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BBC Cliff Richard raid coverage was 'invasion of privacy' - BBC News - BBC Cliff Richard raid coverage was 'invasion of privacy' - BBC News: 'via Blog this' :Text may be subject to copyright.This blog does not claim copyri...
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BRITISH model and Marbella resident Rosie Mac - [image: English: Logo from the television program Game...] BRITISH model and Marbella resident Rosie Mac worked as a stand-in and double for Emilia Clark...
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The Spanish Untouchables - [image: Busto del Rey Juan Carlos I de España en su vi...] A new tell-all book that details what led to Spanish king Juan Carlos giving up the throne wou...
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Gang boss burns out garda sergeant's car while he plays football - Gardai have launched a major investigation after a car belonging to a popular sergeant was burnt-out in a grudge attack linked to gangland thugs. SHARE T...
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Spanish police have arrested a Colombian drug boss dubbed ‘The Mouse’, the alleged leader of a major cocaine smuggling gang accused of 400 killings - Spanish police have arrested a Colombian drug boss dubbed ‘The Mouse’, the alleged leader of a major cocaine smuggling gang accused of 400 killings, offi...
Coast guards in Italy have used helicopters to rescue the crew of a cargo ship after it ran aground on a reef off Sicily in stormy seas. All 19 crew members were ferried to shore by helicopters after the captain of the Gelso M gave the order to abandon ship. Weather conditions are deteriorating in the area near the city of Syracuse on Sicily's south-east coast. There were no reports of any cargo aboard the Italian-flagged vessel. Coastguard spokesman Cosimo Nicastro said four helicopters had been used to airlift the crew to safety, and all of them were well. Helicopters were needed for the evacuation because the ship's position on the reefs had made it impossible for the crew to lower lifeboats or for rescue vessels to approach. The ship's double hull meant there was a low risk of pollution but the environment ministry was alerted nonetheless, AFP news agency reports. Rescue service sources quoted by the agency suggested that, given the weather conditions, the captain had been sailing too close to the coast. The incident comes two months after the cruise ship Costa Concordia hit rocks off the island of Giglio on Italy's west coast, capsizing with the loss of 32 lives.


