Crews have been tackling the blaze on Rhigos in Rhondda Cynon Taf, which began at 18:00 BST on Friday 9 June and reignited on Tuesday.
The order could be extended and lead to arrests, imprisonments or fines if anyone else is at the premises during this time.The Lincoln shops that have been handed the closure orders are:
Andy Wright, the principal trading standards officer, said: "These are not shops that sell a few cigarettes or vapes ‘on the side’. Instead, they exist solely to supply illegal goods."He added: "We will continue to work with our partners in the police to remove this blight from our town centres."Deaths in Scotland's prisons have increased by 60% in the past year, a report has revealed.
The Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research (SCCJR) found 64 people died in jail in 2024 - up from 40 in 2023.Researchers said the mortality rate had more than doubled over the past decade and was now among the highest in Europe.
The Scottish Prison Service (SPS) said every death in custody was "a tragedy for all those who knew and supported the individual".
According to the report 17 of the deaths last year were suicides or apparent suicides, 10 were related to drugs, 27 were attributed to "health condition or incident", one was a homicide and one was categorised as "other/accident"."I will be writing to the Attorney General requesting this is reconsidered. My thoughts are with Natasha and her whole family as they continue to deal with the challenges of this truly heartbreaking tragedy.”
Ms Broadley added she had taken some comfort from the fact rules around caravan gas and fire safety had been strengthened."People have come up to me and said they are careful to check everything is right with their caravans now, because of what happened.
"I still feel the loss every day but Louisiana has at least made people a bit safer," she said.Yorkshire Water has urged people not to pour cooking fats from Christmas dinners down the sink to avoid blockages.