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Driving ban for Bideford woman after drink-driving crash

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Driving ban for Bideford woman after drink-driving crash A DRINK-DRIVER from Bideford crashed her car following office party, a court has heard. Emily Smale, 20, of West Goldsworthy Cottages, Horns Cross, Bideford, appeared before North Devon Magistrates' Court on Friday. READ NEXT: What next for Green Lanes shopping centre? Smale pleaded guilty to one charge of driving while her alcohol level was above the limit. The court heard that police were called to reports of a car crash on the A39 on December 11. Lyndsey Baker, for the prosecution,... Reported by North Devon Journal 6 hours ago.

Thirteen-year-old Lincolnshire boy goes missing, police hunt...

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Thirteen-year-old Lincolnshire boy goes missing, police hunt... A teenage boy from Lincolnshire has gone missing. Jon Laird, from Cranwell, last saw his mother at 10am this morning. READ MORE: Crash on A46 shuts the road - lorry has flipped over (with IMAGES) Since then he was spotted heading towards Lincoln Cathedral at around 11am but has not been seen since. The boy's mother Sara Laird says this is out of character for Jon and she is extremely concerned. It is possible Jon could be heading in the Hull direction. Anyone who has seen Jon should call... Reported by Lincolnshire Echo 5 hours ago.

Three fire engines attend crash on A38 in South Devon

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Three fire engines attend crash on A38 in South Devon THE emergency services were called to a collision on the A38 that left a woman suffering from neck pain on Saturday afternoon. Fire engines from Buckfastleigh, Ivybridge and Ashburton were sent to a report of a single vehicle collision on the southbound carriageway between Wrangaton and Westover at 2.05pm. It was reported that a woman was still inside the vehicle. On arrival the crews confirmed that the woman was still inside the vehicle and suffering from neck pain but she was not... Reported by Torquay Herald Express 7 hours ago.

Renault Kwid road trip: down the Konkan coast

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The Renault Kwid has the potential to shake up emerging car markets, but does its £3k price mean it lacks substance? Doug Revolta drives it down India’s Konkan coast to find out

It’s 7am and I’m staring at one of the most stunning examples of colonial architecture India has to offer.

Mumbai’s central railway station, Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (formerly Victoria Terminus), was built in 1877 and is now a Unesco World Heritage site. Even at this hour, it’s bustling with activity, with locals beginning their morning commutes and tourists, cameras out, snapping away.

In front of the station, being reversed into position by Autocar India’s chief road tester, Rahul Kakar, is the new Renault Kwid, a hatchback that has pricked up the ears of the automotive industry around the world and whipped the Indian market into a frenzy.

The main cause for the fanfare surrounding it, and why I’m about to spend a day driving it, is its scarcely believable price. You can waltz in to a Renault showroom in India, throw down the equivalent of about £3000 and walk out as the owner of a Kwid. Yes, £3000 for a brand-new car. With all four wheels. And doors. That seems utterly ludicrous, even in India, where a decent tikka masala costs just £1 and only the diminutive and ultra-basic Maruti Suzuki Alto and Tata Nano are less expensive.

Unsurprisingly, the Kwid, Autocar India’s reigning Car of the Year, is selling at a staggering rate, with orders already crossing the 100,000 mark in just a few months. Even the base-model Dacia Sandero, the cheapest new car in the UK, costs twice as much as an equivalent Kwid. Is its price too good to be true?

To find out, I’m taking it on a whistle-stop tour of the landmarks in central Mumbai before a 100- mile jaunt south along the Konkan coast to the 15th century Murud-Janjira fort. Surely, a road trip like this will highlight shortcomings or show it as a remarkable feat of engineering.

Time is of the essence. We’ve started this early in an attempt to avoid the very worst of Mumbai’s traffic around town. Photographer Kuldeep Chaudhari ushers Rahul into frame and quickly takes some snaps during the increasingly rare breaks in traffic while I keep watch for agitatedlooking police officers. Once Kuldeep is happy, we scramble to the Kwid to head on before the city wakes up in earnest and turns its roads into vast tentacles of sweaty, bumper-to-bumper queues.

Rahul brought the car to the station, so this is the first time I’ve been behind the wheel of the Kwid, and it’s hard not to be astonished.

This particular model is Autocar India’s new long-term test car, a top-spec RXT example with a 0.8-litre naturally aspirated petrol engine, 7.0in touchscreen infotainment system, trip computer and electric front windows. Even with all that, it still costs less than £4000. But there’s no time to sit and admire the value for money because, as I lean out to manually adjust the non-electric door mirrors, I get enthusiastically honked at by several taxi drivers keen for me to shake a leg.

