" in "a phenomenal way" using a "ferocious and powerful" social media campaign. And he argued that Lib Dem, Green and UKIP voters had switched to Labour in a return to two-party politics. He also suggested the terror attacks that occurred during the campaign, in Manchester and London, had taken "huge chunks out of what would otherwise have been a very long campaign" and meant the party's plans to talk about Brexit and the economy had to be shelved. Asked by Andrew Marr on Sunday if he had advised Mrs May to call a snap election, Mr Davis said: "Yep. I take my share of the blame. Along with the other 20 members of the cabinet who also said it was a good idea." Former Conservative Party chairman Grant Shapps earlier rejected claims voters had turned against the Tories because they were "fed up" with austerity. Instead, in an interview with BBC Radio 4's Today programme, he blamed the party's "crazy policies", describing Mrs May's manifesto as "a long list of punishments for the public and our core supporters". "We were 20 points ahead and suddenly, in the space of two or three weeks. we lost that. And that wasn't down to people suddenly changing their minds on austerity, which none of us have ever liked. "It was because we had forgotten the lessons of previous election campaigns," said Mr Shapps, who was Tory chairman between 2012 and 2015. He said the party "forgot to build a team of activists" on the ground and should have put one person in charge of the campaign - but he reserved the most scorn for his party's "appalling manifesto". If the party had not proposed policies such as ending the winter fuel allowance for better off pensioners and ending the guarantee that the state pension would rise by at least 2.5% a year - plus its social care reforms swiftly categorised as a dementia tax and "raising the spectre of fox hunting as an issue... then we would have a majority today", said the former minister. "We had an unnecessary election and, actually, the world's worst manifesto from the world's oldest political party," he added. He refused to be drawn on Mrs May's future but said he was speaking out now to ensure the party did not learn wrong lessons from the election result, which saw Mrs May lose her Commons majority. If it repeated the mistakes it made in the run up to the 8 June polling day it "would never win an election again", he warned. Chancellor Philip Hammond has highlighted growing "weariness" with austerity as a reason for the Conservatives' worse-than-expected results. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn described his party's boost in vote share and seats as "vote for hope for the future" and a sign people were "turning their backs on austerity". Sum: Brexit Secretary David Davis has blamed the Tories' general election losses on a "badly designed" campaign and Theresa May's social care "U-turn". Loggerhead turtles, which are rarely seen in UK waters, have been spotted near Swanage. Marine conservationists have urged any sightings be reported instead of the turtles being returned to the sea. It is feared the animals "would struggle to survive" in cooler sea temperatures off the UK coast. The Marine Conservation Society (MCS) had been alerted to two loggerhead turtles about 50 metres from the shore by Durlston Head. MCS head of biodiversity and fisheries, Dr Peter Richardson, said loggerhead turtles were "rarely spotted in UK seas". He said: "Usually, young loggerheads thrive in warmer waters, but will stop feeding when sea temperatures drop below about 15C. "As the seas cool down these turtles will suffer from acute hypothermia. "If they are lucky, they may strand alive on a beach, and if found in time they can be rescued and rehabilitated back to health with specialist treatment". He added the loggerheads would most likely "perish" in the South West inshore waters, which are cooling down to below the 15C threshold. He added: "We urge anyone who finds a turtle on UK shores to report it immediately, and try and make sure the tides don't wash them back to sea". Sum:
Residents in Dorset have been asked to report sightings of an endangered turtle, which experts say may become stranded on beaches.
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Text: The 44-year-old Dutchman "intentionally insulted" King Willem-Alexander, accusing him of being a murderer, thief and rapist, the Dutch judiciary said. He was convicted of breaking seldom-used royal defamation laws. A Dutch political party has proposed scrapping the laws and the king has pledged to accept the outcome of any debate on the issue. Profile: Willem-Alexander, King of the Netherlands How the Dutch fell in love with their new queen The court in Overijssel suspended 16 days of the sentence and the man will not spend any more time in jail, having already spent 14 days in preventative custody last year. He was found to have doctored images of executions online to include the king's face in place of those of the actual victims, the judiciary said. "This behaviour is unacceptable in our society and demands that a penalty be imposed on the suspect," it said in a statement. The Dutch D66 political party is campaigning to abolish the lese majeste law, which was last used in 2014 after an activist shouted obscene slogans about the royal family during a protest. Prosecutors initially charged the protester but reversed the decision after the move was condemned as an attack on freedom of speech. The Netherlands' lese majeste law dates from 1881 and carries sentences of up to five years jail or a fine of 20,000 euros ($22,200; £16,700). In total 18 prosecutions were brought under the law between 2000 and 2012, half of which resulted in convictions, Dutch TV reported. summary: A court in the Netherlands has sentenced a man to 30 days in jail for insulting the king on Facebook. Question: Article:Media playback is not supported on this device Devils won 6-2 at Sheffield Steelers to seal their fifth league crown and their first for 20 years. "Three years ago we were ninth placed and now we're winning the league in Sheffield. It doesn't get any better than this," Canadian Lord said. "There's been so much work put in by everyone involved. It's truly amazing." Lord, who scored in the win over Steelers, was also thankful for the support of the team's fans, who had travelled in large numbers to South Yorkshire. "I'm so happy for the fanbase," Lord added. "We're so fortunate to play here and they make it great." Cardiff-born forward Matthew Myers had previously won the Elite League with the Nottingham Panthers in 2013. The 32-year-old added another Elite League title to the Challenge Cup medal he won with the Devils earlier this season. "It's great to win anything and we've been fortunate to win two this season," Myers said. "Sheffield did not want us to win in their own building and they played a good game but thankfully we came out on top." Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: Player-coach Andrew Lord said Cardiff Devils' "unbelievable" Elite League title win is fully deserved for all the hard work this season. input: Article: The annual figure stood at more than 200 just a few years ago but decreased to 164 in 2013. The health board said it looked to pick up on patients suffering a first "simple" fracture such as to the wrist. By offering them a DEXA (bone density) scan it said it was able to identify potential problems and offer treatment. A statement said: "The osteoporosis team at NHS Borders has been working on a fracture prevention programme for several years, and we are now seeing significant reductions in the number of hip and other fractures as a result. "Once patients are identified as being 'at risk', we have a wide range of effective treatments available to us, depending on individual patient needs. "Most are taken as tablets at home, but more specialised treatments are available at outpatient clinics in Borders General Hospital and the five Borders community hospitals." The service is operated from within the radiology department at the BGH. The health board said that put it in the "best possible position" to pick up fractures and offer DEXA scans and treatment for osteoporosis where necessary. Dr Andrew Pearson, osteoporosis lead clinician at NHS Borders said: "I am absolutely delighted that the hard work and persistence of all those who have contributed to the service has paid off by reducing the number of hip fractures in the Borders for three successive years, at a time when numbers are increasing in many other health board areas." Summarize. output: NHS Borders says the number of hip fractures in the region has dropped steadily thanks to a "highly effective" liaison and osteoporosis service. input: Article: The German joined the team at the end of 2009 and has been runner-up in the championship for the past two seasons. The 31-year-old's new deal means both he and Hamilton are under contract until the end of the 2018 season. Rosberg leads the 2016 championship by one point from Hamilton going into Sunday's Hungarian Grand Prix. The pair are dominating F1, having won nine of the opening 10 races, but their relationship is a fractious one, punctuated by a number of on-track clashes. Rosberg said the new contract was a "special moment for me", adding: "I look forward to the future." In a statement, Mercedes said: "Nico has been a core member of the Silver Arrows since the team returned to the sport in 2010 and has played a crucial role in the team's success in that time." Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff told BBC Sport: "Contract negotiations are never a formality because it is important for the driver and the team. It took a couple of months and we signed it last night. "I am in for long-term stability especially with the regulations change. I am a faithful person and if it functions well with your wife you need to stay with your wife." Wolff also said he had no concerns about Rosberg and Hamilton's contracts expiring at the same time. "It means they will try to outperform each other and you have to think to the younger generation," he said. "For me, there is more opportunity than risk in having both run out at the same time." BBC Sport's chief F1 writer Andrew Benson: Rosberg's new deal is no surprise given it has been telegraphed by both team and driver for some time. He is also leading the world championship - and Mercedes could not afford to let a man who might win it leave at the end of the season. The former Williams driver, who has 19 F1 wins in his career, has had a sometimes difficult relationship with Briton Hamilton, but it is a relationship Mercedes feel they can control. The driver line-up is perfect for them. In Hamilton, they have arguably the fastest driver in F1. In Rosberg, they have a man who can win when Hamilton hits trouble and who is good enough to beat him on merit from time to time. Retaining both drivers gives the team stability ahead of 2017, when a new set of regulations will dramatically change the cars. It's the obvious choice. Rosberg's deal means all three top teams have confirmed driver line-ups for 2017. Red Bull are retaining Daniel Ricciardo and Max Verstappen, while Ferrari have confirmed Kimi Raikkonen as partner for Sebastian Vettel. The only active world champion without a drive at this stage is Britain's Jenson Button, whose McLaren contract expires at the end of this season. McLaren are likely to promote their Belgian reserve driver Stoffel Vandoorne to partner double world champion Fernando Alonso, although chairman Ron Dennis told BBC Sport two weeks ago they would not decide until September. Button also has interest from Williams, who are likely to drop Brazilian veteran Felipe Massa. Finn Valtteri Bottas is under option and is likely to be retained. Summarize. output:
Nico Rosberg has signed a new contract with Mercedes and will continue to partner triple world champion Lewis Hamilton for the next two years.
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Summarize: Phyllis Roberts first held the title in Blaenavon, near Pontypool, 47 years ago - when Elvis Presley topped the charts and a loaf of bread cost 9p. The former newsagent and magistrate received a British Empire Medal in 2015 for her services to her community. "If you set your mind to it and you want to do something, you can do it," she said. "I don't feel that old to be honest so I just want to get down to it because I don't like a fuss being made. "One person told me that I was the oldest mayor in Britain but I didn't stand for the council with any thoughts of becoming mayor. "I was nominated by members in the council and I didn't expect to get the support that I did. "Age to me is just a number - it's all about whether you're up to the job or not."
A 93-year-old, believed to be Britain's oldest mayor, has returned to the role for the second time in Torfaen.
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Write an article based on this summary: At least 35% of corals in the northern and central parts of Australia's Great Barrier Reef have been destroyed by bleaching, Australian scientists say.
The experts from James Cook University (JCU) say it is the most extreme case of mass bleaching they have ever measured at the World Heritage Site. Bleaching occurs when warmer water causes coral to weaken and lose the colourful algae that provide oxygen and nutrients. It has been linked to climate change. "We found on average, that 35% of the corals are now dead or dying on 84 reefs that we surveyed along the northern and central sections of the Great Barrier Reef, between Townsville and Papua New Guinea," Professor Terry Hughes, the head of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at JCU, said in a statement. "This year is the third time in 18 years that the Great Barrier Reef has experienced mass bleaching due to global warming, and the current event is much more extreme than we've measured before. "We're rapidly running out of time to reduce greenhouse gas emissions." The scientists warned that the recovery of coral cover is expected to take a decade or longer, but it would take much longer to regain the largest and oldest corals that have died. Their study was released after months of intensive aerial and underwater surveys.
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Question: Article:The 22-year-old's contract with Scottish Premiership side Hearts expired at the end of the 2016-17 season. Full-back Paterson made over 150 first team appearances for the Tynecastle club. "I'm absolutely delighted and buzzing to be part of this big club," Paterson said of his move to Cardiff. "It's nice and early so I've got a lot of time to bed in, get to know my way around the area and introduce myself. "It's great timing and I'm happy to be here." London-born Paterson has won five caps for Scotland after making his debut against Italy in May 2016. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: Scotland defender Callum Paterson has joined Championship club Cardiff City on a three-year contract. input: Article: There were 653 people charged in 2012 out of 4,908 offences reported to 29 forces in England, Scotland and Wales. Police chiefs said the figures demonstrate a new challenge. Last week, interim guidelines were issued, aimed at reducing the number of charges in England and Wales, after a string of controversial court cases. The conviction of Paul Chambers in 2010 for joking on Twitter about blowing up Robin Hood Airport in South Yorkshire was widely condemned and eventually quashed. The latest statistics were released by the police under the Freedom of Information Act. Fewer Twitter prosecutions likely In 2008, when the level of social network activity was much lower, there were 556 reports of alleged crimes with 46 people charged. By this year that figure had risen to 4,908 allegations and 653 charged. Chief Constable Andy Trotter of the Association of Chief Police Officers said it was important that police prioritised social networking crimes which caused genuine harm. He said: "We need to accept that people have the right to communicate, even to communicate in an obnoxious or disagreeable way, and there is no desire on the part of the police to get involved in that judgment. "But equally, there are many offences involving social media such as harassment or genuine threats of violence which cause real harm. "It is that higher end of offending which forces need to concentrate on." Police forces were asked to provide the number of crime reports in which either Facebook or Twitter was a key factor, and nearly two-thirds responded. Offences included those committed on the websites, such as the posting of abusive messages, but also violent attacks committed for real but provoked by these kinds of online postings. As well as menacing and threatening messages, there were also numerous sexual offences including grooming, complaints of stalking, allegations of racially aggravated conduct and reports of fraud. Greater Manchester Police charged the highest number of people, at 115. Lancashire Police say they received reports of six threats of murder. Mr Trotter said some of the offences would have been committed anyway, regardless of the existence of social media. "We have to respect free speech and cannot have police forces responding simply because of public outcry. "In many ways, online communities can be self-regulating and good at weeding out unacceptable behaviour. We need to find a way of distinguishing between that type of behaviour and that which requires police intervention." He welcomed recent guidance from the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), saying it set a "high threshold" for that intervention and represented a first step towards a better co-ordinated approach. Director of Public Prosecutions Keir Starmer QC has announced new guidelines on how people who post offensive messages on Facebook and Twitter should be dealt with. He admitted the CPS made the wrong "judgment call" in the case of Mr Chambers. Summarize. output: The number of alleged crimes involving Facebook and Twitter has increased nearly eight-fold in four years, according to police figures. Article: Unemployed Paul Wright, 53, fears he may be forced to camp in nearby woods, despite "serving Queen and country". WSCC said Mr Wright had been asked to move the caravan after complaints. If Mr Wright refuses, the council will move it and keep it in a safe compound for a certain time, after which it will be dismantled, a WSCC spokesman said. Mr Wright said he was in the Parachute Regiment for nine years, which included two tours of Northern Ireland. "When I was in the Army quite often we lived rough because of the jobs that we did, but it still doesn't excuse the fact that a man should have to live like this after serving Queen and country," he said. "They're not looking after the people that have looked after them. There's an awful lot of ex-servicemen in awful situations, it's not just me." He said he had been told the caravan would be removed from the lay-by on the A259 in five days. "The council have told me they can't offer any accommodation - the only place I can sleep is in the lay-by in the trees," he said. But on Friday, WSCC said Chichester District Council was helping Mr Wright to find alternative accommodation. The spokesman said: "We understand Mr Wright is in a difficult position, but we have had to take action in this case following complaints. "We have been working with the district councils to assist him. "The issue is subject to ongoing court proceedings therefore we are unable to comment further." ++++++++++ Summarize: A former soldier has said he will be left homeless if West Sussex County Council (WSCC) removes his caravan from a lay-by near Chichester. Problem: Officers were called to Rowley Healthcare on Hawes Lane in Rowley Regis, West Midlands, on Monday afternoon. The woman, who was in her 50s, was treated by medical staff and taken to hospital but died a short time later. A 54-year-old man was arrested at the surgery and is in police custody. The area has been cordoned off while forensic experts examine the scene. What was that article about? A: A man has been arrested on suspicion of murdering a woman who arrived at a doctor's surgery with stab wounds and died shortly after. A suicide bomb exploded near the national intelligence headquarters on Sunday morning. The sound of heavy gunfire was reported from the area. Government officials say that they have "foiled the attack" and four militants are dead. The militants have vowed to intensify attacks during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, which began on Wednesday. Al-Shabab claims to have killed several intelligence officers inside the building, something the government denies. Interior ministry spokesman Mohamed Yusuf said security forces had successfully repulsed the attackers. "They were trying to storm the premises but they have been taken out before they reached their objective. There was no casualty on our side," he told reporters. Bodies of al-Shabab militants were shown to the media. Witnesses reported a loud explosion signalling the start of the fighting. "There was a heavy explosion and in seconds heavy gunfire broke out. We cannot go outside the house because of the shooting," local resident Abdulahi Yare told the AFP news agency. Security in the country has improved but al-Shabab still attacks Mogadishu regularly. The group has targeted the intelligence headquarters before. Various armed groups have been battling for control of Somalia since the overthrow of President Siad Barre in 1991. In April, al-Shabab militants launched an assault across the border in Kenya on a university in the north-eastern town of Garissa. The attack killed 148 people in what was the deadliest ever attack by the group. Sum:
The Somali jihadist group al-Shabab has launched a major attack in the country's capital Mogadishu.
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Vladimir Anikeev's group "Shaltai Boltai" (Humpty Dumpty) was notorious for hacks including the Twitter account of Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev. He was tried amid tight secrecy and convicted of unauthorised access to computer information. Anikeev argued he was defending freedom of information and the internet. A former journalist, he denied that Humpty Dumpty was political or had links to the FSB security service. Two other men have also been accused in the case, Alexander Filinov and Konstantin Teplyakov. Among the Kremlin figures he was accused of targeting were presidential aide Andrei Belousov, the prime minister's press secretary Natalya Timakova and state TV presenter Dmitry Kiselyov, who also heads the Sputnik news agency. Anikeev's defence said it would not contest the sentence but would make a plea for early release, news agency Ria Novosti reported. He has already spent several months in custody. Earlier this year, the BBC interviewed another member of the Humpty Dumpty group, Alexander Glazastikov, in Estonia. Initially the group was "a politically-oriented project in opposition to the Kremlin" that targeted domestic corruption, he said. Then he claimed that last year Anikeev had been approached by a senior member of the FSB. An FSB official was among those arrested earlier this year. What is a summary of this text?
The leader of a Russian hacking group that targeted the emails of high-profile Kremlin figures has been given two years in prison by a Moscow court.
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Article: Jones' opening game in charge ended with a 15-9 win in Scotland, meaning England lead the table after the first round of matches. Now England travel to Rome next Sunday, having won all 21 of their previous meetings against the home side. "We control our own destiny. We want to go there and smack Italy," said Jones. Media playback is not supported on this device The 56-year-old Australian was appointed England's first foreign coach after Stuart Lancaster lost his job following last year's World Cup failure. Lancaster's side became the first host nation to be eliminated in the group stage of a World Cup. Now Jones, who took over after leading Japan to a stunning victory over South Africa during the tournament, is trying to guide England to their first Six Nations championship since 2011. Italy, who are aiming to avoid the wooden spoon for the second successive season, were narrowly beaten 23-21 in their opener in France. The Azzurri led 21-20 with less than five minutes remaining, only to lose when Jules Plisson converted a penalty from the halfway line. "I've already said to the boys that's our aim - to go out there and give Italy a good hiding," said Jones. "Italy are going to be tough because they should have beaten France, but that's our aim." Media playback is not supported on this device ++++++++++ Summarize: England head coach Eddie Jones wants his new side to maintain their early Six Nations momentum by giving Italy "a good hiding" next weekend. Article: Mr Renzi formally resigned on Monday after his defeat in a constitutional referendum a day earlier, but the president requested the delay. President Sergio Mattarella will later have to either choose a new prime minister or call early elections. European leaders have been playing down the risks of fallout from the crisis. It comes amid fears of long-term instability for the country's troubled banking sector in the long-term. Shares in Italian banks lost ground following news of Mr Renzi's defeat. Sunday's No vote on constitutional reform was widely seen as a rejection of establishment politics in Italy. Mr Renzi held a final brief cabinet meeting on Monday evening, before travelling to the presidential palace to submit his formal resignation. President Mattarella then asked him to stay on for the budget bill, which is expected to be passed by the Senate in a matter of days. He wanted to avoid "the risks of a provisional budget", the president said in a statement (in Italian). The BBC's James Reynolds in Rome says the move will help to reassure markets that the referendum result has not derailed the country's affairs. Anti-establishment opposition parties have been calling for early elections, although it is unclear yet whether this will happen. Instead, the president may appoint a caretaker administration led by Mr Renzi's Democratic Party, which would carry on until an election due in the spring of 2018. Finance Minister Pier Carlo Padoan is the favourite to succeed Mr Renzi as prime minister. The No vote won with nearly 60% against 40% for the Yes campaign. With a turnout of nearly 70%, it was a heavier than expected defeat for the government. Mr Renzi staked his political future on his attempt to change Italy's cumbersome political system. He wanted to strengthen central government and weaken the Senate, the upper house of parliament. His opponents - including some within his own party - had argued that the reforms would give the prime minister too much power. The electorate agreed. More than a resounding victory for the No camp, it was a chance for a medley of populist parties to reject establishment politics. The opposition, headed by the Five Star Movement, capitalised on Mr Renzi's declining popularity, years of economic stagnation, and the problems caused by tens of thousands of migrants arriving in Italy from Africa. After the vote, Mr Renzi defended his record, saying exports and job numbers were up and unemployment was down to 11.7%. Five Star's leader, Beppe Grillo, has called for an election "within a week". The result is being seen as a blow to the EU, although there is no question of Italy leaving the union. Both Five Star and the Northern League are opposed to the eurozone but not to membership of the EU itself. Reuters news agency quoted German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble as saying there was no reason for a euro crisis but that Italy urgently needed a functioning government. Meanwhile, a spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel said she "took note with regret" of Mr Renzi's resignation but Germany would offer to work closely with the next Italian government. But the leader of the far-right Front National in France, Marine Le Pen, tweeted: "The Italians have disavowed the EU and Renzi. We must listen to this thirst for freedom of nations." Markets seemed to have taken Mr Renzi's departure in their stride. The euro fell initially to a 20-month low but rebounded again. Shares in Italian banks lost ground on Monday afternoon, following a dip and rebound in the morning. But there are concerns over the long-term financial stability in the eurozone's third largest economy. The economy is 12% smaller than when the financial crisis began in 2008. The banks remain weak and the country's debt-to-GDP ratio, at 133%, (second only to Greece's in the eurozone) means many Italian banks are in need of refinancing. There is a risk that the failure of a major bank - such as the troubled Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena - could set off a wider crisis, but repairing the banks becomes more difficult amid political uncertainty. ++++++++++ Summarize:
Outgoing Italian PM Matteo Renzi has agreed to stay in power until the Senate passes its 2017 budget in the coming days, the president says.
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Article:It coincides with the publication of a report on Southern Health NHS Foundation Trust, one of the country's largest mental health trusts. It identified a "lack of leadership, focus and sufficient time spent" investigating deaths. Mr Hunt said he was determined that the NHS learned lessons from the report. Southern Health covers Hampshire, Dorset, Wiltshire, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire, and provides services to about 45,000 people. The report was ordered in 2013, after 18-year-old Connor Sparrowhawk drowned in a bath following an epileptic seizure while a patient at Southern Health hospital in Oxford. His death was found to have been preventable, with neglect by the trust contributing to his death. The report, which was leaked to the BBC last week, showed there had been more than 10,000 deaths at the trust between 2011 and 2015. Not all deaths require an investigation, but of the 722 unexpected deaths, only 272 had been investigated. And investigations that did take place took too long, were of "poor" quality and when concerns were raised by coroners and others "no effective action was taken". And while 30% of all deaths were investigated in adult mental health services, fewer than 1% of deaths of people with learning disabilities were investigated and 0.3% of deaths in older people with mental health problems. The report said there had been a "failure of leadership". In a statement to Parliament, Mr Hunt wrote: "I am determined that we learn the lessons of this report, and use it to help build a culture in which failings in care form the basis for learning for organisations and for the system as a whole." He said the Care Quality Commission would now undertake a "focused inspection" on Southern Health in the new year. The CQC would "also be undertaking a wider review into the investigation of deaths in a sample of all types of NHS trust in different parts of the country", he added. "As part of this review, we will assess whether opportunities for prevention of death have been missed, for example by late diagnosis of physical health problems." Katrina Percy, the chief executive at Southern Health, said the report looked into patients who had had any contact with Southern Health and that "in most cases referred to in the report, the trust was not the main care provider". Ms Percy said: "We fully accept that our processes for reporting and investigating deaths of people with learning disabilities and mental health needs were not always as good as they should have been. "We also fully acknowledge that this will have caused additional pain and distress to families and carers already coping with the loss of a loved one. "We apologise unreservedly for this and recognise that we need to make further improvements." She added that the lessons of the report applied to the "wider health and social care system, and society as a whole". Summarize the main points of that article.
A review of the way deaths are investigated throughout the NHS has been announced by Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt.
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The door opened as the train approached Terminal 4 Heathrow, where passengers were taken off the service. The Rail Maritime and Transport (RMT) union said it was the fifth time it had happened in recent weeks. Transport for London (TfL) said it had carried out checks which showed it was an "isolated incident". The RMT said some drivers were refusing to work on Sunday due to safety fears. The ASLEF union also said some drivers were refusing to operate the Tube trains. TfL said it had met with trade unions to give them full assurance there were no wider safety issues. The Piccadilly line is operating with delays and some suspensions. Pat Hansberry, London Underground operations director, said: "Following an isolated problem with one train door we carried out a full inspection to confirm there wasn't a wider problem, which resulted in some cancellations." The RMT has previously raised questions about the reliability of the Piccadilly Line trains, which it describes as an "ageing fleet". A spokesman for the union said: "There are serious questions over the safety of the ageing fleet on the Piccadilly Line in terms of braking systems, wheel flats and brake operation that RMT has been raising for well over a year now. "There are clearly major safety issues which must not be ignored any longer". What is a summary of this text?
A train door opened on a moving Piccadilly Line train on Saturday morning, prompting an inspection of all the trains on the Piccadilly Line.
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They sniff and sip a type of Oolong tea from tiny, white china cups while making notes on its aroma, body and aftertaste, and consider what food with which to pair it. Part of a generation that had eschewed tea leaves in favour of the lattés, espressos and frappucinos sold by international chains like Starbucks, young Chinese are rediscovering the country's tea drinking tradition. And in doing so, they have sparked a boom that is both a cultural and business phenomenon. "My parents drink tea like this every day but I seldom do," says Sharon Ho, a 30-year-old who works in accounting, as she sips a cup of Wuyi Dark Rock Oolong tea grown in the mountains in Fujian province in southeastern China. "Normally I drink coffee, but as Chinese we should know about this." Prices of rare, high-end Chinese teas - such as Pu Erh, a black, fermented tea that can be aged for up to 100 years, or First Flush Longjin, a freshly picked green tea - have rocketed over the past decade. The industry has been shaped in ways that parallel the Western captivation with wine, with tea becoming a distinctly Chinese way to flaunt your wealth and invest your savings. Vivian Mak, the tea master who runs the tastings, brews the tea in the traditional way using small fine china tea sets and metal implements on a wooden tray that drains off excess water. But she prides herself on taking an innovative approach to an old industry. Her signature drink is a jasmine blossom-scented green tea she likes to serve in a martini glass. She serves the fragrant and visually arresting beverage as an alternative to wine at corporate events for clients like Goldman Sachs. "There's not too much water inside, so you can sip while you mingle," she says. Mak believes different Chinese teas can complement any type of cuisine, be it a nutty, malty Longjing green tea with a Chinese seafood dish, or a stronger Oolong tea to accompany a hearty French casserole. She also likes to pair teas with different types of chocolate. "It's like wine. You serve something more gentle or with more body depending on what you eat. Tea is the same way." Ricky Szeto, the executive director of Hong Kong herbal tea maker Hung Fook Tong, has also found business success repackaging a traditional product in a manner that catches the attention of younger consumers. Teas infused with medicinal herbs have long been a popular drink in southern China to help relieve the effects of hot and humid summers and damp winters. Traditionally sold by the bowlful at corner shops from bronze urns, Mr Szeto says the business was a "sunset industry" by the 1980s, when vendors were hit by sky-rocketing rents. Today, Hung Fook Tong's bottled drinks feature ingredients like ginseng, chrysanthemum, honey and goji berries, and are stocked at supermarkets and convenience stores across Hong Kong and China. The company also has 93 stores in Hong Kong and 32 across the border in China that sell freshly made herbal drinks and snacks. One of Hung Fook Tong's best-selling products is Tortoise Plastron Jelly, a black, slightly bitter concoction made from the underbelly of a tortoise that folk medicine claims is good for the complexion. It is sold in an aluminium bag, like an energy drink. "People love something traditional, but with the trendy packaging," he says. Mr Szeto says demand is strong, with sales increasing at 20% a year, and turnover is expected to be around 700m Hong Kong dollars ($90m; £56m) this year. Overseas companies have taken note of the boom. In 2010 Starbucks, which opened one outlet in China every four days last year, began selling three types of traditional Chinese tea alongside its myriad coffee-related products. And Rahul Kale, director of international business at Typhoo Tea, sees opportunity in China for its stable of teas that include specialty brands such as Heath & Heather Infusions and Ridgways as well its namesake mainstream UK brand of black tea. "The palate is shifting from 100% Chinese teas to something much wider," he says. "And Chinese like foreign brands." But for now, China accounts for only about 1% of Typhoo's sales. China's large market hasn't spawned a well-established domestic tea chain. According to the China Tea Marketing Association, there are more than 60,000 tea houses scattered across the country, most independently run. Once a place where average people could relax over a game of cards or mah-jong and pay next to nothing for their fragrant beverage, many tea houses now target affluent businessmen seeking a place to negotiate deals. They pay by the hour for a room plus the tea they drink. The move upmarket is reflected by the eye-popping prices some types of Chinese tea command. A compressed cake (around 345g) of Pu Erh dating back to the first half of the last century can be sold for up to HK$200,000 (more than $25,000). Sellers charge a premium for leaves picked from older plants, wild trees or particular mountain ranges. Enthusiasts talk about oxidation or fermentation levels, loose-leaf versus pressed, and whether the tea was harvested in the spring or the summer. The hype has prompted one entrepreneur in the southwestern province of Sichuan to grow a tea fertilised by panda dung that costs $3,500 for 50 grammes. However, connoisseurs like Ms Mak in Hong Kong are sceptical of buying tea for investment purposes. There is no empirical way to establish a tea's provenance, so buyers are easily duped. "It's too speculative," she says. "It doesn't matter whether it's expensive or not, you have to focus on the taste." This article was about:
On a humid September Saturday, a group of 20- and 30-something professionals gather at a tea house in an industrial building in a now gentrified Hong Kong neighbourhood.
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Article:He said a rising level of consumer debt in the economy was a growing concern. Lord Darling was speaking on the 10th anniversary of the 2007 crash, which led to the government spending billions of pounds rescuing major banks. He said the financial system was now safer but warned of "complacency". "The lesson from 10 years ago is that something that can start as apparently a small ripple in the water can become mountainous seas very quickly," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. The Labour peer said that over the last seven or eight years the economy had grown with "the odd stutter". However, he said he was concerned it was now starting to slow down again and that Brexit was causing "massive uncertainty". This, coupled with rising levels of consumer debt, should "raise alarm bells" for an economy so dependent on consumer spending, he said. "When interest rates go up, and they will go up, if not this year then certainly next year, and suddenly people find they are going to be paying more in their monthly payments, that's when you need to watch out." Lord Darling - or Alistair Darling as he was then known - became chancellor of the exchequer in June 2007, two months before French bank BNP Paribas famously shut down several investment funds citing problems in the US securities market. This is widely viewed as the start of the financial crisis, and the former chancellor recalled: "As in every other treasury in the world, problems in the financial industry simply had not surfaced." Over the next few years the government was forced to step in as global financial markets seized up and banks stopped lending to each other. It nationalised some lenders and provided tens of billions of taxpayers' money to prop up banks such as RBS that otherwise would have collapsed. The collapse of US investment bank Lehman Brothers saw workers take home their careers in boxes. Then there was the first run on a UK lender in 140 years, and the massive bailout of a British bank that had become the biggest in the world. It all started 10 years ago when a French bank admitted it didn't know what its investments in US property were worth - if anything. That BNP Paribas press release became a panic that turned into paranoia as trust between financial institutions evaporated. On 9 August 2007 we felt the first tremor of a full-blown financial earthquake, whose aftershocks we are still dealing with today - nationally, locally and personally. The crisis: 10 years in three charts Lew: Financial risks 'still substantial' "In the early stages it looked that there was just a problem with [the bank] Northern Rock," Lord Darling said. "However, it became clear as we went through August of 2007 that more and more banks were becoming reluctant to lend to each other - which was extraordinary at that time - and that there was a more deep-seated problem." "Probably the most scary moment" of the crisis, he said, was the run on RBS by its corporate customers in October 2008. "I had to go to one of these meetings of European finance ministers, and I was asked to come out and take a call from the then chairman of RBS [Tom McKillop] who said the bank was haemorrhaging money," Mr Darling said. "Remember this was not only the biggest bank in the world, it was about the same size as the entire UK economy. "I said to him, how long can you last? And what he said to me shook me to the core. He said, 'well we're going to run out of money in the early afternoon'." If the government hadn't intervened quickly, Lord Darling said, "there would have been blind panic throughout the entire banking system, not just in the UK but around the world". He said banks today were much better capitalised than in 2007 and regulators "more sharp and ready to intervene". But he warned the next crisis was likely to come from "somewhere unexpected and from causes that haven't yet been identified". "The biggest danger is complacency. And of course in a few years' time when institutional memories start to fade, and the people around have all gone and retired, then that's where the risk occurs." Get news from the BBC in your inbox, each weekday morning A summary of the above article is?
Regulators must remain "very very" vigilant about the risks to the economy, former chancellor Lord Darling has told the BBC - 10 years on from the start of the financial crisis.
