Daley, 23, revealed he had a boyfriend in a YouTube video in 2013, and the pair announced their engagement two years later.
He won bronze medals at the Olympic Games in London and Rio de Janeiro.
Image captionThe couple got married in Devon last May
He claimed his first individual World Championship gold for eight years with a victory in the 10m platform final in Budapest last year.
Black, 43, won the best original screenplay Oscar for the 2008 film Milk, which was based on the life of gay rights activist and politician, Harvey Milk.
The couple had a belated honeymoon in August last year, sharing pictures from Barcelona.
Image copyrightPAImage captionTwo drivers of operational vehicles were involved in the crash on the taxiway just after 06:00 GMT
A British Airways (BA) engineer has died after two vehicles collided on the airfield at Heathrow Airport.
Two drivers were involved in the crash on the taxiway just after 06:00 GMT.
A man in his 40s suffered a cardiac arrest and died, despite attempts to save him at the airfield and on the way to hospital. Another man is in hospital with a suspected broken shoulder.
At least 20 BA flights were delayed by the incident, although the airfield remained open.
Passengers on one plane had to disembark after the crash, a Heathrow spokeswoman said.
She added: “Our deepest condolences go to the family and friends affected by this accident. We will be fully cooperating with the police in the investigation which will follow.”
A BA spokesman said: “We are deeply saddened by this tragic incident and are offering our full care and support to his family and colleagues.”
The Health and Safety Executive has been informed and there have been no arrests, the Met Police said.
Image copyrightPAImage captionOne of the airport vehicles involved in the crashImage copyrightGETTY IMAGESImage captionSeveral British Airways flights from Terminal 5 were delayed by the crash (stock image)
It added that the deceased man has yet to be formally identified, but his next of kin had been informed.
Image copyrightJUSTINUS STANISLAUSImage captionThe workers have written a letter in support of the farmers, who employ them as flower pickers
Nearly 200 migrant flower pickers employed at a farm raided last week have written to police demanding an apology for being made to feel like “victims”.
Three men were arrested on suspicion of modern slavery and gangmaster offences after the raid near Helston, Cornwall.
The letter, signed by 189 workers, says morale has been affected and defends the farm bosses.
Devon and Cornwall Police said it cannot comment on a live investigation.
The arrested men have since been released while investigations continue.
The majority of those employed at the Bosahan farm are from Lithuania and Romania.
Image captionPolice raided the flower farm near Helston in Cornwall on 8 February
Fourteen of the workers chose to leave the farm after they were spoken to by police and other agencies.
The letter says they are being “treated well” and “the farmer has always been good to us and we feel that he has been treated very badly”.
It states that a police officer “publicly stated that daffodil pickers at Bosahan Farm are being treated as modern slaves. As workers we contest this statement.”
Allen Scrimshaw, from the farm, said: “My son Wolf and I have been so devastated by these allegations of modern slavery that we no longer wish to discuss it with anyone until any charges might be made.
“We would like to thank all the pickers for their continued support and all the messages we have received, not just from this country but all around the world.”
‘Wonderful place’
Justinus Stanislaus, a Lithuanian translator who is helping the group, said: “They want to prove to the world that they are not victims of modern slavery.
“It’s a wonderful place to work and they are treated well. They refute everything that has been said in that respect”.
The following day, Chief Constable Shaun Sawyer explained the raid, saying: “There were reports into police of alleged labour abuse, alleged offence of modern slavery.
“Therein lies the dilemma – you have to at some point intervene and you just sift your way through the evidence.”
Image copyrightTWITTERImage captionCeline Dookhran was found dead in an empty house in Kingston, south-west London
An uncle has been convicted of kidnapping, raping and slitting the throat of his niece before putting her body in a deep freezer.
Mujahid Arshid, 33, was found guilty at the Old Bailey of murdering Celine Dookhran, 20, and the attempted murder of a second woman.
Arshid, 28, snatched the women in July before taking them to a house in Kingston, south west London.
His co-accused, Vincent Tappu, 28, was cleared of kidnapping charges.
Both defendants were cleared of possession of a firearm with intent for allegedly using a Taser during the abduction, which took place on 19 July, 2017.
Arshid has also been convicted of sexual assault charges against the second woman between 2008 and 2010
Members of Ms Dookhran’s family shouted “yes” when Arshid was convicted of her murder.
Arshid reacted by shouting out that the surviving victim had “killed them all”, while Mr Tappu – in tears – thanked the jury.
Image copyrightCOURTESY: HINDUSTAN TIMESImage captionMr Sakya was a tenant of the boy’s parents
Police in India’s capital, Delhi, have arrested a man for allegedly killing a seven-year-old boy whose body he hid in a suitcase for 37 days.
Police found the body on Tuesday in Avidesh Sakya’s home after neighbours complained of foul smell.
