Security fears in Northern Ireland have been ramped up after President Joe Biden touched down in Belfast last night, after police recovered pipe bombs from a cemetery in Londonderry. Despite the POTUS having no plans to visit the town, a major security
Steel barriers have been placed around hotels housing asylum seekers ahead of protests this weekend. The extra security measures, put in place by Serco, are pictured around County Hotel in Skegness, Lincolnshire, and others in the same seaside town. A similar protest turned
British Steel has proposed closing the coking ovens at its Scunthorpe plant, costing 260 jobs. The Chinese-owned firm said that “global economic challenges” left it with little choice but to announce the closure. Jingye Group said the move would combat financial pressures,
British Steel, the nation’s second largest steel producer, is planning to axe roughly 800 jobs – as it simultaneously discusses the possibility of a £300m government funding package, sources have claimed. The company, which employs roughly 4,000 people, is understood to be
Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt is set to approve a support package for British steel and Tata Steel UK with funding worth over £500million. It is hoped that the injection of cash will help prevent thousands of people from losing their