2024 in England

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2024
in
England

Centuries:
Decades:
See also:2023–24 in English football
2024–25 in English football
2024 in the United Kingdom
Other events of 2024

Events of the year 2024 in England.

Incumbent[edit]

Events[edit]

January[edit]

  • 1 January –
    • Figures published by NHS England show that almost three million people were seen for an urgent cancer check during 2023, a quarter higher than the same period before the pandemic. Treatment targets remain behind.[1]
    • A 16-year-old boy who was stabbed to death in Primrose Hill, London, on New Year's Eve, is named by police as Harry Pitman. A 16-year-old boy is arrested in connection with the incident.[2]
    • Sir Martyn Oliver begins his tenure as HM Chief Inspector of Education, Children's Services and Skills.[3] One of his first acts in the role is to announce that Ofsted inspectors will receive training around mental health, following the findings of an inquest into the January 2023 death of headteacher Ruth Perry.[4]
  • 2 January –
    • Following a trial at Chester Crown Court, Alice Wood is found guilty of the May 2022 murder of her fiancé, Ryan Watson, who she dragged under her car following an argument at a party.[5]
    • Birmingham City sack Wayne Rooney as their manager after 83 days in charge, 15 matches and nine consecutive losses.[6]
    • Applications open for working parents in England to apply for 15 hours per week of funded childcare for two-year-olds starting from April 2024.[7]
    • A further two arrests are made in connection with the death of Harry Pitman.[8]
  • 3 January –
    • Thousands of junior doctors begin a six-day walkout, the longest strike in NHS history, in a dispute over pay.[9]
    • More than 250 flood warnings remain in place throughout England in the wake of Storm Henk.[10]
  • 4 January –
  • 5 January –
    • Two teenage boys, aged 16 and 17, have been arrested on suspicion of murder following the death of Harry Pitman on New Year's Eve, police confirm.[12]
    • London Underground staff belonging to the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers begin a week of strikes after the breakdown of last minute talks.[13]
    • Around 280 flood alerts remain in place in northeast, eastern and southeast England, with rivers bursting their banks and several hundred properties flooded, forcing people to be evacuated.[14]
  • 6 January – A 16-year-old boy appears before Highbury Magistrates Court charged with the murder of Harry Pitman, and is remanded in custody.[15]
  • 7 January –
    • The RMT union announce that strikes by London Underground workers which would have crippled Tube services for week commencing 8 January are suspended.[16]
    • The Met Office issues a yellow weather warning for snow and sleet valid from 4am the next day for Greater London and the southeast.[17]
  • 9 January – Following a trial at Maidstone Crown Court, Jan Gholami is convicted of the May 2020 murder of his two-year-old adopted daughter Zahra Ghulami.[18]
  • 12 January – Following a trial and conviction at Maidstone Crown Court, Sian Hedges and Jack Benham are sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum of 19 and 23 years respectively for the November 2020 murder of Hedges' 18-month-old son Alfie Phillips.[19]
  • 13 January – Residents of social housing properties affected with damp and mould, and owned by Rochdale Boroughwide Housing, have reported being told by their landlord that they breathe too much.[20]
  • 14 January – Transport for London is testing ways to stop the appearance of "ghost marks" on the walls of stations on the Elizabeth line caused by passengers leaning on the walls.[21]
  • 15 January – The English Premier League charges Everton and Nottingham Forest with breaching its financial rules.[22]
  • 16 January – The Gender Plus Hormone Clinic is approved by the Care Quality Commission to prescribe hormones for those over the age of 16, becoming the first clinic of its type to receive approval from the CQC.[23]
  • 17 January – Lincolnshire County Council launches an inquiry into the death of two-year-old Bronson Battersby, who is believed to have starved to death, after his father, Kenneth, died from a heart attack shortly after Christmas 2023.[24]
  • 18 January –
  • 19 January –
    • Police issue an urgent appeal to trace the mother of a newborn baby girl who was found abandoned wrapped in a towel inside a shopping bag in Newham, east London, the previous evening.[27]