Officials said Mr Sakya kidnapped the boy for ransom but killed him to cover up the crime.
Mr Sakya, 27, had been renting the house from the boy’s parents for the past eight years.
The boy, Ashish Saini, had been missing since 7 January.
Police told the Times of India newspaper that Mr Sakya had allegedly admitted to kidnapping the boy on the pretext of buying him a bicycle.
But he panicked and killed him when the police launched a manhunt.
When neighbours enquired about the smell, he reportedly told them it was because of dead rats and even showed them one.
But the police became suspicious when Mr Sakya stopped answering their phone calls, prompting them to search his house.
The boy’s father, Karan Saini, said he was shocked because Mr Sakya had helped him in the search for his son.
“[He] was very enthusiastic about searching for my child. He helped me register a missing persons case with the police the same day,” he told the Hindustan Times newspaper.
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGESImage captionThe duo finished at 11th place in the short program
North Korea’s figure skaters have made their debut at the Winter Olympics, showing off an “electric” routine that earned them a spot in the qualifying round.
Ryom Tae-ok and Kim Ju-sik were greeted by cheers as they performed their routine, set to an instrumental cover of The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life”.
The performance on Wednesday saw the duo reach their personal best score.
They are the only North Korean athletes to qualify for the 2018 Games on merit.
Opening their routine with a triple twist lift, the duo were cheered on by a swarm of North Korean cheerleaders who wore red and white tracksuits and waved North Korean flags.
The participation of North Korean athletes and cultural troupes in the Olympics has not been without controversy, as some critics question the North’s commitment to reconciliation and others warn it will change nothing on the nuclear front.
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGESImage captionNorth Korea’s cheerleaders were out in full force
Ms Ryom, 19, and Mr Kim, 25, finished with 69.40 points, their personal best score for the short program – landing them a spot in the 11th place.
“Right now to be realistic, their goal is to make it into the top 12,” their coach Bruno Marcotte had earlier told the OP’S NEWS . “If they reach the top ten, then that would incredible.”
The pair will go on to compete in the long program on Thursday.
Media captionTaking a moment of history in their stride’ – North Korean duo through to next round
Virtual cheers
The duo’s performance has also won them a fair share of fans, both offline and online.
South Koreans on social media were equally impressed.
“Never thought North Korean figure skaters would be this good,” said one user on social media platform Disco. “Ryom looks like a middle school student but he has top skills.
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGESImage captionMany online were impressed with the pair’s figure skating skills
“They are amazingly great. I want to go and cheer [them on]. Are they any tickets left?” another user asked on Twitter.
But its not just their skating skills that have got those on social media buzzing.
Instagram lit up with comments when South Korean figure skater Kam Alex Kang-chan approached Mr Kim for a selfie together earlier last week.
“With my bro from up north woo hoo let’s go! #pyeongchang2018 #jonsnow #theyhateuscausetheyaintus”, said Mr Kam’s Instagram caption.
The interaction is one of several visible moments of friendship between the North and South Korean athletes, who this year marched under a single “unification flag” at the Olympics opening ceremony.
Media captionThe Korean ping pong pals separated forever
Pyongyang has sent some 22 athletes and more than 400 delegates, including a team of cheerleaders and an orchestra, to this year’s Winter Games.
The Games are currently taking place in the wake of long-running tension over North Korea’s nuclear programme.
Kim Jong-un surprised many in his televised new-year speech, when – amid threats against the US – he first expressed support for the Winter Olympics and a wish to “melt the frozen North-South relations”.
Image captionThe ad first appeared in October 2016
Authorities in Indian capital Delhi say they have asked actor Pierce Brosnan to explain why he was in an ad for a local mouth freshener associated with an addictive form of chewing tobacco.
He could be fined 5,000 rupees ($78; £56) or go to jail for two years if he doesn’t respond within 10 days, officials said.
It is not clear how this can be enforced if Brosnan fails to reply.
Indian law prohibits all advertisements of tobacco products.
“We have issued the notice to Pierce Brosnan through the company, and also reached out to him via social media platforms,” officials from Delhi’s health department told the Indian Express newspaper.
Pan Bahar is commonly associated with pan masala and gutka, a potent mixture of tobacco, crushed betel nut, lime, and clove among other ingredients. It is chewed (and subsequently spat out in bright red streams) by millions of people, who get addicted to its mildly psychotropic effects.
Ashok & Co, the company that produces Pan Bahar, told the BBC in 2016 that there was no tobacco or nicotine in the product.
Brosnan told People magazine that the contract was to advertise a single product – a “breath freshener/tooth whitener” that contained no ” tobacco” or any “harmful ingredient.”
Both pan masala and gutka have been linked to cancer, with many Indian states banning their sale and running campaigns to discourage people from buying them.
