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Builder who won £105m EuroMillions jackpot swaps terraced home for £4 5m estate in Kent

Steve Thomson, 43, and his wife Lenka, 42 won the lottery in November 2019 They initially carried on living in their modest three-bed home in West Sussex  Now they have moved into a six-bed farm house which is set on an estate in Kent It boasts a swimming pool, tennis court and party barn but needs a lot of work  

Lottery jackpot winner Gillian Bayford gives birth to lockdown baby at the age of 48

Lottery jackpot winner Gillian Bayford who scooped £148million gives birth to lockdown baby at the age of 48 The Scot who scooped £148 million in 2012 said she was shocked when she first found out that she was pregnant with daughter Emilie, who is now six months  Ms Bayford said: It was a bit of a shock at first. Because I m older, people said to me are you mad? But I d always wanted another baby Ms Bayford shared the huge Euromillions winnings with her then-husband Adrian, with whom she shares two children, aged 15 and 13 

COVID round-up: UK hits 12 million vaccinations; Hungary approves Sputnik V and Venice goes online

France, Italy, Austria, Hungary and the Czech Republic received their first shipments of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine this weekend as the EU tries to ramp up its rollout. Several European countries have already announced that they will not be supplying the vaccine to those over 65, because of the limited amount of trial data for that age group. Now there are concerns that the vaccine may have reduced effectiveness on coronovirus variants. UK - minority scepticism? More than 12 million people in the UK have now received a first dose of a coronavirus vaccine. The Pfizer-BioNtech and Oxford-Astrazeneca vaccines are currently being administered across the country.

UK faith leaders launch campaign to combat low vaccine take-up in BAME community

The UK s covid vaccination campaign is powering ahead but a lower take-up among the black and minority ethnic community has prompted faith leaders to launch a campaign to dispel fear and mistrust. Last month the government s scientific advisory group reported that vaccine hesitancy is highest amongst black Britons, with 72% stating they were unlikely or very unlikely to get the jab. One medical centre in Stoke-on-Trent said the proportion of people not attending vaccine clinics when invited was ten times higher among BAME people than the average. “We’ve had around 20-30% DNAs [did not attend] among the BAME community, compared to 2-3% in other groups,” Dr Lenin Vellaturi told GPonline.

How Do Cyclones Get Their Names?

How Do Cyclones Get Their Names? Share Filed to:cyclone NASA Earth Observatory handout/EPA/AAP To sign up for our daily newsletter covering the latest news, hacks and reviews, head HERE. For a running feed of all our stories, follow us on Twitter HERE. Or you can bookmark the Lifehacker Australia homepage to visit whenever you need a fix. In the Australian region, the Bureau of Meteorology gives tropical cyclones their name. You can write to the Bureau of Meteorology to suggest a cyclone name, but it is likely to be more than a 50-year wait. Tropical cyclones are named so we can easily highlight them to the community, and to reduce confusion if more than one cyclone happens at the same time. The practice of naming tropical cyclones (or storms) began years ago to help in the quick identification of storms in warning messages. Humans find names far easier to remember than numbers and technical terms.

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