Tuesday, March 31, 2009

ARE YOU A SOUTH AFRICAN ABROAD?

A South African flag flying in Trafalgar Square

South Africa's highest court has upheld a decision to allow expatriates to vote in the country's upcoming general election. Are you planning to cast your ballot abroad?

In March the Constitutional Court ruled that South Africans who had already registered to vote would be able to do so on 15 April.

The decision came after a case brought by the Afrikaner nationalist Freedom Front Plus party on behalf of a South African teacher living in the UK.

South African rugby fans in London
It's estimated about 60,000 South Africans live in London alone

The British capital is home to the largest diaspora of expatriates abroad, with an estimated 60,000 South Africans living in London.

Analysts say the court's ruling could give some boost to opposition parties but isn't expected to dent the ANC's share of the vote.

Voters in South Africa go to the polls on 22 April in the country's third general election since becoming a democracy.

South Africans in the UK who are registered to vote will be able to do so at South Africa House in Trafalgar Square.


BBC News is looking to speak to South Africans who are planning to vote abroad on 15 April.

Are you in London, registered to vote and are going to do so? Are you living away from London but planning to travel to the capital to cast your ballot? Where else in the world are you and can you vote?

Please send us your comments using the form below and be sure to include your phone number.

Name
Your E-mail address
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The BBC may edit your comments and not all emails will be published. Your comments may be published on any BBC media worldwide.
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BBC NEWS REPORT.

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"Sayings"


"SMILE WHEN PICKING UP THE PHONE.


THE CALLER WILL HEAR IT IN YOUR VOICE" !
____________

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EMERGENCY DECLARED IN PHILIPPINES

Red Cross Youth Volunteers vigil for ICRC hostages, Manila 25 Feb 09
Filipinos have held vigils for the kidnapped Red Cross workers

A state of emergency has been imposed on a southern Philippine island where militants holding three aid workers have threatened to kill one of them.

The declaration puts all security forces on alert on Jolo island and curtails the movement of people.

The Abu Sayyaf rebels had threatened to behead one of the three Red Cross hostages by 1400 (0600 GMT) if security troops did not pull back.

But there has so far been no word on the fate of the hostages.

Swiss national Andreas Notter, Italian Eugenio Vagni and Filipina Mary Jean Lacaba were seized on 15 January, and have since been held in the jungles of Jolo.

The three aid workers were abducted after a visit to a local prison, where the International Committee of the Red Cross is funding a water project.

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The head of the Philippine Red Cross has made a last-minute appeal to the militants to spare the hostages' lives.

"The whole family of the Red Cross prays for you and I'm proud of the way you've comported yourself," said Senator Richard Gordon in a tearful televised address.

"I'm sorry I should be stronger than you because I'm not in midst of the ordeal you're in now," he said.

At least 800 soldiers out of 1,000 have pulled back on Jolo island.

However the government says it cannot complete a full withdrawal as that would leave the island's civilian population exposed to militant attacks.

The Abu Sayyaf has a history of beheading captives.

In 2001, American Guillermo Sobero was killed after the government turned down attempts by the rebels to negotiate for hostages on the nearby island of Basilan.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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MISSING CHEF 'RELATIONSHIPS' CLUE !

Claudia Lawrence was last seen leaving work on 18 March.
A TV appeal for information about missing chef Claudia Lawrence has led to some interesting calls about her previous relationships, police said.
Miss Lawrence, 35, was last seen on 18 March leaving the University of York's Goodricke College, where she worked.
Det Supt Ray Galloway said an appeal on BBC One's Crimewatch programme had so far generated 83 calls from the public.
"We have received some interesting calls, particularly about previous relationships," he said.
'Unhealthy interest'
Mr Galloway, who is leading the investigation by North Yorkshire Police, said: "What we also want to know is about more recent relationships and anyone who has shown an interest in Claudia lately.
"Who was Claudia going out with? Who was she seeing? Who was her boyfriend? Who was showing her maybe some unhealthy interest?"
He added that anyone who came forward would have their information treated in "absolute confidence".
The programme was told how the inquiry was the biggest police investigation in North Yorkshire for five years.

Copies of her mobile phone and bag were shown on the programme.
Copies of Miss Lawrence's rucksack and mobile phone, which are both also missing, were shown on the show.
One caller reported a possible sighting of Miss Lawrence's rucksack, and names were given of people who could know her whereabouts.
On Monday, police advised members of the public not to make donations to the Claudia Lawrence Appeal website.
Detectives said it was not connected in any way to North Yorkshire Police or Miss Lawrence's family.
On Tuesday police said the website had been shut down.
A spokesman said: "Inquiries are ongoing to see if any offences have been committed. At this time no arrests have been made."
Miss Lawrence disappeared without taking any money, bank cards, or her passport, police said.
Friends and family have described her disappearance as "totally out of character".
She is described as white, 5ft 6ins, slim with brown hair and brown eyes.
She was last seen wearing a white T-shirt, blue skinny jeans and white trainers.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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FRANCE IS THREATENING G20 WALKOUT !

France will walk away from this week's G20 summit if its demands for stricter financial regulation are not met, the finance minister has told the BBC.
Christine Lagarde told HardTalk that President Nicolas Sarkozy would not sign any agreement if he felt "the deliverables are not there".
Strengthening financial regulation will be one of the key issues at the G20.
France wants a stronger global financial regulator than the US and the UK would like.
If France were to leave the summit, it would be a blow to both UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown and US President Barack Obama.
Both men have spoken of their high hopes for the meeting to stimulate international recovery.
"Leaders meeting in London must supply the oxygen of confidence to today's global economy and give people in all of our countries renewed hope for the future," Mr Brown said.
However, splits among other world leaders on how to tackle the economic crisis have also begun to emerge in other areas.

G20 LONDON SUMMIT
World leaders will meet later this week in London to discuss measures to tackle the downturn. See our in-depth guide to the G20 summit.

The G20 countries are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the UK, the US and the EU.
European countries, in particular, are resisting calls to commit to spending more this year and next.
President Obama is due to arrive in London for the summit later. It will be his first visit to Europe since he became president.
President Sarkozy has previously spoken out against "Anglo-Saxon" economies, as has the prime minister of Luxembourg, Jean-Claude Juncker.
"This crisis started in the United States. The Anglo-Saxon world has always refused to add the dose of regulation which financial markets, the international financial system needed," Mr Juncker said last week.
However, there have also been expressions of optimism.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel is reported to have said that chances were high that agreements - for example, to regulate hedge funds - would be reached.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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UNREST THREAT AS CRISIS HITS RUSSIA

Millions of Russian workers have been laid off or sacked recently amid the global economic downturn, and the government in Moscow is already facing angry protests by ordinary people.

The BBC's Richard Galpin has been to a northern Russian industrial town to investigate the political threat of mass protests.

Aluminium factory in Pikalevo
All three factories in Pikalevo now stand idle

Once visited, the grim town of Pikalevo is best forgotten.

Built 50 years ago in the remote, forested plains east of Russia's second largest city, St Petersburg, it stands as a monument to the fundamental flaws of the Soviet Union's command economy.

Its population of 21,000 people lives or dies by the complex of aluminium, cement and potash factories which are the town's only raison d'etre.

But now all three factories stand idle, forced by the economic crisis to close their gates.

Their workers either sit at home or throng the small unemployment office tucked behind the main street.

The rattle and hum of machinery in Pikalevo has been replaced by the cold silence of austerity and hardship.

While most Russians would rather forget Pikalevo's existence, it won't be so easy for President Dmitry Medvedev to banish it from his thoughts as he travels to London to attend a G20 summit on the world economic crisis.

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That's because he knows there are hundreds of other so-called "mono-towns" in Russia which, just like Pikalevo, depend on a single industry.

And in Pikalevo, something unusual for modern Russia is happening: the people are taking a stand against the government and its economic policies, blaming them as much as the factory-owners for their plight.

The opening salvo was fired in mid-February, when thousands took to the streets holding black balloons as a sign of mourning for the jobs they have lost.

Some carried placards accusing the government of being "impotent".

The people of this bleak town have reason to be fearful.

Already almost half the workforce has either been sacked or laid off and another round of redundancies is expected in May.

And if the aluminium factory closes for good, then most of the town's heating and electricity supplies will also be lost because everything here is inter-connected, Soviet style.

Nikolai Tsigankov and his wife
Nikolai says he will join expected protests next month

The waste product of the aluminium plant provides the raw material for the other two factories, while the power plant for the industrial complex also keeps people's homes warm and bright.

"The destruction of this plant is criminal," says Kostia, who was laid off three weeks ago.

"The town only exists because of this plant. So if it goes under, then the town will be lost and there will be looting and fighting in the streets."

The local trade union, under the dynamic leadership of Svetlana Antropova, has been effective in channelling this public anger.

In a particularly troubling sign for the government, she is also a member of the ruling United Russia party, led by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

"Most people don't have enough to eat. Some are starving," she said. "People here don't understand why the government is supporting the oligarchs and banks instead of supporting individual workers directly."

A short drive from Svetlana's office is a particularly drab apartment block, where Nikolai Tsigankov and his family live.

He has seven children, a disabled wife and now no job.

He was sacked after more than 30 years' service at the cement factory, where he said he had never missed a day's work. His pay cheques stopped in February.

"Now I don't know how my family will survive or whether I will survive. It might lead you to poison or hang yourself," he said. "I won't, but I can't live like this. How can I, if the government spits on me?"

He went on to tell me he would be among the first on the streets if the trade union organises more demonstrations next month as expected.

It is hard to see how there can be any good outcome to the crisis in Pikalevo.

The company which owns the aluminium factory insists it is an inefficient relic of the Soviet Union and cannot be saved in the current economic climate.

Women selling food and drinks in Pikalevo
Some Pikalevo residents say they are in a desperate situation

"It's losing money all the time," said senior company manager Yevgeny Ivanov.

"It must be converted into a cement factory by May.

"If not, the business will run out of money, there will be no money for wages or heating and the factory will close down for good."

But both the trade union and the regional governor insist this is nonsense and that the aluminium plant can be saved, if necessary by a change of ownership (assuming anyone can be persuaded to buy it).

The authorities also say they have offered millions of dollars in loans to the factory, as well as free re-training and education programmes for those who have already lost their jobs.

But so far, all to no avail.

The fear of serious unrest is growing as the May deadline imposed by the company approaches.

And the big fear for the government is that the example set by Pikalevo could be copied by the hundreds of other "mono-towns" across the country, which are also fighting for their survival.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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JOYCE AGAIN 'MOST EXPENSIVE' MP

Eric Joyce
Mr Joyce has pledged to make more use of rail services

Eric Joyce has again been dubbed Britain's most expensive MP, after claiming allowances for 2007/08 of more than £187,000.

The Falkirk Labour MP's travel costs alone came to £40,637, including £21,000 on airfares.

He has pledged to use the train more and publish a regular travel diary.

Two years ago Mr Joyce promised to halve his travel expenses after being dubbed Scotland's highest spending politician.

On that occasion he claimed allowances of £174,000, including £45,000 on travel.

Mr Joyce has been unavailable for comment on the day the details of MPs' allowances and expenses were revealed, although his voicemail directed journalists to the micro-blogging site Twitter.

There, his response stated: "Travel down (7% price rises) but still not the cheapest fly-drive deal in village. So, will publish monthly travel diary, use train more."

Linlithgow and East Falkirk Labour MP Michael Connarty, whose constituency is next to Mr Joyce's, claimed £183,466 in total, including a maximum of £23,083 to help pay for living costs in London, away from his main home.

In addition Mr Connarty claimed £27,259 on travel costs, including £13,384 on airfares.

Liberal Democrat MP Alistair Carmichael - whose Orkney and Shetland seat is one of the country's most remote constituencies - claimed £176, 190, which included £40,841 on airfares.

The total amount claimed by MPs was £93m - up by £5m.

Meanwhile, Downing Street announced a pay freeze for UK government ministers, but MPs' pay is to rise by 2.3%.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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JUDGE UPHOLDS GALLOWAY CANADA BAN

George Galloway
Mr Galloway was expelled from the Labour Party in 2003

A judge has upheld the Canadian government's decision to ban British MP George Galloway from entering the country to conduct a speaking tour.

Mr Galloway instead addressed a Toronto audience by video message and said he will complete his tour in the same way.

Officials had barred the Respect party leader, claiming he spoke of providing financial support to Palestinian group Hamas, which is banned in Canada.

The MP said he had given aid to people in Gaza and was not a security threat.

The Canadian government ruled otherwise on the basis that he donated cash to Hamas.

Mr Galloway, the Respect MP for Bethnal Green and Bow in London, described the ban as "idiotic" and vowed to challenge the decision.


But Federal Court judge Luc Martineau ruled there were insufficient grounds to overrule the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA).

"A proper factual record and the benefit of full legal argument" were lacking to warrant overturning the CBSA decision, the judge said.

Mr Galloway delivered a speech to a reported 600-strong audience in a Toronto church from a studio in New York.

In it he denied any suggestion that he supported terrorism.

"I am not a supporter of Hamas but I am a supporter of democracy," he said.

He is expected to deliver video speeches to audiences Mississauga, Ontario, Montreal and Ottawa this week.

The MP was expelled by Labour in 2003 because of his outspoken comments on the Iraq war, which party chairman Ian McCartney said "incited foreign forces to rise up against British troops".

In 2006, he was detained "on grounds of national security" at Cairo airport, Egypt, after trying to attend a "mock trial" of then PM Tony Blair and then US President George Bush.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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Monday, March 30, 2009

CITY HOAX BOMB ALERTS CONDEMNED

Hijack
A number of vehicles have been hijacked and set alight across Belfast

First Minister Peter Robinson said those behind a series of security alerts in Belfast on Monday were "beneath contempt".

The Hillview Road in the Oldpark area of the city and the M1 city-bound at Lurgan are still closed.

Alerts near police stations at Tennant Street, North Queen Street, Kingsway and Blacks Road were all hoaxes.

"Those who would try to destabilise and destroy Northern Ireland will fail. We won't be going back," said Mr Robinson.

The Upper Springfield Road in Belfast is now passable after a fire in a hijacked lorry was put out.

Alerts on the Andersonstown Road and at the Stormont Hotel on the Upper Newtownards Road in Belfast were also declared hoaxes.

A van which was burnt out close to Holy Cross church on the Crumlin Road in the city also caused disruption, the police said.

There are reports that two cars have been hijacked in the Kilwilkie area of Lurgan, which police have advised motorists to avoid.

Peter Robinson said those responsible would not succeed in "dragging Northern Ireland backwards".

"The criminal terrorists responsible for the series of bomb scares and hijackings have no support whatsoever in the community," he said.

Sinn Féin MLA for North Belfast, Carál Ní Chuilín, said they had "no strategy".

"These actions are wrong and counterproductive to anything that our communities want," she added. "I would like the spokespeople of those behind these alerts to come forward and explain how this will in any way achieve a united Ireland."

Ulster Unionist leader Sir Reg Empey said the disruption was caused by "republican elements who are determined to pursue their warped campaign regardless of the cost".

"As this is yet another test for our community, I appeal again for people to remain calm and not under any circumstances to retaliate."

East Belfast Alliance MLA Naomi Long said the hoax alerts were "despicable".

"These micro groups can not and will not be allowed to de-rail the progress made in recent years," she said. "I would urge anybody with any information about any of these security alerts to contact the police."

SDLP deputy leader Alasdair McDonnell MP said those responsible were "enemies of peace and progress".

"The hijackings and alerts are intent in wrecking the new agreed Ireland, we have worked so hard to achieve," he added.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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WALESA THREATENS TO LEAVE POLAND !

Lech Walesa (18/03/2009)
Lech Walesa led the Soviet bloc's first independent trade union, Solidarity

Polish anti-communist leader Lech Walesa has threatened to leave Poland after a second book accused him of being a communist spy as a young man.

The former president and Solidarity leader said he was tired of defending himself against claims he collaborated with the secret police in the 1970s.

He also demanded greater support from the democratic institutions of the state he fought for in the 1980s.

Mr Walesa was cleared of earlier spying allegations by a special court in 2000.

Judges concluded that former SB security service agents had forged documents in his file in a bid to prevent him receiving the Nobel Peace prize in 1983.

Mr Walesa led the Soviet bloc's first independent trade union, Solidarity, which emerged to challenge Poland's communist government during strikes in the Gdansk shipyards in 1980, and eventually helped overthrow it nine years later.

In 1990, he was swept to power as the country's first post-communist president.


The latest book on Mr Walesa's life, which was published earlier this month, repeated a claim that he spied on his colleagues in the Gdansk shipyards in the 1970s. It also alleges he fathered an illegitimate child.

It was published by historians at Poland's Institute for National Remembrance (IPN), which investigates communist-era crimes.

On Monday, Mr Walesa threatened to leave Poland and hand back his Nobel Prize if the law and the courts failed to protect him from the "unpunished attacks" on his life story.

"Fascists and communists killed but they murdered their enemies," he said. "Here, friends and patriots are being murdered, and for what price? A historian must decide whether this serves Poland, and not just repeat unlikely nonsense."

Some critics and Prime Minister Donald Tusk have voiced support for Mr Walesa, saying that the books are politically motivated.

"We need Lech Walesa in Poland as an important authority figure," said Mr Tusk, himself a former Solidarity activist.

The BBC's Adam Easton in Warsaw says the accusations are unlikely to do too much damage to Mr Walesa's reputation.

According to surveys, many Poles say even if he did err as a young man, he is still a hero for what he achieved in the fight for freedom and democracy in the 1980s, our correspondent says.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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TERROR PROBE UNCOVERS 'FAKE GUNS'

An imitation Kalashnikov rifle and fireworks have been seized by police investigating alleged terrorism in connection with the G20 summit.

Three men aged 25, 19 and 16 and two women of 20, from the Plymouth area in Devon, were held after the 25 year old was seen allegedly spraying graffiti.

A number of imitation weapons were seized in searches of several premises.

Assistant Chief Constable Paul Netherton said the weapons were "not major" and "probably not even lethal".

The arrests were an "isolated incident" and local people were not at risk. The arrested people have not been linked to any religious group.



ACC Netherton said the weapons included imitation handguns and a Kalashnikov, as well as fireworks. No ammunition for the guns was found.

Detectives are investigating the possibility those arrested were planning to mount protests in London against the G20 summit of world leaders.

All five people are being held under the Terrorism Act.

The arrests were made after the 25-year-old man was arrested in Plymouth on the evening of 27 March for allegedly spraying graffiti on a wall.

ACC Netherton said: "He was arrested and then the officer went back to this man's house and carried out a search.

"When he was searching the house he came across imitation firearms and also some devices which had basically been made from fireworks. "And also he found some politically sensitive material and things like that."

He said the operation has no connection to failed suicide bomber Nicky Reilly, 22, who was jailed for 18 years earlier this year.

The Muslim convert, who lived with his mother in Plymouth, attempted a nail bomb attack on a restaurant in Exeter.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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"SAYINGS"


"DON'T LET A LITTLE DISPUTE


INJURE A GREAT FRIENDSHIP" !
________

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MADONNA ATTENDS ADOPTION HEARING

Madonna
Madonna has faced criticism in the past for adopting from Malawi

Madonna has left a Malawian court after a hearing to begin the adoption of a second child from the African country.

Her application to adopt Chifundo James has been adjourned until Friday, according to a Lilongwe court official.

A welfare officer speaking anonymously, said the child was now four and that her 18-year-old mother had died shortly after giving birth.

Madonna has said it is "amazing" to be back in the country where she adopted David Banda in 2006.

The girl at the centre of the case, whose name translates into English as Mercy, is in the same orphanage that was home to David, who is now three years old.

Madonna, dressed in a black and white skirt and carrying a straw hat, entered the court of Judge Esme Chombo through a back door and the case will be heard in private.

The singer has come in for criticism over her plans. David Nutt, spokesman for the Save the Children charity, urged Madonna to think again.

"We don't want to pick on one individual - any time, any set of circumstances can change," he said.

Madonna in Malawi in 2007
Madonna's adoption of David Banda was finalised last year

"But the problem is, very often this is the wrong thing to do, and Madonna tends to make it seem like it's the answer to everything and all problems, and it just isn't."

But Steven Whitehead from the charity Oasis, which represents families who adopt from abroad, said foreign adoption was a good idea in many cases.

He said: "There are a number of children for whom inter-country adoption represents their only chance of having a family, and the human convention on the right of the child gives every child the right to a family.

"And it's much better for them be in a family, wherever it may happen to be, than be in institutional care. The damaging effect of institutional care on children is so well recognised that, you know, it's just not an issue of debate."

Madonna's spokeswomen, Liz Rosenberg and Barbara Charone, and her lawyer in Malawi, Alan Chinula, have not commented.

Writing in response to e-mailed questions from Nation readers last week, Madonna said: "Many people - especially our Malawian friends - say that David should have a Malawian brother or sister.

"It's something I have been considering."

In 2006, critics accused the Malawian government of sidestepping laws banning foreign adoptions in order to allow the celebrity to take David home with her.

Madonna's adoption of David Banda was confirmed last year.

After the adoption was legalised, Madonna said the difficulties had arisen because "this adoption essentially was the beginning of the creation of adoption laws in Malawi".

Madonna and daughter Lourdes were seen walking through the village of Chinkhota.

She hoped it would make it easier for others to adopt from the country and explained: "I am the template or the role model, so to speak, for future adoptions."

The star also has two biological children - Rocco, her son with former husband Guy Ritchie, and Lourdes, whose father is Carlos Leon.

Film director Ritchie and Madonna's divorce was finalised in November.

Malawi does not, as a rule, approve adoptions for single or divorced people, but the official at the country's welfare department said that each case was considered on merit.

Madonna has also established a charity, Raising Malawi, which aims to provide accommodation, food, education and other support to orphans in the country.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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EYEWITNESS : I SAW THE ATTACKERS!

At least 11 people have been killed at a police academy near the Pakistani city of Lahore where an armed group are currently holed up.

Aamir Shazad, who runs a construction site close to the police training academy, was at the scene when the attackers entered and opened fire. He told the BBC what he saw as the attacks unfolded.


TV grab from NDTV of soldier with a gun (30 march)
I saw a white pick-up van and I saw four or five men with large hiking bags leaving the pick-up, which moved away immediately.

They did not enter through the main gate. They jumped over the wall and then I heard firing and fighting and blasts - they must have taken arms out of their bags .

It took just three or four minutes before I heard all that.

I was in the front of the main gate. I stopped and watched. I realised the situation was very critical and I called the police just a few minutes later.

They said to me: "We know it, we know it."

I also told the police about the van. I could not chase that van. I was on my motorbike but when that happened I was on foot.

My exact location was that I was on the GT [Grand Trunk] road going to my construction site in front of the main entrance of the academy. I didn't see anything that happened inside the compound.

I saw how they were dressed. They were wearing shalwar kameez, public dress. But one was in a blue track suit and another other was in a white shalwar kameez. They looked no different from the public.


Their hair was like the hair of a youngster with a short hair cut. They looked young and in good health to me. I would say that they looked Punjabi to me.

They were just entering the place commando-style. They did not enter from the main gate. The wall is not so high. So they jumped from one side.

I was there for one or two hours so I heard a lot. It was very dangerous. But the firing was not coming towards us at that time. Many people were standing there outside the academy without any fear. So I also was without any fear.

I was only on one side, I only saw what was happening from the main entrance. I was standing there observing the whole scenario. But in my opinion, the attack could have happened from three sides.

I know that building very well. At the back it is very easy to enter. There is not so much security - only four or five policemen on the front gate. But from the one side there are some houses and at the back there is a village. They could have entered on other sides too. I just saw this side.

The security forces came but they were very late. The rest of the police came about 30 minutes later. They were too late. I was there at 0720 [local time, 0220GMT] and that was when the firing started.

It was really terrible. It felt like a Hollywood film, because I heard three or four blasts. I know the area really well and between 0700 and 0800 the cadres have their parade.

After the firing, many training cadres left the school immediately. They were running away from the premises.

I am now close to home. I left the area and there was a curfew imposed.


BBC NEWS REPORT.

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GM CHAIRMAN FORCED OUT BY OBAMA

Rick Wagoner
Mr Wagoner has headed GM since 2000

The chief executive of struggling US car company General Motors has been ordered to step down by President Barack Obama.

Rick Wagoner will leave immediately, a government official confirmed.