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Article:Physical education teacher Graham Hopkins admitted kissing the girl at Liquid Nightclub in December 2014. The teacher also failed to report to management that the girl and another female, who he knew to be a pupil, were likely to be under 18. Mr Hopkins also admitted having his photo taken at the nightclub with the pupils and socialising with them. He waived his right to a full hearing before the General Teaching Council for Scotland (GTSC) and admitted the charges in a written declaration. Mr Hopkins admitted his fitness to teach had been impaired as a result of the allegations and agreed to the reprimand, which will remain on the GTCS's register of teachers for one year. Summarize the main points of that article.
A teacher who kissed a pupil in a Dundee nightclub has been officially reprimanded but will keep his job.
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North's agent has revealed that Scarlets are in talks with the Saints. Davies says the Welsh regions are almost admitting they are just breeding grounds for Europe's top clubs. "If we're going to be nurseries then we are almost throwing the towel in on the domestic front," he said. "If we want to compete, let's do so. If we don't, let's say so and not lead anybody up the garden path." North, 20, has a year left on his Scarlets contract and is not actively seeking a transfer, according to his agent. But Christian Abt claims the region, who have refused to comment, have been talking to the Saints and "possibly a few other parties" about North's future. He says the financial difficulties facing the Welsh regions are a factor in the North talks. Scarlets, like the three other Welsh regions, are struggling financially and will be operating under a self-imposed £3.5m salary cap next season. They recouped an undisclosed fee after allowing Ben Morgan to join Gloucester at the end of last season, and would expect to pocket a significant amount for North, who is rated as one of world rugby's most destructive wingers. Should he move, North would join fellow Wales stars Jamie Roberts and Dan Lydiate in leaving the domestic game at the end of the season. Alex Cuthbert has bucked the recent trend by extending his contract with Cardiff Blues, who have also tempted Gethin Jenkins back from Toulon. But a steady trickle of Wales players have been lost in recent seasons, lured by the offer of significantly higher wages in England and France. "Finances are obviously coming into play here, probably on both sides," added Davies, a former chief executive of Cardiff RFC. "It's no secret that all the Welsh regions are struggling financially so if the Scarlets can secure a healthy return for [Saints] buying North's contract out, it's obviously of appeal to them. "And of course in terms of George North securing his own future, if a club like Northampton comes in and doubles or triples his salary then he's obviously going to look after his own welfare. "I don't think we can attribute blame on anybody - it's a commercial reality these days." But Davies does fear that while Wales are flourishing on the international stage, having just clinched the Six Nations title for the fourth time in nine years, the domestic game is being left behind. No Welsh team reached this season's quarter-finals of Europe's elite club competition, the Heineken Cup, and all four regions have called for greater financial support from the Welsh Rugby Union. "We're almost saying as a nation that we can't or don't want to compete on the domestic front," said Davies. "I find that quite sad. Welsh rugby should make a statement that we want to compete with the best in Europe. "It's fine at Six Nations level - that's very important as we've seen in recent weeks - but there are still 30 other weekends in the season when I'm sure Welsh rugby supporters would love to see the Welsh regions competing with the top French and English clubs." What is a summary of this text?
The loss of George North to Northampton Saints would further strengthen the impression that Welsh regions cannot compete at club level, says former Wales captain Gareth Davies.
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Q: Media playback is not supported on this device South Korea needed a win so the onus was on them to attack and they were helped when Steven Defour was sent off for a reckless tackle on Kim Shin-wook. A Son Heung-Min cross struck the face of the Belgium crossbar but the Asian side struggled to create chances. And Jan Vertonghen scored the Red Devils' winner when he slotted in after a Divock Origi shot was parried. Belgium have been criticised for a lack of flair so far in the tournament, but there is little question about their resilience as they have let in just one goal in three games and are unbeaten in their last 13 competitive matches. Their victory - the first time the Red Devils have won three group games at a World Cup - eliminated a South Korea side who lacked a cutting edge to go with their endeavour. South Korea boss Hong Myung-Bo apologised to his country's fans after a 4-2 defeat by Algeria in their previous match and his side began with the greater urgency in Sao Paulo. However, Hong's side might have conceded a spot-kick when Kim Young-gwon cynically blocked Anthony Vanen Borre in an offence which began outside the box and continued inside the penalty area. And despite all South Korea's early effort they should have gone behind when a Kevin Mirallas shot broke for Dries Mertens, only for the Belgium midfielder to sidefoot high from eight yards with just the keeper to beat. Hong's side tried to respond, with Ki Sung-yeung's 25-yard shot being turned around the post by keeper Thibaut Courtois. And from the resulting corner a header back across goal came off Belgium defender Nicolas Lombaerts before being hacked off the line by Defour. That was almost the last action of the match for Defour as he was soon sent off for a dangerous studs-up tackle which caught Kim on his shin. With South Korea having the numerical advantage Hong brought on forward Lee Keunho for midfielder Han Kook-young at half-time. And the substitute striker almost had an immediate impact as he had a shot blocked before heading a cross over, while a Son cross struck the face of the crossbar. South Korea's need to attack left them exposed at the back and Belgium took advantage. Origi had looked lively for Belgium after coming on as a substitute and, after his 22-yard strike being parried by keeper Kim Seung-gyu, Vertonghen reacted quickest to slot in the winner. A: Ten-man Belgium beat South Korea to top their World Cup group and set up a last-16 tie against the United States. Text: Negotiators from six world powers are attempting to strike a deal with Iran to restrict its nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief. The parties have set a deadline of the end of March to reach an agreement. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said that progress was being made. Mr Steinmeier said as he arrived in the Swiss city of Lausanne for the talks: "These are decisive days before us after nearly 12 years of negotiations with Iran. "The endgame of the long negotiations has begun." After meeting Mr Steinmeier and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, Mr Zarif said: "I think we can in fact make the necessary progress to be able to resolve all the issues and start writing them down in a text that will become the final agreement." He has already met US Secretary of State John Kerry in Lausanne. Mr Fabius added a note of caution, saying: "We have moved forward on certain points, but on others not enough." Britain, China and Russia are expected to join them over the weekend, with comprehensive talks due Sunday. They have set themselves a deadlines of 31 March for a political framework agreement and 30 June for a final deal. Iran insists its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes but world powers fear it has military ambitions. Some of the most contentious issues remain unresolved, says the BBC's Barbara Plett Usher. Potential sticking points in the nuclear talks are thought to include the pace at which sanctions would be lifted, how long the deal will last and how much of Iran's nuclear facilities will be open to inspection. summary: Talks on Iran's nuclear programme have entered their "endgame", Germany's Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier has said. Question: Article:One man was killed and two other people were hurt in the incident. The attacker got out of his car armed with a knife. He was shot, injured and arrested by police. He is being held on suspicion of murder and attempted murder, but police say there is no evidence of terrorism. The attacker, described by police as being "without a migration background", drove what is thought to be a rental car into pedestrians in one of the city's central squares, injuring three people. One of them, a 73-year-old German man, later died in hospital. The attacker then left the car but was tracked down, shot and seriously injured by police. He was questioned on Sunday in hospital after undergoing surgery but did not comment on the accusations against him, officials said. The two injured people were a 32-year-old Austrian national and a 29-year-old Bosnian woman, police said. Their injuries were said to be minor. An attack in December by a Tunisian Islamist who drove a lorry into a Berlin Christmas market, killing 12 people and injuring 49, has heightened security fears in Germany. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: Investigators are trying to establish the motives of a 35-year-old German man who drove a car into a group of pedestrians in the city of Heidelberg on Saturday. Q: McAleer and Rushe acquired the site just over a year ago and intends to develop it with a mixed-use hotel and student accommodation scheme. Belfast City Council approved plans for the 14-storey development, designed by Belfast-based Consarc Design Group. It will also comprise restaurants, bars and meeting and conference space. The site sits within an area known as 'The Linen Quarter' which Belfast City Council and other government agencies have targeted for major regeneration with plans including a major upgrade of the urban streetscape. The hotel will have an entrance facing on to Blackstaff Square. In a design and access statement submitted as part of the proposal, McAleer and Rushe said the hotel would make a "positive contribution" to the city by regenerating the site of an unoccupied building in the city centre. It also said it would "create a strong development on a prominent corner" in the city centre and "improve the activity and dynamism in a developing area". McAleer and Rushe property director, Stephen Surphlis, said: "This is great news for Belfast, as this is a centrally located hotel scheme, which is designed to complement Belfast's forward-looking aspirations and assist in meeting the undersupply in hotel provision. "The Belfast leisure market has recovered strongly following the downturn, with figures confirming strong occupancy levels and increasing room rates," he added. "This new hotel will help to satisfy increasing demand going forward as Belfast rapidly increases in popularity as a leisure and business destination." Mr Surphlis said his firm has "received strong interest from established hotel operators and have already commenced demolition of the existing college building". "We look forward to beginning construction early in 2016". McAleer and Rushe also has plans for an adjacent 476-room student housing scheme on McClintock Street and 804-room student housing scheme on College Avenue. The hotel and two student housing schemes will create in excess of 300 jobs during the building phase, giving a much need boost to the Northern Irish construction sector. A:
Planning permission for a 206-bedroom hotel on the site of the former Belfast Metropolitan College has been granted to a County Tyrone development firm.
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Article:He was attacked along with another man - understood to be his brother - in the Donegall Road area at about 21:30 BST and suffered a serious head injury. A band parade was taking place at the time, but the attack is not being treated as sectarian. The second man suffered injuries to his face that are not believed to be life-threatening. Police have appealed for witnesses to contact them. Summarize the main points of that article.
A man in his 20s is in a critical condition after being assaulted in south Belfast on Saturday night.
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Q: The 11-year-old bird, called Arthur, was swept away by strong winds during a display at the Royal Bath and West Show on Wednesday. The "massive great" bird has since been spotted in Castle Carey in Somerset and Devizes in Wiltshire. Birds of Prey Displays is asking anyone who sees him not to approach him and to contact them instead. The white-headed vulture was taking part in an Eagle and Vulture show on the opening day of the show in Shepton Mallet, when it was blown off course. Ben Potter, the bird's owner, said the "massive great big glove puppet of a vulture" should be easy to spot. "He's a 12lb vulture, with a 6ft wingspan - you can't miss him," he said. "And he will make himself really obvious to people because he knows people are part of his life so he will be quite visual." Since Wednesday, the massive bird has been spotted in a field in Castle Cary, been seen being "harassed by two rooks" as it flew over Sparkford in Somerset, and surprised a driver in Devizes in Wiltshire. "If you see it give me a call and I'll come and get it," said Mr Potter. "The only thing I do ask is that people don't go to him - not because he's dangerous - mainly because he'll be spooked and keep moving and moving and moving." A: A vulture that went missing in Somerset four days ago has still not been caught despite several sightings. Q: Dhoni was recently accused by the groundsman at Eden Gardens of asking for a dry pitch that will assist spin. But Dhoni said ahead of the start on Wednesday: "The wicket looks good. We'll have to see whether anything happens. It depends on clay content. "I don't think it will be much help for the spinners initially." The four-Test series is level at 1-1 with two matches left to play. India won the first Test in Ahmedabad by nine wickets, but England responded by winning the second in Mumbai by 10 wickets. And the 31-year-old insisted that fast bowlers will play a crucial role in what could prove to be a decisive match. "The fast bowlers at this time of year get a bit of swing on the ball both at the start of play and before stumps," he added. "I think the role of fast bowlers will be very crucial in this game." Ahead of the encounter, Dhoni reportedly asked for the Kolkata pitch to help the spinners from the first day. Groundsman Prabir Mukherjee described the request as "immoral" - but has since resolved his concerns. Dhoni did not confirm or deny that he had made any demands on Mukherjee regarding the pitch, despite being asked to clarify whether the reports were true. But the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) did call in another groundsman to "assist" Mukherjee in the build-up to the Test - a move which led to the latter announcing he was going on a month's sick leave. Mukherjee, who has been the groundsman at Eden Gardens for 20 years, was back there on Sunday stating that any differences had been "sorted out". However, Dhoni did admit that he was keen to play the Test on a pitch that was likely to ensure a result. "We lost the last game, but we still want to play on wickets that suit the sub-continent," he said. "That's what the sub-continental challenge is all about. "If you come to India, why do you want to play on wickets that are flat for the first three or four days? And sometimes, we have seen that even five days are not enough to get a result. "I feel the challenge is to play on tracks that turn and assist the spinners. It doesn't matter if we lose a few games or if we win the series, because that will be the crucial thing. "A cricketer who has played for five or six years can say: 'OK. I went to the sub-continent and the wickets were turning and bouncing. I scored runs or I failed.' Whatever it may be." England: Alastair Cook (capt), Nick Compton, Joe Root, Jonathan Trott, Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell, Eoin Morgan, Matt Prior (wk), Jonny Bairstow, Samit Patel, Graeme Swann, Monty Panesar, James Anderson, Tim Bresnan, Stuart Broad, Steven Finn, Graham Onions, James Tredwell. India: Mahendra Dhoni (capt, wk), Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir, Cheteshwar Pujara, Sachin Tendulkar, Virat Kohli, Yuvraj Singh, Ajinkya Rahane, Ravichandran Ashwin, Pragyan Ojha, Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan, Ishant Sharma, Murali Vijay, Ashok Dinda. A:
India captain Mahendra Dhoni is predicting a good wicket that will not unduly favour spin when his team play England in the third Test in Kolkata.
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For two decades Ms Dlamini-Zuma has been the quiet juggernaut of South African politics. Tough, highly educated, competent, aloof, and most importantly, rarely out of a job. The 67-year-old medical doctor has served in the cabinets of all four of South Africa's post-apartheid presidents - demonstrating an instinct for political survival and a capacity for endurance shared by few of her colleagues. Since 1994 she has been minister of health, foreign affairs and home affairs. But now comes what may be Ms Dlamini-Zuma's defining challenge. After four years away from South Africa's fractious political battles, as chairperson of the African Union Commission in Addis Ababa, she is poised to return home to run for the leadership of the governing ANC this December - a job that could, in turn, catapult her to the country's presidency in the 2019 national elections. Her supporters insist she's the perfect fit - a steady, hugely experienced, glass-ceiling-smashing woman, ideally positioned to reunite and reconcile the ANC's increasingly divided factions and to give the party a new lease of life to counter its steady slide in recent polls. Her absence from South Africa during the past few years is seen as another, perhaps deliberately-planned, advantage - leaving her untainted by the scandals and power struggles that have damaged other prominent figures now challenging her for the top job. But her critics find plenty to object to in that portrait. For a start, they point to her time at the African Union, which began with a notably divisive election campaign. To some observers, Ms Dlamini-Zuma went on to become a lacklustre chairperson, only half committed to the job, and too easily distracted by grand projects rather than setting the agenda and leading the responses to the continent's most urgent crises - from the Ebola outbreak to the conflicts in South Sudan, Mali, Somalia and beyond. Her supporters hit back by saying she has taken a more long-term, developmental approach to problem solving, which may have generated fewer headlines, but served the continent better. Then there is the profoundly complex issue all too neatly summed up by the second half of her surname, Dlamini-Zuma. From 1982 to 1998 she was married to South Africa's current president, Jacob Zuma. The couple raised four children before getting divorced. Since then, their political relationship has appeared to shift, with Ms Dlamini-Zuma at times seeming to back her former husband, and at other times overtly siding against him. The suspicion, now openly articulated by President Zuma's opponents, is that the current South African leader is actively promoting his ex-wife's bid to replace him, in the belief that as president, she will be able and willing to protect him from what he sees as a range of politically-motivated legal challenges and corruption investigations that could well pursue him after he leaves office. Only recently, Mr Zuma added fuel to such speculation by appearing to weigh in on the succession debate by saying the ANC was "ready" to be led by a woman, rather than backing his current deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa. To many, this line of attack against Ms Dlamini-Zuma is little more than a cheap sexist slur against a formidable and independent politician. And yet the perception of family bias clearly exists and, more to the point, in a no-holds-barred contest, it will almost certainly be wielded relentlessly in order to damage her chances of being elected ANC leader. Some draw parallels with Bill and Hilary Clinton in the US, and the sense that South African voters may simply have grown tired of the Zuma name and any hint of a political dynasty. The comparison is unfair, given that the Zumas are long divorced. But there is no doubt that Jacob Zuma - his presidency increasingly overshadowed by scandal - has become an electoral liability for the ANC, and that Ms Dlamini-Zuma will have to position herself as something other than a continuity candidate if she is not only to win December's vote, but to convince South Africans that after nearly a quarter of a century in power, the ANC still deserves to remain in power come 2019. What is a summary of this text?
As Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma steps down as the head of the African Union Commission, will she take over from her ex-husband as president of South Africa?
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The Premiership leaders have announced pre-season dates with the Serie A team, Leicester City and Barcelona. The match against Inter on 13 August will celebrate the 50th anniversary season of Celtic's 1967 European Cup triumph against the Italians. The venue has yet to be confirmed, with Scottish sides having the right to opt out of early league fixtures. Leicester, currently top of the English Premier League, will visit Celtic Park on 23 July, while the Barcelona game will take place in Dublin seven days later. Should Celtic win a fifth successive title, they will feature in the second round of Champions League qualification, with the first leg scheduled for 12 or 13 July and second leg on the 19 or 20 July. The first leg of the third round of qualifying would be on 26-27 July, with the play-off round beginning on 16-17 August. Sum: Celtic will skip the second weekend of next season to fit in a friendly with Inter Milan. The party said the event was not needed following a decision to hold the main UK conference in Llandudno next spring. UKIP leader Nigel Farage is still due to visit Swansea on 23 October, as part of his Say No to EU tour. A ticket website said the conference was cancelled due to a lack of sales, but a UKIP official said the message was incorrect and caused by an administrative error. Sum: UKIP has cancelled its Welsh autumn conference in Swansea in a fortnight. Camilla heard about the work of Social Bite, which feeds, trains and employs members of the homeless community. The Rose Street shop hosted Clooney in November and staff are expected to welcome fellow actor and campaigner Leonardo DiCaprio later this year. It will be DiCaprio's first visit to Scotland. The visit by the Duchess of Rothesay, as Camilla is known in Scotland, comes on the second day of a full week of engagements north of the border. Later on Wednesday, her husband Charles opened The Prince's Trust's youth employment and enterprise hub in Glasgow before being joined by Camilla at Dumfries House near Cumnock in East Ayrshire, the 18th-century stately home whose future was secured following intervention by the Duke of Rothesay in 2007. The couple attended a sewing bee challenge and opened a new maze before watching pets go through their paces in the annual Dumfries House dog show. Tuesday saw Charles praise the skills of workers assembling a new aircraft carrier bearing his name at Rosyth dockyard on the Firth of Forth. He toured the HMS Prince of Wales and spoke to the construction team and crew members before watching crane operators lower the final 570-tonne section into place. The 280-metre carrier, the eighth ship to be named after the heir to the throne, is expected to start sea trials in 2019. Charles had earlier visited Perth sporran makers Margaret Morrison where he was given a tour of the workshop. Sum: The Duchess of Rothesay has followed in the footsteps of Hollywood star George Clooney by visiting an Edinburgh sandwich shop helping the homeless. Culture Secretary Fiona Hyslop made the comments after director general Tony Hall said the BBC needed to adapt to the changing face of British politics. The BBC laid out its plans as part of negotiations with the government ahead of charter renewal in 2016. Ms Hyslop said it was time for the BBC to take "bold and radical steps". During his speech, Lord Hall said the BBC needed to "reconfigure our news coverage to meet the changing expectations of audiences across the UK". The plans include: Lord Hall said: "As the pace of devolution quickens, we will need to adapt our services on television, online and radio to ensure that they fully reflect or are able to report the increasingly divergent politics of the UK. "We will never give up our role in reporting the whole of the UK back to itself, but we also have to recognise that news in some parts of the country simply does not apply in others. "We want to look at how, within existing resources, we might better configure the BBC's news offering across the UK, and, by the way, how across the range of our services more broadly, we reflect the nations of the UK to the whole UK." The SNP won 56 of the 59 available seats in Scotland at this year's general election, a landslide election victory which saw the Labour party suffering a near wipeout after holding most of the Westminster seats in Scotland since 1959. At the Edinburgh Television Festival last month, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon called on the BBC to greatly enhance its Scottish presence. She called for a new BBC Scotland TV channel and a second English-language radio station. Ms Hyslop said the BBC's response to the UK Government's green paper had "some merits" but fell short of the vision set out by the first minister last month. The Scottish culture secretary said the changes were "long-overdue" and the BBC did not need a new charter to be able to put them in place. She said: "It is time for the BBC to take bold and radical steps when it comes to winning back the approval of audiences in Scotland and reflecting the changing nature of the UK as a whole. "This cannot be the limits of the BBC's ambitions for Scotland, and the Scottish government will use the charter renewal process to build support for a better and bolder BBC in Scotland that reflects our national life, our outlook on the world and supports the creation of content in Scotland." Another of the plans announced by Lord all was for "a network of 100 public service reporters across the country", who will share work with local newspapers. It did not find favour with the Scottish Newspaper Society, who labelled the proposal "a Trojan horse which will undermine long-established publications and destroy local news agencies". "Instead of helping local news publishers, it would make the BBC even more powerful and would further concentrate coverage of news in the hands of the state-funded broadcaster," said its director John McLellan. Sum:
The Scottish government has said the BBC's proposals for its future are "far short on our ambitions for the broadcaster in Scotland".
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Article:The official explanation is that having already dropped the bill's most contentious policy - forcing all schools in England to become academies - there's essentially not that much point in going on with it in its planned form. There is not that much need to change the law. Instead, a bill on technical and further education was published. Next year the government will publish another set of reforms for schools, that will include Theresa May's most controversial proposal so far - to open new English grammars. Move along, nothing to see, just a perfectly logical tidying up exercise - if a piece of legislation is watered down, and more to the point is superseded by another, it is purely rational to get rid of it. And as my colleague Branwen Jeffreys writes, this clears the way for Mrs May's grammar school plans, with legislation possibly in the spring. Except that politics is rarely that straightforward. When Number 10 outlined the grammars proposals in September, sources were telling us that the existing reforms would go ahead as planned. At the Tory conference the message was the same. Senior ministers told me that the planned Education For All Bill would proceed this autumn, and that the proposals for grammars would work together perfectly well. Only three weeks later, what's changed? It is true that there is a point of legislative tidiness. The government is at pains to say that the grammar proposal will be part of a wider reform, only one of many measures to maximise the number of good school places. Politically, the government needs the controversial idea to be part of a wider package if they have a hope of getting it through the Commons, let alone the House of Lords. But as soon as Mrs May made clear she wanted to bring in far-reaching education reforms, there was a clear question - what was the point in spending political time and effort passing one big package of change this autumn, only to do the same next year? But it's suggested tonight that there was a lot more to it. One source told me a general "shakiness" around the government meant that the whips were trying to "clear the decks" of anything that might be remotely controversial. With all the anxiety around grammars and education in the Conservative Party and among the education unions, the smart move was to junk the bill rather than rattle the cage even further. One source told me "the PM has allowed the blob to win". Another source suggested ministers were worried about Labour using the Education For All Bill to try to stymie the prime minister, by trying to tack on amendments that would block her longer term plans for grammars. So, even though the bill didn't mention grammars, it could have been hijacked as a vehicle to attack the plans. Having clocked that risk, it was goodbye to Education For All. It's also been suggested the government "rechristened" the bill to focus on technical and further education, in part to give them a line of defence against accusations that the focus on grammars suggests the less able are being ignored. Theories abound. The government's official explanation is here. But bear in mind, the government is in discussions with potential Tory rebels over grammar schools. As one minister said: "People are being seen in an ongoing programme." Opening new grammars is one of the prime minister's big priorities that will be extremely hard to achieve. And to make that happen, ministers may find that other things have to be left behind. Summarize the main points of that article.
The government today has chucked another one of its planned bills over the side - "education for all".
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Write an article based on this summary: Government plans to cut legal aid in criminal cases have been criticised by an elite group of barristers used by it to prosecute the most serious crimes.
Treasury Counsel, appointed by the attorney general, said the cuts - £220m from a yearly budget of £1bn for criminal cases - were unsustainable. The Bar Council and the Law Society also criticised the plans. But the Ministry of Justice said savings were needed to ensure the system could help those most in need. A final consultation on proposed cuts to legal aid in criminal work in England and Wales closed on Saturday. Legal aid costs taxpayers about £2bn every year - half goes on criminal defence and the rest on civil cases including mental health, asylum and family law involving domestic violence, forced marriage or child abduction. Government proposals include cutting fees in complex, high cost cases by 30%, and in other crown court work by up to 18%. Treasury Counsel said the "entirely obvious and predictable outcomes will be lost quality and reduced supply of criminal advocates". Meanwhile, the Bar Council, which represents barristers in England and Wales, accused the government of putting "cuts before justice". Maura McGowan QC, chairwoman of the Bar, told BBC Radio 5 live there was clear evidence that standards were at risk. "The fees that are paid to people who do these cases have been reduced by almost as much as 40% already, before the planned reductions," she said. "It will drive people of quality out of the system and will mean those who depend on publicly funded representation run the risk of getting a lower standard. "So to say that they're making these cuts because they want to protect those who most need help, cannot be right." The Law Society, which represents some 130,000 solicitors in England and Wales, said it had some concerns about proposals for flat fees in magistrates' courts and the crown court and a single national fixed fee for police station work. Law Society President Nicholas Fluck said: "To maintain quality, it is vital that we have the most diverse range of solicitors possible in the system within the boundaries of long-term financial viability. "The current proposals for a single national fixed fee for police station work will have a disproportionate effect on firms in high-cost areas where the cost of doing business is greater. "It is unwise to risk tarnishing the respect in which our justice system both domestically and internationally is held by an apparent incentive to plead guilty, which could jeopardise the relationship of trust between clients and solicitors." The MoJ said the cut in high cost cases was to ensure it would impact high earners and not junior barristers, and denied other cuts were unjust. An MoJ spokeswoman said: "We have tried to ensure our proposals have more impact on high earners - 70% of criminal barristers contracted to Very High Cost Cases receive fee incomes of over £100,000, which is why we targeted the largest fee reductions at this type of work. "Nor do we accept our proposed rates for more routine work are unjust. The minimum a QC would be paid for such a case is £306 each day. "At around £2 billion a year we have one of the most expensive legal aid systems in the world and even after our changes would still have one of the most generous. "We agree legal aid is a vital part of our justice system and that's why we have to find efficiencies to ensure it remains sustainable and available to those most in need of a lawyer. "We have engaged constructively and consistently with lawyers - including revising our proposals in response to their comments - and to allege we have not is re-writing history."
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Question: Article:The North Coast 500 route, also known as the NC500, stretches for 500 miles. North Highland Initiative promotes the NC500 to holidaymakers seeking scenic road trips. VisitScotland said visitor numbers at its information centres (iCentres) had increased by 30% in Ullapool, 27% in Durness and 25% in Thurso. The visitor figures are from 1 April to 31 October this year and were compared to those from the same period last year. Scott Armstrong, VisitScotland's regional partnerships director, said: "I think it is safe to say that the NC500 has definitely brought additional visitors who wouldn't otherwise have come to the region. "As a result, there have been increases in visitor numbers at our iCentres in Ullapool, Durness and Thurso which are all on the NC500, proof I would say that the NC500 is indeed bringing extra visitors to the area." The NC500 features roads in the Black Isle, Caithness, Sutherland and Wester Ross. It includes several challenging ascents and descents, including the Bealach-na-Ba at Applecross. The unclassified road rises to about 626m (2,053ft) over about four miles (8km). North Highland Initiative encourages responsible driving of the route. However, Highlands and Islands Labour MSP David Stewart, while describing the route as a "brilliant concept", has suggested it needs a 10 year-long strategic plan to ensure the roads involved can cope with increased traffic. The NC500 is also regarded as a challenge for endurance cyclists. In May, seven women cyclists set a time of 36 hours to complete the route in a non-stop team time trial. The seven included Commonwealth Games cyclists Lee Craigie and Anne Ewing and British 24-hour mountain bike champion Rickie Cotter. The other riders were author and travel blogger Emily Chappell, transcontinental cyclist Gaby Leveridge, plus Zara Muir and Jo Thom, winners of the women's pairs event at this year's Strathpuffer endurance ride near Strathpeffer. Scottish endurance cyclist Mark Beaumont previously completed the NC500 solo in 37 hours 58 minutes. Edinburgh cyclist and Commonwealth Games rider James McCallum also beat Beaumont's time after completing the route in June. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: A scenic route has helped to increase tourist visitor numbers to places on Scotland's north west mainland coast, according to VisitScotland. Question: Article:Kinondoni District Commissioner Paul Makonda said he hopes to expand the scheme across the entire city. The trips on the "daladala" bus taxis will be paid for by the city's associations, echoing a scheme where soldiers travel for free on buses. Mr Makonda set up the scheme after First Lady Janeth Magufuli visited a local school in February. Her former colleagues at the Mbuyuni primary school, where she taught for over 15 years, mentioned room shortages and transport difficulties as current problems. Teachers greeted the news with smiles and proudly showed the new ID cards showing they are entitled to free transport to the BBC's Tulanana Bohela in Dar es Salaam. Kinondoni, which has a population of over one million, currently provides students with 50% discount on travel and has around 35,000 teachers. The ID cards are expected to be available for 3,000 teachers by the end of the week. Journeys which normally cost around 400 shillings (18 US cents; 12p) are free between 05:30 and 08:00 and 15:00 to 17:00 to those holding the special card. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: Teachers in parts of Tanzania's capital Dar es Salaam are being given free transport to and from their schools. Question: Article:The game - Eco Action Trumps - has been produced by a UK-based environmental games company. "It is a branding disaster for us, so we are dumping our brand name," said Paula Owen, of Eco Action Games. The company said children now assumed the game was connected to the president-elect. After the new president is inaugurated in January, the game will be renamed as Eco Action Toppers. "The awful irony of a positive, educational, eco-themed game bearing that man's name became just too much for us to bear - he simply had to go," said Dr Owen, cofounder of the games-maker. "Working in schools since the election result, we have been struck by how much children know about Trump and what he stands for. "It is becoming impossible to get our eco messages across using our card game any more as the kids now think it is about the president-elect." The card game, promoting environmental awareness, has been available for five years, and 50,000 packs have been sold. But Mr Trump's growing political prominence has created a "bit of a branding crisis", with the connection with the future resident of the White House described as "toxic". The company is going to rename the game and will give away any unsold stock of the "Trump" versions. Join the conversation - find us on Facebook Summarize the main points of that article. Answer:
An educational card game is going to change its name because of negative associations with the US President-elect, Donald Trump.
