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Around 100 civilians have been evacuated from the besieged city of Mariupol, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has said, but many more remain trapped in the Azovstal steelworks and are facing a "humanitarian catastrophe". The UN had on Sunday negotiated safe passage for some civilians from the plant, the last stronghold of resistance against the Russian attack. However, Russian forces resumed shelling after some of the evacuees left, according to reports on Monday. Civilians trapped in the bunkers and tunnels of the Azovstal complex are running out of water, food and medicine. |
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| The draft opinion – first reported by Politico – appears to have been authored by Justice Samuel Alito, and is dated 10 February |
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| 'The answer to many problems in Calais is to let refugees apply for visas to cross the Channel safely,' charity says |
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| Exclusive: Families living in single rooms and forced to declare themselves homeless after fleeing war, charities warn |
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| The 46-year-old beat Judd Trump 18-13 in the final |
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How might a town powered entirely by organic matter provide answers to the energy crisis? |
The town of South Molton in Devon is having all of its gas needs met by a local power plant that turns chicken manure and crops into energy, with a local MP suggesting it could hold answers to the national crisis. The factory deals in biogas, a form of renewable energy created by processing organic materials like farm waste, crops and animal manure in the absence of oxygen, with operator Ixoca saying its facility pumps out enough gas into the local grid to fuel 2,000 homes. Its success comes amid an energy crisis driven by international gas prices and the war in Ukraine that has sent domestic utility bills soaring. Could South Molton provide the blue-print for other locations to follow? |
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– The number of UK citizens referred for cancer checks in the past year, according to record-breaking NHS data, after figures suggested the pandemic saw numbers plummet in 2020. |
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| "I don't think there is a woman alive, not just in politics but in any walk of life, who will not have experienced, somewhere on the spectrum of misogyny and sexism, behaviour that is unacceptable. In some ways, I think it is worse today than it was when I was a young woman starting out in politics." |
– Scotland's first minister Nicola Sturgeon tells ITV's Good Morning Britain she believes the problems of sexism and misogyny in politics are getting worse, arguing that social media is partly responsible. |
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