The Welsh divers sent across the UK on some of the police's most challenging and devastating work walesonline.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from walesonline.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Home Secretary Priti Patel will detail plans for the new system on Monday
Travellers to the UK will need to apply for an electronic travel authorisation
The process allows background checks to be carried out on potential travellers
It will make it easier to ban high-risk foreign criminals from entering the UK
Last year, the Mail revealed that hundreds of foreign killers, rapists and paedophiles had entered Britain without any checks
In 2014, Alice Gross, 14, was murdered in west London by convicted killer Arnis Zalkakns who had moved to the UK from Latvia under freedom of movement
Violence against women: Loss, murder and grieving in public bbc.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bbc.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Following Sarah Everard’s disappearance, journalist Sophie Wilkinson writes that “if police forces want to end a pattern of terrorised women, a pattern of women’s bodies piling up, they need to recognise how small acts can be the potential first stepping stones of men on the warpath”.
The Lamplugh siblings in the early 1980s: l-r, Richard, Suzy, Tamsin and Lizzie
Credit: Paul Lamplugh
It was the summer of 1986. Prince Andrew had just married Sarah Ferguson, Gary Lineker signed for Barcelona, and The Lady in Red by Chris de Burgh was at number one.
On July 28, 25-year-old estate agent Suzy Lamplugh left her office in upmarket Fulham for a 12.45pm viewing appointment with a “Mr Kipper”. She would never return.
That night, her white Ford Fiesta car was found about a mile away, in the quiet street that ran past Fulham football ground, with Lamplugh’s purse still in the seat-door pocket. Det Sgt Mike Barley was called in that evening. “At that point,” he says, “we knew three things. Suzy had left the office about 12.30; her car had been found at one minute past 10; and she hadn’t been seen since. And 34 years on, we still only really know those three things.”