Latest in Set Alight Southport
Sort by
419 items
-
Teen accused of Southport murders facing terror charge
Axel Rudakubana is accused of producing the poison ricin and possessing a study of an al-Qaeda training manual.Top stories - BBC News - October 29 -
UK teenager accused of Southport stabbings charged with terrorism offence
Al-Qaeda manual and deadly poison ricin allegedly found at Axel Rudakubana’s homeBusiness - Financial Times - October 29 -
Southport attack suspect in court on terror charge
Axel Rudakubana appears on charges of producing ricin and possessing a study of an al-Qaeda manual.Top stories - BBC News - October 30 -
PM slams Tory leader candidates' Southport comments
PM says MPs should "support the police" in their investigation of the triple killing in Southport.Top stories - BBC News - October 30 -
The questions being asked over the Southport attack
The complexities of how our prosecutions work can mean there are limits on what the public can know.Top stories - BBC News - October 31 -
How a deleted LinkedIn post was weaponised and seen by millions before the Southport riot
The social media post was quickly taken down, but screenshots were viewed millions of times.Top stories - BBC News - October 25 -
Southport murder suspect charged with terrorism offence and producing ricin
Axel Rudakubana, 18, who is already charged with three counts of murder, faces new charges of possessing terrorist material and making poison. The suspect accused of murdering three girls in ...World - The Guardian - October 29 -
The Papers: Terror charge for Southport suspect and Reeves' first budget
New charges over the Southport attack in July and previews of Wednesday's Budget lead the papers.Top stories - BBC News - October 30 -
Government says it became aware of new Southport charges in last few weeks
Axel Rudakubana, 18, is facing two further charges, including one under the terrorism act.Top stories - BBC News - October 30 -
The sun is setting on traditional retirement
Demographic changes force a rethink, but that’s not necessarily a bad thingWorld - Financial Times - October 18 -