Thursday, September 26, 2013

Big Brother House Public Opening Under Fire



The Big Brother house opens to the public this weekend as a National Trust property in a move that critics have described as “just wrong”.



The 500 tickets for the two-day event were snapped up by Trust members within an hour of going on sale.



“It’s a radical idea but we wanted to look at what a younger, more urban generation of Trust members would be interested in seeing,” said Ivo Dawnay, from the National Trust.



“Big Brother is really a part of British heritage now, so the house is an ideal showcase. It’s fascinating. I think people are going to love looking around it.”



Those lucky enough to get tickets will get to see the famous diary room, bedroom, kitchen and garden where housemates spend their time.



The property is situated off a Tesco roundabout in Borehamwood, north of London, on a TV studio site.



It is a world away from the kind of location you would normally find a National Trust property.



“I’m not going to burn my Trust member card or man the barricades, but this is ridiculous,” said former MP Ann Widdecombe.



“I can see what they are trying to do, they don’t want it to be just about old people traipsing around stately homes. But there were better options than this. It’s just wrong.”



Katy Smith, executive producer of the reality show, said the link-up with the National Trust was a great idea.



“It’s a house that everyone knows about and hardly anyone gets to see. It’s part of British culture. I think this initiative is a fantastic collaboration.”



There have been 14 series of UK Big Brother since it began in 2000, as well as 11 celebrity versions of the show.





Big Brother House Public Opening Under Fire

Big Brother House To Open Under National Trust



The Big Brother house opens to the public this weekend as a National Trust property in a move that critics have described as “just wrong”.



The 500 tickets for the two-day event were snapped up by Trust members within an hour of going on sale.



“It’s a radical idea but we wanted to look at what a younger, more urban generation of Trust members would be interested in seeing,” said Ivo Dawnay, from the National Trust.



“Big Brother is really a part of British heritage now, so the house is an ideal showcase. It’s fascinating. I think people are going to love looking around it.”



Those lucky enough to get tickets will get to see the famous diary room, bedroom, kitchen and garden where housemates spend their time.



The property is situated off a Tesco roundabout in Borehamwood, north of London, on a TV studio site.



It is a world away from the kind of location you would normally find a National Trust property.



“I’m not going to burn my Trust member card or man the barricades, but this is ridiculous,” said former MP Ann Widdecombe.



“I can see what they are trying to do, they don’t want it to be just about old people traipsing around stately homes. But there were better options than this. It’s just wrong.”



Katy Smith, executive producer of the reality show, said the link-up with the National Trust was a great idea.



“It’s a house that everyone knows about and hardly anyone gets to see. It’s part of British culture. I think this initiative is a fantastic collaboration.”



There have been 14 series of UK Big Brother since it began in 2000, as well as 11 celebrity versions of the show.





Big Brother House To Open Under National Trust

Two face court in child sex case



Two men will appear in court today after being charged with a series of sexual offences against children.


Anthony Marsh, 53, and Lee Davis, 39, who have been charged with more than 60 sexual offences, will appear by videolink for a plea and case management hearing at Sheffield Crown Court.


Marsh, who also uses the names Tony Taylor and Tony Smith, has been charged with another 36 offences including sexual activity with a child and possessing and distributing indecent images of children.


Davis, who also uses the name James Parkin, has been charged with 32 offences including rape, sexual activity with a child and taking indecent photographs of a child.


Marsh, of Menson Drive, Hatfield, near Doncaster, and Davis, of Rowena Road, Conisbrough, near Doncaster, are in custody.





Two face court in child sex case

U.S., Iran voice optimism and caution after rare encounter



By Arshad Mohammed and Matt Spetalnick


UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – Iran and the United States held their highest-level substantive talks in a generation on Thursday, saying the tone was positive but sounding cautious about resolving the long-running standoff over Iran’s nuclear program.


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif met after Zarif held wider talks with the United States and other major powers to address Western suspicions that Iran may be trying to develop atomic weapons.


Diplomats from the major countries described the atmosphere of the wider talks in positive terms, but they, as well as the U.S. and Iranian foreign ministers, stressed the difficulty of resolving a dispute that has eluded solution for a decade.


“We had a very constructive meeting,” Kerry told reporters after the talks at the United Nations, where he and Zarif had sat next to one another in a gesture that suggested a desire by both sides to explore how to ease their more than three-decade estrangement.


