Guilty of grieving: Nightmare ordeal of heartbroken father who faced jail - for the 'crime' of 'staring' at the family of drug driver who killed his teenage daughter

Liberty Baker's father faced jail for speaking to family of drug driver who killed

A grieving father last night said he had lost faith in the justice system after being accused of harassing his girl's killer. Police launched an investigation into Paul Baker (pictured left), 47, following complaints from the family of death driver Robert Blackwell. The 19-year-old tested positive for cannabis after mowing down Mr Baker's daughter Liberty (right), 14, in Witney, Oxfordshire last year. He had also been speeding and lost control while texting at the wheel.

Asian dentist almost lost his hand 'after white supremacist hacked him with a machete in Tesco aisle in revenge for Lee Rigby' 

Zack Davies 'hacked Asian man with a machete in Tesco in revenge for Lee Rigby'

Zack Davies (pictured) shouted 'this is for Lee Rigby' as he brandished a machete and started hacking at an Asian dentist who had gone to a Tesco in Mold, North Wales to buy his lunch, a court was told. Mold Crown Court heard the victim's account of the frightening attack which left him with life-changing injuries. The terrified 24-year-old's ordeal only ended when a former soldier bravely stepped in his way and persuaded Davies to drop his weapon. White supremacist and neo-Nazi material was found when police later raided Davies' home, his trial was told. Davies has admitted attacking Sarandev Bhambra because he was Asian, but denies attempted murder.

BREAKING NEWS: Former chief inspector of schools Sir Chris Woodhead dies at 68 after long battle with motor neurone disease

The 68-year-old, who was the top schools watchdog for six years until 2000 and had some fierce clashes with teaching unions, was diagnosed with the disease in 2006.

EXCLUSIVE: Senior British ISIS recruiter 'is a sex pest who steals girls from fellow fighters and only helps the prettiest would-be jihadi brides who contact him on Skype to go to Syria

Raphael Hostey (pictured), a senior British recruiter for ISIS, has accused of forcing girls who ask for help crossing the Turkey-Syria border into taking off their head coverings so 'he can pick the prettiest ones'.

Extraordinary moment a City worker was filmed snorting cocaine on the Tube before telling shocked passengers: 'I just like taking it' 

The dazed-looking drug user was filmed taking the Class A substance on a southbound Northern Line train between Elephant and Castle and Kennington in south London

RAF cadet, 14, was beaten and kicked senseless by teenage gang when he turned Good Samaritan to try to help one of them

Jacob Eaton, 14, was targeted by a group of 20 thugs after he tried to help a youth who was drunkenly stumbling in the road. He was punched, kicked and knocked unconscious in Westfield, Sheffield.

Bing

Mother furious after 'shockingly awful' experience when Harrods security staff banned her disabled son, 3, from using his wheelchair in the store 

Shelly Wall furious after Harrods staff banned her son from using his wheelchair

Shelly Wall, 43, was on a family trip to London with her son Noah (together right), who was born with spina bifida, when she was told he could not take his specially modified wheelchair (inset) into the luxury department store in Knightsbridge yesterday. A security guard said the blue ZipZac wheelchair, which was being carried by his sister Steph (left), would have to be left in the luggage department while they visited the Disney Cafe in store as they considered his aid to be a 'toy'. Mrs Wall, from Abbeytown in Cumbria, protested with the staff member that Noah legs 'don't work' as he is paralysed from the waist down but ended up leaving in tears. Harrods has since apologised for the 'unintentional error'.

Ramadan boosts Britain's big supermarkets with £100million sales uplift as Muslims prepare lavish sundown meals

Three million Muslims in the UK will break their fast with lavish sundown meals during the Islamic holy month, which began last Thursday and ends with the Eid celebration on June 18 this year.

Chris Evans WILL present new series of TFI Friday as Channel 4 reveals Nineties hit is to return despite host landing Top Gear job

Chris Evans seen out in London
Featuring: Chris Evans
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 19 Jun 2015
Credit: WENN.com

The DJ will make eight episodes of the chat show, which was a hit in the Nineties before being resurrected earlier this month for what was said to be a one-off special.

