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Post by Admin on Jun 23, 2014 7:21:18 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jun 28, 2014 15:33:50 GMT
Benefits Street star White Dee, or Deirdre Kelly, struggled to swim as the crowd pointed and laughed. Police have retrieved CCTV from TRH hotel complex in Magaluf and launched an urgent appeal for witnesses of the alleged incident. Today, the 42-year-old will meet with organisers to discuss potential compensation for her injuries. The reality TV queen is pictured bottom right at the event with holiday makers who were not involved in the incident, top right on the way to Magaluf with fellow tourists, also uninvolved, and left on the Channel 4 documentary that made her name.
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Post by Admin on Jul 7, 2014 7:55:32 GMT
is the government heading for a storm is there a cover up with a perverts ring and if so will we get to find out or will they cover each others back and the investigation get kicked in to the long grass it seems a lot of the documents have been lost have they been lost over a 100 of them or have they been destroyed knowing that if it did get out it could bring the leading politicians to there knees time will tell
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Post by Admin on Jul 31, 2014 14:01:57 GMT
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Post by Admin on Aug 27, 2014 11:30:15 GMT
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Post by Admin on Sept 4, 2014 10:07:17 GMT
Extraordinary moment hundreds of migrants stormed P&O ferry at Calais in bid to get to Britain - but were held off by fire hose as they tried to overpower police •At least 250 illegal immigrants attempted to board a ferry at the French port •Staff were forced to use a fire hose to stop the crowds pushing past them •Group pushed past machine gun-wielding police and climbed over fences •Eventually stopped as they ran up the main ramp into the ferry's vehicle hold •Incident comes as Calais' mayor threatens to blockade the massive port •Natacha Bouchart is demanding Britain helps control immigrants in the area
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Post by Admin on Sept 23, 2014 13:05:06 GMT
'Shock without awe': US and five Arab nations launch devastating wave of FIFTY bombing missions on ISIS stronghold in Syria - and foil 'imminent terror threat' on America Fanatics' capital Raqqa hit by missiles and bombs in first strikes in Syria 20 militants reported dead already, with online videos show massive blasts Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Jordan 'participated' with the strikes Not immediately clear exactly what the Arab coalition's support involved Strikes saw first combat mission for $139 million F-22 stealth fighter jets Tomahawk missiles also launched from the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea U.S. also carried out separate solo attacks on Al Qaeda group Al Nusra Front - said to be planning an 'imminent attack' on a Western target Syrian President Bashar al-Assad was warned in advance about strikes News comes as ISIS release second propaganda video showing captured British journalist John Cantlie criticising Western attacks on militant group Read more: www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2765982/Pentagon-US-partners-begin-airstrikes-Syria.html#ixzz3E8x2P4NE Follow us: @mailonline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
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Post by Admin on Oct 8, 2014 15:55:07 GMT
Now ISIS clashes spread across Europe: Riot police separate hundreds of Kurds and Islamist supporters in Germany after at least nine are killed in protests in Turkey
could the uk be next
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Post by Admin on Oct 16, 2014 14:36:19 GMT
British jihadis who go to fight for Isil in Syria and Iraq could be tried for treason, the Foreign Secretary has said.
Philip Hammond said that because jihadis have "sworn personal allegiance to the so-called Islamic State" it raises questions about whether "offences of treason have been committed".
There have been no prosecutions for treason since 1946, when William Joyce - known as Lord Haw Haw - was hanged for his German propaganda broadcasts. The death penalty has since been abolished, but the offence remains.
Philip Hollobone, a Tory back-bencher, asked in the Commons: "Will the Foreign Secretary ensure that British jihadists who return from Iraq and Syria are prosecuted for the offence of treason because her actions are treachery against Her Majesty, because aiding and abetting enemies of Her Majesty is one of the greatest offences a British citizen can commit?"
Mr Hammond said: "There are a number of offences under English law with which returning foreign fighters can be charged. We have had a discussion about the allegiance question
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Post by Admin on Oct 27, 2014 9:58:41 GMT
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Post by Admin on Feb 22, 2015 10:06:08 GMT
could the uk be going down the road of war I see the Russians are getting a bit up set at the eu for trying to extend its long arm of the eu and we have Russian bombers flying close to the uk is Russia saying keep of the grass are we in danger that's the question
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Post by Admin on Apr 14, 2015 8:25:03 GMT
more eu money being spent on point less jobs for the boys
EXPOSED: Now EU plans to spend £14MILLION to double number of highly-paid judges
THE European Union is planning to double the number of highly-paid judges at its Court of Justice in a move that will cost more than £14 million.
