Northamptonshire: 'Major incident' after more than 1,000 people flee flooded caravan park
More than a thousand people have been forced to flee a caravan park in a "major incident" after it was flooded on Christmas Eve.
Trump campaign team had said that they did not ‘organise, operate or finance’ the 6 January rally
Character’s accent seemed to vanish after 2015’s Avengers: Age of Ultron
The days on the barren silt island of Bhasan Char in the Bay of Bengal have developed into a mundane rhythm for Fatima, a single mother with a teenage daughter, who was transferred there in December along with hundreds of Rohingya from the overcrowded refugee camps on the Bangladeshi coastline. She spends her time going to the market, cooking and sitting. The grey breeze-block barracks on the island lack character or home comforts, but they are, she says, an improvement on the flimsy tarpaulin and bamboo huts in the sprawling camps that house more than a million people. Despite concerns from human rights groups that the isolated island, over 18 miles from shore, will become akin to a “floating prison,” Fatima said she relocated voluntarily after her brother said those who moved there would be given priority for repatriation to Myanmar or relocation to a third country. Senior Bangladeshi officials will meet their Myanmar counterparts in the capital, Dhaka, for the first time in a year on Tuesday to attempt to thrash out the details of sending hundreds of thousands of Rohingya home to Rakhine state, where they fled a murderous military-led campaign in 2017.
Billionaire Richard Branson’s Virgin Orbit reached space for the first time on Sunday with a successful test of its air-launched rocket, delivering ten NASA satellites to orbit and achieving a key milestone after aborting the rocket’s first test launch last year. "According to telemetry, LauncherOne has reached orbit!" the company announced on Twitter during the test mission, dubbed Launch Demo 2. Roughly two hours after its Cosmic Girl carrier craft took off from the Mojave Air and Space Port in southern California, the rocket, a 70-foot launcher tailored for carrying small satellites to space, successfully placed 10 tiny satellites in orbit for NASA, the company said on Twitter.
Dennis Nilsen's final wish will not be carried out, his 'next of kin' has insisted as he seeks to finally publish the serial killer's autobiography. The Scottish serial killer, who died in 2018, tried multiple times to get his memoirs published from prison, but was thwarted by rules brought in by the Labour government in the late 1990s, which prohibited prisoners from profiting from crimes. Fighting to get his words published, the killer spent over ten years trying to get the ban removed, and even tried to pursue his case with the European Court of Human Rights. His autobiography, History of a Drowning Boy, is now due to be released this week by Mark Austin, the man he named as his next of kin after becoming a "prison pen pal" of his. Mr Austin, 54, graphic designer and married father of two, edited the words and found an independent publisher to release them. However, Mr Austin argued that publishing the autobiography is not the 'last wish' of the killer. He said he has refused to scatter the ashes of his friend in the garden where many of the victims' remains were burned. The graphic designer told the Sunday Times: "I thought it was an insult. When the time comes, I'm probably going to scatter his ashes in the sea in Fraserburgh." Nilsen, who murdered at least 12 young men and boys between 1978 and 1983, confesses to new crimes in the thousands of pages he typed up in his cell. In it, he details the strangulation and sexual abuse of two previously unknown male victims. The families of the victims have said that they are frustrated with the decision to publish the thoughts of a serial killer. The sister of Carl Stottor, who survived a murder attempt by Nilsen but later died in 2013 after battling depression and alcoholism, described the new book as "morally wrong". "Carl fought all his life to have those memoirs stopped," Julie Bentley told the Sunday Times. "When that evil man died, I thought it was over. Why should he have his say when the victims can't have their word?" A friend of another bereaved relative told the paper: "It's as if he's still laughing at us from beyond the grave." Ann Widdecombe, a former Tory prisons minister, said: "Providing nobody is making any money out of it, there seems no good reason [to block publication] after this length of time." Mr Austin has said that any royalties from the book will be given to charity. He befriended the serial killer in 1991 "out of curiosity", and the murderer signed all his possessions to his pen pal after he died, because his family had disowned him. The two exchanged over 800 letters, and had 70 in-prison visits together.
