Written By Unknown on Senin, 30 Maret 2015 | 23.38
A man has died on the London Underground after being hit by a train as he tried to save his brother.
The 35-year-old from London was trying to pull his 32-year-old brother to safety at Old Street station when they were both struck.
The older sibling was taken to the Royal London Hospital with serious injuries but died a short time later.
The 32-year-old, from Manchester, who initially fell on to the Northern line, remains in a stable but critical condition.
Both men were struck by an approaching train at 12.22am on Sunday morning.
British Transport Police said they were not currently treating the incident as suspicious but were "working to put together a fuller picture of what happened".
Investigating officer Detective Sergeant Adrian Naylor said: "I am keen to speak to anyone who was at the station or on the platform when the incident happened to help us understand how the two men came to be struck by a train."
Transport for London confirmed it was working with the BTP to conduct a "thorough investigation" into what happened.
The co-pilot in the French Alps plane disaster was treated for suicidal tendencies in the past, German prosecutors have said.
But prosecutors' spokesman, Christoph Kumpa, told a news conference in Dusseldorf that Andreas Lubitz, 27, had not been treated recently.
He said: "There still is no evidence that the co-pilot told before that he'll do what we have to assume was done and we haven't found a letter or anything like that that contains a confession.
"Added to this, we have not found anything in the surrounding be it personal, or his family, or his professional surrounding, that is giving us any hints that enable us to say anything about his motivation.
"We have found medical documentation that show no organic medical illness.
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"The co-pilot has been, before he got his pilot's licence, in psychotherapy. He had at that time been in treatment of a psychotherapist because of what is documented as being suicidal at that time.
"In the following time, up to now, right until he took the plane, there have been several visits at medical doctors and we have found as we have already communicated evidence that his doctors documented him to be unable to work and to fly.
"But these documents don't show any hint of being suicidal or being aggressive against other people."
Video:Co-Pilot's Motives 'Not Relevant'
Mr Kumpa added that there was no evidence Lubitz was suffering any problems with his sight.
The Germanwings co-pilot is believed to have deliberately crashed Flight 4U 9525 last week, killing all those on board.
He had been given a sick note on the day of the crash, but the note was never submitted to Germanwings.
Video:Plane Crash: Special Report
Police found medicines for the treatment of psychological conditions during searches of Lubitz's home in Dusseldorf.
A summary of the transcript of recordings from the voice recorder on board, published by German newspaper Bild, revealed Lubitz began the descent after the captain left the cockpit.
The voice recorder also picked up the captain shouting "open the damn door" as he desperately attempted to get back into the cockpit as the plane went down.
Video:Is Pilot Testing Rigorous Enough?
Investigators have so far been unable to find the aircraft's second black box, which would provide technical flight data of its final moments.
It comes after French prosecutors said the DNA of 78 of the 150 people on board have been identified.
Recovery teams have described the difficulty of the search for victims as "unprecedented" because of the mountainous terrain and the violence of the impact.
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Gallery: The Victims Of The Germanwings Crash
American Emily Selke, a recent graduate, was on the plane with her mother Yvonne. Raymond Selke has described his wife and daughter as 'amazing people'. Pic: Facebook
Iranian sports journalist Hussein Javadi was on his way to Austria to cover a football match. A friend said he was 'a kind, loving, caring man'. Pic: Maysam Bizær/Hossein Javadi
A staff nurse at an Oxford hospital has pleaded guilty to a series of sex offences committed in A&E - with victims as young as 10.
Andrew Hutchinson has been convicted of crimes against 11 women, many of which were conducted in the emergency department of the John Radcliffe Hospital.
The counts against the 29-year-old included rape, voyeurism, outraging public decency, and sexual assault.
His campaign of abuse also extended to other locations across Oxfordshire, including the White Horse Leisure Centre in Abingdon, and the medical tent of a festival.
