Habib Chaab: Files show how Iranian dissident was kidnapped in Turkey after 'honeytrap by Iran'
An audacious cross-border kidnap plan carried out in Istanbul and involving a "honeytrap" is further straining relations between Turkey, Iran and Europe.
Scientists call for gradual and prolonged transition out of lockdown, arguing rules should not be eased until May at earliest
Are you Team Anne or Team Bradley?
‘You either hate him or you hate him,’ says Rick Wilson
A devoted dog has spent days outside a hospital where her beloved owner was being treated. Boncuk has returned every day to a hospital in the Turkish city of Trabzon, to wait for her owner, Cemal Senturk. Senturk’s daughter, Aynur Egeli, said she would take Boncuk home but the dog would repeatedly run off and return to the hospital to continue her vigil. Watch the touching moment where an excited Boncuk and Cemal are reunited.
It comes almost three weeks after Boris Johnson ordered lockdown.
The people smuggling gang ran several runs before the tragedy in Purfleet in 2019, the Old Bailey has heard.
Boris Johnson to give press conference at 5pm - watch live Ministers consider £500 payment for positive Covid test Boris Johnson suggests lockdown could last until summer Fraser Nelson: Vaccines may usher in Fortress Britain Coronavirus latest news: R-rate falls below 1 across the UK Subscribe to The Telegraph for a month-long free trial Boris Johnson is in for the "mother of all arguments" with his backbenchers now the R rate has dropped below 1 and the UK case rate will begin to fall, a top Government scientific adviser has said. Prof Sir David Spiegelhalter, a Sage academic, said pressure on the Prime Minister would grow as deaths and case numbers fall, while hospitals will remain under significant pressure. The UK's reproduction rate is now estimated to be 0.8-1.0, suggesting a decline in the number of new infections. Last week, it was between 1.2 and 1.3. The rates are lowest in London and the East of England, although still thought to be above one in parts of the North. Tory MPs have already begun calling for lockdown to ease. Sir Desmond Swayne told the Telegraph: “Given that the Government itself has selected and put so much store on the R rate, you would expect there to be some reaction, a payback, a recompense in terms of the lifting or the promise of lifting of restrictions.” He added: “That is why we need some sort of urgency and plan from the Government as to when and how they’ll start restricting decisions.” Some Conservative colleagues suggested that while the R-rate might not be the trigger point, the Prime Minister would be under pressure to give a clear exit plan as cases continue to fall. One former minister said it would be “difficult to justify” lifting restrictions until the pressure on the NHS started to ease. “But we need a plan for getting out,” the senior Tory added. “He needs to show some ankle.” Follow the latest updates below.
Ministers could pay £500 to everyone with Covid in EnglandExclusive: universal payment is ‘preferred position’ of DHSC in effort to help people self-isolate * Coronavirus – latest updates * See all our coronavirus coverage
Lawmaker’s stunt destined to go nowhere with Democratic controlled House and Senate
UK travellers could be locked out of continent
Former head of the diplomatic service describes move as ‘wholly unnecessary’
The former president and the Graham family have a long history
Seeds have been sown for future team-up
Prime Minister Boris Johnson will hold a Downing Street briefing later this afternoon as the UK continues its battle with the Covid-19 pandemic. Number 10 said the PM will appear alongside England's chief medical officer Professor Chris Whitty and chief scientific officer Sir Patrick Vallance at 5pm. Mr Johnson this week refused to rule out even tougher lockdown restrictions as hospitals come under growing strain from rising Covid-19 cases.
She’ll be back in (virtual) court on Monday
A new form of African swine fever identified in Chinese pig farms is most likely caused by illicit vaccines, industry insiders say, a fresh blow to the world's largest pork producer, still recovering from a devastating epidemic of the virus. Two new strains of African swine fever have infected more than 1,000 sows on several farms owned by New Hope Liuhe, China's fourth-largest producer, as well as pigs being fattened for the firm by contract farmers, said Yan Zhichun, the company's chief science officer. Though the strains, which are missing one or two key genes present in the wild African swine fever virus, don't kill pigs like the disease that ravaged China's farms in 2018 and 2019, they cause a chronic condition that reduces the number of healthy piglets born, Yan told Reuters.
So much for the grand promise of unity. Joe Biden's rush to erase Donald Trump from history delivered a forceful poke in the eye - some would say worse - to the 74 million people who voted for the other guy. Ironically, while the US Capitol riots were a disaster for Mr Trump and his legacy, they have also undermined Mr Biden's chances of bringing the country together in a post-Trump world. Cheered on by an increasingly noisy left wing of the Democrat party, demanding that all things Trump be cancelled, the new president spent his first hours in office doing just that. He is using everything available to him under his executive powers - what he can do without the approval of Congress - to wipe clean the last four years. But in doing so there has been no attempt to offer an olive branch to Republican voters, or their representatives in Congress. Senior Republicans have been taken aback by the extent of Mr Biden's opening measures, especially on immigration and climate change. Some took it as confirmation of their fears that the new president, a moderate Democrat, would end up a passenger in a party careering left. Mr Biden promised Mr Trump's voters he would work for them too. But so for there is little sign of it. And Republicans in Congress are nervous.
Fire broke out in an under-construction building at the site of the Serum Institute of India but vaccine production will not be affected, officials say
PC Michael Warren, a serving Met Police officer who was shielding at home and working remotely, died after testing positive for COVID.
Thousands of vials of the Oxford / Astrazeneca vaccine were saved during an “urgent” mission by council staff following flooding at an industrial estate in Wales. Heavy rain caused by Storm Christoph led to standing water surrounding buildings at Wockhardt's pharmaceutical manufacturing facility in Wrexham, and a call for help was put out on Wednesday evening. The Telegraph can reveal that other sites where the vaccine is manufactured are near areas which have flood warnings, and government sources said there were "concerns around vaccine deployment". The leader of Wrexham County Borough said that authorities worked "through the night" to ensure that the site was not overwhelmed by flood water, using a team of six staff, a number of sandbags and two water pumps. Mark Pritchard told the Telegraph: "We got a phone call last night from the company who were concerned about rising water."