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Here is a featured listing from the site:

Peugeot 206
Price: £3000

Year: 2002

Mileage: 37000

Colour: moonstone blue

Leicestershire - 1.4i, Look, 3 Doors, Manual, Hatchback, Petrol, 37,000 miles, Moonstone blue, Remote Central Locking, Electric Windows, Air Conditioning, Power Steering, Drivers Airbag, Passenger Airbag, CD player. MOT due january 2009, 6 months Tax. £3000 ono - Manual, Taxed, MOT

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Transport News Headlines
Filipino whose wife died after blunder by NHS to be deported
A man whose wife died as a result of an NHS blunder has lost his right to remain in Britain, in what a coroner described yesterday as an "extraordinary" decision.
Mystery liquid at blast site
The London house destroyed this week by a mysterious explosion was the target of a vandalism attack hours earlier when a purple liquid was poured through the letter box, police said yesterday.
New date for BA's Heathrow Terminal 5 flights
British Airways will start transferring its Heathrow long-haul flights to the new Terminal 5 (T5) on 5 June, it was announced today.
Freedom Of Information: Businesses must disclose what they tell ministers
The role of lobby groups in influencing government policy by holding private meetings with ministers has long been a bone of contention among those who want to see more transparency in the corridors of Westminster. Unless there is proper disclosure about the comings and goings of corporate bodies and campaign groups to Downing Street and the Palace of Westminister, there will be always a whiff of prejudicial dealing surrounding such meetings.
Radical Muslim cleric with links to Bin Laden is freed on bail
Abu Qatada, the Islamist preacher described as "Osama bin Laden's right-hand man in Europe", could be freed on curfew within weeks after being granted bail by an immigration tribunal.
Boy awarded damages over bouncy castle accident
A teenager who was brain damaged when he was kicked in the head on a bouncy castle today won his damages action against the couple who hired it for their children's birthday party.
Murder inquiry after body found in blast house
Detectives were investigating today whether a man found dead after a massive explosion ripped through four homes was murdered.
Huge landslide hits Dorset's Jurassic Coast
It began as a low rumble on Tuesday night, but soon giant chunks of land "the size of cars" were cascading into the sea off Dorset. By yesterday morning, a 400m section of the World Heritage Jurassic Coast between Lyme Regis and Charmouth had disappeared, in what has been described as the biggest landslide Britain has seen in a century.
Smith tightens laws on cannabis
Cannabis users could in future be automatically arrested and charged on their second offence, Jacqui Smith announced as she defied her own experts to tighten laws on possession of the drug.
Cannabis laws to be strengthened
Jacqui Smith defied the Government's own experts today by announcing that laws on cannabis will be toughened up.
Legal Opinion: Lawyers defend their right to freedom of expression
In some very notable respects, Scotland's criminal justice system is very different to the one established in England and Wales. The non-proven verdict and the unique position of its prosecution service are two examples of a varied approach to the practice of law in the Scottish courts. But, in the support of the fundamental principles of justice, the two systems are as one.
Hyde Park concert for Mandela's 90th
Twenty years after a historic Wembley Stadium concert called for his release from Robben Island, Nelson Mandela will travel to London next month for another musical extravaganza to celebrate his 90th birthday and raise awareness of Aids in Africa.
Gascoigne in hospital after hotel incident
Paul Gascoigne was back in hospital yesterday after police were called to a London hotel.
Life after Jehovah's Witnesses: website offers help to followers who lose their faith
It was only when Rachel Underhill was lying in a hospital bed, haemorrhaging, that she first realised the way of the Watchtower might not be for her.
Bishop attacks immigrant policy
A senior Catholic bishop yesterday launched an attack on the Government over a "shameful" and "unjust" failure to regularise the position of thousands of long term illegal immigrants in the country.
Non-EU football stars will have to take English test
Foreign footballers and managers will have to pass an English test before they are allowed to display their talents in this country under new immigration rules.
Anger over plan for commercial flights at wartime airfield near Snowdonia
For years the only droning in the tranquil hills of Snowdonia National Park was the sound of bumblebees. But as plans advance for an abandoned military airfield to be turned into a commercial airport, campaigners fear the droning of aircraft will soon destroy the peace in this corner of protected Welsh countryside.
Reefer madness: Do the drug laws work?
Defying the weight of medical and scientific opinion, Gordon Brown is to order tougher new laws today on cannabis possession. The Prime Minister has decided to overrule his own expert advisers and reverse the downgrading four years ago of Britain's favourite illegal drug from a class B to a class C substance, threatening cannabis smokers with five-year prison terms.
Police chief fiddled expenses over mistress
A former police chief constable misused his force computer and corporate credit cards, an investigation concluded today.
Nottingham tackles Asbo culture with early action
It has been called the gun crime capital of the UK and has languished at the bottom of the education league tables, but now Nottingham is transforming its fortunes with a groundbreaking early intervention project to tackle Asbo culture.
Children's bodies found in toy box
The remains of two small children were found in toy boxes at the home of an elderly woman who died two years ago, police said yesterday.
Judge ends McCartney marriage
The ill-fated marriage of Sir Paul McCartney and Heather Mills was ended today by the same judge who awarded the former model £24.3m as a divorce settlement.
Credit firms 'breaking rules with internet ads'
Some credit companies are breaking advertising rules when they use social networking sites to tout for business, a charity has warned.
Tightening of immigration laws means farmers face losing 50,000 tonnes of fruit
Millions of pounds worth of soft fruit and vegetables are likely to be left to rot in fields this summer because of a shortage of foreign pickers caused by the falling value of the pound and new restrictions on the number of seasonal labourers allowed to enter Britain, farmers' leaders have warned.
Cheap rail fare 'con' attacked
Train companies are "deliberately misleading" passengers over the availability of cheaper advance tickets during busy periods, says a transport union.
Exclusive report: Soldiers need loans to eat, report reveals
A highly sensitive internal report into the state of the British Army has revealed that many soldiers are living in poverty. Some are so poor that they are unable to eat and are forced to rely on emergency food voucher schemes set up by the Ministry of Defence (MoD).
Benn gives go-ahead for new GM potato trial
Ministers have given permission for thousands of GM potatoes to be grown in Britain, a decision that is bound to provoke a new confrontation with environmentalists.
Tax evasion 'costs lives of 5.6m children'
The lives of more than five million children could be saved in the developing world – if the super-rich and the world's largest companies paid their fair share in taxes, according to a leading British charity. In Death and Taxes: the True Toll of Tax-dodging, Christian Aid says that the extent of tax abuse "is so widespread and damaging that it is tantamount to a new slavery".
News courtesy of Independent.co.uk

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