HERE are some of the national news headlines this Sunday.

Motorists spend night in their cars amid 15-hour queues to Dover


Motorists heading for Dover were spending the night in their cars after police warned the delays could last until Monday.

British officials are being drafted in to work with French border police after the government admitted motorists had suffered "extraordinary disruption" at the port.

People travelling, many heading off for a summer break, spent up to 15 hours in standstill in queued traffic while water supplies were dropped along the jam by police helicopter.

Germany mourns victims of Munich massacre


Candlelit vigils were held in Munich as the identities of those cut down by a teenage gunman began to emerge.

Earlier a father visited the scene at the Olympia shopping centre to mourn his son's death, while others paid tribute to friends and loved ones lost in the massacre that left nine people dead, most of them teenagers.

A further 27 people were injured in Friday's attack - 10 of whom are in a critical condition, including a 13-year-old boy.

Two British pupils remain in hospital after coach crashes in France


Two British schoolchildren remain in hospital after being badly injured when a coach full of pupils crashed in France near the Swiss border.

The two students, one described as in a life-threatening condition and the other in a serious condition, were airlifted to hospital from the crash site on the A39 motorway at Lons-le-Saunier.

A further 10 students and one member of staff from Cheltenham Bournside School received minor injuries and were treated in hospital before being discharged.

Government action plan to crack down on hate crimes


Prosecutors will be urged to press for tougher sentences for perpetrators of hate crimes after a surge in reported incidents in the wake of the EU referendum.

A new fund will also be established for "protective security measures" at synagogues, mosques, churches and other places of worship.

The steps will be outlined in the government's new hate crime action plan, which will be published next week.

Momentum vows to check merchandise sourcing after Labour practices claim


T-shirts sold to raise funds for Jeremy Corbyn's leadership campaign are being made by Bangladeshi workers paid just 30p an hour, it has been reported.

The Mail on Sunday said that it had found machinists living in poverty-stricken conditions were required to work 10 hours-a-day to make the garments which were sold for £10 each by the Momentum campaign group.

Momentum said it had cancelled the contract for the T-shirts suggesting that it may have been misled by one of its suppliers in relation to labour practices at the factory.