Will she be okay?From Digital Spy
Trump to hold sendoff ceremony on Biden inauguration dayOutgoing president has issued invites for event taking place in Maryland at 8am on Wednesday * Follow the latest US political news – live updates
Of England’s 315 local areas, 279 have seen a fall in case rates in the seven days to January 13 compared with the previous week, PA analysis shows.
Some communities may become cut off, say forecasters
Mark Drakeford defended delaying the roll out, saying using all of its stock would mean "all our vaccinators standing around with nothing to do".
Latest developments from Westminster
A British lawyer set to prosecute Hong Kong democracy campaigners has been slated by Dominic Raab for being "mercenary". It comes after it was recently revealed that David Perry QC is being brought in to handle the trial of Jimmy Lai, a publisher and high-profile critic of the Chinese state, and eight other campaigners accused of organising an illegal anti-government march. The Foreign Secretary said he did not understand how any British lawyer could in "good conscience" prosecute a case applying the controversial national security law in Hong Kong. Mr Raab said: "There's no doubt in my mind that under the bar code of ethics a case like this could be resisted and, frankly, I think people watching this would regard it as pretty mercenary to be taking up that kind of case." He said he did not understand how anyone in “good conscience, from the world-leading legal profession that we have, would take a case where they will have to apply the national security legislation at the behest of the authorities in Beijing, which is directly violating, undermining the freedom of the people of Hong Kong, and I understand, in the case of Mr Perry, in relation to the pro-democracy activists”. He added: "From Beijing's point of view, this would be a serious PR coup."
Mass testing of entire regions is being considered by ministers to help get the country out of lockdown, it has emerged, as Dominic Raab said restrictions could start to be eased in March. The Foreign Secretary said that by the "early spring, hopefully March" some restrictions would be lifted "gradually" so the country could "get back to normal”. He warned it would not be a “big bang” end to lockdown but a return to tiers depending on the level of Covid admissions in hospitals, death rates and hitting targets on vaccinating the over 50s and vulnerable by early spring. The Telegraph understands mass testing could be used to swiftly move the worst-infected areas down the tiers. One idea under consideration is to send out home testing kits, known as lateral flow tests, to every household in an entire region so the population could be tested within a week.
Parts of the Greek island of Lesbos were blanketed in snow on January 16-17, footage posted by author Claire Lloyd shows.“Lesvos is beautiful in the snow,” Lloyd wrote, using the island’s alternative name.Video shows several scenes of the snowfall in and around the village of Skalochori. Credit: Claire Lloyd via Storyful
State prosecutors in Russia asked a judge on Monday to jail Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny for 30 days, after he was detained the previous evening at a Moscow airport when flying home for the first time since he was poisoned last summer. The United Nations and Western nations told Russia to immediately free the opposition politician and some countries called for new sanctions. Moscow told them to mind their own business.
Corbyn to campaign against Murdoch's News UK TV channelFormer Labour leader calls for ‘free and accountable’ media at launch of his Peace and Justice Project
Travellers could face GPS tracking in a bid to crackdown on breaches of quarantine, Dominic Raab indicated on Sunday. The Foreign Secretary refused to rule out the use of GPS data to establish if people were staying at the address they put on their locator form when they entered the UK. He also confirmed that the Government was considering quarantine hotels where travellers would be required to stay and pick up the bill, as happens with New Zealand’s policy of “directed isolation” and Australia where arrivals self-isolating are charged between £1,500 and £2,500. The move follows Boris Johnson’s announcement last week scrapping travel corridors to 63 countries, which means every arrival – apart from exemptions such as hauliers – will have to quarantine for up to 10 days and, from Monday, provide a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours of their departure.
Matt Hancock is to lead today’s Downing Street press briefing as the UK rolls out coronavirus vaccines to millions more Britons. The Health Secretary is set to address the nation at 5pm as the country makes progress towards Boris Johnson’s target of inoculating Britain’s 15 million most vulnerable residents by mid-February. The Prime Minister hailed developments in Britain’s mass-vaccination efforts after it emerged that the over-70s and clinically extremely vulnerable would be invited to receive their jabs from Monday.
Vardy takes to the ice this year with professional partner Andy Buchanan