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Problem: Write an article based on this "US forces have launched missile attacks on Syria, a country in the Middle East." Article: A: 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. He said that he ordered "a targeted military strike on the airfield in Syria from where the chemical attack was launched. It is in this vital national security interest of the United States to prevent and deter the spread and use of deadly chemical weapons" The Syrian army say six people have been killed in the missile attack. President Assad says that he didn't have anything to do with the chemical weapons attack. The UK government says it fully supports the US missile strikes on Syria. Russia has condemned the missile attacks. 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. Problem: Write an article based on this "Children's services in Coventry - in the spotlight since four-year-old Daniel Pelka's death - have been branded "inadequate" by Ofsted." Article: A: Coventry City Council was criticised for a lack of robust management and not seeing vulnerable children fast enough. Managers at the authority said the department would now receive a £5.6m cash boost. Daniel, from Coventry, died in March 2012, after being starved and abused by his mother and her boyfriend. Ofsted's investigation in the wake of his death also stated the effectiveness of the Local Safeguarding Children Board was "inadequate". Children's Minister Edward Timpson is due to write to the council next week to say what he wants done. Councillor George Duggins, the city council's cabinet member for children, said staff had struggled because of workloads, which had increased by almost 50% in the past two years. He said: "There is no hiding from the fact the report's overall findings are disappointing but many of the problems we face, particularly in the front line of children social care, is down to the fact of the unprecedented volume of work which continues to increase." The Ofsted report said bosses had not tackled weaknesses in social care fast enough. It said meetings to discuss concerns about children were "not always effective enough" and said police "did not routinely attend". It also indicated that information about how managers were performing was not always reliable. Brian Walsh, the council's executive director of people, said a children's board chaired by Birmingham City Council chief executive Mark Rogers was being set up to ensure improvements were implemented. He said the authority, which is in the process of cutting £22.5m from adult social care, had pledged more money to the children's budget. In addition to the £5.6m - which will be used to fund 12 extra social workers and 16 agency staff - the council will allocate an extra £4m a year to children's services, from 2015-2016. "I can never guarantee every child in Coventry will be safe," said Mr Walsh. "All I can say is we are doing our best to provide a safe and robust service." A serious case review set up to investigate Daniel's case concluded last September that chances were missed to save the youngster and said at times he was "invisible" to police, NHS and social care agencies. Now, Ofsted has highlighted 10 areas of children's services requiring immediate action, including the need to ensure private fostering assessments were completed on time. Mr Walsh said no-one had been sacked due to the failures but said anyone not up to the job would be "dealt with through our normal procedures". By Phil MackieNews Correspondent Coventry knows it's under more scrutiny than most local authorities because of what happened to Daniel Pelka. Today's Ofsted report says many of the things that went wrong in 2012 are still not working properly now. Coventry only has to look to Birmingham to see how, once things start to go wrong, they can quickly get worse. Birmingham's children's social care department has been rated inadequate since 2009, has changed management several times, has struggled to recruit and retain staff, and has seen a catalogue of high-profile cases from Khyra Ishaq to Keanu Williams, in which young children, known to the authorities, have died. Coventry will be hoping to emulate another nearby authority, Staffordshire. In a little over two years, its children's services department has been transformed. At the end of 2011 Ofsted said it was performing poorly. Today it is rated as 'good'. Many of the changes introduced in Staffordshire are also being implemented in Coventry, including creating a multi agency hub where social workers, health workers, the police and schools occupy the same room and share information about cases so they can react quicker when there are concerns. Amy Weir, independent Chair of Coventry Safeguarding Children Board, said they were "very disappointed" with the Ofsted judgement. "We are determined to tackle the further challenges raised in the report in order to deliver rapid improvement over the coming months," she said. A Department for Education statement said it had been concerned about the arrangements for the protection of children in Coventry since the publication of the serious case review into Daniel's death. "While we accept securing sustainable improvement takes time, today's report shows that the pace of change in Coventry has simply not been good enough," it said. "We will now consider what further actions are needed to ensure all vulnerable children in Coventry are sufficiently protected." Dr Bernard Gallagher, a specialist in child protection research at the University of Huddersfield, said society needed to be "more questioning" of families. "If some parents are then suspected of abusing their children wrongly - that unfortunately is just something we have to accept," he added. The director of children's services at charity Action for Children, Carol Iddon, said: "The services that need to be maintained and invested in are the ones of early intervention so that children get support earlier before they become critical and before the situation becomes necessary for social work intervention. "We could do more at an earlier stage and that would then release social workers to deal with the high level cases where there are real genuine concerns about children's safety." Problem: Write an article based on this "News that some Tube services will run for 24 hours at weekends and 750 ticket office jobs are to go has been met with a mixed response from business, commuters and other interested parties." Article: A:
Mayor of London Boris Johnson said: "This is just the first stage in an opening up of the Tube network to become 24 hours. "For 150 years, the Tube has been the beating heart of London, its tunnels and tracks providing the arteries that have transported millions of people and helped to drive the development and economic growth of our great city." But are others equally as positive? No matter how this is dressed up by Boris Johnson and his officials, today's announcement is all about slashing almost £250 million from the annual London transport budget and the proposed cuts will decimate staffing levels and hit the most vulnerable users of Tube services the hardest. "RMT's position remains the same. We will work with sister unions and the public to fight these plans and that means using every campaigning, political and industrial tool at our disposal and our executive will be looking at a timetable and a strategy for that campaign, including a ballot for industrial action, later today. FSB London welcomes the new 24 hours Tube service at weekends and improvements to the reliability, capacity and accessibility of Tube services. London is a 24-hr international city and it should have a transport infrastructure to support the night time small business economy. However, whilst the 24-hour Tube service is a much-needed step forward, more needs to be done to address the problem of road congestion and the state of repair of roads in London. We are horrified at London Underground's dangerous plans to cut staff from Tube stations. Thousands of disabled and older passengers rely on station staff to help us travel safely and independently. Many of us - particularly visually impaired people and those with a learning impairment - simply cannot use ticket machines. When we first established the West End Commission at the start of this year, one of the major recommendations that came through was to run the Tube at later times at the weekend. We are delighted that our work with businesses, Peter Hendy, and the TfL team has now made that a reality. The West End Partnership may be in its infancy but we are already getting results that will benefit the entire West End of London. Later tubes = great. Closure of all ticket offices?! Idiocy of the highest order. London is a modern, global city and it is only right that we should have a transport system that reflects this. We support the work that TfL has done in putting in place plans to extend the Tube which will further help us compete with other major cities. The Mayor of London has today ripped up his manifesto promise to the people of London. As a result of his plans, Londoners will feel more anxious travelling at times when stations may be deserted.
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Q: E.On said the Rampion wind farm would now include 116 turbines, rather than 175, built eight miles (13km) off the coast between Peacehaven and Worthing. The energy provider revealed its final plans for the government-approved project on Monday. The three-year construction of the wind farm is expected to start next year. E.On said the site would generate electricity for up to 290,000 homes and would reduce CO2 emissions by up to 600,000 tonnes a year. It also estimates that between 250 and 300 jobs will be created by the project. E.On development manager Chris Tomlinson said: "Our final design seeks to optimise the scheme in the best seabed conditions as part of our continuing drive to reduce the costs of offshore wind. "We're now finalising our construction plans and moving closer to being able to secure jobs during both construction and operation." Concerns about the wind farm's impact on fishing and the environment - as the turbines would be visible from areas like the South Downs National Park - have previously been voiced. Brenda Pollack, from Friends of the Earth South East, said: "We are really pleased to see this project moving forward and that Eon have taken into account concerns we had about the visual impacts. "Although there will now be less energy produced due to smaller and fewer turbines it is still a substantial scheme which will help the country deliver cleaner energy sources to fuel our homes, businesses and public buildings." A: A wind farm off the Brighton coast will have 59 fewer turbines following concerns about its impact on views from the South Downs National Park. Q: In Tynwald, David Anderson confirmed plans are in place for an external assessment, the timings of which are due to be announced next month. It follows the publication of a series of concerns from senior consultants about standards at Noble's hospital. Mr Anderson said plans for a review have been in the pipeline since 2008. He added the delay had been due to trying to persuade UK regulators, Care Quality Commission (CQC), to take on additional work outside the UK. The CQC was set up in the UK as a way of checking that hospitals, care homes and care services meet national standards. Talks are now ongoing with other health service regulators. The inspection dates will be announced in the July sitting of Tynwald. A: An independent review into the Isle of Man's hospital is "a sign of a healthy, self-critical organisation, not failure", says the health minister. Q: They're touring primary schools across Scotland, but are taking all props, costumes and set pieces on their bikes! The producers of The Last Polar Bears want their play to be as enviromentally friendly as possible. It tells the story of an old man and his dog's quest to go to the North Pole to see the polar bears before all the ice melts. Ricky's went to meet the play's actors to find out more about the eco-friendly show. A: If you thought your school bag was a lot to carry, then spare a thought for these actors. Q: The Senate adopted the bill by 196 votes to 146 on Tuesday evening. It must now be passed by the National Assembly, before becoming law. Organisers of such pageants may face a jail term of up to two years and a fine of 30,000 euros (£25,000; $40,000). The measure was prompted by a row over a photo shoot in Vogue magazine. The photos published in December 2010 showed a girl of 10 with two others, all three in heavy make-up and wearing tight dresses, high heels and expensive jewellery. Vogue defended the pictures, saying they merely portrayed a common fantasy among young girls - to dress like their mother. Parliament heard a report entitled Against Hyper-Sexualisation: A New Fight For Equality, which called for the ban on beauty competitions for the under-16s. It also recommended other measures, not included in the bill, including a ban on child-size adult clothing such as padded bras and high-heeled shoes. "Let us not make our girls believe from a very young age that their worth is only judged by their appearance," said the author of the report, former Sports Minister Chantal Jouanno. A:
Parliament in France has moved to ban child beauty pageants on the grounds that they promote the "hyper-sexualisation" of minors.
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Question: Article:As Britain basked in the early-spring sunshine, there was a festival atmosphere, but with an initial 6,000-plus teams now cut down to around 600, there was also a fierce competitive spirit, with places in the Birmingham finals now within touching distance. It all began with the exuberance and no-little-skill of our Under-14s and Under-16s teams... The stars of our live-page coverage were undoubtedly Finesse Under-13s and Sprowston Girls Under-16s, who came through their sections in contrasting styles. Sprowston reprised their form of round one, when they dismissed all-comers in Norfolk, with a similar display of dominance in Birmingham, culminating in a 7-2 victory in the final. Finesse, by contrast, ground it out through two penalty shootouts in Wimbledon to prevail in a fiercely contested section, beating the highly skilled WHU Kicks - who also provided us with some great entertainment - 4-2 in the final. Of course, we couldn't be everywhere, but other qualifiers include (Boys' Under-14) Sproatley Juniors, CS Colts, Summertown Stars, (Boys' Under-16) New Mills, Barking, Sutton Coldfield Town, Handsworth. And in the girls section, (Under-14) Elita 5s, Hebburn Town Honeys, Plymouth Argyle (Under-16) Hayes and Yeading Ladies, Rose Bridge Academy and not forgetting QPR Girls (and their Brazilian fan club)! Media playback is not supported on this device We followed the fortunes of Norton and Stockton Ancients in the Adult Female category in Leeds as they battled their way to the trophy, sealing it in a penalty shootout. And we also enjoyed this belting strike from Oakwood Ladies Red in the group stage in Wimbledon, before broadcasting a Facebook live of their final against Elite Soccer Ladies, which Elite won 2-0. Liverpool fans Team Full of Carraghers will have enjoyed winning the Male Vets category on rival territory in Manchester, Wokingham and District beat Larkhall Legends 2-1 in the final in Bristol, and Harraby Catholic narrowly overcame Grimsby Vets - 4-3 in the final - in Leeds. Meanwhile, in the over-50s Walking Football, Plymouth Argyle won out in Bristol, Birmingham City lifted silverware on home soil, and Wokingham UB50 have qualified for the finals unbeaten in round one and the semi-finals. Media playback is not supported on this device Another glorious day - albeit an early start for some bleary-eyed mums on Mother's Day with the clocks going forward - and it was the turn of our disability categories and Adult Males. Media playback is not supported on this device First up, Youth and Adult Male League with some great skills and great sportsmanship, exemplified by the youth match between Swanscombe Tigers and Wandgas Football for All in Wimbledon. Youth winners include Cedarsfield, Bromley Valiants, Bradford DFC, while Pinfold Pumas and Mill Hill both go through from the Adult League in Manchester, Pinfold having come through a dramatic shootout in their semi-final against Danby Rovers. Last up, the two remaining disability categories and the always fiercely contested Adult Males. In Manchester, the Disability Premiership category was won by South Tyneside Ability, a 4-3 success against Deaf Rhinos sealing their place in the finals in Birmingham, but they've got their sights firmly on Wembley. (the eventual winners will receive tickets to the FA Cup final there in May the chance to lift their trophy there). But the Rhinos gave us one of their enduring images of the weekend with their sign language team talk... Media playback is not supported on this device Among our Adult Male winners, we saw some great skill from Scorpionz Blue in Wimbledon. You can watch a Facebook live of their final against T.N.G. here. And they're joined, among others, in the finals by Back of the Net, who won in Manchester, and Woolpack United, triumphant in Leicester. To sum up - congratulations to all our qualifiers and well done to everyone who took part in a brilliant weekend's footballing action. We'll be back with live coverage of the finals on 30 April/1 May and in the meantime, look out for our semi-final highlights on iPlayer and the Red Button. And the last word goes to our goalscorers and a round up of Sunday's best goals - see you in Birmingham next month! Media playback is not supported on this device Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: After the wind and rain of round one, the semi-final weekend of the FA People's Cup couldn't have provided better conditions. Question: Article:The bowler from Eastbourne was found dead at a private property in the Forres area of Scotland on 2 January. England players wore black armbands during day two of the second Test match against South Africa in Cape Town the following day. The service was held at All Saints Church in Eastbourne on Friday. It followed a private family funeral which was held on Monday. BBC reporter Adrian Harms said hundreds of people filled the church and some players from Sussex County Cricket Club flew back from Dubai to be there. He said Mr Hobden's two brothers gave emotional tributes at the thanksgiving service. One of the local touches included a solo saxophonist playing "Sussex by the Sea", while Zac Toumazi, the Sussex club's chief executive, also paid tribute to the young player. Mr Hobden's shirt number - 19 - will now be retired and a tree will be planted at the cricket ground in Hove in his memory. Mr Hobden was one of six fast bowlers who were due to spend time with the senior England squad in Johannesburg to help with preparations for the one-day international series. Mark Davis, head coach of the Sussex cricket team, said the "sky was the limit" for the 22-year-old player and he would be sorely missed. He would have gone on to represent his country, according to England bowling coach Kevin Shine. The cause of his death remains unexplained but there were no suspicious circumstances, according to police. He had been celebrating the new year with friends when he died at the property on the Moray coast near Inverness. Details of the post-mortem examination have been passed to procurator fiscal in Scotland. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer:
Family and friends have taken part in a service of thanksgiving to celebrate the life of cricketer Matthew Hobden who was tipped to play for England.
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Summarize: Forest officials in Gujarat state will test the lions' prints and excrement in an attempt to identify the killer. The "guilty lion" will be kept in a zoo for life while the others will be released back into the Gir sanctuary, the officials told BBC Hindi. Six attacks on humans have been reported recently near the sanctuary, the only habitat of the Asiatic lion. Gujarat's top forest official, JA Khan, said that the lions had been "arrested" over the past two months and were now being held in separate cages while tests were carried out. "We think we have pinpointed the guilty lion, but we are still awaiting the results of nine more animals," he said. Wildlife expert Ruchi Dave told the BBC that the "tests" involved studying the pug marks and faecal matter of the lions. "The officials are also studying the animals' behaviour. Man eating lions usually get aggressive at the sight of a human being," she said. Another wildlife expert Revtubha Raizada said the man-eating lion would be caged for the rest of its life, as it was too unsafe to release it back into the wild. Some experts feel that the thriving lion population in Gir forest is to blame for the "unusual" behaviour by the lions. Govind Patel, the former chief wildlife warden of Gujarat, told the Indian Express newspaper that Gir could accommodate only 270 lions, forcing some prides to settle outside the boundaries of the sanctuary. India's Supreme Court has ruled that Gujarat needed to relocate some of its lions to other states to avoid the possibility of disease or other disaster wiping out the entire population. However the state has expressed reluctance and has not yet complied with the order. Summary:
Officials in India have "arrested" 18 lions as they try to find a man eater suspected of killing three people.
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The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is expected to open a formal inquiry within the next several days, the Wall Street Journal said. The FTC is looking at whether Google manipulates its search results to steer users to its own sites and services. Google has not commented on the matter. Google's competitors argue that the search giant, which handles roughly two out of every three internet searches in the US, has used its dominant standing in search to improperly promote its other products, like mapping, shopping and travel websites. FTC officials privately debated this month whether to allow the agency's Bureau of Competitions to issue subpoenas to Google, and the FTC is now close to moving forward with handing out the court orders, The New York Times reported. Meanwhile, the Financial Times said that attorneys-general in California, New York and Ohio have also launched antitrust investigations into Google. The European Commission is already conducting probes into whether Google uses its dominance to wrongfully stifle competition. In a statement on its website, FairSearch.org, an organization that represents several of Google's critics, like Expedia, Travelocity, Kayak and Microsoft, said: "Google's practices are deserving of full-scale investigations by US antitrust authorities." Though the FTC probe would be the broadest federal inquiry into Google to date, the company has previously been targeted by US regulators. Google settled charges with a US policy group in April, which claimed the company deceived users and violated its own privacy policy by automatically enrolling all Gmail users in a social network called Buzz without seeking prior permission. The company has faced repeated other antitrust inquiries in recent years, many of which have involved proposed acquisitions. This article was about:
US federal regulators are preparing to issue court orders to Google and other companies as part of a probe into practices in Google's search engine business, US media report.
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Article:No inquest has been held into the 2012 murder at her family's request. Ms Meagher was originally from Drogheda, but moved to Australia from Ireland in 2009 with her husband. She worked for ABC Radio but went missing during a night out with colleagues. Her body was discovered six days later buried on the outskirts of Melbourne. Adrian Bayley, who had a history of violent sex attacks, was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum jail term of 35 years for her murder. On Friday, coroner Ian Gray said Jill Meagher's death had been "preventable". He pointed to failings by Community Correctional Services (CCS), a division of Corrections Victoria and the Adult Parole Board (APB), a separate body within the Department of Human services. "A more rigorous, risk-averse approach by CCS and the APB would have led to a cancellation of Bayley's parole," Mr Gray said. "The approach taken is difficult to understand ... it did not bring dangerous and high risk parolees immediately to account." Bayley had been on parole for previous rapes when he raped and murdered Ms Meagher as she walked home from Brunswick in the early hours of 22 September 2012. He was also on bail pending an appeal of a three-month sentence after pleading guilty to attacking a man outside a pub at Geelong in 2011. At the time of that incident, Bayley had been on parole after serving eight years' jail for 16 counts of rape against five women. He had already served time for rapes committed from the age of 18. The coroner noted Victoria's parole system had been amended since Ms Meagher's murder. Had it been changed when Bayley was charged with the Geelong assault, a representative from Corrections Victoria told the coroner, his parole probably would have been cancelled automatically when he was convicted of that offence. "The poignant truth of this ... will resonate with Ms Meagher's husband, family and friends," the coroner said. A summary of the above article is?
The Australian authorities could have prevented the rape and murder of Irish woman Jill Meagher by revoking her killer's parole as soon as he breached it, a coroner has found.
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Article:United Lincolnshire Hospital Trust (ULHT) has said it does not have enough doctors to staff the department safely. The department has been shut between 18:30 and 09:00 since August. Campaigners claim it puts patient safety at risk, which the trust denies. Protest groups claimed around 6,000 people took part in the march earlier. Conservative councillor Ray Wootton said of the march: "I think it sends a clear message to the trust that Grantham people will not take no for an answer," he said. Jody Clark from the group Fighting for Grantham Hospital said: "I cannot understand why they believe it is in the interest of patient safety to keep it closed when it clearly is not." ULHT said it does not have enough doctors to staff the department safely and also maintain services in Lincoln and Boston, which see more patients. It has insisted the closure is temporary until it can recruit enough staff to fully resource all three units. It acknowledged the decision was unpopular and added it supported the right of people to protest against it. A summary of the above article is?
Thousands of people have protested against the overnight closure of Grantham hospital's accident and emergency unit.
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Text: The group, which also includes London's deputy mayor for policing, has written to the government arguing the proposals are "unjustified and deeply flawed". The signatories, five of whom are Tories, say they will seek a judicial review unless the changes are halted. The government has said the old funding formula was "not fit for purpose". New proposals, which the Home Office is currently consulting on, set out changes to the way central government allocates funding to the 43 forces in England and Wales. The funding formula review was always likely to result in winners and losers. Police and crime commissioners were prepared for that. What they hadn't bargained on was the scale of the changes which, on top of the expected central government funding cuts, appear to put the sustainability of some forces at risk. The possibility of judicial review proceedings is no idle threat and, if carried out, could delay the process or derail it entirely. One concession ministers are understood to have been considering is to exempt the Metropolitan Police from the new arrangements. The force stands to lose £185m. The Home Office, though, has denied that any decision has been made. But the changes are proving to be a real headache for ministers, who'll be particularly concerned, with PCC elections just six months away, that five of the seven signatories to the letter are Conservatives. While some forces could see their budgets increase under the new system, analysts suggest 11 forces could lose out on funding. According to the Independent, the letter to policing minister Mike Penning has been signed by police commissioners representing: The letter says Lancashire Police's annual budget will be cut by £25m - nearly 14% - and Cumbria Police's "viability" will be brought into question if its funding is reduced by £9m under the reforms. Police services in Britain face a "milestone moment", and the government's decision could shape policing "for a generation", it says. The group said they were "taking legal advice with a view to initiating a judicial review" should their concerns "not be addressed". Police and Crime Commissioner for Lancashire, Clive Grunshaw, said the move had not been properly handled. He told the BBC: "It's not been an open process. It's not been transparent. There's been no proper understanding or scrutiny that's been available to challenge the process because we just haven't understood what it's actually meant." His counterpart at Cumbria, Richard Rhodes, said it was very difficult to save any more money. "We have up till now been able to preserve the front line. We now have to look seriously about that," he said. "It's going to be extremely difficult and it's quite clear that whatever police force emerges in Cumbria at the end of this it will be very different from the one we have at the moment." Anthony Stansfeld, commissioner for Thames Valley, said: "If the funding formula remains unchanged it will have a severe adverse impact on Thames Valley with our annual allocation of police grant decreasing by at least 2.6% or £5.6m next year." Mr Penning has previously said the reforms, which would take effect in the next financial year, would put police funding "on a long-term, sustainable footing". The current Police Allocation Formula, which has been used for nearly 10 years, is "complex, opaque and out-of-date", while the new system would be "fair, robust and transparent", he has argued. The Commons Home Affairs Committee is due to hear evidence about the proposals on Tuesday, with a Home Office consultation, which began in July, due to end on Friday. Funding would take into account five features of local areas, including population and the number of council tax band D or equivalent properties in the area, because of the contributions to police from council tax. Other factors would include the number of households with no working adult and dependent children, a "hard-pressed" population indicator - which covers a wide range of types of households, and the number of bars per hectare. Last month London Mayor Boris Johnson said the changes would "severely disadvantage" the capital. He told the London Assembly its impact "has not been properly thought through at all". Chancellor George Osborne is due to announce the latest departmental spending review in November which will set out details of the Home Office budget beyond 2015-16. The Met believes it will face cuts of up to £1bn, prompting Met Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe to say it would lead to a reduction in the number of front-line officers. But the Home Office said forces would still have the resources to do their work. summary: Six police and crime commissioners have threatened the Home Office with legal action over changes to the way police forces in England and Wales are funded. Text: BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti informed staff members by email on Monday. The ads were due to run in the coming months and had been booked before Mr Trump became the presumptive nominee. Mr Peretti told employees the move would have "no influence" on coverage of the campaign. How Trump could capture the White House Trump: From Mogul to candidate Trump lambasts reporters Mr Peretti wrote: "We certainly don't like to turn away revenue (...) However, in some cases we must make business exceptions: we don't run cigarette ads because they are hazardous to our health, and we won't accept Trump ads for the exact same reason." The website Politico reported that the deal had been worth $1.3m (£900,000). Mr Peretti's email to staff continued as follows: "The Trump campaign is directly opposed to the freedoms of our employees in the United States and around the world and in some cases, such as his proposed ban on international travel for Muslims, would make it impossible for our employees to do their jobs." Mr Trump defeated 16 other candidates for the Republican nomination for president. As he built up an unassailable lead in the primaries they dropped out one by one and last month, he secured the backing of enough delegates to win him the nomination. Republicans will finalise their nomination at a convention in July. summary: The BuzzFeed news website has pulled out of an advertising deal with the Republican Party in the US, saying its presumptive presidential nominee Donald Trump is "hazardous to health". Text: Stephen Ward, 25, was found guilty of the 2014 manslaughter of his son Jordan by inflicting injuries at the family home in Cirencester, Gloucestershire. Bristol Crown Court was told medical tests showed Jordan's injuries could not have been inflicted by accident. Ward was said to have a history of losing his temper when Jordan cried. The baby's mother, Paula Watts, told the court she once heard Ward slap Jordan when he was crying but he had told her he had just "tapped" their son. Ms Watts said she confronted Ward about Jordan's injuries after the baby had been admitted to hospital. She said: "I asked him to look me in the eyes and swear on my life that he hadn't done anything. He said he hadn't." Det Ch Insp Steve Bean said Ward "denied any wrongdoing", claiming Jordan had "choked then lost consciousness whilst he was feeding him" and "even tried to suggest that his ex-partner Paula might have been responsible". He said the tragedy of Jordan's death was "beyond description" and paid tribute to Ms Watts, adding Ward will "have to live with what he has done for the rest of his life". summary:
A father who killed his nine-month-old son by violently shaking him and causing "catastrophic injuries" has been jailed for eight years.
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Write an article based on this summary: Two performances went ahead on Saturday night at Battersea Arts Centre, only a day after a fire ripped through the south London venue. Article:
About 30% of the first and second floors of the property were destroyed in the blaze, including the Grand Hall and Lower Hall. The front half of the Grade II-listed building was left untouched. The centre said on Twitter that it was "wonderful to see the building buzzing with people". Productions of Lorraine & Alan and Fiction went ahead despite the fire damage, the centre said. Artistic director and CEO David Jubb said ahead of the performances: "Today we start the next chapter. We want to get the shows back on and rebuild the building brick by brick." He paid tribute to the firefighters who tackled the blaze, which broke out at about 16:20 GMT on Friday. "Huge thanks are owed to all the emergency services, who literally saved the front half of the building, to staff, artists and volunteers at Battersea Arts Centre, and to everyone who has shown their overwhelming support online over the last 24 hours. "The passion for the building and the organisation is extraordinary. Thank you all for being part of this. We really need you at this time." By the early hours of Sunday more than 1,200 people had given money to an appeal set up by the charity National Funding Scheme, which has raised more than £38,000. Jane Ellison, the Conservative Party MP for Battersea, told BBC London 94.9: "The grand hall is a huge part of the centre not just physically but also it is the biggest theatre space. "Therefore one of the headaches of the arts centre is to sit down and look at their financial plans and look at it afresh in the light of the fact they don't have access to the biggest theatre space." The 1893 building was formerly Battersea Town Hall but was turned into an arts centre in 1974. London Fire Brigade station manager Matt Burrows, who visited the scene on Saturday, said: "Firefighters did a great job to save large parts of the building including the octagonal dome, which I'm told is priceless, and salvaged valuable artwork. "We'll continue to damp down and our fire investigators are inspecting the building to find the cause."
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Question: Article:Scores of homes have been destroyed in the city, in Coahuila state, which is just across the border from Del Rio, Texas. Images from the scene showed cars upended and leaning against buildings. Local media said the death toll could rise as more destroyed homes were searched. Rosario Cano, a spokeswoman for Coahuila's interior department, said the tornado had struck at about 06:40 (11:40 GMT). Are you affected by the issues raised in this story? Email [email protected] with your experiences. If you would be happy to speak further to a BBC journalist, please include a contact telephone number. You can also tweet your stories to @BBC_HaveYourSay or text 61124. If you are outside the UK, send them to the international number +44 7624 800 100. Or WhatsApp us on +44 7525 900971 Read our terms and conditions. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: At least seven people are reported to have been killed by a tornado that hit the northern Mexico border city of Ciudad Acuna. input: Article: The personal thank you letter from General Dwight D Eisenhower was written to Sir Stewart Menzies, wartime chief of the Secret Intelligence Service. In the letter, Eisenhower said intelligence gathered saved thousands of British and American lives. The letter from the future US president is to go on display at Bletchley. Dated 12 July 1945, Eisenhower expressed his "heartfelt admiration and sincere thanks" in the letter, stating that the intelligence from Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire had been "of priceless value to me". He added the work had "saved countless British and American lives" and had "contributed to the speed with which the enemy was routed and eventually forced to surrender". Poland's Enigma codebreakers (July 2014) The letter was in the office of the chief of the Secret Intelligence Service during the tenure of Sir John Scarlett. He said: "I was proud of this letter, but only came to appreciate the full significance of Eisenhower's words after taking over as chairman of the Bletchley Park Trust in 2012." Dr David A Hatch, a historian with the US National Security Agency, said: "Within five years of this letter, Dwight Eisenhower became the first commanding General of NATO and within two years after that, he became the President of the United States. "He used intelligence well (and) made improvements. It all traces back to the time of Bletchley Park that this letter represents." The letter is on display in museum's visitor centre in Block C. Summarize. output: A secret letter from the Supreme Allied Commander in World War Two praising the work of code breakers at Bletchley Park is to go on public display. Article: Viktor Orban said they paid more into the UK's system in tax than they got out in benefits and should not be "discriminated" against. For that reason Mr Cameron's demand for a four year benefit ban on new arrivals was "difficult", he said. But he vowed to work with other East European countries to come up with a solution acceptable to the UK. Mr Cameron - appearing alongside Mr Orban at a press conference in Budapest - is touring Europe as part of his bid to renegotiate the UK's relations with the EU before holding a referendum on whether the UK should stay in it, or leave. The PM stressed that he valued the contribution made by Hungarians and citizens of other EU nations in the UK and said: "I am open to other solutions... and I am confident we can reach an agreement." Mr Orban said he fully supported Mr Cameron's three other reform demands and in some cases wanted to go even further - but said he had a problem with the suggested benefit ban. "We would like to make it very clear that we are not migrants into the United Kingdom," he said. "We are citizens of a state that belongs to the European Union, who can take jobs anywhere, freely, within the European Union. "We do not want to go to the UK and take away something from them. We don't want to be parasites. We want to work there. And I see that Hungarians are working very well. "Those Hungarians that are working well and contributing to the UK economy, they should get respect and they should not suffer discrimination." Mr Orban said Hungary, the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovakia - known as the V4 - would set up a common position on welfare reform and he saw a "good chance" of agreement with the UK. Mr Cameron said the four year proposal "won't come off the table" unless something was put in its place and said it was needed to help curb high levels of immigration. Mr Cameron said he was hopeful of getting a deal at an EU summit in February that he can put to the British people in a referendum by the end of 2017 - but he was prepared for it to take longer to reach an agreement, adding: "What matters to me is substance." Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, whose country is taking over the EU presidency and will be hosting next month's summit, has said he is "relatively optimistic" Britain can come away with a deal. Mr Cameron held talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday in Bavaria, where he attended the annual conference of her sister party, the Christian Social Union, and toured a BMW car plant. He hailed BMW as "a great example of how working together creates jobs and opportunities that benefit both our countries,", adding: "I firmly believe the EU is stronger with Britain, and that Britain will be at its strongest in a reformed EU." BMW's director for sales and marketing, Ian Robertson, said the UK had the "most diverse car industry in Europe" and was the company's fourth largest market. "From an industry perspective we would therefore regret seeing the UK leave the EU," he added. In other EU referendum news, London Mayor Boris Johnson has said the UK has a "great, great future" outside the EU if Mr Cameron doesn't secure the reform it needs. Mr Johnson - seen as one of the contenders to replace Mr Cameron as Conservative leader when he quits - said his preference was to remain part of a reformed EU but is waiting to see the outcome of the prime minister's renegotiations. Asked if he could campaign on the opposite side to the prime minister in the referendum campaign, he said "let's see what happens". Q&A: What Britain wants from Europe Guide to the UK's planned in-out EU referendum BBC News EU referendum special report ++++++++++ Summarize: Hungary's prime minister has told David Cameron Hungarians working in the UK are not "migrants" or "parasites". A statement from the film's production company Alcon Entertainment confirmed the accident occurred on a soundstage at Origo Studios. It said the worker was "underneath a platform, upon which the set was constructed, when it suddenly collapsed". The cause of the accident is not yet known. A Hungarian news website, Index, reported the worker had been dismantling the set as production had already moved to another location. The untitled sequel to Blade Runner, which will star Ryan Gosling, Harrison Ford and Jared Leto, is due to be released next autumn. The sequel to the 1982 sci-fi film is being directed by Denis Villeneuve, who was also behind Sicario and Prisoners filmmaker. Follow us on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, on Instagram, or if you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. Sum:
A construction worker has been killed on the set of the sequel to Blade Runner, which was filming in Budapest.
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Article: Scott Quigley scored a hat-trick for the Welsh Premier leaders and Word Cup winners at Latham Park. Matty Williams and Jamie Mullan also scored for Saints, who had been beaten twice by Connah's Quay in the league this season. Craig Harrison's side will face Airbus UK Broughton in the final in May. Tony Gray scored a hat-trick as Airbus UK Broughton thrashed Port Talbot Town 7-0 to reach their first Welsh Cup final. Andy Preece's side led 3-0 at the interval through goals from Gray, Ryan Wignall and Kevin Monteiro. James Murphy scored two with Gray completing his hat-trick in between Airbus' Ryan Fraughan being sent-off. Port Talbot Town 0-7 Airbus UK Broughton The New Saints 5-0 Gap Connah's Quay ++++++++++ Summarize: New Saints remain on course for a second successive domestic treble after a comfortable 5-0 Welsh Cup semi-final win over Gap Connah's Quay. Article: Police in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province, say they have arrested two suspects believed to have produced millions of the fakes in dirty facilities. The fakes are thought to have gone on sale across China since 2013. Chinese authorities have warned against buying discounted products, saying there could be serious health risks. The Nanchang Public Security Bureau says it seized fake sanitary towels with a resale value of more than 40m yuan ($5.9m; £4.8m) in a factory with no disinfection facilities. The fakes were then sold in supermarkets under the trademarks of leading Chinese brands such as ABC or Whisper, the Nanchang News reported. It is not yet clear whether they were distributed internationally. Consumers have been urged to check the packaging before buying because the colouring of the fake products is reportedly slightly darker. The scandal was one of the biggest talking points in Chinese social media on Thursday. Tens of thousands of Sina Weibo microblog users posted under the hashtags #Over10MillionFakeSanitaryTowels and #SanitaryNapkins. Some social media users have called for the "evil" suspects to be given the death penalty. "Why would someone want to hurt me at my most vulnerable?" asked social media user Sdanler. Another social media user, zhou6665, said someone she knew bought fake sanitary towels and suffered a urinary tract infection followed by inflammation. Others warned that women in rural China could be especially at risk, as they have less access to information and are more reliant on cut-price products. BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook. ++++++++++ Summarize:
The discovery of a huge "fake sanitary towel" operation in southeast China has prompted fears about the possible impact on women's health.