    • The bodies of a man and woman and two girls are found at a property in Norwich.[28]
    • The High Court in London rules that former Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams can be sued in a personal capacity by victims of IRA bomb attacks in England.[29]
  • 20 January –
  • 21 January – Police investigating the deaths of a family of four near Norwich confirm the two adults died as a result of stab wounds.[32]
  • 22 January – NHS England begins contacting millions of parents in England to advise them to get their children vaccinated against measles as cases of the disease increase.[33]
  • 23 January – A court accepts Valdo Calocane's plea of manslaughter on the basis of diminished responsibility over the 2023 Nottingham attacks, meaning he will not stand trial for the stabbings.[34]
  • 25 January –
    • Paranoid schizophrenic Valdo Calocane is sentenced to an indefinite detention in a high security hospital for the June 2023 Nottingham stabbings during which he killed three people.[35]
    • Elsa, the baby found abandoned in Newham, London, has been discharged from hospital and placed in foster care, BBC News reports.[36]
    • The British Medical Association announces that senior consultants in England have voted by 51% to reject the UK government's latest pay offer, worth an extra 4.5%. The offer was rejected on a 66% turnout.[37]
  • 26 January –
    • A BBC News investigation finds that more than 60 calls were made to police and social services before the death of nine-year-old Alfie Steele, who was killed by his mother and her partner at their home in Droitwich, Worcestershire, in 2021.[38]
    • 2023 Nottingham attacks:
      • The Attorney General's office will consider a review of Valdo Calocane's sentence following a referral arguing it was too lenient.[39]
      • NHS England announces an investigation into Calocane's contact with mental health services stretching back to 2020.[40]
      • Leicestershire Police confirm that Calocane was reported for assaulting two colleagues six weeks before he stabbed three people to death in Nottingham, but that no arrest was made.[41]
    • An inquest into the March 2021 death of 14-year-old Mia Janin concludes the north London schoolgirl took her own life after being bullied by boys at her school.[42]
  • 27 January –
    • The UK's first licensed drug safety checking service is launched by charity The Loop in Bristol.[43]
    • Firefighters tackle a major blaze at a four-storey building in Liverpool city centre.[44]
  • 28 January –
  • 29 January –
    • Police in Leeds appeal for a mother of a baby girl found in a pub toilet the previous evening, and who appears to have been stillborn, to contact them.[47] It is reported the following day that the woman has been identified and is receiving medical treatment.[48]
    • Two teenagers who died following a stabbing incident in Bristol are named as Max Dixon, 16, and Mason Rist, 15.[49] A further two arrests are made in connection with the incident.[50]
    • Leicestershire Police refers itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct over its investigation into two assaults committed by Valdo Calocane weeks before he stabbed three people to death in Nottingham.[51]
  • 30 January –
    • A man armed with a crossbow is shot dead by police after trying to break into a house in Surrey Quays in Southwark, south east London.[52] He is subsequently named as Bryce Hodgson, a convicted stalker who was banned from the road where he was shot.[53]
    • A BBC investigation reveals that three police officers at Thames Valley Police viewed body camera footage of a woman's groin without reason, but did not face a misconduct hearing for doing so, while a student officer was dismissed for reporting the incident. Thames Valley Police has since referred itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct.[54]
    • Work begins to dismantle an unauthorised spa building at the home of Captain Sir Tom Moore's daughter after she lost an appeal to save it from demolition.[55]
  • 31 January –
    • Launch of Pharmacy First, an NHS scheme enabling pharmacists in England to issue prescriptions for seven minor ailments, including sore throats and earache, without the need for a referral from a GP.[56]
    • A further three arrests are made in connection with the fatal stabbing of two teenagers in Bristol.[57] A 44-year-old man is subsequently charged with murder.[58]

