No image available
/ 10 August 2006

Rooney forgives teammate Ronaldo

Wayne Rooney has forgiven Manchester United teammate Cristiano Ronaldo for his actions in the World Cup quarterfinal between England and Portugal. Rooney was sent off for stamping and England lost 3-1 on penalties after Ronaldo was seen to encourage referee Horacio Elizondo to send the striker off.

No image available
/ 10 August 2006

UK bomb plot: ‘Untold death’ averted

British police on Thursday said they foiled a plot to blow up several aircraft flying between Britain and the United States in what Washington said might have been an attempted al-Qaeda strike. ”We are confident we have disrupted a plan by terrorists to cause untold death and destruction,” said London police’s Deputy Commissioner Paul Stephenson.

No image available
/ 10 August 2006

Terry named new England captain

Chelsea skipper John Terry has been appointed as England’s new captain, the Football Association said on Thursday. Terry takes over the armband after David Beckham stepped down from the role in the wake of England’s World Cup quarterfinal defeat on penalties by Portugal last month.

No image available
/ 10 August 2006

UK stocks hit by news of terror plot

United Kingdom stocks were sharply lower on Thursday as news of a foiled plan to blow up aircraft in mid-flight sent shockwaves through the market, with British Airways (BA) particularly hard hit, along with other stocks tied to the airline and leisure industries. Shares in BA fell 4,8%.

No image available
/ 10 August 2006

UK bomb plot had ‘global dimensions’

United Kingdom police on Thursday foiled a plot to blow up aircraft in mid-flight between Britain and the United States, and were holding 21 people after overnight raids, senior officers said. Unconfirmed media reports said anywhere from six to 10 US commercial airliners had been targeted in the plot, which police said had "global dimensions".

No image available
/ 10 August 2006

‘Mass murder on an unimaginable scale’

Police said on Wednesday that a foiled plot to blow up aircraft flying from Britain to the United States was ”an attempt to commit mass murder on an unimaginable scale”. A spokesperson said: ”We believe that the terrorists’ aim was to smuggle explosives on to planes in hand luggage and to detonate them in flight.”

No image available
/ 10 August 2006

UK police foil plot to bomb aircraft

Police in the United Kingdom said on Thursday they have thwarted a plot to blow up aircraft in mid-flight using bombs smuggled on in hand luggage. A number of people were arrested in the London area. Britain raised its security-threat level to ”critical”, which means it expects an attack imminently. An immediate ban has been placed on carry-on luggage on planes.

No image available
/ 10 August 2006

Victories for AC Milan, Ajax, Liverpool

Six-time champions AC Milan and four-time winners Ajax and Liverpool put themselves in a position to reach the group stage of the Champions League on Wednesday. AC Milan edged Red Star Belgrade 1-0, Ajax won 2-1 at Copenhagen, and Liverpool beat Israeli club Maccabi Haifa 2-1 at Anfield.

No image available
/ 9 August 2006

Chelsea: ‘We are ready for war’

”We are ready for war,” Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho said, his hair cropped in a buzz cut, but still voicing the arrogance that has won many games — and few friends. ”I don’t care too much about image,” he said. ”I don’t think it’s possible to be loved by everyone. Not in a lifetime and especially not in football.”

No image available
/ 8 August 2006

Landis: Drug test was fatally flawed

Disgraced Tour de France winner Floyd Landis said on Tuesday his positive drugs test was fatally flawed as he continued his media campaign to prove his innocence. The American rider tested positive for excessive levels of testosterone after his remarkable comeback stage-17 victory but claims the test was not carried out correctly.

No image available
/ 8 August 2006

Britons fight to save real ale

Though warm and frothy ale is an enduring symbol of Britain, there’s a fight on to save the traditional British pint from being flushed away by a fizzy tide of bland, mass-produced Euro-lager. Real ale, made the time-honoured, natural way, is an endangered species that enthusiasts say is being muscled out of British pubs by international brewing giants.

No image available
/ 7 August 2006

How do you solve a problem like Maria?

The British public is getting the chance to vote for their favourite actress to take the lead role of Maria von Trapp when The Sound of Music returns to the London stage in December. Ten remaining candidates will compete to land the part of the singing nun in a series of live televised knock-out rounds.

No image available
/ 7 August 2006

Four more Klimts to be sold after record price

A woman who fought a court battle to win back five valuable paintings by Gustav Klimt taken from her heirs by the Nazis will sell the remaining works from her collection after the first fetched a record -million. United States-based Maria Altmann, niece of the Bloch-Bauers who originally owned the paintings, has hired Christie’s to handle the sale of works.