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input: Article: In the front room of his house, surrounded by his family, Nedal tells a story about the excitement of a revolution turning to fear, of arrest turning to torture, of hiding and fleeing Syria - and then of a two-year wait in Jordan to receive refugee status in the US. Nedal says the day he learned he, his wife Raeda and their two children would be allowed to move to the US was "the happiest day". The family reached Michigan in June 2015. Nedal has a job as a welder and hopes to finish the final year of his degree in engineering when his English improves. Raeda works at the day care centre her children attend and plans to qualify as a hairdresser, the job she did before the family fled Syria. Seated on their couch in a comfortable home in the suburbs of Detroit the family seems as though it is on its way to living the American dream. But as Michigan struggles to recover from its economic troubles. Nedal and his family - and others like them - may also be the answer to the state's problems. Detroit, Michigan's largest city, has lost an estimated 30,945 residents since 2010. And while Michigan has seen its population rise slightly in the last two years, the loss of skilled talent after the financial crisis has made it hard for the state to fully recover. Michigan needs immigrants to fill jobs, and it also needs them to start new businesses to help kick-start the economy. To do that the state has focused on making it easier for immigrants already in Michigan to find work, to start companies and to remain in the country. In 2014, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder set up the Michigan Office for New Americans (Mona) to help remove some of the red tape that can make it difficult for immigrants to stay in the state or find work. Its aim is to help immigrants to get job qualifications, learn English or start new businesses, which in turn helps existing companies to fill highly skilled roles and to grow, as well as adding to the tax base. Bing Goei, Mona's director says that Mona works to remove "artificial barriers", and that on average immigrants become self-sufficient in one to two years. "We need to get the population up so we need immigrants to choose Michigan as their new home," he adds. This has already happened with Iraqi refugees. Michigan had taken in some 19,861 Iraqi refugees by January 2016, according to the US State Department. Many were attracted from other US states because of the large Arabic-speaking community that had been created and the prospect of highly skilled jobs, mostly in the car industry. Imad Morad was one of those people. The Iraqi electrical engineer was resettled with his family in Colorado in 2013, but could only find work washing dishes. After an internet search revealed there was a large population of Middle Eastern people in Michigan, Mr Morad decided to travel to the state and look for work. In an Arabic coffee shop in Dearborn he learned about a local business owner who was looking to sell his electronics shop. Mr Morad made his way to the store, where he volunteered while he learned about the business. After four months he was able to secure a small business loan and bought the shop, which he now hopes to expand with a second store. "In Michigan you can find yourself, people speak Arabic and it's easy to find work in a restaurant or auto shop to get started," says Mr Morad. Given success stories like Mr Morad's, many were surprised when Governor Snyder became one of the first to call for a hold on allowing Syrian refugees into Michigan - suspending his state's Syrian refugee resettlement programme. The governor said the hold would be temporary while the state consulted the Department of Home Land Security. Governors do not have the authority to prevent the federal government from accepting refugees and placing them in their states, but they can make the process more difficult. So far, governors in 30 states have called for a ban on Syrian refugees being placed in their states but the federal government - which determines what states refugees will be placed in - has not stopped or slowed its refugee acceptance programme. Since 2011, Syrian refugees have been resettled in 38 states. Where an individual or family is placed depends on many factors, including assistance being offered by local organisations, typically charities, that help refugees find housing, employment and get settled. After three months refugees are allowed to move to any US city or state they like, without restrictions. In a statement Mona said: "Michigan Governor Rick Snyder is supportive of refugee resettlement overall (not just Syrians) and of what contributions all refugees can make when making Michigan their home." Nonetheless, the negative rhetoric could impact the state's appeal for immigrants, says Steve Tobocman, director of the non-profit organisation Global Detroit. "Making this a welcoming and successful place for immigrants is the best way to attract immigrants from other states and around the globe," says Steve Tobocman, director of the non-profit organisation Global Detroit. Both Mr Morad and Nedal say they have received support from the community and neighbours of all backgrounds, not just Arabic. "The state doesn't feel depressed to me, it feels like there is a lot of opportunity and I have had a lot of help from the community," says Nedal. Nedal hopes after finishing his degree that he will be able to start a bee farm, which was his family's business in Syria before the war. If he starts his bee farm in Michigan he will be in good company: immigrants own 28% of farms in Michigan. Summarize. output: "The word refugee is painful to hear," says 28-year-old Nedal, through a translator. input: Article: Armed police shot dead two pitbull-type dogs in Queens Park, Bolton on Sunday. Daniel Hennessy, of Halliwell, Bolton was charged with two counts of allowing dogs to be dangerously out of control, affray and possession of cannabis. The 39-year-old has appeared before Bolton magistrates and was remanded in custody for a hearing at the town's crown court on 2 May. Summarize. output:
A man has been charged after a man and a woman were bitten by dogs in a park in Greater Manchester.
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Problem: Warnings are in place for the River Vyrnwy at Melverley and Maesbrook, and a lesser flood alert has been issued for the River Severn in Shrewsbury. So far, fields and low-lying roads have been affected. Levels are expected to peak overnight. Dave Throup from the agency said "more significant" floods could happen during the next week if forecast rain arrives. What was that article about? A: Flood barriers have been erected in Shropshire following advice from the Environment Agency. Deputy First Minister John Swinney said applications were now open for funded teacher education training places. It has been warned some schools in Aberdeen may close because of a "crisis" in recruiting teachers. The Transition Training Fund (TTF) was set up to help oil and gas workers made redundant, or at risk of redundancy. Jobs lost as a result of the downturn in the UK oil and gas sector could top 120,000 by the end of this year, according to a report on Friday. The scheme will allow "suitably qualified" oil and gas workers to be employed by Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire councils while they do their initial training. The TTF courses start in September Mr Swinney said: "The north east has a highly-skilled oil and gas workforce and we want to utilise these skills and offer those affected by job losses with a positive career path. "By becoming a teacher, they can use their knowledge and expertise to inspire the next generation of young people in STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) subjects. "We know that in some parts of the country, particularly the north east, schools are facing challenges recruiting teachers in certain subjects. "That is exactly why we have made money available from the TTF to fund an innovative teacher training proposal. "It will result in guaranteed employment for four years for up 20 people in the two local authorities." Aberdeen is not the only part of Scotland to warn of difficulties recruiting teachers. Other parts of the north east, Highlands and Islands and rural areas, including Dumfries and Galloway, have found difficulty filling posts. The problems and issues are not simple and straightforward. Nationally, there is an agreed number of places available in teacher training. The funding deal between councils and the Scottish government commits councils to maintaining teacher numbers. In general, the problem is not so much the number of people who are qualified to teach across Scotland as the number of people who may want to work in some parts of the country. Read more on this here. Mr Swinney added: "We have been working closely with the University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen City Council and Aberdeenshire Council to ensure those interested can start as quickly as possible. "I am delighted that people applying now will be able to start their training in the autumn." Industry body Oil and Gas UK has estimated 84,000 jobs linked to the industry went in 2015, with 40,000 losses expected this year. Aberdeen City Council has said there are 134 empty teaching posts in the city. The council said consideration would have to be given to shutting the worst-affected schools after the summer unless the situation improves. Sum: Redundant oil and gas workers workers who retrain as teachers will be guaranteed a job for four years, the Scottish government has said. Q: Williams, 18, led with just 10 seconds remaining, but a ferocious late attack by opponent Mengyu Zhang saw the Chinese fighter win 31-22. Longobardi-Radford, who has previously competed for Spain, lost 24-10 to Yu-Jen Huang. "I just didn't get my tactics right," he told BBC Sport. Victory in the quarter-finals would have guaranteed the British fighters a medal. Williams, a double world junior champion and senior European gold medallist, opened her day with a dominant 29-7 defeat of Ivory Coast fighter Marie Federique Ekpitini. Media playback is not supported on this device The seventh seed followed that up with a tense sudden-death, golden-point success over Athanasia Mitsopoulou of Greece, before a concentration lapse saw her eliminated in the next round. Longobardi-Radford, who had won all five lower-ranking events he entered since joining the Great Britain programme in 2016, opened with a 18-11 preliminary round defeat of Turkey's Ferhat Can Kavurat. Emphatic defeats of Moroccan fighter Faical Saidi (19-4) and Arven Al Cantara of the Philippines (22-8) followed before he was outclassed by Huang of Chinese Taipei. "For sure I'm happy with what I've achieved recently, but today wasn't the performance I was looking for and that's a disappointment," he said. Defending +73kg champion Bianca Walkden, who two years ago became only Britain's second World Taekwondo gold medallist, begins her campaign for a further title on Tuesday. Fellow Team GB Rio Olympic medallists Lutalo Muhammad and Jade Jones begin their quests for their first world titles on Wednesday and Thursday respectively. A: Britain's Lauren Williams and Peter Longobardi-Radford missed out on medals after losing in the World Championships quarter-finals in South Korea. Text: Both country's militaries have been on alert after a brief exchange of fire at the border last Thursday. The North had threatened to use force to stop propaganda broadcasts by the South, started after two of its soldiers were injured by a landmine. High-level negotiators have been meeting since Saturday to agree a deal. Yonhap reported that the deal, to be announced later on Monday, would see North Korea express "regret" over the landmine incident earlier this month. In return, it said South Korea would stop the loudspeaker broadcasts that were resumed after an 11-year hiatus, in apparent retaliation for the landmine attack. summary: South and North Korea have agreed a deal to defuse tensions after a series of recent border confrontations, South Korea's Yonhap news agency says. Question: Article:The Frenchman, 29, will complete the move when he returns from spending some time in his homeland. Nade scored three goals as Dundee won the Scottish Championship last season but was then released by the Dens Park club. As well as having a spell with Sheffield United, he has also played in Cyprus and Thailand. Championship Raith recently signed goalkeeper Kevin Cuthbert and midfielder Martin Scott. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: Raith Rovers have agreed to sign former Hearts and Dundee striker Christian Nade. Text: The Loch Ness RNLI lifeboat went to the scene near Cherry Island when the alarm was raised at about 14:00 on Friday. No-one was injured in the incident. Thee vessel was pulled from the rocks and escorted to Fort Augustus about one mile away. RNLI Loch Ness volunteer crew member Martin Douglas says: "This is something we train for regularly as there a quite a few areas on the loch where vessels can run aground. "We were extremely fortunate to have crewmember Linda Izquierdo Ross on board the lifeboat as French is one of the many languages she can speak fluently. "I'm sure this played a significant part in helping and reassuring the family" Volunteers from the Inverness Coastguard team also responded and were on hand at Fort Augustus to help with mooring the cruiser and to carry out further checks. summary:
Five Belgian holidaymakers, including two teenagers, were rescued after their cruiser hit submerged rocks on Loch Ness.
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Article:Matthew Baker, 29, and James Whitlock, 32, went on the run in November after breaking out of HMP Pentonville. Baker's girlfriend Chelsea Gibson, 25, of Bow, east London, pleaded guilty to assisting an offender while his sister Kelly Baker, 22, of Ilford, admitted harbouring an escaped prisoner. They were both sentenced to eight months in jail suspended for 18 months. Baker and Whitlock escaped from prison by sawing through a metal bar to open an external window cover. Two days later, Baker was found hiding under a bed at his sister's home in Ilford. He had dyed his hair and had a fractured leg. Whitlock was found at an address in Homerton, east London, after six days on the run. Gibson was also ordered to complete 150 hours of unpaid work, while Baker was told to complete 100 hours of unpaid work. A summary of the above article is?
A prisoner's girlfriend and his sister have been sentenced for helping him to escape.
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Three attackers were killed, and the remainder fled after the Thursday evening assault, he said. At least another 12 troops were injured in the ambush. Egypt has been fighting Islamic militants in the region for several years, but no group has claimed responsibility for the attack. An earlier report from Reuters news agency, citing security sources, said assailants fired two rocket-propelled grenades at a checkpoint near the city of El-Arish, before masked men opened fire. That report said three policemen had been killed. It is not yet clear if the conflicting reports refer to the same attack, or separate incidents. Islamist groups are thought to have carried out more than 400 attacks in the North Sinai region between 2012 and 2015. The Sinai Province jihadist group, the most active insurgents, also swore an oath of loyalty to so-called Islamic State (IS) in November 2014. It was initially called Ansar Beit al-Maqdis (Supporters of Jerusalem), and has been active in the Sinai Peninsula since 2011. It has an estimated 1,000 to 1,500 active members. Sum: Eight Egyptian soldiers have been killed in a car bomb attack on a checkpoint in the country's North Sinai region, an army spokesperson said. Doug Wilson took up his role covering Dumfries and Galloway and the Scottish Borders in April. He said he believed the area could offer "something for everyone". He highlighted a string of attractions including outdoor pursuits, festivals, food and drink and the common riding events. Mr Wilson lives in the Borders but his role as regional director also covers the neighbouring region of Dumfries and Galloway. He said he was looking forward to seeing some of the world's best cyclists in Castle Douglas in September. He described the Tour of Britain as a "fantastic opportunity to showcase the impressive scenery and warm spirit of the region's people on a global stage". The Borders Railway has already had a huge impact on the region and Mr Wilson said he expected its importance to grow further. "The number of people travelling on the Borders Railway has surpassed all expectations," he said. "As we hit the summer months we hope to see the numbers rising again. "The last year has been incredible for the region with the launch of the Borders Railway which has opened up the region to the global market." He listed a string of other attractions the area had to offer including: He added that the area was "full of hidden gems" but said it was time to "share them with the rest of the world". Sum: The new head of tourism in the south of Scotland has flagged up the Tour of Britain and the Borders Railway as key opportunities to boost visitor numbers. Here is a list of the nominees in both the film and television categories. Details of the stunt categories are available on the SAG website. Outstanding performance by an actor Bryan Cranston, Trumbo Johnny Depp, Black Mass Leonardo DiCaprio, The Revenant Michael Fassbender, Steve Jobs Eddie Redmayne, The Danish Girl Outstanding performance by an actress Cate Blanchett, Carol Brie Larson, Room Helen Mirren, Woman in Gold Saoirse Ronan, Brooklyn Sarah Silverman, I Smile Back Outstanding performance by an actor in a supporting role Christian Bale, The Big Short Idris Elba, Beasts of No Nation Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies Michael Shannon, 99 Homes Jacob Tremblay, Room Outstanding performance by an actress in a supporting role Rooney Mara, Carol Rachel McAdams, Spotlight Helen Mirren, Trumbo Alicia Vikander, The Danish Girl Kate Winslet, Steve Jobs Outstanding performance by a cast in a motion picture Beasts of No Nation The Big Short Spotlight Straight Outta Compton Trumbo Outstanding performance by an actor in a drama series Peter Dinklage, Game of Thrones Jon Hamm, Mad Men Rami Malek, Mr Robot Kevin Spacey, House of Cards Bob Odenkirk, Better Call Saul Outstanding performance by an actress in a drama series Claire Danes, Homeland Viola Davis, How to Get Away with Murder Julianna Margulies, The Good Wife Maggie Smith, Downton Abbey Robin Wright, House of Cards Outstanding performance by an actor in a comedy series Ty Burrell, Modern Family Louis CK, Louie William H Macy, Shameless Jim Parson, The Big Bang Theory Jeffrey Tambor, Transparent Outstanding performance by an actress in a comedy series Uzo Aduba, Orange Is the New Black Edie Falco, Nurse Jackie Ellie Kemper, Unbreakable Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Veep Amy Poehler, Parks and Recreation Outstanding performance by an actor in a television movie or miniseries Idris Elba, Luther Ben Kinglsey, Tut Ray Liotta, Texas Rising Bill Murray, A Very Murray Christmas Mark Rylance, Wolf Hall Outstanding performance by an actress in a television movie or miniseries Nicole Kidman, Grace of Monaco Queen Latifah, Bessie Christina Ricci, The Lizzie Borden Chronicles Susan Sarandon, The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe Kristin Wiig, The Spoilers Before Dying Outstanding performance by an ensemble in a drama series Downton Abbey Game of Thrones Homeland House of Cards Mad Men Outstanding performance by an ensemble in a comedy series The Big Bang Theroy Key & Peel Modern Family Orange Is the New Black Transparent Veep The SAG Awards will take place on 30 January 2016. Sum:
The nominations for the 22nd annual Screen Actors Guild Awards (SAG) have been announced in Los Angeles, with British stars Idris Elba and Dame Helen Mirren up for three awards each.
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It comes after the latest inspection figures revealed there were more "inadequate" ones than "good". Councils rated as "inadequate" face having children's services handed to charities or other authorities if they do not improve. One council leader called for a review of Ofsted's inspection criteria. The call came after fewer than a quarter of children's services inspected in the past two years were judged "good". Only 17 out of 74 council children's services were good and none was outstanding. The other 38 across England "require improvement". About half of councils have been inspected under new Ofsted criteria introduced two years ago. The education watchdog said the results were "not necessarily representative of the quality of services for all local authorities in the country" until reports for all the others were done. But they suggest that councils will find it harder to satisfy inspectors than those inspected before November 2013. Figures showed that out of the nine English regions, the South West did not have a single local authority children's services department rated "good" among seven inspections since the end of 2013. Another nine have yet to be inspected under the new criteria. The North West and the South East each have four "inadequate" children's services, while the West Midlands and North East have three and all other regions have one. Councils judged inadequate for 'overall effectiveness' of children's services: Birmingham; Buckinghamshire; Coventry; Cumbria; Darlington; Doncaster; Knowsley; Lambeth; Lancashire; Leicester; Manchester; Norfolk; Rotherham; Sandwell; Slough; Somerset; Sunderland; Surrey; West Berkshire 'Re-think needed' Prime Minister David Cameron has said failing departments have to improve within six months or they will be taken over by high-performing councils or charities. However the Labour leader of Sandwell Council, which has had two successive "inadequate" ratings and will see commissioners sent in within a year, has called for a re-think of the inspection criteria. Councillor Darren Cooper said: "When the figures show there are more 'inadequate' councils than 'good' ones and that none are outstanding, something is obviously wrong. "There must be a pause for reflection and a re-think." He said the council was working to address the criticisms made in the Ofsted reports but that officers and councillors had been given expert advice that they had improved before their last poor rating in June 2015. But Conservative MP James Morris, whose Halesowen and Rowley Regis constituency covers part of Sandwell, said: "When protecting our most vulnerable children, we need to make sure that we have the most rigorous safeguards in place. The Ofsted report into Sandwell highlighted some very serious flaws. We need to make sure that we sort this out now, rather than looking for excuses to delay change." The new "single inspection framework" sees inspectors judge child protection and services for looked-after children at the same time in one report. Ofsted said the harder test asked what difference services were making to children's lives. That framework "has undoubtedly raised the bar," according to Ofsted. "While we accept it is tough to achieve a good or better grade, children deserve no less than a good standard of support from those charged with caring and protecting them," a spokesman for organisation said. "Inspectors have seen examples of good and outstanding practice in several local authorities and this is reflected in their overall inspection outcome." In a statement, the Department for Education vowed "to take tough action where councils are failing children" highlighting "over 30 securing real improvement as a direct result of our intervention since 2010". It continued: "We must now go further... We will also be partnering with the best local authorities, investing £100m in innovative support to local authorities, as well as investing £100m in fast track social work training." Children's homes improve Ofsted inspected 959 children's homes between April and September 2015 and found 71% were good or better, an improvement of 13 percentage points on the year before. But of the 71 homes previously inspected as "outstanding", 29 of them declined to "good", two declined to "requires improvement" and one declined to "inadequate". The figures showed the South West had the largest number of "inadequate" rated children's homes, 14 in total. What was that article about?
Up to a quarter of children's services in English councils face being taken over unless improvements are made, Ofsted has said.
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The party said the number is made up of about 350,000 members, 129,000 who paid £25 each to be registered supporters, and 168,000 from other organisations. Jeremy Corbyn is up against the party's former shadow work and pensions secretary, Owen Smith. The result of the contest will be announced on 24 September. Mr Corbyn has announced that he would look to bolster the bargaining powers of trade unions if he wins. Announcing his reform plans, Mr Corbyn said he wanted to "democratise our country from the ground up". He said a Labour government would introduce "new collective and individual rights" for employees with the aim of giving people a "real say" against "boardrooms that control them". Guide to the Labour leadership election BBC political correspondent Chris Mason Amid the noise and the court cases, the rallies and the rancour, it is easy to overlook the extraordinary growth of the Labour movement: both those who've joined the party and those willing to sign up as supporters, at no small cost. It's provided a welcome fillip to Labour's meagre finances: the new registered supporters alone collectively handed the party more than £3.2m in just 48 hours last month. Over the last 40 years, membership numbers for the Conservatives and Labour have shrivelled; the Tory figure currently stands at around 150,000. The hundreds of thousands drawn to Labour's ranks appear driven by one man - Jeremy Corbyn - and a passionate desire to either endorse or reject him. As part of Mr Corbyn's reform plans, he said he would include mandatory collective bargaining in firms with more than 250 employees, the election of staff representatives to executive remuneration committees, and the introduction of "sectoral union bargaining rights". "We need to break open the closed circle of Westminster and Whitehall, and of the boardrooms too," he said in a statement. "Labour under my leadership will listen to ideas from the bottom up - and take radical action to transform and rebuild our country so that no-one and no community is left behind." Mr Corbyn's proposals also include: Meanwhile, the leader of the Scottish Labour Party, Kezia Dugdale, became the latest senior party member to back Owen Smith in the leadership contest. Writing in the Daily Record, she said the question of who was best placed to lead Labour to a general election victory was "the only question that matters". She wrote: "With the Tories wreaking havoc on our country, the first and last consideration must be which of the candidates is most likely to lead the next Labour government that will invest in our public services and give everyone a fair chance in life." Ms Dugdale added that she thought Mr Smith could "unite our party and move us on from the divisions that exist under the current leadership of Jeremy Corbyn". Her intervention comes after London Mayor Sadiq Khan urged Labour voters to ditch Jeremy Corbyn as leader and vote for Owen Smith. Speaking on Sunday, Mr Khan told BBC News Mr Corbyn had "failed to win the trust and respect of the British people" and criticised his leadership during the EU referendum. But a Corbyn campaign spokesman pointed out that Mr Khan won the London mayoralty standing on a Labour platform - which had the support of Mr Corbyn. What was that article about?
Ballot papers will be issued later to more than two thirds of a million people with a vote in the Labour leadership contest.
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All of those who have been sworn in at a ceremony in Kabul are new faces. For the first time four of them are women. But the crucial post of the defence minister remains empty because of disagreements in the unity government. Forming a cabinet has been problematic because Mr Ghani's opponent in last year's elections, Abdullah Abdullah, holds the position of chief executive. Afghanistan now has 24 out of 25 posts filled in its cabinet, and so after nearly seven months of political wrangling finally has a fully-fledged government in place, says the BBC's Shahzeb Jillani in Kabul. Many are young, educated and come from professional backgrounds. For the first time, the 24-member cabinet includes four women. It's all in line with President Ghani's promise to allow technocrats to run the government, instead of warlords and former fighters. But the new cabinet faces daunting challenges ahead. Afghanistan's economy is in a shambles. And, with the emergence of the militant group Islamic State in parts of the country along with the Taliban's refusal of peace talks, security fears are growing. The four female ministers are reported to be Farida Momand at the Higher Education Ministry, Nasreen Oryakhil at the country's Labour Ministry, Dilbar Nazari at the Women's Affairs Ministry and Salamat Azimi at the Counter-Narcotics Ministry. Mr Ghani attempted to unveil his cabinet in January but ran into a number of problems. But the biggest issue has been the question of dual nationality - parliament refused to ratify a number of the president's nominees because they held dual citizenship. The Afghan constitution does not explicitly bar such candidates, but it also grants parliament the authority to either approve or reject nominees with dual citizenship. Sum: Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has sworn in 16 new ministers - nearly completing his cabinet after months of delay. Scotland Yard arrested a 51-year-old man, a woman aged 53 and three females aged 16, 17 and 19. All were arrested on suspicion of possessing information likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism. They are in police custody. The man was also arrested on suspicion of possessing false identity documents. Police said the 16-year-old girl had previously been arrested in July on suspicion of preparation of terrorism and had been bailed until September. Sum: Five members of one family have been arrested on suspicion of terror offences in east London. Professor Paddy Nixon was giving evidence to the Stormont Committee for Employment and Learning. In September, UU said it would close its school of modern languages. He said the university was "no longer funded to provide the degrees people might like." Responding to a question from committee chair, UUP MLA Robin Swann, Prof Nixon said that FE colleges could teach languages at the level needed in Northern Ireland. "The FE provision in languages is actually - particularly when it's about spoken languages as opposed to what a university should be doing, which is a different thing altogether - quite extensive." "So there is an ability for the system in Northern Ireland to support language provision at the level we need it for business and industry." "Northern Ireland does retain an ability to train language students, but it won't be provided any longer by Ulster University." However, he said that there had been no consultation with the FE sector on the decision to close the school of modern languages at UU. When the school, at the Coleraine campus, closes, UU will no longer offer degrees in French, German, Chinese, Spanish and Applied Languages and Translation. However, Queen's University in Belfast currently offers undergraduate degrees in French, Irish, Spanish and Portuguese. Prof Nixon also defended the redundancy process currently taking place at Ulster University. SDLP MLA, Pat Ramsey, questioned whether the process was actually voluntary. He said: "There was not an open call through all departments." "These are specifically aimed and targeted at specific areas, so they're not voluntary redundancies, and staff are a wee bit angered and upset by that." However, in response, Prof Nixon said he had no plans to change the redundancy procedure to make it open to all staff. "I don't think that will serve the strategic purpose of the university or result in us being a stronger university to face some of the other challenges that we might face," he said. In other evidence to the committee, Prof Nixon also said that UU had no current position on whether tuition fees for students should rise. He suggested that a graduate tax based on ability to pay might be one model for the future, but warned that long-term sustained funding for universities was central. He also revealed that UU was seeking to treble the number of international students it attracts. Sum:
The vice chancellor of Ulster University (UU) has said demand for modern language learning in Northern Ireland can be met by further education colleges.
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Andrew Bow, 36, was found dead at a house in the city 10 days ago. A call about his wellbeing was handled by Bilston Glen - the same centre that dealt with a call about the M9 crash in July. The police response is being examined by the Police Investigations and Review Commissioner (Pirc). An investigation will look at how officers responded to initial concerns about the occupant of the house, who was understood to be vulnerable. A Pirc spokesman said in a statement on Friday: "The Police Investigations and Review Commissioner has been instructed by the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service to carry out an independent investigation after the body of Andrew Bow, 36, was discovered at a residential address in Edinburgh on 23 March 2016. "The investigation will focus on the initial police response leading up to the incident, which included a report of concern about the welfare of the occupant of the property. "A report on the commissioner's findings will be submitted to the COPFS in due course." Staffing shortages at Bilston Glen were highlighted after an HM Inspector of Constabulary (HMIC) report into the M9 crash near Stirling in July in which Lamara Bell and John Yuill died. Ms Bell, who was discovered critically injured in the crashed car, had been in the vehicle next to her dead partner Mr Yuill for three days. She died later in hospital. Police Scotland admitted they did not investigate a report they had received about the crash until three days after it happened. What was that article about?
Police were alerted to concerns about a man who died in his Edinburgh home at least two days before his body was discovered, it has emerged.
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Stephen Port, 41, should die in prison, the judge Mr Justice Openshaw said. The former chef, who was also convicted of a string of sex offences, lured his victims to his flat before plying them with GHB. Port, who had denied 29 charges in total, was found guilty of the murders after a trial at the Old Bailey. The killer the police missed GHB: The killer drug used by Stephen Port Victim's family "disgusted" by police Relatives of the victims cheered and clapped as Mr Justice Openshaw told Port he would never be released. The judge told Port that he had carried out the murders to "satisfy his lust" for sex with young men who were rendered unconscious. He highlighted Port's attempt to cover up two of his murders with fake suicide notes as "wicked and monstrous". One fake note planted on the body of a victim alluded to responsibility for another of Port's killings. Between August 2014 and September 2015, Port murdered Gabriel Kovari, 22, from Lewisham, Daniel Whitworth, 21, from Gravesend, Kent, and Jack Taylor, 25, from Dagenham, east London. By a majority verdict, the jury also found him guilty of murdering Anthony Walgate, 23, from Dagenham, in June 2014. The victims met Port via dating websites such as Grindr and were taken to his flat in Barking, east London, for sex. Their bodies were all found dumped in or near a graveyard within 500m of his home. During sentencing Mr Justice Openshaw referenced the police investigation into the deaths, which has been criticised by the victims' families. "It is not for me to say whether the seeming bizarre coincidence of these three gay young men being found dead so close together might have given rise to suspicions that these deaths were not the result of ordinary self-administered drug overdoses," he said. "The competence and adequacy of the investigation will later be examined by others." Before the sentence was handed down, statements from the victims' friends and families were read by prosecutor Jonathan Rees QC. The mother of Mr Walgate said the death of her son had "devastated and broken the family". Mr Kovari's brother Adam spoke of the difficulty in telling their mother of his death, saying "there is no pain greater than losing a child". Daniel Whitworth's father Adam said he had been given "a life sentence of grief". Outside court, Mr Taylor's sister Donna said: "We finally have justice for Jack and the other boys. "A sick and twisted scumbag will never be able to hurt or destroy any other family's life. "Jack can finally rest in peace. We will always be completely heartbroken." Lead investigator Det Ch Insp Tim Duffield said Port was "one of the most dangerous individuals" he had encountered during his 28-year career. The initial handling of the case has provoked fierce criticism from friends, families and campaigners, who accused police of failing to act on earlier concerns about Port. It has also emerged that the coroner at Daniel Whitworth's inquest expressed concerns about the suicide note found in his hand, and did not rule out the involvement of another person. Scotland Yard has admitted it missed "potential opportunities" while investigating the deaths. The Independent Police Complaints Commission is examining the initial police response to the deaths of the four men. This article was about:
A "wicked and monstrous" serial killer who poisoned four young men with lethal doses of a date rape drug has been given a whole life prison term.
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Article:Davis, 25, has made exactly 100 Championship appearances for Blues since signing from West Midlands rivals Wolves in August 2014. He spent five years on the books as a professional at Molineux, During that time he played 61 times, as well as being loaned out to Darlington, Walsall, Shrewsbury Town, Inverness Caledonian Thistle and Chesterfield. Davis's new deal, tying him to St Andrew's until the summer of 2020, follows the re-signing of Craig Gardner from West Bromwich Albion, ending a busy week of activity for Blues boss Gianfranco Zola in his midfield department. The Italian is open-minded about the future of Diego Fabbrini, who was signed by predecessor Gary Rowett from Watford in a £1.5 million deal a year ago. Despite being brought in for only his second start of the season against Newcastle last Saturday, Fabbrini is prepared to move on in the hope of regular first-team football. "In his mind he wants to go and maybe try somewhere else," Zola told BBC WM. "But he has a future here if he is willing to work at his game and work hard at some issues." "I know where he could be. But I cannot do anything unless he wants to do that. Then he can be a player who, wherever he goes, he plays." Zola is close to abandoning his plan to bring in Slovenia international Rene Krhin from La Liga side Granada. Although Blues had agreed a £2m fee with the Spaniards, Krhin returned without signing after attending last weekend's FA Cup third-round 1-1 draw with Newcastle United. "It's gone very quiet," said Zola. "We wanted the player, but the player is taking too much time and we need to move. We have waited more than we should. "To be fair that, position was not a priority. Stephen Gleeson and Robert Tesche have done well so far." A summary of the above article is?
Birmingham City midfielder David Davis has signed a new three-and-a-half-year contract with the Championship club.
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Article:Sohaib Qureshi from Bearsden, East Dunbartonshire, is thought to have made £1.2m from trafficking cocaine from Colombia and the Caribbean to Scotland. He was jailed in March 2012 after being caught along with two other men. Qureshi originally had £70,000 seized. A judge has now granted a confiscation order for a further £91.000. At the High Court in Edinburgh, advocate depute Barry Divers said that an application was being made to change the confiscation order previously made against Qureshi. He said the new order would confiscate pounds £161,000 from the 40-year-old, who had already paid £70,000 towards the figure. Laura Reilly, counsel for Qureshi, told the judge, Lord Kinclaven, an agreement had been reached in the action after negotiations between the Crown and defence. The businessman, who was once described as a millionaire property owner, denied the charges against him but was convicted following a trial at the High Court in Edinburgh. The court heard how officers from the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency (SCDEA) targeted the drug smuggling operation which sourced high-purity cocaine in Colombia and the Dominican Republic. As part of Operation Klaxon, undercover officers carried out surveillance on a house in Springburn, Glasgow, in April 2009. Qureshi was seen at the house, along with Ronald Augustine, from the city's Maryhill area and David Byrne, from Springboig, Glasgow. When officers later stopped Qureshi and Byrne in a car, they found scales and other items used to cut and distribute drugs. A raid was then carried out at the house in Springburn, where officers found 4.5 kilos of cocaine with a possible street value of £180,000 together with 5.5 kilos of benzococaine, which could be used to bulk out the drug. Qureshi was later jailed for 12 years, with Augustine sentenced to seven years for providing a "safe house" for the cocaine operation and courier Byrne jailed for two-and-a-half years. Two men were also jailed in the Caribbean and two Colombians were arrested in the country's capital Bogota after police were tipped off by their counterparts in Scotland. Summarize the main points of that article.
A man who was jailed for 12 years over an international drug trafficking operation is to have more cash seized under proceeds of crime laws.
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Article:Kevin Lee Co, 45, from Sacramento, California, pleaded guilty to fraudulently using company credit cards to steal the money. Court documents reveal Mr Co spent about $1m of the embezzled funds on Game of War, one of the world's highest grossing mobile games. Players buy gold and other in-game credits to help build their empires. Mr Co worked at Holt, a California-based dealer of Caterpillar machinery, for about two years before he started the fraudulent scheme by May 2008. He became responsible for managing Holt's accounting department a year later and continued to hide the transactions until March 2015. He left the company a month later. Over the course of nearly seven years, he used the company card to buy luxury cars, as well as season tickets to NFL team the San Francisco 49ers, and basketball team the Sacramento Kings. Other items included plastic surgery, home furniture and golf course membership, according to a copy of his plea agreement obtained by tech news site Ars Technica. It is estimated players spent $550 on average last year on Game of War, which has featured singer Mariah Carey and model Kate Upton in its adverts. That was double the next highest grossing mobile game, and largely came from buying $52 crates of gold, according to data analysts Slice Intelligence. Mr Co, who pleaded guilty to charges of wire fraud and money laundering, will be sentenced in May. The two charges each carry jail terms of up to 20 years, but the US government's attorney has recommended a lesser punishment as part of the plea deal. The case follows an investigation by the FBI and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). A summary of the above article is?
