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Government rejects Straw's two-state Cyprus solution
Turkey's president Recep Tayyip Erdogan has led celebrations of the anniversary of his country's intervention 50 years ago, which left the island of Cyprus split in two.
Labour MP pregnant at 15 was 'groomed' by older man
An MP who has revealed she became pregnant at 15 after being \"groomed\" by an older man has vowed to be a voice for \"women that have children in far from ideal circumstances\".
Two senior Tories back Tugendhat as new leader
Two senior Tories have thrown their weight behind Tom Tugendhat to be the new Conservative Party leader. Damian Green and Steve Baker, who lost their seats in the 4 July election but are influential figures in the party, have endorsed shadow security minister Mr Tugendhat.
Chancellor says 'big bang' reform of savings will boost pensions and unlock growth
The chancellor hopes to boost pension pots by £11,000 and unlock billions more in investment with a review of retirement savings.
Public sector pay rises could cost extra £10bn, IFS warns
The government could need up to £10bn extra to cover public sector pay increases if reports of a 5.5 per cent rise prove true, a leading economist has warned.
Third of English pharmacy drug supplies hit by outage
A global IT outage hit one-third of drug deliveries to pharmacies in England, as thousands of GP practices were affected and hospitals across the country declared critical incidents.
Tui passengers are worst hit as software chaos continues
Thousands of passengers across the UK have faced fresh cancellations and delays to flights as airlines recover from the impact of one of the largest global IT outages ever.
Crisis-hit probation service not ready for early releases
The head of the UK's probation watchdog has warned that the service is failing in 97 per cent of areas, even before the government releases thousands of prisoners early. Martin Jones, the chief inspector of probation, said the service was already struggling to cope with supervising and managing the number of prisoners currently released on licence.
'Before I got back to diving, it was my plan - be involved in some journalistic way'
Tom Daley tells Will Jennings he has already won in Paris before his first dive... by competing and commentating
Maiden century by Hodge leads West Indies fightback
Kavem Hodge and Alick Athanaze led a West Indies revival as they finished a sunny second day of the second test on 351-5, 65 runs behind England at Trent Bridge on yesterday.
F1 season sparks into life with four-way team battle
It's Saturday night in Bahrain, March 2024. Away from the hullabaloo of paddock gossip and the Red Bull soap opera, the world champions had blown away the field - again - on their more comfortable field of racing tarmac.
Lowry leads British Open with Scheffler on the hunt
Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy and Zach Johnson miss the cut
What the industry thinks of Labour's new housing plans
A new government means a new target for building homes - but developers have heard it all before, says Chris Blackhurst
If museums start returning their items, where will it end?
All parents recall the training they tried to instil in their young children around the concept of sharing. The calm interventions when two go to war over one toy; the sense of panic in one that the other may waddle off with its plastic treasure toddlers
Trump's message isn't one of unity, whatever he might say
It is hard to decide which is the best moniker to apply to him after this strange but magnificent political week for Donald Trump - is he the martyr of Milwaukee, or the messiah of Milwaukee? In the eyes of the faithful - and given the quasi-religious devotion he is now attracting - it is both.
Gershkovich jailed for 16 years for 'spying' in Russia
US journalist Evan Gershkovich has been jailed for 16 years in a Russian prison on \"politically motivated\" charges of espionage.
Israel presence in occupied territory 'unlawful', says UN
The top United Nations court has ruled that Israel's presence in the Palestinian-occupied territories is \"unlawful\" and called for it to end. The court pointed to the building and expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, and East Jerusalem, its annexation and imposition of permanent control over lands, and discriminatory policies against Palestinians.
Trump's 'bizarre, boring' speech good for Democrats
Donald Trump's campaign spent the better part of four days promising a changed Trump - a more solemn, thoughtful man, whose politics were forever altered by a would-be assassin's bullet. That image was shattered over 93 minutes on Thursday night.
Biden privately accepts race for second term almost over
Adviser says president admits path to victory is very narrow
New rights will let workers ignore messages after hours
Workers will soon be able to ignore work-related emails and calls outside office hours under new rules to be introduced by the Labour government. Meeting the party's \"right to switch off\" campaign pledge, the plan will see workers empowered to disconnect from their jobs outside regular hours, including the right to refuse to take on extra work at the weekends.
Six million lives at risk from extreme heat, report warns
Millions of vulnerable people in England are having their lives put at risk by extreme temperatures, a new report has warned. Research by Friends of the Earth found 1.7 million children under five and 4.3 million older people are at high risk of developing heat-related illness as record extreme summer temperatures become more common across the UK.
Five arrested after rioters in Leeds overturned police car
Unrest began after social workers dealt with residential issue
Is imprisoning protesters necessary or authoritarian?
Amnesty International has expressed \"alarm\" at the four- and five-year sentences imposed on five Just Stop Oil protesters, which are thought to be the longest ever handed down for a peaceful demonstration.
Starmer is fine at diplomacy – but that was the easy part
Striking a new tone on the EU was not a problem for the new prime minister, writes Andrew Grice. The second phase coming up with detailed policy - will be much more difficult
Ukraine must be allowed to strike Russia, says Zelensky
President urges Keir Starmer to 'show leadership' and permit British missiles to be used on targets inside Russian territory
Turning it off and on again won't fix a broken internet
Yesterday's global computer shutdown has been billed as the most serious the world has ever seen. We should view it as a timely warning and prepare for worse, says Chris Blackhurst
Security giant CrowdStrike is £60bn Nasdaq favourite
Before this week, CrowdStrike was known for finding the cause of problems, rather than causing them. The company headquartered in Austin, Texas, but with a reach across the world - was most famous for having investigated large-scale hacks, such as those on Sony Pictures and breaches at the Democratic National Committee that it blamed on Russian spies.
IT outage causes worldwide chaos that could last weeks
An unprecedented global computer outage caused major chaos across Britain and around the world without warning yesterday grounding thousands of flights, knocking TV stations off air and leaving patients unable to see doctors.
Von Der Leyen Wins Second Term As President Of EU
'Next five years will define our place in the world,' she says
Women And Girls 'Treated Like Meat' In Police Custody
Women and girls have been treated like meat and subjected to unjustified strip searches in police custody, according to a damning new report.