UK News

Police may be asked to investigate Hain's donations

Published: 15 January 2008

The Electoral Commission is considering whether to refer the case of Peter Hain's undisclosed donations to the Metropolitan Police.

DJ jailed for breaking restraining order

Published: 15 January 2008

The DJ Andy Kershaw was jailed for three months today for breaking a restraining order involving his ex-partner.

Osborne facing watchdog probe over donations

Published: 15 January 2008

The Shadow chancellor George Osborne was today facing the prospect of a parliamentary investigation over his failure to declare £500,000 in donations in the Register of Members' Interests.

Drifting cargo ship sinks

Published: 15 January 2008

Severe weather was today hampering attempts to salvage the sunk cargo ship Ice Prince which was abandoned by its crew after it got into difficulties in the English Channel.

Energy suppliers 'are profiteering from poor people'

Published: 15 January 2008

Energy companies have been accused of profiteering by charging vulnerable customers –who receive "discounts" on their bills – more than the wealthiercustomers.

Blair's confessor: An audience with Father Michael Seed

Published: 15 January 2008

He's the mysterious 'fisher of men' who's converted some of Britain's most powerful public figures to the Catholic faith – andis as comfortable on the cocktail circuit as he is in the pulpit. As Tony Blair becomes the latest to fall under his spell, Father Michael Seed tells Peter Stanford about life as a saviour of souls

Burrell: Diana wanted to marry heart surgeon

Published: 15 January 2008

After the "rock" came the "hub". Paul Burrell, the royal butler whom Diana, Princess of Wales, considered vital to her existence, claimed yesterday that he co-ordinated her life to such an extent that she asked him to arrange a potential "private wedding" to a Muslim heart surgeon she called her "soul mate", rather than to Dodi Fayed.

Jury picked for Suffolk murder trial

Published: 15 January 2008

A jury of 10 men and two women was selected yesterday to hear the trial of a forklift truck driver accused of murdering five prostitutes during a killing spree carried out at a pace never seen before in Britain.

Cameron to cut MPs' pensions

Published: 15 January 2008

David Cameron pledged to end "gold-plated" pensions for new MPs as part of a package of proposals to restore trust in Parliament.

Challenge to bank charges begins

Published: 15 January 2008

Banks came under pressure to reduce their charges yesterday as a legal challenge that could trigger refunds of millions of pounds to customers got under way.

Brown promises to 'keep Britain at heart of Europe'

Published: 15 January 2008

Gordon Brown said yesterday that it would be a mistake to question Britain's EU membership at a time of global economic problems.

Contractors warn over hospitals 'deep clean'

Published: 14 January 2008

Gordon Brown's much trumpeted hospital "deep clean" is in danger of becoming a "£50 million flash in the pan", cleaning contractors warned today.

Ministers have missed 122 of 346 Whitehall targets

Published: 14 January 2008

The Government has failed to hit more than 100 of the performance targets it set itself as part of its drive to improve public services.

Storm-hit ship adrift in Channel after dramatic rescue

Published: 14 January 2008

Attempts will be made later today to take in tow a storm-hit cargo ship from which 20 crew were dramatically rescued in the Channel last night, said Coastguards.

Turf war: How Britain's playing fields became a battleground

Published: 14 January 2008

Screaming, shouting, fistfights, firearms – and that's just the grown-ups. Simon Usborne discovers why a record numbers of children's football games are abandoned due to parental hooliganism.

£487,000 donations leave Osborne facing inquiries

Published: 14 January 2008

Labour turned the tables on the Tories over political donations after it emerged that the shadow Chancellor, George Osborne, had not declared payments of almost £500,000 from wealthy Tory donors.

Is Prime Minister only man without a lookalike?

Published: 14 January 2008

His clunking fist strategy and oratory tone have provided powerful ammunition to impersonators. But the quest to find Gordon Brown's spitting image has proved far more challenging.

PM backs removal of body parts without consent

Published: 14 January 2008

Gordon Brown is sympathetic to calls for hospitals to be allowed to remove organs from dead patients without explicit consent, but families would have a veto which would allow them to stop organs being used to save the lives of others if, as expected, the Government brings in a system of "presumed consent".

Yachtsman saved after rescue call to his local pub

Published: 14 January 2008

A 61-year-old yachtsman who had to be rescued from his boat in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean first raised the alarm by calling his local pub.

Court to rule if banks overcharged customers with 'punitive' fees

Published: 14 January 2008

The long-awaited court case that will determine whether thousands of aggrieved bank customers can pursue overcharging claims against banks begins today.

Inspector's body found in wood

Published: 14 January 2008

The body of a man found in woodland was that of a police inspector accused of murdering his wife, police confirmed last night.

Brown says Tory 'isolation' on EU puts economy at risk

Published: 14 January 2008

Gordon Brown will adopt a more positive stance on Europe today by promising a policy of "full engagement" with the European Union.

A tale of two cities of culture: Liverpool vs Stavanger

Published: 14 January 2008

Merseyside isn't the only place to have launched its year as European Capital of Culture. So how does it compare with its tiny Norwegian competitor? Mark Hughes reports

Port down to its last fishing boat

Published: 14 January 2008

One of the UK's most famous fishing ports is down to its last boat.

Prisoners 'to be chipped like dogs'

Published: 13 January 2008

Ministers are planning to implant "machine-readable" microchips under the skin of thousands of offenders as part of an expansion of the electronic tagging scheme that would create more space in jails
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