I’m fairly new to driving in India, so I’m glad that Rahul, who knows every road in this country like the back of his hand, will be my navigator. “It’s more dangerous to stop at a red light than drive through it,” he says, offering his first piece of advice. “No one pays attention to traffic signals this early in the morning.” It’s going to be a long day.

Rahul guides me past the station and we join the traffic headed to the Gateway of India for our second photo opportunity of the morning, and my initial impressions of the Kwid are encouraging. The steering is very light, which is useful on these unbelievably congested streets, and crucially the horn can be easily drummed with the thumb while holding the wheel. The air-con works well, too, another necessity in Mumbai, where today’s winter temperature will top 30deg C.

The three-pot engine chugs out a lowly 53bhp, is pretty flat from low revs and doesn’t really liven up like other, turbocharged equivalents do. The low-speed ride is pretty jerky, too, not helped by sensitive throttle response that doesn’t translate to peppy performance. But the car’s price gives it a crucial caveat; knowing how little it costs cushions the disappointment of certain aspects – such as the hard plastics in the cabin. Yes, they’re poor quality and scratchy, but what do you expect? The infotainment is a tad slow to react but otherwise fine, and it goes some way to boosting the appeal of the cabin, which is surprisingly comfortable. Basically, anything that isn’t terrible feels like a major boost for a car that’s this cheap.

Thankfully, for now, the roads are pretty clear and we make it to the Gateway of India in just a few minutes, wincing my way through some red lights, thumb jammed on the horn.

Towering over the Apollo Bunder waterfront and overlooking the Arabian Sea, the Gateway of India was built to welcome King George V and Queen Mary in 1911 and thereafter acted as a ceremonial portal to and from India for visiting government officials. It’s a fitting place, then, to take some shots of a car designed by the French to announce Renault on the Indian car market, a notoriously hard one to crack.

Import tax of 120% means that only cars built in India itself stand any real chance of achieving mainstream sales success. That is, chiefly, why the Kwid is so cheap. It’s manufactured in India, where labour costs are a fraction of European ones, and Renault claims to have sourced 98% of the parts from the country, with only the engine knock sensors, connecting rods and injectors imported from overseas.

When you also consider that there’s additional tax on cars over four metres long and average wages in India are extremely low, this has created a market with an insatiable appetite for cheap, small hatchbacks, and the Kwid – comparable to a Ford Fiesta in size – is Renault’s attempt to cash in.

After getting our shots by the Gateway of India, we head on to our final stop in Mumbai, the Rajabai Clock Tower, a kind of Indian version of Big Ben, and the sound of the engine ticking over in a deserted side street by the tower manages to attract a dozen or so stray dogs over to the car.

We pause for photos and play with the dogs – I’ve had my jabs – and, looking at the car, we all agree that it’s actually very pretty. The chunky, SUV-like styling disguises its price and dinky size, but its 13in wheels are dwarfed by flared wheel arches that beg for bigger rims and also hint at the potential of the car’s platform.

The Kwid – developed by Renault’s Gerard Detourbet, the same man behind the Dacia line-up – is set to be launched in Brazil but not the UK, although its flexible and cheap architecture will arrive on our shores in some form. The CMF-A platform is a variant of RenaultNissan’s Common Module Family (CMF) and can potentially be used for several different body types, such as a small SUV.

It’s now 9am, the sun is giving a taste of the ferocious heat it will be delivering throughout the day and we’re in the very heart of Mumbai’s rush hour. Luckily, most traffic is going the opposite way to us, into the city, and as we head for the national highway, I begin to appreciate that the roads are a total free-for-all. But the Kwid is an ideal companion, ducking in and out of queues, performing tight manoeuvres and easily overtaking the many decrepit vehicles on the road.

Eventually, we escape Mumbai’s concrete jungle and the demonic cacophony of blaring horns, screeching tyres and shouting. On the national highway, the Kwid proves itself to be not too horribly suited to motorway trips. It’s comfortable only below 70mph, though. Above that, the lightness of the steering becomes pronounced, the poor refinement and loud thrum of the engine make the cabin noisy, and you can just generally feel that it’s much better suited to hacking through traffic rather than munching up motorway miles.

We take the Panvel-to-Goa highway, heading towards Alibaug on the coast, and the landscape begins to fade from smoggy, grey concrete to vivid green leaves of coconut trees rooted in burntorange soil, with the Arabian Sea shimmering beyond and temples, forts and beaches all dotted along the coastline. The roads change, too. The congested, pothole-ridden city streets have given way to long, sweeping country lanes that are like silk ribbons by comparison.