Mr Obama is preparing to outline terms for offering more help to GM and fellow car giant Chrysler.

The two firms have already received $17.4bn (£14.4bn) in bail-outs. Chrysler has requested a further $5bn while GM says it needs $16.7bn more.

Reports have suggested that a frustrated Mr Obama will reject GM and Chrysler's turnaround plans as unrealistic, raising the risk of the carmakers' bankruptcy.

Obama: Car industry 'must do more'. Courtesy of CBS 'Face the Nation'

The auto task force appointed by Mr Obama released two reports on Monday on the financial health of both carmakers, saying that Chrysler was "not viable" in its current form.

It demanded a merger with Italy's Fiat or another carmaker if Chrysler was to survive and said the Obama administration would only provide the company working capital for the next 30 days.

It also said that it would pledge to fund GM's operations for the next 60 days only, requiring the carmaker to come up with another plan detailing further restructuring.

"While Chrysler and GM are different companies with different paths forward, both have unsustainable liabilities and both need a fresh start," the task force said.

"Their best chance at success may well require utilising the bankruptcy code in a quick and surgical way."

In an interview with US broadcaster CBS, President Obama said the firms must do more to justify further aid, saying "they're not there yet".

"We think we can have a successful US auto industry," the president said.

"But it's got to be one that's realistically designed to weather this storm and to emerge - at the other end - much more lean, mean, and competitive than it currently is."

GM plans to axe 47,000 jobs and Chrysler 3,000, as well as shedding a number of car models.

The job cuts would take place by the end of 2009 and are the largest work-force reduction announced by a US firm in the current downturn.

Mr Wagoner, 56, has headed GM since 2000, after first joining the company in 1977.

Fritz Henderson, the GM president and chief operating officer, will replace Mr Wagoner.

The news comes as France's biggest carmaker, Peugeot Citroen, sacked its chairman Christian Streiff, citing "extraordinary difficulties" in the automotive industry.

In December, GM had said it would cut the number of plants from 47 in 2008 to 38 by 2012, but now plans to close a further five factories, which would leave it with 33 facilities.

GM cars at showroom
GM has seen sales fall sharply in the US

The carmaker's brands would also be reduced from eight to four - Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac and GMC.

GM and Chrysler received their first bail-outs at the end of last year, warning that without the support they risked financial ruin.

Ford, the third of the "Big Three" US carmakers, has yet to require any bail-outs, but says it may need funds in the future.

GM, Ford and Chrysler have all seen sales fall sharply in their home market.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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LIFE : A MEDICAL CONDITION !

By Alasdair Cross
Producer, Medicalisation of Normality

Charcot demonstrating hysteria
Hysteria once preoccupied medical science

Restless leg syndrome, social anxiety disorder, female sexual dysfunction, celebrity worship syndrome - it seems that a new illness is invented every week, covering every potential quirk in human behaviour.

Is the human condition becoming a medical condition?

Ten per cent of British children are regarded as having a clinically recognisable mental disorder, 34 million prescriptions for anti-depressants were written in the UK in 2007, while it is estimated that 10% of US children take Ritalin to combat behaviour problems.

Dr Tim Kendall, Joint Director of the National Collaboration Centre for Mental Health and a key government adviser is deeply concerned at what he sees as a medicalisation of a vast swathe of society.

He said: "I think there is an inherent danger from increasingly classifying people.

"If you look at the American Psychiatric Association 'bible', you'll see almost every piece of human behaviour can be classified as being in some way aberrant."

Dr Kendall sees dangers in a "tendency for new categories to be invented, often at the behest of drug companies looking for a new drug".

Medical historian, Dr Louise Foxcroft agrees, pointing to ill-defined conditions such as female sexual dysfunction and to the erectile hardness scale promoted by the producers of Viagra which she claims "is a creation of fear and anxiety".

It is certainly not a new phenomenon.

Dr Foxcroft, author of 'Hot Flushes, Cold Science', has shelves of old medical textbooks stuffed with long-forgotten ailments.


Among them is hysteria, the symptoms of which could range from excessive masturbation to excessive novel reading and a tendency to wander.

Common treatments for hysterical women, and they were invariably women, included opium, the removal of the clitoris and incarceration.

Later, neurasthenia became the fashionable mental affliction, suffered by the likes of novelist, George Eliot and philosopher Immanuel Kant.

These over-worked intellectuals were offered the more convivial option of Priory-style rehab retreats to help ease their troubled minds.

Such ailments and the chance of treatment were once confined to the upper classes but that has changed in the past 20 years.

In 1997 the US fully legalised the advertising of prescription medicines.

Since then television ad breaks and popular magazines have been packed with explicit claims for the effectiveness of anti-depressants, behaviour modifying drugs and pre-menstrual tension treatments.

Prescriptions for the most heavily-advertised drugs have risen significantly.

Could we see a similar effect in the UK?

Dr Kendall is concerned by current European Commission proposals that could loosen the blanket ban on the advertisement of prescription medicines to European consumers.

Do not expect Prozac ads before Coronation Street or a Ritalin sponsored X-Factor.

However, the proposed shift would allow adverts on medical websites and in relevant magazines.

Dr Richard Tiner of the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry says that his members are completely opposed to 'direct to consumer advertising' on the American model.

Dr Kendall, an adviser to the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, said: "It's far better that independent bodies like NICE provide the evidence, turned into plain English for patients.

"I'd far rather that's what patients got than so-called information provided by a pharmaceutical company."

If the proposals become law then, as in the US, we can expect to see even more new conditions and new drugs to treat them, new ways not to be 'normal'.

'The Medicalisation of Normality' is broadcast on BBC Radio Four at 2100 BST on Monday 30 March and repeated on Wednesday 1 April at 1630 BST.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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THE LITTLE WHITE LIE !

The little white lie that grew

A POINT OF VIEW

Caught out in a fib to get out of a speeding ticket, do you put your hands up - or dig yourself deeper into a hole of your own making, asks Clive James.

Car passing speed camera
It wasn't me at the wheel, honest

In a case which has deep resonance for Britain and the entire civilized world, the whole of Australia has been glued to the media in recent weeks, following the story of an eminent judge who has ruined his reputation because he tried to lie his way out of a speeding fine that would have cost him about £36.

At the age of 70, he is about to go to jail for a minimum of two years because he failed to cough up 36 quid at the right moment.

On the face of it, you can't call his disaster a tragedy. A tragedy, according to classical principles, is a fall from high degree because of some great flaw.

Marcus Einfeld, the judge in question, was certainly of high enough degree - none higher. Queens Counsel since 1977, Australian Living Treasure 1997, United Nations Peace Award 2002, the list goes on. He retired a few years ago but has continually been brought back to judge important cases about refugees because the Australian legal system can't do without his experience and prestige.

The judge harangues the Australia federal government over its mandatory detention policy
Einfeld, here protesting against mandatory detention, faces jail

Or anyway it couldn't. In 2006 a speed camera in Sydney caught his silver Lexus doing 6mph over the limit. At this point we have to forget about the dizzy speed of the car and try to slow down the thought processes going on in his head. There he is, at the top of his profession, with a national, indeed international, reputation for wisdom.

This is the man who was the founding president of Australia's Human Rights and Equal Opportunities Commission. In 1987 he headed the Commission's enquiry into the living conditions of aborigines in the border area of New South Wales and Queensland, and he wept openly at evidence that a young aboriginal boy who had been denied a proper rugby ball had played instead with an old shoe.

Those were famous tears, and there is every reason to think that they were sincerely felt.

As a judge of great matters of justice, Marcus Einfeld had deservedly been revered for many years. He had a right to think of himself as the very incarnation of the law. Now here he was, with a speeding ticket in his hand, facing a fine of a paltry £36 for having exceeded the speed limit by a lousy 6mph.

And right there, the fatal error begins to take form. It wasn't so much the £36 fine. He could afford that. It was that the penalty points would bring him closer to losing his licence. Somehow the top judge and national treasure didn't see himself in a position where he was not allowed to drive.

Clive James

If he had said he lent the car to a secret agent whom he could not name without rendering him vulnerable to attack, Marcus Einfeld might still be enjoying his place at the top of the heap

Unusual, that. Many 70-year-old men of his exalted rank are very content to be driven, rather than having to do the driving. They have a man with a cap to drive them, so they can say from the back seat: watch out for the speed cameras, Bruce.

Perhaps Marcus Einfeld is one of those strange men - there are thousands of them in every country and they are nearly always men - who need to have a driving licence just so that they can get points on it, who think that the whole purpose of driving is to drive as far over the limit as they can and still get away with it, and still keep going for as long as the licence lasts even if they don't get away with it.

But the judge was only 6mph over the limit, which scarcely made him a boy racer. He must have thought the prospect of getting yet more points on an already point-scarred licence was an awful lot of inconvenience for practically nothing, and he must also have thought - and here the other half of the fateful mental pattern comes into play - he must also have thought of how easy it would be to get out of it.

All he had to do was say that someone else was driving the silver Lexus that day. So he said he had lent the car to an American friend, Professor Theresa Brennan. Satisfied, the magistrate dismissed the case, and the judge walked free. In just such a way, King Oedipus believed himself to be in the clear when he left Corinth.

If he - I mean the judge, not King Oedipus - had said that he had lent the car to an Australian government secret agent whom he could not name without rendering him vulnerable to attack by terrorists, Marcus Einfeld might still be enjoying his place at the top of the heap, admired by all.

But Professor Theresa Brennan was an actual figure, who could be traced. When a newspaper did trace her, it turned out that she was no longer in existence. At the time of the speeding incident she had already been dead for three years.

Marcus Einfeld, acting for wrongfully deported Australian citizen Vivian Alvarez
The judge is a respected defender of the displaced and downtrodden

It was probably already too late for Marcus Einfeld to save his career. Yet he might conceivably have climbed relatively unbesmirched out of the hole he was occupying, and even drawn some sympathy for the depth to which he had dug himself in by telling one of those little fibs that almost everyone tells over small matters.

But like President Nixon in the Watergate scandal, the judge, although trying to cover up an infinitely smaller crime - dodging a £36 fine instead of okaying acts of black-bag espionage against a rival party in clear defiance of the Constitution of the United States - the judge chose to go on digging himself further towards the centre of the earth.

He said he didn't mean that Theresa Brennan. He meant another Theresa Brennan. A Greek chorus at this point might have said that the judge was anything but a natural liar, because he lied so very badly, just like most of us.



Further proofs of his amateur status followed in quick succession.

Finally, in a skein of inventions that we needn't bother to unravel, he managed to implicate his own mother, aged 94, when he claimed to have been using her Toyota Corolla that day, so he couldn't have been at the wheel of his silver Lexus.

Alas, there was security camera footage to prove that his mother's Toyota Corolla had not emerged from the garage of her apartment block between daylight and dusk. We were left with the thought picture of a team of trained investigators examining a whole day's worth of CCTV footage to establish that a Toyota Corolla had remained stationary throughout. With that thought picture, and with the thought picture of a man of true stature with his life in ruins.

Did any of this really matter? Well, obviously the original offence didn't matter much. At 6mph over the limit, the judge wasn't going to hurt anyone.

Workman in new Sydney traffic tunnel
Six mph he won't ever forget

And the first lie shouldn't have mattered much either. People really do lie all the time. Often they lie to protect themselves, sometimes they lie to protect their loved ones, and there is even such a thing as a saving lie, a lie that wards off the dreadful consequences of the truth.

Ibsen wrote a play about that, called The Wild Duck. None of this means that lying is a virtue. Almost always, it's a vice to be avoided. But it's a universal vice, and its prevalence is the very reason why any properly functioning legal system has a harsh law against perjury, because a court is where the lies have to stop, or there can be no justice.

And what the judge did was knowingly to put himself on the road to perjury. He was on the road at only 6mph over the limit and he could have stopped himself by coughing up 36 quid, but there was an inner momentum.

Just why that should have been so is a question he'll be occupying himself with for the next two years at least. Everyone else will be thinking about it too, but his will be easily the finest mind concerned with the subject. He doesn't need me or anyone else to tell him that a judge who commits perjury, over no matter how trivial a matter, has sinned against the spirit of his profession.

That's why his case really is a tragedy, and not just a farce. It's a tragedy because he not only fell from high degree, there really was a tragic flaw: a capacity to forget, at the critical moment, the central ethical precept of the calling to which he had given his life.

Suddenly, belatedly, and for almost no reason, he put himself in the position of a doctor who is arraigned for selling body parts, and, because he was selling only fingernails, defends himself by saying it hadn't been him that sold the fingernails, it was Professor Theresa Brennan, or another Theresa Brennan, or his mother at the wheel of a Toyota Corolla. The doctor wasn't supposed to be selling anything, so he should have owned up.



But the judge doesn't need to hear that from me, or from any other of the thousands of Australian experts - editorial writers, television commentators and philosophers of all descriptions - who are now picking this matter over.

The judge is already hearing about it from himself. He's hearing about the fatal road that led from the speed camera to the truly tragic climax, which wasn't the moment when one of his fellow judges had to send him down for three years, two of them without parole.

The tragic climax came when the distinguished Judge Marcus Einfeld found himself on the telephone to his mother saying: "Mum, remember how you lent me your Toyota that day?" and she said "Marcus, what have you got yourself into?"

And suddenly he was a little boy again, as all men are when the truth they must face is about a mess of their own making.

BBC NEWS MAGAZINE

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SIEGE AT PAKISTAN POLICE ACADEMY !

An armed group is holed up in a police academy in eastern Pakistan after attacking it with grenades and rifles.

Officials say at least 11 people have been killed and dozens injured at the academy, on the outskirts of Lahore.

Firing was continuing more than five hours after it began as troops laid siege to the academy. It is unclear how many people are trapped inside.

The attack comes less than a month after gunmen attacked the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore.

In that attack, six policemen were killed, while up to 14 gunmen escaped.

I saw a man firing a Kalashnikov running towards us
Police official

Pakistani officials say it is too early to say who is responsible for Monday's assault in Lahore.

Escalating militant violence in Pakistan has been concentrated in the country's north-west near the border with Afghanistan.

But insurgents have increasingly targeted big cities in recent months.

The Lahore academy has been named by local media as the Manawan police training school. It is on the outskirts of the city, on a road to the border with India.

One official said the gunmen had attacked from four sides. Another said they had thrown grenades before starting to fire.

Several hundred trainees were there when they struck, local TV reports said.

Map of Pakistan

Some 10-12 gunmen carried out the attack, officials said.

Troops were called in and secured the area around the academy.

"Our elite squad has surrounded the area," said senior police official Mushtaq Sukhera.

"God willing, now we will get into the building."

The BBC's Jill McGivering, in Lahore, said that after hours of shooting, several hostages were seen coming out.

She said helicopters were sweeping low over the compound, apparently trying to move the battle into a final, critical stage.

The scene is chaotic, our correspondent says, with roads around the site clogged with vehicles and people.

Officials and witnesses said the gunmen had entered the academy dressed in police uniform, adding to the confusion.

A police constable who witnessed the attack told reporters: "We were exercising in the training ground inside the compound when we heard a blast.

"A great cloud of dust blew over us and I felt something hit my face," he said.

"When I touched my face there was blood all over. Then I saw a man firing a Kalashnikov running towards us.

"He had a beard and his face was partially covered by a bandanna. Three of my colleagues fell down in the burst of firing. I just turned and ran."

TV footage showed several police officers lying motionless on the ground inside the school.

Reports gave varying death tolls.

Police official Ali Nawaz told The Associated Press that at least 11 people had died, while 40-45 were being treated for injuries.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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Sunday, March 29, 2009

IRAN'S FESTIVAL DRINK AND DRUGS BINGE

By Faraj Balafkan - BBC Persian Service.

As Iran celebrates their New Year festival, Nowrouz, some Iranians turn increasingly to drugs and liquor to get them in the party mood.
Nowrouz lasts for two weeks and many people travel to the lush jungles and seaside villas of northern Iran to escape the hustle and bustle of city life.
But where ever they go imported and home produced alcohol, from vodka to Saki, are imbibed along with kebabs.
During the month building up to Nowrouz police statistics show that on average more than 25,000 cans of alcoholic drinks and some 135,000 litres of home-made liquor are hauled across Iran. This is despite the country-wide ban on alcohol imposed under Sharia law.
And, of course, strong homemade alcohol can be particularly dangerous. The AFP news agency recently reported police saying that 10 people had died from drinking poisonous homemade alcohol in a northern Iranian province.
But most of the domestic thirst for spirits is quenched with booze smuggled from Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey.
It is transferred to Kurdish towns such as Erbil in northern Iraq and then carried over the border into Iran.
Once over the border, the final price varies according to how easy it was to negotiate the treacherous terrain of western Iran while avoiding police patrols.
In total, some 14 million litres of liquor are distributed in Iran each year, according to the special anti-smuggling task force which is supervised by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
This is despite the severe punishment for those caught committing offences related to alcohol.
An Iranian convicted of drinking on three separate occasions could face death by hanging. There is little chance of a pardon.
Turning to drugs However the punishment for drug possession and abuse is not as harsh. Only convicted drug traffickers and wholesale sellers are usually hanged.
This has encouraged many heavy drinkers to turn to drug abuse, with the new derivatives such as crack (a solid form of cocaine that can be smoked), acid (lysergic acid diethylamide) and ice (Methamphetamine) becoming increasingly popular according to some experts.
During the last Iranian year, over 100 kg of ice was smuggled into Tehran, according to the city police; a rise of 250% on the previous year.

34% of addicts in Iran use opium
26.6% use crack
19.2% use heroin
But this forms a small part of the total.
Anti-trafficking officials say that each year 2,500 tons of illicit drugs are smuggled into Iran from neighbouring Afghanistan.
In addition over 1,100 tons comes from European and Persian Gulf countries.
Opium has traditionally been the favourite drug among Iranian users according to official figures.
According to officials, Iran has 1.2 million addicts and 800,000 'recreational' users.
But NGOs say that the total number of drug users in Iran is as high as 5 million.
In recent years some NGOs have set up private clinics to treat addicts.
They charge anywhere between $500(£340) and $3,000 (£2,050) for treatment.
The government has its own drug rehabilitation camps, but some reports claim these have turned into key drugs distribution centres.
One drug user told the BBC Persian Service that many addicts have set up 'kitchens' or makeshift drug labs to independently produce acid-based drugs and these kitchens produce more drugs during Nowrouz. Prices also rise during the festive season.
Of course, many Iranian drinkers and drug takers feel they have a right to escape from their woes, at least momentarily and that Nowrouz provides the time to do so.
The police however have a different idea and say they are determined to combat illegal drug taking and drinking during the new year.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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COLOMBIA SHOCKED BY INCEST CASE !

A Colombian man has appeared in court accused of imprisoning his daughter and fathering 11 children with her.
Arcedio Alvarez is said to have abused his daughter, now in her 30s, since she was nine years old.
The case has shocked Colombia, and the 59-year-old needed police and army protection for his court appearance.
Mr Alvarez, who the press have dubbed the "monster of Mariquita" after the area he comes from, denies incest and rape, saying his daughter was adopted.
"We agreed to have a romantic relationship because we really loved each other. But she was not my own child," he told the court in the central Tolima province.
Sometimes I would ask him [why we were doing it] and he would say it was God's will
Arcedio Alvarez's daughter
It is not clear whether his claim is true, or whether it would affect the charges he faces, but the woman says she always saw him as her father.
"I always respected him as my father and he is my father," she said.
"He never spoke about [incest], about why we were doing it. Sometimes I would ask him and he would say it was God's will."
The woman told police how her mother died when she was five years old, leaving her in the care of Mr Alvarez.
She says she was raped repeatedly and had 11 children - three of whom died.
The woman and her children are now under state protection.
Child welfare campaigners have called for a life sentence if he is convicted, saying there are hundreds of thousands of child sexual abuse cases in Colombia not being prosecuted.
The case has also prompted a movement to change Colombian law, says the BBC's Jeremy McDermott in Colombia, to ensure that those found guilty of raping children go to prison for life.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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Saturday, March 28, 2009

PHILIPPINES IN HOSTAGE COMPROMISE

Map

The Philippines have relaxed a security cordon around Abu Sayyaf rebels who have threatened to behead one of three Red Cross hostages seized in January.

At least 800 soldiers have pulled back on the southern island of Jolo.

"We are giving them a breathing space where they feel they're safe to negotiate," said Philippine Interior Secretary Ronaldo Puno.

The rebels said they would kill one of the hostages if the cordon around them was not fully removed by 31 March.

In rare public appeal, the head of the International Committee of the Red Cross Jakob Kellenberger asked Philippine officials to consider the demands made by the Islamist militants.

He also called on the kidnappers not to harm the hostages - Swiss national Andreas Notter, Italian Eugenio Vagni and Filipina Mary Jean Lacaba - who were seized on 15 January.

Red Cross Youth Volunteers vigil for ICRC hostages, Manila 25 Feb 09

Mr Kellenberger said Red Cross staff were in the Philippines to do humanitarian work, and that nothing whatsoever could be achieved by hurting them.

The Abu Sayyaf has a history of beheading captives.

In 2001, American Guillermo Sobero was killed after the government turned down attempts by the rebels to negotiate for hostages on the nearby island of Basilan.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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'DUMB' THIEF PICKS POLICE SUMMIT !

Map

A man in the US state of Pennsylvania accused of a robbery at a narcotics police convention has been described as probably the state's dumbest criminal.

Retired police chief John Comparetto was attending the meeting of 300 officers when he was allegedly held up at gunpoint in the men's toilets.

He handed over money and a phone but then he and some colleagues gave chase as the suspect tried to flee in a taxi.

They arrested a 19-year-old man over the incident near Harrisburg.

Mr Comparetto described the suspect as "probably the dumbest criminal in Pennsylvania".

The Associated Press news agency reported that when a journalist asked the suspect for comment as he was led from court, he said: "I'm smooth."

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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10 THINGS !

10pots_203jpg.jpgSnippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.

1. Tits are also known as bumbarrels.
More details

2. The Daily Sport website is banned in the House of Commons.
More details

3. Teenagers don't like pink light.
More details

4. Crabs feel pain.
More details

5. Britons spend six months of their lives queueing.
More details (Telegraph)

6. A broken heart is known as Takotsubo cardiomyopathy and it can be cured.
More details

7. Britney Spears's family comes from Tottenham in north London.
More details

8. People like their tea to have a temperature of 56-60C.
More details

9. Hyenas have the strongest jaws in the animal kingdom.
More details (Metro)

10. Charles Darwin loved eating vegetables.
More details

BBC NEWS MAGAZINE



"SAYINGS"

"REMEMBER THAT GREAT LOVE
AND GREAT ACHIEVEMENTS INVOLVE
GREAT RISKS"!
______

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WORLD PREPARES FOR BIG SWITCH-OFF !

Millions of people worldwide are being urged to switch off lights for an hour, in what is described as the biggest climate change protest ever attempted.
The initiative, Earth Hour, was begun in Sydney two years ago by green campaigners keen to cut energy use.
Correspondents say the aim is to create a huge wave of public pressure to influence a meeting in Copenhagen later this year to seek a new climate treaty.
Critics describe the event as a symbolic and meaningless gesture.
The switch-off is expected to take place in more than 3,400 towns and cities across 88 countries, at 2030 in each local time zone.
Earth Hour was launched in 2007 as a solo event in Sydney, Australia, with more than two million people involved. Last year's event claimed the participation of 370 cities.
Locations taking part this time include Sydney's Opera House, Edinburgh Castle in Scotland, the Bird's Nest Stadium in Beijing and the Egyptian Pyramids.
Fast-food giant MacDonald's has pledged to dim its "golden arches" at 500 locations, while celebrities such as actress Cate Blanchett and Archbishop Desmond Tutu have promised support.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon backed the initiative in a video posted this month on the event's YouTube channel.
"Earth Hour is a way for the citizens of the world to send a clear message," he said. "They want action on climate change."
People are invited to provide blogs and short video clips on how they spend their time.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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Friday, March 27, 2009

WIND POWER CAR BREAKS RECORD !

Greenbird wind powered vehicle
Wind powered Greenbird reached speeds of 126.1 mph

A British engineer from Hampshire has broken the world land speed record for a wind powered vehicle.

Richard Jenkins reached 126.1 mph (202.9 kmh) in his car Greenbird on the dry plains of Ivanpah Lake in Nevada.