A man went on a $1m (£800,000) spending spree on the Game of War app after stealing $4.8m from his employer.
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Summarize: A European Parliament motion passed on Wednesday refers to "the absolute need to ensure continuity and stability of the Northern Ireland peace process". It calls on negotiators "to avoid a hardening of the border". EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier said he would work for arrangements that do not threaten the peace process. He said any such arrangements must be compatible with EU law. The motion setting out the European Parliament's position for the Brexit negotiations was passed by 516 to 133. Although MEPs will not participate directly in the exit talks they will have to vote in favour of the final deal for it to go ahead. It set out general principles at the start of the two year negotiations for the UK to leave the European Union under the Article 50 process. At one point, Ulster Unionist MEP Jim Nicholson told Mr Barnier to stop "twiddling with your telephone" during the debate. Mr Nicholson said that Dublin did not speak for Belfast on Brexit negotiations, adding: "We will take care of ourselves". The UUP would accept neither a hard border between the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland, nor an internal border within the UK, added Mr Nicholson. He urged EU leaders not to heed those who, he said, wanted to use Brexit as an excuse to attempt to break up the UK. He also acknowledged that the EU had been a strong friend to Northern Ireland "during our darkest days", saying that while all sides wanted a frictionless border this would require innovative thinking. Sinn Féin MEP Martina Anderson challenged the Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Enda Kenny to stand up for the Good Friday Agreement and act as the voice of the Irish people, north and south, in the Brexit negotiations. Ms Anderson said she was glad MEPs had taken on concerns voiced by the late Martin McGuinness in drafting the sections of their resolution dealing with Ireland. DUP MEP Diane Dodds said she appreciated there was genuine sadness, disappointment and even anger in the European Parliament over Brexit, but she insisted that the triggering of Article 50 had been a good day for democracy in the UK. Mrs Dodds said any Brexit deal must respect that Northern Ireland will be an "integral part of an independent UK". Summary:
MEPs have called for "the unique position of and special circumstances" of the island of Ireland to be addressed in any Brexit agreement.
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Write an article based on this summary: Freezing temperatures have forced the postponement of nine of Saturday's 15 Scottish Cup third-round ties. Article:
St Mirren's game against Lowland League side Spartans was called off "due to a problem with the under soil heating". Beith Juniors' Bellsdale Park pitch was also deemed unplayable for their match at home to Greenock Morton. Albion Rovers v Queen of the South and Clyde v Arbroath also fell foul of the weather after pitch inspections held on Friday afternoon. Stirling Albion v Wick Academy was called off late on Friday, with East Fife v Edinburgh City, Stranraer v East Kilbride, Brechin City v Ayr United and Formartine United v Annan Athletic all postponed after pitch inspections on Saturday morning. Queens' trip to Coatbridge has been rescheduled for Tuesday 29 November, while Arbroath's match in Cumbernauld will be played on Tuesday 6 December, both with a 19:45 GMT kick-off. West of Scotland Superleague side Beith will now play host to their tie on Saturday 3 December with a 13:30 kick-off. It means that Morton's Championship game away to Raith Rovers has been postponed, with no date for the rearranged league match having been announced. Morton said in a website statement: "The majority of the Bellsdale Park playing surface has been frozen since Wednesday despite the junior outfit putting covers down." St Mirren and Spartans will attempt to play their game on Tuesday, with a 20:00 kick-off. The Paisley club said in a website statement: "We are investigating the cause of the problem and will meet with our insurers next week to see if the repairs are covered under our policy of insurance." Rugby Park, Kilmarnock, will host the draw for the fourth round of the cup on Monday at 18:35. The Premiership club have been chosen to mark the 20th anniversary of the Ayrshire club winning the 1996-1997 Scottish Cup. They defeated Falkirk 1-0 in front of more than 48,000 spectators at Ibrox Stadium to end a 68-year wait to lift the famous trophy for a third time.
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Summarize this article in one sentence. The campaign aims to warn young people about the dangers of hacking and using online tools for cyber-attacks. The CyberChoices campaign comes after NCA research revealed the average age of people involved in its investigations was 17. The research indicated few teenagers knew what constituted a cybercrime or what would happen if they were caught. "Over the past few years, the NCA has seen the people engaging in cybercrime becoming younger and younger," said Richard Jones, head of the Prevent team at the NCA's Cyber Crime Unit, in a statement. For example, he said, an NCA operation against users of an online attack tool known as Lizard Stresser resulted in seven people being arrested - all of whom were under 18 years old. The CyberChoices campaign builds on work the NCA did after Operation Dermic in 2014 against users of the Blackshades remote-access Trojan (Rat). A total of 17 arrests were made as part of that operation. Follow-up activity involved 80 "cease and desist" visits to known purchasers of Blackshades - 500 emails and letters were also sent to people known to have bought the cybercrime kit. Many of the people contacted were teenagers, still living at home. The youngest Blackshades buyer was 12 years old. "We know that simply criminalising young people cannot be the solution to this, and so the campaign seeks to help motivate children to use their skills more positively," Mr Jones said. The NCA has produced a range of materials that spell out UK laws governing computer misuse. They also deal with the most common types of cybercrime teenagers tend to be involved with. Many young people had been using attack tools that knocked computers offline, said Mr Jones, while others had turned to remote-access programs that let them spy on people and steal data. Mr Jones said teenagers often indulged in these types of attack to impress or "prank" their friends. However, he added, the abuse of these tools could often escalate and involve those using them committing "higher level" crimes without them being fully aware of what they were doing. "We want these young people, and their parents, to understand that choosing that path can result in a criminal record, can limit their choices for their future, and can put restrictions on their daily lives including the loss of access to the internet," said Mr Jones. The materials include guides for parents and lesson plans for teachers as well as video testimonies by young former hackers about what they did and the consequences they have suffered. "We have aimed the campaign initially at parents, because we know from research that they often are unaware of what their children are doing online," he said. European policing organisation Europol said it too had seen a rise in criminality among teenagers and younger computer users. Europol regularly runs campaigns to educate these groups about how low-level cybercrimes can escalate. "A lot of people can grow accustomed to using crime kits very easily," said Jaap van Oss, a team leader in Europol's Cyber Crime Centre. "We make them aware that using a Rat is not just for fun. It's a crime." "We have larger programmes throughout the EU where we specifically target those younger users of those tools," said Mr Van Oss. "It's not that we will convict them to serious sentences immediately, but we will take them up, knock and talk, and show them that they are breaking the law." Targeting these younger people was the "right thing to do", said Gabriella Coleman, an anthropologist at McGill University in Canada who studies online life and has written extensively about the Anonymous hacking collective. "There are probably hordes of young hackers who are attracted to forums simply to learn to explore a secret world and who never act upon the knowledge or tools they get from these forums," she said. "It is good that law enforcement has an awareness and an ability to differentiate between those who are dabbling and testing and those who are truly using these tools for criminal operations," she added. The CyberChoices materials will be made available via the NCA's website as well as its Twitter, Facebook and YouTube pages. It is being supported by several partner organisations including GetSafeOnline, the Cyber Security Challenge and the Crest organisation, which represents ethical hackers.
Teenagers committing crimes online are being targeted by the National Crime Agency.
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Summarize: Benoit de Juvigny said that "large international banks" have undertaken the due diligence needed to set up a subsidiary in the French capital. He also told Newsnight that "many other companies" had lodged informal inquiries about moving post-Brexit. He expects similar talks to be going on in Europe's other financial centres. Authorities in Frankfurt, Luxembourg and Amsterdam have said they would welcome banks moving operations from London for when the UK leaves the European Union. For many years, British-based financial services companies have been able to operate throughout Europe using so-called passporting rights. That scheme may end when Britain leaves the EU, with no guarantee that it will be replaced by a similar agreement. It is that uncertainty that had led many financial companies - and particularly international banks - to make contingency plans that would see them transfer a chunk of their business to an EU member country. Newsnight has learned that at least eight centres are now actively vying for this business - Paris, Frankfurt, Dublin, Luxembourg, Amsterdam, Madrid, Bratislava, and the Maltese capital, Valletta. But the extent to which these plans have been progressed has been hard to ascertain - until now. Mr de Juvigny's disclosure that major banks have gone as far as conducting due diligence shows an important milestone. Due diligence is the process of close scrutiny that major businesses go through prior to a major deal. It is detailed and expensive, and even wealthy banks don't undertake it lightly. What's more, if Mr du Juvigny is right, then it's being conducted in multiple cities around Europe. He said that the French regulatory department was likely to be expanded to cope with any influx of companies. However, he warned about the impact of regulators trying to compete to attract banks, saying: "The danger is the race that we could have for a more lenient regulation with a more lenient regulator." He said the risk of such leniency was lax regulation that could lead to another financial crisis, and called for Europe to stick "strictly" to existing legislation. "I don't believe that [lenient regulation] should be the choice of the UK, but nobody knows," he said.
Some major banks are in advanced stages of planning to shift some operations from London to Paris, France's leading financial regulator has told the BBC.
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Article:Exeter, Huddersfield, Liverpool and Winchester will pilot a system this year where the names of applicants are not seen during admissions. The aim is to stop "potential bias" about students' race and identity. Universities Minister Jo Johnson said he backed attempts to "stamp out inequality" in higher education. The pilot project aims to see if masking the names of applicants will remove any "unconscious bias". Without identifying names, applications would be considered without knowing the gender of students or any indications of their ethnic background or religion. The admissions process would use any relevant contextual information about a student - such as whether they were from a low-income family - but the name would be concealed. Last year, former Prime Minister David Cameron said universities should use name-blind recruitment as a way of promoting social mobility and preventing bias against minorities. The pilot study will find out how this might be implemented more widely, such as whether the name of the applicant should be known before a decision is taken to offer them a place. For universities that interview applicants for some courses, they would need to decide when admissions officers would have access to the names. At present, there are no universities that use "name-blind" admissions. But other employers have announced similar plans to try to run a recruitment process while concealing much of the information about applicants. Deloitte said its recruitment process would take place without knowing which university or school that applicants had attended, in a bid for a more diverse workforce. Universities have been under pressure from the government to make sure that they are open to applicants from all social backgrounds. Last week, Oxford University announced that this year it would be admitting the highest proportion of students from state schools for more than 40 years. This week, the Office for Fair Access said that universities would spend £834m on outreach projects and scholarships to support poorer students. Helen Thorne of the Ucas admissions service said the project would allow UK universities to evaluate any benefits and see how it worked with "existing approaches used to ensure that admissions are fair". Mr Johnson said: "We are committed to ensuring that everyone with the ability, regardless of their background, has the opportunity to study at our world-class universities. That is why we called on Ucas to conduct this review." A summary of the above article is?
Universities are going to test "name-blind" admissions for the first time to stop potential discrimination based on assumptions about students' names.
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Problem: Fabric, in Farringdon, has had its licence temporarily suspended after two 18-year-old boys died following suspected drug overdoses. There have been six drug related deaths at the nightclub since 2011. In a report, the force said the nightclub had become associated with drug use, in particular, MDMA. The submissions have been sent to Islington Borough Council, which is set to decide whether to reinstate the club's licence. The report says on 25 June, one teenager died after taking MDMA pills which had been smuggled in a friend's socks. I could tell by peoples body language and behaviour that well over 80% of the other people in the club appeared to be under the influence of drugs On 6 August, another 18-year-old took MDMA which had been smuggled into the club inside boxer shorts. One of his friend's told police: "We were very surprised about the lack of searching on this occasion. I was only patted down softly and I even said to the searching officer 'do you not want to check my pockets' and he said something like 'no don't worry about it'." They added: "I could tell by people's body language and behaviour that well over 80% of the other people in the club appeared to be under the influence of drugs. "The culture in the club is a drug culture and it's known by everyone who attends that you can buy drugs easily from within the venue," they said. On 2 July, undercover police officers witnessed open use of drug taking in the nightclub. Officers noted many people with glazed, red eyes; sweating and staring into space. The free water bars were busy, whereas the bars selling alcohol were not. Chief licensing officer Ian Graham described the system of preventing banned people from entering the club was "wholly inadequate" as staff were expected to remember the faces of more than 100 people from their photographs. "There is clearly an element of tragic misadventure in the drug-related deaths at Fabric," said Sgt Barnes. "However it is the contention of the police that an environment which is tolerant of drug-related serious crime has been created and maintained by the operation of the club in its current manner." Officers suggested raising the age of entry to 25 as younger, "inexperienced" drug users were more vulnerable to a fatal overdose. "The police urge the committee to give serious consideration to revocation of the licence. If the premises continue to operate in the same way it is believed that further drugs related deaths will inevitably follow." The report also contains submissions from people in support of Fabric. One person, who works there, wrote: "We are so strict on the doors. The security really pat down people for drugs (private parts etc) girls have bras searched as well it's extremely intense compared to other venues, festivals, parties around the world." A petition supporting Fabric has been signed by nearly 100,000 people. In response, London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he had urged all involved to find a "common sense solution" that ensured the club stayed open while those who attended were protected. What was that article about? A: Further drug-related deaths will happen at one of London's biggest nightclubs unless serious changes are made, according to the Met Police. Problem: Officers found the body of the 40-year-old victim at a property on Harbour Farm Road, Hyde, at about 18:00 BST on Monday. Det Insp James Faulkner said he had suffered "a serious assault resulting in a number of injuries". A 32-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder and is in custody for questioning. What was that article about? A: A man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a man was found dead in Greater Manchester. Problem: The white Nissan Micra was seized from Devell House in Rusholme on Friday. Det Ch Supt Russ Jackson said Abedi made "repeated trips" to and from the car between 18 and 22 May, the day of his attack. Meanwhile, police have arrested a man at Heathrow Airport in London in connection with the Manchester bombing. The 38-year-old was apprehended in what police described as a "planned" operation on suspicion of "offences contrary to the Terrorism Act". Greater Manchester Police said "there was no direct threat to the airport". Abedi's attack at Manchester Arena following an Ariana Grande concert killed 22 people. Greater Manchester Police have released images of the car and a holdall found inside in the hope it will help people recall Abedi's movements between 13 and 15 April, the day he left the UK for Libya, and 18 and 22 May. "We need to know who was in the car and where the car went," Det Ch Supt Jackson said. "We know Abedi bought some of the parts of the device after landing back in the UK and although his final acts on the night seem to have been alone, this doesn't mean that he did not have support in planning this attack. "It is vital that we exhaust all our lines of inquiry to establish how this was planned and understand how others might have been involved." He added forensic examiners had found "significant evidence" in the vehicle. Det Ch Supt Jackson said the investigation had made "significant progress". "We have made more arrests and have corroborated the accounts of some people we have released." However, he said police still wanted to hear from Abedi's "close associates" to help "build a picture of exactly what led to this atrocity". Nineteen people, including the man held at Heathrow, have been arrested over the bombing - 12 have been released without charge. A 33-year-old man was released earlier after being arrested in Wigan on 24 May, Greater Manchester Police said. An 18-year-old man arrested on the same day in the Fallowfield area was also released on Tuesday. Seven men remain in custody. What was that article about? A:
Manchester suicide bomber Salman Abedi may have used items stored in his car "to help assemble the device" he used to kill, police have said.
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Write an article based on this summary: The new ministerial team at the Department of Health is in place - now its time to face up to what David Cameron called "down-to-earth, bread-and-butter issues" which he said his Government should focus on. +++++++ A: One of those is the state of the NHS and its direction of travel over the next five years. The immediate signal from the Department is that there will be no radical change of course. Major reorganisations similar to the upheaval seen in the last parliament are not on the agenda. The Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt has let it be known that his focus will be on "out of hospital" care. He used his first two years in the post to concentrate on what he saw as the urgent need to improve safety and transparency inside hospitals in the wake of the Mid Staffs scandal. He now says there should be a push for higher standards of care for the elderly and most vulnerable patients provided by GP surgeries, community and social care. Tackling dementia was a priority for the last Government. That is still the case. But ministers are also aware of the increasing obesity challenge to the NHS. The costs associated with treating diabetes are mounting - on one estimate around 10% of the NHS budget. Those who are overweight or obese are more at risk of developing Type 2 diabetes. A new initiative in this area by the Department of Health seems likely. While Jane Ellison remains in her post as public health minister, there are intriguing changes elsewhere in the department. As Dan Poulter departs, Ben Gummer arrives as a new minister. He made a name for himself campaigning on behalf of Ipswich Hospital to secure a heart centre. He also pushed the Treasury successfully for taxpayers to be sent itemised statements setting out how their money is spent. Might he take a close interest in NHS spending? The new Minister of State Alistair Burt is an old Whitehall hand, having served in John Major's Government and at the Foreign Office after the 2010 election. He has campaigned on behalf of victims of the tainted blood scandal. One of Mr Hunt's final statements in the last parliament followed the Penrose inquiry in Scotland into the use by the NHS of contaminated blood products. He said a new and broader compensation scheme for victims would be drawn up. It may well fall to Mr Burt to see that through. As for the opposition, its too early to say what angles will be pursued. Andy Burnham's position is well known and he will probably continue to highlight the use of private provision in the NHS. He may be distracted for a while by a Labour leadership bid - as would shadow care minister Liz Kendall - though that could itself involve a campaign around health. Hovering over the Department of Health is a financial shadow. The new ministers will quickly be brought up to speed by their colleagues on the short- and medium-term challenges to the NHS budget. Health trusts have been warning in recent weeks that there is a danger of a significant deficit in the current financial year, perhaps running to £2 billion. They claim to be under massive strain and that a new cash injection from Government will be required. For now, ministers are making clear that everything the head of NHS England Simon Stevens asked for to cover the current financial year was provided. They are in no mood to pull out the cheque book just yet and don't want to be seen to be caving in to the demands of the leading hospitals. Summer will give way to autumn. By the time the leaves are falling from the trees, the readiness of the NHS for winter will again be high on the agenda. Claims that the service is creaking at the seams and that the money is running out will be made again. Ministers at the Department of Health will have to start thinking now how they are going to tackle that. Write an article based on this summary: Swansea council's leader is confident a £1.3bn city deal is ready to sign off with the UK government. +++++++ A: Councillor Rob Stewart believed they "could not be in a better position" to agree the deal which could be worth millions over the next 15 years. But a transatlantic cable, described as a "game changer" in bringing ultrafast broadband to the Swansea Bay region, is not part of the deal. It would be separate but complementary, said Mr Stewart. Swansea Bay City Region's chairman Sir Terry Matthews, interviewed a year ago, had described the importance of the communication channel from New York to London via the south west Wales region. He added at the time that the cable would make the Swansea Bay City Deal, unlike those put forward by other areas, deliver for the whole of the UK rather than the region alone. But Mr Stewart said the Project Jupiter cable was a separate project - and like Tidal Lagoon's relationship with the city deal's energy projects - would be "aligned" and "complementary" rather than directly part of the city deal. BBC Wales has seen a copy of the latest plan put to the UK government. What is on the table involves 11 different projects ranging from investments of £50m in the Swansea City and Waterfront Digital District and £5m for the Yr Egin creative hub project. Mr Stewart denied that the focus on buildings could lead to a return of the failed Technium project. He added that the Swansea Techniums had been a success story. The city deal aims to support "next generation industries" and to apply internet technologies for the region's energy sector. It also aims for the four council areas stretching from Neath Port Talbot to Pembrokeshire to become a magnet for hi-tech and cloud data firms. Life science firms would work alongside local hospitals, including an eye-catching £225m "wellness village" planned for near Llanelli. But Mr Stewart strongly denied the focus had shifted away from the "internet coast" vision to a more traditional focus of bricks and mortar developments. "In order to deliver the sorts of economic change we want in this region we have to take forward the fifth generation technologies - the establishment of the test bed," he said. "We've been very clear about that and Sir Terry Matthews and his business partner from Wesley Clover, Simon Gibson, have been integral in bringing that together. "They can demonstrate though the model they've successfully rolled out in Canada, they've created 22,000 jobs there and we believe we can make that sort of economic impact here. "Whilst there are several projects which will have construction as part of it, the real golden thread through the deal are still those new technologies and new industries." City deals exist to give financial support for councils to work more regionally on big projects - which will stimulate private investment and have a real transformational impact. There are hopes the Swansea Bay deal could be mentioned in Wednesday's Budget from Chancellor Philip Hammond. Mr Stewart said very positive meetings had been held with the Welsh Secretary Alun Cairns and Swansea-born Lord Heseltine, adviser to the communities and local government secretary. "As far as we're concerned we've answered all the questions posed to us by Treasury officials and others and feel we're at the point when we're ready to sign," Mr Stewart told BBC Wales. He said £673m of private investment was ready to come into the region and the bid had "substantial support" from a wide range from within the private sector. "It's still a unique deal and still a very class-leading deal in terms of what it tries to do," said Mr Stewart. "Some of the comments back from the secretary of state and others is that it's a very innovative deal, it does lots of things individually that others are doing but nobody is doing those in the way we are putting this together. "The biggest vote of confidence is if you look at the UK's industrial strategy, recently released by Theresa May, you map that against what our city deal is doing and the two are indivisible. People have caught up with the thinking that our city deal provides." Write an article based on this summary: China's economic growth slowed further in the three months to March this year, expanding 7% compared to a year earlier, its slowest pace since the global financial crisis in 2009. +++++++ A:
The rate was lower than the 7.3% posted for the three months to December. Last year, China's economy, which is the world's second largest, grew at its slowest pace since 1990. It expanded by 7.4% in 2014, missing its annual growth target of 7.5% for the first time in 15 years. Despite the slowdown, the Chinese economy was still one of the world's fastest-growing and analysts have said it was proving to be more resilient than expected. However, they have also said that slower growth, together with the country's cooling property market - a key economic driver - was likely to mean further easing by China's central bank this year, including further rate cuts among other measures. In February the People's Bank of China unexpectedly cut interest rates for the second time since last November. Interest rate cuts together with injections of liquidity are some of the tools Beijing uses to fine tune its economic growth. The latest growth numbers were by no means a hard landing - which some had feared - and were in line with the latest government target, analysts said. "Still, it represents a slowdown from the previous read of 7.3%," Nicholas Teo from CMC Markets told the BBC, "and is one of the weakest numbers reported in quite a few years." In the first three months of 2009, amid the financial crisis, China's economy expanded 6.6% from a year earlier. China also released industrial production (IP) figures on Wednesday which fell to 5.9% month-on-month in March, down from forecasts for an expansion of 6.9% and the lowest since 2008. Analysts said these figures were more glaring than the growth data. Mr Teo described the latest IP numbers as "unfavourable". "Together with the slower trade numbers reported earlier this week, the industrial production number may just set the tone for a quickening pace with regards further easing measures," he said. "And this may come in the form of further interest rate cuts." Evan Lucas from IG Markets told the BBC the IP numbers highlighted "the real issue facing China" as exports declined "and falls in work done were being felt across the board". Markets were lacklustre following the numbers however, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng index up 0.7% and the benchmark Shanghai Composite flat, up just 0.01% at 4,135.91.
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Summarize: The 42-year-old Filipino crew member died when a lifeboat, with five crew, became detached from the fifth deck during a safety exercise. It fell 10m (33ft) into the water. Two crew members are in hospital with life-threatening injuries. The accident happened during a stopover in Marseille. The injured crew members included three other Filipinos and an Indian man, AFP reports. The Royal Caribbean Cruise company, which operates the Harmony of the Seas, also confirmed the death on its Twitter account. "We're keeping our colleagues and their families in our thoughts and prayers," the company said. Harmony of the Seas is the world's largest cruise ship at 362m long, and can hold more than 8,000 passengers and crew. It is higher than a 25-storey building, and longer than the height of the Eiffel Tower. It entered service in May this year. Among its luxurious facilities are 20 restaurants, 23 swimming pools, a theatre and a casino.
One crew member has died and four others have been injured in an accident on the Harmony of the Seas, the world's biggest cruise ship.
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Summarize this article: Murray and Australian Peers won a dramatic match against the Italian duo of Simone Bolelli and Fabio Fognini 7-6 (7-5) 3-6 11-9. "I guess we're one of the best teams in the world, that's why we're here," Murray told BBC Scotland. "Every time we step on court we feel we've got a chance to win our match." Murray confessed to some pre-match nerves ahead of his World Tour Finals debut, but was thrilled to make a winning start to the round-robin stage. "I was a bit nervous going out there, which I guess means it meant a lot to us," Murray said. "We did great to win, it was a real high level match. Everyone on the court was playing a lot of good tennis with exciting rallies. Really happy to come through at the end. "It's obviously nice to get off to winning start, get a bit of momentum going early in the tournament." With Great Britain's Davis Cup final tie against Belgium looming at the end of the month, Murray, 29, has plenty to think about over the next few weeks, but he's adamant that his only focus right now is the Tour Finals. Despite enjoying great success with partner Peers this season - they won titles in Brisbane and Hamburg, were runners-up at Wimbledon and the US Open and could end the year as the world's number one pairing - they will go their separate ways after this tournament. "It's been a great year for us," Murray continued. "We've done three years together now and I think we both kind of felt it was time to move on. A fresh start, try something different." "I'm going to play with Bruno Soares next year. I'm really looking forward to that and hoping to be even more successful than I was this year." "Any decision comes with risk, especially after the year we've had. We both know we can do great things together, but we both felt it was time to move on, do something different and that's why we're going our separate ways after this tournament."
Jamie Murray believes he and doubles partner John Peers are a match for any team after winning their opening match at the ATP World Tour Finals.
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The 22-year-old's contract with Scottish Premiership side Hearts expired at the end of the 2016-17 season. Full-back Paterson made over 150 first team appearances for the Tynecastle club. "I'm absolutely delighted and buzzing to be part of this big club," Paterson said of his move to Cardiff. "It's nice and early so I've got a lot of time to bed in, get to know my way around the area and introduce myself. "It's great timing and I'm happy to be here." London-born Paterson has won five caps for Scotland after making his debut against Italy in May 2016. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page. What was that article about?
Scotland defender Callum Paterson has joined Championship club Cardiff City on a three-year contract.
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Text: The alleged fraud, at Dover Athletic football club's Crabble Stadium, was discovered after an internal audit revealed a discrepancy in its accounts. Club chairman Jim Parmenter said the amount lost was bound to have an impact on the club, but would not put it in "any form of financial difficulty". Kent Police said the 43-year-old woman from Gillingham had been freed on bail. summary: A woman has been arrested on suspicion of theft after a "five-figure sum" went missing from a Kent football club. Text: Fans were queuing from the early hours on Friday to get a seat for the match against Gillingham. The match this Friday will be the first game in the city since the owners of the Sky Blues moved home fixtures to Northampton in a dispute over rent. The League One club has said more tickets may be made available if police and safety approval is given. summary: All 15,000 tickets on general sale for Coventry City's first match back at the Ricoh Arena have been sold. Text: They say there is too much room for error in ultrasound scans in the first six weeks, which wrongly label a small percentage of embryos as miscarried. The true scale of the problem is unknown but researchers said it was "hard to see how there can't be women having misdiagnoses being made". Guidelines are currently being reviewed. The study suggested the current rules "could lead to 400 viable pregnancies potentially being misclassified", however the researchers said this was an educated guess with no evidence of how many would lead to a termination. Miscarriage is very common, affecting one in five pregnancies. If a women experiences pain or bleeding early in the pregnancy, around five to six weeks, they will have an ultrasound scan. Two results would suggest a miscarriage, which could then lead to a decision to terminate the pregnancy: A series of papers published in Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynaecology questioned the thresholds. One paper reviewed the evidence for the guidelines and said they were based on poor evidence. Another reported significant variation in the measurements made by different clinicians, which could in theory change the diagnosis. Tests on 1,060 women whose pregnancy was in question showed the 20mm rule would diagnose about 0.5% of cases as miscarriages when they were in fact healthy. Prof Tom Bourne, from Imperial College London, told the BBC: "We found that the cut-off values were not entirely safe because they can be associated with a misdiagnosis of miscarriage in a small number of cases, and our view is that there shouldn't be any risk. "I think a significant number is one, frankly. I think anyone who has a diagnosis of miscarriage and potentially has surgery would expect that that diagnosis is right." He argues the cut-offs should be about 25mm instead of 20mm for the sac and 7mm for an embryo without a heartbeat. He also wants a greater emphasis on repeat scans. He said: "There's not a medical cost to being more cautious in what we're doing." Prof Siobhan Quenby, from University Hospital Coventry, welcomed greater attention and clarity on the issue, but said: "I really don't think many mistakes are being made." She said people were aware of issues with the guidance and if there was any doubt, further tests, not a termination, would take place. It is "very common that people come back for a second scan", she said. For those with a miscarriage diagnosis, she said that in the majority of cases there would be no medical intervention. About 30% would take tablets or have surgery to end the pregnancy. Dr Mark Hamilton, consultant gynaecologist at Aberdeen Maternity Hospital, said the findings "reinforce the need for clinical staff to continue to exercise great care in the diagnosis of non-viable pregnancy to minimise the risk of misdiagnosis. "Women should continue to be managed expectantly without the need for medical treatment or surgery until the diagnosis of non-viability is established with certainty." The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence is currently developing guidelines for the care of women who experience pain and bleeding in early pregnancy. There is already guidance available from the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. This will include the role of ultrasound in determining the viability of a pregnancy and will draw on this research. New guidelines are due in November 2012. The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists welcomed the studies. summary:
Some pregnancies are being terminated unnecessarily after an incorrect diagnosis of miscarriage, say doctors.
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Write an article based on this summary: Australia says it is encouraged by UN Security Council support for an international criminal tribunal into last year's MH17 crash.
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has returned to New York to lobby for the establishment of the tribunal. The Malaysian Airlines plane was flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur when it crashed, killing all on board. Many say there is evidence the plane was hit by a Russian-supplied missile fired by pro-Russian rebels. Australia has joined other countries involved in a joint investigation of the 17 July 2014 crash, including Belgium, the Netherlands and Ukraine, to push for the tribunal and the prosecution of those responsible. Russia is expected to veto the proposal after President Vladimir Putin earlier this month said it would be "premature". Ms Bishop told Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) TV that despite Russia's resistance, she was encouraged by support from the UN Security Council. "They recognise that we are seeking justice for the families of those who were killed aboard Malaysia Airlines MH17 over a year ago," she said from New York. "We're determined to hold those responsible to account and we want to establish an independent criminal tribunal backed by the UN Security Council so that it does have international support," she said. However, said she had requested the Russian ambassador get instructions from Moscow not to veto a resolution for the tribunal. "This would not serve Russia's national interest, in seeking to deny the families of those aboard MH17 justice," she said, according to Australian Associated Press. Ms Bishop is expected to address the council on Wednesday New York time. A final report on the cause of the crash by the Dutch Safety Board is due to be released in October.
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Article:Adams became the first female boxer to win an Olympic gold medal when she triumphed at London 2012. The 33-year-old from Yorkshire won the flyweight title again in Rio this year, the first British boxer to defend an Olympic crown for 92 years. Asked about her future, she told the BBC: "If I was to go professional I could definitely break boundaries." Speaking on BBC Radio 5 live, Adams added: "I've had a few chats with quite a few promoters and I still need to think about what I really want to do. "There is also Tokyo [Olympics in 2020] and acting which I'd love to pursue, but the professional boxing world would be a big challenge. Who knows, we could have a new world champion." Adams highlighted the successful transition of former Olympic judo bronze medallist Ronda Rousey to Mixed Martial Arts, where she won the UFC bantamweight world title. "Before her there weren't that many female MMA fighters anybody knew," Adams said. "For me, coming from amateur boxing, people already know my name. I've already got a big following and if I take that into professional boxing that could change the game forever." Adams was asked about British world heavyweight champion Tyson Fury, who could lose his boxing licence after revealing he took cocaine in an attempt to help deal with depression. Fury, 28, also claimed he had retired on 3 October, only to retract the comment three hours later. "With Team GB we have everything; doctors, nutritionists, psychologists - everything you could think of - and we don't need to worry about anything," Adams said. "Maybe there needs to be that in the professional game, someone they can talk to. Summarize the main points of that article.
Double Olympic champion Nicola Adams says she has held talks over a move to the professional ranks.
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Summarize this article in one sentence. Lauren Docherty's post about her Muslim friend Faiza Chowdhury has been shared around the world almost 10,000 times. It has now been used in Facebook's anti-hate campaign, Changing Minds. Ms Docherty, from Doncaster, wrote: "If we'd 'closed the borders' 24 years ago, I would never have made one of the best friendships I've ever experienced." She wrote the post in November, when "everything was happening in the world with the Syrian refugees," she said. "I was seeing a lot of negative things on Facebook by a lot of people who I think hadn't been friends with someone of a different race before, so I wanted to challenge that a little bit," she added. Ms Chowdhury, 24, was born in Bangladesh and brought to the UK when she was a baby. She is now a teacher in Manchester and wearing a headscarf is seen as "normal" by those around her. "I was really worried at first but I've realised that when you're a child you're just curious," she said. "But anything you explain to them they'll be more understanding towards you. "It's so important to have people who wear headscarves in teaching so kids will grow up used to it." Ms Docherty said knowing Faiza had influenced her views on many things. "Faiza isn't a terrorist. She isn't oppressed. She doesn't support ISIS, she doesn't want us all to stop eating bacon, she doesn't think we should all learn her language, or stop wearing poppies," Ms Docherty wrote. "We got hundreds of messages, thousands of friend requests because of this post - only positive things from all races and all over the world," Ms Docherty added. "It's just been insane."
A woman has spoken of the "insane" experience of her Facebook post being printed on bus stop signs and billboards across the UK.
