Sex Education s Connor Swindells to lead cast of Steven Knight s new BBC drama pressandjournal.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pressandjournal.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Cabinet Office minister acknowledged there are bureaucratic obstacles to negotiate and navigate with Brussels, as he was pressed to support retaliation against EU fishing vessels.
Industry leader Zotefoams claims it is now difficult to export short hop to EU
CEO David Stirling said: We export globally - this is definitely not a smooth system
Hauliers would rather take lorries empty to EU because of delays and paperworkl
M&S stores in France are also looking scarce, with Scotch shelves empty in Paris
Fortnum & Mason and John Lewis among major retails to suspend exports to EU
Kitson And Counter-Revolution!
‘Kitson and Counter-Revolution’ was first
featured by News Line on 30th April 2015.
We are producing it once again because the British state is now preparing to use Kitson methods against the working class in the UK, Ireland and elsewhere.
THIS week it emerged that retired British general Sir Frank Kitson is to be sued by the widow of a Catholic worker murdered by loyalist paramilitaries in 1973.
Eugene ‘Paddy’ Heenan was a building worker who was killed when a loyalist gang threw a grenade at the minibus taking him and 14 other workers to a building site in east Belfast.
Hereford is known around the world, but what exactly has put the city on the map? Here – in no particular order – are the seven things we think are most responsible for its fame (let us know if we ve missed something!)
The SAS raid on the Iranian Embassy in 1980
1. The Special Air Service (SAS) The Hereford-based SAS has become one of the most famous elite fighting forces in the world. Its hand-picked troops have to pass a legendarily tough selection process. The SAS regiment of the British Army was formed during Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War. It was the idea of Lieutenant David Stirling, who envisaged small teams of soldiers operating behind enemy lines to gain intelligence and disrupt operations.