Mr Jenkins told the BBC that it had taken him 10 years of "hard work" to break the record and that, on the day, "things couldn't have been better".

American Bob Schumacher set the previous record of 116 mph in 1999, driving his Iron Duck vehicle.

"It's great, it's one of those things that you spend so long trying to do and when it actually happens, it's almost too easy," Mr Jenkins told the BBC.

The Greenbird is a carbon fibre composite vehicle that uses wind (and nothing else) for power. The only metalwork used is for the wing bearings and the wheel unit.

The designers describe it as a "very high performance sailboat" but one that uses a solid wing, rather than a sail, to generate movement.

Mr Jenkins, from Lymington, spent 10 years designing the vehicle, with Greenbird the fifth vehicle he has built to try and break the record.

Richard Jenkins
Richard Jenkins spent 10 years trying to break the record

Due to the shape of the craft, especially at such high speeds, the wings also provide lift; a useful trait for an aircraft, but very hazardous for a car. To compensate for this, the designers have added small wings to "stick" the car to the ground, in the same way Formula 1 cars do.

"Greenbird weighs 600kg when its standing still," said Mr Jenkins. "But at speed, the effect of the wings make her weigh just over a tonne."

Richard Jenkins spent much of his childhood sailing on the south coast and from the age of 10 was designing what he calls "radical contraptions".

He has also built a wind powered craft that travels on ice, rather than land.

"Now that we've broken the record, I'm going back onto the ice craft. There's still some debate as to whether travelling on ice or land will be faster," he said

"But I think we've got some time. 126.1 mph was a good margin to beat the record and I think it will be some time before anyone else breaks it."

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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10 WAYS TO GET A GOOD SLEEP !

Sleeping in flowers

The weekend looms, and that means a morning lie-in for many - though with the clocks going forward there'll be an hour's less shut-eye on Saturday. But, says Sean Coughlan, there's much more to getting a really good kip than just shutting your eyes.

Britons are the worst sleepers in Europe, claimed a survey last week, depicting a nation starved of sleep and facing a daily battle against red-eyed exhaustion.

Notice in boarding house
If it's a good sleep you want, there are rules

One in five of the population has less than seven hours sleep a night, according to research from the Future Foundation for the health campaign Sleep Well Live Well. Many of these tired souls reported feeling stressed and unhappy.

But how about looking at the question from another direction? If insufficient or disrupted sleep is bad for our health - then what would be the ingredients of a really good night's sleep? What makes a perfect sleep?

Dr Adrian Williams of the Sleep Disorders Centre at St Thomas's Hospital in London sets out a few ground rules.

Don't have any caffeine drinks after 2pm, exercise some time between 4pm and 7pm, have a milky drink and a bath before bedtime and try to exclude noise and light from the bedroom, recommends Dr Williams.

But sleep is a highly individual experience. Like our appetite for different types of food, we all have our own gourmet sleeps. Here are 10 to savour.

1. THE AFTERNOON NAP
According to the wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill, the pearl of slumbers was the afternoon nap. "You must sleep some time between lunch and dinner, and no half measures. Take off your clothes and get into bed."

2. THE WEARY PARENT

Baby sleeping near Nancy Pelosi
Adults can't help but envy the baby's ability to just nod off

For the sleep-starved parent, it can feel as though they've given birth to a temperamental air-raid siren. Their sleep fantasy is nothing more elaborate than a night alone and a long luxurious morning when they can wake up undisturbed. Maybe they could warm the room with a bonfire of all those smug-faced sleep training manuals.

3. HOTEL SCHADENFREUDE
There are few more succulent slices of sleep than the first morning of a holiday. No alarm clock, no rushing for the train, no playing hunt the other sock, no making sandwiches for the kids. What makes it even sweeter is the thought of everyone else back at work toiling over a hot computer.

4. THE GREAT OUTDOORS
Sleeping outside has a particular grass-scented pleasure, whether it's drowsing on a sunny afternoon in the back garden, on the beach or in the park. Looking up at the clouds creates that feeling of getting back to nature.

Sleeping in tent
Sleeping outdoors can sometimes help

Fresh-air sleeping has a long tradition. Alice Ravenhill, an Edwardian authority on rearing children, ordered that bedroom windows should be always fully open, apart from in the severest cold spells. In summer, she recommended sleeping on the porch.

Modern hotels say they pitch their optimum room temperature for sleeping at 18 degrees. It must have been all the other ones I've stayed in that are hotter than the Gobi desert, with the windows bolted shut.

5. COMFY PILLOW
Pillows now come with almost as much science as hair conditioner. And there are versions with in-built speakers to play sleep-inducing sounds such as a heart beat or soothing music.

This would not have impressed the Elizabethan writer, William Harrison, who attacked the young men of the 1580s for being so soft that they used pillows to help them sleep. In his day, real men slept on wooden logs or hairy sacks. Allergenic or non-allergenic sack, sir?

6. KEPT IN THE DARK
For a city dweller, used to a constant fog of light, it can be a rare treat to sleep in undisturbed treacly darkness. It's becoming more and more difficult to find. There are light polluted skies outside - and the insides of homes are overflowing with light-emitting gadgets. Kielder in Northumberland is claimed as having the darkest skies left in England.

7. SNEAKY CINEMA SNORING

Delegates asleep
The Lawrence of Arabia effect

We've all been there. It's warm, it's dark, the mobile is switched off and you're watching a film or a play, and you feel an irresistible urge to close your eyes. It's been a long day and your body is crying out for a delicious moment of rest. The innovative Japanese have recognised a gap in the market and run "sleep concerts", in which rows and rows of exhausted salarymen cheerfully snore while the musicians play.

8. NIGHT MUSIC
Who wouldn't enjoy being lulled to sleep by music? Or else the music is so dull that staying awake becomes impossible. Interpret this either way, but a study for the hotel chain Travelodge says that Coldplay and James Blunt are the most sleep-inducing musicians. Guests also like "unchallenging" reads, with the literary works of Jordan and David Beckham topping the sleep chart.

9. DREAMING OF FOOD
The Christmas sleep, after a big dinner, is a classic of its kind. But different types of food have associations with inducing sleep. The NHS recommends eating bananas. Since the Romans, lettuce has been a persistent ingredient in sleep recipes. Less attractive is the use of dormouse fat, as used by the Elizabethans. The Victorians recommended top quality champagne as an insomnia cure. Even if you didn't get to sleep, it would still have been a good party.

10. WEEKEND LIE-IN
Going home on Friday, the weekend stretches out alluringly. The first pleasure is the morning lie-in, that extra hour or so when everything seems possible. You lie there planning that great novel, dipping in and out of sleep. Nathaniel Hawthorne caught this perfectly: "You speculate on the luxury of wearing out a whole existence in bed, like an oyster in its shell, content with the sluggish ecstasy of inaction."

Maybe we're not bad at sleep, just out of practice.

BBC NEWS MAGAZINE

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ITALIAN 'FRITZL' AND SON ARRESTED !

Italian policeman and car (file pic)
Police have not revealed many details about the case

Police have arrested a man and his son on suspicion of raping their daughters in the northern Italian city of Turin.

The son was allegedly encouraged to imitate his father, who reportedly kept his daughter captive in a dark room for 25 years, sexually abusing her.

Italian media say the first victim, given the pseudonym "Laura", is now 34 and is having psychological treatment.

Laura alerted the police, who now believe that the 63-year-old man's son also raped his own four daughters.

Laura's abuse is believed to have started when she was nine years old.

Prosecutors say she was locked up in a room without electricity, forced to leave school at the age of 13 and never allowed to leave the house without her father's supervision.

According to Italian media reports, the case came to light after Laura accused her brother of rape.

She had reportedly fled her father's house, sought refuge in her brother's house, only to be allegedly locked up and raped by her brother for two weeks.

Laura says her brother also raped his own four young daughters.

"It seems that in this family there was a sort of 'droit de seigeneur' of the father over the daughter," prosecutor Pietro Fornon said, alluding to the medieval feudal right which gave the lord the right to sleep the first night with the bride of any of his vassals.

Father and son, both street vendors who collect scrap metal for a living, have been arrested and charged with rape, sexual abuse and carrying out obscene acts in public.

Both men have denied any wrongdoing.

Laura was reportedly already known to police after filing a complaint for sexual abuse 16 years ago.

But as the BBC's David Willey reports from Rome, no action was ever taken because the woman was allegedly forced by her father to pin the blame on an uncle who also denied any wrongdoing.

Investigators say the case is unusual in that most of the other members of the large family of the accused - he has eight sons and two daughters - defend their father and have told police that they worship the ground where he treads.

The younger children have now been taken in charge by the city authorities and are undergoing therapy.

Italian media say the case echoes that of Josef Fritzl, the Austrian man jailed for life on 19 March for having kept his daughter as a sex slave in a cellar for 24 years and fathered her seven children, murdering one of them by neglect.

Italian police announced the arrests on Friday.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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VOLUNTEERS FLOCK TO SPACE EXPERIMENT !

By Richard Galpin BBC News, Moscow

What would you be prepared to do for money? For $6,500 (£4,500) a month, to be precise?
How about the following: locking yourself inside a small metal container for three months without any communication with the outside world, with electronic monitors attached to various parts of your body and with frozen baby food and cereal bars for breakfast, lunch and dinner?
To add to the fun you'll have five companions who will do everything possible to stop you trying to escape before the three months are up.
Meanwhile, from a control room outside, a team of scientists will monitor your every move checking for any signs that you are starting to crack up.
And banish all hope of finding solace through alcohol or tobacco. Both are strictly forbidden.

So it may come as something of a surprise to know that this well-paid, extreme version of Big Brother and The Weakest Link attracted 6,000 applicants from 40 countries.
And next Tuesday the fun will begin for the six lucky people who were chosen to take part.
After a news conference and with cameras flashing they will walk to a collection of linked cylindrical containers inside a dreary building in Moscow, open the heavy hatch and disappear inside.
All in the name of an unprecedented experiment called Mars 500 which has been talked about for many years and is now finally happening.
The six volunteers from Russia, France and Germany believe they are playing a small part in the making of history by bringing the long-cherished goal of a manned mission to the planet Mars one step closer.

Using the current generation of rocket engines, a trip to the Red Planet and back could take up to two years (compared with less than two weeks for a mission to the Moon).
So space agencies around the world vying to win the race to Mars have to be certain the next generation of astronauts will be able to withstand the psychological and physical trauma of extremely long periods of space travel.
The Mars 500 experiment here in Moscow will focus on the psychological difficulties of prolonged isolation and claustrophobia.
"It's a real probability that a flight to Mars would fail if the very serious problem of isolation is not investigated first," says Oliver Knickel, an army engineer from Germany who is one of the volunteer "astronauts" for the experiment.
"The impact of the isolation would almost certainly kill the crew on board."
Whether the six volunteers taking part in the current experiment will come to blows is a moot point.
"It definitely will not be fun," says Sergei Ryazansky, the commander of the mock spaceship.
"Each test subject [volunteer] has the right to go out at any moment but of course it will influence the whole experiment.
"So we will try to support him and make life for him better.
"Each crew member understands that it's our goal to go all the way."
And that will certainly not be easy judging by what we were allowed to see of the inside of the mock space-craft earlier this month.

Its cheap, stripped-pine interior was mostly bare, although we were told this was because the scientific equipment had yet to be installed.
There were a few home comforts, including a large flatscreen TV, a plastic kettle and an empty fridge.
But overall it was cramped, airless and without windows.
The sleeping quarters are particularly small and apparently not well sound-proofed.
Each of the volunteers is allowed to bring one suitcase of personal belongings including books, music, DVDs and games such as chess.
They will work shifts of up to 10 hours either during the day or at night, when they will be busy conducting scientific experiments and ensuring all the on-board systems are working properly.
Claustrophobia
They won't have much free time.

"You have to cope with the environment - that's the main point," says volunteer astronaut Cyrille Fournier who is a commercial airline pilot from France.
"You can be psychologically normal but some people may be claustrophobic or think something will happen.
"That's not the case for me, so I am quite confident."
It was all laughter and smiles as the "astronauts" left us to complete the final stages of their training before the big day.
And if all goes well with this experiment, then early next year another "crew" will be locked inside for a total of 520 days.
Any volunteers?
BBC NEWS REPORT

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'DNA BUNGLE' HAUNTS GERMAN POLICE !

Police in Germany have admitted that a woman they have been hunting for more than 15 years may never have existed.
Dubbed the "phantom of Heilbronn", the woman was described by police as the country's most dangerous woman.
Investigators had connected her to six murders and an unsolved death based on DNA traces found at the scene.
Police are now acknowledging that swabs used to collect DNA samples may have been contaminated by an innocent woman - possibly during manufacture.

Police suspected the unnamed woman of being a serial killer who over 16 years carried out a string of six murders, including strangling a pensioner.
She was alternatively called the "woman without a face" and the "phantom of Heilbronn" after the city in southern Germany where she allegedly killed a policewoman.
Police suspicions were based on traces of identical female DNA they found at 40 crime scenes across southern Germany and Austria.
After finding her DNA at the scene of the murder of a 22-year policewoman from Heilbronn in 2007, police offered a 300,000 euro reward for information leading to her arrest.
However, police did not come any closer to identifying their most-sought suspect.

According to prosecutors in the south-western town of Saarbruecken, doubts about the existence of the "phantom killer" were raised when her DNA appeared on documents belonging to a person who had died in a fire.
When police first tried to identify the victim, they found the phantom's DNA on the dead person's ID. But in a subsequent test, no trace of the phantom's DNA could be found on the document.
That was the point at which alarm bells started ringing and investigators began to suspect that the test material itself may have been contaminated with DNA, prosecutors say.
Police in the south-western state of Baden-Wuerttemberg are now investigating if the cotton buds used to gather DNA at the crime scenes may have come in contact with DNA before being packed.
Thousands of cotton buds are being tested for contamination and workers at the cotton buds factory are being asked to give DNA samples.

The justice minister for the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, Ulrich Goll, believes the case is now closed. He thinks the DNA found at the scene of the crimes is probably due to contamination at the factory.
"It shouldn't have happened," he told a regional radio stationsaid.
"The investigators are not to blame. They can't tell if a cotton bud has DNA sticking to it."
The state interior minister, Heribert Rech, wants to wait until the investigation is finished. "Hasty conclusions are misplaced," he said.
The head of the union of police officers in Baden-Wuerttemberg, Josef Schneider, also wants to wait until the results of the investigation are published.
However, he admitted that "if the trace does belong to a woman working in the factory, it'll be very embarrassing".
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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Thursday, March 26, 2009

BOMBING TARGETS SOMALI MINISTER !

Somali Interior Minister Abdulkadir Ali Omar after surviving the assassination bid 26 March 2009
Somalia's interior minister vowed to overcome the "enemies of the people"

Somali Interior Minister Abdulkadir Ali Omar has been wounded in a deadly bomb attack in the capital Mogadishu.

The BBC's Mohammed Olad Hassan in the city says the minister's secretary was killed and a bodyguard also injured.

The minister was passing through the capital's bustling Bakara market - a stronghold of the radical al-Shabab militia - when a landmine went off.

The new government can only work in parts of Mogadishu, as Islamists and militias run swathes of the country.

"We will do all we can to resolve the matter," Mr Omar, wearing a white bandage on his leg, told journalists in Mogadishu, reported AP news agency.

"We will still pursue the peace process and we'll manage to overcome the enemies of the people."

Mr Omar is one of the relatively moderate Islamists who lead the new interim unity government, set up in recent months under a UN reconciliation process.

map of areas under al-shabaab control

Correspondents say the fragile administration faces an uphill struggle trying to reach a peace deal with radical Islamists.

Mr Omar led an Islamist militia that fought alongside al-Shabab against the Ethiopian troops who invaded Somalia in late 2006 in an effort to prop up a wobbly UN-backed government.

The Ethiopians withdrew this January under the terms of the UN-brokered peace deal that led to the more moderate rebels laying down arms and entering government.

Radical insurgent groups like al-Shabab now control much of the country and areas of the capital itself.

Somalia has been without an effective central government since President Siad Barre was overthrown in 1991.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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BOAT MURDER WIFE'S SURVIVAL BID !

The wife of a British man murdered by pirates near the coast of Thailand has spoken of her fight for survival during their ordeal.

It is thought Malcolm Robertson, 64, was beaten and had his throat cut by men who boarded his boat, before his body was thrown into the Andaman Sea.

His wife Linda, 57, was stripped, tied up, and dumped below deck.

Recalling the ordeal, she said the last thing she heard her husband say was: "Get off my boat, get off my boat."

Mrs Robertson told the BBC's Alastair Leithead she believed her husband's decision to stand up to the men may have cost him his life.

She described how after the attack on Monday, the three young Burmese men struggled to start the boat's engine.

When they brought her up to help them she saw blood all over the deck.

Alastair Leithead
Alastair Leithead, BBC Radio 4

Linda Robertson had her family surrounding her as she sat and calmly described what happened the night three men boarded the yacht where she and her husband were sleeping.

She heard Malcolm challenge the men, "get off my boat, get off my boat" - the last thing she heard him say.

She was stripped, tied up and dumped below deck while the three young Burmese men tried to start the engine.

When they brought her up to help them she saw blood all over the deck. "I know Malcolm was dead at that point," she said, "but I thought whatever it takes to survive I've got to survive."

For hours she was trapped onboard as the men ate through their food supplies. "They were laughing and joking", she said, "knowing they had just killed my husband."

"I knew Malcolm was dead at that point, but I thought whatever it takes to survive, I've got to try and survive."

It is believed the 64-year-old was beaten with a hammer and his body was thrown into the Andaman Sea, 45 miles west of Satun.

Mrs Robertson suffered minor injuries and was later rescued by a passing fishing boat.

The couple, from Hastings in East Sussex, had been sailing near Koh Dong island, when their 44ft yacht was attacked.

"He was not the sort of man that would just sit back and let things happen. I wish really that he had been.

"Who knows he could be here now.

"I think the fact that he tried to get them off the boat was the mistake," Mrs Robertson said.

She told the BBC how she was trapped on board for about 10 hours while the men ate through their food supplies.

"It was such a banal situation because it was like the three boys having a picnic - they were eating food, laughing and joking.

"The young boy was playing on my mobile phone, he was playing all the tunes on the mobile phone.

Malcolm and Linda Robertson
Linda and Malcolm Robertson were sailing near the island of Koh Dong

"It seemed so surreal, you know, knowing that they had just killed my husband it just switched off in their minds."

She said they "certainly weren't professional".

"I mean a professional taking the murder weapon away with them? And being picked up with it.

"No, they weren't professional and thank God they weren't because I'm here to tell the story and be with my family."

She described how her husband was "a wonderful caring man" and how sailing was his passion and his life, next to his family.

"He wasn't perfect by any stretch of the imagination but we all loved him... he would do anything for anybody.

"He was a warm, kind person with a loving heart and a bit of a temper."

The couple had been sailing 45 miles west of Satun

Mr Robertson, she said, retired at the age of 50 with the aim of sailing around the world.

"We loved Thailand so much that we've been here for four years."

Thai Police have arrested three Burmese men in connection with the incident.

The migrant workers, who are said to have confessed to killing Mr Robertson, have been remanded in custody.

Mr Robertson was the owner of a chain of coffee shops around Hastings.

The couple, who had been married for 25 years, had two children each from previous relationships and seven grandchildren between them.

All four children have now arrived in Thailand to support Mrs Robertson.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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F1 TEAMS GIVEN MELBOURNE GO-AHEAD


The diffuser on the back of the Williams car
Rivals claim the rear diffuser of three cars, including this Williams, are illegal

AUSTRALIAN GRAND PRIX
Venue: Albert Park, Melbourne Dates: 27-29 March Coverage: Comprehensive live coverage of Friday's practice sessions, Saturday's qualifying sessions and Sunday's race across BBC TV, radio and online. Find complete listings here


Motorsport's governing body has rejected the protest made by three Formula 1 teams about the legality of certain cars.

With F1 just days away from the start of the new season in Australia, the FIA has ruled that the cars of Brawn GP, Toyota and Williams are all legal.

Ferrari, BMW Sauber and Renault claimed a crucial part at the back of the car does not conform to new F1 regulations.

The protesting teams have appealed and this will be heard after 5 April.

The initial verdict was delivered after a six-hour hearing with the stewards presiding over Sunday's Australian Grand Prix rejecting the complaint.

An appeal was lodged and this will be heard following next weekend's Malaysian Grand Prix.

In an exclusive interview with BBC Radio 5 Live, Jenson Button insisted the Brawn GP cars were "100% legal".

"We're at the pinnacle of motorsport and you've got a lot of manufacturers and teams that want to be the best," he said.

"With the massive rule change that we've had, some people aren't going to like certain things on certain cars.

"They might think they are wrong but as far was we know our car is 100% legal. We've just built a very competitive car. That's it really."

Should any of the six drivers racing for Toyota, Williams or Brawn GP finish in the top eight in either Sunday's race or a week later in Sepang, their points scored would be held under appeal.

WHAT IS A DIFFUSER?
It is the rear part of the floor of the car between the rear wheels and under the rear wing
It is crucial to the aerodynamics, and small changes can have a big impact on downforce - and therefore grip and speed

All three cars are expected to be close to the front in the Grand Prix - and Brawn are widely tipped to have the fastest car on the grid.

And Button has been installed by bookmakers as favourite to win.

Renault engineering director Pat Symonds told BBC Sport that teams had been expressing their concerns on the issue to the FIA for "a number of weeks".

The part in question is the rear diffuser on the Brawn, Williams and Toyota cars, the rear part of the floor of the car between the rear wheels and under the rear wing.

It is crucial to the aerodynamics of the car, and small changes can have a big impact on the amount of downforce - and therefore grip and speed - the car can produce.

Rivals believe the controversial diffusers create more downforce and give a lap-time benefit of as much as 0.5 seconds.

They say the diffusers in question contravene a rule that demands that the diffuser has an upper edge that runs in a horizontal straight line.

They also believe that the parts go against the aim of a huge raft of new rules that were introduced this year in an attempt to make it easier to overtake.

One of the main aims was to reduce the amount of air turbulence generated by the cars so drivers find it easier to follow closely behind.

Jenson Button's Brawn team are the subject of a protest at the Australian Grand Prix
Button's car is the subject of a protest appeal by rivals

BBC Sport understands Toyota, expecting a row in Melbourne, brought an alternative diffuser to the race and they could have raced with that.

However, asked if his team had a contingency plan if the diffuser had been declared illegal, Toyota Motorsport president John Howett replied: "No, because I don't think we need one."

He added: "In motor racing anybody is allowed to protest and I don't have an issue with that. But we've studied the regulations in detail, and we're very confident we have interpreted them correctly.

"We used the consultation process with the FIA technical department and we are satisfied that they verified our interpretation.

"We will just now wait to see what the stewards, or subsequent court, may decide."

Brawn and Williams have no option but to race with their existing diffuser.

If Brawn, Toyota and Williams eventually have their cars passed legal after the appeal, then their rivals will be forced to design similar parts themselves.

F1 Mole's Blog
F1 Mole

This would be a particularly troubling situation for Red Bull, whose car has been designed with a rear suspension system that makes it impossible to build a similar diffuser.

Red Bull's rear suspension operates a unique pull-rod system - where the arms pull down on the dampers, as opposed to the push-rods used by all other teams - which would require a major redesign if it was to be changed to incorporate a diffuser such as that used by Brawn, Williams and Toyota.

Red Bull team boss Christian Horner said the row would not threaten the political unity the teams have been showing in their disputes with the FIA over the future of F1.

"This is a sporting and competitive issue, it has nothing to do with the workings of Fota (the F1 Teams' Association)," Horner said.

"It's nothing personal against the teams, it's simply looking to clarify regulations - our interpretations and [those of] others have been different.

"Our purpose in all of this is to establish the clarity of the regulation, because it has significant impact on how we channel our development."

BBC SPORTS REPORT.

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CHARITY CHIEF FOCUS OF ARMS PROBE!

Dr Faisal Mostafa
Dr Mostafa was previously cleared of plotting explosions

Bangladeshi police investigating a huge arms haul in the south of the country are investigating the possible role of the head of a British charity.

The whereabouts of Dr Faisal Mostafa are unknown, although some unconfirmed reports say that he is in police custody in Bangladesh.

The weapons cache was found at an Islamic school, or madrassa, allegedly run by a charity based in Manchester.