They also accidentally provide a robust test of the Kwid’s suspension and brakes, thanks to the unsignposted speed bumps that appear every few kilometres. They’re like optical illusions, becoming visible to the untrained eye only just before you crash over them. The Kwid remains mechanically untroubled, though, despite the huge jolts being sent through the cabin, and it’s actually quite enjoyable to drive when we’re not braking savagely for the speed bumps.

The five-speed manual gearbox is accurate enough and ground clearance of 180mm and a longest-in-class wheelbase help the Kwid to deliver a smooth ride, considering the poor condition of the roads. The steering isn’t particularly engaging and the tiny tyres don’t offer a great deal of grip in the faster corners, but the car still feels fairly zingy and agile, a benefit of its minuscule 670kg weight.

However, the weight-saving measures on the Kwid come at a cost. India’s outdated crash testing standards mean that many cars on the roads have inferior safety protection to that of European models. The highlight of the Kwid’s safety equipment is the driver’s airbag, for instance. And it’s optional. You can’t even specify a passenger airbag. Instead, you get three gloveboxes – yes, three. So driving it on India’s hair-raising roads, where crashes are routinely avoided by millimetres, feels about as safe as strutting through no man’s land in a mankini.

Despite some close calls with lorries, the Kwid remains unscathed and even the tiny engine – said to be the most efficient in the country, with a claimed 70mpg – allows us to overtake without too much fuss on country roads. This says a lot about the vehicles we’re overtaking…

From Alibaug, we head for Kashid – stopping briefly at a deserted beach in Nagaon so that Rahul and I can carry out a thorough examination of the Kwid by doing handbrake turns in the sand – and pick up some coconuts for nourishment. Kuldeep is grateful for the chance to stretch his legs. He’s not too complimentary about rear seat space, but the Ford Fiesta-beating 300-litre boot has easily swallowed his camera equipment.

We eventually reach Murud after lunch and find a jetty that offers a clean view of the MurudJanjira fort out at sea, giving us our final shot and signalling the end of our journey south.

We return in the early evening, exhausted by 12 hours on stressful roads in a noisy cabin, but I’m not sick of the sight of the Kwid. Far from it, in fact. It has obvious safety shortcomings, but it’s a remarkable car with plenty of character and quality that defies its price point, and it shows Renault is capable of matching Maruti Suzuki at its own game on home turf.

How the CMF-A platform develops in Europe will be interesting to see – a cheap SUV could eventually arrive – and if this taste of budget motoring is anything to go by, the entry-level car market could be in for a big shake-up. Reported by Autocar 7 hours ago.

​Live traffic updates: 3-vehicle crash blocks part of The...

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​Live traffic updates: 3-vehicle crash blocks part of The... HERE is your central point for all the latest traffic and travel news for south west Wales.Our live blog covers major routes like the M4, along with key city and town arteries.We will be searching the length and breadth of south west Wales for any incidents that might delay your journey.Our blog also covers public transport, with buses, trains and flights from Cardiff Airport covered.But we don't expect to find out everything ourselves, so if you know of an incident, please message us on Twitter... Reported by South Wales Evening Post 6 hours ago.

Injured woman rescued from car on A38 into Plymouth

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Injured woman rescued from car on A38 into Plymouth A woman had to be rescued from her car on the A38 heading towards Plymouth this afternoon.Fire engines from Buckfastleigh, Ivybridge and Ashburton were sent to a report of a single vehicle crash with a passenger still inside.The incident happened on the A38 Southbound, Wrangaton to Westover, at about 2pm. A spokesperson for Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service said: "The crews confirmed the female was still inside the vehicle suffering from neck pain but not physically trapped.... Reported by Plymouth Herald 6 hours ago.

Road rage driver left gran with horrific injuries after causing crash by breaking in front of mobility car

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Road rage driver left gran with horrific injuries after causing crash by breaking in front of mobility car Shamzad Iqbal, 33, had been tailgating and flashing his lights at Mary Daglan's Volkswagen Polo in a bid to get past her on the outside lane of the M62 Reported by Daily Record 2 hours ago.

Roller derby cup held for fatal crash victim Louise Wright

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Roller derby cup held for fatal crash victim Louise Wright amily and fans of a fatal crash victim came together to celebrate her life – by holding a roller derby tournament. Twenty nine-year old Louise Wright, who was killed by a lorry in 2014 while cycling, had been a long-time member of Nottingham Roller Girls. On Sunday, her teammates gathered to remember her and celebrate the rough-and-tumble sport she loved so much. Read more: Louise Wright death trial: Jury discharged The one-day tournament was called the Louisey Rider Cup, named after... Reported by Nottingham Post 6 hours ago.