Ministers will vote on the change on May 16, although it looks likely Britain will be outvoted
Cases at the bureaucratic court have edged up just 26 per cent and officials recommended the appointment of just 12 new judges.
But after years of red tape and bickering between member states that number will bulge to 28 – and each will be paid a salary of more than €220,000 (£158,000).
The costly General Court currently has one judge per country, totalling 28 – but diplomats refused to agree on certain countries having more.
The number is now set to double after a vote by European ministers on May 19.
While the UK's representatives are strongly opposing the vote, it is almost inevitable that they will be downvoted by other nations.
Even the court itself opposes the change, which Brussels insiders consider a waste of money at a time when budgets are squeezed and wages are stagnating across the Eurozone.
Criticising the vote, court president Marc Jaeger wrote in the Financial Times: "Thee are more appropriate, more effective and less onerous means by which to strengthen the general court and to achieve better and even faster outcomes for litigants."
And a diplomat told The Times: "This is a big setback for countries like the UK, especially, that wanted to show EU institutions can be reformed and streamlined.
"It doesn't look good."
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Post by Admin on May 20, 2015 12:08:07 GMT
Leaving EU could be massive boost for British jobs, says former CBI boss Lord Digby Jones
ONE of Britain’s most celebrated businessmen today called for an early referendum on the country’s membership of the EU, saying an exit could boost competiveness in global markets.
WARNING Lord Digby Jones says PM s tactics to renegotiate then call vote are insane WARNING: Lord Digby Jones says PM's tactics to renegotiate then call vote are 'insane' [GETTY]
Digby Jones, a former trade minister under Gordon Brown, and now Lord Jones of Birmingham, said the UK was being dictated to by an “unelected ruling elite” who were “destroying” British jobs.
The former director general of the CBI urged David Cameron to bring forward his proposed referendum on EU membership from 2017.
He said the Prime Minister’s pledge to renegotiate the treaty with Brussels was unlikely to achieve more than "minor adjustments" to its system of regulations and subsidies.
A vote should be staged "as soon as possible", he wrote in a scathing article for The Times today.
His comments contrast with the current views of the CBI, which this week issued a strong case for the UK remaining in Europe despite the EU's accounts not having been signed off for 19 years.
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Post by Admin on Oct 16, 2015 15:20:12 GMT
this is what happens when you sell uk company's over seas
Tata Steel is to announce 1,200 UK job cuts next week.
The firm is expected to significantly reduce the workforce at its Scunthorpe steel plant, which employs 3,000 people and is one of the UK's biggest.
Tata may also cut jobs in Scotland, at Clydebridge in Cambuslang and Dalzell in Motherwell.
The company declined to confirm the job cuts, but said it had been facing challenges in the UK such as a surge in steel imports, and the strong pound.
A spokesman said: "We've made a number of structural changes to our UK business over the last months and years to make us more competitive. Like all companies we continue to review the performance of our business."
Roy Rickhuss, general secretary of the Community union, said it would seek talks with Tata Steel to discuss ways that jobs could be saved.
"This is yet another blow to our steel communities and demonstrates the precarious state of the UK steel industry and emphasises the need for government action," he said.
The potential job losses come as unions called on ministers to take "concrete and positive" action to save the UK steel industry.
The steel sector has been hit by SSI's decision to close its blast furnace and coke ovens in Redcar.
Business Secretary Sajid Javid chaired a steel summit involving unions, business leaders and ministers in Rotherham on Friday that was organised following the SSI closure.
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Post by Admin on Oct 17, 2015 15:34:05 GMT
'We are protecting the freedoms of European citizens': Hungary defends closing its Croatian border as first busload of migrants reach Slovenia
Hungary defends closing its Croatian border as first busload of migrants reaches Slovenia
The blockade at the Hungary-Croatia border forced thousands of migrants (left and right) and refugees to divert towards the tiny country of Slovenia, which has cancelled all trains from Croatia to stop them arriving that way. Hungarian let the last few migrants into the country before sealing the border with a barbed wire fence (inset) at around 1am (11pm GMT) last night. Many of them are trying to reach Germany and Austria via Budapest, having travelled thousands of miles from their war-torn homes in the Middle East and Africa. Hungary's latest shut-down came as an EU deal with Turkey - designed to stop the flow of migrants - looked on the brink of collapse. Turkey said the EU had not offered up enough money or housing to more than 600,000 mostly-Syrian people to have arrived on Europe's shores this year. 'They announce they'll take in 30,000 to 40,000 refugees and then they are nominated for the Nobel for that. We are hosting two and a half million refugees but nobody cares,' said Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
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