Transgender man who had surgery to remove his breasts now says he does not want a full sex change until after he has married and become a mother

Kay Browning, 25, from Tiverton, Devon, underwent NHS-funded surgery this month but says he wants to remain anatomically as a woman until he and his partner can conceive.

Andy Murrary's new woman coach has brought out his feminine side and helped his tennis, says mother Judy

Murray, 28, who won his fourth Queen's Club crown over the weekend, has been coached by former Wimbledon champion Amelie Mauresmo (pictured together) for just over a year.

Brussels orders Britain to get more stay-at-home mothers back to work despite record boom in working women

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British women are twice as likely as those in the rest of Europe to be stay-at-home mothers according to the EU, which has demanded more government action to tackle the 'social challenge'.

Two men and teenager arrested over house fire which killed three including a 17-year-old mother and her six-month-old daughter 

A 17-year-old boy and two men, aged 21 and 43, have been arrested on suspicion of murder in connection with the house fire in Langley Mill, Derbyshire, which killed three people.

Mother of three, 34, stole £50 worth of goods from Asda using a 7p 'reduced price' sticker that she had hidden in her bra when she used the self-scan till

Claire Dunleavy stole £50 worth of goods from Asda using a 7p ‘reduced price’ sticker

Claire Dunleavy, 34 (pictured left) scanned the cut-price sticker - initially used on a loaf of bread - while simultaneously putting more expensive items into her basket at the store in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent (right). But the fraudster was caught when her receipt showed she had bought 22 bundles of reduced bread - and there wasn't a single loaf in her basket. A court heard how Dunleavy paid just £15.66 for £69.02 worth of items by using the code. Inquiries carried out by the store revealed that Dunleavy had carried out the same scam on two successive days prior to be being caught, the court heard. Dunleavy, from Bentilee, Stoke-on-Trent, was spared jail after pleading guilty to two charges of fraud by false representation. The court heard she had been given a 12-month conditional discharge for shoplifting just two weeks before the incident in Asda. During that crime spree, she had stolen children's toys from Toys R Us worth £170.

'I didn't read the small print, the tax was a disgrace': Woman sings sarcastic ballad about Ryanair's fees for punters in pub

Punters cheered and hollered as Frances Kennedy performed her four-minute song at a packed pub as Cahersiveen, Ireland hosted the Fleadh Cheoil Chiarrai music festival.

Man woke up with bike lock stuck around his neck after friends pranked him while he slept ... then LOST the keys 

Firefighters were forced to use an angle grinder to remove the hardened-steel lock after the man, aged in his 20s, was marched into Coventry Fire Station by his angry mother.

British tourists waste £350 MILLION a year on holiday... because they don't have the maths to cope with currency conversions

Designer clothing topping the list of the most costly mistakes by Britons who struggle with basic conversions, with one in four tourists running out of cash abroad due to a currency miscalculation.

Why a woman's postcode could determine her chance of beating ovarian cancer: Those in Birmingham or London are 40% more likely to survive than in Kent and Sussex

Patients' chance of getting on a medical trial - the way to get most modern medicines - varies from 65 per cent in some parts of Britain to three per cent in others, according to Target Ovarian Cancer charity.

French wildcat strikes close Calais and the Channel Tunnel amid reports migrants are exploiting the traffic chaos to sneek onto trucks bound for Britain

Striking employees of the French company My Ferry Link, a cross-channel ferry service, stand in front of tyres set on fire as they block the access to the Channel Tunnel on June 23, 2015 in Calais, northern France. AFP PHOTO PHILIPPE HUGUENPHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/Getty Images

Around 100 workers from MyFerryLink blocked access to the Channel Tunnel and burned tyres on the main road leading to the French port in a row over redundancy.

EXCLUSIVE - Bizarre twist in murder of British millionaire at Spanish villa: Police find gunshot residue on new girlfriend who said she was OUTSIDE 'when he was shot dead by jealous model ex'

Police investigating Andy Bush murder find gunshot residue on girlfriend

Bristol-born millionaire Andy Bush, 48, was shot dead at his villa on the Costa del Sol. His model ex-girlfriend, Mayka Kukucova, 25, (together inset) has been accused and is being held in a Malaga prison. She is expected to be charged with his homicide, which in Spain is a halfway house between manslaughter and murder. But the discovery of gunshot residue on his new girlfriend, 22-year-old Maria Morotaeva, (main) has added confusion to the previously 'open and shut' case. She has insisted she was outside the villa when Mr Bush was shot. Ms Morotaeva insisted she knew nothing of the police ballistics report.

