'The heart of our family': The lives lost to Covidpublished at 16:58 Greenwich Mean Time 31 January
We share the stories of some of the 12,000 people who have died with coronavirus in Scotland.
Read MoreWe share the stories of some of the 12,000 people who have died with coronavirus in Scotland.
Read MoreAs Manchester City prepare for the Champions League final, we recall the unusual way they won their first and only European trophy, 53 years ago.
Read MoreFamily members and friends have described their loved ones and paid tribute to their lives.
Read MoreZuber and Mohsin Issa's EG Group owns Britain's third largest supermarket, Asda.
Read MoreCompare the temperature in your area to other locations in the UK and around the world.
Read MoreAs Sergio Aguero retires after a few months at Barcelona, some of his former team-mates discuss his impact on former club Manchester City.
Read MorePeople who live, work or travel in various parts of the UK are being urged to get a Covid test.
Read MoreLiverpool are to trial seats with safety rails at Anfield because of concerns over "persistent standing" by supporters following a safety review.
Read MoreMark Dale collected 39 bags of litter across his 26.2-mile and 10-hour litter pick.
Read MoreWarrington are to sign Castleford's Oliver Holmes and Peter Mata'utia on three-year and two-year deals respectively from 2022.
Read MoreAnfield's capacity will increase by 7,000 to 61,000 following the Anfield Road Stand's expansion.
Read MoreSandish Shoker
BBC News
A Nottinghamshire man has been handed a three-year football ban after he shouted racial abuse at a Manchester City fan at a match in 2019.
Chelsea fan Antony Crump, 28, was found guilty of intentional racially aggravated harassment, alarm and distress at Tameside Magistrates' Court on 9 June, after his trial was delayed due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Crump, of Hereford Close, Worksop, was banned from attending games for three years and fined £1,700.
Nottinghamshire Police said the offence related to a match at the Etihad stadium between Manchester City and Chelsea on 23 November 2019.
The force said the incident was reported to a steward but the exchange continued, and the racial slur was repeated again, this time witnessed by another steward and another Manchester City supporter.
Supt Suk Verma, strategic lead for hate crime at Nottinghamshire Police, said the force was determined to stamp out racial abuse and treat all reports seriously.
"No member of society should face such abuse wherever they are, especially when at their place of work - and this applies for anyone, whether they are a professional sports player or otherwise," he said.
"With fans hopefully continuing to return to stadiums in the coming weeks and months, this conviction is a reminder to anyone who thinks of engaging in such intolerable abuse that we will work robustly to prosecute perpetrators of hate crime and bring them to some justice."
A review of evidence gathered after the IRA bomb in Manchester has produced "limited" leads, police say.
Read MoreManchester United co-chairman Joel Glazer was told the club had become "a laughing stock" when he attended a fans' forum meeting for the first time.
Read MoreGreater Manchester's new top officer says such actions could affect police impartiality.
Read MoreAn ambulance boss tells an inquiry strategic thinking was not needed after the Manchester Arena bomb.
Read MoreA couple say they are putting off having more children because of the lack of mental health services.
Read MoreThe investigation is continuing into the collapse of part of Northwich railway station's roof.
Read More