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The Scotsman
14 Aug, 2018
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Unemployment in Scotland drops as EU workers leave UK
The number of Scots out of work has fallen and the jobless total across the UK reached a 40-year low, official figures today show.
Latest News
Poll: Most Scots never pray and only attend church on special occasions

Scots are becoming increasingly indifferent to religion, with the majority of young people describing themselves as not having any faith, according to new research.

Westminster ‘terror incident’: Two injured after car hits pedestrians – what we know so far

Two people have been injured and a man has been arrested after a car crashed into security barriers outside parliament in a suspected terror incident.

Early age drinking in spotlight

As a major international conference is taking shape, we consider how a global perspective can find ways to tackle issues around alcohol

Promoted by Scottish Health Action on Alcohol Problems (SHAAP)

Homebase set to close 42 stores putting 1,500 jobs at risk

Homebase is pressing ahead with a wave of store closures that will see 42 DIY outlets shut, putting around 1,500 jobs at risk.

Letters: Lesley Riddoch wrong to claim BBC fails to report pro-Scottish independence marches

A few days ago Russian human rights activists used an event at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe to attack Alex Salmond for taking money from Russia Today – Vladimir Putin’s propaganda TV channel.

Holiday park operator tees up St Andrews site

A holiday park operator with sites in Perthshire and Angus is pushing ahead with its “most ambitious project yet” after earmarking a development in the Fife golfing resort of St Andrews.

Sport Update
Celtic target Patrick Roberts ‘set to complete season-long loan move to Girona’

Celtic are set to miss out on Patrick Roberts with the player set to move to La Liga.

Scottish football transfer LIVE: Rangers target Adam, Celtic hope over deals, Ntcham eyed by Porto

Follow The Scotsman’s daily blog as we keep you updated with all the latest news, views, transfers, rumours and much more from around Scottish football.

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The key positions Brendan Rodgers needs to strengthen at Celtic

It has been far from a straightforward start to the season for Celtic following an awkward 1-1 draw at home to AEK Athens in the Champions League qualifiers and an early domestic defeat to Heart of Midlothian in the league.

Hearts captain Christophe Berra out for 6 months with torn hamstring

Hearts have been dealt a blow with Christophe Berra facing up to six months on the sidelines with a torn hamstring.

And finally...
Book review: Leila, by Prayaag Akbar

One of the most depressing ironies of our age – and there’s some pretty stiff competition out there – is that, at a time when the most serious threat facing our species is man-made climate change, a problem which requires people from all over the world to work together towards a common goal, we seem to be increasingly obsessed with demarcating and defending our own little patches of dirt. Well, make that a little patch of dirt with a moat in the case of the UK; a big patch of dirt in the case of the United States. When Donald Trump, the climate change ostrich-in-chief, first started slobbering semi-coherently about building a “big, beautiful wall” along the US-Mexico border, he shocked a lot of people, but Trump was in tune with the times: since 9/11, border walls and fences have become quite the thing. According to Canadian academic Elisabeth Vallet, the world had seven border walls at the end of the Second World War, still just 15 by the time the Berlin Wall came down in 1989, yet now we have a total of 77. Our heads of state are looking more and more like a posse of bad-tempered, shotgun-toting farmers, taking it in turns to shriek “get off my land!” And meanwhile, the planet literally burns.

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