February[edit]

  • 1 February –
    • It becomes a criminal offence to own an American XL Bully dog in England and Wales unless the owner has successfully applied for the dog to be exempt.[59]
    • A further four people are charged in connection with the fatal stabbings of two teenagers in Bristol.[60]
  • 2 February – Alice Wood is sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 18 years for the murder of her boyfriend, who she ran over with her car following an argument.[61]
  • 3 February – A 68-year-old woman, later named as Esther Martin, dies following an attack by two dogs, believed to be American XL bullies, at Jaywick in Essex.[62]
  • 4 February –
    • Police offer a reward of £20,000 for information leading to the arrest of Abdul Ezedi, who remains at large following an acid attack in Clapham on 31 January.[63]
    • A 17-year-old boy becomes the fourth person to be charged with the murder of two teenagers in Bristol.[64]
    • Jockey Keegan Kirkby dies following a fall from the horse he was riding at a race meeting in Kent.[65]
  • 5 February – A 14-year-old boy becomes the fifth person to be charged with the murder of two teenagers in Bristol.[66]
  • 6 February –
    • Teenagers Abdul Yaro and Kavian Vaughans are sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 21 years for the murder of 17-year-old Shea Gordon, who was stabbed to death at an 18th birthday party in east London in September 2022.[67]
    • The UK government gives Birmingham City Council the go-ahead to increase its Council Tax by 10% from April.[68]
  • 8 February – Analysis carried out by BBC News indicates 2023 was the worst year on record for cancer waiting times in England, with almost 100,000 people not starting treatment within 62 days of a diagnosis.[69]
  • 9 February –
    • The BMA announces that junior doctors in England will stage a strike from 24 to 28 February.[70]
    • Authorities in Cumbria confirm that an invasive alligator snapping turtle, native to the southern United States, was found by a dog walker at Urswick Tarn, near Ulverston, a few days earlier.[71]
  • 10 February – An eight-year-old boy is taken to hospital after being bitten in the head by a dog, believed to be an XL bully, in Bootle, Merseyside.[72]
  • 11 February –
  • 12 February – The Independent Office for Police Conduct begins investigating Leicestershire Police's contact with Valdo Calocane prior to the Nottingham stabbings.[75] A probe into Nottinghamshire Police's contact with Calocane is launched the next day.[76]
  • 14 February –
    • The High Court upholds a decision against the University of Bristol that it discriminated against student Natasha Abrahart, who committed suicide in 2018 shortly before she was scheduled to take part in a group presentation. Abrahart had chronic social anxiety disorder and a previous hearing had ruled the university had failed to make reasonable adjustments for her.[77]
    • A murder investigation is launched after a 16-year-old boy, subsequently named as Darrian Williams, is stabbed to death by two masked attackers in the Rawnsley Park area of Bristol.[78][79]
  • 15 February –
  • 16 February –
    • NHS England authorises the use of Produodopa, a Parkinson's disease treatment that uses a pump to steadily release medicine into the bloodstream.[86]
    • Six people are taken to hospital after migrants were found in the back of a lorry at Newhaven Ferry Port.[87]
    • Jan Gholami is sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 23 years and six months for the murder of his two-year-old adoptive daughter Zahra Ghulami.[88]
    • Craig Browne resigns as deputy leader of Cheshire East Council, saying he can no longer afford to do the role on the £30,000 annual salary.[89]
  • 17 February –
  • 18 February –
    • Two fifteen-year-old boys are charged with the murder of Darrian Williams.[93]
    • A 42-year-old woman is arrested on suspicion of murder after three children are found dead at a property in Bristol.[94]
    • Police begin a search for a two-year-old boy who is missing after falling into the River Soar at Aylestone in Leicester.[95]
  • 19 February –
    • The campaign group Save Stonehenge World Heritage Site loses a legal challenge against renewed plans to build a tunnel under the A303 near to Stonehenge.[96]
    • The UK government announces plans for new measures on holiday homes in England to stop local people being priced out of being able to live in their community.[97]
    • Birmingham City Council announces plans to raise council tax by 21% over the next two years as part of £300m in budget cuts.[98]
  • 20 February – The sentence of Valdo Calocane for killing three people in Nottingham is to be reviewed by the Court of Appeal after the Attorney General ruled it was unduly lenient.[99]
  • 21 February – Bristol City Council approves plans to move a statue of transatlantic slave trader Edward Colston to the M Shed Museum, where it will go on permanent display.[100]
  • 22 February –
    • A yellow weather warning is in place for many parts of England as heavy rain and high winds affect areas already waterlogged by previous downpours.[101]
    • A man, subsequently named as Lenny Scott, is shot dead while riding his bicycle in Lancashire.[102]
  • 23 February –
    • A 500kg (1,102lb) unexploded World War II German bomb found in a garden in Plymouth three days earlier, and that forced the evacuation of thousands of people, is taken out to sea for disposal.[103]
    • Following a trial at Oxford Crown Court, Scarlet Blake, who once livestreamed the killing and dissecting of a cat, is convicted of the July 2021 murder of Jorge Martin Carreno, who Blake attacked and killed after wandering the streets in search of a murder victim.[104]
  • 24 February – Junior doctors in England begin a five-day strike at 7.00am, the tenth time they have walked out during their dispute.[105]
  • 26 February – Scarlet Blake is sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 24 years for the murder of Jorge Martin Carreno.[106]
  • 27 February – A man is arrested by police on suspicion of trespassing at Windsor Castle, and subsequently detained under the Mental Health Act.[107]
  • 29 February –