The UK's Charity Commission is investigating the allegations.

Newspaper reports in Britain say that Dr Mostafa - the head of the Green Crescent charity which runs the madrassa - had previously been tried for plotting explosions in the UK.

Arms haul at Bhola
Bangladeshi police say they have unearthed a mini ordnance factory

He was cleared in 2002 of planning to cause terrorist acts by using high explosives.

In November 2008 Dr Mostafa was found guilty by a court in Manchester of possession of dangerous weapons and making a false statement about baggage cargo at the city's airport.

A court spokeswoman told the BBC he was given a two-year suspended sentence and ordered to do 100 hours unpaid community work.

Bangladeshi police say that the arms haul - which included weapons, bomb-making equipment, bullets and booklets about jihad - was found in the coastal district of Bhola, about 100km (60 miles) south of Dhaka this week.

No-one at the charity, based near Manchester in north-west England, has so far commented on the allegations.

On Wednesday the UK Charity Commission said it wanted to find out "whether or not the charity, its funds, or funds raised on its behalf were used unlawfully".

The commission's website said that in 2008, Green Crescent had a turnover approaching £70,000 ($102,733).

British newspapers say that Dr Mostafa is a chemistry graduate. He is listed as a trustee for the charity on the commission's website.


According to the charity's website, Green Crescent is involved in other projects around Bangladesh and at least one in Pakistan.

In 2002, Dr Mostafa, from Stockport in the north of the UK, was cleared by a jury after being accused of conspiring to build home-made explosive devices using a "terrorists' handbook" detailing bomb-making techniques.

He faced a joint charge at Birmingham Crown Court of conspiracy to cause explosions with intent to endanger life and cause serious injury to property in the UK by stockpiling bomb-making material.

Bangladeshi officials say that the madrassa is located on a remote river island only accessible via a drawbridge.

They have described the premises as a "mini-ordnance factory" and said the whole compound was being used for militant training.

Police in Bhola say a leading member of the Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) extremist group was arrested in the raid along with three other people in a raid on Tuesday.

The JMB carried out a series of bombings across the country in 2005 and is blamed by some in the government for a mutiny last month which killed 74 people.

Bangladesh has in recent years been hit by a number of bomb attacks at political rallies, in courts and at cultural venues.


BBC NEWS REPORT.

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A CASE OF 'PEOPLE POWER' IN CHINA?

By Chris Hogg BBC News, Shanghai

It has been hailed elsewhere as a victory for "people power" in China.
But have the demonstrators who appear to have halted plans for an extension of a hi-tech magnetic levitation train line through the suburbs of Shanghai really triumphed?
Or does their story just highlight the limits on the power that ordinary citizens can enjoy in an authoritarian country like China?
It was mainly middle class demonstrators who opposed plans to extend the magnetic levitation line, or maglev for short.
Homeowners in particular - a group which has not traditionally been at the forefront of large-scale protests in this country - objected to the extension, which was designed to link Shanghai's two airports and go on to the neighbouring city of Hangzhou.
After decades of economic development here, these were the winners, not the losers.
They are the people who benefited from China's economic growth, and invested huge amounts relative to their income to purchase their homes, only to see those investments threatened by the proposed new maglev line.
They said that the value of their houses had already been badly damaged by the proposal to site the line so close to their front doors.
And they feared the magnetic fields used to propel the maglev train down the tracks would damage their health.

In January 2008, the demonstrators held what they called "strolls" - not protest marches - to try to get the project halted. Turnout was huge.
Following the demonstrations, progress on the project slowed and now the respected business magazine Caijing says the plans have been "suspended".
By now the engineering work should have been completed; it has not even started.
The first trains were scheduled to run on the new stretch of track before the end of this year. In a sense, the residents have won a partial victory as clearly that timetable will not be met.

It is a sign perhaps of how much has changed in this country that protest movements like this can block the grand schemes of officials.
However, those who led the demonstrations and courted publicity 14 months ago are now reluctant to speak openly about their campaign. We don't want to cause any trouble, they say.
That suggests that in other ways, little has changed.
People are still nervous about challenging the authority of the state. A victory of any sort does not make them feel stronger.
In any case, a visit to the Minghang district, where many of the demonstrators come from, suggests the victory may have been called prematurely.
On the Ping Yang Lu Jia Yuan estate, a peaceful, tidy, unremarkable sort of place, there is no sense of triumph when you talk to people about the maglev issue.
One woman, a ringleader of last year's protest, is at first very reluctant to talk. She does not want us to reveal her name, or have her photograph taken.
She and the other residents do not really know if they have won, she says.
"We thought we had, because we thought a developer was building new homes right next to the proposed route near our estate.
"We figured no developer would do that if they thought the line was to go ahead.
"Now though, we have discovered it's not going to be homes, but shops or a factory, whose value might not be damaged by the maglev passing so close. So now we're not so sure," she says.

Another woman, Yao Hong Jun, is walking through the grounds with her two-year-old son, Sun Yu Yao.
She is more willing to talk about the maglev, but again is unwilling to be photographed. She does not think they have won either.
"If the government starts to build it, then people might protest again," she insists.
"But of course, it's useless. If the government decides to do something, then we can't win."
'No influence'
The feeling of empowerment they displayed here in January 2008 seems to have been replaced by a sense of the limits of their power.
An old man, sitting on a bench at the back of one of the apartment blocks, playing with his pug dog, scoffs when he is asked what he has heard about the fate of the maglev project.
"There's no point asking us," he says. "Ordinary people have no influence. If you want to know what's happening, ask the mayor."
In China, the process of approval for such a major infrastructure project is opaque, and our efforts to try to establish from the mayor's office and from other officials whether or not the plan for the maglev extension had been halted proved fruitless.

A journalist from the business magazine Caijing was recently told by a senior official that since ground had been broken in the last few weeks on a high-speed, conventional rail link connecting Shanghai and Hangzhou, the maglev link between the two cities was now "meaningless".
Shanghai's mayor, Han Zheng, had earlier insisted that the maglev project was still "under discussion".
When we asked his office if that was no longer the case, they denied that anything had changed.
The maglev is still "in the discussion phase", they said.
Officials in Hangzhou, the city the maglev extension is supposed to connect to Shanghai, were less sure though.
"I go to most of the mayor's meetings," a bureaucrat in the public information office at the provincial government headquarters said, "and no one has talked about the maglev for months."
Chen Weihua, the chief commentator at the Shanghai office of the state-owned newspaper China Daily, says no-one really knows what is happening.
"The Shanghai government has basically been saying we'll have public hearings, we'll hear from experts about whether it will damage public health, or whether we should revise the plans.
"For almost two years they have been saying that repeatedly, but I don't think they have come out to say how this is progressing."

"I think they should be more transparent. There should be regular briefings for the public about what's going on," he says.
It appears still too early to be sure who has prevailed here - the demonstrators or the officials.
In a country where maintaining social stability is seen as one of the most important tasks officials have, what has happened to the maglev project is a good example of the compromises that have to be entered into to try to avoid unrest.
The project lies dormant, but not abandoned. It can be revived at any time, if the conditions become more favourable.
In the meantime, the threat of its reinstatement hangs over those who opposed it, cowing them in a way, perhaps even ensuring they do not cause any more trouble.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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THERAPISTS OFFER GAY 'TREATMENT'


Therapists are still offering treatments for homosexuality despite there being no evidence that such methods work, research suggests.
A significant minority of mental health professionals had agreed to help at least one patient "reduce" their gay or lesbian feelings when asked to do so.
The survey, published in the journal BMC Psychiatry and conducted by London researchers, involved 1,400 therapists.
Many were acting with the "best of intentions", said the lead author.
Only 4% said they would attempt to change a client's sexual orientation, but when asked if they would help curb homosexual feelings some 17% - or one in six - said they had done so.
The incidence appeared to be as prevalent in recent years as decades earlier.
The conclusions of this research are a welcome reminder that what lesbian and gay people need is equal treatment by society, not misguided treatment by a minority of health professionals
Derek Munn Stonewall
"Of course it's incumbent on a professional to assist a client who wants help, but this should be done using evidence-based therapies - exploring their distress and helping them to adjust to their situation," said Professor Michael King of University College London.
"We know now that efforts to change people's sexual orientation result in very little change and can cause immense harm.
"We found it very worrying that there was a significant minority who appeared to ignore this - even if they had all the right intentions."

The Royal College of Psychiatrists says all homosexuals have "a right to protection from therapies that are potentially damaging, particularly those that purport to change sexual orientation".
In the US, where there has been heated debate on the issue of "curing" homosexuality, The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has urged all "ethical practitioners to refrain from attempts to change individuals' sexual orientation".
However there are organisations which campaign both for an individual's right to seek treatment and a professional's right to offer it.
They point to work by Robert Spitzer, a psychiatrist who lobbied for the removal of homosexuality from APA's list of mental illnesses but went on to suggest in a controversial 2001 study that therapy could bring about change in sexual orientation.
Researchers in the UK are launching a website to collect stories from around the world about such therapies.
They hope in this way to uncover stories from India, South America and China where little is known about the prevalence of such practices.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

CZECH PM ATTACKS OBAMA SPENDING !

The Czech prime minister has condemned US President Barack Obama's economic recovery plans as "a way to hell".

Mirek Topolanek was speaking in the European Parliament, in his capacity as current holder of the EU presidency.

Hours before his remarks, President Obama appealed for all countries to bear the burden of spending to stimulate the world economy.

Mr Topolanek said the biggest success of last week's EU summit was its refusal to copy the US example.

His intervention comes 10 days before the G20 summit meeting in London and coincides with a visit to New York by UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who has called for a "worldwide fiscal and monetary stimulus".

When the US president turns up for the EU summit in Prague, whose hand will he shake?
Europe editor Mark Mardell

Other European leaders, particularly French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, want tougher financial regulation to be the priority of the G20.

Mr Topolanek, whose government collapsed last night in a Czech parliament vote of no-confidence, said the United States was not taking "the right path".

He attacked the US's growing budget deficit and the "Buy America" campaign, saying "all of these steps, these combinations and permanency is the way to hell".

"We need to read the history books and the lessons of history and the biggest success of the (EU) is the refusal to go this way," he said.

BBC correspondent Jonny Dymond says his comments are not quite a full frontal assault on US economic strategy - but they come pretty close.

He says Mr Topolanek has again underlined that European leaders see no need for a further global economic stimulus to come out of the G20 summit.

Mr Topolanek has said he will step down as Czech prime minister, but the Czech Republic is set to complete its six-month EU presidency regardless.

At the end of their Brussels summit last week EU leaders insisted that the EU's existing stimulus measures - put at about 400bn euros ($543bn; £375bn) - had to be given time to kick in.

In the US, correspondents say, President Obama faces a tough fight to get support in Congress for his draft $3.6tn (£2.5tn) budget.

The package means an increased deficit, reckoned to be $1.4tn for next year. Mr Obama says his goal is to create jobs, revive the housing market and encourage a resumption of bank lending by providing more liquidity.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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SIR FRED GOODWIN'S HOME ATTACKED

Sir Fred Goodwin's Edinburgh home
Windows of the stone villa have been smashed

The Edinburgh home of former Royal Bank of Scotland boss Sir Fred Goodwin has been attacked by vandals overnight.

Windows were smashed and a Mercedes S600 car parked in the driveway was vandalised.

There has been widespread public and political anger over a pension payout worth about £700,000 a year to the 50-year-old former chief executive.

Sir Fred took early retirement from RBS last year after the bank needed a £20bn bailout from the government.

Last month, RBS reported that it made a loss of £24.1bn in 2008 - the largest annual loss in UK corporate history.

When Sir Fred stepped down from the post in October, he rejected Government pressure to accept a reduction in his package, insisting that changes to the early retirement deal he had negotiated were "not warranted".

The payout was described as "obscene" and "grotesque" by MPs and "unjustifiable and unacceptable" by Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

It is not known if anyone was in the house at the time of the attack or who reported the vandalism.

A spokesman for the Royal Bank of Scotland said short term security arrangements had been put in place at Sir Fred's Edinburgh home, and that these were still operational during the time of the attack.

Mercedes s600 car
A Mercedes S600 car parked in the driveway was damaged

The bank would not confirm what these security measures entailed.

However, earlier this month it emerged that the bank was paying about £290 per month for security, which included CCTV monitoring of the house and security staff.

A police car is now guarding the entrance to Sir Fred's home, in the Grange area of the city.

Three smashed ground-floor windows of the stone villa were clearly visible.

In the driveway, the rear window of a dark-coloured Mercedes saloon was smashed, as well as the nearside rear passenger window.

There were no obvious signs of activity inside the house.

A Lothian and Borders Police spokeswoman said they were called out at 0435 GMT.

She said: "Inquiries in relation to the incident are ongoing. We are appealing for witnesses."

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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"SAYINGS"

"DONT BELIEVE ALL YOUR HEAR,

SPEND ALL YOU HAVE OR

SLEEP ALL YOU WANT" !

______

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Model railway's global uber-view

Section of Miniatur Wunderland, file pic: Miniatur Wunderland
The scenery took 700kg of fake grass and 4,000kg of steel to build

Rail enthusiasts can now enjoy views of Scandinavian fjords, the Swiss Alps, and even Mount Rushmore - in Germany.

Twin brothers Frederick and Gerrit Braun have built the world's longest model railway in the city of Hamburg.

It has six miles of track, cost £8m to build and its 1,150 square metres (12,380 square feet) take in the US, Scandinavia and the Swiss Alps.

By the time the layout is completed in 2014 it will be twice as long and will take in France, Italy and the UK.

The Braun brothers, 41, began work on the Miniatur Wunderland project in 2000.

Their model railway now comprises 700 trains with 10,000 carriages, 900 signals, 2,800 buildings and 160,000 individually designed figures.

It even includes scale models of the Rocky Mountains, Mount Rushmore, the Swiss Matterhorn, and a Scandinavian fjord complete with 4ft cruise ship.

The scenery took 500,000 hours, 700kg of fake grass and 4,000kg of steel to build.

So large is the layout that 160 staff are employed to show visitors around the railway.

"Our idea was to build a world that men, women, and children can be equally astonished and amazed in," said Gerrit Braun, according to the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

"With this attitude we managed to create technology which amazes our visitors."

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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TERRIFYING PLIGHT OF AFGHAN ACTRESS !

Afghan actress Parwin Mushthal's passion for her job has exacted a heavy toll - resulting in the murder of her husband and forcing her to live in hiding with her two children.
Ms Mushthal's career choice appears to have upset the Taleban and their supporters.
She has received threatening telephone calls and abuse in the streets from people telling her to stop acting.
She told the BBC that she believes her continued defiance of those threats resulted in the shooting by unknown gunmen of her 39-year-old husband, a taxi driver, in Kabul in December.
Since then her life has been turned upside down.
Prostitution
Parwin Mushthal's interest in acting stemmed from her days at high school. She has appeared in more than 20 theatre productions and dozens of films and is a regular on Afghan televsion.
She is currently in the television series, Bulbul, and has appeared in numerous adverts.
Her best known performances are in Shakespeare's Love's Labour Lost, which was performed in the Dari language, and in Soeurs (which she co-created). Both productions were in collaboration with Kabul's Foundation for Culture and Civil Society.
But although Ms Mushthal was well known, she had to hide her career from her husband's family, because many people in Afghanistan link acting with immorality. Women who act can find themselves accused of prostitution.
"When his brothers came from the provinces to our home [in Kabul] as guests, we didn't put on the TV because I was always on ads," the 41-year-old told the BBC World Service's Outlook programme.
"I was scared that they would see it, so I would just put on a DVD and show them that," she said.
But as her fame grew, so did the level of threats against her. She began to receive warnings from people who recognised her.
"When I was going to work, people were standing in my way waiting for me," she said.
"They were usually on bikes and they were telling me that, 'you women shouldn't be here any more'."
At first she brushed the threats off but then things started to get worse.
"My husband... was getting phone calls from Khost Province asking him why he was letting his wife appear on TV," she said.
Ms Mushthal at first thought that the threats were not serious and could be connected to her choice of clothing, so she started to wear a big scarf.
"Then later, I understood that it was about me working on TV and that I should stop doing so," she said.

Over time, the attacks became more menacing.
"I was walking towards home and then a man came behind me on a bike and punched me in my back," said Ms Mushthal.
"I fell down in the street really badly, I still have a pain in my leg, because he punched me really hard.
"I was with my little son and I was crying and we were running to get home."
Her husband was concerned as to why she was in pain, but she did not want to worry him and just said that she had fallen and hurt her leg.
However, things took a turn for the worst as her husband became the target of a horrific attack.
"That night, this guy who killed my husband had been calling him constantly to come out [of our home]," said Parwin.
"My husband was very tired and he couldn't be bothered to go out. The same guy called the next day at around five o'clock in the evening and asked him to come and meet him.
"My husband went out, I realised that it was a bit late and it was getting dark."
When her husband failed to return home, she tried calling him but his phone was off. It was dark and there was no electricity.
"At eight o'clock, I heard a shooting, I couldn't go out because I was scared and very upset," said Parwin.
"I was alone with my kids as there was no other man in my family. I could feel that something had happened but I didn't know what.
"My children started crying and asking where their dad was. I couldn't do anything so I let them sleep and just said that dad would come."
Ms Mushthal locked the door and stayed awake all night, in fear that someone might come for her and her children, who are eight and nine.

In the morning, she received shocking news from the police that her husband had been killed.
"I saw my husband lying down on the floor, his face was full of blood. They didn't allow me to go near his body but you could see that they had shot him so many times. I was just shouting and crying," she said.
"That day my children were very upset and they were really scared, they kept holding and to me and saying, 'don't go out because they will kill you as well'."
Her husband's family took his body to Khost Province and she has now been in hiding for three months with her two children.
She also has to wear a full-length burka so that no one recognises her.
"I'm still in hiding, no one knows where I am," she said.
"Our life was really happy, we were really close to each other, he really loved me."
Parwin Mushthal is not alone.
Correspondents say there is marked sense of unease among many other working women in Kabul and other Afghan cities as the presence of the Taleban - who have made no secret for of their disapproval of women working - appears to grow ever stronger.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

CLASH IN TENSE ISRAELI-ARAB TOWN !

Israeli-Arab protesters have clashed with police as Jewish Israeli right-wingers marched in the majority-Arab town of Umm al-Fahm.
Stun grenades and tear gas were used as hundreds of Israeli-Arab protesters threw stones, police said.
Israeli-Arab residents of the town view the march as highly provocative and had vowed to stop it.
The High Court gave permission for the march, but police had postponed it several times, fearing violence.
About 2,500 police in riot gear were deployed as about 100 far-right activists marched in the town, waving Israeli flags.
The BBC's Katya Adler: "This is an extremely violent demonstration"
They declared the Israeli-Arabs counter-demonstration illegal and ordered protesters to disperse.
The BBC's Katya Adler at the scene described crouching behind a car with stones raining all around her as Israeli-Arab demonstrators pelted the police.
She says that while many of the city's residents say they want to live in peace with their Jewish neighbours, there is a lot of anger on the streets over the fact the march has been allowed to go ahead.

The Israeli right-wingers said they wanted to exercise their right to march and raise the Israeli flag in any street in Israel.
One of the leaders of the march was Baruch Marzel, who led the anti-Arab Kach party that was banned in Israel in 1994.

ISRAELI-ARABS
About 1.2m, a fifth of Israel's population, are Israeli-Arabs
They are citizens of israel, but face widely documented discrimination
Outgoing PM Ehud Olmert said there is "no doubt" Israeli-Arabs have faced discrimination for "many years"
Israeli-Arabs own 3.5% of Israel's land, get 3-5% of government spending and have higher poverty levels than Jewish Israelis*
There are 12 Israeli-Arabs in the 120-seat Knesset, 10 representing [primarly] Arab parties
*Source: Mossawa Center

Israeli-Arabs vote in anger
Israeli Arabs torn by Gaza violence
Jewish-Arab riots shock Israeli city

"All we are doing is waving the Israeli flag. All we are demanding is loyalty to the state," another march leader, Michael Ben-Ari Ben-Ari, a member of the Israeli parliament, told the Israeli news website Ynet.
"There is in Umm al-Fahm a gang of hooligans, who think they can win using violence. The State of Israel is the Jewish people's state. We are here to voice our truth and not to create provocations," he said.
Israeli-Arab residents of Umm al-Fahm consider the marchers racist, and had called a general strike and said they would use peaceful methods to prevent the activists from entering the town.
"Racism is not freedom of expression, it's a criminal act and the law should punish it," Israeli Arab MK Jamal Zahalka told the AFP news agency.
The march was over within an hour, and took place on the outskirts of the town, after the High Court ruled the activists could enter its municipal boundaries but not residential areas.
The town is considered a stronghold of Israeli-Arab sentiment, and is also where 13 Israeli-Arab protesters were killed during riots as the last Palestinian uprising, or intifada, broke out in 2001.
The march was planned about a year ago, but comes in the wake of a strong showing for the far right politician, Avigdor Lieberman, in Israel's recent elections.
Mr Lieberman advocates transferring majority-Arab areas in Israel to the control of the Palestinian Authority, and wants to bring in a citizenship law demanding that all Israeli citizens, including Israeli-Arabs, swear allegiance to Israel as a Jewish state.
Israeli-Arabs make up about a fifth of Israel's population, and are descended from families who remained in Israel after the war that followed the state's creation in 1948.
They are full Israeli citizens, but face widely documented discrimination.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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TOP AIG BOSSES 'TO REPAY BONUSES' !

Nine of the 10 executives who received top bonuses from US insurance giant AIG have agreed to return them, New York's attorney general says.
Andrew Cuomo said he hoped to recoup $80m (£55m) of bonus payments - which amounts to about half of the $165 million paid by AIG on 15 March.
The US rescued AIG with bail-out funds totalling $170bn since September 2008.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is due to testify on Tuesday on the need to reform the US financial system.
He said on Monday that the banking crisis showed the country's financial regulatory system had failed and needed to be replaced by a stronger system with a better regulations.
"Our system basically failed its most fundamental test," he said in remarks before he was due to appear before the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee on Tuesday. "It was too fragile."

AIG's decision to pay bonuses despite being bailed out by the government had sparked widespread outrage in the US.
Ranked the 18th biggest company in the world by Forbes at the start of 2008, it suffered massive losses related to the problems afflicting the housing and credit markets.
AIG played a key role in insuring risk for financial institutions around the world.
The troubled insurer reported a loss of $61.7bn for the last three months of 2008, the biggest quarterly loss in corporate history.
The bonus debacle had prompted the approval of a bill by the US House of Representatives to impose a 90% tax on bonuses awarded by companies bailed out by the US government.

AIG: QUICK FACTS

30 million US policy holders
Operates in 130 countries
Provides insurance to 100,000 companies and other entities

Obama 'outraged' at AIG bonuses
US media homes in on AIG

But President Barack Obama said such a measure would be unconstitutional.
The announcement that much of that money is now being returned seems likely to ensure that the bill never reaches his desk, says the BBC's Richard Lister in Washington.
Mr Cuomo said 15 of AIG's top 20 bonus recipients had agreed to return their payments, which he estimated to total around $30m.
"A number of them have risen to the occasion and I applaud them," Mr Cuomo - who is investigating AIG as well as several other financial institutions - said of the executives who had offered to give up their bonuses.
He added that he expected to recoup all of the bonuses paid to American citizens working for AIG, which accounts for around half the $165m the company paid out.
Mr Cuomo said he did not plan to release the names of the employees who have agreed to return the bonuses, suggesting there was no implied threat that if an employee refused to return their bonus, their name would be disclosed.
Bonuses ranging from $1,000 to more than $6m were paid to some 400 staff in the division handling the mortgage-backed assets at the heart of the financial crisis.
Seven senior employees were paid more than $3 million, while 73 members of staff received bonuses of more than $1m.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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UK 'HOME TO 200 RIGHTS ABUSERS !

More than 200 people responsible for war crimes and other human rights abuses overseas could be living in Britain, the BBC has learned.
File on 4 has discovered that many of the alleged perpetrators are known to the government's UK Border Agency.
The agency recommended rejecting more than 300 asylum or immigration claims in five years of people suspected of crimes against humanity.
Only a handful of cases have been referred to the police.
Figures seen by File on 4 show the UK Border Agency's war crimes team recommended rejection of 330 asylum and immigration claims in five years, on the grounds it suspected the applicants of war crimes or crimes against humanity.

