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Girl, 13, died of allergy after 'failure to follow processes'
A 13-year-old girl died of a severe allergic reaction just hours after taking one sip of a Costa Coffee hot chocolate following a “failure to follow processes”, an inquest concluded yesterday.
Blood scandal victim's wife was told to have an abortion over fears of infecting child
A contaminated blood scandal victim was told by doctors his wife needed to have an abortion due to the risk of infection.
Should Harris fight fire with fire on economic policy?
Much as many would, understandably, like it to be otherwise, the presidential election is not yet over, it is not yet in the bag for Kamala Harris, and there remains a near even chance that Donald J Trump will be sworn in as president of the United States on 25 January 2025.
Majority of Muslims feel less safe in UK after riots
Many Muslims feel less safe living in the UK after far-right rioters targetted mosques and hotels housing asylum seekers, a poll has revealed.
'Violent racist' jailed for attack on lone Black man
A “violent racist” who punched and kicked a Black man in the face during disorder in Manchester has been jailed, after claiming he thought he was joining a rally to “celebrate British culture”.
Farage paid £98,000 each month to present GB News
Clacton MP Nigel Farage is paid almost £98,000 a month to be a presenter on GB News, his register of interests has revealed. The Reform UK leader is paid £97,928.40 a month by the broadcaster, for 32 hours of work.
If Labour wants to succeed, it needs to learn to say 'No'
The ending of two major disputes should be applauded but the government must be prepared to stand firm in future to protect the economy and public services, says Andrew Grice
Train strikes to return just days after pay deal is agreed
Commuters face three more months of train strikes as the drivers’ union Aslef announced further walkouts yesterday less than 48 hours after the government offered a pay deal.
Nothing lasts forever and era of Man City is ending
Jurgen Klopp’s departure means Pep Guardiola stands alone. Only one manager who has won the Premier League still plies his trade in it: Manchester City’s serial champion.
De Ligt buy proves Ten Hag is all-in on Dutch gamble
“Manchester is red,” read the message on a football club’s social-media account; though not from the Manchester club who play in red. It was a cheeky point made by Ajax, surveying Manchester United’s recruitment drive and the addition of two of their alumni, Matthis de Ligt and Noussair Mazraoui, on the same day. It means that, in the former Ajax manager Erik ten Hag’s reign, United have now spent around a quarter of a billion pounds on his Ajax players.
Premier League prices may bring supporters together
As fans feel the squeeze it could force positive change
Good food, good beer and 160mph on a country lane
During F1’s quiet period, Kieran Jackson heads down to the unorthodox setting of rural Worcestershire for the Shelsley Walsh Hill Climb, a racing event with some old-school speed
UK economy is the fastest growing in G7, experts say
But economists warn first-half gains are unlikely to continue
THAT TASTES RICH
As a London neighbourhood fights gentrification in the shape of bougie bakery Gail's, Hannah Twiggs looks at the foodie signs that your postcode is on the way up - or down
The Jimmy Lai verdict is a grave and troubling injustice
Jimmy Lai, together with his friends in Hong Kong, ranks alongside the world’s greatest dissidents and champions of freedom. Lai along with Martin Lee, the father of Hong Kong’s democracy movement, lawyers Margaret Ng and Albert Ho, trade unionist Lee Cheuk-yan, social activist Leung Kwok-hung, and pro-democracy politician Cyd Ho and others have been key figures in Hong Kong’s fight for freedom.
Trump lawyers seek to delay hush-money sentencing
Attempt to push decision back to after election in November
Protests held in India over rape and murder of doctor
Tens of thousands of women took to the streets across India on Wednesday night in protest over the rape and murder of a trainee doctor at a prominent state-run hospital in West Bengal.
Gaza death toll over 40,000 as fresh ceasefire talks start
Fears of Iran attacking Israel give discussions extra urgency
Harry and Meghan begin four-day tour of Colombia
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex were welcomed to Colombia yesterday as they began their four-day tour of the South American nation. Harry and Meghan were met in the capital Bogota by Colombia’s vice-president Francia Marquez and her husband Rafael Yerney Pinillo.
'Ketamine Queen' among five held over Perry death
Five people have been arrested and charged with providing Friends star Matthew Perry with the ketamine that killed him last October, authorities said yesterday. At a press conference, US attorney E Martin Estrada said the suspects include Perry's personal assistant, two doctors, and a North Hollywood woman known as “the Ketamine Queen”.
Extinction Rebellion plans protest at Windsor Castle
Extinction Rebellion (XR) is planning to occupy Windsor Castle for three days of mass protest across the royal grounds, it can be revealed.
'Help...we are in the water'
Desperate SOS sent from doomed migrant boat is revealed
Infected blood payment scheme to start this year
Victims of the infected blood scandal can receive support scheme payments for life, while those who were subjected to unethical research will get up to £15,000 extra under changes to a multibillion-pound compensation plan.
Tens of thousands of train fare convictions are invalid
Judge says he will quash close to 75,000 cases in October
Does the strike deal mean there's light at the end of the tunnel for passengers?
Difficult though it may be to believe, industrial peace is about to descend on Britain’s railways. The government and the leaders of the train drivers’ union, Aslef, have agreed a “no strings” pay rise of 15 per cent, and the union’s members are expected to vote to accept it.
Former nursing watchdog chief said 'whistleblower can go take a running jump'
The former chief executive of the UK’s scandal-hit nursing regulator allegedly said a whistleblower should “take a running jump” after they raised concerns about public safety.
A-level top grades see rise but inequality gap widens
A-level students are celebrating an increase in top grades this year – with almost one in 10 awarded an A* – but inequalities have widened between private and state schools, and boys and girls. Hundreds of thousands of pupils received their A-level results yesterday morning, with more than a quarter (27.8 per cent) awarded an A or A* grade – a rise of 0.6 percentage points on last year.
Judge quits media freedom panel over Hong Kong case
A British judge who was condemned for upholding the conviction of pro-democracy campaigner Jimmy Lai in Hong Kong has quit a top media freedom panel.
British tanks deployed in Ukraine's Russia incursion
British tanks have been used to force back Vladimir Putin's troops during Ukraine's audacious incursion into Russia.
Klitschko takes on Russians and Zelensky in new film
Documentary examines ex-champion Vitali's role as wartime mayor of Kyiv and asks if he aims to be president of Ukraine