The party's over: Police in Magaluf ordered to punish badly-behaved Britons as by-laws aimed at curbing drinking, nudity and urinating in the street are finally enforced

Unruly visitors will be hit with fines by the weekend as the Spanish tourist resort - a magnet for young holidaymakers looking for sun, sand and sex - cracks down on anti-social behaviour.

Up to 100 Brits jailed in France in the past year for trying to smuggle migrants into the UK through Calais

Migrants walk on June 17, 2015 towards the ferry port of Calais, northern France. Around 3,000 migrants built makeshift shelters in the so-called 'New Jungle' before trying to go to England. AFP PHOTO / PHILIPPE HUGUENPHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/Getty Images

People from the UK now make up now make up a quarter of those brought before the Calais courts in human trafficking cases, according to a French deputy prosecutor.

Number of families buying their own home falls for first time in a CENTURY as dream of buying a property 'dies' for millions

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Just 64 per cent of homes in England and Wales are now owner-occupied - down five per cent in 10 years, according to a new analysis published by the Office for National Statistics.

50 everyday chemicals that can mix to raise cancer risk: Substances found in fried potatoes, handwash and suncream could lead to cancer if combined 

New research has revealed that 50 everyday chemicals 'might lie behind the global cancer epidemic', said scientists. Previous studies may have underestimated the potential danger.

Parlez vous Anglais? 10,000 French students sign petition to have 'impossible' English question removed from marking for their baccalaureate

A stock photo of teenage girls writing exams. 


Image shot 2006. Exact date unknown.

French high school students claim the English words 'coping' and 'concerns' were too hard to understand, and some 12,000 are now demanding that the question is struck of the baccalaureate exam.

£12,000 a square METRE: Kensington and Chelsea named most expensive place for property in the country at six times national average

A three bedroom Mansion Block apartment with wood floors in the receptions. Being located just south of the Kings Road the apartment is available either furnished or unfurnished and would ideally suit professional sharers looking for an apartment in Chelsea.
Price: £725 per week


http://zoopla.homesandproperty.co.uk/to-rent/details/17492403?search_identifier=91042ab455a5eb21163923c0a30d8a53

This is nearly six times the national average of £2,033, and some £2,000 ahead of the area in second place, Westminster, where one square metre of a property costs £9,571.

The 12-year-old boy who reads Ulysses for fun and a girl, 9, whose friends call her a walking encyclopaedia: Meet the young geniuses who will fight it out to be Britain's brainiest child

Child Genius and those who will fight it out to be Britain's brainiest child

Schoolboy Thomas, left, scores 162 on Mensa's IQ scale and reads advanced economic textbooks and James Joyce's best-known book for pleasure. Meanwhile nine-year-old Neha, right, is a budding scientist and read her mother's 395-page PhD paper on the properties of metals at the tender age of three. The young rivals are among the children who will compete in a series of challenges when Channel 4's controversial show Child Genius returns next Tuesday. Last year, the show was criticised for showing children bursting into tears as the pressure of the competition became too much for them to handle.

Is this where Hatton Garden robbers planned diamond heist? Tiny outbuilding in grounds of north London pub was raided by police six weeks after robbery

The tiny outbuilding in the grounds of a North London pub is where gang members are thought to have plotted the Hatton Garden jewel robbery and stored their equipment for the raid.

The women who built 'The Ladies' Bridge': Female workers who helped construct Waterloo Bridge during WWII are finally honoured 70 years on

EMBARGOED TO 0001 TUESDAY JUNE 23
Undated handout photo of Dorothy a female welder cleaning her face whilst working at Waterloo Bridge, 1944. The key role played by women in building London's Waterloo Bridge during the Second World War has been officially recognised as part of its protected status. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Tuesday June 23, 2015. The Grade II* listed bridge which spans the Thames in central London, has been re-listed on the National Heritage List to include information on the role played by women in its construction from 1937 to 1945. The re-listing by Heritage Minister Tracey Crouch was recommended by government heritage agency Historic England at the start of the #builtbywomen campaign to recognise women's involvement in building England, and marks National Women in Engineering Day. See PA story HERITAGE Women. Photo credit should read: Daily Herald Archive/Science & Society Picture Library/PA Wire
NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in f

The Grade II* listed bridge in central London, has been relisted on the National Heritage List to include information on the role played by women in its construction from 1937 to 1945.