Thames Valley Police believes Hutchinson's many attacks took place between October 2011 and November 2013.
Further offences levelled against the nurse include making indecent images of children, the theft of medical equipment, and the possession of the class B drug, ketamine.
Images of sex offences were found by police on his mobile phone and camera. When the victims featured in the photographs were approached by detectives, many did not know they had been recorded or filmed.
Detective Chief Inspector Mark Johns said Hutchinson's guilty plea has spared victims the distress of having to endure a trial.
Some of the offences took place at the John Radcliffe Hospital
He added: "I have no doubt that Hutchinson would have continued to offend had he not been arrested.
"This has been a complicated and unusual case as the victims of his sex offences were not aware that offences took place because they were not conscious.
"Thames Valley Police sent specially trained officers to personally speak to all of the victims, who showed great courage when informed with such distressing news."
Mark Power, director of workforce for Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust, said: "I can confirm that in November 2013 the Trust was informed by Thames Valley Police of the arrest of a male nurse, who at the time was employed at our John Radcliffe Hospital.
"Subsequently, Thames Valley Police have been conducting an extensive investigation and we have done everything possible to support this process. Since his arrest, the individual has not worked in any part of the Trust and is no longer an employee of ours.
"Our thoughts today are with the victims, whose trust was so betrayed in our hospital and elsewhere.
"We have been shocked and horrified by the behaviour of the individual, who so badly let down both the patients he was entrusted to care for and his fellow colleagues, and who totally failed in his professional duties and responsibilities as a nurse.
"I would wish to reassure members of the public that the welfare and safety of our patients is always our first priority."
Hutchinson has been remanded in custody and will be sentenced on 27 April.
Raffaele Sollecito has given a news conference in Rome after he was acquitted of the murder of British student Meredith Kercher.
The 31-year-old began the conference by thanking his family for supporting him, but said he had been accused of "being an assassin without an element of proof".
He said: "I feel today as though I'm a prisoner who after seven years and five months am free again.
"For me it was a rebirth.
Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito in Perugia before their arrest
"Seven years and five months is an incredibly long time when you're suffering, when you're living an unbearable tragedy. I felt desperate.
"I can't tell you that I no longer have any pain. I still feel the pain.
Video:Amanda Knox Acquitted
"I don't expect from now on ... to be called an assassin and I'll be ready to defend my dignity."
Mr Sollecito and his former girlfriend Amanda Knox were acquitted of murder on Friday by Italy's Supreme Court.
The judges, after 10 hours of deliberation, concluded that a conviction could not be supported by the evidence. Their reasoning will be released within 90 days.
Ms Kercher, who was 21 and from Coulsdon, Surrey, was sexually assaulted and stabbed to death in Perugia in 2007.
Ms Knox and Mr Sollecito spent four years in jail for her murder, but were freed on appeal in 2011.
The American returned to the US before an appeal court threw out the acquittal and reinstated the guilty verdicts last year.
Speaking from Seattle on Saturday, she said: "The knowledge of my innocence has given me strength in the darkest times of this ordeal."
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Gallery: Meredith Kercher Murder: Key Events
2 November 2007: The body of Meredith Kercher, 21, is found in her Perugia apartment. Investigators say she was killed the night before
Ms Kercher's flatmate, Amanda Knox, is pictured kissing her then-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito in the days after the murder
A murder investigation has been launched after a British couple were found shot dead in their villa near Benidorm.
Sky News Crime Correspondent Martin Brunt said the couple, aged 77 and named by Spanish police as Peter and Jean Tarsey, were found dead in the villa in Xalo at around 4pm on Sunday.
He said: "Yesterday they were expecting dinner guests. Last night the guests got into the villa and found them, it's been described to me locked in each other's arms on the sofa.
"Both of them had been shot dead by a small calibre gun. Police say that various gunshots had been fired."
