- THAI MILITARY SHOWS LANDMINES FOUND AT BORDER
- PANAMA AND US HOLD JOINT MILITARY EXERCISES
- U.S. TO COORDINATE UKRAINE SECURITY GUARANTEES
- UN CHIEF APPLAUDS TRUMP’S MEETING WITH ZELENSKIY
- EPPING MIGRANTS COULD BE MOVED TO ANOTHER HOTEL
- SOCIAL MEDIA STILL FLOODING TEENS WITH SUICIDE CONTENT
- UK FARES ON TRACK TO SOAR
- MILLIONS TO FACE ROAD AND RAIL CHAOS
Author: LoveWorld UK
The European Union promised legal action on Wednesday after the British government unilaterally extended a grace period for checks on food imports to Northern Ireland, a move Brussels said violated terms of Britain’s divorce deal. Since it left the EU last year, Britain’s relations with the bloc have soured, with both sides accusing the other of acting in bad faith in relation to part of their trade agreement that covers goods movements to Northern Ireland. The British government extended a grace period for some checks on agricultural and food products imported by retailers to Northern Ireland until Oct. 1 in…
Kelechi Iheanacho’s sweetly struck equaliser illuminated an oddity of a match: open yet lacking copious goalscoring chances, much of the action occurring between the two boxes. By the final whistle Burnley had 29 points, six clear of Fulham in the final relegation position, while Leicester had reached 50, six better than fifth-placed Chelsea in the race for a Champions League berth. Burnley’s Sean Dyche and Leicester’s Brendan Rodgers would have preferred victory but at this stage of the campaign were content with the draw and they now move on. Dyche was right to identify Kasper Schmeichel’s display. “Their keeper was arguably man…
The Chancellor used the Budget to confirm the locations of the ‘special economic zones’ that were first announced in the Tories’ 2019 election manifesto. East Midlands Airport, the Suffolk ports of Felixstowe and Harwich, the Humber region in Yorkshire, the Liverpool City Region, Plymouth in Devon, the Solent in Hampshire, the Thames near London and Teesside in the North East have all been chosen. The freeport model works by allowing companies to import goods tariff-free and only paying once it is sold into the domestic market, or exporting the final goods without paying UK tariffs. Supporters say they can stimulate…
Nicola Sturgeon’s career remains on the line today after she failed to answer critical questions over her handling of complaints against Alex Salmond at a marathon eight-hour grilling in the Scottish Parliament yesterday. Her allies insisted she had ‘dismantled’ the claims and ‘conspiracy theories’ made by Mr Salmond and opposition parties when she gave evidence before MSPs. But the First Minister still faces a vote of no confidence in her leadership, with critics insisting she said nothing to change their view that she had misled the Scottish parliament over what she knew and when. Holyrood’s Tories rubbished her ‘litany of lies’…
An ‘avalanche’ of people have claimed their loved one’s cause of death was recorded as Covid despite them never having been exposed to an outbreak or testing positive to the virus. Grieving families are calling for an inquiry into how deaths have been recorded during the pandemic amid claims their loved ones did not die of Covid. Dozens of families are said to have raised concerns after Bel Mooney revealed that her father, 99, who suffered from dementia and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, had his death recorded as coronavirus. Bel claimed her dad had passed three Covid-19 tests but was nonetheless…
Britain’s finance minister Rishi Sunak will promise on Wednesday to do “whatever it takes”, including a five-month extension of a huge jobs rescue plan, to steer the economy through what he hopes will be the final months of COVID restrictions. Sunak has already racked up Britain’s highest borrowing since World War Two and he will turn to the bond markets again in his budget speech, saying the task of fixing the public finances will only begin once a recovery is in sight. “We’re using the full measure of our fiscal firepower to protect the jobs and livelihoods of the British…
Lawyers warned the Scottish Government was heading for defeat in its court battle with Alex Salmond more than three months before it lost the case. In a major development which piles more pressure on Nicola Sturgeon, it emerged yesterday that they warned in September 2018 there was ‘a real risk that the court may be persuaded by the petitioner’s case in respect of the ground of challenge based on ‘procedural unfairness’.’ Legal advisers then informed officials on October 31 of a ‘very real problem’ which eventually led to Mr Salmond winning the case. An ‘urgent note’ issued by senior counsel highlighted…
Amid threats of a vote in no confidence in Deputy First Minister John Swinney, the Scottish Government will release advice which relates to Mr Salmond’s legal challenge over sexual harassment claims made against him. The Government had previously rejected releasing the legal advice relating to a challenge but due to the serious nature of the allegations, the documentation will be released subject to legal checks. Mr Swinney said: “In normal circumstances, government legal advice is not released. “Indeed, such is the importance of being able to get frank, private advice, it is almost unheard of for the legal advice to be released. “But, we…
International critics are questioning the impartiality of a World Health Organization (WHO) team that recently conducted a fact-finding mission in Wuhan to probe the origins of the CCP virus. The team consisted of 17 Chinese experts and 17 foreign experts from 10 countries. They began their work in the central Chinese city of Wuhan—the epicenter of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus outbreak—in late January before presenting their preliminary findings at a virtual press conference on Feb. 9. However, the composition of the WHO team has come under scrutiny. In particular, some experts have relationships with the Chinese regime, raising conflict of interest issues. Leung…
Tokyo has requested Beijing to stop taking anal swab tests for Covid-19 on Japanese citizens because the procedure causes psychological pain, a government spokesperson has said. Japan’s chief cabinet secretary, Katsunobu Kato, said the government had not received a response that Beijing would change the testing procedure, so Japan would continue to ask China to alter the way of testing. “Some Japanese reported to our embassy in China that they received anal swab tests, which caused a great psychological pain,” Kato told a news conference. It was not known how many Japanese citizens received such tests for the coronavirus, he…
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