On board GPs, shops and gyms: What passengers expect trains on £50bn HS2 high-speed line to be equipped with

A passenger aboard a high speed train at London's St. Pancras International station in London, Britain, 28 January 2013. 


The British government has announced the next phase of the 40 billion euro HS2 high-speed rail, 28 January. The route of phase two will travel from Birmingham to Manchester and Leeds along two northbound routes.  


EPA/ANDY RAIN
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Other ideas for HS2, whose first phase will run from London to Birmingham from 2026, included guarantee seats and music and high-quality local food at stations.

Put a recycling bin in your bathroom! The latest infuriating demand from green police to cut number of shampoo bottles and toilet roll tubes we throw away

The WRAP quango said too many people put empty shampoo bottles and toilet roll tubes with their general rubbish, and so should have an extra bin for these.

Hit someone with a biscuit and you could be charged with ABH: Incident among number of trivial cases police have recorded as violent crimes 

Stephen Bett, the Police and Crime Commissioner for Norfolk cited the 'jaw dropping' example, after demanding an investigation into why there has been a 14% rise in crime in the country.

Justice system failing crime victims, says Gove: 'But it provides world-beating service for wealthy foreigners'

Britain's dysfunctional justice system is providing a 'world-beating service' to rich foreigners but 'failing' our own victims of crime, Michael Gove will say today.

It is 'challenging' getting Florence, 3, to start school this year, says Cameron

Prime Minister David Cameron talks to students during a visit to Ormiston Bolingbroke Academy in Runcorn, where he signalled that ministers are preparing deep cuts to tax credits as he defended the Government's plans to slash £12 billion from the welfare bill. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Monday June 22, 2015. The Prime Minister said that Britain needed to become a "a higher wage, lower tax, lower welfare society" rather than simply dealing with "symptoms" of low pay by topping up people's pay packets. See PA story POLITICS Cameron. Photo credit should read: Peter Byrne/PA Wire

The Prime Minister revealed the struggle to get his daughter 'school ready' before term starts, as the government considers allowing parents to delay young children starting school for a year.

Ministers clash over flying the rainbow flag as Cabinet Office backs gay rights despite Foreign Secretary's ban

Date: 22/06/15 
PH:  Nick Edwards
Pictured:  Rainbow Flag flying from the Cabinet Office 
Caption: Rainbow Flag flying from the Cabinet Office in Westminster, Central London today, It will be flown all week to celebrate Pride in London parade which will take place this Saturday, 27 June. The Rainbow flag, is a symbol of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender

Mr Hammond last week banned the flag being flown from the Foreign Office and British embassies but today Cabinet Office Matthew Hancock said it would be seen over Whitehall.

Time 'fast approaching' for Cameron to tell us what he wants from Brussels, warns Boris Johnson as he urges PM to be 'bold'

Mayor of London Boris Johnson, speaks ahead of a flag raising ceremony at City Hall in London, on 22 June, 2015, to honour members of the armed forces past and present in the lead up to National Armed Forces day which takes place on June 27. AFP PHOTO / BEN STANSALLBEN STANSALL/AFP/Getty Images

The Prime Minister is expected to formally tell EU leaders that he wants a new deal for Britain at a crunch Brussels summit on Thursday - but will not set out a 'shopping list' of demands.

Britain must leave EU if it refuses to change, business chiefs tell Cameron: Group demands PM comes back with veto over EU laws and control of employment rules

EU flag

The study sets out ten major reforms which the report suggests David Cameron must seek from EU leaders before the in/out referendum he has pledged to hold by the end of 2017.

'Waiter, my hake is completely unadorned!' From butter in soup to cheesy creme brulee, the bizarre complaints made by peers about food in the House of Lords

Queen Elizabeth II and  Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh in the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament at the Palace of Westminster in London. 

PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Wednesday May 27, 2015. See PA story POLITICS Speech. Photo credit should read: Arthur Edwards/The Sun/PA Wire

Despite the fact that peers enjoy subsidised food and drink - including 'prawn and lobster meat folded into Avugar caviar' for just £10 - they have lodged a number of complaints with catering chiefs.

Why did police pick on me, asks motorway middle lane roadhog: Painter and decorator fined £940 accuses force of treating him like a common criminal 

Driver who was first in UK convicted of being a 'middle lane hogger' speaks out

Ian Stephens from Wigan in Lancashire was convicted of 'middle lane hogging' after refusing to move out of the central lane of the M62 between Rochdale and Huddersfield last year. Police said six drivers had to brake and swerve to overtake his Citroen Berlingo van, as it travelled on the eastbound carriage of the motorway near Junction 23 at 60mph.

Watchdog looks at dodgy tactics of phone giants: Firms that stop customers leaving to be investigated by Ofcom over six months 

Watchdog Ofcom is to monitor the switch arrangements of companies such as Sky, BT, Virgin, Talk Talk and EE, after they were accused of breaking fair trading laws for customers.

Chocs away...Thorntons is sold to Ferrero Rocher: Board agrees £111.9m deal with Italian giant

Britain's biggest chocolate firm is being bought by the company that makes Ferrero Rocher. Thorntons is the latest famous UK confectionary brand to go to a foreign buyer.

It's only June! Argos has already made its Christmas wish-list... with children expected to want My Friend Freddy and Tumbling Stuart this year 

Also on the list are a £49.99 Tumbling Stuart animatronic soft toy based on the Minion film character, a £59.99 Nerf Modulus dart blaster and the £99.99 Real FX is a slotless racing game.

Bagpuss could wake up again: Show's creator says he thinks show may work well in a 'New England atmosphere' and also hints Ivor the Engine could return 

Designer Peter Firmin also poured scorn on today's use of computer generated imagery on children's TV saying that the faces of the characters have no soul because their eyes aren't real.

Child Genius is back: Channel 4's controversial show that made children burst into tears returns to screens again

One is a 12-year-old who reads Ulysses for fun and the other has been dubbed a 'walking encyclopaedia' by her primary school friends. Channel 4 Child Genius has returned.

Indiana Jones, our greatest ever film hero: Character beats James Bond and Han Solo to top spot in poll of movie fans 

The intrepid archaeologist played by Harrison Ford (pictured) topped the poll of 10,000 fans, with Breaking Bad's Walter White voted number one greatest TV character of all time by Empire magazine readers.

Greeks edge towards compromise as debt talks go to the wire: Eleventh-hour deal said to be on the table but IMF chief says there is 'still a huge amount of work to do'

Greeks edge towards compromise as debt talks go to the wire

Greece was said to be edging towards an 'eleventh hour' compromise as the latest talks to resolve its debt crisis continued amid pro-EU demonstrations in Athens (pictured) last night. Greek economy minister Giorgios Stathakis said he is confident that the latest plans were the basis for a settlement with its creditors, while International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde warned there remained a 'huge amount of work to do in the next 48 hours' to achieve a deal.

Tories take aim at Brown's tax credits that let firms pay staff 'poverty wages': Ministers threat as they prepare for budget assault on £30bn system

Ministers last night threatened to get tough with firms paying 'poverty wages', as they prepared for a Budget assault on Britain's £30billion tax credits bill.

Ministers WILL meet 2% defence spending target... by including peacekeeping cash too

Peacekeeping missions will be counted as defence spending for the first time to ensure the UK is 'comfortably over' the Nato expenditure target, it emerged yesterday.

Mr Angry! IDS gave Labour a tonking: QUENTIN LETTS Yesterday in Parliament 

You can hardly blame Iain Duncan Smith for occasionally exploding. The Left are extremely irritating when it comes to welfare cuts. We will therefore forgive him becoming so batey.

Taxpayer forced to foot multi-million legal bill to defend shamed HBOS and RBS bankers: Costs spiral after report into who was to blame delayed by lawyers

The rolls played in the collapse of state-backed Halifax Bank of Scotland by chief executive James Crosby (left) and his successor Andy Hornby (right) are being probed by regulators.

