A woman nearly caught up in one of the London Tube bombings then boarded the bus blown up about an hour later, an inquest hears.
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Gail Sheridan has stood for office previously, in 2003
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Tommy Sheridan’s wife Gail is to stand for election to the Scottish Parliament, the BBC understands.
The wife of the disgraced ex-leader of the Scottish Socialist Party plans to run as a candidate for the Solidarity party in the May poll.
Last month, Mr Sheridan was convicted of perjury following a 12-week trial at the High Court in Glasgow.
He is due to be sentenced on 26 January and Mrs Sheridan is expected to make a formal announcement after that.
She had also been accused of perjury but was acquitted of all the charges against her.
It is believed the 46-year-old will be placed at the top of Solidarity’s Glasgow list.
The party was founded in 2006, shortly after Mr Sheridan won his defamation action against the News of the World which accused him of attending a swingers’ club.
But in December last year, a jury found Mr Sheridan guilty of lying under oath during his defamation action against the paper.
Mr Sheridan failed to be re-elected in the 2007 Holyrood election as top of Solidarity’s list nominees for Glasgow.
The party also stood a candidate in by-elections in Glasgow East and Glenrothes in 2008, and Mr Sheridan himself stood again in the Glasgow North East by-election in 2009, winning just 3.9% of the vote.
Mrs Sheridan was an activist in the SSP from 1999 to 2006, and has stood for office before, contesting the Glasgow Cardonald seat in a council election in 2003.
The former air hostess increased the SSP’s vote, but lost out to Labour.
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The illegally-obtained points would have been worth £81,000
A Sainsbury’s IT worker who stole more than 17 million Nectar points from the firm has been jailed.
James Stevenson created false accounts to give himself the points under the shop’s reward card system, the Old Bailey heard.
The illegally-obtained points would have been worth £81,000 to Stevenson, 45, from Muswell Hill, north London.
He was sentenced to 20 months in prison for fraud but will be released after 10 months on licence.
“This was a carefully-planned, well-worked fraud”
Judge Peter Thornton
Stevenson had worked for the company for two decades and had access to the IT networks controlling the Nectar card scheme.
He created 18 accounts and added points to them between 2003 and 2004, the court heard.
But he waited until 2007 and 2008 to begin using the points.
Stevenson then went on test runs, buying only one item at a time, the court heard.
When Stevenson’s fraud was discovered by Sainsbury’s, he told them he had “discovered a loophole in the system”, the court heard.
He was ordered to repay the £8,120 he stole to pay for goods.
Edward McKiernan, prosecuting, said: “There wasn’t a proper check in place. He was a trusted employee so no-one was looking over his shoulder.”
Judge Peter Thornton told Stevenson: “Your motive was clearly greed. This was a carefully-planned, well-worked fraud on Sainsbury’s.”
The father of two’s relatives wept in court as he was sentenced.
His defence team argued he had showed remorse for the crime.
A Sainsbury’s spokeswoman said: “Our internal systems to prevent fraud are very robust.
“When the actions of Mr Stevenson came to light we took appropriate action and we are pleased that the legal process has now come to an end.”
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New boy Aaron Finch strikes an unbeaten fifty as Australia end England’s run of eight straight Twenty20 victories with a four-run triumph in Melbourne.
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A huge bright blue cockerel and a bronze sculpture of a boy on a rocking horse will take their place on the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square.
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When should breastfed babies be weaned onto solids?
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Lt Gen Nyamwasa used to be a close ally of President Paul Kagame
A military court in Rwanda has sentenced four former top officials who have fallen out with the government to long prison terms.
The men, all in exile, were found guilty of threatening state security and propagating ethnic divisions.
Lt Gen Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa, who survived an assassination attempt in June, and Maj Theogene Rudasingwa got 24 years and will lose their army rank.
Patrick Karegeya and Gerald Gahima received a sentence of 20 years each.
The guilty verdict means Rwanda’s government could seek the extradition of the men who are currently in exile in either the US or South Africa.
However correspondents say it is unlikely that either country would readily agree to such a request.
Rwanda denies any links to the June 2010 shooting of Lt Gen Nyamwasa in Johannesburg.
The Rwandan government believes Lt Gen Nyamwasa was linked to grenade attacks in Kigali earlier last year and has previously tried to secure his extradition.
Like the other men Lt Gen Nyamwasa was once a close ally of Rwandan President Paul Kagame – and has denied the allegations.
FAUSTIN KAYUMBA NYAMWASA1994: Helped bring Paul Kagame to power and end genocide1998: Appointed army chief of staff2006: French judge accuses him of shooting down plane of Rwanda’s ex-President Habyarimana in 19942008: Spain accuses him of links to death of Spanish nunsFeb 2010: Leaves post as ambassador to India, flees to South AfricaAccused of links to grenade attacks in KigaliJune 2010: Shot in JohannesburgJanuary 2011: Sentenced to 24 years by a military court
Mr Gahima was Rwanda’s prosecutor general, Mr Karegeya was director of external intelligence in Rwanda’s military, while Maj Rudasingwa was the top official in the president’s office.
The BBC’s Geoffrey Mutagoma in the capital, Kigali, says the men were also found guilty of creating a group of criminals; defaming a head of state and disrupting the freedom of the government.
Mr Kagame led the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) rebel movement which put a stop to the 1994 genocide – and has been president since 2000.
The president, who was overwhelmingly re-elected for a second term with 93% of the vote last August, is viewed by many in the West as one of Africa’s more dynamic leaders.
However, critics have raised concerns about his more authoritarian tendencies and the government was accused of harassing the opposition ahead of the elections.
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