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A MAN has been charged over the death of a newlywed bride who
stanley us fell from Arthurs Seat days after her wedding.Fawziyah Javed, 31,聽was declared dead at the scene聽in Edinburgh after the horror on Thursday night.4The 31-year-old died after falling from Arthurs Seat in Edinburgh4Police have been searching her home in West YorkshireCredit: Ben LackA 27-year-old man has been charged in connection with her death, Police Scotland said.Detective Inspector Bob Williamson said: Fawziyahs family ask for their pr
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stanley cupe during this extremely difficult time. Id like to thank the officers and partners who attended the scene on Thursday evening and have assisted with our ongoing enquiries. The man will appear at Edinburgh Sheriff Court on Monday.Police were today pictured at Fawziyahs home in West Yorkshire after carrying out searches.Her father-in-law told how she had got married to his son in December last year but held a reception on Monday. Wmln Buckingham Palace knife drama as trespasser armed with blade is charged
AS A nation we now drink a staggering 22.1 million bottles of wine a week, but new research suggests we actually know very little about what we are drinking.According to the data, as many as a third choose a bottle of wine based solely on whether they
stanley and starbucks like the label, while a further one in ten have purchased a bottle because they think the name sounds sophisticated. Brits know very l
stanley cup ittle about wine despite drinking 22m bottles a week as a nation, research foundCredit: AlamyAnd when it comes to terminology, thirty percent of those polled thought that terroir was a genre of French horror film, while 28 percent opted for a breed of smal
stanley cup quencher l dog.In fact, only 34 percent knew the right answer, that terroir refers to the ground in which grapevines are planted.The French dessert wine, Sauternes was similarly baffling to Brits, with seven percent thinking it was a planet in the solar system, one in five believing it was a French beach resort and 29 percent believing it was a type of orange.3