March[edit]

  • 1 March –
    • Eleven people, including eight police officers, are taken to hospital after fire breaks out at a five-storey building in the Kensington area of London.[112]
    • At the Old Bailey, Ashana Studholme, Lisa Richardson and Shaun Pendlebury are sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 34 years for the murder of Shakira Spencer.[113]
    • Following a trial at Leeds Crown Court, Marcus Osborne is given a whole life sentence for the May 2023 murders of his ex-partner, Katie Higton, and her new love interest, Steven Harnett.[114]
    • NHS England figures indicate that 91,000 appointments had to be rescheduled following the latest strike by junior doctors.[115]
    • Three people are injured during a police chase involving two suspects on a moped in Clapham, south west London; two women are injured when a gun dropped by one of the suspects discharges, while a member of the public is injured when they are hit by the moped.[116]
  • 2 March – Northumberland National Park confirms that part of the felled Sycamore Gap Tree will go on display at The Sill, a venue near the site of the tree, from September.[117]
  • 3 March – Train fares in England and Wales are increased by 5%.[118] London bus and tube fares are frozen until 2025.[119]
  • 4 March –
    • A rare Ferrari F512M worth £350,000, which was stolen in London from Formula One driver Gerhard Berger in 1995, has been recovered by police.[120]
    • A woman is arrested on suspicion of murder after the discovery of the body of a 10-year-old girl, subsequently named as Shay Kang, at a property in Rowley Regis, West Midlands.[121][122]
    • One person is taken to hospital following a chemical leak at a factory in the Trafford Park area of Greater Manchester.[123]
  • 5 March –
  • 6 March –
  • 7 March – North Yorkshire Police arrest an 11-year-old boy who was stopped on the M1 while driving a BMW X5 that was towing a suspected stolen caravan.[128]
  • 8 March –
  • 9 March – Humberside Police remove a number of bodies from a funeral home in Kingston upon Hull following a report of concern about "care of the deceased".[132] It is subsequently reported that 35 bodies and a quantity of human ashes were removed.[133]
  • 12 March – NHS England announces that children will no longer routinely be prescribed puberty blockers at gender identity clinics.[134]
  • 13 March – Following a trial at Leeds Crown Court, Lynda Chenery and Mark Woods are convicted of fraudulently obtaining and reselling concert tickets worth £6.5m.[135]
  • 14 March – At the Old Bailey, a 17-year-old boy pleads guilty to the manslaughter of 15-year-old Elianne Andam, who was stabbed at a bus stop in Croydon in September 2023. The plea is not accepted by the prosecution meaning a murder trial will take place in November.[136]
  • 15 March –
    • At 9.00pm, a five mile section of the M25 is closed between Junctions 10 and 11 in Surrey to facilitate the demolition of a bridge and the installation of a new gantry. The section is scheduled to reopen again at 6.00am on 18 March, but opens eight hours earlier than planned, at 10.00pm on 17 March. It is the first daytime closure of a section of the motorway since it was opened in 1986.[137][138]