But Kerry added, “Needless to say, one meeting and a change in tone, which was welcome, doesn’t answer those questions yet and there is a lot of work to be done.”


The United States wants Iran to address questions about its nuclear program, which Washington and its allies suspect is a cover for developing nuclear weapons. Iran denies that, saying its program is for solely peaceful, civilian uses.


Zarif, a U.S.-educated diplomat, also sounded a cautionary note and insisted on quick relief from the painful U.S., European Union and U.N. sanctions imposed for Iran’s refusal to suspend its uranium enrichment program.


“I am satisfied with this first step. Now we have to see whether we can match our positive words with serious deeds so we can move forward,” he told reporters.


“Of course as we move forward, there has to be removal of sanctions and in the end game there has to be a total lifting of all sanctions and both bilateral sanctions, unilateral sanctions as well as multilateral sanctions and U.N. sanctions and we hope to be able to move in that direction within a short span of time.”


Kerry said Zarif had put some “possibilities” on the table, but stressed there was more work to be done.


It was a very uncommon encounter between top officials of the United States and Iran, which have been estranged since Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution toppled the U.S.-backed Shah.


A State Department official said it was the highest-level “official” meeting between U.S. and Iranian officials since before the Iranian revolution, although there had been “informal” interactions at the same level in the past 10 to 12 years.”


Both Kerry and counterparts from the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany described their meeting with Zarif on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly as “a change in tone” from encounters with Iran’s previous, hardline government.


European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who chaired the meeting, told reporters it had been “a substantial meeting. Good atmosphere. Energetic.”


She said the two sides had agreed on an “ambitious timetable” to address Western concerns and would meet again in Geneva on October 15 and 16 “to pursue the agenda to carry on from today’s meeting and to hopefully move this process forward.”


Ashton also added a note of caution, saying it was important to focus on “effective work that we do on the ground.”


HANDSHAKE OR NO HANDSHAKE


Kerry was seen smiling at Zarif at the start of the meeting and Ashton hinted that he and Zarif shook hands, noting the two had sat side by side.


“Secretary Kerry … is a man of great politeness, so it would be surprising if they didn’t do that,” she said.


“We all shook hands and we all smiled,” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said after the meeting on Iran.


The New York talks involved the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council – Britain, France, Russia, China, the United States – and Germany, known as the P5+1.


Beforehand, Kerry said he looked forward to the first meeting involving the newly elected Iranian government of centrist President Hassan Rouhani, but would not specify what Iran should do to show it was serious about addressing concerns about its nuclear program.


A moderate cleric, Rouhani has stepped up efforts to improve Iran’s image abroad during his visit to New York this week. He has said that Iran would never develop nuclear weapons and called for a nuclear deal in three to six months.


U.S. President Barack Obama on Tuesday cautiously embraced Rouhani’s gestures as the basis for a possible nuclear deal and challenged him to demonstrate his sincerity.


But the failure to orchestrate a handshake between the two leaders, apparently because of Rouhani’s concerns about a backlash from hardliners at home and perhaps Obama’s concerns about the possibility of a failed overture, underscored how hard it will be to make diplomatic progress.


Even without making any real concessions so far, Rouhani has offered a softer, more reasonable tone than his stridently anti-U.S. predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.


The sanctions imposed on Iran have begun to bite severely.


Iranian oil exports have fallen by about 60 percent in the past two years as the EU stopped purchases and most Asian buyers drastically cut imports because of the sanctions. Iran is now earning only around $100 million from oil sales a day as opposed to $250 million two years ago.


The six powers said in February they wanted Iran to stop enrichment of uranium to 20 percent, ship out some stockpiles and shutter a facility where such enrichment work is done. In return, they offered relief on international sanctions on Iran’s petrochemicals and trade in gold and other precious metals.


U.S. officials say that offer remains on the table.


But signalling some of the obstacles that could hamper any new diplomacy, Iran on Thursday sharply criticized the U.N. nuclear watchdog over “baseless allegations” about its atomic activity.


It was an apparent reference to the International Atomic Energy Agency’s concerns, spelled out in a series of quarterly reports, about what it calls the possible military dimensions to Iranian nuclear activities.


