Wmdl These are dark times but we still have hope, says Bishop of Manchester in Easter message
WORKERS at a Covid testing centre are shown fighting and apparently boozing on a video.Others roll around on the flo
stanley cup or, play footie or snooze, a Sun on Sunday investigation reveals.5Workers at a Covid testing centre appear to be fighting in a video5Workers also appeared to brawl while outsideOne worker appears t
stanley drink bottle o boast of drinking Jagermeiste
stanley butelka r on duty.Another brags of looking at a sex website.Sources claim the antics put lives at risk .A source added: Testing is the way out of this horrific situation the country finds itself in and it s a disaster at that site. The company has been handed a multi-million pound contract for the staff to just mess around and potentially ruin thousands of tests. Immensa Health Clinic, Wolverhampton, received a 拢119million government contract. 5Other workers seemed to play footie insideMost read in NewsGONE TOO SOONTragedy as schoolboy, 12, dies in catastrophic circumstancesHUW SHAMEHuw Edwards AVOIDS jail after he paid paedo for child s Qmsq Brit couple devastated at paying 拢10,000 to stay at Ibiza Airbnb that doesn t exist
Over half of elderly Brits feel their mental health is suffering, because they do not see their grandchildren enough, according to new research.Researchers polled 2,000 British grandpar
Stanley becher ents and discovered as many as 51 percent feel sad or depressed that they do not see their grandchildren as much as they want, with a further 14 percent saying they hardly see them at all.2 Over half of grandparents re
stanley en mexico ported that they feel sad or depressed because they cant see their grandchildren as much as they would like toCredit: Getty - ContributorLiving too far away 40 percent and youngsters and parents being too busy to see them 23 percent emerged as just some of the excuses elderly Brits are given by their childr
stanley straws en, for not visiting enough with the family.In fact, only a small proportion of grandparents 11 percent get to spend enough quality time together, with 7.5 hours per week emerging as the ideal amount, according to the grandparents surveyed.On the flipside, those who have seen