LABOUR DIVISIONS EXPOSED AS THERESA MAY HAILS 'HISTORIC' BREXIT BILL VICTORY

Labour's divisions on Europe were left exposed after a mini-rebellion in a series of votes on the Government's flagship Brexit Bill.

Theresa May headed off defeat in the crunch Commons clash and hailed results as a historic Parliamentary victory that would allow exit negotiations to move on.

Jeremy Corbyn had branded the European Union (Withdrawal) Bill a ministerial "power grab" and ordered his MPs to vote against the Government.

UK SOLDIERS AMONG THREE CHARGED WITH TERROR OFFENCES

Three men including two British soldiers are due to appear in court charged with terror offences after being charged with membership of a banned neo-Nazi group.

Mikko Vehvilainen, Mark Barrett and Alexander Deakin are accused of being part of the proscribed organisation National Action.

Vehvilainen, based at Sennybridge Camp, Brecon, Powys, is also charged with possessing a document containing information likely to be useful for terrorism and publishing material which is threatening, abusive or insulting, by posting comments on a website intending to stir up racial hatred.

JOHN MICHIE: DAUGHTER'S DEATH AT BESTIVAL A 'TRAGIC ACCIDENT'

Holby City and former Coronation Street actor John Michie has said his daughter's death at Bestival was a "tragic accident".

The 60-year-old told The Sun that the family had "lost an angel", but that the death of 25-year-old Louella Michie was "not murder".

He told the paper: "We've lost our angel. It's not murder - they were friends. It was just a tragic mistake, a tragic accident."

BORIS JOHNSON HEADS TO CARIBBEAN TO SEE HURRICANE IRMA RELIEF EFFORT

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson is to fly to the Caribbean to visit the British territories devastated by Hurricane Irma.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office said Mr Johnson will spend "the coming days" there to see the UK's relief effort first-hand.

It is understood he will visit the British Virgin Islands and Anguilla.

'BRUTAL INTRUSION' INTO LANDSCAPE CONDEMNED AS STONEHENGE TUNNEL GETS GO-AHEAD

Time Team presenter Tony Robinson has attacked the Government's decision to give the go-ahead for a 1.8-mile road tunnel near Stonehenge.

He described the project as "the most brutal intrusion into the Stone Age landscape ever" and accused the Department for Transport (DfT) of paying "no attention at all" to the importance of the Wiltshire monument.

But government heritage agency Historic England, and the National Trust and English Heritage, who manage the stone circle and its surrounding landscape, welcomed the announcement.

MAN IN COURT CHARGED WITH MURDERING DOG WALKER IN NORFOLK

A man is due in court charged with the murder of an elderly dog walker.

Alexander Palmer, 24, is accused of murdering 83-year-old grandfather Peter Wrighton, from Banham, Norfolk.

The body of retired BT worker Mr Wrighton, who had been walking his two dogs, was found in woodland near the village of East Harling on August 5.

TWO DEAD AFTER LIGHT PLANE CRASHES ON MARSHLAND

A pilot in his 50s and a female passenger in her 70s have died after a light aircraft crashed in Norfolk.

Emergency services were called just before 11am on Monday following reports of a crash landing on marshland near Wolferton.

The pair were pronounced dead at the scene and there were no other casualties, Norfolk Police said.

BORIS JOHNSON WELCOMES NEW SANCTIONS ON NORTH KOREA

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson says the world is "united against the illegal and reckless acts by the North Korean regime" after the United Nations Security Council unanimously approved tough new sanctions.

The resolution bans all textile exports and prohibits all countries from authorising new work permits for North Korean workers - two key sources of hard currency.

It also bans North Korea from importing all natural gas liquids and condensates.

LAWSUIT SETTLED OVER RIGHT TO MONKEY'S SELFIE PHOTO

A settlement has been reached in a lawsuit over who owns the copyright to selfie photographs taken by a monkey before a federal appeals court could answer the novel legal question.

Under the deal, the photographer whose camera was used to take the photo agreed to donate 25% of any future revenue of the images to charities dedicated to protecting crested macaques in Indonesia, lawyers for an animal-rights group said.

Lawyers for the group and the photographer, David Slater, asked the San Francisco-based 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals to dismiss the case and throw out a lower court decision that said animals cannot own copyrights.

UN APPROVES WATERED-DOWN NEW SANCTIONS AGAINST NORTH KOREA

The UN Security Council has unanimously approved new sanctions on North Korea in a watered-down resolution without an oil import ban or international asset freeze on the government and leader Kim Jong Un that the Trump administration wanted.

The resolution does ban North Korea from importing all natural gas liquids and condensates. But it only caps Pyongyang's imports of crude oil at the level of the last 12 months, and it limits the import of refined petroleum products to two million barrels a year.

It also bans all textile exports and prohibits all countries from authorising new work permits for North Korean workers - two key sources of hard currency.