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Dr Mark Harrison will not be able to practise as a doctor for up 18 months pending a review. The General Medical Council (GMC) will decide whether he will face a fitness to practise panel. Botox can normally only be prescribed by doctors or designated professionals. If Dr Harrison faces a panel he will be assessed by the GMC's Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service. It comes after the GMC banned doctors remotely prescribing injectable cosmetic medicines, such as Botox, on the phone, fax or online, without a face-to-face consultation. Niall Dickson, chief executive of the GMC, said: "There are good reasons why these are prescription-only medicines, and we believe doctors should assess any patient in person before issuing a prescription of this kind." Remote prescribing was common practice at Dr Harrison's company Harley Aesthetics - one of the UK's largest purchasers of the anti-wrinkle drug. Nurses who have independent prescribing qualifications are able to prescribe any drug, including Botox, without the involvement of a doctor. And nurses without this qualification are legally allowed to inject the drug under a doctor's direction, but risk being struck off for doing this remotely, unless in an emergency. Dr Mark Harrison, the director of Harley Aesthetics, had built up a network of hundreds of nurses who phoned him on his mobile from across the UK to receive authorisation to inject patients immediately with Botox. They paid Dr Harrison £30 for each conversation. After concerns were raised to the BBC, an undercover researcher secretly recorded one of Dr Harrison's training days and joined his team of nurses. Dr Harrison was secretly recorded explaining how prescriptions for Botox could be obtained in the names of friends and family and the stock of drugs could be used on walk-in patients. If nurses were unable to reach him on his mobile at any time when they had a patient expecting immediate treatment, he encouraged them to inject their patients anyway and he would phone the patient later. "If you can't get a signal, what you might do is do the treatment and then you ring through with the details and the phone number and we guarantee we'll always ring the client after the event," Dr Harrison was secretly recorded saying. "That may be after the event, which is a little bit naughty." The BBC then phoned him to see if this would really happen, claiming a new patient had already been injected. Dr Harrison left a message on the voicemail of the "patient" and later sent a prescription. Senior doctors have said this amounts to a potential safety risk and would mean the nurse was breaking the law by injecting Botox without a prescription. In a statement, Dr Harrison said he had performed more than 50,000 remote consultations since 2005, with no adverse affects on patient health. He said the use of prescriptions in one person's name for the treatment of others was "common, almost universal practice throughout the aesthetics industry" and had "no consequence for patient safety". Dr Harrison said the practice of a doctor phoning a patient after an injection "would never be encouraged and would never be acceptable for a new patient". He added: "The decision to treat has been taken by the nurse and the doctor informed retrospectively." Dr Harrison went on: "I can confirm that I take my professional and moral obligations to both the patients who have treatments and the nurses who use the service extremely seriously." Dr Nigel Mercer, a leading cosmetic surgeon and former president of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, was shocked by the BBC's findings. He said: "This is a wake-up call. It's not an appropriate way for providing a medical service." What is a summary of this text?
A Harley street doctor exposed in a BBC London investigation encouraging nurses to order potentially dangerous Botox drugs in one person's name for use on another has been suspended.
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Article: The McKinsey Global Institute conducted the research showing more female employment would boost the economy. It found $2.1 trillion could be added if the country raised its female employment ratio from 64% to 74%. "Gender inequality is a pressing human issue, but also has huge ramifications for jobs, productivity, GDP growth, and inequality," the report said. The report says 6.4 million new jobs would need to be added to the US, on top of the 10 million already projected to be added by 2025, just to reach the $2.1 trillion target. That would require businesses and local governments to invest $475 billion. The US economy has added more than two million jobs for the last three years, but most have been low paying. Opponents of government enforced equality programs often point to the high cost new regulations place on businesses. To get the full economic benefit women would also have to occupy more high paid and full-time jobs. Women make up 46% of the US workforce, but currently contribute just one fifth of the country's annual gross domestic product (GDP). Promoting more women to leadership and management roles and training them for higher skilled positions would boost their contribution to the economy, the study said. Reducing the amount of time women spend on unpaid work is also essential. Between 1965 and 2010 labour force participation rate for women rose, but the time women spent on unpaid child care also climbed by a third. In February, philanthropist Melinda Gates, addressing the impact of unpaid work called it a "hidden cost in society." On Tuesday, San Francisco became the first US city to pass a law mandating fully paid parental leave. The study's authors called for government action to address to paid parental leave, which is not guaranteed in the US, and improve childcare. They also said businesses should look at their hiring and performance evaluation practices to boost gender diversity. The authors admitted that reaching the $4.2 trillion figures was unlikely because the "barriers hindering women from fully participating in the labour market make it unlikely that they will attain full gender equality within a decade." In September, a research report by MGI said $12 trillion would be added to the global economy if gender equality was reached worldwide. ++++++++++ Summarize: Gender equality in the workplace could add $4.3 trillion (£3 trillion) to the US economy by 2025, a study has found. Problem: Owen was sent to the Craiglockhart War Hospital in Edinburgh, where he met fellow war poet Siegfried Sassoon in August 1917. The site is now part of Edinburgh Napier University's Craiglockhart campus. The university already has a permanent exhibition to mark war poets' work. Earlier a Caithness flagstone bearing a quote from the poet "My subject is war and the pity of war. The poetry is in the pity" was unveiled by Isaacs, who is in Scotland with Theatre of War company, which produces ancient Greek tragedies for service members, veterans and their families. Owen was killed in the final week of World War One, shot by German machine guns as British forces unsuccessfully tried to bridge a canal in northern France. Isaacs, who plays Lucius Malfoy in the Harry Potter films, said: "This flagstone and its quotation will remind everyone who sees it that though the poets to emerge from the Great War have come to represent something culturally significant and revered, their inspiration was what all wars still provide; tragedy, terror and death. These were dispatches from the front line." The flagstone was donated to the university by Glen-Art, a military charity supporting former members of the armed forces. It lies outside the old main entrance to the building as a permanent memorial to Owen and all those affected by the First World War and other conflicts. Catherine Walker, curator of the university's War Poets Collection, said: "It is a unique gift, which is a fitting tribute to all who have been affected by war, not only those officers treated at Craiglockhart War Hospital." Fiona MacDonald, founder and director of Glen-Art and a trustee of the Wilfred Owen Association, said: "We are delighted to be able to donate this beautiful stone as the first of many events and activities commemorating the centenary of the time Wilfred Owen spent at Craiglockhart, where he met Siegfried Sassoon." What was that article about? A: Harry Potter star Jason Isaacs has unveiled a tribute to the war poet Wilfred Owen at the former hospital where he was treated for shell shock. Problem: During PMQs in the Commons, he told Theresa May that too many people had "paid the price" for austerity. The Conservative leader replied that the best route out of poverty was for people to be in work. She pointed to tax cuts and the national living wage as ways to give workers "real help". Mr Blackford, the SNP's Westminster leader, challenged Mrs May on whether she was "looking out for the just about managing". He said: "The UK government has not announced any measures to address rising inflation and slowing wage growth which the IFS (Institute for Fiscal Studies) has described as dreadful. "As workers face more than a decade of lost wage growth and endure the worst period for pay in 70 years, does the Prime Minister think she's looking out for the just about managing?" Mrs May insisted that what was important was ensuring that "we have an economy which is increasing the number of jobs". She went on: "Because the best route out of poverty is for people to be in work, that is what we are doing. We've seen nearly three million more jobs being created over recent years, that's important for people. "We also help people for example by cutting taxes, it's exactly what we've done for people who are lower paid. Introducing that national living wage, these are measures that are giving people real help." Mr Blackford raised concerns about in-work poverty, arguing that workers have "paid the price" for austerity. However, Mrs May maintained that the government's monetary policy had helped create jobs in the economy. Former investment banker Mr Blackford said: "Of course it's the forecast of a rise in in-work poverty that should concern us, in particular the likely increase of young people in poverty over the lifetime of this Parliament. "Since the 2010 general election, the FTSE has risen by 39.6%, monetary policy, not least quantitative easing has helped drive up financial assets while workers have paid the price for austerity. "Workers will earn no more by 2020/21 than they did in 2008. Will the Prime Minister give workers a pay rise?" Mrs May replied: "I would have thought that particularly with his background he would have recognised the role that monetary policy, including the quantitative easing, has done in ensuring that we are able to see those jobs in the economy that are so important for people." Earlier at PMQs, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn accused the government of "flip flopping and floundering" over public sector pay. He said that the government was "recklessly exploiting the goodwill of public servants" through the 1% pay cap and called for it to be scrapped. What was that article about? A:
The SNP's Ian Blackford has insisted that the prime minister should end "in work poverty" by backing a pay rise for public sector employees.
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The individuals had not previously been commemorated by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC). It said they may have come home and died of injuries or illnesses from the war and it had not been informed. The CWGC said there were "still many cases to be resolved" and the memorial had room for further names to be added. The new memorial to the fallen of World War One was unveiled at the cemetery last year. Most of the names have been inscribed on panels at the CWGC's workshop in France, but more than 15 have been engraved at the site. The Brookwood 1914-1918 War Memorial commemorates the missing and casualties with no known grave. The majority are servicemen and women from the land forces of the UK. Brookwood Military Cemetery contains 1,601 Commonwealth burials from World War One and 3,476 from World War Two. This article was about:
The names of 77 men and women killed during World War One are being added to the 1914-1918 War Memorial at Brookwood Military Cemetery in Surrey.
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North Down's Reynolds clocked 7.77 in the 60m hurdles to edge under the required 7.80 for the European Indoor Championships in Belgrade next month. Portaferry athlete Mageean won the 800m in 2:06.02 but it was well short of the Belgrade qualifying mark of 2:03.75. Kerry O'Flaherty clinched 1,500m victory in 4:16.04 and Adam McMullen won the long jump with 7.48m. Rio Olympian O'Flaherty overhauled in-form Queen's athlete Emma Mitchell over the closing laps in the race of the day with the runner-up finishing in 4:17.42. Both runners were chasing the European Indoor 1500m standard of 4:15.00 with Mitchell having set her personal best of 4:16.20 when winning the Scottish Indoor title last week. Derry man McMullen needed a jump of 7.90 to qualify for the European Indoor Championships. Meanwhile, Holywood's Paul Pollock was in good form in Japan with a marathon personal best of 2:15:30 and a qualifying time for the World Championships in London in August. Sum: Ben Reynolds and Ciara Mageean secured victories in the AAI Games at the new National Indoor Arena on Sunday. The average cost of services including probate, headstones, flowers and the burial or cremation fee is now £8,427, according to insurer SunLife. The average cost of a funeral has increased by 87% since the survey was first conducted in 2004. SunLife described a 39% jump in estate administration fees as a "significant" factor in this year's increase. The figures are set out in SunLife Direct's annual Cost of Dying report, which said that hiring a professional such as a solicitor now accounts for more than a third of expenditure associated with a person's death. The report found that saving money was a key motivation for the increased number of people who choose to manage their loved ones' affairs without professional help. Responding to the survey's findings, a Law Society spokesperson said that enlisting a solicitor "may save time and money in the future by ensuring things are done right the first time". Another factor influencing how much people spent was the type of funeral, since cremation tends to be less expensive than burial. The average burial cost is now £3,982, a rise of 2% since last year and 89% since the survey began in 2004. Dr Kate Woodthorpe, a sociologist from the University of Bath and author of the SunLife report, said the costs of funerals were rising "on numerous fronts". Funeral directors' fees reflect the costs of "staff salaries, the expense of running a business, but also the costs recovered by local authorities", she explained. "Local authorities are trying to preserve land by removing subsidies for burial, and in the case of cremation trying to recover the costs of meeting mercury emissions targets," she said. A spokesman for the Local Government Association responded that local government funding had been "slashed" over the past three years which meant "councils have been forced to examine all their services carefully". "Where services have been subsidised by council tax payers previously, as has been the case with some cemeteries and crematoriums, councils have had no choice but to review the fees they charge," the spokesman said. Cost also varied widely across different regions. The average funeral cost in the London area was £10,498, compared with £5,893 in Northern Ireland. The cost of a funeral will not always be met by families. When a person dies without relatives or the relatives are unable to pay, local councils or the NHS can provide a public health funeral. Dr Woodthorpe argued that "we don't have a culture of talking about death, which means we often don't plan properly, and we need to address that". Sum: The "cost of dying" is more than 10% higher than it was this time last year, according to a report. It quoted military sources as saying that the refitted former Soviet warship left its shipyard in the north-east and the trial "would not take a long time". The move is likely to raise fresh concerns over China's rapid military build-up. Beijing is currently involved in several maritime territorial disputes, particularly in the South China Sea. The aircraft carrier left its shipyard at Dalian Port in northeast Liaoning Province on Wednesday morning, Xinhua reported. "Military sources said that the first sea trial was in line with the schedule of the carrier refitting project," it said. "After returning from the sea trial, the aircraft carrier will continue refit and test work." Xinhua did not provide any further details. The BBC's Michael Bristow in Beijing says China is years away from being able to deploy this carrier as a potent military tool. Even so, the country's neighbours will be worried. Many are involved in disputes with China over maritime borders - and they will be looking anxiously at Beijing's naval build-up, our correspondent says. The carrier in question is a former Soviet warship, which was formerly called the Varyag. It is a relatively old design and it was not built by China. It was constructed in the 1980s for the navy of the USSR, but was never completed. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the rusting hull of the Varyag sat in dockyards in Ukraine. China extending military reach As other Soviet warships were cut up for scrap, a Chinese company with links to China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) bought the Varyag claiming it wanted to turn it into a floating casino in Macau. It took several years to finally tow it all the way to China, where it was then taken to Dalian. In June, the PLA confirmed that China's first aircraft carrier was under construction. However, Beijing has recently sought to downplay the capabilities of the carrier, saying it would be used for training and research. China's military is generally believed to be 20 years behind America's in its development. But in its rapid expansion, China is focusing on weapons designed to blunt US military power, analysts say. The PLA has invested heavily in submarines. It is believed to be close to deploying the world's first "carrier-killer" ballistic missile, designed to sink aircraft carriers while they are manoeuvring at sea up to 1,500km (930 miles) offshore, and it is building its own stealth fighter aircraft along with advanced carrier-based aircraft built from Russian designs. All of these can target US bases, US ships and US carriers in Asia. They will make it much more dangerous for US carrier fleets to operate close to China's coast, pushing them out further offshore. Taiwan, Korea and Japan that look to the US for their security may start to question how much America can really protect them in future, analysts say. A Japanese defence study last week expressed concern about what it called China's failure to explain its military ambitions. In the past year, China has had maritime run-ins with Japan, Vietnam and also the Philippines over disputed territories in the area. Sum:
The Chinese navy's first aircraft carrier has begun its sea trials, the state-run Xinhua news agency has said.
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Write an article based on this summary: A leading historian says Scotland's Roman Catholic Church is facing its gravest crisis since the Reformation. +++++++ A: Prof Tom Devine was speaking after the country's Cardinal Keith O'Brien resigned amid allegations of "inappropriate behaviour". He is contesting the claims by three serving priests and a former priest. Prof Devine said: "This is probably the gravest single public crisis to hit the Catholic Church in Scotland since the Reformation." In his commentary piece published in the Daily Telegraph, he added: "Its effects in the short term are incalculable." However, the senior Edinburgh University research professor believes that, although the faithful in Scotland would be stunned by the "seismic turn of events", the church had a powerful resilience that should not be underestimated. The resignation of Cardinal O'Brien as archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh followed claims that he had acted inappropriately to four priests who had been in the ministry in the 1980s. Britain's leading Roman Catholic cleric had been due to take part in the election of Pope Benedict's successor. He had been expected to fly out to Rome and join his fellow cardinals to vote in the conclave. However, Cardinal O'Brien issued a statement on Monday saying he would be resigning with immediate effect and would not participate in the vote. He added: "I have valued the opportunity of serving the people of Scotland and overseas in various ways since becoming a priest. "Looking back over my years of ministry: For any good I have been able to do, I thank God. For any failures, I apologise to all whom I have offended." Write an article based on this summary: A brand new species of 'see-through' glass frog has been discovered in Costa Rica, Central America. +++++++ A: 20 April 2015 Last updated at 07:23 BST The skin of glass frogs is so see-through that you can see organs that are inside its body. They are usually found in parts of Central and South America and scientist Brian Kubicki reckons that the discovery of this new species means the wildlife in Costa Rica's mountain area - where it was found - is doing well. The new species has a different colouring, skin texture and call. Check out the clip to see what glass frogs are like... Write an article based on this summary: A man has admitted he allowed three dogs to die a "long, slow, agonising death" when he left them in a hot car. +++++++ A: Jonathan Theobald, 65, left Staffie-type dogs Daisy, Mitch and Rascal in a vehicle in Peterborough for about five hours on 16 June. RSPCA inspector Justin Stubbs, the investigating officer, said they "may have slowly cooked, essentially". At Peterborough Magistrates' Court, Theobald admitted causing unnecessary suffering by confining them in the car. He is expected to be sentenced at a later date. More on this and other news from Cambridgeshire The dogs died after being left in a car on Ashbourne Road while Theobald went to a gym. The court heard that when he returned, two of the dogs were dead. He attempted to resuscitate the third but a vet, who he had called, pronounced it dead. The weather on the day in question was "overcast, not hot, but warm and humid", Mr Stubbs said. The temperature ranged from 16-19C (61-66F), but humidity levels were high. The animals would have suffered a "long, slow, agonising death", the inspector said. "The dogs would have overheated, they would have had fits. They may have slowly cooked, essentially." It was, he said, a "tragic accident" but leaving animals in cars for any length of time in such conditions was like "putting your dog through torture". Speaking before his court appearance, Theobald, who was visibly distressed, said: "I am so sorry. I am appalled by what happened. "I have shed a lot of tears since then." "I understand the RSPCA has a job to do and I don't want this to happen again." Theobald, of Lincoln Road, Peterborough, was charged under Section 4 of the Animal Welfare Act 2006. In court he admitted one count of causing unnecessary suffering to the dogs by confining them in an environment which was detrimental to their well-being and led to their death. Write an article based on this summary: Boreham Wood have signed midfielder Jai Reason from National League rivals Eastleigh on a free transfer. +++++++ A:
The 27-year-old former Ipswich Town and Cambridge United player made more than 250 appearances for the Spitfires after joining them in 2012. He helped the club win promotion from the Conference South and scored once in 26 matches for Eastleigh this term. "He's joining a very well-run club with ambition. I'm sure he'll do well," said Eastleigh chairman Stewart Donald. Find all the latest football transfers on our dedicated page.
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Article:Download speeds in Miserden averaged 1.3Mbps, meaning it could take 11 hours to download an HD film. Parts of Hertfordshire, Cumbria and Somerset also had average speeds below 2Mbps, consumer tests over 12 months showed, cable.co.uk said. But, a government spokesman said faster speeds might be available under different deals in those areas. Cable.co.uk, a consumer comparison site, released a list of the slowest and fastest speeds recorded by householders themselves, under their existing broadband deals. Of 94 tests conducted in Miserden, a village with a population of around 450, the average speed was 1.3Mbps but one resident recorded a "staggeringly low" speed of 0.12Mbps. Cable.co.uk said at that speed it would take 119 hours to download the Bond film Spectre in HD. Residents of Rickmansworth in Hertfordshire recorded the highest average broadband speed - 77.17Mbps. But Ashwell in Hertfordshire, Ulverston and Gilsland in Cumbria and the village of Brent Knoll in Somerset all recorded speeds below 2Mbps - which is "worse broadband than Mount Everest base camp", according to cable.co.uk. Dan Howdle, of the firm, warned that "digital black holes" risked economic decline as businesses needed an online presence. "These often beautiful, scenic locations will become ghost towns," he said. The average UK broadband speed was 22.8Mbps in November 2014, the latest Ofcom figures available. The government has pledged speeds of at least 2Mbps to all UK premises. A Department for Culture, Media and Sport spokesman said those below that could check whether they are eligible for a subsidised satellite connection. "This scheme offers immediate assistance to those in the most remote areas with the slowest speeds and is all part of our transformation of the UK's digital landscape," he said. A summary of the above article is?
A Gloucestershire village has the UK's slowest average broadband speed, tests carried out by householders suggest.
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Gas-powered generators have been providing power to major cities. A state of emergency has been declared. The pylons brought electricity from Ukraine. Engineers were reportedly denied access to the site by Ukrainian activists. Crimea was annexed by Russia last year, but the Ukrainian authorities have continued to supply power to the area. Images on social media show Ukrainian flags on some damaged pylons - and Crimean Tatar flags on others. Crimean authorities said they had managed to partially reconnect the cities of Simferopol, Yalta and Saky using generators. But more than 1.6 million people remain without power, and water supplies to high buildings have stopped and cable and mobile internet is down. Some 150 schools were also without power. "I had no electricity all night. These useless officials can't run the city and they still haven't built a local power station," a resident of Sevastopol told AFP news agency. "It's not the first time Ukraine has cut off electricity to Crimea, we are already used to power cuts and stock up on batteries," another one said. Mikhail Sheremet, Crimea's deputy prime minister, said the peninsula's hospitals had backup power sources and would not be affected. Two of the four main power lines were cut in an earlier attack on Friday, reports said. Ukrainian authorities said they encountered activists blockading the site when they tried to repair the damaged pylons. "The nature of the damage shows that it took place as a result of shelling or the use of explosive devices," Ukraine's state energy company Ukrenergo said in a statement. Ukrenergo said it hoped to finish all repairs within four days. Crimean Tatars, an ethnic group native to the peninsula who oppose Russian rule, held a protest at the site of the broken power lines in Kherson region, Russia's RIA news agency reported. What is a summary of this text?
Three-quarters of Crimea's population remain without power after four electricity pylons were blown up.
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Q: It said that the implications were new, serious and of such gravity that a commission had to be set up. "A system was in place in a large number of Garda (police) stations whereby incoming and outgoing telephone calls were taped," it said. It is understood the revelations could have an impact on past and current court cases. The government said it was informed of this new information on Tuesday. However, Irish broadcaster RTÉ has reported that the former garda commissioner Martin Callinan who resigned earlier on Tuesday following a controversy over whistleblowers, had written to the Department of Justice more than two weeks about the recordings. In a letter to the secretary general of the department, Mr Callinan asked that Minister for Justice Alan Shatter be informed and added that he had consulted with the Attorney General on 11 November 2013. By Andy MartinBBC Ireland Correspondent What could not be ignored was the fact that as commissioner, if Martin Callinan did not know about the secret recording of phone calls into and out of police stations, he should have known. The practice stopped last year, which suggests that some senior people knew about it and brought it to a halt. The potential repercussions are huge. Calls from prisoners to solicitors may have been monitored, and it is conceivable that the courts may view that as an abuse of process in cases where subsequent convictions resulted from recorded information. Read more Martin Callinan said the systems were set up in the 1980s to enable gardaí to record calls to and from control rooms in particular 999 calls, bomb threats and other messages. The practice continued in some stations over the years with recordings retained in the Garda Stations. In the letter, Mr Callinan confirmed that all recordings except 999 calls ceased nationally on 23 November 2013. The total number of tapes amount to more than 2,400 and Mr Callinan said he had consulted with the Attorney General and expected to consult with the Data Protection Commissioner The government has asked for a full, detailed report from its police force, An Garda Síochána, and its Department of Justice. It said the matter was "of significant public concern" and the investigation would be chaired by a senior serving or retired member of the judiciary. In a report by the Garda Síochána Ombudsman Commission (GSOC) published in June 2013, there was a reference to the practice of recording all incoming and outgoing calls on a particular phone line at Waterford Garda Station. The report said a court ruled that recordings were not admissible evidence. "On consideration of the ruling of the court, the Garda Commissioner may wish to re-evaluate his practice regarding the recording of such calls and the consents required if it is to be permissible to use such recordings in evidence," the ombudsman noted. However on Tuesday, John Redmond from the Association of Garda Sergeants and Inspectors (AGSI) said: "I am absolutely not aware of any recordings - except by ministerial order - I've never come across routine recording." The Irish Government's statement on Tuesday also said that the government had agreed to the retirement of Mr Callinan. Deputy Commissioner Nóirín O'Sullivan has been appointed as interim Garda Commissioner. A: The Irish government has set up an inquiry into allegations of widespread secret recordings by police. Text: Pan Am Flight 103 was on its way from London to New York in 1988 when a bomb went off on board while it was above the Scottish town. Duke Fakir said: "The producer on Top of The Pops was the reason we didn't get on that plane." He explained the group originally planned two performances for the show. The 80-year-old said the group wanted to record them together but were told they could not do both of them in the same session. Timeline: Lockerbie bombing Speaking in London before attending a performance of Motown the Musical, Fakir explained: "We had two shows to do and we were going to record them at the same time. "One of them was not going out until New Year's Eve and the producer didn't want us to play them at the same time. He wouldn't have it." Fakir added: "I was glad, so, so glad that we didn't do it in one session." The explosion over Lockerbie killed all 259 people on board the plane and 11 people on the ground. Sex Pistols frontman John Lydon has previously said he was booked on the Pan Am flight, but missed it because his wife took too long packing. Fakir performs with a new-look The Four Tops, who will soon embark on a UK tour with The Temptations. The Four Tops became one of the best-known bands of the Motown era after forming in the late 1950s. Follow us on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, on Instagram, or if you have a story suggestion email [email protected]. summary: The last surviving original member of The Four Tops has revealed the Motown group almost boarded the plane that was blown up over Lockerbie. Q: Grace Kissell's body was found by police at the house in Cowal Drive, Linwood, at about 14:30 on Thursday. John Haugen, of Cowal Drive, was accused of striking Ms Kissell on the head and body repeatedly with a knife. He made no plea or declaration when he appeared on petition at Paisley Sheriff Court. Mr Haugen was remanded for further examination by Sheriff Colin Pettigrew. A:
A 41-year-old man has been remanded in custody charged with the murder of a 33-year-old childcare worker in Renfrewshire last week.
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Article:In many ways the scheme - known as Class 3A - looks generous. But it may not necessarily be the best way to boost your pension, and indeed by doing so you may lose other benefits. As a result, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is advising people to get financial advice. But here are some general guidelines: Anyone who received their pension before 6 April 2016. That means that men are eligible if they were born before 6 April 1951. Women are eligible if they were born before 6 April 1953. The idea is that such people should be compensated, as they will not be eligible for the new - and more generous - flat-rate state pension, which starts in April 2016. Any current pensioner can benefit. Those who live for a long time will inevitably get better value out of the scheme than those who live for a short time. The maximum you can get is £1,300 a year, or £25 a week. This will be paid on top of the current state pension of £115 a week. How much you pay for that income depends on your age. For example, if you are 65, that £25 income would cost you £22,250. That is a one-off payment, which you will not get back. However, if you are 80 it would only cost you £13,600. You can chose to buy a smaller amount. The government has produced a calculator to help you work out costs. Click HERE to use the calculator. The top-up payments will rise with inflation, as measured by the Consumer Prices Index (CPI). In addition, spouses or civil partners will, in most cases, be able to inherit some of the payments. They will get between 50% and 100% of the cash. The rules for passing on the payments are the same as they are with the additional state pension. Anyone who has not got a full National Insurance contribution record - frequently women or those who have been self-employed - is likely to be better off topping up through another existing scheme, known as Class 3. That scheme is far more generous financially, but only applies to people who have not got a full contribution record. However, anyone who claims means-tested benefits may see them reduced, as a result of their income being boosted by either of these schemes. In particular, anyone who claims the guarantee element of pension credit, housing benefit, or council tax support may be affected. Those whose incomes may exceed £42,385 as a result will also be liable to the 40% rate of income tax. Anyone who is in poor health may not get good value for money out of it. Such individuals may do better to buy an enhanced annuity. Experts say the top-up scheme represents very good value for money. Buying a top-up at the age of 65 provides an annual return of 5.84% on the payment you make. An equivalent private-sector annuity - which also offers an inflation-linked income for life - would provide a return of 3.69%, according to investment provider Hargreaves Lansdown. "No private pension company can offer such an attractive deal," said Tom McPhail, pension expert at Hargreaves Lansdown. According to his calculations, the cost of buying a pension top-up is much lower than the cost of buying a standard annuity. See table above. However, some people may want to consider other forms of investment as an alternative. Peer-to-peer lending can offer returns of 6% before tax, and at the same time individuals would keep their capital. But, unlike top-up payments, such investments do carry a level of risk. The scheme will only run for 18 months, so is due to finish in April 2017. It is not known what will happen after that. To register an interest, or to get more information, visit this page on the DWP website. Summarize the main points of that article.
The government is offering millions of people the chance to get a higher income in retirement, through top-ups to their state pension.
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Text: The immediate cause of the incidents has been an intensifying dispute between Islamists and nationalists in Libya about legislative elections that created a new parliament in June. The new House of Representatives was to replace the interim assembly, the General National Congress (GNC), elected in 2012. Moderate Islamists fared far worse than they had in the previous elections and have been unwilling to accept the legitimacy of the new body. Instead, they claim, the GNC, sitting in Tripoli is the only legitimate legislative body and the House of Representatives, sitting in Tobruk, over 1,000km (600 miles) to the east, is not. GNC members are particularly opposed to calls by the new body for foreign intervention to improve security in Libya, where 350 militias have taken the place of the national army and police force. In Tripoli, the dispute erupted a month ago into a struggle to control the international airport. The Libya Dawn alliance, which backs the Islamists, has just wrested control of the facility from the Zintan militia coalition, which supports the nationalists. Libya Dawn, which is now in complete charge of the capital, was targeted by the raids. It regards the bombing as flagrant interference in Libya's internal affairs by the UAE - which has denied involvement. Meanwhile, since June, a motley collection of militias, air-force units and army groups under a former general, Khalifa Haftar, has been trying to eliminate pro-Islamist and extremist militias in Libya's second city, Benghazi. It has been relatively unsuccessful and Islamist militias there have forced out his key ally, the al-Saiqa elite army unit. Despite this, Gen Haftar has warned that he would extend his campaign across north-western Libya. The bombing raids, which he claimed his forces had carried out, seem to be the harbinger of this. Whoever was behind the raids, other countries have always been involved in Libya's problems. Britain, France, the US, the UAE and Qatar intervened in the 2011 civil war that toppled Col Muammar Gaddafi. Qatar has supported moderate Islamist groups since then. That support has now drawn in other countries, too, for there is a wider crisis in the Middle East as well - the struggle to eliminate the Muslim Brotherhood as a political force in the wake of the Arab Spring and the July 2013 army-backed coup in Egypt. Misrata-led alliance (Libya Dawn): Zintan-led alliance: Why is Libya lawless? Guide to Libya's militias Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE have come together to confront the Muslim Brotherhood and similar groups wherever they appear - in Egypt, the Gaza Strip or Libya, for example. The three anti-Brotherhood allies have also targeted Qatar, for its support for the Islamist groups they oppose, hence the raids on Tripoli. Egypt has also denied being involved in the attacks, but it soon will be, simply because of its fears that radical Islamist militias in Benghazi will soon spill over its borders. That is no doubt why Gen Haftar is a frequent visitor to Cairo. Indeed Egypt must also be very worried about the situation in the eastern town of Derna, where local extremists have declared a caliphate in imitation of the much-feared Islamic State - which controls swathes of Iraq and Syria. Nor are the Egyptians alone, as Europe begins to worry that such extremism may soon cross the Mediterranean. summary: US allegations that United Arab Emirates (UAE) warplanes based in Egypt bombed Tripoli in recent days puts into stark relief the way in which the domestic conflict in Libya has been dragged into a wider crisis emerging in the Middle East. Text: Northern Powergrid said about 38,000 properties in the North East were affected, with 1,500 yet to be reconnected. A lightning strike damaged railway signalling between Durham and Morpeth, causing widespread disruption. Many homes in parts of Teesside, County Durham and Northumberland were also affected. A spokesman for Northern Powergrid said: "Engineers have successfully restored customers since the storms started in the early hours by diverting electricity through alternative routes on its network, wherever possible. "The electricity distributor is continuing to monitor the weather and has taken action with additional staff being drafted into repair the damage the lightning storms have caused to parts of North East's power network. "We have also had the helicopter ready to fly today, weather conditions permitting, to carry out network inspections and help spot any damage so repairs can be carried out as soon as possible." summary: Torrential rain and thunderstorms caused power to be lost in thousands of homes and businesses overnight. Text: Christopher Chisholm, 31, abused Humza Yousaf as the politician took part in a Big Issue awareness initiative outside Queen Street station on 7 February. Glasgow Sheriff Court heard he said "you're not from my country" and also made reference to "a benefits locust". Chisholm was also ordered to be supervised for 12 months as part of a community payback order. The court heard that 30-year-old Mr Yousaf, who is minister for external affairs and international development, was taking part in a charity event to highlight poverty. He was with a Big Issue vendor trying to sell the magazine to commuters when the incident took place. Chisholm, from Gartcosh, North Lanarkshire, passed by and told those filming the event: "Take a photo of that mate, that's a benefit locust". The father-of-one then declined to buy a Big Issue from the politician, saying: "You're not from my country". Chisholm previously admitted acting in a racially aggravated manner. Imposing the community payback order, Sheriff Andrew Mackie told him: "Your behaviour was deplorable on this occasion, there is no place for the type of conduct you displayed in Scottish society." The court heard the incident was reported to the police on 13 February and there was a media campaign to try and identify Chisholm after the footage was posted online. He was eventually traced and invited to the police station but he declined and said he would speak to a lawyer. When officers arrived at his door he was recognised from CCTV and arrested for a racist breach of the peace. It also emerged that Chisholm has previous breach of the peace convictions with religious and sexual orientation aggravations. He was previously fined ??600 at the same court after he ran on to the pitch at Hampden as Rangers beat Celtic in the 2003 League Cup final. summary:
A man who admitted racially abusing an MSP in Glasgow has been ordered to carry out 90 hours of unpaid work.