(Additional reporting by Yeganeh Torbati, Lesley Wroughton, David Brunnstrom and Louis Charbonneau at the United Nations; Marcus George in Dubai; Dmitry Zhdannikov in London and Fredrik Dahl in Vienna; Writing by David Brunnstrom and Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Will Dunham, Jim Loney and Peter Cooney)





U.S., Iran voice optimism and caution after rare encounter

Chile to move ex-Pinochet agents to no-frills jail



SANTIAGO (Reuters) – Chilean President Sebastian Pinera on Thursday ordered shut a prison where 10 former agents of dictator Augusto Pinochet are serving sentences for human rights violations, a move that came amid public anger over their relative comfortable conditions.


The inmates, including Manuel Contreras, former chief of Pinochet’s notorious DINA secret police, will be moved from the Penitenciario Cordillera in Santiago to a jail where other former military officers and collaborators of the dictatorship are being held.


“Taking into account three principles: first, equality under the law; second, the safety of the inmates and third, the normal and efficient running of the prison police force, I’ve taken the decision to close the Penitenciario Cordillera jail,” Pinera, a conservative, said at the presidential palace in Santiago.


The move came after Chilean media revealed that those at Penitenciario Cordillera, which was built in 2004, enjoyed preferential conditions and benefits compared to inmates in other prisons in the South American nation.


The 10 inmates live in five cabins, each equipped with a private bathroom, can play tennis for two hours a day and are in the process of getting a personal trainer, according to public documents from a recent court-ordered visit to the facility.


Under Pinochet’s 17-year dictatorship, over 3,000 people were killed or forcibly disappeared, while another 28,000 were tortured, including ex-President Michelle Bachelet, who is the front-runner to win the presidency later this year.


Referring to the decision to close the prison, Bachelet said the country “now has the political conditions” to adopt this measure, something that would have been nearly impossible only a few years ago when Pinochet, who died in 2006, was still alive.


(Reporting by Anthony Esposito; Editing by Paul Simao)





Chile to move ex-Pinochet agents to no-frills jail

Bid to put brake on parking 'spies'



Councils in England could be banned from using CCTV cameras and “spy cars” to impose parking fines on motorists under new government proposals.


Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles has said he wants to curb “overzealous” local authorities which use cameras to maximise their income from parking fines.


He warned that public support for CCTV could be undermined if people believed they were being used to generate revenue rather than preventing crime.


A government consultation paper will suggest amending legislation underpinning the Traffic Management Act 2004 to outlaw the practice.


“We want to rein in these overzealous and unfair rules on parking enforcement, so it focuses on supporting high streets and motorists, not raising money,” Mr Pickles told the Daily Telegraph.


“Parking spy cameras are just one example of this and a step too far. Public confidence is strengthened in CCTV if it is used to tackle crime, not to raise money for council officers.”


The announcement will be seen as a morale-booster as Conservative activists prepare to head off for their annual party conference next week in Manchester.


The Telegraph reported that 75 local authorities, one in four in England, currently has permission to use CCTV or “approved devices” for parking enforcement.


The Department for Transport says CCTV should be used only when it is impractical to use traffic wardens.





Bid to put brake on parking 'spies'

Chemical Plant Explosion Rocks West Thurrock



Fire crews have been sent to a chemical explosion at a chlorine scrubbing plant in West Thurrock.



Local residents were urged to stay indoors and keep their doors and windows closed after a strong smell of chlorine was reported.



However, Fire Service Divisional Officer Neil Fenwick said that after an assessment by specialists from Industrial Chemicals Ltd it was found that there was no risk to the public.



“We have had assurances from chemical experts on site that there is no risk to the public,” he said.



“A small tank of diluted caustic soda exploded and the contents drained away into an interception tank and was contained on site.”



One man suffered minor injuries to his shin and was treated at the scene by firefighters.



The Health and Safety Executive has been informed and an investigation is under way to establish the cause of the blast.



 





Chemical Plant Explosion Rocks West Thurrock

Harry hails humanitarian volunteers



Prince Harry has praised the “extraordinary” volunteers of a humanitarian emergency response organisation as he was spirited to the heart of a devastating earthquake.


Harry spoke of his pride at being patron of MapAction which helps co- ordinate relief efforts in disaster areas as he watched a team responding to a mock earthquake.


The royal looked on intently as a small team of three MapAction volunteers battled to cope with the natural disaster inside a canvas field tent complete with satellite phones, first aid kits and dozens of maps.


MapAction, which is based near High Wycombe, produces maps highlighting not only the geography of an area but where need is greatest and the locations for vital humanitarian aid.