No image available
/ 4 August 2006

Anglo American plans $1bn bonus dividend

Global mining giant Anglo American plans a bonus dividend of -billion and a big share buy-back programme, it said on Friday after delivering bumper first-half earnings from record metals prices. Anglo American said net profit surged 60,1% to ,943-billion in the six months ended June 30 from the equivalent figure in 2005.

No image available
/ 3 August 2006

England rugby star arrested after brawl

England and Bath flyhalf Olly Barkley was arrested by police using CS (violence controlling) spray after a fight in which a man suffered a broken jaw. Devon and Cornwall police confirmed on Thursday that the 24-year-old was detained by them along with two other men in the seaside town of Newquay, north Cornwall on the weekend.

No image available
/ 3 August 2006

Flintoff eyes Ashes return

Andrew Flintoff is planning to regain match fitness well before the first Ashes Test against Australia, which starts at Brisbane’s Gabba ground on November 23. The 28-year-old England all-rounder, the man selectors want to captain the team in Australia, underwent surgery on his problem left ankle last week.

No image available
/ 1 August 2006

Further problems for Wembley

The new Wembley Stadium, which was supposed to be finished for this year’s FA Cup final, may not even be ready to stage the showpiece game in 2007. The Australian construction firm heading the £757-million project said the first major event at Wembley was almost a year away.

No image available
/ 1 August 2006

New England coach vows to do it his way

Steve McClaren wasted no time in distancing himself from Sven-Goran Eriksson. ”I’m going to do it my way,” McClaren said on Tuesday as he officially took over as England’s 11th national soccer coach. He assumed control exactly a month after England were knocked out in the quarterfinals of the World Cup by Portugal, ending Eriksson’s five-and-a-half year tenure.

No image available
/ 31 July 2006

Hasselbaink faces FA charge over Chelsea slur

Dutch striker Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink faces an FA charge over claims he made about former club Chelsea in his autobiography. Hasselbaink, who joined Charlton earlier this month from Middlesbrough, alleged Chelsea had made illegal bonus payments to players following the win against Arsenal in their Champions League quarterfinal in April 2004.

No image available
/ 31 July 2006

Invisibility ‘not so far off’

It’s unlikely to occur by swallowing a pill or donning a special cloak, but invisibility could be possible in the not-too-distant future, according to research published on Monday. A theoretical physicist at St Andrews University in Scotland believes the most plausible example is the Invisible Woman, one of the superheroes in the ”Fantastic Four”.

No image available
/ 31 July 2006

UK’s nuclear-waste dump seeks a home

The United Kingdom will eventually have to bury its growing pile of nuclear waste deep underground, but urgently needs somewhere to safely stash it in the meantime, a government-commissioned study said on Monday. The Committee on Radioactive Waste Management called for a nationwide search for a suitable site for a vast, underground nuclear-waste dump.

No image available
/ 29 July 2006

Eel-bashing game slapped down in UK

Battering one another with a dead eel has been a favoured old tradition in one British town for decades, but a new ban has curtailed the fishy fun and sparked local anger, British newspapers reported on Saturday. "Conger cuddling" has been staged annually in Lyme Regis on the southern English coast for 32 years to raise money for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution charity.

No image available
/ 28 July 2006

Survey: Danes are happiest people in the world

Danes are the happiest people in the world, according to a new survey published on Friday that measures health, wealth, education, sense of identity and the aesthetic quality of the landscape. The survey follows another earlier this month that said the tiny South Pacific Ocean archipelago of Vanuatu was the happiest country on Earth.

No image available
/ 28 July 2006

Blackburn sign Benni McCarthy

Blackburn Rovers have signed South Africa striker Benni McCarthy from Porto, the Premier League club said on Friday. McCarthy, who joins for an undisclosed fee, has signed a four-year contract. ”We tried to sign Benni 12 months ago and have been tracking the situation since then,” Blackburn chairperson John Williams told the club’s website.

No image available
/ 27 July 2006

Tour de France champion fails doping test

Tour de France winner Floyd Landis has tested positive for the male sex hormone testosterone, the United States rider’s Phonak team said on Thursday. Landis produced a remarkable effort a week ago to win the 17th stage of cycling’s showpiece event following a disastrous 16th stage in which he dropped from first to 11th place.