Find Out More
Listen to File On 4, Radio 4 Tuesday 24 March 2009 2000 GMT, repeated Sunday 22 March 1700 GMT
Or catch up at Radio 4's Listen Again site

But less than half of those were actually excluded.
The figures do not include people who entered the country illegally or were not spotted by the authorities.
One estimate suggests that this could be another 100 people
Police plea
Only 22 cases of people alleged to have been either war criminals or human rights abusers have been referred to the police in the last five years.
And there have been claims some investigations failed because of a lack of resources or expertise.
The government's reviewer of anti-terrorism legislation, Lord Carlisle, said that needed to be rectified.
"I would hope that the new Metropolitan Police Commissioner would think it right to set up an additional unit, just as one of his predecessors set up the war crimes unit, to investigate international criminal matters of this kind, " he told the BBC.
"There is a suspicion around the world that the United Kingdom gives safe haven to people who have committed genocide and indeed torture.
"Some of them are suspected of the most appalling crimes, involving murder on a large scale," he added.
The Home Office said that the government was committed to dealing with human rights abusers.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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SWAT TALEBAN FIND SHARIA A CHALLENGE

By Syed Shoaib Hasan BBC News, Mingora, Swat .

"I am not going to change the decision as it is valid according to Sharia," says Maulana Ehsan-ur-Rahman softly but adamantly.
Maulana Rahman is a qazi, or judge, in one of the newly appointed Islamic Sharia courts in Pakistan's troubled district of Swat.
He is addressing about a dozen people standing in front of the bench in the circuit courthouse of Mingora, Swat's main town.
They are led by a tall, fierce looking man who adamantly demands an explanation for the court's decision.
He is a commander in the Swat Taleban who fought Pakistan's army to a recent standstill.
The Taleban had demanded the implementation of Islamic Sharia law here.
The government acceded and these courts are the first step in that direction.
The members of the Taleban present refused to accept the verdict and said they would take up the matter with senior Taleban commanders

The move led to an outcry across Pakistan and in the international community.
Human rights activists are horrified at the possibility of punishments such as the amputation of limbs, whipping and stoning to death being implemented.
Moreover, legal experts are worried over the challenges posed by setting up a parallel legal system.
But the common people in Swat have welcomed the establishment of the courts and have thronged to them.
"We believe we will get quick and impartial justice from the Sharia courts," says Umar Hayat, a local man waiting to file his petition.
"In the past, cases used to drag on for years, but now they are settled in days. More importantly, everybody is equal in front of the law."

The "Taleban case" before the court vividly illustrates this.
It pertains to the creation of a dirt track through the fields of a local farmer at the behest of the Taleban.
The farmer filed a case in the Sharia courts and the matter was adjudicated by Maulana Rahman.
The ruling was in the farmer's favour.
"But the members of the Taleban present refused to accept the verdict and said they would take up the matter with senior Taleban commanders," an eyewitness says.
"They also twisted the judge's words and brought in the commander after telling him that Maulana Rahman had said that he did not care if Maulana Fazlullah himself had demanded a repeal."
Maulana Fazlullah is head of the Taleban in the Swat region. His power is said to be absolute.
The clearly incensed Taleban commander demanded an explanation from Maulana Rahman.
The qazi made it clear he had not made any such comments.
But he also reiterated the fact that the ruling was final.

SHARIA IN SWAT
The Nizam-e-Adl (Order of Justice) ordinance implements Sharia in Swat retrospectively from 15 March
Cases are decided according to the sect of the person(s) filing
There are two major sects: Sunni (80%) and Shia (20%) but they divide into many subsects
The Taleban follow the Wahhabist/Deoband Sunni subsects and want their own form of Sharia
Most Pakistanis follow the Barelvi Sunni subsectFor several minutes, the Taleban commander and his henchmen continued to argue.
But Maulana Rahman refused to budge, and fellow qazis waded into the argument in his support.
Finally, they managed to convince the Taleban after quoting examples supporting the decision from the Koran.
They also said they would personally come and investigate the matter if the ruling was not followed.
At this, the Taleban agreed to the decision and beat a hasty retreat.
"This a system that works for us," says Qari Fazal Maula, a petitioner at the court.
He had just received a ruling in his favour over a dispute involving the ownership of his rickshaw taxi.
"I couldn't get a decision despite having filed two years ago in a local court," he says.
"It was a waste of money with all the lawyers' fees and other costs. Here I had to spend 20 rupees (25 US cents) on a piece of official stamp paper."
Most of the other petitioners at the crowded court voiced similar sentiments.
But there are dissenting voices.
"The courts are not admitting our cases," says Farooq Ahmed.
He is waiting to file a petition regarding a property dispute dating back 40 years.
"Cases that were filed before the implementation of the original Sharia draft in 1999 will not be accepted," a judge explains.
"This had to be done otherwise there would be a huge backlog of cases and this would again start the delay in justice."
According to Maulana Rahman, he has so far heard 100 cases since the courts were started on 18 February.
"I have given a decision in 20 of the cases," he says. "The decisions are on the basis of Sharia and consensus."
There is already a minor backlog because of the available number of judges - just seven for the entire district.

The newly implemented Sharia system for the Malakand division is three-tiered.
There is the Ilaqa (local area) court, which comes under the zila (district) court, all of which are presided over by the Darul Darul qaza court for the entire division. This acts as the supreme court.
The region needs at least 20 judges to make the system workable and efficient.

Not everyone is happy. Farooq Ahmed's case is too oldBut that is just a problem of resources which can be addressed quite quickly if need be.
The real issue remains the validity of the implementation of Sharia law itself.
A declaration was made for it to take effect from 15 March but the actual ordinance has still to be signed.
"When the ordinance is signed by the president, the relevant code will have retrospective effect," insists a local TNSM leader.
The TNSM organisation, led by former militant leader Sufi Mohammad, brokered the peace agreement between the Taleban and the government.
But that peace may not hold.
Under previous Sharia regulations, courts came to their decisions by taking both the law and consensus into account.
Most analysts believe this is unlikely to change and that it may to lead to trouble from the Taleban.
"The Taleban have always said they want the implementation of their version of Sharia law here," explains a local legal expert.
But the Nizam-e-Adl, or Order of Justice, for Swat talks of interpreting Sharia according to the demands of the relevant sects involved.
"This is a sure recipe for disaster," the legal expert says.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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COMMUNISTS TURN TO CONFUCIOUS

BY James Reynolds

"Before you embark on a journey of revenge, dig two graves."
"It does not matter how slowly you go so long as you do not stop."
"Wheresoever you go, go with all your heart."
If you're Chinese, you probably knew the author of these sayings by the time you got to the word "Before". If you're not Chinese, you probably got it by the end. These proverbs are some of the sayings of China's first moral teacher, Confucius (551- 479 BC) - a man whose teachings are now back in fashion in this country.
This week, it was announced that Chow Yun-Fat is to star as Confucius in a state-backed film to mark the 60th anniversary of Communist rule in October. A recent book about Confucius' teachings has sold more than 10 million copies.
For centuries, Confucianism provided the moral foundation for the conduct of life in China. Confucius and his followers designed a system of government and society based on harmony and respect for social order.
But during the early years of Communist rule, Confucianism came under attack. Chairman Mao decreed that there was room for only one belief system in China: his own.
During the decade-long Cultural Revolution, Red Guards attacked the home of Confucius and tried to destroy all forms of religion and tradition. Many were killed for their beliefs.
Then, at the end of the 1970s, Deng Xiaoping began to introduce capitalism. The certainties of Mao-style Marxism began to fall away.
A few years later, the Communist Party started to worry about a growing vacuum of belief in China. Universally-mandated faith in Communism was being replaced by a new belief in money, and also by a growing number of religious movements. One of these movements, the Falun Gong, was seen as a dangerous cult which posed a threat to the Party's rule.
The Party needed an alternative - a faith that might help to guide its citizens through life in a country that was trying to jam several centuries' worth of change into just a few years. In the end, it chose to do what every political party does when it faces a crisis - it went back to basics. In this case - to Confucius.
After he took office in 2003, China's President Hu Jintao began to talk of building a "harmonious society" - a deliberate echo of Confucius. Communist Party officials talk as much as they can about harmony (conveniently, the need for harmony is often used as a pretext for stopping all forms of dissent).
Here in Beijing, the 14th Century Confucian Temple is a popular destination for Chinese tourists. Harmony within the grounds clearly needs a little vigilance. A sign warns that there will be "No Admission for Drunkards and People with Mental Problems".
A colleague and I asked some of the visitors for their favourite Confucian sayings.
"I work for a very big company," one woman told us. "Every day I have to work in a team with colleagues. I practise and experience one of the mottos of Confucius: 'When three people travel together, one must be the teacher.'"
"Confucius says a noble man can love a beautiful woman but not have lust," a man told us. "That philosophy taught me a lot. My son is still young but when he grows up I will teach him about it and show him the root of our culture."
Do you follow the teachings of Confucius? Do you have a favourite Confucianism?
BBC REPORT

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Monday, March 23, 2009

UFO FILES SHOW 'CLOSE ENCOUNTER' !

A boomerang-shaped object seen from an airport control tower and a woman's encounter with an "alien" are among the secrets revealed in official UFO files.
The woman reported seeing a glowing, spherical object rise into the air in Norwich after meeting a man who said he came from a planet similar to Earth.
In another sighting, a triangular craft hovered then "shot off at 500mph".
The third set of UFO documents to be released by the Ministry of Defence covers the period from 1987 to 1993.
Crop circles
In November 1989 a "completely terrified" woman contacted RAF Wattisham in Suffolk to report her close encounter with a man claiming to be an alien.
She said she met the fair-haired man with a Scandinavian-type accent as she walked her dog on a sports field.

LONDON ROOF TERRACE SIGHTING

Crescent-shaped moon object. Shaped like a banana. Maybe blue in colour. Arm and leg shapes hanging from lower end.
Extract from MoD file: 16 May 1989
First UFO documents released
Tories 'would publish UFO files'

He told her crop circles were caused by others like him who had travelled to Earth and that the purpose of his visit was friendly.
He then said he had spoken to her because he felt it was important to have contact with humans even though he was told not to.
As the unidentified woman ran home she heard a loud buzzing noise and turned to see a large, spherical object, glowing orange-white, rise steadily until out of sight.
A letter from RAF Wattisham to the MoD and Norfolk police described it as "one of our more unusual UFO reports".
Three years later two air traffic controllers at London's Heathrow Airport reported seeing a black, inverted boomerang-shaped UFO from their control tower.
It was stationary then moved steadily in the morning sun, the files say.

A week earlier on a coastal road in Louth, Lincolnshire, several people had reported similar sightings of a large, triangular-shaped object with three lights.
Many witnesses reportedly stopped their cars and got out for a better look before it turned on its axis and zoomed off "at 500mph towards north west".
Other accounts of strange lights and unexplained objects had plausible explanations.
In November 1990, the crews of six RAF Tornado jets reported being overtaken by a "giant UFO" while flying over Germany.
They thought it was a test flight for the then top-secret US Stealth fighter, but it turned out to be the burning debris from a Soviet rocket body used to launch a satellite into orbit.
On 31 March 1993 various reports of moving lights over south-west England and south Wales were later traced to the re-entry of a Russian Cosmos rocket body.
The files suggest it had burned up, disintegrating over the North Atlantic.

In 1992, a bright cigar-shaped object seen flying silently over central London at night triggered a "spate" of sightings, notably in Ilford and Romford.
It was later identified "almost certainly" as an illuminated airship advertising the Ford Mondeo car.
UFO expert Dr David Clarke said: "The vast majority of reports are ordinary things seen in extraordinary situations.
"So many things can be interpreted as unusual, you've got to eliminate all that noise and see what's left.
"I don't think there's any solid evidence that we have been visited by intelligent life but I don't think you can rule that out.
"There are many good examples of puzzling things, for example seen on radar by the military, that need investigating."
The files, which can be downloaded from the National Archives website, are being released as part of a three-year project.
These latest documents are the first containing information written by defence intelligence staff to be made public.
Dr Clarke said they were among tens of thousands of secret files contaminated with asbestos and were in danger of being destroyed.
They were eventually saved after a campaign by historians to rescue them from the old War Office building in Whitehall.
Have you spotted a UFO, and caught it on camera?
Send your pictures to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124. If you have a large file you can upload here.
Read the terms and conditions
At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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ALASKA VOLCANO ERUPTS FOUR TIMES !

Mount Redoubt volcano in the US state of Alaska has erupted, sending a cloud of ash 15km (50,000ft) into the air.
The volcano, 166km (103 miles) from Anchorage, erupted late on Sunday, with three more explosions early on Monday.
The Alaska Volcano Observatory has issued a red alert, meaning an eruption with significant amounts of ash is imminent or under way.
Forecasters at the National Weather Service said they expected fine ash to begin falling later on Monday morning.
"The ash cloud went to 50,000 feet and it's currently drifting towards the north-east," Janet Schaefer, a geologist at the Alaska Volcano Observatory told the Associated Press (AP).
It is expected the ash cloud will pass west of the city of Anchorage, moving towards Willow and Talkneetna, two communities near Mount McKinley.
Dave Stricklan from the National Weather Service told AP he expected the ash fall to be "just kind of a light dusting".
Most of the ash probably fell down the side of Mount Redoubt, he said.
The observatory warned in late January that an eruption was likely after the volcano showed signs of activity.
Mount Redoubt, which stands 3,100m (10,200ft) high, last erupted over a four-month period from 1989 to 1990.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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OBAMA PONDERS AFGHAN 'EXIT PLAN' !

President Barack Obama has said that the US must have an "exit strategy" in Afghanistan, even as Washington sends more troops to fight Taleban militants.
He was speaking in a CBS interview, as the White House prepares to unveil a comprehensive strategy for Afghanistan.
Mr Obama said preventing attacks against the US remained its "central mission" in Afghan operations.
His comments come at a low-point in relations between Washington and Afghan President Hamid Karzai's government.
Earlier, Richard Holbrooke, the US special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, said US policy would no longer treat the two countries separately.

New tactics, same strategy?
US envoy weighs Afghan challenge

"In the past, the United States government stove-piped it, they had an Afghan policy and a Pakistan policy. We have to integrate the two and I hope the rest of the world will join us in that effort," he told the BBC.
Mr Holbrooke said Taleban sanctuaries in Pakistan's tribal areas along the Afghan border were the primary problem for Kabul.
He also said that the era of "neglect" of the region was over, promising more troops and resources.

In other news from Afghanistan:
• Eight police officers are killed and one wounded after Taleban fighters ambush their convoy in the Spin Boldak district of the southern province of Kandahar
• Nato says its forces killed senior Taleban commander Maulawi Hassan and nine associates in an operation in Helmand province on Saturday
• Senior Afghan militant Sirajuddin Haqqani tells Reuters news agency attempts by the Afghan government to open peace talks with insurgents are a trick to divide militants

"What we're looking for is a comprehensive strategy [for Afghanistan]," President Obama told the CBS programme 60 Minutes on Sunday.
Richard Holbrooke: "Neglect was what happened in the past - that era is over"
"Threre's got to be an exit strategy. There's got to be a sense that this is not a perpetual drift."
Mr Obama - who last month ordered the deployment of an additional 17,000 US troops to Afghanistan - acknowledged that military force alone would not be enough to achieve Washington's objectives, which included the defeat of Taleban and al-Qaeda militants.
He said an effective strategy could include building up economic capacity in Afghanistan and improving diplomatic ties with Pakistan and other regional players.
But Mr Obama stressed that Washington "can't lose sight of what our central mission is".
"Making sure that al-Qaeda cannot attack the US homeland and US interests and our allies. That's our number one priority."
He said the central task was the same as when US troops went into Afghanistan after the 11 September 2001 attacks.

According to the British-based Guardian newspaper, the White House review has proposed creating a new senior executive or prime ministerial role in Kabul to work alongside President Karzai and dilute some of his power.
"Karzai is not delivering," a diplomat with knowledge of the review told the newspaper.
"If we are going to support his government, it has to be run properly to ensure the levels of corruption decrease, not increase. The levels of corruption are frightening."
Hamid Karzai - who faces re-election in August - has made half-hearted threats to shift his allegiance from Washington to Moscow, the BBC's Ian Pannell in Kabul reports.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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WORLD'S CHEAPEST CAR IS LAUNCHED!

Annotated image of Tata car

The Tata Nano, the world's cheapest car, is being launched in India.

Costing just 100,000 rupees ($1,979; £1,366), the Nano is being launched in Mumbai later, before going on sale across India over the next 10 days.

Tata hopes the 10 feet (3 metre) long, five-seater car will be cheap enough to encourage millions of Indians to trade up from their motorcycles.

Car industry analysts estimate it will take five or six years for Tata to start to make a profit from the Nano.

The four-door Nano has a 33bhp, 624cc engine at the rear.

Inside the tiny Tata Nano (first broadcast 2008)

The basic model has no airbags, air conditioning, radio, or power steering. However, more luxurious versions will be available.

A slightly bigger European version, the Nano Europa is due to follow in 2011, and is expected to cost nearer to £4,000.

Analysts said that if the car proves an immediate hit in its home market, Tata may struggle to meet demand.

This is because the main Nano factory in the western state of Gujarat, which will be able to build 250,000 cars a year, is not due to open until next year.

In the meantime, Tata will only be able to build about 50,000 Nanos at its existing plants.

The delay happened when Tata had to abandon plans to build the Nano in a new plant in the eastern state of West Bengal due to a row over land acquired from farmers.

This caused the launch of the Nano to be put back by six months.

Even if Tata can sell 250,000 models a year, it will add only 3% to the firm's revenues, says Vaishali Jajoo, auto analyst at Mumbai's Angel Broking.

Chauffeur Gopal Pandurang
I want to be able to take my wife out for a drive in a car - my own car
Indian chauffeur Gopal Pandurang

"That doesn't make a significant difference to the top line," he said.

"And for the bottom line, it will take five to six years to break even."

Yet with seven million motorcycles sold last year in India, Tata is eying a huge marketplace for the Nano.

Like almost all global carmakers, Tata has seen sales fall as the global economic downturn has continued.

The firm made a 2.63bn rupees loss for three months between October and December.

In addition, Tata is struggling to refinance the remaining £2bn of its £3bn loan it took out to buy the Jaguar and Land Rover brands from Ford in June of last year.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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THE JADE GOODY EFFECT ON SCREENING

By Jane Elliott
Health reporter, BBC News

Jade and Jack Tweed.Chris Radburn/PA Wire
Jade Goody married fiance Jack Tweed shortly before death

Jade Goody's decision to share her fight against cancer so publicly has proved controversial - but there is no doubt it has had a tremendous impact.

Some have expressed concern that her struggles with the cervical cancer that claimed her life should not have been made so public.

But many others have praised Jade for her courage, saying her actions will have saved many lives.

Cancer screening experts are reporting a massive surge in the number of young women coming forward for screening - some for their very first test.



Julietta Patnick, director of NHS screening programmes, said some laboratories are reporting a 20% increase in cases, others as much as 50%.

She said it was difficult to quantify exactly how many women had come forward, and it was true that some did not need a test, and were just clogging up the system.

"But given the numbers reported we also all believe there are some women there who have either never been screened or have not been screened as frequently as we would recommend."

Ms Patnick said over the past decade the number of women coming forward for screenings had been falling - the Jade effect seems to be reversing that.

"What we have seen over the last decade is a fall in acceptance of screening and it is particularly bad in the women under 25-35 age group," she said.

"Jade, at 27, is absolutely in that hard to reach age group."

Ministers in England have also instigated a review of the age at which screening starts.

Women are currently not called until they are 25, but calls for checks to begin at 20 - as they do in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland - have been renewed since Jade's case hit the headlines.

She said that as well as catching women with cervical cancer the ripple effect of Jade's battle might be to encourage parents to get their teenage daughters vaccinated against HPV human papillomavirus - a risk factor for cervical cancer.

Professor Karol Sikora, medical director of Cancer Partners UK agreed, saying her honesty about her cancer had encouraged others to get screened.

"My wife is a primary care nurse and does cervical smears as part of her job and she says that she has never had so many people ask for a screening before," he said.

"All the official returns show the same thing.

A screening. Pic caption: Mark Thomas/SPL
Women are urged to have regular smears

"It is rare for a young person to do what she has done, and I think it is very positive.

"We are very good at telling people now that they have cancer, we have overcome that.

"We are not so good at telling them what it really means to them and we are very bad at giving people the real truth about their prognosis.

"This is the first time that I have seen it portrayed like this in the media - it brings death out of taboo so that we can now talk about it ourselves."

Professor Sikora said out of the 3,000 cases of cervical cancer each year in the UK two thirds would be cured - and stressed that early treatment improves prognosis.

"Cervical screening it is a very successful programme because screening is not just picking up early cancer, it is also picking up the pre-cancerous cells."

He said Jade had a particular appeal to the hard-to-reach lower socioeconomic groups.

"What is interesting is that if you look at the number of people who take up the offers, it is on average 70%.

"If you break that down to socioeconomic groupings it is about 90% in class one - wealthy and educated people - and something like 50% in some geographical areas of Britain where there are predominantly people living in deprivation with poor education," he said.

"What Jade's story does is get to groups you can not get to with other methods.

"Putting out a leaflet or an advert on TV just does not work.

"She appeals to socioeconomic groups four and five, people who read the tabloids rather than the broadsheets."

Signs and symptoms
Bleeding between periods or after sex, or new bleeding after the menopause
Unpleasant smelling vaginal discharge
Discomfort/pain during intercourse

Dr Jo Waller, a psychologist based at University College London, said the general public, particularly women in the target 25-35 age group, identified strongly with Jade.

"It may be because she is so young," she said.

"She is ordinary and somebody people can identify with, having come up through the reality route rather than being someone from a very privileged background people.

"Because she is so much in the public eye and people read so much about her that they feel that they know her.

"And because she is so public you are getting an insight into her cancer that you would not usually expect to get. That is making people identify more than if she withdrew from public life.

"The image of her in a wheelchair and with no hair is not something you usually see and I can't remember this from any other celebrities.

"Jade has brought cervical cancer into the public consciousness."
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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'TOILET TORCHER' REWARD OFFERED !

Portable toilets in the US (file pic)
The mystery attackers have targeted toilets across San Francisco

A US firm is offering $5,000 (£3,450) for clues leading to the arrest of an arsonist who has been setting portable toilets on fire across San Francisco.

The Clorox Company is also offering a year's supply of toilet cleaning products in exchange for such tips.

More than two dozen toilets on San Francisco construction sites have been set on fire in the city in recent months, the Associated Press reports.

The cost of the damage has been estimated at $50,000.

The Clorox Company is sending out a team to advertise its offer to locals.

The patrol service is "a crappy job, but somebody's got to do it", joked a company spokesman.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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SOUTH AFRICA 'BLOCKS' DALAI LAMA !

Dalai Lama
The Dalai Lama was due at a peace conference this week

The South African government has defended its decision to deny entry to the Dalai Lama, amid charges it is bowing to pressure from China.

The Tibetan spiritual leader was due to attend a peace meeting in Johannesburg this week, along with fellow Nobel laureates Desmond Tutu and FW de Klerk.

But the authorities have not granted an entry visa, saying the invitation did not come from official channels.

Archbishop Tutu has threatened to pull out of the conference over the issue.

Speculation is rife in the local media that the government caved in to pressure from Beijing.

"The Chinese government would not have been happy had we let him come," an unnamed government official was quoted as saying by Business Day newspaper.

"We would not do anything to upset the relationship we have with China," the official said.

But a government spokesman said the Dalai Lama was not on the official list of invitees to the Johannesburg conference, which was organised in connection with the 2010 Football World Cup.

"As a government we have not extended an invitation, and therefore the issue of a visa does not arise," foreign affairs spokesman Ronnie Mamoepa told AFP news agency.

China accuses the Dalai Lama of leading the fight for Tibet's independence. He says he just wants more autonomy for the region.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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"Sayings"


"GIVE PEOPLE MORE THAN THEY EXPECT

AND THEY DO IT CHEERFULLY" !
__________

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PYRAMID SCAM RINGLEADER CONVICTED!

By Chris Hogg
BBC News, Shanghai

100 Yuan notes
Investors were promised high returns, but ended up with nothing

A Chinese man who masterminded a pyramid scheme that lost investors a total of $246m (£170m) has been sentenced to 15 years in jail.