Image captionLan Mercado took up her post as Oxfam’s Asia regional director for Asia in 2016
A senior figure in Oxfam says she is aware of sexual abuse claims involving its staff in Asia.
Lan Mercado told the BBC the cases took place in the Philippines, Bangladesh and Nepal before she started as regional director in 2016.
She said the scale of sexual misconduct was “not comparable” to that in Haiti, where Oxfam faces claims staff paid vulnerable people for sex.
Oxfam is meeting the Charity Commission as part of an inquiry by the regulator.
The commission has launched a statutory inquiry into Oxfam – which denies covering up the behaviour of its staff in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake – but details of its scope have not yet been released.
‘Horrified’
Ms Mercado said she was aware of similar cases involving Oxfam workers in Asia between 2009 and 2013.
She said they went largely unreported and had been dealt with internally “according to specified policies”, although she would not define the situation as a “cover up”.
In a statement the Good Will Hunting and Hope Springs star said she was “nothing short of horrified” by the allegations.
Organisations including Marks and Spencer and the Duke of Edinburgh’s (DofE) Award have also said they are considering their association with the charity.
She wrote: “Women do not have to be modest to be respected. Live for you.
“Everyone should feel comfortable expressing themselves however makes them happy.”
The picture was part of a campaign for Sports Illustrated.
In a backstage video from the photo shoot, Aly said: “I think everyone goes through really hard times and I’ve decided to be so honest about what I went through.
“The tough times are very hard to talk about and they aren’t comfortable but they are equally as important in shaping us as the good times.”
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGESImage captionRaisman won one gold and two silver medals for Team USA at the Olympics in Rio 2016
In the testimony she gave against Nassar earlier this year, the Olympic gold medallist said realising you’re a survivor of sexual abuse is “really hard to put into words”.
“Imagine feeling like you have no power and no voice. Well you know what Larry? I have both power and voice and I am only beginning to use them.”
The photo shoot for Sports Illustrated was carried out by an all-female crew and also featured models including Hunter McGrady, Ebonee Davis and Robyn Lawley.
Image copyrightREUTERSImage captionA Daca recipient brought to the US when she was 4-years-old speaks at a Los Angeles rally
A second US judge has blocked the White House from ending a programme barring the deportation of immigrants brought illegally to the US as children.
The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca) programme cannot end in March as President Donald Trump had planned, a New York City judge ruled.
The decision comes a month after another judge ruled it must stay in place as legal challenges play out.
The US Supreme Court is due to consider a White House appeal of that ruling.
President Donald Trump in September rescinded the Obama-era scheme, which protects some 800,000 people and provides temporary permits for work and study.
He delayed enforcement to give Congress until 5 March to enact a replacement plan for Daca recipients, known as “Dreamers”.
But US District Judge Nicholas Garaufis in New York on Tuesday ruled that his reasons for revoking the programme were too arbitrary and could not stand.
He ordered the Trump administration to process Daca renewal applications under the same terms that applied before the president’s September order.
The New York decision is similar to one issued on 9 January by US District Judge William Alsup, who said the justice department’s argument that the scheme was illegal was based on a “flawed legal premise”.
The San Francisco judge ordered the government to process renewal applications from people who had previously been covered, but not for those who had never before received protection under the scheme.
Media captionThe missing – consequences of Trump’s immigration crackdown
After Tuesday’s ruling, a US Department of Justice spokesman reaffirmed the administration’s stance that former President Barack Obama unlawfully implemented the programme and it was therefore unconstitutional.
“The Justice Department will continue to vigorously defend this position, and looks forward to vindicating its position in further litigation,” Devin O’Malley said in a statement.
The US Supreme Court on Friday is due to consider whether to hear an appeal from the administration against the 9 January ruling. A decision on whether to take up the case could be announced as soon as Friday afternoon.
The legal challenges create more uncertainty as the US Senate debates immigration reform.
Democrats and Republicans have vowed to work together on a new immigration bill that would address President Trump’s campaign promise for more border security as well as the fate of Daca recipients.
What is Daca?
The scheme was created in 2012 by then President Barack Obama to shield children of undocumented immigrants from deportation.
It also provided work and study permits for those it covered.
Media caption‘America is the only country I’ve known’
In order to qualify for Daca, applicants under the age of 30 were required to submit personal information to the Department of Homeland Security, including addresses and phone numbers.
They had to pass an FBI background check, have a clean criminal background, and either be in school, recently graduated or have been honourably discharged from the military.
In exchange, the US government agreed to “defer” any action on their immigration status for a period of two years.
The majority of dreamers are from Mexico and other Latin American countries.
The justice department has said no current Daca recipients will be affected by the decision to scrap the scheme before 5 March 2018, but no new applications will be accepted.
Media captionWhere do America’s undocumented immigrants live?