Now small firms back PM's bid to reform EU: British Chambers of Commerce set to support Cameron's strategy after he rejects Tory calls to publish his demands 

The British Chambers of Commerce, which represents tens of thousands of firms, said we must not 'sleepwalk into an ever closer union' and the 'regulatory burdens' imposed by EU.

Top journalist Sue takes cancer fight to BBC foyer: Reporter urges passers-by to become stem cell donors as she faces 'race against time' to beat leukaemia 

She has risked her life reporting from some of the most dangerous war zones but today award-winning journalist Sue Lloyd-Roberts was fighting her own personal battle - in the foyer of the BBC.

High demand means house sellers refuse to cut prices: Reduction on asking amounts slumps to five-year low 

The price of the average house advertised online last month was cut by just 6.05 per cent - the lowest figure since comparable records began in August 2010, according to property website Zoopla.

EU calls for more mothers to go to work: Bureaucrats accused of bullying after report finds British women are twice as likely not to return to work as the rest of Europe

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The percentage of British women who did not work or worked part-time 'due to personal and family responsibilities' was 12.5 per cent, almost twice as high as the EU average of 6.3 per cent.

Carnage on the streets of London: Campaigners call for ban on ALL private cars and lorries from capital's crowded narrow streets as two more cyclists join the six others to have died this year alone

London Cycling Campaign call for ban cars in capital as two more cyclists die

On Monday, a 26-year-old woman was crushed to death by a lorry in central London, and a 50-year-old man was killed in a crash with a car in north-west London in the early hours of Sunday. Their deaths follow (clockwise from top left): Stephanie Turner, 29, who died just a few miles from her North London home after a collision with a lorry in January, Akis Kollaros, 34, who died on February 2, Federica Baldassa, 26, a Italian-born fashion buyer died in a cycle-lorry crash in Holborn on February 6, Claire Hitier-Abadie, 36, a mother-of-two, who was killed in an accident in Victoria in February, Moira Gemmill, 55, who was killed in a collision with a tipper truck in Westminster in April and Esther Hartsilver, 32, died after an accident in Camberwell in May.

Almost one in four children 'think playing video games with their friends is exercise' 

Children are becoming so glued to screens that nearly a quarter think video games are a form of exercise, a survey has found. Future generations are at risk of becoming 'hostages to handheld devices.'

'Letting people with dementia drive is like giving them a shotgun': Countless patients have slipped through the net because of outdated licensing system, doctors warn

Leading members of the British Medical Association have warned that Britain's licensing system and medical procedures are not keeping pace with the nation's ageing population.

Stop making naughty pupils in detention 'celebrities', says government adviser: Teachers told punishments including lines should be abolished

Primary school pupils in classroom with male teacher. 



Image shot 09/2008. Exact date unknown.
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By making children write lines and highlighting their bad behaviour, teachers are making them 'famous' among other students, says  Paul Dix, a former teacher and behaviour management expert.

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Climate change 'to reverse health advances': Experts say past 50 years of progress could be wiped out if Earth's temperature increases

Rising global temperatures would see health hit through storms, floods, droughts and starvation, as well as other possible impacts including shifting patterns of infectious diseases.

Teenage brains are wired to be impatient: Lack of foresight peaks in adolescence, study claims

Led by the Max Planck Institute in Berlin, the study found that teenagers reacted more to immediate rewards. Shown is Harry Enfield's Kevin the Teenager, known for his grumpy attitude.

The end of injections for diabetics? Smart patch can automatically release insulin into the bloodstream

The patch - a thin square no bigger than a penny - is covered with more than one hundred tiny needles, each about the size of an eyelash that can automatically release insulin when needed.

Disgusted wife blasts Jobcentre officials who ordered her husband to attend interview despite the fact that he cannot walk, talk or feed himself 

Nick Gaskin's Wife blasts Jobcentre who ordered husband with multiple sclerosis to attend

Nick Gaskin, 46, from Quorn, Leicestershire, was diagnosed with primary progressive multiple sclerosis 16 years ago and needs wife Tracy, 41, (pictured left with him) to provide 24/7 care. He communicates with Tracy by blinking. Despite this he received a letter (right) from Loughborough Job Centre causing Tracy to ring them and ask why he had been summoned for an interview only to be told if her husband couldn't attend he could do a telephone interview - even though he can't speak.

