
-
Coach urges Pakistan to 'focus on cricket' for India Asia Cup final
-
Denmark says airport drone flights were 'hybrid attacks'
-
Liga champions Barca claim comeback win at Oviedo
-
Aston Villa earn first win to launch Europa League bid, Rangers beaten
-
UN to vote on Iran as sanctions loom
-
Amazon to pay $2.5 bn to settle Prime enrollment case
-
Volkswagen to take Dieselgate case to federal court
-
DeChambeau-Thomas to face Rahm-Hatton in Ryder Cup opener
-
Israel strikes kill eight in Yemen's rebel-held capital: Huthis
-
Madagascar police fire tear gas at protest over power, water cuts
-
US sanctions on Serbian oil firm will start October 1: Vucic
-
Argentina choose Carreras over Albornoz at fly-half
-
Two teens killed in shooting at Brazil school
-
Denmark says airport drone flights aimed to create fear
-
Eagles aim to turn tables on Bucs in battle of NFL unbeatens
-
Pakistan down Bangladesh to set up Asia Cup final with India
-
Tessier adamant Canada can 'go all the way' to win Women's Rugby World Cup
-
Inmates beheaded in second Ecuador prison massacre in days
-
McIlroy becomes Europe's inspirational Ryder Cup cornerstone
-
Mix and match at Prada, joyful colour at Fendi
-
At UN, Ghana's leader warns against normalizing anti-migrant 'hatred'
-
Trump urges Turkey's Erdogan to stop buying Russian oil
-
Sea life thriving on unexploded Nazi bombs, sub discovers
-
'Bullets, fire and fear': Haiti is at war, its leader warns
-
Germany vows defence against Russia in drone warfare and in space
-
France's Sarkozy prepares for five-year prison term after guilty verdict
-
DeChambeau yearns to face McIlroy, sees Trump as Cup force
-
Canada stick with same line-up for Women's Rugby World Cup final
-
Europe players ready for hecklers and Trump at Ryder Cup
-
Hong Kong's coastal businesses pick up pieces after typhoon
-
Germany's Bosch to cut 13,000 jobs in blow to auto sector
-
Palestinian leader tells UN no role for Hamas in state
-
Taiwan races to rescue two dozen missing after barrier lake burst
-
UN tells Trump probe launched over his 'sabotage' claims
-
Zelensky says Russian officials should end war or find 'bomb shelters'
-
Sinner eases past Cilic to launch China Open title bid
-
McIlroy says Bryson matchup in Ryder Cup would be 'wonderful'
-
'A mess': Alcaraz says players want better deal from Grand Slams
-
New Zealand's Miller back for World Cup bronze clash with France
-
France's Sarkozy: from palace to prison
-
Polish climber on skis makes Everest descent in first
-
NATO sticks to guns as allies talk tough on Russian jets
-
Alcaraz sweats on ankle injury after opening win in Japan
-
Denmark says airport drone flights designed to create fear
-
Alcaraz survives injury scare and rain delay to win Tokyo opener
-
Ticketmaster agrees clearer prices after Oasis probe
-
Stocks downbeat ahead of key US data
-
EU opens antitrust probe into German software giant SAP
-
Meet Ali Akbar, the last newspaper hawker in Paris
-
EU rejects Apple demand to scrap landmark tech rules
RIO | 2.38% | 65.43 | $ | |
RBGPF | 1.49% | 76.43 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.37% | 24.17 | $ | |
NGG | -0.89% | 70.52 | $ | |
GSK | -1.67% | 39.52 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.7% | 15.64 | $ | |
RELX | -0.19% | 46.28 | $ | |
VOD | -0.53% | 11.27 | $ | |
BTI | -0.06% | 52.35 | $ | |
AZN | -2.49% | 73.53 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.08% | 24.33 | $ | |
SCS | 0.12% | 16.7 | $ | |
BCC | -1.41% | 76.65 | $ | |
BCE | -0.3% | 23.05 | $ | |
BP | 0.14% | 35.26 | $ | |
JRI | -0.5% | 13.97 | $ |

UK MPs to hold crunch vote on assisted dying
British lawmakers could take a major step towards legalising euthanasia on Friday when they hold a knife-edge vote on whether to allow assisted dying for terminally ill people.
MPs will either progress the legislation to the House of Lords upper chamber for further scrutiny or end it entirely following several hours of impassioned debate.
Protesters both for and against the contentious bill are expected to gather outside parliament as the so-called third reading -- the MPs' last chance to debate its contents -- takes place inside.
"It is about real people facing the prospect of a painful and undignified death either for themselves or a loved one," the legislation's proposer, MP Kim Leadbeater, told AFP in a statement.
"The injustice and inhumanity of the status quo means we cannot wait any longer to offer them the hope of a better death."
The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill would allow assisted suicide in England and Wales for adults with an incurable illness who have a life expectancy of fewer than six months.
They would have to be able to administer themselves the life-ending substance, and any patient's wish to die would have to be signed off by two doctors and a panel of experts.
A change in the law would see Britain emulate several other countries in Europe and elsewhere that allow some form of assisted dying.
- Advert ban -
Supporters say euthanasia would give the terminally ill greater protections and choice at the end of their lives, but critics worry that vulnerable people could be coerced into dying.
The Royal College of Psychiatrists said last month that it had "serious concerns" about the safeguarding of people with mental illness and said it cannot support the bill in its current form.
MPs backed the proposed legislation by 330 to 275 votes at an initial vote in parliament last November.
Since then the bill has undergone several changes, including applying a ban on adverts for assisted dying and allowing all health workers to opt out of helping someone end their life.
Several lawmakers in the 650-seat parliament have subsequently switched positions, and parties are not telling them how to vote, making the outcome difficult to predict.
An ITV News tracker of around half the parliamentarians estimates that 153 MPs plan to vote for changing the law, with 141 against. Some 21 remain undecided with another 21 due to abstain.
Both the House of Commons and the House of Lords need to approve the legislation before the end of the current parliamentary year, likely sometime in the autumn, or the bill will fail.
If it passes and receives royal assent, then it would be four years before an assisted dying service is implemented.
A government impact assessment published this month estimated that approximately 160 to 640 assisted deaths could take place in the first year, rising to a possible 4,500 in year 10.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected to vote in favour but several of his top ministerial team, including the health and justice secretaries, have publicly opposed changing the law.
Assisted suicide currently carries a maximum prison sentence of 14 years in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Separate legislation is going through the devolved Scottish parliament, while the Isle of Man at the end of March became the first British territory to pass an assisted dying bill.
N.Schaad--VB