Having accused North Korea of providing Russia with military aid—a claim denied both by Pyongyang and Moscow—it is certain that the West will be keeping a steady watch on an upcoming meeting.
Ministers have been told they will have to change the law if they wish to prevent children from acting as though they are the opposite sex at school.
After first deciding to rub salt into the wound with its endorsement of the Argentine name for the Falklands, EU officials later backed down and clarified their position.
Well over one-tenth of the Conservative Party’s current stock of MPs have already announced they will not stand again at the next general election.
Critics have questioned the decision to build the prayer centre beside some of London’s most well-known gay bars and strip joints.
Former Brexit Party MEP Ben Habib said that “Rishi Sunak is neither a Brexiter nor a Unionist. He also cannot be trusted.”
Reports suggest that deportation flights to Rwanda are still unlikely to take place before the New Year, if at all.
The chair of an iconic British retailer said she has “lost count” of the number of times affected branches have been told the police will not respond to thefts.
Justice Minister Helen McEntee described increasing numbers as “a permanent change.”
Legislation comes in response to the Manchester Arena terror attack, but makes no mention of the security guard who had a “bad feeling” about the suicide bomber but did not act for fear of “being branded a racist.”
After being incentivised to fork out for hybrid cars, Britons could now be told that the ban on such vehicles will be brought forward.
The 29-year-old criminal insisted that “not even the Prophet himself could prevent the Harka,” the name given to illegal immigration in Tunisia.