Car flips on to its side after crash in Cottingham Road, Hull

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Car flips on to its side after crash in Cottingham Road, Hull THESE dramatic pictures show the moment a car flipped on its side as it travelled down one of Hull's busiest roads this afternoon.The BMW was spotted on its side by fellow motorists in Cottingham Road, close to the junction with Hall Road, in north Hull.Emergency services were called to the scene, with firefighters trying to right the vehicle. It is not known whether the driver suffered any injuries in the collision which happened shortly before 4pm.• More news: Woman trapped in... Reported by Hull Daily Mail 5 hours ago.

Two seriously hurt in bike crash on B3098 near Westbury in west...

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Two seriously hurt in bike crash on B3098 near Westbury in west... Two people on a motorbike have been airlifted to hospital after it collided with a car on a B-road in between Westbury and Devizes in west Wiltshire.The rider and pillion passenger on the CBR bike were airlifted to Southmead Hospital in Bristol after the collision with a Hyundai car on the B3098 road between Westbury and Bratton.The two people in the car were uninjured, but the two bikers were critically hurt with what police described as 'multiple injuries', in the crash which happened on... Reported by Western Daily Press 5 hours ago.

​Live traffic updates: Brynmill Lane closed both ways after crash

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HERE is your central point for all the latest traffic and travel news for south west Wales.Our live blog covers major routes like the M4, along with key city and town arteries.We will be searching the length and breadth of south west Wales for any incidents that might delay your journey.Our blog also covers public transport, with buses, trains and flights from Cardiff Airport covered.But we don't expect to find out everything ourselves, so if you know of an incident, please message us on Twitter... Reported by South Wales Evening Post 5 hours ago.

Two motorcyclists taken to hospital after crash near Westbury:...

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Two motorcyclists taken to hospital after crash near Westbury:... Two motorcyclists have been taken to hospital after a crash near Westbury. The rider of a motorcycle and a pillion passenger were airlifted to Bristol's Southmead Hospital after the collision on Saturday morning (April 16) The collision, which involved an orange CBR motorcycle and a car, happened on the B3098 between Westbury and Bratton at about 10.30am. The driver and passenger of the car, a Hyundai IX35, were uninjured. The road between Westbury and Bratton was closed for about three... Reported by Bath Chronicle 5 hours ago.

Neil Hudgell vows to 'smoke out dishonest people' at Hull KR...

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Neil Hudgell vows to 'smoke out dishonest people' at Hull KR... Hull KR chairman Neil Hudgell has vowed to 'smoke out dishonest people' within the Robins club after watching his side crash out of the Challenge Cup to part-time Oldham Roughyeds. The Robins were beaten 36-22 at the Lightstream Stadium this afternoon in what coach James Webster described as his biggest career embarrassment. Hudgell took to Twitter shortly after the final whistle and did not hold back. Hudgell did not hold back in his criticism. With KR sat second-bottom in Super... Reported by Hull Daily Mail 4 hours ago.

Report of a helicopter crash near Baltimore-Washington International Airport - @WBAL_Gary

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Reported by Breaking News 5 hours ago.

Bus driver banned after house crash

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BBC Local News: Cumbria -- A bus driver who crashed into a house in Cumbria - injuring 17 people including seven schoolchildren - is banned from professional driving for three months. Reported by BBC Local News 4 hours ago.

Nearby Amtrak train service halted due to helicopter plane crash near Baltimore-Washington International Airport - @jtannenwald

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Reported by Breaking News 4 hours ago.

Photo: Smoke from a helicopter crash in Baltimore, Md., as seen from Baltimore-Washington International Airport - @JoeMcMonigle

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Reported by Breaking News 4 hours ago.

Update: No fatalities reported in helicopter crash near Baltimore-Washington International Airport; no affect on airline operations - @BWI_Airport

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Reported by Breaking News 4 hours ago.

Wayne Pivac refuses to blame sickness bug after Scarlets crash to...

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Wayne Pivac refuses to blame sickness bug after Scarlets crash to... WAYNE Pivac refused to blame the sickness bug that swept through the Scarlets squad for their 46-10 thrashing at the hands of Glasgow in Llanelli. The result was the heaviest margin of defeat the West Walians have suffered at home in the Pro12. Twenty players were reportedly affected by the norovirus bug that raged through Parc y Scarlets during the build-up. But New Zealander Pivac didn't want to use it as an excuse for a dreadful performance scarred by woeful ball retention and missed... Reported by South Wales Evening Post 3 hours ago.

Helicopter crash reported near Baltimore-Washington Airport

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(Reuters) - A helicopter crash was reported on Saturday near Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, but no one was seriously injured, the Federal Aviation Administration said. Reported by Reuters 4 hours ago.
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