Zhao Pengyun was described by Chinese media as the "main culprit" in the scam that left 20,000 people out of pocket.

Pyramid schemes were banned in China in 1998, but a recent report described the practice as "rampant" in some areas.

Most of the victims were from Beijing, and the scam has been described as the city's biggest ever pyramid scheme.

Investors were promised high returns on parcels of forest land.

But salespeople recruited other salespeople, who in turn recruited more; the investments were worthless.

A total of 28 people involved in the scam have been given jail terms ranging from one to 15 years.

The ringleader, Zhao Pengyun, has been fined $44m (£30m) in addition to his jail term.

As the economy slows down, China has increased efforts to prevent unemployed graduates and migrant workers getting caught up in such scams.

The country's leaders fear that when large numbers of people lose money to fraud on this kind of scale, it increases the chances of social unrest.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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Sunday, March 22, 2009

RUSSIA'S ECONOMIC CRISIS : YOUR STORIES

In the early days of the global financial crisis, Russian officials played down their country's exposure to the downturn. But it's now widely acknowledged that the crisis has hit Russia much harder than the government was initially prepared to admit.
The BBC Russian service gathered the opinions of people who had been affected by the economic downturn.

YEKATERINA DAVYDOVA, ADVERTISING SPECIALIST, MOSCOW

I worked for a year and a half as a media manager in one of the top design studios in Moscow. Then, when the world crisis began, there were some big changes in our company.
First we lost our free lunches, then there were staff cuts (I escaped the first round). We found ourselves suddenly "squashed together", when the office space was slashed. In January, my salary was cut by 20%.
Then, in February, I was hit by the second round of cuts. The company has now cut its workforce by a third. I was in shock after being laid off - where should I go, what should I do?
What makes it more difficult is that I live in a rented flat in Moscow, and I have to keep up the payments for it each month. I registered on the internet sites where they offer vacancies, straight away. But there was no stream of job offers.
Since I need some sort of income, I earn money however I can - I've recently been working as a nanny, sitting with a stranger's baby. I receive 120 roubles an hour (£2.50), although a professional nanny would get more than that. I've also remembered how I used to earn extra money as a student - I'm back writing-up coursework and degree essays.
I have also kept distributing my CV in the hope of getting a media manager job.
It is a shame there aren't that many of them. All the same, I will find a job in my specialist area. Perhaps not immediately, but in the near future.
For the time-being, I'm looking - and I can work as a secretary or a nanny. After all, he who looks will always find.

YURI SAMSONOV, LAWYER, ULYANOVSK

I felt the effects of the crisis right away.
I was working as a lawyer in one of the local state organisations. They announced there would be job cuts quickly, although they passed it off as "optimisation". So that is how I found myself without work.
I have sent out almost 300 copies of my CV And it's a really difficult situation in small towns because it's difficult to find a job there even at the best of times.
I have been offered jobs, but of the sort with a salary that would not even allow me to feed myself. I took advice from my parents, and decided to move to Moscow.
It seemed to me that, despite the financial crisis, I'd have a much better chance of finding a job in the capital.
I'd seen a number of mates do the same thing - they did well and were earning decent money. But what I got to Moscow it was a disappointment.
I have sent out almost 300 copies of my CV, and went to a few interviews with potential employers.
Some of them said they'd have a think about my CV, others offered miserly salaries that would simply not allow me to live in such an expensive city.
So far, I've been unable to come up with anything better than working in a car wash!
Of course it's very tough work, without any sort of legal registration. We have days when there are so may cars we don't get to sit down.
There are lads from all over the place working with me here - some of them have higher education. It's not the good life that's brought them to work here. They've lost their jobs, need to feed themselves and their families.
On a good day, I can earn up to a thousand roubles (£21). but I've no idea what I'm going to do in the future. There are practically no suitable new vacancies. The crisis means that most companies have stopped recruitment.

ANZHELA TOKAYERVA, ASSISTANT PRODUCER, MOSCOW

My life changed in a big way at the end of last year.
I'd been working as an assistant producer for one of the Moscow TV channels.
Suddenly, everything changed. The management gathered us together and told us about the cuts.
I spent two months trying to find a job in television without success. It was as if they'd all conspired - some of the employers told me quite openly that they'd got nothing for their existing staff to do.
After that my mum helped me get a job as an accountant in one of the departments of the ministry of internal affairs.
To be honest, I still haven't got to grips with my new work. I regret wasting time on it, but I need to live on something of course. To make matters even worse, I get half of what I used to earn in my old job.
All this paperwork, forms, endless figures, really doesn't suit me. Sometimes it all frightens me, since the work is very scrupulous - I think I'm becoming the same!
I want to do what I love - TV. After all, you feel really happy when you go to do something you like. I'm definitely going back to TV once the crisis is over. The main question for me is just when that's going to happen.

OLGA YALYNSKAYA, DESIGNER, UFA

I'd spent several years working in design, and had always been busy. I liked the way people valued what I used to do.
My last job was in one of the PR agencies in Ufa, where I worked as a designer.
The financial crisis was a certain catalyst for us - it pushed us to develop our project
We all got the chop in December. They did offer me another job, but at a much lower salary. I think people should be paid adequately.
A friend and I had an idea some time ago. Before the crisis, she'd had a fairly successful business importing clothes from Belarus and selling them here. When I lost my job we decided to make the business internet based. After all, it would be really expensive to try to keep a number of retail outlets going here in Ufa.
I'm now working on our website, and we hope to get it up and running soon.
For the time being, I'm living on quite a modest unemployment benefit, and my parents are also helping me out.
I really can't say how we'll get on with the new business yet. We're concerned that consumers here really like to touch and try on clothes before buying them - and you can't do that online.
We have been thinking about this for some time but never quite got around to it. It's likely that the financial crisis was a certain catalyst for us - it pushed us to develop our project. I think it'll turn out fine.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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TIBETANS MONKS 'HELD AFTER RIOT' !

Some 93 monks have been held by Chinese police after a riot in an ethnically Tibetan town, state-run media report.
The monks were held after a crowd of at least 100 attacked a police station in La'gyab township in Qinghai province on Saturday, Xinhua news agency said.
The agency quoted officials as saying policemen and government staff had been assaulted and "slightly injured".
The unrest was apparently sparked after a monk detained for advocating Tibetan independence escaped from jail.
Chinese authorities said the monk fled on Saturday and was still missing.
But a Tibetan website said the monk had killed himself by jumping into a river.

Xinhua said six people had been arrested and 89 more had surrendered to police. All but two of the 95 people held were monks from the La'gyab Monastery.

Police quoted by the agency said the people had been "deceived by rumours" about the monk, but gave no further details.
It was earlier reported by Xinhua that the unrest had taken place in Gyala township, but the agency later confirmed the name of the town as La'gyab.
It is difficult to confirm reports from Tibetan areas because foreigners are not allowed into Tibet and access to surrounding regions is restricted.
Last week marked the 50th anniversary of a failed uprising by Tibetans against Chinese rule which saw their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, flee into exile.
The BBC's James Reynolds, in Beijing, says Chinese officials have taken extra security measures to avoid mass protests around the anniversary.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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REALITY STAR JADE GOODY HAS DIES !

David Sillito takes a look back at Jade Goody's life -

Reality TV star Jade Goody has died at the age of 27, her spokesman Max Clifford has confirmed.
She died at home with her family in Upshire, Essex, overnight on Saturday after a battle with cancer.
Goody was diagnosed with cervical cancer in 2008 but the disease spread to her liver, groin and bowel and she was told it was terminal in February.
Her mother Jackiey Budden, who was at her side as she died, said: "My beautiful daughter is at peace."
Goody had been treated at the Royal Marsden Hospital in west London but wanted "to spend all the time she had got left" with new husband Jack Tweed and sons, Bobby, five, and Freddy, four.
The star died at home at 3.14am on Mother's Day. Her body was taken out of her home shortly before 8am.
Media interest
Speaking outside the home, Ms Budden said: "Family and friends would like privacy at last."
Mourners started arriving at the house to pay tribute to Goody within minutes of the news breaking. They left floral tributes at the gates of her home.
The star had been christened in a 20-minute ceremony at the Royal Marsden on 7 March while in a wheelchair and was assisted by nurses during the service.
Goody's illness had featured in the media on a daily basis over recent weeks.

Goody's husband Tweed is awaiting sentence for attacking a taxi driver
She married partner Jack Tweed on 21 February at Down Hall Country House Hotel in Essex. OK magazine paid a reported £700,000 to cover the event.
Goody stipulated that the entire amount should be passed on to her sons.
The wedding was also filmed as part of a documentary series following the star and was screened on digital channel Living.
Goody, originally from Bermondsey, south London, had been open about wanting to exploit media interest in her battle with cancer.
She was keen to raise public awareness of the disease and prevent other women from suffering her fate.
Family friend, Kevin Adams, who was with Goody when she died, said: "I think she's going to be remembered as a young girl who has, and who will, save an awful lot of lives.
"She was a very, very brave girl and she faced her death in the way she faced her whole life - full on, with a lot of courage."
'Celebration of life'
Even in death the cameras will remain firmly fixed on Goody as preparations are made for her funeral.
Before she died she told those around her she wanted the service to be a "celebration" of her life.
"She wants it to be a big celebration because it's her final farewell to everybody," Mr Clifford said.
"She's the world's first reality television star.
"It will be a very Jade Goody event - exactly the way she wants it."
Mr Clifford said he hoped Goody's family would be left in peace to grieve.
Tweed, 21, is awaiting sentence after he was found guilty of attacking a taxi driver and threatening to stab him after leaving a club in Essex last year.
He was jailed for 18 months last September after assaulting a teenager with a golf club.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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Saturday, March 21, 2009

AUSTRIA RELIEVED AT FRITZL VERDICT !

Pages of a newspaper published during the trial.
Readers have devoured details of the case in this week's newspapers
Josef Fritzl's life sentence is widely welcomed in Austria's newspapers.

There's a clear sense of relief with headlines in the popular Kronen Zeitung and Der Standard proclaiming "Life for Josef F".

The front page of the daily Heute carries a colourful scene from Hieronymus Bosch's painting The Last Judgement, with the words "That's the way: life sentence!"

There is no rush to criticise the police or other agencies for failing to prevent his crime.

Many of the papers pore over the details and emotion of the trial.

Austria's tabloid Kurier says it was Fritzl's daughter who made sure that he would receive a life term.

With her 11-hour video statement and her surprise appearance in person at the trial, she wanted to ensure her father wouldn't "escape through a back door", says Kurier.

Most of the papers try to capture the drama of the final day in court. Der Standard quotes the final statement of the daughter's court representative, Eva Plaz.

She stressed that her client wanted the accused to be held to account for the death of her child.

By contrast, says the paper, the defence lawyer used such passionate phrasing in his opposition to the murder charge, that he twice drew laughter from the courtroom.

There's much praise for the way the trial was conducted. Kurier describes the performance of the 32-year-old prosecutor, Christiane Burkheiser, as a great success.

She took over the case after just 11 months in office, says the paper, and managed to get convictions on all counts.

Der Standard also applauds the professionalism of the court, noting what it called the unpretentious appearances of the judge and state prosecutor and the competence of the daughter's court representative.

"It should not go unremarked," says the paper, "that all of these were women."

In an editorial, Der Standard goes on to address criticism of the speed of the trial.

"Why prolong the process when the facts are clear," it asks. "Wilfully dragging out the trial would have served only to satisfy a desire for sensation."

Away from the courtroom Die Presse returns to Amstetten, the Fritzls' home town, where many of the locals are weary of the bad publicity caused by their most infamous resident.

One says he's heard how schoolchildren from Amstetten were taking a skiing course in the resort of Obertauern, when some of the pupils were asked whether they were Fritzl's children. "What nonsense is this?", the resident asks.

But the Mayor of Amstetten is more hopeful, says Die Presse. "The verdict is what everyone was hoping for," he told the paper. "A dark chapter in the history of our town is now closed."

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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ZIMBABWE - LETTER FROM THE DIASPORA

20th March 2009

Dear Friends,

The British media went into a tailspin this week when the unemployment figures for the UK were announced: over 2 million people are now without jobs. Most of the job losses have been in the retail sector and boarded-up shop fronts are now a common sight in towns and cities around the country. Hardly a day goes past without companies closing down or announcing layoffs. Car manufacturing has been massively affected and towns whose economies depended on the car industry are badly hit. Is it recession or is it depression, the economists ask, but it hardly matters to the two million people without jobs, unable to pay their mortgages; house repossessions have become another painful feature of the recession. The Bank of England has resorted to printing money - you can imagine how Zimbabweans in the diaspora chuckled when we heard that! Here it's called 'Quantitative easing' and is intended, so the economists tell us, to ease the economy by using the newly created money to buy assets from banks and other financial institutions; in effect, to inject more cash into the economy so that the sellers of assets have cash to spend on goods and services. That's the theory anyway but for ordinary folk it means very little.

But the truth is that no one in the UK will starve in this recession/depression. The state pays Job Allowances and sends you on courses to retrain for a new job, if you can find one; if you get sick there is free medical treatment and your children can still go to school - no school fees, of course, and eligible children can still get free school meals.

It's a world away from the poverty we know in Africa and Zimbabwe in particular but the recession that is being experienced in the developed world has direct relevance to Africa and the developing world. African leaders met with Gordon Brown in London this week ahead of the G20 summit next month. The BBC's International Development correspondent reports that Brown was warned that the possibility of conflict and unrest breaking out all over the continent was a very real one if the African economic downturn continues. (No one mentioned Zimbabwe of course, that's a basket case in a class of its own.) In Zambia half a million have lost their jobs in the copper mines; the halving of the cotton prices have resulted in farmers losing their livelihoods in Tanzania and the drastic reduction of receipts from tourism has led to a severe drop in foreign revenues across Africa. As the recession bites in the west, African migrants have less disposable income to remit to their families at home. The point was repeatedly made by the African leaders that it is in the west's own interest to ensure that Africa does not descend into conflict; as Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf said, it makes sense for the richer countries in the world to fund the poorest since it would cost much less now than paying for peacekeeping operations later. It is not going to be easy to persuade the west of the force of President Johnson Sirleaf's argument. The commitments made to Africa at the Gleneagles summit in 2005 have still not been fulfilled so it seems unlikely that western financial institutions and banks will be willing to honour their pledges now.

All of this makes very dismal reading for Zimbabwe; the Inclusive Government is hardly likely to attract any substantial investment even from sympathetic countries while the old regime still holds the reigns of power. The picture painted by Tendai Biti in his 'Reality Budget' this week is truly grim. It seems that Government revenue is sustained by the excise duty on cigarettes and beer; there is no production going on in the country and 94% of the population is unemployed. Even as Biti spoke the devastation of the agricultural sector continued unabated, often with the direct collusion of the ZRP and the army. Biti calculated that government revenue would be 1 billion but expenditure would top 1.9 billion. It doesn't need an economist to work out what every householder knows; we must live within our means. The greed and profligacy that led to the west's economic collapse is, sadly, already a feature of the new Inclusive Government in Zimbabwe. With a hugely bloated cabinet and ministers and deputies all being allocated brand new Mercedes, not to mention all the other perks, it is hardly surprising that critics are voicing their alarm that the MDC is no better than Zanu PF at resisting the patronage that is so freely coming their way. To paraphrase the prophetic words of the great African writer, Chinua Achebe, when people have been out in the rain and the cold for so long, they are reluctant to share the warmth and comfort of the cave with others when they finally get out of the rain. When asked by a reporter how he could justify driving around in a Mercedes, one MDC Minister replied that it was what the people expected of him, without such a status symbol, he would not have the people's respect! Such twisted logic does not suggest that Tendai Biti's 'Reality Budget' is being taken seriously by the Ministers so newly come in 'out of the rain.'

The 'reality' of Biti's revised emergency budget is that Zimbabwe is broke, there is no money and little prospect of western donors bailing out the government. The Education Minister admitted as much when he told the teachers that he cannot even guarantee their March salaries. "We'll give you fourteen days to increase our pay (from US$ 100 currently being paid to all civil servants) or we go back to the trenches" stormed Raymond Majongwe, the PTUZ boss. What this means is that children who have had almost no schooling in 2008 and a severely curtailed first term in 2009 face the prospect of a second term without teachers. Exam results, due out shortly, will surely reflect the disastrous effect all this disruption has had on children's lives. The children are the innocent victims of Zanu PF's politicisation of education; it is not surprising that the MDC were given the education portfolio and the job of cleaning up Zanu PF's mess! Money is a big part of the solution but it is also part of the problem. Teachers rightly claim that they cannot survive on $US 100 a month but they should remember that hundreds of thousands of their fellow citizens have no jobs at all. Without education now for thousands of Zimbabwean children, the danger is that they too will join the ranks of the unemployed, ten years from now. Getting our children back to school must be a priority if Zimbabwe is ever to regain its status as the best-educated workforce in Africa. Greed and self-interest - from whatever side of the political divide - must be set aside for the greater good of the country.

Yours in the (continuing) struggle PH

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10 THINGS !

Snippets from the week's news, sliced, diced and processed for your convenience.

1. Wuthering Heights is known as Les Hauts de Hurlevents in France.
More details (Times)

2. The shoes that take Dorothy back to Kansas were originally silver.
More details

3. Champagne that's 184 years old can still have a few bubbles left in it.
More details

4. Elephants can be pink.
More details

5. False memory is called confabulation.
More details

6. Mining output fell more in the periods before and after Mrs Thatcher, than during her time as prime minister.
More details

7. Kim Jong-il likes pizza. North Korea's first pizzeria has opened.
More details

8. Parts of cremated bodies are recycled.
More details

9. Monkeys in Thailand use public transport.
More details

10. You should warm up before gardening.
More details

BBC NEWS MAGAZINE.

AUSTRIA FREES 'MURDER PITS GUARD' !

A former SS man alleged to have taken part in the extermination of 8,000 Jews in one day has been freed by Austria, a day after being extradited from the US.
The Austrian justice ministry said the former guard, 83-year-old Josias Kumpf, could not be put on trial because the statute of limitations had expired.
The US says he acted in the killing and burial in pits of Jewish interns at the Trawniki camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.
He left Austria in 1956 to settle in the US, and became a citizen in 1964.
The US justice department sued to strip Mr Kumpf, who lived in Wisconsin, of his citizenship in 2003.
Austrian justice ministry spokeswoman Katharina Swoboda said Vienna had warned the US that Mr Kumpf would not be prosecuted in Austria because the statute of limitations relating to his crimes had expired in 1965.
"We have always pointed out to the United States that he cannot be charged here with the crimes of which he is accused," she said.

The justice ministry also said Mr Kumpf had been a teenager at the time of the alleged offences and had never been an Austrian citizen.
The opposition Greens have called on the government to amend the law to allow for the prosecution of alleged Nazi war criminals regardless of the time elapsed.
The US justice department said on Thursday that Mr Kumpf had admitted that he stood guard over a pit where prisoners were being gunned down and "finished off" the wounded.
Mr Kumpf was found to have served as a guard at Sachsenhausen concentration camp in Germany and Trawniki in Nazi-occupied Poland, where the mass shooting took place in 1943.
His assignment had been to watch for victims who were still "halfway alive" or "convulsing" and prevent their escape, the US justice department said.
There was no immediate comment from Mr Kumpf or his lawyer, Peter Rogers. They have in the past denied that Mr Kumpf had a role in any atrocities.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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Friday, March 20, 2009

MRS? OR IS THAT MS, MISS ?

Nicolas Sarkozy holding the hand of Ms Carla Bruni, or Mrs Sarkozy-Bruni
Getting married? What do you call yourself now?

By Anna Browning
BBC News

In recent days the European Parliament has again caused "outrage" in the British press after publishing a pamphlet asking staff to refrain from using the titles Miss or Mrs.

"Ludicrous", one Tory MEP told the Daily Mail. "Political correctness gone mad", he continued. Another, in the Daily Telegraph, branded it a "waste of taxpayers' money".

It is more than 30 years since Ms began to gain ground among a US feminist movement keen to find a title which did not denote a woman's marital status.

Decades later - while being a Ms might be seen in Brussels as simple as being, well, a Mr - many elsewhere are less keen to catch on.

Being a Ms is, frankly, unheard-of in some quarters.

"I don't think it's very helpful," said Charles Kidd, editor of Debretts Peerage and Baronetage - the guide to aristocracy.

"I was brought up to address a married woman as Mrs John Smith, for example."

Being a Ms isn't always plain sailing - with the most mundane tasks often turned into an exhausting battle of principle.

For example, attempting to take out insurance, this conversation is likely to follow:

"Name?", "Jane Smith".

Miss Ann Widdecombe MP
I can't see the point of Ms and I don't see it as an issue
(Miss) Ann Widdecombe MP

"Marital status?", "married". "Address Mrs Smith?".

"Actually I'm a Ms, Mrs Smith is my mother."

Momentary silence.

Then: "I'm sorry, if you're married you can only be a Mrs. The system won't allow another title."

For married TV producer (Ms) Eve Kay - whose recent projects include Channel 4's Jamie's Ministry of Food - it is a familiar tale.

For example, the time she tried to fill out a criminal records check for a TV series she was producing involving children.

"I was naturally asked for my title. As always, I typed in 'Ms'. At the end of the first page, though, I hit a roadblock.

"The program kept asking what my surname at birth was - annoying, since, despite getting married in 1994, I've had the same surname all my life.

"In their minds Ms is a title that means you have been divorced."

Again, her dealings with insurers have also had their moments.

"I found that married women were given a different premium to unmarried women. Yet, because men are Mr and so they couldn't tell their marital status, there was no change."

Denis and Margaret Thatcher
Not everyone is hampered by titles showing their marital status.

Bureaucrats, she says, have "lost sight of the fact that we don't want to be denoted by our relationship to men".

Having said that she doesn't agree with the European Parliament's ban of Miss and Mrs.

"You can't impose liberation on people; it has to come from understanding.

"It would be far better if women understood that being a Mrs or Miss is trivialising their independent status."

A title which indicated a woman's relationship to a man was simply "archaic", she said, "a hangover from the past".

Her own straw poll of the office on the issue found: "Women with children do get it and don't much want to be seen as married and over-the-hill or a spinster.

"They can see that marital status being known at work is by no means helpful.

"Whereas young women couldn't see what I was on about, because they hadn't experienced any negative attitudes."

Some though, just can't see the point.

Says Miss Ann Widdecombe MP: "I've grown up with that title and it's a perfectly good title. I can't see the point of Ms and I don't see it as an issue.

"It's absolutely ridiculous. These titles have been around for a very long time."

And it needn't be confusing: "I'm not confused. It's everyone else who is.

"I use Ms as a form of convenience if I don't know what they call themselves. But if they mention in a letter that they are married then I'll use Mrs."

Referring to the European Parliament, she said: "They want to make everything unisex. They don't even want to say 'man-made' But man-made is an all-embracing term," she said. It means women too.

For Charles Kidd, of Debrett's: "It's important to get someone's title right. If someone does want to be called Ms then that's fine."

But, he added, he had never been asked to change somebody's title of address from Mrs to Ms.

"I've just never heard of it," he said.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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PINK ELEPHANT IS CAUGHT ON CAMERA

By Rebecca Morelle
Science reporter, BBC News

Pink baby elephant in Botswana (Mike Holding)
The little pink calf was spotted in amongst an 80-strong elephant herd

A pink baby elephant has been caught on camera in Botswana.

A wildlife cameraman took pictures of the calf when he spotted it among a herd of about 80 elephants in the Okavango Delta.

Experts believe it is probably an albino, which is an extremely rare phenomenon in African elephants.

They are unsure of its chances of long-term survival - the blazing African sunlight may cause blindness and skin problems for the calf.

Mike Holding, who spotted the baby while filming for a BBC wildlife programme, said: "We only saw it for a couple of minutes as the herd crossed the river.

Baby pink elephant in Botswana
The baby elephant seems to be sheltering under its mother to protect itself from the sun

"This was a really exciting moment for everyone in camp. We knew it was a rare sighting - no-one could believe their eyes."

Albino elephants are not usually white, but instead they have more of a reddish-brown or pink hue.

While albinism is thought to be fairly common in Asian elephants, it is much less common in the larger African species.

