Speaking during a performance at London's Wide Awake festival last week, Mr Ó hAnnaidh - who is due to appear in court next month - claimed the authorities were "trying to silence" the band before Glastonbury.
that the war with Ukraine will end if Opec brings oil prices down."People in Moscow are laughing at this idea, because the party which will suffer the most… is the American shale oil industry, the least cost-competitive oil industry in the world," Mr Milov told the BBC.
Mr Raghunandan says that Russia's cost of producing crude is also lower than in Opec countries like Saudi Arabia, so they would be hurt by lower oil prices before Russia."There is no way that Saudi Arabia is going to agree to that. This has been tried before. This has led to conflict between Saudi Arabia and the US," he says.Ms Rosner says there are both moral and practical issues with the West buying Russian hydrocarbons while supporting Ukraine.
"We now have a situation in which we are funding the aggressor in a war that we're condemning and also funding the resistance to the war," she says. "This dependence on fossil fuels means that we are really at the whims of energy markets, global energy producers and hostile dictators."Get our flagship newsletter with all the headlines you need to start the day.
Tesco's introduction of AI technology to some self-checkouts has led to customers joking that it bears a striking resemblance to the Video Assistant Referee (VAR) technology used in football.
The supermarket is aiming to reduce shoplifting by installing overhead cameras to identify when shoppers fail to scan an item properly, and then showing a live-action replay of the item not scanning.There is "no doubt" that UK defence spending will rise to 3% of GDP by 2034 at the latest, Defence Secretary John Healey has said.
In February, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer set out plans to increase defence spending to 2.5% by April 2027, with a "clear ambition" to reach 3% by 2034, economic conditions allowing.A government source told BBC News the defence secretary had "full confidence" that ambition will be reached in the next parliament.
The government will unveil its major strategic defence review on Monday, which will outline its priorities for military and security spending in the coming years.It is understood that the defence review is based on the assumption that the 3% target is the trajectory spending will follow.