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Question: Article:Media playback is not supported on this device The Swede carded a joint-record eight-under-par 63 in the final round at Royal Troon in 2016 to win The Open by three shots after an enthralling final-day tussle with Phil Mickelson. "I don't know which is going to be harder, winning the Claret Jug again or going skydiving - that thought scares me a little bit," he said. "It won't stop me from trying though." Stenson, 41, has relished carrying the Claret Jug around the world - he has even taken it jet-skiing - and said he was sad to hand it back to the tournament organisers. "It had become like part of the family," he said. "It's an iconic trophy. It's been the busiest year, but also the best year in my professional career." Stenson will partner former world number one Jordan Spieth in the first two rounds at Royal Birkdale, a player he is seeking to emulate as a multiple major winner. "Once you win one, obviously that's off your shoulder," he said. "I think that's pretty much what we're aiming for, a few more chances to win more major championships." For his part, Spieth is aiming to bring an end to the streak of first-time major winners that started with Jason Day's 2015 PGA Championship win and most recently saw Brooks Koepka win the US Open. The run of first-time winners now spans seven majors, and 23-year-old Spieth believes it underlines just how hard it is for one player to dominate. "It's very tough to do," the American said. "You have to have a lot of things go right at the right times. "Guys are winning younger, playing more fearless, even in major championships. I think it's going to be a very exciting time. "You'll see a group of 10 to 12 guys over the next 15-20 years, that are going to have a lot of different competitions that come down the stretch with each other. "It's different than one person being the guy to beat. But I think it's exciting." England's Chris Wood, and Americans Mark O'Meara and Ryan Moore will be the first group away at 06:35 BST. Stenson and Spieth get under way at 09:47, alongside South Korea's Kim Si-woo. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer: Henrik Stenson says he'll take the Claret Jug skydiving if he successfully defends the Open Championship at Royal Birkdale this week. The issues are similar to those at Oxgangs Primary in Edinburgh, where a wall collapsed in January. That led to 17 schools in the city being closed before the summer holidays over safety fears. Responding to some of the new evidence, a leading architect told the BBC: "In my view, this is malpractice." About 7,600 primary and secondary school children in the capital were affected when the Edinburgh schools, which were all built or refurbished as part of the same public private partnership (PPP) scheme, were closed suddenly in April this year. The problems - with wall and header ties, used to hold exterior and interior walls together and attach them to the rest of the building - first became apparent when part of a wall at Oxgangs fell during stormy weather. Safety inspections were ordered and pupils were bussed to other schools across the city while repairs were carried out. Edinburgh City Council's investigation into what happened is due to begin later this week. The chief executive has told the BBC that the inquiry may reveal nationwide issues with this kind of building. 30 Schools affected across Scotland 17 closed in Edinburgh 13 others in East Renfrewshire, Glasgow, Stirlingshire and South Lanarkshire identified 62 walls ties replaced at nine schools in South Lanarkshire Now the BBC has also learned that similar problems with wall and header ties have been uncovered at 13 other schools across Scotland. Repairs have been undertaken in South Lanarkshire, Stirlingshire, Glasgow and East Renfrewshire in the last five years. Images of St Ninian's High School in East Renfrewshire, obtained under Freedom of Information legislation, show the inside of cavity walls where some metal ties are dangling in mid-air instead of holding the outside wall to the inside wall. Other wall ties were not properly embedded because the joints in the walls were not aligned. The council had to undertake a number of repairs to the school, costing more than £870,000. "The way some of these things are done is very worrying indeed," said Prof Alan Dunlop, Master Architect and lecturer with Robert Gordon University. "I'm also concerned and shocked that this is something that happened in 2010 and we do not know anything at all about it." "I would suggest that it not only contravenes what would be standard practice. In my view this is malpractice," he added. East Renfrewshire Council said it did not inform parents of the issue because "at no time was there a health and safety risk to pupils, staff or visitors". It said the matter was discussed "openly" at a full council meeting in May 2013. A spokeswoman added: "The expert structural reports which identified issues with some of the walls at St Ninian's did not highlight any immediate risk and neither did they recommend any immediate remedial action for the walls. "Furthermore the reports made no recommendation to close off the area or prohibit access in any way." During a storm in January 2012, in East Kilbride, Duncanrig Secondary School's wall collapsed inwards. Header ties - also called wall head restraints - were added when the wall was rebuilt. The next day, at Trinity High School in Rutherglen, South Lanarkshire, a wall collapsed due to structural defects similar to those found at Oxgangs Primary School in Edinburgh in 2016. South Lanarkshire Council said engineers had concerns over both design and construction failures and wall ties were part of the repair process. The work was overseen by the company who runs the schools, Morgan Sindall. After investigations at other schools in the area for which it has responsibility, a small number of additional wall ties were added at eight other sites. A spokesman for Morgan Sindall said: "We took a responsible approach to the issues by carrying out further investigations across the entire South Lanarkshire Secondary Schools estate for which we were responsible. "This identified a small number of issues, with 62 tie repairs being required at nine (including Duncarig) of the 16 schools." To provide some context, the total number of wall ties used across the estate is 240,000. The spokesman added: "Safety is always our number one priority." As pupils get ready to return to Edinburgh schools on Wednesday, following all the repairs being completed, the council said its inquiry would look at whether the failures in Edinburgh amount to a national construction issue. It said the issue could affect any public building built in the same way as the 17 school which were closed in April - with cavity walls around a steel frame. Chief executive, Andrew Kerr, said: "It may be that this is a national issue that has to be tackled in terms of how you supervise these works going on, how they're undertaken. We have just tried to make sure that Edinburgh schools are safe right now." All the defects reported at the 30 schools identified have now been repaired. Edinburgh City Council has assured parents that buildings affected by closures are now safe for their children to return for the start of the new school year. Sum:
A total of 30 schools in Scotland have had to make repairs due to structural defects in the last five years, a BBC investigation has revealed.
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Article:The 26-year-old from Ramsey finished the 85-mile walk in 15 hours 36 minutes and 59 seconds, around 17 minutes ahead of Karen Chiarello in second place. "I've no idea where I pulled it from. It still feels surreal and this could take some time to sink in," he said. Parker's win made him the youngest winner in two decades. The electrician added: "I'd just like to say a massive thank you to everybody who came out and cheered me on along the way, it really means a lot." Chiarello finished second in 15:53:44 to break Janice Quirk's 2009 record by more than four minutes. Adam Killip finished just over an hour down on Chiarello in third in a time of 16:58:26. Richard Gerrard, who was going for a third consecutive win, was holding second place when he retired at Bride. Only 127 of the 1,116 who started at the National Sports Centre in Douglas completed the full distance inside the time limit. The majority of those taking part aimed to reach Rushen after 19 miles or Peel after 32 miles. Connor Gilbert and Anna Hall won the men's and women's under-21 races to Peel. Summarize the main points of that article.
Liam Parker said he "couldn't be any happier" to win the 2017 Parish Walk held in baking hot conditions over the weekend.
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Write an article based on this "Newcastle manager Rafa Benitez says it has been "impossible" to sign players before the start of pre-season friendlies because of Euro 2016." Article:
The Championship side are yet to make a signing this summer, with Steven Taylor the only player to have announced he is leaving the club. "I would like to have the squad ready and start working with them on 1 July," he told BBC Radio Newcastle. "With modern agents and the Euros, a lot have gone and aren't working." Benitez signed a new three-year contract to stay in charge, despite the Magpies suffering relegation from the Premier League last season. The 56-year-old said the club were close to three or four deals, for players coming in and going out, but would have to be patient. "I'm surprised that it's summer and the transfer window is open and some technical directors are away," the Spaniard added. "For me as a manager it's too late to get the squad that I want but in reality [for transfers] it is too early."
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Summarize this article in one sentence. The 34-year-old victim was attacked in Glenrosa Link in the north of the city at about 01:15 BST on Sunday. Police said he was taken to hospital and "remains in a stable condition". Officers arrested two 26-year-old men a short time after the attack. They are being questioned at Musgrave police station in Belfast. Summary:
Two men have been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after a man was struck on the head with a hatchet in Belfast.
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Article:British actor Jeremy Irvine plays a fictional character who incites the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York which kicked off the US gay rights movement. But the petition accuses the film, Stonewall, of "whitewashing" history. "It is time that black and brown transwomyn (sic) and drag queens are recognized for their efforts," it says. It continues: "From the preview alone, we know that will not be happening. Majority of characters casted are white actors, cis men play the role of transwomyn, and folks who began the riots do not seem to be credited with such revolutionary acts." Cis refers to the term cisgender, which is an individual whose gender corresponds to their assigned sex at birth. The riots, in June 1969, followed a police raid at the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay hangout for Latino and black transgender protestors such as Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P Johnson, both of whom became prominent activists. They co-founded the Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries, a group dedicated to helping homeless young drag queens and trans women of colour. Much of the anger is directed toward's the film's portrayal of Irvine's white cisgender gay character as a leading light in the movement. The film's director Roland Emmerich addressed the petition on his Facebook page, saying: "I understand that following the release of our trailer there have been initial concerns about how this character's involvement is portrayed. "But when this film - which is truly a labour of love for me - finally comes to theatres, audiences will see that it deeply honours the real-life activists who were there [...] and all the brave people who sparked the civil rights movement". "We are all the same in our struggle for acceptance," he adds. Irvine himself also defended the film in a post on his Instagram account. "I saw the movie for the first time last week and can assure you all that it represents almost every race and section of society that was so fundamental to one of the most important civil rights movements in living history," he wrote. The film is due to be released in September. A summary of the above article is?
A petition to boycott a new film that purports to tell the story of the early days of the LGBT rights movement has reached more than 20,000 signatures.
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Article:The man snatched the bag from the woman in the Coal Wynd car park in Kirkcaldy at about 15:35 on Saturday. After her husband was knocked to the ground, and bumped his head, another woman stepped in and retrieved the bag. The suspect was described as being white, in his 30s, about 5ft 7in tall, of scruffy appearance with frizzy hair. He was wearing a black bomber-style jacket and grey tracksuit bottoms and was carrying a rucksack. Det Sgt Craig Fraser, of Police Scotland, said: "This was nothing short of a cowardly attack on an elderly lady by this suspect who saw fit to struggle violently with all three people in his attempt to steal this bag. "The last sighting of the suspect we have is of him is on the High Street near to the indoor market. Anyone who can help us identify this man is asked to call us." Summarize the main points of that article.
Police are trying to identify a man who tried to steal an elderly woman's handbag and knocked her husband to the ground when he tried to intervene.
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Officials attempted to resuscitate Grant Cook after he collapsed on the field on Sunday in Murwillumbah, in New South Wales. The father-of-two was flown to Gold Coast University Hospital but died from his injuries overnight. His wife, Colleen, said that Mr Cook's sudden death has "left a huge hole" in her heart. Mr Cook - who had played rugby league all his life - received a head injury and went into cardiac arrest as a result of the tackle, the Gold Coast Bulletin reported. It said that New South Wales police were investigating the incident and were reviewing footage from the game before submitting a report to the coroner. Police say that Mr Cook was injured just before half time and collapsed shortly afterwards. The attempt to resuscitate him was made before paramedics arrived. Northern Rivers Regional Rugby League (NRRRL)'s Brian Rix was quoted by ABC News as saying that that Mr Cook required CPR on the side of the field after going "into some sort of fit or convulsion". "He had to leave the field because he didn't feel great, he sat on the bench before he started to feel even worse," Mr Rix said. "My beautiful husband Grant is now an angel watching over us," Colleen Cook wrote on Facebook. "Life can be so cruel. He has left a huge hole in my heart and I know all the family, especially his parents, are hurting trying to understand this tragedy." "[My husband] died doing something he loved so passionately, and I guess that's how I have to look at it." (Colleen Cook on Facebook) "Country Rugby League (CRL) send their sincere condolences to the family and friends of 28-year-old Grant Cook who tragically passed away whilst playing for the Murwillumbah Mustangs Rugby League Club. CRL will be offering counselling to the family and both teams who participated in the Northern Rivers Regional Rugby League match." (CRL media release) "It is with a very heavy heart that we wake up today, hearing the news of the passing of Grant Cook. Grant has been a member of the Giants family since he was a Jnr Giant, playing, coaching and being a committee member. No words can describe the sadness we are feeling." (Mullumbimby Giants Rugby League on Facebook) Mr Cook, from the Gold Coast, had been playing for the Murwillumbah Mustangs in a game against the Casino Cougars. His death comes amid increasing international concern about tackling safety in rugby union and rugby league, along with evidence released earlier this year of the link between head injuries received in the sport and dementia. The last Australian to die playing the game was in June 2015, when Sunshine Coast Falcons front-row forward James Ackerman, 25, suffered a head injury in a tackle during a Queensland Cup match against the Norths Devils and later died in hospital. This article was about:
A 28-year-old man has died in hospital after being tackled during an amateur rugby league game in rural Australia.
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Text: The British Medical Association renewed calls for boxing to be banned after middleweight Nick Blackwell was placed in an induced coma following his defeat to Chris Eubank Jr. "I've done the research myself," said national performance coach Mike Keane. "Boxing is well down the injury list, including concussions and injuries to the head. "Cycling, swimming and rugby are all way above us with injuries and damage." Blackwell's British middleweight title fight on Saturday against Eubank Jr left him with a small bleed on the brain. Keane, who has coached fighters for over 30 years, believes the present focus on the dangers of boxing is unfair and also feels fighters and parents alike will not be put off boxing after the events of the last few days. "Overall, contact sport is going to come with some sort of risk, but there is no 100% evidence to suggest when and where an injury is going to occur," said the man who oversees the coaching of Scotland's 1,500 registered amateur in 112 clubs across the country. "A boxer that perhaps has a brain injury might well have had the same injury outwith boxing." Scotland's first winner of a British women's title, Stephanie Kernachan, is also defending her sport amid the current controversy. "I've been boxing for nine-and-a-half years and the transformation that boxing has had on me is amazing," she said. "From going from a really, really shy girl to a really confident woman." The 23-year-old says that she has had friends this week in the wake of Blackwell's injury trying to stop her fighting. "I have had conversations with them saying 'that's why we don't like boxing because it's really dangerous'," she added. "But, to be honest, in my career so far, I've only had a cut lip or black eye - I've never really been hurt." summary: Boxing Scotland's top coach claims that his sport sees fewer injuries than the likes of rugby and swimming. Text: What's happening? Its an interesting question at a time when the political debate ahead of the general election is reaching fever pitch. The latest polling data comes from the British Social Attitudes survey, covering a range of issues, which has been conducted every year since 1983 apart from 1988 and 1992. It was carried out in England, Scotland and Wales, covering just under 2,000 adults weighted to reflect the age, gender and geographic spread of the population. Its important to note that most of the interviews were carried out in August and September, with some over the next two months but all before winter set in with a succession of headlines about accident & emergency problems. Those interviewed were representative of the whole population, not just patients. But the survey, conducted in association with the King's Fund think tank, does provide a consistent data set going back more than 30 years. The survey's headline finding is that public satisfaction with the NHS rose from 60 to 65% in 2014, the highest in any year apart from 2010 when it was at 70%. There was a big drop in 2011, but much of that ground has been recovered. Satisfaction with A&E services rose despite pressure on the system building from the spring. More than 70% of those surveyed were satisfied with GPs, though this was the lowest since the survey began. The BSA/King's Fund survey is published as successive opinion polls put the NHS at the top of voter concerns. An IPSOS/MORI poll in January reported that 46% said health issues were very important, up from 29% in September 2014. Managing the economy, the next most important issue, trailed at 33%. And a BBC/Populus poll this week suggested that people thought the NHS was the most important issue to be covered by the news ahead of the election, ahead of the economy and immigration. The big unknown is how all this plays out when voters walk into polling stations in May. If they are satisfied with the NHS, might they give the coalition parties their support? Or might they back the claim that to ensure continued satisfaction with the health service only a vote for Labour will suffice? If they think that health is the most important issue how will this translate into crosses on ballot papers? It's hard to work out the answers. More detailed fieldwork by IPSOS/MORI reveals some intriguing views amongst British population. It found 27% of those surveyed lacked confidence they would receive high quality NHS care in their local area this winter. Yet 68% of Britons agreed that the NHS was a "symbol of what is great about Great Britain" and everything should be done to maintain it. So, it seems, people can love the NHS and still be worried about the service this winter. One thing is clear - the NHS will be a major issue out on the campaign trail. Its far from plain, though, how people's views on the service will help or hinder the rival parties as they scrap for every vote. summary: Accident and emergency targets missed, longer waits, ambulances queuing at hospitals, rising patient numbers, intense pressures - yet public satisfaction with the NHS is close to a record high. Text: Hundreds of Buddhists took to the streets following the passage of a law that would allow temporary residents who hold "white papers" to vote. More than one million Rohingya live in Myanmar, but they are not regarded as citizens by the government. In 2012, violence between Muslims and Buddhists left more than 200 dead. The clashes broke out in Rakhine province and sparked religious attacks across the country. The so-called white papers were introduced in 2010 by the former military junta to allow the Rohingya and other minorities to vote in a general election. Thein Sein had originally persuaded parliament to grant white-paper holders the vote, but later apparently changed his mind. The announcement came just hours after demonstrations in Yangon. Those protesting resent what they see as the integration of non-citizens into the country. "White card holders are not citizens and those who are non-citizens don't have the right to vote in other countries," said Shin Thumana, a Buddhist monk who took part in the protest. "This is just a ploy by politicians to win votes." However, Rohingya MP Shwe Maung, whose constituency is in Rakhine, argued that voting rights had only become an issue following the violence in 2012. Buddhist monks are at the forefront of protests against Muslims. One high-profile leader is monk Ashin Wirathu, who recently used abusive language to describe the UN's special envoy to Myanmar. In December, the UN passed a resolution urging Myanmar (formerly known as Burma) to give access to citizenship for the Rohingya, many of whom are classed as stateless. summary:
Rohingya Muslims will not be able to vote in Myanmar's referendum after President Thein Sein withdrew temporary voting rights following protests.
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Write an article based on this "Full-back Willie le Roux and wings Cornal Hendricks and Lwazi Mvovo return to the South Africa side to face Wales on Saturday."
Coach Heyneke Meyer makes five changes to his starting XV with prop Tendai Mtawarira and hooker Bismarck du Plessis also included. Back-three trio JP Pietersen, Bryan Habana and Johan Goosen are unavailable because of club commitments. The Springboks laboured to a 22-6 win over Italy last weekend. Meyer was always going to change his back three with Pietersen (White Knights) returning to Japan, and Habana (Toulon) and Goosen (Racing Metro) going back to France. The two changes to the front row are rotational, with hooker Adriaan Strauss and prop Trevor Nyakane dropping to the bench. Damian de Allende, 23, is the only other change to the match-day squad as the centre takes a place among the replacements. The Springboks are without back row Warren Whiteley and prop Jannie du Plessis, who have calf and hamstring injuries respectively. "This tour has been a good test of our depth and we're looking forward to see what the team can do on Saturday," said Springbok coach Heyneke Meyer. "We will face a fired-up Welsh side this weekend. They played very well against New Zealand and it will be a tough end to our season, but we want to finish on a high and the focus this week has been on ensuring we keep on building on what we've done thus far this year. "I believe this is a quality side and I believe it will do well on Saturday." The Springboks have only lost once to Wales, in the first match to be played at the Millennium Stadium in 1999. They have won all other Tests between the two nations, apart from a 6-6 draw in 1970. Warren Gatland's side were denied a first Test win against the Boks on South African soil, losing 31-30 late on in June. Meyer says the June Tests against Wales were some of the "toughest" the Springboks have faced this season and "could have gone either way". He added that South Africa will have to be particularly wary of the Welsh backs: "If they get quality ball they are a very dangerous side." Wales have only beaten Fiji this autumn, losing to both Australia and New Zealand, but Meyer expects Wales to perform in next year's Rugby World Cup. "I truly believe Wales will be strong in the World Cup...I think they are going to be a really difficult side to play against," he said. South Africa: Willie le Roux; Cornal Hendricks, Jan Serfontein, Jean de Villiers (capt), Lwazi Mvovo; Pat Lambie, Cobus Reinach; Tendai Mtawarira, Bismarck du Plessis, Coenie Oosthuizen; Eben Etzebeth, Victor Matfield; Marcell Coetzee, Teboho Mohoje, Duane Vermeulen. Replacements: Adriaan Strauss, Trevor Nyakane, Julian Redelinghuys, Lood de Jager, Nizaam Carr, Francois Hougaard, Handré Pollard, Damian de Allende.
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Article:The money will see the repair and re-use of up to 30 buildings within the city's conservation area. The buildings have not yet been identified but Upper English Street and Russell Street are among the areas set to benefit from the funding. HLF said the five-year project will create 20 jobs and five new businesses. They added it will also secure a further 10 jobs and four existing businesses. Support was awarded through the fund's Townscape Heritage (TH) programme. Lord Mayor of Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon, Darryn Causby, has welcomed the award. "This will enable us to build on the excellent work already completed in the city," he said. "Armagh has a rich built heritage and the funding will help restore and enhance this culture for future generations." Paul Mullan of HLF said the plans would "play an important role in regenerating the city's commercial core, restoring its economic heart and opening up its unique heritage for both local people and visitors to enjoy". A summary of the above article is?
Armagh is receiving a £1.98m grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) to restore and enhance the city's built heritage.
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Problem: Write an article based on this "UK employers are growing increasingly worried about the economy, new research has found." Article: A: A survey of 601 employers by the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) found 31% expect the economy to worsen, with only 28% expecting it to improve. Employers' confidence has worsened since the last survey in July. REC chief Kevin Green said the decline should "raise a red flag" and called for greater clarity over Brexit. "The jobs market continues to do well despite growing uncertainty," he said. "Businesses are continuing to hire to meet demand, but issues like access to labour, Brexit negotiations and political uncertainty are creating nervousness." The REC's measure of confidence has turned negative in the space of a month. In July the number of those employers who felt confident about the economy outweighed the pessimists by 6 percentage points. The fall is matched by declining consumer confidence. In June the market research group GfK's consumer confidence index fell to the level last seen in the immediate aftermath of the Brexit vote. The REC's JobsOutlook survey showed that 40% of employers had no spare capacity and one in five planned to take on more permanent staff to meet additional demand. However, their biggest problem was finding the right candidates, especially in the construction industry, for either temporary or permanent positions. Mr Green said: "Employers in the construction sector are especially concerned as they rely heavily on EU workers to meet the growing demand for housing and to support the government's infrastructure plans. "The added factor of dropping consumer confidence is putting some businesses on edge. If people reduce their spending, businesses will be impacted. "The government must do more to create an environment where businesses have clarity. That means clearly laying out what Brexit plans look like and how employers can keep recruiting the people they need from the EU." Labour MP Mary Creagh, part of the Open Britain campaign group, said the government's refusal to guarantee the rights of EU citizens living in the UK was damaging business confidence. "To protect jobs and our economy, they need to give citizens and businesses certainty that all EU workers living in Britain will have their rights guaranteed, and that Brexit will not be used as an excuse for a self-defeating crackdown on immigration from Europe," she said. A government spokesperson said: "We recognise and value the contribution that EU citizens make to the social, economic and cultural life of the UK and that's why last month we outlined our offer to protect the rights of EU citizens in the UK and UK nationals in the EU." Problem: Write an article based on this "An inmate has been arrested after a prison officer had his throat slashed with a razor blade." Article: A: The Isle of Wight officer was "left shaken" after the prisoner attacked him on the way back to his cell at HMP Isle of Wight, on Saturday. The incident left the officer with "superficial" cuts to his throat, the prison said. A 24-year-old inmate was arrested on suspicion of causing grievous bodily harm with intent. He has been bailed until February. Neil Yule, chairman of the Prison Officer's Association at HMP Isle of Wight's Albany branch, said the inmate had hidden a razor blade in his mouth after receiving medical treatment, which he then used to attack one of the officers. "Thankfully the wounds are superficial, however the attempt was certainly to cause major damage. It was a very nasty incident," he said. Mr Yule added that, although the injured officer's wounds would heal, mentally he remained "very shaken". He said: "I think it could have been an awful lot worse and the prison officer has had an exceptionally lucky escape." The inmate was sent to Parkhurst prison on the Isle of Wight. A prison service spokesman said: "We do not tolerate violence against our hard-working and dedicated staff, and when incidents like this occur, we work closely with the police to push for the strongest possible punishment." The prison in Newport is a category B prison. HMP Isle of Wight was created in 2009 with the merger of Parkhurst, Albany and Camp Hill prisons, the latter facility closed in 2013. Problem: Write an article based on this "A young boy has been rescued after falling into a large sinkhole that he mistook for a puddle on a popular beach in Devon." Article: A:
The three-year-old was submerged up to his waist in the the sinkhole in Exmouth Beach on Wednesday morning. He was pulled out uninjured by his father, the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said. The coastguard agency erected a safety cordon and a 100m (328ft) exclusion zone on the west side of Orcombe Point. More on the sinkhole and other Devon stories The 1.2m x 1.2m (3.9ft x 3.9ft) hole was caused by a fault with a water pipe that runs underneath the beach. The MCA is advising people to keep away from the area. The boy's father, who is a structural engineer, recognised it as a sinkhole and called the emergency services. East Devon District Council which has responsibility for the beach said: "Our officers are continuing to monitor the sinkhole on a daily basis and will ensure that the cordon remains in place until South West Water (SWW) begin repairs on site." It said SWW was erecting temporary fencing panels in the area and the pipe was being repaired as a matter of urgency. Coastguard Matt Helm said: "These things are dangerous, but people shouldn't be put off going to the beach. They just need to be aware that they do crop up in this area."
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The 29-year-old joins them as a free agent having been released by French club Paris St Germain last September. Sissoko, who has been capped 34 times by Mali, had been training with English Premier League side Crystal Palace but could not agree a deal with them. The former Liverpool midfielder has previously played in Spain, for Valencia between 2003-2005. What is a summary of this text?
Mali international Mohamed Sissoko has signed for Spanish side Levante on a short-term contract.
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Write an article based on this summary: A new £130m arrivals terminal is to be built at London Stansted Airport. +++++++ A: The 34,000 sq m (365,972 sq ft), three-level building has been designed by architects Pascall+Watson and will be built next to the current terminal. The site will include larger immigration and baggage reclaim areas, Stansted's owner Manchester Airports Group (MAG) said in a statement. Work is expected to take up to three years to complete, and will begin in late 2018. The departures building will be reconfigured to provide more space at check-in and in security. The increased size of the immigration area in the arrivals terminal was "purely down to the size of the building" rather than as a result of possible future changes to the immigration procedure, an airport spokesman said. The new building was granted planning permission by Uttlesford District Council. The airport's Chief Executive Andrew Cowan said the site would "transform our infrastructure and facilities to give our passengers the best possible experience". "Stansted is a national asset and our investment will continue to boost competition and support economic growth, jobs and international connectivity for London and the East of England," he said. "At a time when airport capacity in the country is at a premium, Stansted is playing a vital role in supporting both the regional and national economy. This project will strengthen our ability to do this by enabling us to make the most efficient use of our single runway." Construction of the new building will take place away from the existing terminal to minimise disruption to passengers, MAG said. Once the site is complete, Stansted will be the only airport in the UK operating dedicated arrivals and departures terminals. Write an article based on this summary: Details of an ambitious Scottish celebration to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death have been announced. +++++++ A: The BBC SSO, Glasgow School of Art, The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and the University of Glasgow will all collaborate for the first time. Director Graham McLaren will work with them to create performances, exhibitions and screenings. They are all inspired by A Midsummer Night's Dream. The idea is to look at how Shakespeare's words and stories continue to influence hundreds of years on. The festival will culminate with one multi-media event at Glasgow University's Bute Hall and its atmospheric Cloisters on 23 April next year - the 400th anniversary of the death of William Shakespeare. Mr McLaren, the man behind critically-acclaimed National Theatre of Scotland productions including The Tin Forest and In Time O' Strife, will be curating and directing the work of students, professional artists and academics from all four partners for the final festival, Dream On!. He said: "Thirty years ago I was taken to the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland (then RSAMD) by a wonderful, canny drama teacher to watch Shakespeare for free. "I sat in the Old Athenaeum Theatre and, quite simply, a fire in me ignited and a lifelong love of this great institution started. "You will understand then the real privilege I feel leading RCS students with such a remarkable array of local and international collaborators and artists in what is certain to be Scotland's most significant response to celebrate Shakespeare's 400th anniversary." Prof Anton Muscatelli, the principal of the University of Glasgow, said he was proud to be hosting the event. He added: "The University of Glasgow will play centre stage in what will be a creative, inspiring evening of performance, dance and music - a fitting tribute to William Shakespeare, a man whose own artistic skills and creativity helped shape the English language and English literature around the world." Write an article based on this summary: A motorist launched a foul-mouthed verbal assault on BBC presenter Jeremy Vine as he cycled down a west London street. +++++++ A: The Radio 2 presenter was riding home on Friday after hosting his show when the driver tailgated him, beeping her horn. He paused and she got out, shouting at him to "get... out the road" and appearing to kick his bike. The incident has been reported to the Metropolitan Police. Posting a video of the encounter on Facebook [warning: this video contains language that may offend], Vine invited viewers to "see what you think". "I hate to overload our hard-working London police with footage from my commute, but I feel the person you see on the tape will at some point hurt someone very badly - either with her car or in a direct personal assault," Vine wrote. A police spokesperson could not confirm whether it was being investigated. The incident took place in a narrow street in Kensington after the black Vauxhall drove close behind Vine, beeping her horn. "Concerned this motorist may be dangerous, I slow to explain," Vine captioned the video. She yelled: "Why would you do that?" "There's got to be a car's width," he replied. Getting out of her car, she kicks out, telling Vine to "get ... out the road. "I could be done for murder." After passing him, she again got out of the car at a junction, warning Vine she would "knock you out... if you take a picture of my car again" and apparently making the shape of a gun with her hand. "Wow. A gun. It's not appropriate," responded Vine. The woman then drove off. Vine has declined to comment further, saying the incident is now in the hands of the police. Write an article based on this summary: A man who was arrested after a car was stolen with two young children inside has been charged with kidnapping and a range of other offences. +++++++ A:
The incident happened in Boucher Crescent in south Belfast on Saturday, when a woman got out of the car and a man jumped in and drove off. Members of the public managed to stop the car and the children were unharmed. The man, who is 35, is expected to appear before Belfast Magistrates' Court on Monday morning. He has also been charged with aggravated vehicle taking causing injury, common assault, and driving when unfit through drink or drugs. The man is further accused of failing to provide a specimen of breath for preliminary test, failing to provide specimen when driving unfit and driving without a licence or insurance.
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input: Article: The brother, known at the inquiry as BR10, taught at Rubane House boys home, County Down, in the 1970s and 1980s. Several former residents accused him of physically abusing them at the home. Earlier, the inquiry took evidence from a lay worker at Rubane, who also denied abuse and claimed the boys pulled knives on each other in the home. He said the incident happened after a De La Salle brother was removed amid sex abuse allegations. The lay staff member worked at Rubane more than 30 years ago and has been accused of assaulting a number of boys, which he denies. He told the inquiry social services used the home as a "dumping ground" for "the most difficult children". He added: "I think maybe some of the boys could have been better placed." The man described how glue-sniffing was "very prevalent" in the home, and said workers "very often found glue bags strewn around Rubane". Describing the moment when a De La Salle brother was removed from the home amid sex abuse allegations, he said: "The boys were going mad. "They had pulled knives on each other and the whole place was in an uproar. "Boys were accusing each other of touting on them to the police." Giving evidence on Tuesday afternoon, the witness known as BR10 said he was "flabbergasted" by allegations that he physically assaulted boys at Rubane. One former resident had claimed the brother "punched the living daylights out of me" and others also alleged he had punched and kicked them. BR10 repeatedly denied the claims and on one occasion, he told the inquiry: "I can't understand. I'm flabbergasted by that. Flabbergasted." It was also revealed that the police decided not to prosecute him over sex abuse allegations. BR10 said he taught and worked with young children for more than 30 years, after leaving his post at Rubane House and had never been accused of any physical or sex abuse linked to his work. The HIA inquiry was set up in 2013 to investigate child abuse in residential institutions in Northern Ireland over a 73-year period, up to 1995. A total of 13 Northern Ireland institutions are being investigated. The inquiry is currently examining alleged abuse at Rubane. About 200 former residents have made allegations of abuse. A total of 55 former residents have come forward to the inquiry to allege that they were physically or sexually abused. Summarize. output: The first member of the De La Salle religious order to give evidence to the Historical Institutional Abuse inquiry has denied abusing boys in his care. Article: The British world number two trailed two sets to one when play was suspended on Monday because of bad light. Murray, 29, won the fourth set but was pushed hard by his Czech opponent before winning the deciding set to clinch a 3-6 3-6 6-0 6-2 7-5 victory. The last time Murray lost in the first round of a Grand Slam was in 2008. A three-time French Open semi-finalist, he has now come from two sets down to win nine times in Grand Slam matches. Murray joins compatriots Aljaz Bedene, Kyle Edmund and Heather Watson in the second round, while Johanna Konta and Laura Robson play their first-round matches later. Murray will next face French wildcard Mathias Bourgue, who is ranked 164 in the world. When play began on Tuesday, Murray survived two break points in his opening service game before levelling the match by breaking. But Stepanek, the oldest man in the draw, continued to frustrate the Briton with some inspired shot-making in a nervy fifth set. Murray was two points from defeat when serving at 4-5 but held on and broke in the next game. He double-faulted on his first match point but sealed victory after three hours and 41 minutes when Stepanek netted an attempted drop-volley two points later. Murray, who sportingly applauded Stepanek off the court, said: "He had an extremely bad injury last year and still at 37 coming out and fighting like that, playing that way, it's unbelievable. "I don't expect to be doing that myself at that age. I'm just glad I managed to get through. "He's always been extremely difficult to play. I wasn't able to dictate many of the points, I wasn't in a great rhythm, and that's credit to him and the way that he played. I fought extremely hard today and I'll get a chance to play again tomorrow." BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller "Stepanek played a magnificent final set: serving and volleying himself out of trouble when the occasional break point down and engaging theatrically with the crowd, which warmed to a 37-year-old who is a real craftsman of his trade. "Murray was two points from defeat at 4-5 deuce in that deciding set, but it is notable that with his French Open on the line he did not face a single break point in the final set. "Stepanek's poor final service game cost him dear, and despite serving a double fault on his first match point, Murray did not let him off the hook. The reserves of nervous energy have been depleted, but rather that than an early start to the grass-court season." The British number two began his match against Austrian qualifier Gerald Melzer with two double faults and lost the first eight points. But he was the better player after that and came through 4-6 6-3 6-4 6-4 to reach the second round for the first time. Bedene, who is being coached on a temporary basis by GB Davis Cup captain Leon Smith, will play either 31st seed Federico Delbonis or Spain's Pablo Carreno Busta in the second round. Edmund will take on 15th seed John Isner in the second round after the American fired down 40 aces to overcame John Millman of Australia. Isner won 6-7 (4-7) 7-6 (12-10) 7-6 (9-7) 7-5 in another match played over two days. Edmund beat Georgian qualifier Nikoloz Basilashvili on Monday. Subscribe to the BBC Sport newsletter to get our pick of news, features and video sent to your inbox. ++++++++++ Summarize: Andy Murray finally beat 37-year-old qualifier Radek Stepanek in five sets to avoid a shock first-round defeat at the French Open in Paris. Problem: Residents of Godolphin Cross near Helston emailed him in a desperate attempt to raise funds. The village shares a name with the world famous Godolphin stables, founded by the sheikh, Cornwall Live reports. Richard Mckie from the Godolphin Cross Community Association said: "We are extremely appreciative." The group needed £90,000 to buy the chapel that they intend to convert into a community centre, and had raised £25,000 towards it. More on this story, and other Cornwall news It's not known how much was contributed by the sheikh, but Mr Mckie said "it has pushed us across the line". One villager, Valerie Wallace, had the idea as a last ditch attempt, with the group having failed to raise sufficient funds elsewhere. "We thought nothing of it and then we began to get phone calls from Dubai," Mr Mckie said. "We thought we were being hoaxed but it was no hoax." The sheikh, who has been invited to visit the village, was unavailable for comment. The group now needs to raise a further £350,000 to restore the hall. What was that article about? A: The ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, has helped a small Cornish village buy its Methodist chapel. Question: Article:The proposed £2m development has been earmarked for the site of the demolished Dounreay Sports and Social Club. The power station is also in the process of being knocked down. A four-lane running track and indoor sports hall equivalent in size to four badminton courts has been proposed. Subject to planning permission and successful funding applications, the sports complex could be open by the end of 2016. It would form part of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games legacy programme. Summarize the main points of that article. Answer:
A sports complex could be built in Thurso with support from Cavendish Nuclear, the parent company at the nearby Dounreay power station.
