
Scotland 0-1 Austria: Have your say
Scotland fans, were you at Hampden on Friday night or following the action from home? Either way we want your views on the performance. What did you make of Melissa Andreatta's first game in charge? How are you feeling about the future under the new boss? How big a miss will Rachel Corsie be when she hangs up her boots?Have your say on Andreatta's first game in charge
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
31 minutes ago
- BBC News
'Oldham parenting group changed my life and made me a better person'
A mother-of-four was in tears as she finished a parenting course as she praised it for helping to change her completed a 10-week programme designed to show parents how to manage feelings and behaviours to cope in difficult said the "insightful" sessions run by Oldham Council's parenting team had "made me a better person". "I used to cry all the time but now I don't cry all the time like I used to," said Louise. Louise said the Family Links Nurture Programme had provided the support and guidance she was looking for. "I've been going to so many different parenting groups and this one has actually helped and I'm a much better of a person for it," she said."I cried on the last day as it had been really insightful and really helpful. "It's helped changed my life and my family's life." 'Toolkit to cope' Eleven parents recently completed the course held at Oldham included Kamila, who said she was scared that she would be judged by taking part."That is the biggest thing," she said. "This just goes to show that there's nothing to be scared of."She added that she had already seen the benefit of the strategies she had learned and the friendships that she had made."This group makes you feel that you are never alone in your journey," she said."It has helped a lot in gaining strategies about how to manage my child's behaviour and how to self-regulate myself." Carli Keane, parenting officer at the council, said: "There's a big stigma attached with parents actually accessing these groups because they think it's kind of a negative."But they're actually all good parents as they're actually committing to two hours every week for 10 weeks."Councillor Shaid Mushtaq, cabinet member for children and young people, said the course helped "to give their children the best start in life"."It is providing our parents with a toolkit to cope, creating a calmer, nurturing household, while making friendships and forming bonds to continue an emotional support network," she said. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.


BBC News
35 minutes ago
- BBC News
Rare royal pistols owned by first Duke of Sussex to be sold
A pair of rare pistols from the private collection of an 18th Century prince are to be sold at auction guns were owned by Prince Augustus Frederick, the first Duke of Sussex, the sixth son of King George were made in the 1790s by the esteemed Spanish gunsmith Francisco Targarona and are believed to have been given to the prince as a diplomatic pair are estimated to fetch between £20,000 and £30,000 at a special sale of medals and coins, arms and armour at Woolley & Wallis, in Salisbury. The duke was well liked and noted for championing societal freedom and was also known for his large weapons collection, which was put up for auction on his death in 1843, including the pistols. The guns are Spanish 22 bore convertible 'Madrid' lock pistols, which date from about are highly decorative, with geometric and floral accents, and can be fitted together to create a short, single are housed in a fitted mahogany case with velvet lining. On the outside, the case has an oval silver plate on its lid engraved "Purchased at the sale of His Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex, 1845".Ned Cowell, head of arms and armour at Woolley & Wallis, said the selling the guns was a privilege."We are honoured to be offering such an outstanding pair of pistols by such a distinguished gunmaker and with such a historic background," he items in the sale include a selection of military medals, rare coins, swords, cannons and a coronation robe worn in 1937 and in 1953.


BBC News
36 minutes ago
- BBC News
Report highlights more than 70 threats or attacks on journalists
There have been 71 attacks or threats on journalists in Northern Ireland since 2019, a report by Amnesty International has found. The report features 26 interviews, including 22 with journalists in which they recounted their experiences of being told they will be shot or stabbed, and threatened with bombs under their also said that many journalists no longer report threats due to "time consuming processes and lack of action or positive outcome".Patrick Corrigan, the human rights organisation's Northern Ireland director, said Northern Ireland is the most dangerous place in the UK for journalists. The report is dedicated to Martin O'Hagan and Lyra McKee, two journalists who were killed in 2001 and 2019 O'Hagan, who was a journalist for the Sunday World newspaper, was shot dead by the Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF) in Lurgan, County Armagh, in McKee died after being struck by a bullet while observing rioting in Creggan in Londonderry in 2019. Lack of prosecutions The report said petrol bombs had been thrown at journalists' cars, and pipe bombs left close to their homes. It added that "several journalists report that they are receiving more threats in recent years than ever before".These threats were said to be primarily from armed paramilitaries, as well as organised crime journalists told the organisation they had "lost count" of the threats they have report said since June 2022, only two people have been successfully prosecuted for threats against journalists, none of which were made by paramilitary groups. It also reported that one media company has spent tens of thousands of pounds on ensuring journalists' homes are protected. Mr Corrigan said threats created "a climate of fear that many assumed was consigned to history"."When journalists are under attack, press freedom is under attack," he added. National Union of Journalists (NUJ) assistant general secretary Seamus Dooley said that in "what is supposed to be normalised society, post the peace process, journalists are living in fear and behind high-security measures."That really is not the sign of a normal functioning democracy."Among the journalists interviewed, was Belfast Telegraph crime correspondent Allison Morris, who police visited on nine occasions between December 2023 and October 2024 to deliver threats from paramilitary or criminal Morris told the report: "I'm convinced someone's going to kill me at some point. "Most of the time, I pretend that the threats don't annoy me, but clearly, they do. Sunday World Northern Editor Richard Sullivan said threats included being "given 48 hours to get out of the country or I'd be shot".Photographer Kevin Scott, from the Belfast Telegraph, said he has three cars and alternates his use of them for safety Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) have been asked for a response to the report. Report recommendations The report makes a number of recommendations including:asking the justice minister to establish and chair a new Media Safety Group, with representatives from the PSNI, Public Prosecution Service, media organisations and the NUJ, to deliver a new journalist safety strategysaying the PSNI must review its procedural response to threats and attacks against journalists and conduct investigations capable of leading to successful prosecutionscalling on the PSNI to produce new guidance and training for officers on the protection of journalists during public disordersaying the Northern Ireland Office and Department of Justice should ensure at-risk journalists can access the Home Protection Schemecalling on the UK government to establish an independent public inquiry into the murder of Martin O'Hagan "if the expected Police Ombudsman's investigation finds serious failings or wrongdoing by the police"