Baby pink elephant in Botswana (Mike Holding)
Surviving this very rare phenomenon is very difficult in the harsh African bush
Dr Mike Chase, Elephants Without Borders

Ecologist Dr Mike Chase, who runs conservation charity Elephants Without Borders, said: "I have only come across three references to albino calves, which have occurred in Kruger National Park in South Africa.

"This is probably the first documented sighting of an albino elephant in northern Botswana.

"We have been studying elephants in the region for nearly 10 years now, and this is the first documented evidence of an albino calf that I have come across."

He said that the condition might make it difficult for the calf to survive into adulthood.

"What happens to these young albino calves remains a mystery," said Dr Chase.

"Surviving this very rare phenomenon is very difficult in the harsh African bush. The glaring sun may cause blindness and skin problems."

However, he told BBC News that there might be a ray of hope for the pink calf as it already seemed to be learning to adapt to its condition.


ders

Dr Chase explained: "Because this elephant calf was sighted in the Okavango Delta, he may have a greater chance of survival. He can seek refuge under the large trees and cake himself in a thick mud, which will protect him from the Sun.

"Already the two-to-three-month-old calf seems to be walking in the shade of its mother.

"This behaviour suggests it is aware of its susceptibility to the harsh African sun, and adapted a unique behaviour to improve its chances of survival."

He added: "I have learned that elephants are highly adaptable, intelligent and masters of survival."

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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GOOGLE'S PICTURES OF UK GO LIVE

Birmingham Street View image (Google)
Birmingham is one of 25 UK cities fully covered by the service

Google has launched the UK version of its Street View service, which allows users to browse a selection of pictures taken along city streets.

Street scenes in 25 UK cities from Aberdeen to Southampton can be viewed using the service.

The Netherlands version of the service also launched on Thursday, bringing the number of countries covered to nine.

The imagery available comprises video taken along 22,369 miles of UK streets by customised camera cars.

Emma Simpson looks at Google's Street View in action

Google Maps users can zoom in to a given location and then drag the "Pegman" icon above the zoom bar on to a given street.

UK CITIES ON STREET VIEW
Aberdeen
Belfast
Birmingham
Bradford
Bristol
Cambridge
Cardiff
Coventry
Derby
Dundee
Edinburgh
Glasgow
Leeds
Liverpool
London
Oxford
Manchester
Newcastle
Norwich
Nottingham
Scunthorpe
Sheffield
Southampton
Swansea
York

A picture view of that street appears, which users can control to get a 360-degree view of the area or to progress on street level, throughout the city.

Google says it has gone to great lengths to ensure privacy, suggesting that the service only shows imagery already visible from public thoroughfares.

It also uses face recognition technology to blur out faces and licence plates that appear in the images.

The Information Commissioner's Office ruled in 2008 that the face- and licence plate-blurring were sufficient to ensure that privacy was maintained.

However, Simon Davies of Privacy International says that existing case law suggests that images for commercial purposes cannot be taken without prior consent of those who appear in the images.

The ICO did not rule on that point in 2008, meaning that the law on privacy protection remains unclear. Mr Davies objects to the fact that "Google had not consulted with the very communities that it was about to capture" in order to address that issue.

"The Holy Grail is to know as much as possible but to protect to the greatest extent privacy rights. Google's halo has slipped for the very reason that it believes in the first part of the equation but not in the second," he told BBC News.

HAVE YOUR SAY
In what way is it an invasion of privacy? They're taking pictures of houses, not you.
Graham, Sheffield

However, Mr Davies does not object to the Street View service altogether.

"We're not trying to destroy the concept of Street View, what we're saying is that it should be deployed in an environment of historic rights, and people shouldn't be seduced into believing that just because a technology appears to be cool it must be allowed to proceed."

A Google spokesperson countered: "The images in Street View are lawful. The Street View feature only contains imagery gathered on public property. The imagery is no different from what any person can readily capture or see walking down the street."

What is more, the service provides "easily accessible tools for flagging inappropriate or sensitive imagery for review and removal".

Street View/Tate screenshot (Google)
Artworks, pub recommendations, and tourist attractions are linked in

Among Google's partners in the venture is Tate, who have worked with Google to integrate precise locations in the UK associated with artworks by JMW Turner and John Constable, which can then be viewed alongside their real-world locations.

Other partners have selected a gallery of images to showcase the UK's attractions.

London mayor Boris Johnson said: "It is simply fascinating, even for a Londoner like me, to whiz over Westminster Bridge past the Houses of Parliament, soak up the majesty of Regent's Park, take in the stupendous views from Primrose Hill or simply wander around the streets near where I live."

Also, hidden among the images is the popular children's book character Wally - of striped-jumper Where's Wally? fame - in one UK location.

Have you spotted any funny or unusual pictures in Street View? Send them to us at: yourpics@bbc.co.uk, or upload them from this page:upload here.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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JEWEL THIEVES ROBBED OF TAKINGS !

BBC map

Two men who held up a jewellery store in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, were themselves robbed as they made their getaway, US police say.

A second pair of robbers pounced on their haul of cash and gems in the street outside, sparking a fight followed by a car chase.

Police pulled over both vehicles and arrested four men, all from Illinois.

But no loot was discovered and police are now searching for more suspects, the Associated Press reports.

Police Lt Thomas Welch said the original robbers were aged 40 and 31 and the two who robbed them in turn were 22 and 27.

No estimate was given of the value of the stolen items.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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"Sayings"

"WHEN YOU ARE DISSATISFIED
AND WOULD LIKE TO GO BACK TO YOUTH,
THINK OF ALGEBRA" !
________

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SOUTH PACIFIC SPARED QUAKE DAMAGE

BBC map

A 7.9 magnitude earthquake about 200km (130 miles) south-east of Tonga has triggered a tsunami in the South Pacific, but no damage is reported.

The quake hit at 0618 local time (1818 GMT) at a depth of 10km (6.2 miles).

The tremor, which residents from Fiji to New Zealand reported feeling, was followed two hours later by an after-shock of 5.3 magnitude.

A regional tsunami warning was issued, but withdrawn just over an hour and a half later.

A resident of the Tongan capital Nuku'alofa said there was no sign of significant damage or of a tsunami after the shallow quake.

Caroline Holden, a seismologist with New Zealand's Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences, said this was surprising.

"Quite remarkable, given the magnitude of it. We might have gotten off lightly," the national police commander, Chris Kelly, said.

An undersea volcano has also been erupting off the coast of Tongatapu

"The house really moved, the trees were swaying and the ground was rippling," he said.

People in low lying areas of Fiji fled for higher ground, officials said, and schools and government offices were closed.

New Zealand seismologist Craig Miller said "a long, low rolling motion" from the quake was reported by residents on the east coast of New Zealand's North Island - more than 3,000 km (1,875 miles) from the quake's epicentre.

Tonga resident Pesi Fonua told the Associated Press the quake had lasted for "something like 20 seconds" but he had seen no damage.

Police spokesman Niua Kama told the agency residents did not appear to take the warning seriously.

"People are out on the roads, laughing at the warning," he said.

They were not moving back from the coast despite tsunami warnings, the spokesman added.

Several earthquakes have been felt in Tonga recently and an undersea volcano has been erupting off the coast of the main island Tongatapu, although it was not considered to be a threat to people in the area.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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Thursday, March 19, 2009

AFGHAN WOMEN WHO TURN TO IMMOLATION

By Martin Patience
BBC News, Kabul

Women in Afghanistan
Poverty, illiteracy and domestic violence still weigh on women

Sitting in her family's mud brick home, Shanas recalled the day she set herself on fire.

The 16-year-old doused her legs in petrol and then with a match set the fuel alight.

"The next thing I remember was waking up in the hospital surrounded by my family. That was three or four days later."

From what Shanas says it is unclear what drove her five years ago to take such drastic action.

She may have been unhappy about her engagement during that period.

But what is clear is that her story is one that is repeated across Afghanistan.

Self-immolation among women has the highest recorded levels in Herat province (although many other provinces provide no data on the subject).

Most of the women are in their teens or early 20s and are recently or soon-to-be married.

Kandigol
We want to have the same rights as men
Kandigol, women's rights campaigner

Experts suggest that a combination of poverty, illiteracy, domestic violence and lack of freedoms continue to drive this decades-old trend.

While the Afghan constitution - written after the fall of the Taleban in 2001 - enshrines equal rights for men and women, much of the country remains conservatively entrenched.

At the burns centre of the provincial hospital in Herat, Dr Mohammed Jalili knows more than most about this gruesome practice.

He says he has seen more than 80 cases of women committing self-immolation in the past year. The majority of these women have died from their injuries.

"Many of the women and their families say 'it was an accident'," he says. "It's their way of hiding their shame about the act."

But Dr Jalili says the cases are often easy to detect. Apart from the extent of burns, one tell-tale sign of an act of self-immolation is that there are no burns on the arm used to pour the petrol.

At the hospital, Dr Jalili was treating two women. He had operated on 20-year-old Anargol three times, including a skin graft operation on her badly scarred neck.

Art and crafts fair in Kabul to mark International Women's Day
Afghan women rarely get a forum to display their talent

Anargol says she had committed self-immolation after arguing with her husband.

When asked whether she had a message for other women, she had a shocking response.

"Don't burn yourself," she said, lying on her hospital bed. "If you want a way out, use a gun: it's less painful."

It was an absolute cry of despair, and something rarely heard from women in this deeply conservative society.

But according to Soraya Balaigh, director of the provincial department for women's affairs, it is an emotion that many women relate to.

"Pressure is often put on these women by their husbands or the mothers-in-law," she says.

"Violence is common and many women are desperate. I had a woman in this office who begged me to kill her here rather than send her back."

But there are some women who think that small steps are being made in the field of women's rights.

To mark International Women's Day in March, an arts and crafts fair was held in the city, with all the items made and sold by women.

Hundreds of people visited the fair selling an array of items, including jams, oil-paintings, religious sayings carved in wood and wedding cakes bedecked in decorations.

"I wanted to show that women can do some things better than men," says the organiser, Kandigol. "We want to have the same rights as men."

But Kandigol, like many women here, is realistic enough to know that this is wishful thinking at the moment.

Some will continue to feel isolated and desperate. And a few will decide to make a terrible, painful escape - and set themselves ablaze.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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MEXICAN DRUGS LORD SON ARRESTED !

Mexican soldiers on patrol in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico (02 March 2009)
Thousands of soldiers have been deployed to tackle the gangs

Vicente Zambada, the son of one of Mexico's top drug barons, has been captured, officials say.

Mr Zambada was in charge of operations for the Sinaloa cartel, Mexico's most powerful drugs gang, said the country's attorney general's office.

His father, Ismael, is believed to be a senior leader of the cartel.

Gang warfare and drugs-related violence have soared in Mexico, with more than 6,000 drugs-related killings in the country in 2008.

Vicente Zambada, also know as "El Vicentillo", was arrested on Wednesday in an exclusive area of Mexico City, said officials at a news conference.

They said the arrest followed reports from neighbours of suspicious activity in the area.

A stockpile of weapons and cash were also seized by police.

Ricardo Cabrera of the attorney general's office said the arrest of the younger Zambada would significantly affect the Sinaloa cartel's operations.

Ismael Zambada's brother, Jesus "The King" Zambada, was arrested last year.

Gangs in Mexico are fighting a vicious turf war in the north of the country over lucrative smuggling routes into the US.

The Sinaloa gang is reportedly controlled by Mexico's most wanted man, Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, who escaped from prison in 2001 and is believed to be at large in Mexico or Central America.

He is estimated to have a personal fortune of $1bn (£722m) and has been blamed by Mexican officials for much of the continuing violence.

President Felipe Calderon has deployed thousands of soldiers close to the border with the US in an attempt to take back control.

The US has also offered assistance, and this week said it would be sending troops or anti-narcotics agents to the Mexican border.

BBC NEWS REPORT

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TOPPLE SOMALI LEADER - BIN LADEN

Somalia President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed  on 7 February
Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed has vowed to introduce Sharia

Osama Bin Laden has called for the overthrow of Somalia's moderate Islamist president in an audio recording published on the internet.

Bin Laden said President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed had "changed to partner up with the infidel".

Mr Ahmed was inaugurated in January after UN-brokered reconciliation talks and has promised to introduce Sharia law to the strongly Muslim country.

But al-Shabab insurgents allied to al-Qaeda have continued to fight him.

Correspondents say the voice on the recording could not be immediately verified but it resembles that of Bin Laden and was published on known militant websites.

The 12-minute tape - entitled "Fight on, champions of Somalia" - carried an often-seen image of Bin Laden with a map of Somalia in the background.

The Somali leader's election had been "induced by the American envoy in Kenya", the tape said.

map of areas under al-shabaab control

This Sheikh Sharif... must be fought and toppled
Bin Laden tape

It accused Mr Ahmed of having "changed and turned back on his heels... to partner up with the infidel" in a national unity government.

"This Sheikh Sharif... must be fought and toppled," the tape said, before comparing the Somali leader to "the [Arab] presidents who are in the pay of our enemies".

It added: "How can intelligent people believe that yesterday's enemies on the basis of religion can become today's friends?"

Mr Ahmed was a leader of the Union of Islamic Courts which controlled Mogadishu in 2006 before being ousted by Ethiopian forces, backing the previous Somali president.

Somalia, a nation of about eight million people, has not had a functioning national government since warlords overthrew Siad Barre in 1991 and then turned on each other.

As part of a UN-brokered deal to reconcile moderate Islamists and dissident lawmakers in a unity government, Ethiopian troops withdrew in January.

Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan in an undated file image
This is Osama Bin Laden's third tape this year

President Ahmed has the support of several Islamist groups but al-Shabab has continued to fight the Somali government and the African Union peacekeepers in Mogadishu.

The hardline Islamist guerrillas now control much of southern and central Somalia.

Earlier this month the Somali cabinet backed President Ahmed's plan to introduce Sharia law, a move analysts say is designed to drain support for al-Shabab.

But the hardline Islamists rejected the move, saying it would not be a strict enough version of Islamic law.

On Saturday, a tape purportedly from Bin Laden urged holy war to liberate the Palestinian territories.

A similar message was issued in January in another a tape - just days before US President Barack Obama took office - which was the first recording in eight months attributed to Bin Laden.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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NORTH KOREA : A GLIMPSE INSIDE A SECRET STATE !

Two US journalists were detained by the North Koreans on Tuesday while reporting from the China-North Korea border. The BBC's Michael Bristow was also on the border on Tuesday. Here he reports on what he found.

North Korean farmers colelcting water from the Yalu River
There are few signs of motorised transport along the river

The border between China and North Korea, which stretches for nearly 1,500km (900 miles), is heavily guarded by soldiers from both countries.

Two rivers, the Yalu and the Tumen, act as the border along much of its length. But wire fences have also been erected, sometimes on both sides.

The border seems to be more heavily guarded on the North Korean side. There are military points every few kilometres in some places.

Foreigners are not usually welcome in North Korea so it is difficult to get information about what is going on inside the country.

But it is possible to hire a boat and travel along the Yalu River to get a glimpse of ordinary life in the secretive socialist state.

The BBC took a boat along the river just outside the Chinese border city of Dandong, through which much of the cross-border trade passes.

It is obvious from a brief look at North Korea that the country is very poor.

North Korean farmers working in the fields were using their hands. There were no tractors, not even horses.

North Korean singers at a restaurant in Dandong
North Korea is happy to show off some aspects of its society
There appears to be little mechanisation in this rural area. A cow-pulled cart was being loaded with water from the cool, clear river.

The BBC also spotted a ferry taking passengers from an island in the river to the mainland of North Korea.

It was making slow progress because it was being powered by a large oar pulled from side-to-side by two men standing at the back of the boat.

There was also a commune of about a dozen bungalows on the island.

They looked like the kind of homes you could find on the south coast of England, but there was also something you would not find in the UK - a slogan over a gateway leading into the commune praises North Korea's founder father Kim Il-sung.

The World Food Programme says that nearly nine million North Koreans will need foreign food aid this year.

map
This rural face is one that North Korea's current leader, Kim Jong-il, does not want the outside world to see.

But in Dandong, North Korea does allow outsiders to get a glimpse of a more pleasing aspect of the country.

It runs several restaurants in the city in which young, pretty North Korean women sing, dance and serve delicious food.

Wearing traditional costumes, the women perform nightly for both Chinese and North Korean guests.

The relationship between China and North Korea was forged in blood. China sent an army to help the North during the Korean War.

Hundreds of thousands of Chinese soldiers died in the fighting and there is a memorial to their sacrifice in the centre of Dandong.

It is typical communist architecture. There is a tall, square tower surrounded by four sculptures showing courageous soldiers.

But this relationship is also about trade. North Korea relies on China for much of its food, fuel and guns.

Traders who sell to North Koreans have shops in the streets around China's customs post in Dandong.

Goods for sale at a shop selling to North Koreans
North Koreans buy all kinds of items in Dandong

One of these traders is Li Hongde, who runs a shop that sells everyday items such as cups, plates and pans.

The cheapest thing he sells is a glass, which costs just 2 yuan (30 US cents, 21 UK pence). The most expensive item is a rice cooker that costs 2,760 yuan ($404, £284).

"Business isn't very good at the moment because it's winter and the political situation isn't very stable," he said.

He said North Koreans prefer buying household items made in South Korea because they are reliable - and marked with Korean characters.

But before taking their purchases home, the North Koreans scrub off any markings that show where they were made.

There is an array of items on sale at other shops in the district, including electric keyboards, bicycles and hammers.

Many items are taken to North Korea via Dandong's Sino-Korean Friendship Bridge, the main crossing point between the two countries.

It stands next to the Broken Bridge, the previous crossing point that was built by the Japanese and destroyed by US bombers in the Korean War.

The Friendship Bridge is able to carry road and rail cargo, but there is not much traffic at the moment.

In the space of an hour, a van, a couple of trucks and a short train crossed over. It does not seem like business is booming.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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DOLLAR SLIDES AFTER US FED PLAN !

Dollars
Investors fear that more dollars means less value for each note

The dollar has fallen against all major currencies after the US Federal Reserve announced a plan to buy $1.2tn (£843bn) of debt to boost its economy.

The dollar fell by 3.8% against the euro and by 3.6% against the pound.

The US currency also declined against the yen, the Norwegian krone, the Australian dollar and Brazilian real.

The Fed's decision to buy debt means it is effectively creating new money, leading to concern from investors about the over-supply of dollars.

The dollar traded at $1.449 against the pound, its lowest since late February.

The US currency also had its biggest drop against the euro in over two months, to $1.3633 versus the 16-nation European currency. Against the yen, the dollar bought 94.88.

HOW QUANTITATIVE EASING WORKS
Central bank expands money supply by using newly created money to buy assets from banks and other financial institutions
Aims to boost the economy by giving sellers of these assets money to spend on goods, services or more assets

The decline in the dollar ended its rally so far this year, which has seen the US dollar rise by more than 2% against most major currencies.

The Fed said on Wednesday that it would buy long-term government debt and expand purchases of mortgage-related debt to help stimulate an economy in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

It said it would buy up to $300bn worth of government debt, known as US Treasuries, over the next six months, as well as an additional $750bn of mortgage-backed securities to boost mortgage lending.

It also said it would buy debt issued by government-sponsored agencies such as Freddie Mac, which supports the mortgage market.

BBC economics editor Stephanie Flanders said the decision to buy Treasury bills came as a "shock" to investors.

"Why have this new spending spree at all?" she said. "The answer may be that the Fed - and the administration more generally - is concerned that the apparent improvement in credit conditions the past few months is a false dawn."

The surprise registered in the stock market, as the Dow Jones shares index jumped 90 points on Wednesday.

Following the Fed's announcement the yields payable to holders of government bonds also fell sharply.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.5% percent from 3.01% - its biggest one-day slide since the Wall Street crash of 1987.

The Bank of England has already begun buying government debt to expand money supply - known as quantitative easing - while Japan said on Wednesday it would step up its purchases of government debt.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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AUSTRIAN FRITZL SENTENCED TO LIFE !

Josef Fritzl
Fritzl's trial lasted four days

Austrian Josef Fritzl, who kept his daughter in a cellar and fathered her seven children, has been convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment.

Fritzl, 73, was found guilty of all charges against him, including rape, incest, murder and enslavement.

He showed no obvious emotion at the verdict, telling the court that he accepted it and would not appeal.

The court ordered that Fritzl should serve his life sentence in a secure psychiatric facility.

The judge said he could speak to his lawyer but he shook his head. Then he was led out of court with an impassive face.

Fritzl's lawyer, Rudolf Mayer, said outside the court after the verdict: "He showed in his confession that he realises the dimension of his crimes and offences and as such the verdict is the logical consequence."

The life sentence was delivered for the crime of murder by neglect of one of the children, who died soon after birth.

The jury unanimously accepted prosecutors' arguments that the child could have survived if it had received medical care denied by Fritzl.

The defendant first denied murder and enslavement but changed his plea to guilty after seeing testimony from his daughter.

The BBC's Bethany Bell at the court says there has been an enormous amount of media interest in the trial, and its twists and turns have been enormous.

At the time of the first details of this case, no-one could grasp the extent of this man's crimes, she says, and Austria still has to come to terms with it.

Court officials said Fritzl would be sent first to a co-ordination centre, where it would be determined how dangerous he was and whether he was able to undergo therapy, before going to the psychiatric facility.

He could in theory be released from the facility if he is deemed to be cured of his illness and would serve the remainder of his sentence in a normal prison.

In this case he will be eligible for release after 15 years.

BBC NEWS REPORT.


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Wednesday, March 18, 2009

MADOFF ACCOUNTANT ON FRAID CHARGES

David Friehling
David Friehling is charged with deceiving investors

US prosecutors have charged the long-term accountant of disgraced US financier Bernard Madoff with fraud.

David Friehling, 49, has also been charged with aiding and abetting fraud, and four counts of filing false audit reports.

Madoff pleaded guilty to all 11 charges against him when he appeared in a New York court last week.

He has always insisted he acted alone in masterminding an estimated $50bn (£35bn) investment fraud.

Madoff, 70, has now been remanded behind bars ahead of his sentencing in June. He could receive a sentence of up to 150 years.

He ran a Ponzi scheme, whereby early investors were paid off with the money injected by new clients.

Mr Friehling, faces up to 105 years if found guilty of the charges he faces.

Although Mr Friehling is not charged with knowledge of the Madoff Ponzi scheme, he is charged with deceiving investors by falsely certifying that he audited the financial statements of the Madoff business
Acting US district attorney Lev Dassin

He is now due to appear before a judge in Manhattan later.

Acting US district attorney Lev Dassin said that Mr Friehling's company, Friehling & Horowitz, was the accounting firm that "purportedly" audited the accounts of Bernard L Madoff Investment Securities between 1991 and 2008.

"Mr Friehling is charged with crimes that represent a serious breach of the investing public's trust," said Mr Dassin.

"Although Mr Friehling is not charged with knowledge of the Madoff Ponzi scheme, he is charged with deceiving investors by falsely certifying that he audited the financial statements of the Madoff business."

Mr Dassin added that Mr Friehling was paid approximately between $12,000 (£8,600) to $14,500 a month by Madoff between 2004 and 2007.

Madoff arriving for Thursday's court hearing
Madoff has insisted he acted alone

"Simply put, Friehling failed to do his job, and lied to investors and regulators in saying that he did," he said.

US commentators have said that Mr Friehling ran his accounting business from a nondescript suburban building north of New York City.

Madoff told last week's court hearing that he was "deeply sorry and ashamed" for his actions, which he said had started in the early 1990s.

"I cannot adequately express how sorry I am for what I have done," he said.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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CRUSHED BY HIS DAUGHTER'S WORDS

By Bethany Bell
BBC News, St Poelten

Josef Fritzl at his trial, 17 March
Fritzl watched most of the taped testimony on Tuesday
It was an extraordinary turn of events at the trial of Josef Fritzl.

Shortly after he entered court, this time with his face uncovered, the judge asked him to sit in the dock.

She asked him if he had anything to say after viewing the 11 hours of his daughter's video-taped testimony.

"I plead guilty," he said.

The atmosphere was taut. He spoke in a low voice.

Some of the journalists in court leant forward in their seats, anxious to catch every word.

The judge asked him about the death of the baby in the cellar, one of the seven children he fathered by his daughter.

"I should have got help," he said. "I am sorry."

Then he repeated: "I plead guilty."

His back was turned to us so we could not see his face as he said these words - but his voice was steady.

