Queen's Row barge leads Platinum Jubilee Flotilla
The Queen's Row barge, Gloriana, has led 30 boats along the Thames from Windsor to Staines as part of the Platinum Jubilee Flotilla. .
Analysis: A price cap on Russian oil and potential famine in Africa are among issues pressing for attention
The first yachts to make it all the way round the Isle of Wight will be honoured at a ceremony later this morning.
The three vessels from the GB Row Challenge hoped to collect environmental data.
The nine justices of the Supreme Court made clear in their landmark ruling Friday whether they stand on abortion
The portrait will be displayed at the National Portrait Gallery when it reopens in 2023.
It comes amid a reduced timetable and strike action by rail workers.
Prime minister refuses to accept Partygate scandal triggered byelection defeats – and rules out ‘psychological transformation’ to change his character
Furious about surging prices at the gasoline station and the supermarket, many consumers feel they know just where to cast blame: On greedy companies that relentlessly jack up prices and pocket the profits
Charles Dickens condemned the slave trade as “inhuman” and an “atrocity” in a previously unpublished letter that has been discovered.
Ghislaine Maxwell reported Brooklyn jail staff threatened her safety, prompting employees to place her on suicide watch, prosecutors said on Sunday, arguing there was no need to delay her sentencing on sex trafficking charges. Maxwell, 60, is scheduled to be sentenced on Tuesday for her December conviction for helping her then-boyfriend Jeffrey Epstein, the globe-trotting financier and convicted sex offender, abuse girls between 1994 and 2004. Prosecutors say she deserves between 30 and 55 years in prison.
The resignation of the Conservative Party chair is more significant than both by-election defeats put together
Industrial action means there will be a very limited train service today.
The deaths of at least 18 migrants on Friday during a mass attempt to cross from Morocco into a Spanish enclave took place at a pivotal time for often rocky relations between the neighbouring countries. Moroccan authorities said the disaster occurred after migrants attempted to breach a fence into the Melilla enclave, with some dying in a crush after what authorities called a stampede, and others falling as they climbed. Spain retained the enclaves of Melilla and Ceuta, which were previously colonial territories, after Morocco gained independence in 1956.
Penalties for peaceful action are now the same as for aggravated assault
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 levy on food and fossil fuel giants could save lives now and help create a sustainable food system, says Gabriela Bucher
Prime minister under fire after insisting he will not change his behaviour in office
Prince Charles' head gardener is developing compost by using shredded paperwork and organic waste from the Highgrove estate to help tackle the impact of climate change.
A Government crackdown on unions features among the stories on Sunday’s front pages.