    • Liverpool Coroner's Office confirms that Stephen Shrimpton, who collapsed while driving a school bus which subsequently crashed killing a teenage girl in September 2023, died from natural causes.[139]
  • 16 March – A group calling itself the South Devon Primary, which aims to unseat Conservative MPs in South Devon at the next election, chooses Liberal Democrat Caroline Voaden as a candidate for one of its constituencies.[140]
  • 18 March – Four people are injured following an attack by a suspected American XL bully dog in Battersea, South London.[141]
  • 19 March – The Football Governance Bill, which aims to establish an independent football regulator for England, is introduced into Parliament.[142]
  • 20 March – Junior doctors in England vote in favour of continuing their industrial action for a further six months, with 98% of the 62% of respondents voting to continue the dispute.[143]
  • 21 March –
    • Following a 17-day trial at Newcastle Crown Court, Christina Robinson is found guilty of the November 2022 murder of her son, Dwelaniyah Robinson, who she scalded and beat.[144]
    • Dan Barker, selected in December 2023 as the Conservative candidate for the 2024 Greater Manchester mayoral election, defects to Reform UK, accusing the Conservatives of giving up on northern England.[145]
    • At Leicester Crown Court, Shannon Grant is sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 34 years for the June 2023 torture and murder of Natasha Morais at his home in Leicester.[146]
    • At Warwick Crown Court, three teenagers − two boys and a girl − are given custodial sentences of between nine and twelve months after pleading guilty to the manslaughter of a man who was walking his dog in Nuneaton.[147]
  • 22 March –
    • At Chelmsford Crown Court, Luke D'Wit is sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 37 years for the April 2023 murders of Stephen and Carol Baxter, who he poisoned with fentanyl before rewriting their will.[148]
    • A 12-year-old boy is arrested after a teenage girl was stabbed during an incident in Sittingbourne, Kent.[149] He is subsequently charged with attempted murder.[150]
  • 24 March – Mayor of London Sadiq Khan rules out any changes to the Ultra Low Emission Zone while he is in office.[151]
  • 25 March –
    • Following a trial at Birmingham Crown Court, Remy Gordon and Kami Carpenter are convicted of the Boxing Day 2022 murder of footballer Cody Fisher, who was stabbed at a nightclub in Birmingham.[152]
    • A review into the Valdo Calocane case finds that prosecutors were right to accept his plea of manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility, but that they could have handled the case better.[153]
  • 27 March –
    • Participants in the 2024 Boat Races, scheduled to take place on 30 March, are being warned not to enter the River Thames after high levels of E. coli bacteria were found in the water. It is believed the bacteria comes from a discharge of raw sewage.[154]
    • A man in his 20s suffers life threatening injuries after being stabbed on a train in Beckenham, south east London.[155] A 19-year-old man is subsequently arrested and charged with attempted murder.[156]
  • 28 March – At Stafford Crown Court, four men are convicted of the August 2023 murder of DPD driver Aurman Singh, who was attacked in Shrewsbury. A fifth man is convicted of manslaughter.[157]

