concluded Norwegian authorities prioritised protecting the reputation of the lucrative oil industry over fully exploring the disaster's causes.
Solihull Council said protecting and enhancing the area’s environment was a priority and pledged to continue prosecuting fly-tippers “to the fullest extent”.Actor Idris Elba says young people have solutions to tackle knife crime, from tougher sentences to removing loopholes for obtaining knives.
Speaking at an anti-knife crime event in Hammersmith, the actor said he did not know what to say to young people carrying knives."They're literally holding these out of fear," he said.The event was also attended by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and families of knife crime victims.
The event comes as latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show recorded knife crime rose by 22% in London in the year to 23 September.Elba told the group: "I've had conversations which are difficult, like 'Idris, you're telling people to put away our knives, but what am I going to hold?'
"And I feel like I don't know what to say to them, because they're literally holding these out of fear. But they have solutions."
Some said tougher sentences would be a deterrent, while others said there were too many loopholes when it came to obtaining knives, the actor added.The files have been published in a new book, The Murderer Who Must Be Saved, by French investigative journalists Karl Laske and Vincent Nouzille, and Libyan activist Samir Shegwara.
Mr Shegwara - who took part in the uprising against Gaddafi in 2011 - told the reporters the documents were retrieved from the archives of Libya's former intelligence chief Abdullah Senussi, who was named as a Lockerbie suspect in 2015.The journalists spent four years checking their contents with contacts and against information already in the public domain.
Mr Nouzelle said: "Samir Shegwara's not interested in money or in revenge."He just wants these documents to go public for truth and for history and for justice.