Peter Tarsey, 19, after he was chosen to represent GB in the 1956 Olympics
The Guardia Civil said post-mortem examinations have not yet been completed, but they are believed to have been killed in the last few days.
The couple, known to have been residents in Spain for 18 years, had no known criminal history and "had not been doing anything strange", according to police. Reports in Spanish media said they had been living in the area for 22 years.
Officers said there was no sign of forced entry and the case is being treated as homicide. A TV was found to be missing in the property and a computer had been thrown into the swimming pool.
The couple were found at their villa in Xalo
A spokeswoman for the Guardia Civil said: "At around 4.15pm yesterday, some friends of the couple went to their villa because they had not been seen for a few days.
"They found the door was open and there were no signs of a break-in.
"The couple, who had been living in Spain for 18 years, were found dead with gunshot wounds on the sofa.
"The Guardia Civil is now awaiting the results of post-mortem examinations and investigations continue."
A spokesman for the Foreign Office said: "We can confirm the death of two British nationals in Alicante, Spain.
"We stand ready to provide consular assistance."
Xalo mayor Joan Miquel Garces told Spanish media that the friends who raised the alarm "used to go round for lunch every Sunday".
Mr Tarsey is a former Olympic diver who competed for Great Britain at the 1956 games in Melbourne, Australia.
David Cameron said in five years he had put Britain "back on her feet again" as he formally fired the starting gun on the election race after a meeting with the Queen.
Speaking on the steps of Number 10 after returning from Buckingham Palace where he asked the Queen to dissolve Parliament, Mr Cameron said voters face a "stark choice" between him and Ed Miliband.
With 38 days to go until the election, the Conservatives would offer strong leadership and a country that was safe and secure but Mr Miliband would offer a country mired in "economic chaos".
He said: "Britain is on the right track. This election is about moving forward, and that is what, as Prime Minister here at Downing Street, I will deliver."
:: For full coverage of General Election 2015 click here.
Video:Cameron Heads For The Palace
And he warned that if voters put Mr Miliband in Number 10 working families would face a £3,000 tax hike.
In a YouTube video released by the Conservatives before Mr Cameron's journey to Buckingham Palace, the leader said 7 May was "the most important General Election in a generation".
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg also made the trip to Buckingham Palace for a meeting with the Queen in his role as President of the Privy Council.
Video:Miliband: 'Two Futures On Offer'
Speaking ahead of the meeting Mr Clegg predicted another coalition government come 7 May and said: "It is my view that the era of single-party government is now over in British politics."
"About the very last thing the country now needs is a lurch to the left or the right and yet that is exactly what the Conservative and Labour parties are now threatening."
He added: "I think what the vast majority of people in this country want is that we keep this country and our government anchored in the centre ground, which is where the Liberal Democrats have anchored the government over the last five years."
Video:Clegg: Don't Lurch Left Or Right
The final act of pomp and ceremony of the coalition government fires the starting gun on the General Election campaign.
As the formalities played out at Buckingham Palace, Ed Miliband was attempting to win over business with the launch of its first "mini manifestos" in which the Labour leader warned of the "clear and present danger" of leaving the EU.
He said: "There could be nothing worse for our country or for our great exporting businesses than playing political games with our membership of the EU. David Cameron used to understand that. But in the past five years our place in the European Union has become less and less secure."
Video:SNP: The Party Could Be Kingmakers
UKIP leader Nigel Farage was due to launch his party's five election pledges this afternoon along with a new poster.
The pledges are: "1. Say No to EU 2. Control our borders 3. Extra £3bn for the NHS 4. Cut foreign aid spending 5. No tax on the minimum wage."
With Parliament dissolved, MPs immediately lose their title and are asked to remove references to it, or place disclaimers on any email or social media account which names them as an MP.
Video:UKIP 'Reflection Of Modern Britain'
It has already prompted a Twitter squabble with the Conservative parliamentary candidate for Worsley and Eccles South posting: "I'm sure it's an oversight that my Labour opponent's Twitter name now breaches Parliamentary rules after dissolution."