Josef Fritzl made this decision to change his plea without consulting his lawyer, Rudolf Mayer.

Mr Mayer told me that his client had been emotionally "destroyed" by his daughter's testimony - and that he had finally begun to understand something of what she had been through.

It was a huge turnaround, he said, for a man who was not "normal", a man who had an overwhelming urge to dominate and control.

That was also the message of psychiatrist Adelheid Kastner, who met Fritzl several times and put together a psychological profile of him for the court.

Addressing the court from the bench, she said Fritzl's "basic need was for power".

"It is about domination, about power, about control," she said.

She said Fritzl knew he was acting against all the rules, that he knew what he was doing was wrong.

As Dr Kastner described the accused's childhood and his difficult relationship with his mother, who had seen him as "a burden and a calamity", Fritzl stared ahead, twisting his thumbs.

Dr Kastner said that he had picked out his third daughter as his victim because she was the most similar to him, "obstinate and strong".

She said it was more "satisfying" to him to control a strong personality.

He was determined to have someone who belonged to him alone, the psychiatrist said.

She said the large number of children he fathered only strengthened the control he had over his victim.

She recommended that Fritzl be held in a psychiatric facility, as she said there was a danger that he would repeat his behaviour if left untreated.

After the psychiatrist's testimony and brief consideration of reports about the cellar,
officials adjourned the trial until Thursday, when the verdict and sentencing are expected.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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US TO FORCE AIG TO REPAY BONUSES!

Ailing insurer AIG will be required to pay back hugely controversial bonuses it awarded after taking public bail-out money, the US treasury secretary says.
In a letter to congressmen, Timothy Geithner also said $165m (£116m) would be taken from $30bn the firm is due to get as part of its government bail-out.
The plan comes after Mr Geithner faced heavy criticism for his handling of the increasingly controversial issue.
Republicans said he should have done more to stop the bonuses being paid.
Channelling public anger
Frustration has been growing over the bonuses, and reports say that AIG offices have received hate mail and even death threats.
On Monday President Barack Obama called the AIG bonuses "an outrage".
The BBC's James Coomarasamy, in Washington, says these are uncomfortable times for Mr Obama.

AIG: QUICK FACTS

30 million US policy holders
Operates in 130 countries
Provides insurance to 100,000 companies and other entities

Obama 'outraged' at AIG bonuses
US media homes in on AIG

The president is trying to channel public anger over the bonuses without becoming the object of that anger himself, our correspondent says.
Republicans have raised questions about when Mr Obama was told about the bonuses - and also criticised Mr Geithner for not preventing the payments before they were paid.
In a letter to Congress leaders, Mr Geithner outlined the measures he had taken to try to stop the bonuses being paid.
He then confirmed that the bonus payments would be deducted from the next instalment of AIG's $180bn bail-out package.
"We will impose on AIG a contractual commitment to pay the Treasury from the operations of the company the amount of the retention awards just paid," Mr Geithner's letter said.
"In addition, we will deduct from the $30bn in assistance an amount equal to the amount of those payments."

Politicians have been anxious to criticise the bonuses - with one congressman even suggesting that AIG executives receiving bonuses should kill themselves before swiftly retracting his statement.
On Tuesday, the politicians' anger was stoked by a letter from the attorney general of New York state, Andrew Cuomo, revealing more details of the bonuses.

Chorus of anger over AIG

He said that 73 AIG executives - including 11 who no longer work for the company - were each last week given bonuses worth more than $1m.
Before Mr Geithner's announcement, Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the House of Representatives, had said several committees were looking at passing legislation this week to reclaim the money from AIG.
And Senate Democrats wrote to AIG Chief Executive Edward Liddy on Tuesday calling on him to hand over the bonuses.
"If these contracts are not renegotiated immediately, we will take action to make American taxpayers whole by recouping all of the bonuses that AIG has paid out to its financial products unit," the letter stated.
The financial products unit, the letter stated, is seen as being primarily responsible for the "near-failure of the company".
Mr Liddy has said the bonuses were paid to honour contracts AIG agreed to before the firm's value plummeted when the financial crisis set in last year.
He is due to testify before a House sub-committee on Wednesday. Analysts predict he will face a tough set of questions.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Cathy Buckle's Weekly Letter from Zimbabwe

Shocking legacy !

Tuesday 17th March 2009

Dear Family and Friends,

Its been a month now since Zimbabwe's unity government took office and this seems an appropriate point to record the changes that are affecting everyday life.

The economy is now running completely on US dollars and the prices of most goods are still two, three or sometimes even four times more expensive than in our neighbouring countries. But, on the positive side, more and more shops have got products back on their shelves so at least now we can find food - even if we can't afford most of it! Basic economic rules of supply and demand and competition are coming back into play and forcing the outrageous profiteers to back down. Seeing shelves stocked with food is such a shock that we still stand and stare wide-eyed at the sight of tins and packets and bottles. For such a long time we've been scavenging, scrounging, bartering and just going without that seeing food for sale again makes us realize the terrible abuse that was inflicted upon us by the previous leadership.

Another positive development has come for civil servants who have begun receiving a small monthly salary in US dollars, and a top up in Zimbabwe dollars. Frankly the top up in Zim dollars is a waste of time and utterly useless as there is nothing at all that you can buy in local currency - not even a single banana or cup of ground nuts from a woman on the roadside. The US dollar amounts being paid to civil servants is nowhere near enough, is not linked to people's qualifications and is not comparable to salaries being paid for the same work in the region, but it is a start.

I had to visit a Police station recently and seeing the appalling circumstances under which these men and women have to work is truly shocking. Ceilings falling in, broken tables, chairs collapsing and without backs, no stationery, nowhere for people to sit, doors falling out of their frames, roadways almost unusable because of deep gullies and potholes. This situation is similar in almost all government buildings and is another shocking legacy left by the previous leadership.

In the last month utilities, licences and other urban service fees have gone through the roof and despite our paying in US dollars no changes are yet noticeable on the ground. Garbage is still not being collected (its been a year now) roads are a maze of deep potholes, street lights still don't work and sewage continues to run openly in some streets. Water and waste management is in a perilous place and the handing back of assets, tools, chemicals and other equipment by ZINWA (controlled by government) to the local municipalities has opened a writhing can of worms. Water pumps have gone missing, chemicals have vanished and assets which actually belong to the ratepayers, have simply disappeared. We are told by the incoming MDC officials that legal action is being taken and that people will be held to account. This promise is a breath of fresh air but actions speak louder than words!

It's very early days and a mountain of decay, corruption and plain thievery stands in the path but the feeling of hope continues to grow. Change must come from the top, the middle and the bottom; we're ready at the bottom!


Until next week, thanks for reading, love cathy

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RUSSIA ANNOUNCES REARMAMENT PLAN

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
President Medvedev wants to increase the combat readiness of Russian forces

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has said Moscow will begin a comprehensive military rearmament from 2011.

Mr Medvedev said the primary task would be to "increase the combat readiness of [Russia's] forces, first of all our strategic nuclear forces".

Explaining the move, he cited concerns over Nato expansion near Russia's borders and regional conflicts.

Last year, the Kremlin set out plans to increase spending on Russia's armed forces over the next two years.

Russia will spend nearly $140bn (£94.5bn) on buying arms up until 2011.

Higher oil revenues in recent years have allowed the Kremlin to increase the military budget, analysts say. But prices have averaged $40 a barrel in 2009 compared with $100 last year.

In his first address to a defence ministry meeting in his capacity as supreme commander, Mr Medvedev said considerable sums are being channelled towards developing and purchasing modern military equipment.

Russian troops (file photo)

"Despite the financial problems we have to cope with today, the size of these sums has remained virtually the same as planned."

Analysts say the brief war in Georgia exposed problems with outdated equipment and practices within Russia's armed forces and led to calls for military modernisation.

President Medvedev's remarks also appear significant for what they say about the diplomatic game between Moscow and the new administration in the United States, says the BBC's James Rodgers in Moscow.

Both sides are looking for a solution to issues - such as US missile defence plans in Europe - which bitterly divided the Kremlin and the White House during the Bush administration. Neither, though, seems willing simply to abandon previously-held positions, our correspondent adds.

The Russian Security Council is currently developing a new military doctrine which is expected to reflect current and forthcoming international developments, including any changes Nato may set out this year, missile defence deployments and WMD proliferation.

"The Security Council will approve Russia's national security strategy until 2020 in the near future," President Medvedev said.

Watch Tim Whewell's films on the Russian military on Newsnight on Tuesday 17 March and Wednesday 18 March, 2009 at 2230 on BBC Two.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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FRITZL'S FACE CAUGHT ON CAMERA !

Josef Fritzl in court (17/03/09)
Fritzl was glimpsed before covering his face with a blue ringbinder

The face of Josef Fritzl, the Austrian charged with crimes against children he kept and abused in a cellar, has been caught on camera at his trial.

Mr Fritzl had been covering himself with a folder since the trial began on Monday but let it drop as he was escorted into court on the second day.

His lawyer said Mr Fritzl had been "simply ashamed" to show his face.

Jurors are due to finish viewing videotaped testimony from Mr Fritzl's daughter by the end of the day.

They also saw video evidence from one of her brothers.

The final pleas could be made on Thursday morning and that means we could expect to have a verdict on Thursday afternoon
Court spokesman Franz Cutka

Josef Fritzl is said to have been watching the recordings very attentively.

The court also heard expert testimony on infant care on Tuesday.

One of the charges against Mr Fritzl is that he murdered his own newborn baby boy by failing to provide him with proper medical care.

Mr Fritzl has pleaded guilty to incest and "partially" guilty to rape but not guilty to enslavement or murder at the trial in the town of St Poelten.

A verdict is expected as early as Thursday.

"The final pleas could be made on Thursday morning and that means we could expect to have a verdict on Thursday afternoon," said court spokesman Franz Cutka.

Mr Cutka said that the media and public would be allowed back into the court on Wednesday

FRITZL CHARGES AND PLEAS
Murder - not guilty plea
Enslavement - not guilty plea
Deprivation of liberty - guilty plea
Rape - partially guilty plea*
Incest - guilty plea
Coercion - guilty plea

*Understood to mean he is contesting the wording of the charges

They were admitted on Monday at the opening of the trial but are being barred from the courtroom while the daughter and son's testimony is played.

A psychiatric expert is expected to testify on Wednesday and two reports by technical experts regarding the cellar in which the defendant locked his daughter for 24 years will also be read out to the court.

Mr Fritzl, his lawyer and the prosecution all agreed to the reading of the experts' opinion rather than their appearance at the trial, Mr Cutka said.

He said he could give no details of the testimony shown on Tuesday, because of a reporting prohibition designed to protect the identities of the defendant's alleged victims.

"Today's session was dedicated to viewing the videotaped testimony of the defendant's daughter and one of her brothers," the court spokesman told a news conference.

"The defendant was questioned about the issues that came up in the testimonies, and he gave his views."

"The defendant followed [his daughter's] recorded testimony attentively," he added.

Mr Fritzl is alleged in 1984 to have lured his daughter into a cellar with windowless soundproofed chambers beneath their house, to have imprisoned her there and raped her repeatedly over a number of years.

The daughter and three of her seven children fathered by Mr Fritzl were kept captive in the cellar until the case came to light in April last year, when one of the children became seriously ill and was taken to hospital.

Mr Fritzl is accused of murdering one of the newborn twin boys his daughter gave birth to in 1996, having failed to arrange medical care for the ailing infant.

Some legal experts have said it may be hard to prove the murder charge but the charge of enslavement carries a maximum penalty of 20 years, and some of the other charges carry a sentence of up to 15 years.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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US CAPITAL BLIGHTED BY HIV/AIDS !

The US capital is suffering an epidemic of HIV/Aids worse than some African nations, with 3% of over-12s infected, the city's department of health says.
Its report suggests the hardest-hit sections of the population are black men, and people aged between 40 and 49.
The infection rate puts Washington DC on a par with Uganda.
But one factor may be a drive towards more HIV/Aids testing, and the city government insists much is now being done to tackle the problem.
According to the report, both the United Nations and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have "historically defined an HIV epidemic as generalised and severe when the overall percentage of disease among residents of a specific geographic area exceeds 1%.
I think we're seeing the increase recently because the new director of our HIV/Aids administration here in Washington has put a large push for everyone to get tested
Dr Raymond Martins Whitman-Walker clinic"The overall proportion in the District is three times higher," the report says. By comparison, less than half of 1% of Americans are living with cancer.
Even the 3% figure, the report says, is certain to be an underestimate, as so many of Washington's residents are unaware that they are infected.
"In the District, nearly every population group and age is experiencing a substantial epidemic," the report says, with the greatest rates of infection among black men (6.5%), Hispanic men (3.0%), and white men (2.6%).
In terms of age, those aged 40-49 are the worst affected (7.2%), followed by those aged 50-59 (5.2%).
The main mode of transmission is men having sex with men, followed by heterosexual sex and infection through drug use.
'Actually 5%'
The chief medical officer at the Whitman-Walker clinic, one of Washington's biggest HIV organisations, told the BBC that the real figure could be even higher.
"When they've tested large groups of the District population it looks like the prevalence is actually about 5%, which is higher than the 3% but a lot of the people haven't been tested yet," said Dr Raymond Martins.
"I think we're seeing the increase recently because the new director of our HIV/Aids administration here in Washington has put a large push for everyone to get tested and so with that testing you're discovering all these people that are HIV-positive that didn't realise they were."
The report says the city's Mayor Adrian Fenty and the department are following a three-pronged strategy to tackle the epidemic, by promoting testing for the virus, preventing transmission by providing free condoms and needle exchanges, and doing more for those already living with HIV/Aids.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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Monday, March 16, 2009

'OUTRAGE' AT AIG BONUS PAYMENTS!

AIG sign
AIG insures financial institutions around the world

The Obama administration and US senators have reacted angrily to the bonus payouts to executives announced on Sunday by US insurance giant AIG.

President Barack Obama's economic adviser Larry Summers said the recent goings on at AIG were "outrageous".

But he conceded that legal obligations meant the company had no choice but to pay the $165m (£116m) in bonuses.

House Financial Services Committee chairman Barney Frank said the bonuses were "rewarding incompetence".

"These people may have a right to their bonuses. They don't have a right to their jobs forever," he said.

AIG has received bailouts from the US government totalling $180bn (£127bn) since coming close to collapse in 2008.

"There are a lot of terrible things that have happened in the last 18 months, but what's happened at AIG is the most outrageous", said Mr Summers.

But he admitted that, despite the strength of feeling in the White House, there was little the administration could do to stop the bonus payments.

AIG: QUICK FACTS
30 million US policy holders
Operates in 130 countries
Provides insurance to 100,000 companies and other entities

"The easy thing would be to just say... off with their heads, violate the contracts. But we are a country of law. The government cannot just abrogate contracts," he said.

Mr Summers said that Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner had used all his power, both "legal and moral", to lower the payments.

"I don't know why they [AIG] would follow a policy that's not really sensible, is going to ignite the ire of millions of people, and we've done exactly what we can to prevent this kind of thing happening again," said Austan Goolsbee from President Obama's Economic Recovery Advisory Board.

Indeed bonuses for 2009 are to be cut sharply - by up to 30% according to AIG boss Ed Liddy - but those agreed for 2008 will be paid.

Such concessions did little to appease angry senators.

"Did they enter into these contracts knowing full well that, as a practical matter, the taxpayers of the United States were going to be reimbursing their employees?

"Particularly employees who got them into this mess in the first place? I think it's an outrage," said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.

Democrat Elijah Cummings was equally incensed: "It's like, OK, you got to help me screw you. And by the way I'm going to take your money and I'm going to slap you with it."
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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AUSTRALIA CUTS MIGRANT JOB INTAKE

Slow sign at roadworks, Sydney Australia 3 Mar 09
Construction and manufacturing are slowing in Australia

Australia has said it will cut the number of skilled foreign workers it accepts by 14% to safeguard local jobs.

Immigration Minister Chris Evans announced the cut, the first by the country in 10 years.

Mr Evans said the government did not want to admit people who would compete with Australians for limited jobs amid the global financial crisis.

Unemployment is rising in Australia, after years of economic growth fuelled largely by mining exports.

One of the main countries likely to be affected by the cuts is the UK.

Every year many British bricklayers, carpenters, plumbers and other people with trades decide to swap life in the UK for life in Australia.

"We're going to cut (the programme) from 133,500 to 115,000, so that's about a 14% cut," Mr Evans told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

The number of foreign skilled migrants will be cut by 18,500 for the 2009/10 financial year, which starts in June, from a total number of 133,500 in 2008/09.

"The economic circumstances in Australia have changed as a result of the global financial crisis," Mr Evans said. "It is prudent to reduce this year's migration intake accordingly."

The permanent skilled migration programme will bar entry to foreign bricklayers, plumbers, carpenters and electricians for the foreseeable future.

"That's where we've seen a drop-off in demand [and] some major redundancies," Mr Evans said.

NICK BRYANTS' AUSTRALIA
Nick Bryant
The announcement confirms what we have known since before Christmas: that Australia does not offer a safe haven from the worldwide downturn

He added that further cuts may be made when the national budget is unveiled in May.

The migrant scheme offers permanent residency to approved skilled workers.

Employers will still be able to bring in foreign tradesmen by sponsoring them under a special visa for temporary migrant workers, provided they can prove that the labour cannot be sourced in Australia.

Professions such as nurses, doctors, engineers and information technology will be safe, as Australia still has shortages in these areas.

The government removed hairdressers and cooks from Australia's list of critical skills shortages late last year.

Figures released last week showed the unemployment rate had risen to a four-year high of 5.2%. The federal government predicts a jobless rate of 5.5% by June, and 7% by the same time next year.

The government recently announced an Aus$27.5bn (£19.6bn) stimulus package, including cash handouts and infrastructure spending, which it hopes will help the economy through the downturn.

Australia's economy has shrunk for the first time in eight years, raising fears that the country may be heading for a recession.

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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FRITZL ADMITS RAPE, DENIES MURDER !

Josef Fritzl, accused of imprisoning his daughter and fathering her children, has pleaded guilty to rape and incest but not guilty to murder.

The Austrian is accused of the murder by neglect of one of his daughter's children. He also denied enslavement.

TV pictures showed the 73-year-old enter the courtroom with his face concealed by a blue file. He refused to answer journalists' questions.

The trial, in the city of St Poelten, is attracting intense media interest.

Mr Fritzl is alleged in 1984 to have lured his daughter into a cellar with windowless soundproofed chambers beneath their house and then raped her repeatedly.

The daughter and three of her seven children were kept captive in the cellar until the case came to light in April last year when one of the children became seriously ill and was taken to hospital.

Mr Fritzl faces up to 20 years in jail for enslavement and up to 15 years for some of the other charges.

Escorted by six policemen and dressed in a light grey, checked jacket and dark grey trousers, Mr Fritzl made the short walk down the corridor from his cell to the courtroom, where journalists tried unsuccessfully to question him before the judges arrived.

Josef Fritzl treated his daughter as his property, he made her completely dependent
Christiane Burkheiser
prosecutor

Speaking in a composed voice, Mr Fritzl gave the judges his name and other personal details.

In her opening statement, prosecutor Christiane Burkheiser said Mr Fritzl used his daughter "as a toy".

"[The defendant] showed no sign of regret or any consciousness of wrongdoing," she said, quoted by AFP news agency.

"Josef Fritzl treated his daughter as his property, he made her completely dependent."

Ms Burkheiser said he also sometimes raped her in front of their children, and described the atmosphere in the cellar.

"I went down there twice and there's a morbid atmosphere," she said. "It's damp, it's musty, it's mouldy."

The prosecutor also blamed Mr Fritzl squarely for the death of one of twin boys that his daughter gave birth to in 1996.

"He failed to seek any help", despite his daughter's pleas, when the baby developed breathing problems, Ms Burkheiser said.

"That my dear jurors, is murder by negligence."

FRITZL CHARGES AND PLEAS
Josef Fritzl
Murder - not guilty plea
Enslavement - not guilty plea
Deprivation of liberty - guilty plea
Rape - partially guilty plea*
Incest - guilty plea
Coercion - guilty plea

*Understood to mean he is contesting the wording of the charges
But defence lawyer Rudolf Mayer said his client was "a human being not a monster" and appealed to jurors to be objective.

In her introduction, court president Andrea Humer said she wished to emphasise that a single person was on trial, not a town or a region.

The judge asked Mr Fritzl some questions about his life and work experience, before sending the public out of the courtroom as the remaining evidence was deemed too sensitive.

Camera crews and photographers had already been told to leave.

An estimated 200 journalists are in St Poelten for the trial but fewer than 100 were allowed inside the courthouse.

An air exclusion zone has been imposed above the courthouse to prevent news crews using helicopters to get aerial shots.

Mr Fritzl has been held in custody in St Poelten since his arrest nearly a year ago.

All evidence in the trial is due to be given behind closed doors, with no press or public present, out of concern for the privacy of the family.

The evidence includes hours of pre-recorded testimony given by the daughter at the centre of the case.

Edited details of the day's proceedings will then be released to the press each afternoon.

The trial is predicted to last just a week, with a verdict expected on Friday.
BBC NEWS REPORT.

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'BRAIN DECLINE' BEGINS AT AGE 27 !

Concentration
Mental abilities decline at a relatively young age, experts suspect

Mental powers start to dwindle at 27 after peaking at 22, marking the start of old age, US research suggests.

Professor Timothy Salthouse of Virginia University found reasoning, speed of thought and spatial visualisation all decline in our late 20s.

Therapies designed to stall or reverse the ageing process may need to start much earlier, he said.

His seven-year study of 2,000 healthy people aged 18-60 is published in the journal Neurobiology of Aging.

To test mental agility, the study participants had to solve puzzles, recall words and story details and spot patterns in letters and symbols.


The same tests are already used by doctors to spot signs of dementia.

In nine out of 12 tests the average age at which the top performance was achieved was 22.

The first age at which there was any marked decline was at 27 in tests of brain speed, reasoning and visual puzzle-solving ability.

Things like memory stayed intact until the age of 37, on average, while abilities based on accumulated knowledge, such as performance on tests of vocabulary or general information, increased until the age of 60.

Professor Salthouse said his findings suggested "some aspects of age-related cognitive decline begin in healthy, educated adults when they are in their 20s and 30s."

Rebecca Wood of the Alzheimer's Research Trust agreed, saying: "This research suggests that the natural decline of some of our mental abilities as we age starts much earlier than some of us might expect - in our 20s and 30s.

"Understanding more about how healthy brains decline could help us understand what goes wrong in serious diseases like Alzheimer's.

"Alzheimer's is not a natural part of getting old; it is a physical disease that kills brain cells, affecting tens of thousands of under 65s too.

"Much more research is urgently needed if we are to offer hope to the 700,000 people in the UK who live with dementia, a currently incurable condition."

BBC NEWS REPORT.

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"NEVER PUT OFF UNTIL TOMORROW,
WHAT YOU CAN AVOID
ALTOGETHER" !
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FRITZL TO GO ON TRIAL IN AUSTRIA !

Josef Fritzl, the Austrian man accused of holding his daughter captive for 24 years and fathering seven children with her, is due to go on trial.
The 73-year-old faces charges of rape, incest, coercion, enslavement and deprivation of liberty.
He is also accused of murder in connection to the death of one of his daughter's children.
The case, seen as one of the biggest in recent Austrian history, is attracting intense media interest.
An estimated 200 journalists are in the town of St Poelten for the opening of the trial, although fewer than 100 will be allowed inside the courthouse.
A no-fly zone has been imposed above the courthouse to prevent news crews using helicopters to get aerial shots.
Mr Fritzl has been held in custody in St Poelten since his arrest nearly a year ago.

The boy, a twin, died soon after birth. Prosecutors say Mr Fritzl is guilty of murder through neglect.
He faces life imprisonment if convicted of murder.
All evidence in the trial is due to be given behind closed doors, with no press or public present, out of concern for the privacy of the family.
The evidence includes hours of pre-recorded testimony given by the daughter at the centre of the case.
Edited details of the day's proceedings will then be released to the press each afternoon.
The trial is predicted to last just a week, with a verdict expected on Friday.
The case first came to light after one of the children fathered by Mr Fritzl and kept underground, became seriously ill and was taken to hospital.
BBC NEWS REPORT

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UN AID WORKERS SEIZED IN SOMALIA !