CATEGORIES
Categories
Woman's heart stopped in cold water therapy session, inquest hears
A woman who died during a water therapy session near the Peak District probably suffered \"sudden cardiac death\" caused by the cold water, an inquest has heard.
Soaring demand for muzzles and dog classes prior to XL bully ban
Demand for dog muzzles and training classes for American XL bully dogs has soared since Rishi Sunak said the breed would be banned by the year end.
Broadcasting behind bars - Prisoners using secret phones to share lives on social media
Prisoners are using secret smartphones to broadcast their lives on social media, with some interviewing cellmates like jailhouse Paxmans and others performing Jackass-style stunts. Many show off their rapping skills and a few give Jamie Oliver a run for his money by showcasing what can be cooked in a prison kettle.
Young offenders Children talking to therapists via cell door hatches
Traumatised children in a young offender institution are talking to psychologists through the hatch in their cell doors as there are not enough guards to unlock them for therapy sessions, the Guardian has learned.
Youth jails could be allowed to use pepper spray to curb rise in violence
Prison officers in England and Wales could be allowed to use pepper spray to incapacitate children under plans to curb a sharp increase in violence at young offender institutions, the Guardian has learned.
Let people plant trees to improve urban areas, says Gove adviser
A right to plant trees and other greenery in public spaces should be given to people across Britain, an adviser to Michael Gove has said.
Northern Tories 'will back HS2 delay if east-west line preserved'
The chair of an influential group of Conservative MPs who represent northern constituencies has signalled they may be open to a compromise that would see the second phase of HS2 delayed for years.
Concern as Antarctica's sea ice levels break record for lowest annual maximum amount
Antarctica has probably broken the record for the lowest annual maximum amount of sea ice around the continent, beating the previous low by im sq km (386,000 sq miles).
Public asked by British Museum to help recover missing items
The British Museum has asked the public to help it identify and recover items believed to have been stolen from its collection, as it announced that it had already retrieved 60 missing items and identified a further 300.
Carnival of taxis and two cans of Red Bull: comedian's 11-hour odyssey with Avanti
There are many ways to cope with a rail journey from hell. Some raid the onboard shop for mini bottles of wine; others forge new friendships amid the misery. The really unlucky ones end up urinating in empty Pringles pots, or climbing over 7ft fences (complete with spikes) when they arrive so late that the station has been closed.
UN rebukes Braverman over human rights claim
Suella Braverman has been rebuked by the UN refugee agency after claiming that world leaders have failed to make wholesale reform of human rights laws because of fears of being branded \"racist or illiberal\".
'Feminist approach' to cancer could save 800,000 women's lives a year
Health experts are calling for a \"feminist approach\" to cancer to eliminate inequalities as research revealed 800,000 women worldwide are dying needlessly every year because they are denied optimal care.
Nissan Vows To Be All Electric By 2030 Despite Sunak's U-Turn
Nissan vowed yesterday to "press ahead" with a plan to sell only electric vehicles in Europe by 2030 despite Rishi Sunak's delay to the UK ban on new petrol and diesel car sales.
Ignorance Of History Of UK Nations A Risk To Union Olusoga
Schools in the UK need to teach the history of all four nations, the historian David Olusoga has said, warning that ambivalence and disinterest risk pulling apart the union.
Early Life Or Just A Rock? Scientists Train Tool To Tell The Difference
It is the cloud that overshadows the search for alien life: for all the spacecraft sent to faraway worlds, researchers do not really know what to look for when it comes to evidence of life elsewhere.
'We're a bit of an oddity' Exeter up for the cup after 20 years of fan ownership
League One side host Lutonin the League Cup tonight but as their chair says: Tm sad at how other clubs judge success’
Ay, carrom-ba! Ashwin's wizardry deserves a crowning glory of World Cup success on home soil
Let's talk about the David Warner ball first, and then zoom out from there, because if you're going to try to get your head around the disorienting, shapeshifting puzzle that is Ravichandran Ashwin then you need to realise there are layers and mirrors to this thing. Some of the walls move and some do not.
Recovering Van Gogh How £5m painting wound up in an Ikea bag
Arthur Brand stands at the front door to his flat in east Amsterdam, where a week ago he took an extraordinary delivery: a stolen Vincent van Gogh painting worth up to £5.2m.
Canadian speaker apologises for applauding veteran of Nazi unit
Canada has become embroiled in political controversy after members of its House of Commons were encouraged to join in a standing ovation for an individual who fought in Ukraine with a Nazi military unit accused of war crimes during the second world war.
US stages love-in for Pacific island leaders in effort to curb China influence
Joe Biden has offered $40bn (£33bn) in economic aid to Pacific islands at a White House meeting with leaders from the region aimed at bolstering US engagement in the face of the growing Chinese presence.
'Diabolik', mafia boss behind some of Italy's worst killings, dies at 61
Matteo Messina Denaro, the \"last godfather\" of the Sicilian mafia, who was accused of orchestrating some of the most heinous crimes perpetrated by the Cosa Nostra, has died after a long illness.
Arms cache discovered in Kosovo after village siege
Kosovan authorities say they have recovered a large cache of arms after ethnic Serb gunmen stormed a village in the restive north at the weekend, battling police and barricading themselves in a monastery.
‘Inspiring’ Erdogan hails military victory by Azerbaijan
The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and the Azerbaijani leader, Ilham Aliyev, have lauded Baku's military victory in Nagorno-Karabakh as thousands of ethnic Armenians flee their homes from the breakaway region into Armenia.
Art review Fresh romp through the perversity of the everyday
Awax-cast erect penis is planted on a chair, and a pair of pink dentures sits upright on the other. The chairs are corralled behind a low barrier, to deter the adventurous from taking a seat and doing themselves a mischief.
Ice house to become circus centre as part of £12.2m lottery grants
A 19th-century thatched ice house is to be transformed into a circus training centre.
Braverman pushes for tougher laws on asylum in US speech
Gay people and women seeking asylum from oppressive regimes should prove they face life-threatening persecution before being given refugee status, Suella Braverman told a US audience last night.
Lib Dems vote to keep target on housing in blow to Davey
Liberal Democrat members handed a public rebuke yesterday to Ed Davey before his key speech to the party conference, rebelling in large numbers against a plan to scrap national targets for housebuilding.
Supershoes Sportswear brands go toe to toe in push to get on podium
It has been said that shoes maketh the man. But did a pair of trainers make Ethiopia's Tigist Assefa a record-breaking marathon runner?
Who needs HS2 when you can take the helicopter? And where is this 'Manchester' anyway?
That “inaction man” jibe had really hurt. Rishi Sunak had left PMQs in a right strop.
Violence, isolation and rats in cells The harsh reality of life on the inside
It is a sunny morning outside HMP Wandsworth and tourists are pointing at a food lorry waiting to go through the portcullis-style gate.