The government has not given a precise breakdown of the forecast savings but the bulk are expected to come from changes to eligibility for disability payments.
He had not spoken to his family yet because he lost his phone in the chaos, saying he had never experienced anything like it in his life. He thought he was going to die.The construction workers tell me they were a mixture of Thai and Burmese.
Nukul Khemutha, 30, was working on the fifth floor when he felt the tremors. He looked up and saw all the floors sinking, holes forming.He said one of his colleagues had just gone up to the tenth floor to use the bathroom and they are still waiting for news of his whereabouts. He told me: "We were all just screaming 'run' and telling each other to hold hands and run together."When I spoke to them, they sat there smoking, trying to calm down. They looked sad. None of the survivors had received medical help, as all the attention was focused on those still trapped.
As the sound of drilling intensifies, rescue workers face a long night ahead.A 21-year-old County Armagh man has been sentenced to five years and two months for a litany of online sexual offences against teenage girls.
On Friday, Max Hollingsbee, of Orient Circle in Lurgan, was sentenced for his crimes against 14 girls and young women.
His crimes fall into the broader field of online catfishing – where someone uses a false identity to gain the trust of someone before exploiting them, also often referred to as "sextortion".Headlining the festival had been on her bucket list since she recorded her first album in 2018, she added.
“It's the greatest place on Earth. Just the sense of community and togetherness and having fun and taking care of one another. It's just beautiful.”But this year, as I headed to Worthy Farm, I knew there was something different - and exciting - afoot.
On Thursday night, South Asian artists took over the furthest corner of the festival, launching the first of four days of music, beats and DJs.The new space, a first for Glastonbury, is being hailed as a "huge step forward" in improving the representation of British Asian music and artists.