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Another UK soldier dies in Afghanistan new

Another British soldier was killed in Afghanistan today, bringing the total death toll level to that suffered in the Iraq war.

Romanians leave south Belfast in June after being forced out by racist groups

'Get out – or you die'

That was the chilling message delivered to Belfast’s immigrant population. David McKittrick reports on racism that continues to scar Northern Ireland

Police to probe MI5 over torture claims

Officers are to investigate allegations by former Guantanamo Bay detainee Binyam Mohamed.

Colin Hendry and his wife Denise, who died on Thursday from an infection after undergoing surgery to correct a botched liposuction procedure

Ex-football star's wife dies after botched surgery

Jerome Taylor : Denise Hendry never fully recovered from operation

Tories may sacrifice Africa for climate change fight

Andrew Grice and Michael Savage: Warning from campaigners over Conservative plans to rethink Britain’s aid budget

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'The challenge of the Tour is as much mental as it is physical,' says Chris Boardman

Chris Boardman: 'I just didn't have enough testosterone for the Tour'

The Brian Viner Interview: He won Olympic gold, set world records, and wore the famous yellow jersey three times, but the eminence grise of British cycling knows the current generation can achieve even greater highs.

View from the top: Aidan Gillen as Gus in 'Freefall'.

Aidan Gillen - A slippery player you can bank on

From 'Queer as Folk' to 'The Wire', Aidan Gillen is an actor who refuses to be typecast. Next up, he plays a high-flying City boy in 'Freefall', the BBC's new credit crisis drama.

Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google, (left) chats with Bill Gates, former CEO of Microsoft.

Google OS will be 'game changer,' says Schmidt

Eric Schmidt spent his first six years as Google's CEO resisting a push by the company's co-founders to develop their own operating system for personal computers.

50,000 students could miss out on university

Almost 50,000 potential students could be denied a place at university this year due to a sudden rise in the number of applications.

The ranter: Wells performs at a gig during the 1981 Right to Work - Jobs Not Yops [Youth Employment Programme] campaign in London,
at which he appeared with Attila the Stockbroker and the Jam

Steven Wells: Journalist celebrated for his 'ranting poetry' and iconoclastic pop writing

Few cancer memoirs have happy endings. Nine days before his death from enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma, the British journalist and pop, sport and political polemicist Steven Wells wrote his last column for the Philadelphia Weekly.


Columnist Comments

steve_richards

Steve Richards: There's trouble when the spin doctor becomes part of the story

It was only a matter of time before Andy Coulson became a news story

andreas_whittam_smith

Andreas Whittam Smith: Forget regulation – the banks are back to business as usual

It was supposed to be "never glad confident morning again" for capitalism

terence_blacker

Terence Blacker: The true driving force is cash

The realities behind the energy debate

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