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The arrested man, from Birmingham, arrived at a police station after officers said they were looking for a car driver who reportedly left the scene of a crash on foot. He was arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving. A man, 83, from Coventry, died at the scene of a crash on the M42 southbound carriageway, between junctions 10 and 11, on Saturday evening, A 74-year-old woman was taken to hospital where she is in a serious but stable condition. A Peugeot 307 was in collision with a gold Vauxhall Agila which the man and woman were travelling in. Sum: A man has been arrested following a crash in which an 83-year-old died. Q: His latest pick is former Goldman Sachs banker Steven Mnuchin as his treasury secretary, where he will be responsible for government borrowing, assisting in the overhaul of the tax code and preparing financial sanctions against other countries. The appointment still needs to be approved by the Senate. It's an unusual - and somewhat controversial - choice, given candidate Trump's criticism of Wall Street. Here are five things you need to know about Steven Mnuchin. Steven Mnuchin will follow in the footsteps of fellow Goldman alumni Robert Rubin (under Bill Clinton) and Henry Paulson under (George W Bush) in the Treasury job. Mr Mnuchin spent 17 years early in his career at the investment bank, where he oversaw trading of mortgage-backed bonds and rose from partner to chief information officer. Goldman chief executive Lloyd Blankfein described Mr Mnuchin - who served as Mr Trump's national finance chairman - as "a very smart guy". "When I was running the fixed-income division, he was a high-flyer," Mr Blankfein said recently. Mr Mnuchin left Goldman in 2002 and two years later founded the hedge fund Dune Capital Management. The future US treasury secretary coming to a screen near you? Yes, it's true. He plays a banker in Warren Beatty's new film Rules Don't Apply. Besides working in finance, Mr Mnuchin has longstanding ties to Hollywood. He teamed up with producer-director Brett Ratner and Australian businessman James Packer to form RatPac Dune Entertainment. Together they produced some of Hollywood's most successful movies, including Avatar and Mad Max: Fury Road. Recent projects include Sully and The Accountant. He was briefly co-chairman of Relativity Media before it went bankrupt. Mr Mnuchin returned to banking during the financial crisis, gathering a group of investors including hedge fund bigwigs George Soros and John Paulson, private equity investor Christopher Flowers and computer mogul Michael Dell to buy failed mortgage lender IndyMac. The bank, renamed OneWest Bank, returned to financial health but it became known for quickly seizing the homes of borrowers who fell behind on their mortgage payments. In 2009, a New York judge called OneWest's behaviour "harsh, repugnant, shocking and repulsive'' in trying to foreclose on a New York family. OneWest said it "respectfully disagreed" with the court. Two years later, protesters marched on Mr Mnuchin's Los Angeles mansion accusing OneWest Bank of aggressive foreclosure practices. It was sold to CIT Group in 2015 in a lucrative deal. Like his new boss, Steven Mnuchin grew up in a wealthy family. His father, Robert Mnuchin, was a banker-turned-upscale art dealer and his mother was a vice president of the International Directors' Council of the Solomon Guggenheim Museum. When she died in 2005, she made Steven and his brother Alan the beneficiaries and executors of her estate. Within a few months, they withdrew $3.2m from her account with Bernard Madoff Securities. Three years later Madoff was arrested and the two were sued by the trustee trying to recover money for victims of Madoff's Ponzi scheme. The suit was dropped because of time restrictions. Donald Trump could soon be in a position of having sued his own treasury secretary. Mr Mnuchin's Dune Capital was among a group of lenders, including Deutsche Bank, who provided loans for the construction of a Trump skyscraper in Chicago. Mr Trump sued the lenders during the credit crunch to extend the terms of the loan. The suit was later settled. Mr Trump and Mr Mnuchin have also previously worked together on a hotel in Hawaii. A: President-elect Donald Trump swore he'd shake up Washington and he's wasting no time. Article: The Wales Climate Change Strategy, published in 2010, contains an aspiration to create 2,000 hectares of new woodland every year between 2010 and 2030. It is seen as a way to help Wales meet its carbon emission reduction targets. Ministers said they were committed to increasing new trees in Wales. The Woodland Trust said Wales had not met its tree planting objectives and had failed to address the need for them in the landscape to deliver key environmental, public and economic gains. "Tree planting in Wales has fallen off a cliff," a spokesman said. "We are seeing the lowest tree planting levels in a generation, only 100 hectares in two of the last three years, showing the failures of Welsh Government to meet the already weakened aspiration of 2,000 hectares of new woodland per year until 2020." The Welsh Government is under pressure from several sides to be more ambitious. Wales has planted comparatively little woodland cover compared with Scotland. Both governments have ambitious targets, but many woodland organisations feel more needs to be done to deliver these promises in Wales. Forest industry body Confor, said it is worried about the "catastrophic decline" in soft wood over the last 15 years. National manager for Wales, Martin Bishop said: "The lack of public support for tree planting is one reason why we have not achieved very much." He said a complicated, slow and ponderous regulation process was also causing problems. "We have no appetite in Wales to see land use change and we seem to want to preserve everything we have as it is in perpetuity," he added. "We will not achieve the 1000 ha we have funds for, unless something is done about the regulatory process. Wales seems to want to put in even more regulation than anyone else." In Abbeycwmhir, Powys, farmer Jack Lydiate has participated in a farm diversification project to plant Wales' largest new forest. At 48 ha, it is a fraction of the Welsh Governments 2,000 ha yearly target. Mr Lydiate said: "I'm looking towards a sustainable future for myself and my family. I know where my business is going to be over the next 30 to 40 years due to the revenue from the trees. "How many people can say that about their stock? "It's hard, because there's a lot of old school thought out there. People don't want to take good land away from their stock," he said. Scheme facilitators Farming Connect are optimistic that with the increasing need, more people will turn to planting trees. Geraint Jones, its forestry technical officer, said: "We import over 60% of our trees into this country, which will increase over the next few years as particular trees become more rare. "It's therefore vitally important that we get this message across, that tree planting is important looking towards the future, especially at a commercial level." A Welsh Government spokesman said: "We want to see more trees and woodland in Wales. "We are working with Natural Resources Wales to improve the way the various regulatory processes are implemented to protect important habitats while also increasing new woodland." ++++++++++ Summarize:
Not enough trees are being planted in Wales and the Welsh Government needs to do more to meet targets, woodland organisations have said.
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Summarize this article in one sentence. Philip Hollobone made the plea in the Commons in support of the wholegrain rectangles, which are produced in his Northamptonshire constituency. He said the "great British breakfast cereal" should be served at all early meetings held by environment ministers. Environment Secretary Liz Truss told him she kept a box of the cereal on her desk "for all visitors to see". "It's a real example of linking farm through to fork," she said. However, she did not go quite as far as agreeing to the request made by Mr Hollobone, the Conservative MP for Kettering. In response to the exchange, Speaker of the House, John Bercow, quipped: "We've learnt more about [the secretary of state's] domestic arrangements." The House of Commons website said it "actively champions the producing, buying and eating of British food". Summary:
Weetabix cereal should be the breakfast of choice at governmental international trade conferences, according to an MP.
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Dr Spitzer played a leading role in the development of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. He was also lauded for pushing to remove homosexuality's classification as a mental disorder in 1973. Dr Spitzer's wife said he died from heart problems in Seattle on Friday. His work on several editions of the field's diagnostic manual, known as the DSM, was seen as a "major breakthrough in the profession", his wife and colleague Janet Williams told the AP news agency. It helped to give psychiatrists definitions of all of the major disorders so that they "could agree on what they were seeing", she said. Working from Columbia University in New York, he pioneered an approach that relied on empirical study rather than traditional theory. Dr Spitzer was "by far the most influential psychiatrist of his time," Dr Allen Frances, editor of a later edition of the DSM manual, told the New York Times. Homosexuality, which at the time was listed as a mental disorder, was among the behaviours Dr Spitzer analysed and later removed from the list in the 1970s. Until that point, the DSM had classified homosexuality as an illness, designating it a "sociopathic personality disturbance." Dr Spitzer said he pressed for the change after meeting gay rights activists and determining that homosexuality could not be a disorder if gay people were comfortable with their sexuality. "A medical disorder either had to be associated with subjective distress, pain or general impairment in social function," he told the Washington Post. Dr Jack Drescher, a gay psychoanalyst, described it as a major advance for gay rights. "The fact that gay marriage is allowed today is in part owed to Bob Spitzer," he told the New York Times. But Dr Spitzer later courted controversy after publishing a study in 2001 which purported to support reparative therapy to turn gay people straight, sparking claims of betrayal from gay rights activists. More than 10 years later, he apologised for the study, which he said was flawed. He said it was the only thing in his career that he regretted. Sum: Robert Spitzer, the influential American psychiatrist credited with establishing a modern classification of mental disorders, has died at the age of 83. Staff learned the firm, which employs 165 people in Scotland, had gone into administration on Christmas day. Workers gathered in Motherwell on Monday morning to protest against the prospect of redundancy. Coventry-based City Link employs 2,727 people in the UK. The RMT union expects more than 2,000 to be made redundant. The job losses are expected on New Year's Eve, with the remaining posts being retained to wind down the company. Staff have been told they will be paid until 31 December. More than 100 contractors work for the company in Scotland. They will be treated as creditors by administrators. Those taking part in the protest in Motherwell were demanding political efforts to save the operation as a going concern - or for as many jobs as possible to be saved. Gordon Martin, regional organiser in Scotland for the RMT union, said some staff were joined at the demonstration by their partners and children. Speaking at the scene, he said: "It's a demonstration organised by the workers, for the workers, about their right to work. "Basically this is a right-to-work argument. These guys deserve and demand the right to work." He claimed a recent meeting with the administrators failed to give staff answers to their questions. "They've walked out of the meeting more disillusioned than when they walked into it, which is saying something considering the situation," he said. Mr Martin said the protesters were aiming to put political pressure on UK and Scottish politicians to intervene to save jobs. He urged MSPs and Scottish ministers to "intervene with any means possible and through any actions to try and keep this as a going concern - and if that's not possible to save as many jobs as possible". Administrators Ernst & Young have said "substantial redundancies" are expected in the coming days and that it was "cautious" about the prospects of finding a buyer for the business. City Link, which was founded in 1969, was acquired by restructuring specialist Better Capital in April 2013. It invested £40m, but the administrators said City Link had incurred substantial losses over several years and the money could not help it turn the firm around. The company has Scottish bases in Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Glenrothes and Motherwell. Sum: Workers facing redundancy at the collapsed parcel delivery firm City Link have staged a demonstration outside a depot in North Lanarkshire. Mr López has been moved to house arrest after more than three years in jail. He left a prison near Caracas and was reunited with his family on Saturday. Mr López was serving a 14-year sentence for inciting violence during anti-government protests in 2014, a charge he has always denied. The Supreme Court said he was released on health grounds. Mr Maduro said he "respected" and "supported" the Supreme Court's decision but called for "a message of peace and rectification" in the country. Hours after being freed, Mr López urged supporters to continue protesting in the streets against Mr Maduro. Venezuela's opposition and international powers have long pressed for his freedom. The head of the Organisation of American States regional bloc, Luis Almagro, said the court's decision offered an opportunity for national reconciliation. Henrique Capriles, a former opposition presidential candidate, stressed "he must be given his full liberty together with all political prisoners", Reuters reported. Giving a glimpse of his son's life behind bars, Mr López's father told Spanish radio "a few days ago they had punished him with solitary confinement without light or water for three days". He said his son was now wearing an electronic tag so that the authorities could keep abreast of his movements. His wife had complained that she had not been allowed to see him for more than a month, but on Friday she tweeted she had been allowed an hour-long meeting. In May, a government lawmaker published a video of Mr López in his cell following rumours that he had been poisoned and taken to hospital. In the video, Mr López - a Harvard-educated former mayor who has been prevented by the government from standing for public office - said he was well and did not know why he was being asked to prove he was still alive. Venezuela has been experiencing a wave of anti-government protests similar to those over which Mr López was jailed. The opposition is calling for early elections and the release of opposition politicians jailed in recent years, saying the socialist governments of President Maduro and his predecessor, the late Hugo Chávez, have mismanaged the economy since coming to power in 1999. Sum: Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has praised the decision to release from prison one of the country's main opposition leaders, Leopoldo López. It was the second top-of-the scale EF-5 twister in the area in 11 days, the National Weather Service said. Last Friday's storm in El Reno, along with flooding, killed 18 people, including three storm chasers. The other EF-5 tornado hit the nearby city of Moore on 20 May, killing 24 people and wreaking widespread damage. Friday's massive twister avoided highly populated areas near the Oklahoma state capital, sparing lives. "If it was two more miles this way, it would have wiped out all of downtown, almost every one of our subdivisions and almost all of our businesses," El Reno Mayor Matt White said. William Hooke, of the American Meteorological Society, says it is only "a matter of time" before such a tornado hits a major urban centre. "You lay that path over Oklahoma City, and you have devastation of biblical proportions," Mr Hooke told the Associated Press news agency. Sum:
The deadly tornado near Oklahoma City last week was a record-breaking 2.6 miles (4.2 km) wide and packed winds of up to 295 mph, weather officials said.
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Article: Iraqi-born, this year she was the first woman to receive the Royal Institute of British Architects (Riba) Gold Medal in recognition of her work. She died following a heart attack on Thursday in a Miami hospital, where she was being treated for bronchitis. Her designs have been commissioned around the world, including Hong Kong, Germany and Azerbaijan. Collecting her Gold Medal in February, Dame Zaha said she was proud to have been the first woman to win in her own right. "We now see more established female architects all the time," she said. "That doesn't mean it's easy. Sometimes the challenges are immense. There has been tremendous change over recent years and we will continue this progress." Dame Zaha's other creations include the Serpentine Sackler Gallery in London, the Riverside Museum at Glasgow's Museum of Transport, and Guangzhou Opera House in China. She twice won the Riba Stirling Prize, the UK's most prestigious architecture award. In 2010 she won for the Maxxi Museum in Rome, winning again in 2011 for the Evelyn Grace Academy in Brixton. Born in Baghad, she studied maths at the American University of Beirut - where she later designed a building on campus which was completed in 2014 - before embarking on her career at the Architectural Association in London. In 1979 she set up her own company - Zaha Hadid Architects. Her first major commission to be constructed was the Vitra Fire Station in Weil am Rhein in Germany. The striking London Acquatics Centre in Stratford, which resembles a wave, features two 50-metre pools and a diving pool. After being used for the Olympics and Paralympics it was opened to the public in 2014. "I love the London Aquatics Centre because it's near where I live," Dame Zaha said at the time. London Mayor Boris Johnson wrote on Twitter: "So sad to hear of death of Zaha Hadid, she was an inspiration and her legacy lives on in wonderful buildings in Stratford and around the world." She designed one of the stadiums that will take centre stage at the Qatar World Cup in 2022. Last year, however, the Japanese government scrapped plans to build the futuristic-looking stadium she designed for the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, opting instead for a scaled-down, less costly design. Riba president Jane Duncan said: "This is absolutely terrible news. Dame Zaha Hadid was an inspirational woman, and the kind of architect one can only dream of being. "Visionary and highly experimental, her legacy despite her young age, is formidable. She leaves behind a body of work from buildings to furniture, footwear and cars, that delight and astound people all around the world. The world of architecture has lost a star today." Dame Zaha Hadid was an extraordinary human being. She was not only one of Britain's greatest architects, but one of the world's great architects of the 21st Century and late 20th Century. She was most famous in the UK for the Aquatic Centre for the 2012 Olympic Games and for Maggie's Centres in Scotland. She won the Stirling Prize for architecture twice and was the first woman to win the Pritzker Prize for architecture - Dame Zaha was an extraordinary woman considering where she came from and what she made of her career. It was very much a man's world but she was determined to shape it and bend into the way she saw it, into Zaha Hadid's world. Her architecture was modern and futuristic with very noticeable sensuous lines, she brought a femininity to Modernism. Dame Zaha always had a problem in Britain to be taken as seriously as she should have been. People tried to knock her quite a lot and she didn't get the commissions she thought she should. She was very frustrated by that especially as she traded very well overseas. I don't know what the reason for that is but it wasn't because she wasn't a great architect. Her legacy is to prove what can be done; that you can be a Baghdad-born British citizen who can cut through all the red tape, all the machismo, all the macho behaviour and become an internationally-respected architect who creates buildings which will stand the test of time. And Dame Zaha will be seen as a leading light for any architect, especially female architects who have come from abroad and are living in Britain, to show that they can succeed in this country even through all the brickbats you receive along the way. ++++++++++ Summarize: Architect Dame Zaha Hadid, whose designs include the London Olympic Aquatic Centre, has died aged 65. Problem: The Ansar al-Sharia group said that its leadership had been wiped out while fighting the Libya National Army. Most of it members are thought to have defected to the Islamic State group. Separately a case against Hillary Clinton brought by the parents of two Americans killed in the Benghazi attack has been dismissed by a US judge. The Benghazi diplomatic compound attack killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, while Mrs Clinton was secretary of state. The issue dogged her presidential campaign last year. Patricia Smith and Charles Woods, parents of two of those killed, filed a lawsuit against Mrs Clinton for wrongful death and defamation. The suit claimed the former secretary of state's use of a private email server contributed to their sons' deaths. The parents also accused her of defaming them in statements to the media. But federal judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled that the complainants had not proved that Mrs Clinton was not acting in her official capacity by using the private server. She also judged that they did not have enough evidence to substantiate their defamation claim. The al-Qaeda linked Ansar al-Sharia group emerged in Benghazi - Libya's second largest city - in the upheavals following the death of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi n 2011. At one point in 2014 they took control of the city. But the group suffered heavy casualties while fending off continued offences launched by Libyan National Army strongman Khalifa Haftar - who earlier this month repeated his efforts to drive jihadist fighters out of their two remaining strongholds in Benghazi. The online announcement of Ansar's formal disbandment called on Islamists to form a united front in Benghazi. Libya now has two rival parliaments and three governments. The bulk of the fighting is between the Libyan National Army and forces aligned with the UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli. What was that article about? A: A group of militant Islamists in Libya, blamed by the US for the 2012 attack on the US mission in Benghazi which killed the ambassador, says it has disbanded. Problem: The property in Cheltenham, with the Spy Booth artwork on it, has a guide price of £210,000. The mural, on the Fairview Road house, has been the target of thieves, been fought over and vandalised since it appeared in 2014. Before the property was placed on the open market, Cheltenham Borough Council said a deal was being negotiated to buy the Grade II listed building. The Peter Ball & Co. estate agent's website describes it as "a rare opportunity to acquire a Grade II listed, Victorian, three bedroom end terrace property with a genuine 'Banksy' on the gable wall." The mural, located about three miles from government listening post GCHQ, has been daubed with white paint, sprayed with silver and red graffiti, and had people trying to steal it. Businesses and communities have also fought over its ownership. In a bid to protect it under the property's Grade II listed status, the "unauthorised" work was granted retrospective planning consent last February. Since then, the council has served notice on the property's owner David Possee demanding he fix the damage, "apparently" done in an "abortive attempt" to remove it, by April this year. An urgent works letter to repair the rendering on the wall with the Banksy on it, was also served. What was that article about? A:
A house with a famous Banksy mural painted on it has been put up for sale.
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Media playback is not supported on this device United striker Murray was cautioned in the first half after falling when approached by Massimo Donati. Then, with 13 minutes remaining, the United striker appeared to be fouled by Scott McMann just inside the box. However, referee Steven McLean, on the advice of his assistant, showed a second yellow and then a red card. United manager Ray McKinnon told BBC Scotland the club will appeal against the decision, which would mean Murray would be free to play in the return leg on Sunday. However, Hamilton could be without Donati and Dougie Imrie, both of whom finished the match despite suffering injuries. Hamilton did not let a raucous Tannadice atmosphere stop them from settling and the best chances of the first half fell to them. Danny Redmond put himself in a great position for Rakish Bingham's low cross from the right but the Englishman scuffed his effort at the near post. That was followed by David Templeton playing a superb through ball for Bingham to race on to, only to watch his low shot repealed by United goalkeeper Cammy Bell. In-form Murray tested Accies goalkeeper Remi Matthews and there was a bit of a defensive mix-up between Donati and Alex Gogic at one point as well to show that United also had presence as an attacking force. Imrie did well to take the ball off the toe of a threatening Murray, who then picked up his first booking following a challenge by Donati. At the start of the second half, 18-goal striker Murray was being cursed by his manager McKinnon for opting to shoot instead of playing in the better placed Blair Spittal. But the manager's stare was soon being trained on Wato Kuate instead after an act of ill-discipline that McKinnon later suggested will "absolutely" spell the end of the midfielder's United career. Soon after becoming embroiled in an argument with team-mate Mark Durnan, the 21-year-old was replaced and chose to angrily stomp directly towards tunnel at the corner of the pitch rather than meet his replacement - Charlie Telfer - at the halfway time. Matthews then made a brilliant one-handed save from a Mikkelsen header and then an equally good stop from Durnan, albeit referee McLean blew for a foul. United were controlling the second half but the introduction of Greg Docherty gave life to Accies and he combined with Louis Longridge to create a chance that Ali Crawford sidefooted over. But all that was overshadowed by the game's most contentious moment when McMann appeared to nick Murray's knee in the box, with referee McLean seeming to take instruction from his assistant before producing the second yellow. Match ends, Dundee United 0, Hamilton Academical 0. Second Half ends, Dundee United 0, Hamilton Academical 0. Thomas Mikkelsen (Dundee United) wins a free kick on the left wing. Foul by Massimo Donati (Hamilton Academical). Corner, Hamilton Academical. Conceded by Mark Durnan. Delay over. They are ready to continue. Substitution, Dundee United. Alex Nicholls replaces Tony Andreu. Delay in match Dougie Imrie (Hamilton Academical) because of an injury. Alexander Gogic (Hamilton Academical) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Thomas Mikkelsen (Dundee United) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Alexander Gogic (Hamilton Academical). Delay over. They are ready to continue. Delay in match Massimo Donati (Hamilton Academical) because of an injury. Corner, Dundee United. Conceded by Darian MacKinnon. Corner, Dundee United. Conceded by Scott McMann. Tony Andreu (Dundee United) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Greg Docherty (Hamilton Academical). Substitution, Hamilton Academical. Alejandro D'Acol replaces Rakish Bingham. Louis Longridge (Hamilton Academical) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Willo Flood (Dundee United) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by Louis Longridge (Hamilton Academical). Second yellow card to Simon Murray (Dundee United). Attempt missed. Ali Crawford (Hamilton Academical) left footed shot from the centre of the box is too high. Substitution, Hamilton Academical. Greg Docherty replaces Daniel Redmond. Foul by Tony Andreu (Dundee United). (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Attempt missed. Darian MacKinnon (Hamilton Academical) right footed shot from outside the box is too high. Mark Durnan (Dundee United) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Daniel Redmond (Hamilton Academical). Foul by Willo Flood (Dundee United). Daniel Redmond (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the defensive half. Corner, Hamilton Academical. Conceded by Willo Flood. Foul by Thomas Mikkelsen (Dundee United). Scott McMann (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick on the right wing. Foul by Mark Durnan (Dundee United). Massimo Donati (Hamilton Academical) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Paul Dixon (Dundee United) wins a free kick in the attacking half. Foul by Daniel Redmond (Hamilton Academical). Attempt missed. Mark Durnan (Dundee United) right footed shot from outside the box is high and wide to the right. Attempt missed. Dougie Imrie (Hamilton Academical) left footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the left. This article was about:
Simon Murray was booked twice for diving and sent off as Dundee United drew with Hamilton Academical in the Premiership play-off final first leg.
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Summarize this article: Cardinal Raymond Burke is a staunch critic of Pope Francis' moves to soften the Church's stance on homosexuality. He said that he was to be moved to the far less senior post of patron of the sovereign military order of Malta. Pope Francis is leading a council in the Vatican on possible reforms to Church teaching on social issues. A preliminary report on the initial discussions at the extraordinary Synod on the family was released on Monday. The report, which was written by more than 200 bishops, said homosexuals had "gifts and qualities to offer", and used more welcoming language when discussing homosexuality and its place in the Church. Although it does not challenge the Church's stance on gay marriage, the document was praised by liberal clergymen and activists. However, it was also criticised by more traditional and conservative Church figures who rejected it. Cardinal Burke was among the most publicly critical of the bishops involved in the discussions. For weeks, there had been rumours that the Pope would demote him, says the BBC's James Reynolds in Rome. Last year, a survey launched by Pope Francis suggested that the majority of Catholics rejected Church teaching on issues such as sex and contraception. Summary:
A leading American cardinal has told BuzzFeed that he is to be demoted from his position running the Catholic Church justice system.
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Twenty-one people were killed and 113 injured, said Maharashtra state's Chief Minister, Prithviraj Chavan. He called the explosions, during Mumbai's busy evening rush-hour, "a co-ordinated attack by terrorists". One explosion was reported in the Zaveri Bazaar, another in the Opera House business district and a third in Dadar district in the city centre. Police sources were reported as saying the explosions were caused by home-made bombs. The attacks are the deadliest in Mumbai since November 2008 when 10 gunmen launched a three-day co-ordinated raid in which 166 people were killed. By Zubair AhmedBBC News, Mumbai Dadar is one of the old areas of Mumbai, in the middle of the city. The blast here happened in a very crowded area with lots of shops and residential buildings. The blast here was not powerful. Police have said the explosion in Zaveri Bazaar was stronger. Police say the timing of the blast - 1900 - is significant. This was the height of the evening rush hour - it was designed to cause maximum panic and casualties. One person asked why Mumbai is always the target of attacks. However, many of the people gathered here now are merely onlookers curious to see what has happened. People have come from nearby areas to see what is going on. There is no evidence of real panic here. But in other parts of the city, the story is grimmer. There is panic and people are rushing back home. Anger and curiosity in Mumbai Prime Minister Manmohan Singh denounced the bombings and appealed to Mumbai residents "to remain calm and show a united face". US President Barack Obama strongly condemned the "outrageous" attacks, and offered "support to India's efforts to bring the perpetrators of these terrible crimes to justice". High alert The latest explosions hit the city as workers were making their way home. The first struck the Zaveri Bazaar at 1854 (1324 GMT), tearing through the famed jewellery market, according to police. A minute later, a second blast hit the busy business district of Opera House, in the south of the city. At 1905, the third bomb exploded in the Dadar area of central Mumbai. Because the explosions occurred within minutes of each other, "we infer that this was a co-ordinated attack by terrorists", Home Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram told reporters. Mumbai had been put on a state of high alert and a commando team was standing by, he said. Delhi, the capital, Calcutta and several other cities have also been put on alert. Forensics teams have been sent from Delhi and Hyderabad to examine the explosion sites. By Soutik BiswasBBC News, Delhi Read more from Soutik Biswas The authorities have not yet said who they believe might be behind the explosions and no group has said it carried them out. In Zaveri Bazaar, witnesses described a motorcycle exploding next to a jewellery shop. Mumbai Police Commissioner Arup Patnaik said a bomb had been left in an abandoned umbrella. Photographer Rutavi Mehta told the BBC he was shopping nearby and heard the explosion. He grabbed his camera and ran to the scene. "I took a couple of photographs. I think they might be too graphic for broadcast," he said. "Bodies and limbs were strewn everywhere. People were crying and screaming. The area was packed with shoppers at the time of the blast. A few offered assistance to the blood-soaked victims, while others looked on in a state of shock," he said. "It was totally chaos. There were pools of blood everywhere." The second and most powerful blast was in the nearby Opera House district. Local media said it was planted inside the two-storey Prasad Chamber building. In the central Dadar district, the bomb tore apart a taxi that was parked next to a bus stop, witnesses told the BBC. It was unclear whether the explosives were planted inside the vehicle or in a nearby electricity meter box. "I heard a loud explosion. And then I saw people with serious injuries lying in pools of blood," another person told the Times of India. An unexploded bomb was also reportedly been found in Dadar. The choice of locations makes it clear that the blasts were intended to cause maximum casualties, says the BBC's Soutik Biswas in Delhi. But footage of one of the blast sites - a ripped-off cover of a bus shelter and a car with its glass shattered - points to a medium-level and possibly crude explosion, adds our correspondent. According to some reports, the blasts came on the birthday of Mohammad Ajmal Amir Qasab, the sole surviving gunman from the 2008 attacks. But court records show his birthday to be in September. Those attacks, which targeted two high-end hotels, a busy train station, a Jewish centre and other sites frequented by foreigners, were blamed on the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group. Pakistan was quick to condemn the latest explosions, in a statement issued by the foreign ministry. Peace talks between Pakistan and India have only recently resumed since they were broken off after the 2008 attacks. Mumbai has been targeted many times in recent years. As well as the 2008 attacks, co-ordinated blasts on seven of the city's trains on 11 July 2006 caused massive loss of life. More than 180 people were killed and hundreds wounded in those bombings, which were blamed on Islamist militants. The city suffered four bomb attacks during 2003, including twin blasts on 25 August 2003 which killed 52 people. In 1993, 257 people were killed and 700 injured in a series of 12 bomb blasts across the city. The attacks were allegedly ordered by the Muslim-dominated underworld in retaliation for Hindu-Muslim riots. What is a summary of this text?
Three near-simultaneous explosions have shaken India's commercial capital Mumbai (Bombay), police say.
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Summarize: 10 May 2016 Last updated at 08:51 BST She was speaking to BBC Newsnight as part of a series of films called My Decision, where a number of well-known figures explain how they plan to vote, and the thinking behind their decision. More: Dreda Say Mitchell: 'I'm black and voting for Leave' Michael Morpurgo: 'I look at the history' Tom Hunter: 'Where are the facts?' Summary:
Artist Tracey Emin says it would be "absolute insanity" to leave the European Union in the upcoming EU referendum.
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Tests in the fitness room showers at Walton-on-the-Naze Lifestyles proved positive for legionella bacteria. The customer, who had used the fitness room and shower facilities, fell ill on 18 November. Tendring District Council said its fitness room showers would be closed until the bacteria was eradicated. The council said it did not know whether the customer was still in hospital. Live: For more on this and other stories The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has been informed. Lynda McWilliams, the council's member for leisure health and wellbeing, said: "As soon as we were contacted by Public Health England, the showers used by the customer were closed down and test samples taken. "All the necessary bodies were informed while we awaited the results of the tests which were carried out at an independent laboratory. "The council's corporate health and safety advisor is currently working to find and eliminate the source of the bacteria." This will involve dismantling and disinfecting the shower heads, flushing the system and taking more samples. What was that article about?
A visitor to a council-owned leisure centre was hospitalised after contracting Legionnaires' Disease, it has emerged.
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