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Swanley delivery driver allegedly assaulted and car robbed

Time to say #pollutionispants and reject fast fashion

Time to say #pollutionispants and reject fast fashion by Nora McElhone Thank you for signing up to The Courier daily newsletter Something went wrong - please try again later. Sign Up Fast fashion may allow us to get our fix of the latest trends at affordable prices, but its long-term implications go much deeper than the desire for a new dress. This is one of the issues that will be tackled as St Andrews University students come together with Transition St Andrews and local sustainability campaigners to highlight the problem of wearable clothing ending up in landfill or being incinerated. In particular, their #PollutionisPants campaign will celebrate the choice of second-hand clothing over buying new, pants being one notable exception to the rule, thankfully.

My adventure holiday turned into nine months of hell as a FARC hostage

My adventure holiday turned into nine months of hell as a FARC hostage Tom Hart Dyke © Paul Carter Tom Hart Dyke in his Lullingstone Castle garden - Paul Carter A lawless wilderness straddling the border between Colombia and Panama, the Darien Gap is the only break in the 19,000-mile  Pan-American Highway which connects Alaska with Argentina. In 2000, horticulturalist Tom Hart Dyke, heir to Kent’s Lullingstone Castle estate, spent nine months there, after being taken hostage by a group presumed to be FARC, the Marxist rebels which disbanded before returning as a political party. Last week the party announced that it’s changing its named to Comunes. Twenty years after his release, Tom explains how his captivity inspired Lullingstone Castle’s spectacular World Garden.

Helicopter-flying millionaire businessman, 41, faces eviction from his £1 4m Henry VIII castle

17 shares According to the documents seen by The Times, Mr Giles s company, SLF Associates, which is registered in the Seychelles,  appears to be the subject of a freezing injunction under anti-money-laundering legislation and whose director appears to be disqualified in England .   The court was told Mr Giles bought the home from Kathryn Durnford, who submitted documents to the court which branded Mr Giles as untrustworthy for his alleged role in a misleading pension scheme.  She was listed alongside Mr Giles s company as a defendant in the case with HSBC because she continues to hold the title deed and mortgage on the property.

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