New warning over tech criminal gangs
allerton to Thirsk cost £6.30 (37p per mile) whereas a 19-mile return trip to Yarm (now Teesside, formerly North Riding) cost £9 (47p).
Travelling from one part of Yorkshire to another cost more.
A 15-mile return from Hunmanby, North Yorkshire, to Bempton, East Yorkshire, cost £6.30 (42p per mile) while the 19-mile return from Hunmanby to Scarborough, also North Yorkshire, cost £5.60 (29p per mile).
But it could also cost you less – buying two singles to and from York to Leeds could cost as little as £6 (12p per mile) South Yorkshire
The extra cost of crossing a county boundary bore out in South Yorkshire.
The cost of rail travel from Dore and Totley to Dronfield – four miles away in Derbyshire – was £6.30 return (a whopping 79p per mile) and you’d be expected to travel in the opposite direction and change at Sheffield first.
If you just wanted to go to Sheffield, 4.5miles away, it would cost £4.10 (46p per mile).
Travelling from Doncaster to Sheffield, 20 miles away, cost £6.20 (16p per mile). But travel to the Lincolnshire towns of Retford and Gainsborough, approximately the same distance away, cost £9.40 (27p per mile) and £13 (33p per mile) respectively. will cost you extra.
A 14-mile return trip from Marsden to Greenfield, Greater Manchester, cost £7.90 (56p per mile) whereas travelling the same distance to and from Huddersfield cost £4.60 (33p per mile).
And there was the same price disparity between travel from Walsden, Todmorden, to Littleborough, Greater Manchester (eight miles return) and from Walsden to Hebden Bridge (12 miles return).
The journey’s cost £4.50 (56p per mile) and £3.90 (33p per mile) respectively.
Northern Rail, which runs the majority of these services, has been approached for comment.
FOREIGN Secretary Dominic
Raab will use a speech to warn that hostile state actors and criminal gangs are using technology to undermine the ‘foundations of our society and democracy’.
Mr Raab is expected to warn that cyber attacks pose a real risk on a daily basis and will call out malicious operators, while calling for a coalition of countries to ‘shape the international rules’.
In his keynote speech at the National Cyber Security Centre’s CyberUK conference today, the Foreign Secretary will conclude there is a need to clarify how rules around cyber activity are enforced.
He is expected to say the aim should be to ‘create a cyberspace that is free, open, peaceful and secure’ and to secure a wider agreement on how to respond to states committing malicious cyber attacks.
Mr Raab is due to tell the conference: “The clash of values is playing out today between the countries that want to protect and preserve a system based on open and outward-looking societies, and those promoting an authoritarian international system.”