April[edit]

  • 1 April –
    • Analysis of NHS data suggests that as many as 250 patients in England could be unnecessarily dying each week because of A&E waiting times.[158]
    • Parents in England become eligible to access 15 hours of free childcare each week.[159]
    • A murder investigation is launched following the fatal shooting of a 21-year-old man in west London.[160]
  • 4 April –
    • Data produced by the Nuffield Trust indicates an increase in demand for assessments for autism and treatment for ADHD has surpassed the ability of NHS England to meet demand.[161]
    • A murder investigation is launched following the discovery of a human torso in woodland at Kersal, Greater Manchester.[162] The torso is later described as that of a man who is "likely to be aged older than 40" and had "only been deceased for a matter of days".[163]
  • 5 April –
    • Senior consultants belonging to the British Medical Association (BMA) and the Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association (HCSA) vote to accept a pay offer from the UK government worth almost 20% for 2023–24, thus ending their dispute.[164]
    • People are warned to "be on their guard" following a cyberattack on Leicester City Council.[165]
    • At the Old Bailey, student Adele Okojie-Aidonojie is sentenced to 11 years in prison for causing death by dangerous driving after a couple who were twerking in the back of her car as it was speeding were thrown from the vehicle in a crash in Battersea, south London in July 2022.[166]
  • 6 April – West Yorkshire Police launch a murder investigation after a 27-year-old woman dies in hospital after being stabbed in Bradford city centre while she was pushing a baby in a pram.[167] She is subsequently named as Kulsuma Akter.[168]
  • 8 April – Remy Gordon and Kami Carpenter are sentenced to life imprisonment with minimum terms of 26 years and 25 years respectively for the December 2022 murder of Cody Fisher.[169]
  • 10 April –
    • Michael Davis is sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 22 years for the 2017 murder of his baby son, Ollie Davis.[170]
    • A 25-year-old man is charged with the murder of Kulsama Akter.[171] He is subsequently remanded in custody the following day by Bradford Magistrates.[172]
    • Omar Edwards is sentenced to five months in prison for "abusive and violent behaviour" towards cabin crew after he was asked to stop vaping in the toilets of a flight from Jamaica to London in November 2022.[173]
  • 11 April –
    • Data published by NHS England for March 2024 shows targets for the number of people seen in A&E within four hours were not met, falling below the 76% threshold, while a separate target to eliminate all waiting times over 65 weeks by March has been pushed back until September.[174]
    • After South East England is hit by Storm Pierrick, the waves at Dunster Beach in Somerset is turned pink as sediment from the red sandstone cliffs are churned up by rough seas.[175]
  • 12 April –
  • 13 April –
    • Greater Manchester Police arrest five people after the discovery of the remains of a baby at a property in Wigan; the five are subsequently released on bail.[178]
    • Mayor of London Sadiq Khan launches what he describes as a "new climate action plan" for London, which includes a Net Zero Schools target and recommitting to making London Net Zero by 2030.[179]
    • Seventeen people are taken to hospital after a minibus carrying South Shields F.C. fans home from a match with Tamworth F.C. crashes on the A1(M) near Pontefract in West Yorkshire.[180]
  • 14 April – Three men are killed in a car crash at Staples Corner Retail Park in north London after their car rolls down an embankment and strikes a footbridge.[181]
  • 16 April –
    • A woman is remanded in custody by magistrates in Warrington charged with the murder of a baby whose body was found in Warrington in March 1998.[182]
    • Flight operations at Birmingham Airport are temporarily suspended following a security incident on an Aer Lingus jet.[183]
  • 17 April –
    • Sussex Police apologise to the families of the 1986 Babes in the Wood murder victims over the way they handled the investigation.[184]
    • Mohammed Abbkr, who has schizophrenia and set two people alight as they walked home from mosques in Birmingham and London, is sentenced to an indefinite hospital order after he was convicted of attempted murder in November 2023.[185]
  • 18 April – The Criminal Cases Review Commission issues an "unreserved apology" to Andrew Malkinson, who spent 17 years in prison after being wrongfully convicted of rape.[186]
  • 19 April –
    • Police launch an investigation after a number of films of women on nights out in North West England were taken without their knowledge and posted on social media.[187]
    • Myra Carvalho, who sent the singer Harry Styles 8,000 cards in less than a month, is sentenced to 14 weeks in prison at Harrow Crown Court, and given a ten year restraining order that prevents her from attending any events where he is performing.[188]
  • 23 April –
    • Six people are arrested after trouble at a St George's Day event in central London.[189]
    • The Unite union announces that 800 of its staff at Heathrow Airport will stage a strike from 7 to 13 May over outsourcing of jobs.[190]
  • 26 April – Dr Tijion Esho, a cosmetic doctor who is noted for appearances on television, is struck off for giving free Botox treatment to a patient in return for sex at his clinic.[191]
  • 28 April – Police investigating the identity of a torso discovered at a nature reserve in Greater Manchester find other body parts.[192]

Scheduled events[edit]

Holidays[edit]

Source:[194][195]

Deaths[edit]

January[edit]

February[edit]

March[edit]

April[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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  2. ^ Warren, Jess (1 January 2024). "Primrose Hill stabbing: Harry Pitman named as stabbing victim". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
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  4. ^ Jeffreys, Branwen; George, Sallie (2 January 2024). "Ruth Perry death: Ofsted needs more empathy, says new boss". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
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  29. ^ O'Neill, Julian (19 January 2024). "Gerry Adams: Ex-Sinn Féin leader can be sued by IRA victims, court rules". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
  30. ^ Pope, Alex; Issimdar, Mariam (20 January 2024). "Norwich: Police not deployed to 999 call from family death house". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 20 January 2024.
  31. ^ "Birmingham teenager Muhammad Hassam Ali killed in a case of 'mistaken identity'". BBC News. BBC. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024.
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  33. ^ Roxby, Philippa (22 January 2024). "Measles vaccine campaign targets unprotected millions". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 22 January 2024.
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