Bar/fly: The Witchery, Scotland
Och, witch room? Clash of the tartans and a wee dram later, Kevin Pilley is still deciding.
Och, witch room? Clash of the tartans and a wee dram later, Kevin Pilley is still deciding.
Darktrace is a UK cybersecurity company that counts Cambridge machine learning specialists and cyberintelligence experts from GCHQ and MI5.
It's 1940, Britain is at war and code-breaker Alan Turing is hard at work. Danica Kirka time travels at Bletchley Park.
A prominent, far-right activist has been arrested following a police investigation into anti-Semitic tweets sent to a Member of Parliament.
A video of a woman who appears to tell a passenger that his ancestors "used to be slaves" during an argument on the London Underground is being investigated by police.
The 94-year-old Wellington veteran received the honour at French Ambassador Laurent Contini's home in Thorndon tonight.
Alan Barnes, the UK pensioner who inspired an outpouring of public generosity after he was attacked, says he wants buy house close to woman who set up well wish fund.
Frontline Springboks could enjoy up to five weeks rest from Super Rugby this year, according to Patrick Lambie, the Sharks pivot who ended 2014 in possession of the Bok No 10 jersey.
Finally, the Springboks are top priority in a World Cup year.
A businessman is preparing to have a hysterectomy after doctors discovered he was born with a womb.
When the British Foreign Secretary told us we were "family" this week, he meant we're the bogan cousins everyone's loathe to invite to weddings, writes Kerre McIvor.
New Zealand lamb wool prices jumped to their highest level in almost four years this week.
A New Zealand judge has been picked from 150 candidates, after a "robust" vetting process, to lead a mammoth inquiry into historic child sex abuse allegations in Britain.
Hercule Poirot, aka Kevin Pilley, tips his homburg to Agatha Christie's mysterious bust using Franglais clues.
Bed and breakfast under those famously dreaming spires allows a glimpse into how the other half thinks, writes Steve Braunias.
The widow of poisoned spy Alexander Litvinenko has told the public inquiry into his death that her husband accused Russian president Vladimir Putin of being a paedophile.
British MPs have reopened the debate over UK visa rules, arguing they are unfairly favouring Europeans at the expense of those from NZ and Australia.
A young Briton is in a Christchurch spinal unit after breaking his back in a Queenstown tree climbing fall.
Peter de Graaf follows in the steps of Everest's conqueror, visiting Sir Edmund Hillary's local pub in Wales.
When the Gawker website speculated media mogul Rupert Murdoch tweets while drunk, Murdoch hit back - with a tweet.
British tourist who left more than 52,000 pictures of child abuse on hard drive in a rental car while visiting NZ avoids jail.
Billionaire Jeffrey Epstein has hit out at media coverage of allegations Prince Andrew had sex with a teenage girl.
A wildlife cruise on the Isle of Mull is heaven for bird lovers, writes Richard Tulloch.
Tony Abbott has been criticised over his decision to make gaffe-prone Prince Philip a Knight of the Order of Australia.
The first female Church of England bishop described her consecration service as an “occasion of prayer and of party”.
Hershey’s has won a legal battle that means British-made Cadbury's chocolate can't be sold on American shelves.
As Alexander Litvinenko lay dying from radiation poisoning in 2006, he named the man he thought had ordered his murder: Russian President Vladimir Putin.
'If I sign the letter, am I signing my own death warrant?' A British grandmother fears she may face the firing squad in Bail within weeks.