Queen shares family home videos for the first time to mark her Platinum Jubilee
The Queen has allowed the world to see "the fun behind the formality" of her royal life in home movies that have been released for the first time.
Analysis: A price cap on Russian oil and potential famine in Africa are among issues pressing for attention
UK may face significant flu epidemic alongside Covid, vaccines expert warns
A Sri Lankan government minister was in Qatar on Tuesday and another will travel to Russia at the weekend in search of energy deals to alleviate a severe fuel shortage that is crippling the economy of the island nation and forcing many schools to close. Protests, some of them violent, have erupted in recent months and key ministers have resigned, leaving President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe fighting to stabilise the nation. In a step aimed at getting more fuel into Sri Lanka, the power and energy minister said on Tuesday that the duopoly controlling imports would end and companies from oil-producing countries would be allowed to enter the market.
The BMA doctors’ union said there needs to be a culture change in the NHS.
‘I genuinely have what most females want’, says the investment analyst
Saudi Arabia tells pilgrims to use new online system and to seek refunds from any agencies they have already paid
QUITO (Reuters) -Ecuadorean President Guillermo Lasso said on Sunday he would cut prices for gasoline and diesel by 10 cents a gallon, the latest concession to try to end nearly two weeks of anti-government protests in which at least six people have died. The sometimes-violent demonstrations by largely indigenous protesters demanding lower fuel and food prices, among other things, began on June 13 and have slashed Ecuador's oil production. Lasso, whose adversarial relationship with the national assembly has worsened during the protests, had already withdrawn security measures and announced subsidized fertilizers and debt forgiveness, and his government met this weekend with indigenous groups.
A drink-driver who tried to evade police at more than 130mph was eventually stopped by a police stinger.
There are late sailings this afternoon. Here's why...
The portrait will be displayed at the National Portrait Gallery when it reopens in 2023.
More than 12,300 migrants have risked their lives to reach Britain in small boats crossing the Channel so far this year – at least double the number in the same period of 2021. A total of 153 people on four boats were intercepted by the UK authorities on Monday, according to figures released by the Ministry of Defence. The figures highlight the Government’s failure to stop the dangerous Channel crossings despite the Brexit campaign’s key pledge to take back control of the UK’s borders.
Letters: John Lynch and Declan O’Neill respond to an article on how tactical voting, as seen in the recent byelections, could reshape British politics. Plus a letter from David Smith
Six years after four policemen burst into her Manila slum shack and shot dead her husband and teenage son, Mary Ann Bonifacio fears for her own life as she fights for justice.
Christianity is in decline, millennials are catching up to boomers, and everyone was at home. Insights from the pandemic census night
A major clean-up operation has begun at Glastonbury to return the site from a pop-up city of 200,000 people to a Somerset dairy farm. Volunteers began shifting rubbish strewn across the 800-acre site as revellers started to make their way home following headline performances by Billie Eilish, Sir Paul McCartney and Kendrick Lamar. They began picking up thousands of discarded items including paper cups and food containers after around 200,000 people descended on Worthy Farm for the festival.
A defence source did not deny reports that the Defence Secretary asked the PM to lift the annual military budget to 2.5% of GDP by 2028.
A Pembrokeshire school is looking forward to holding its summer community fete, hoping to bring people from across Pembrokeshire to attend.
Hilarious home security footage captured in Pennsylvania last week shows the moment when two moms were forced to flee with their children after spotting a snake slithering around in the living room.
From July 1, more than 500 people leaving care in Wales will be offered £1,600 each month for two years to support them move into adult life.
Labour has said pupils should receive face-to-face, professional careers guidance while at school.