South Korea on Thursday lowered its crisis level for COVID-19 and will from June no longer require infected people to quarantine for seven days, dropping one of the country’s few remaining pandemic-related restrictions. Health authorities will still recommend five days of self-isolation
In a comment piece for News.com.au, she wrote: “If this was not galling, not ignominious, debasing enough – Harry, the son of the King, having to share a pew with Alexandra, who is three and a half rugby teams worth of spots
A hosepipe ban in Cornwall and Devon has been extended until at least December as fears grow over water levels ahead of this summer. Authorities said the ban came after the region continued to experience lower-than-average levels of rainfall. Following the announcement,
U.S. defense officials have been sounding the alarm that China could launch an invasion on the self-ruled island of Taiwan by 2027, and though Taiwanese residents are divided on their concerns over the imminent threat, they are in apparent agreement in believing
Shockingly long waiting times and widespread staff shortages have led to the public losing faith in the NHS, a damning report reveals. Satisfaction in our health system has now dropped to the lowest level ever recorded thanks to the massive backlog in
Legal experts have warned the Government’s “threat” to exit the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) would strip Britons of “valuable protections”. This, it is claimed, will end up bringing the country’s human rights standards down to the level of Russia and
Britain is set to be swept with heavy snow and ice, the Met Office has warned, as temperatures have been tipped to reach as low as -9C next week. Yellow warnings have been issued by the Met Office for much of Scotland
The Ministry of Defence is expecting a £10billion boost to its spending power at the March budget. Defence Secretary Ben Wallace appears to be confident he can squeeze the cash out of the Treasury. Mr Wallace is thought to have asked Chancellor
More than six out of 10 (61 percent) say unions representing staff in the ambulance, rail and fire sectors should be forced to guarantee basic services. The polling by Redfield & Wilton Strategies comes as health secretary Steve Barclay issued a new
Rishi Sunak is set to introduce a law that will allow employers to sack staff and sue trade unions, as well as limit the right to strike. The Prime Minister is planning to announce legislation to enforce “minimum service levels” during industrial action