Some, including Conservative MP Maria Miller, were refusing to remove the MP on their accounts. Ms Miller argued the Twitter account was set up before dissolution.
MPs elected in 2010 will also find their parliamentary pass for Westminster Palace ceases to work.
Video:Hobbit Star Backs Labour
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Gallery: The Queen And Her 12 Prime Ministers
Winston Churchill was the first prime minister to serve under Queen Elizabeth. His second term under Queen Elizabeth lasted from 1951-55
Anthony Eden served from 1955-57. Eden strongly believed in keeping the Queen informed of state affairs and was the first prime minister to show her secret government papers
Ed Miliband's business manifesto launch has been overshadowed by a row over Labour's use of business leaders' quotes in an advert for the party's stance on the EU.
The Labour leader faced a backlash over the advertisement in the Financial Times, published on the morning Mr Miliband warned voters that leaving the European Union was a "clear and present danger" to British business.
In a full-page advert under the Labour message: "The biggest risk to British business is the threat of an EU exit. Labour will put the national interest first. We will deliver reform not exit" were a number of quotes from the business leaders about Europe.
Labour's full-page advert in the Financial Times
Company spokesmen were swift to issue statements making clear that they were not linked to Labour.
A spokesman said: "Siemens has profound concerns about a possible UK exit from the EU. We are also on record of expressing our concern about the uncertainty that a referendum would create - particularly as it is not clear what options would be presented.
Video:Siemens Boss: 'We Are Apolitical'
"We are however very clear that a referendum might be called, and if it is, we will support efforts to get a better deal and stay in the EU. We do not, however, endorse any political party."
A statement from Kellogg's said the quote used by Labour in the advert was made over a year ago by its UK managing director.
It added: "What he was expressing was a concern about the insecurity which comes from the uncertainty about Britain's position in the EU – nothing more. Kellogg's is strictly non-partisan and does not endorse any political party."
However, SCM Direct founding partner Gina Miller said she was happy for her comments to be used and added: "I'm clearly aware of it because they told me it was happening last week."
Video:Labour's Business Advert Row
:: For full coverage of General Election 2015 click here.
Mr Miliband said all the comments on the advert were made in public and the party was entitled to use them.
He said: "We've simply quoted public statements by these businesses about the place of Britain in the European Union.
"And I think lots of businesses all around this country are not necessarily going to be supporting Labour or the Conservatives but they do have a very strong view about our place in the EU."
Video:Hobbit Star Backs Labour
With 38 days to go until the General Election, Mr Miliband was in the City of London setting out his pitch to business leaders with the launch of the first of the party's "mini manifestos".
He said: "There could be nothing worse for our country or for our great exporting businesses than playing political games with our membership of the EU. David Cameron used to understand that. But in the past five years our place in the European Union has become less and less secure.
"He used to say he would campaign to keep Britain in Europe. But now he won't rule out campaigning to leave."
David Cameron has promised a referendum by 2017 if he wins the election - something that Mr Miliband described as "a recipe for two years of uncertainty".
Video:Clegg: Don't Lurch Left Or Right
Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg joined in with the criticism of Mr Cameron's stance by saying he would never "play footsie" with Britain's membership of the EU.
Labour's 22-page A Better Plan For Business is an attempt to fight back against concerns that Mr Miliband would put the economic recovery at risk.
Business insiders have told Sky News they are faced with a difficult choice between a Conservative Party who would put Britain's EU membership at risk and a Labour Party perceived as anti-business.
Mr Miliband was sharply criticised by the Boots boss Stefano Pessina earlier this year, who warned a Labour government would be a "catastrophe" for Britain.
Video:Cameron Heads For The Palace
In an interview with The Daily Telegraph on Monday, Dr Assem Allam - who has donated £400,000 to the Labour Party - described the Conservatives as "the best party in Europe" to manage the economy.