Pictured: 7-year-old girl killed along with her sister, 6, when a car 'ran into her family' as they crossed the road on the way to school 

Sisters Lily (pictured) and Shelly Wu, aged six and seven, died in hospital after being hit by a car in Handsworth, Birmingham, as they walked with their mother Zhu Lan and their two siblings.

Meet the newborn twins with DIFFERENT birthdays after they were born half an hour apart either side of midnight 

Non-identical twins Benjamin (right) and Theo Storey were born six weeks early at Arrowe Park hospital in Wirral and are together again after Theo came through two days in intensive care.

Surgeons do amazing job rebuilding nose of bite attack victim, 32, using skin from his forehead

Christopher Watson, 32, from South Tyneside, whose nose was bitten off on his work Christmas party night out has had it rebuilt using skin from his forehead.

Train driver realises his cousin was the first British soldier to kill a German in WWI thanks to chance visit to military museum while he was on holiday 

Michael Sambrook, 49, from Essex, uncovered his relative's unique place in history after randomly spotting a sign advertising a regimental museum while on holiday in Cornwall.

Pictured: Three friends who were killed when the car they were in hit a tree and crashed through a wall

Nathan Rhodes, Ryan Case, and Emily Jennings, pictured, died instantly when a blue Citroen Saxo hit a tree and smashed through a wall in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire on Saturday.

Britain and Europe's oldest man dies just two weeks after he celebrated his 111th birthday with a pint of Stella and a whisky

Nazar Singh, from Sunderland, thought to be Europe's oldest man has died just two weeks after he celebrated his 111th birthday with a pint of Stella and a drop of whisky.

Raising a glass as they gorge on dog meat, the Chinese fans of the Yulin festival ignore global fury to begin the annual feast

Fans of China's Yulin dog meat festival ignore global fury

WARNING GRAPHIC CONTENT: Supporters of China's Yulin festival where up to 10,000 dogs - many of them stolen pets - are beaten and caged before being butchered, grilled or boiled, claim the festival is the same as eating turkey at Christmas. Despite global outrage from animal rights activists, supporters of the brutal summer solstice celebration say it has as much cultural value as any other country's traditions. Countless images of traumatised dogs crammed into tiny cages and left in the street before being turned into food are causing shock around the world.

Village named 'Camp Kill Jews' in a bid to appease the Spanish inquisition finally changes its name nearly 400 years later following a referendum of its 50 inhabitants 

A tiny Spanish village has finally changed its name from Castrillo Matajudios, which means 'Camp Kill Jews', to Castrillo Mota de Judios (meaning Jews' Hill Camp) after long standing complaints.

Israel blasts 'biased' UN report which says the Jewish state and Hamas were both guilty of war crimes during 2014 conflict 

U.N. investigators have announced today that both Israel and Palestinian militant groups committed grave abuses of international humanitarian law during the 2014 Gaza conflict.

ISIS offer a Yazidi sex slave as a PRIZE for memorising the Koran in sick 'celebration' of Ramadan 

The brutal militia group known as Islamic State have launched a Koran reading competition which is set to be held in several ISIS mosques in Syria, including the Osama bin Laden mosque.

WORLD NEWS

       

MAX HASTINGS: Any deal stitched up with the Greeks will be a victory for cowardice - and only make the euro crisis worse

The Greek government stubbornly refuses to adopt any measure that would hit the pockets of its political clients, especially the bloated state employment sector, writes MAX HASTINGS.

DAMIAN THOMPSON: Shock! Horror! At LAST a BBC boss who admits it's biased

DAMIAN THOMPSON: Roger Mosey, former head of BBC TV news, has published a book confirming that Auntie leans so far Leftwards that she frequently topples over into propaganda.

DAILY MAIL COMMENT: Greece's lesson in how to handle the EU 

If tiny Greece can extract so much, from its position of extreme weakness, think what an attractive deal Mr Cameron could secure for mighty Britain in his renegotiation of our EU membership.

CRAIG BROWN: Swimming in Britain's seas? It's a scream! 

Eeek! Aaargh! Oooh! No! Oh my GOD! These are the sounds I hear outside my bedroom window at this time of year.Beside the seaside, the screams and yelps of people taking to the North Sea in June.