He criticised Mr Miliband for wanting to "penalise" wealth creators with a mansion tax and a rise in the top rate of tax.
Speaking on Good Morning Britain, UKIP's Nigel Farage said Mr Cameron had been "forced into" promising a 2017 referendum on Britain's membership of the UK and that his party's job was to "hold his feet to the fire to make sure that the referendum is not a stitch-up".
He added: "I don't want this to be kicked into the long grass until the end of 2017. I think it should be before the end of this year."
Video:Battle For Number 10 Special
It comes as Mr Cameron has visited the Queen to ask for Parliament to be dissolved.
One person is reported dead and a second injured after they allegedly tried to ram a vehicle into a gate outside the National Security Agency headquarters in Maryland.
Guards opened fire on the vehicle, killing one of its occupants, a senior US official told the AP news agency.
The FBI said the incident on Monday morning was not believed to be related to terrorism.
The NSA headquarters is located on the sprawling base near Baltimore
The NSA has not yet commented.
A spokeswoman for Fort Meade, where the US spy agency is located, said emergency responders were at the scene.
The condition of the injured person was not immediately known.
Aerial footage shot by local television station WUSA showed two damaged vehicles, including a police SUV, near the gate.
Emergency workers were seen loading an injured uniformed man into an ambulance.
A British man is among four people, including a baby and another child, found stabbed to death in Gibraltar, police say.
Police in the British Overseas Territory were called to the property in the Boschetti's Steps area at 11.35 this morning.
They found a British man, aged 31, a Spanish woman, 37, a four-year old girl of Spanish nationality and a baby girl who was six weeks old.
Detectives and forensic officers are working in the flat and the area remains cordoned off. They are not looking for anyone else in connection with the tragedy.
Spanish media reported that the family had been living in Spain and had only recently arrived in Gibraltar.
The British man involved was originally from Liverpool, according to police sources quoted by El Mundo newspaper.
The newspaper said the four-year-old girl was believed to be the woman's daughter from a previous relationship, while the baby had been born in Spain.
A Foreign Office spokesman said: "We are looking into reports that British nationals may be involved in an incident in Gibraltar. We stand ready to provide consular assistance."
A spokesman for the Royal Gibraltar Police said: "It is believed that all the deceased belong to the same family.
"However, there are still inquiries being conducted to locate close relatives of the family and as you may understand it is for this reason that the identities of the deceased are not being disclosed.
"At this present moment in time, a full investigation is being conducted by officers of the serious crime unit to establish the cause surrounding the untimely deaths of this young family and are encouraging anyone who maybe able to support the investigation to contact the duty officer of the Royal Gibraltar Police.
"Presently, we are not looking for anyone involved in this very unfortunate event, but the investigation will be thorough and detailed drawing in on the expertise of other professionals.
"Her Majesty's Coroner has already been informed and has visited the scene."
Prince William has started work with the company operating the East Anglian Air Ambulance - and hopes to fly rescue missions in the summer.
William, a former RAF search and rescue helicopter pilot, is from today an employee of Bond Air Services, which runs a number of air ambulance operations in the UK.
Kensington Palace said in a short statement: "The Duke of Cambridge has today started work as an employee of Bond Air Services.
"Over the coming months he will undertake job-specific training before he begins piloting missions for East Anglian Air Ambulance during the summer.
"The mandatory training will involve simulator, aircraft and in-flight skills training."
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William has begun work a few weeks ahead of the birth of his second child and is likely to take paternity leave, as he did for his first child Prince George.
A spokesman for Bond Air Services would not discuss the length of the leave the Duke could receive but added: "Like other pilots, he will be entitled to paternity leave."
He said: "He has come to do a job as a professional, a pilot, and we're very happy he's going to be a pilot."
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The company hit the headlines in November 2013 when a police helicopter it operated crashed into a pub in central Glasgow.