The organisation has successfully deployed to more than 40 emergency missions since its service was launched over 10 years, helping millions of people affected by disaster.


Speaking to potential MapAction donors and existing financial supporters and helpers at the Royal Society in London Harry said he had met volunteers.


He said: “I was struck by their willingness to drop everything at a moment’s notice – despite the fact I’d do that in my job anytime – and step into the heart of the crisis no matter where it is in the world, leaving loved ones behind.”


He added: “And to do this knowing that very few people will have any idea what contribution they have made. They are extraordinary people and this is an extraordinary organisation.”





Harry hails humanitarian volunteers

Fed needs better way to signal policy, officials say



By Sakari Suoninen, Alistair Scrutton and Ann Saphir


FRANKFURT/STOCKHOLM/HOUGHTON, Michigan (Reuters) – The Federal Reserve confused financial markets over scaling back its bond buying, three top officials said on Thursday, with one arguing the central bank should link tapering to drops in the jobless rate and another calling for a broad remake of strategy.


Fed Board Governor Jeremy Stein said he would have been comfortable with acting at the September 17-18 meeting, and the decision to keep buying bonds at an $85 billion monthly pace had been, for him, a “close call”.


“But whether we start in September or a bit later is not in itself the key issue – the difference in the overall amount of securities we buy will be modest,” he told a monetary policy conference in Frankfurt.


“What is much more important is doing everything we can to ensure that this difficult transition is implemented in as transparent and predictable a manner as possible. On this front, I think it is safe to say that there may be room for improvement,” he said in prepared remarks.


The Fed’s decision to stand pat on bond buying stunned financial markets, which had anticipated it would begin to slowly reduce the program, signalling the beginning of the end to an unprecedented five years of ultra-easy monetary policy.


Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke explained the decision last week by pointing to the disappointing performance of the U.S. economy in the second half of 2013. It also noted headwinds from tighter U.S. fiscal policy, which could worsen as leaders in Washington fight over a deal to keep the government funded and lift the U.S. debt limit.


Investors are now focused on Fed meetings in October and December, although some economists say the central bank could hold fire until 2014 to make sure the U.S. economy has decisively regained cruising speed.


FACE SAVING


But Richmond Federal Reserve President Jeffrey Lacker, one of the Fed’s most hawkish officials who has been urging for months that it taper bond buying, said that the central bank had boxed itself in by failing to move last week.


“It could be hard to do it (tapering) in October without losing face, but I don’t see why we couldn’t do it,” he told a banking conference in Stockholm. “It’s going to be harder for us to communicate credibly in the future,” he told reporters. Lacker is not a voting member of the policy committee this year.


A third official, Minneapolis Fed chief Narayana Kocherlakota, said the Fed had only itself to blame if markets swing wildly in “misguided” reaction to its meeting-by-meeting decisions on bond buying.


“It is a problem of the (Fed’s) own making, because we have not been sufficiently clear about what we are going to do down the road,” he said.


He called for a renewed focus by Fed policymakers on bringing down unemployment, like former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker’s single-minded focus on bringing down inflation in 1979.


The central bank, he said, should do whatever it takes to drive U.S. unemployment lower, although not necessarily by buying even more bonds. For instance, it could lower the interest rate it charges banks to keep their excess reserves at the Fed, he said.


What matters is not the specific “tactic,” he said, but the overall strategy.


“What the committee chose to do in September was fully consistent with everything that had been communicated,” Kocherlakota told reporters after his talk. But what has been communicated, he said, is insufficient, as is the level of stimulus the Fed is providing the economy.


“I think we’ve set ourselves up in a very awkward position where every action, no matter how minute the economic consequences of that action, and every communication about that action, no matter how minute that communication might be, is having very undue consequences on people’s beliefs about the course of future policy,” he said. “We should be communicating more effectively that we are about having the economy recover as fast as possible, as long as inflation stays close to, possibly temporarily above, but close to 2 percent.”


Kocherlakota is one of the Fed’s most dovish members, and on Thursday reiterated the Fed should keep interest rates near zero until unemployment reaches 5.5 percent, though he cast doubt on whether the rate truly captures the state of the labour market.


The nation’s jobless rate fell to 7.3 percent in August, but remains well above historically normal levels. The decline was also subject to caution because it reflected the departure of workers from the labour force, rather than being entirely due to stronger new job creation.


There are millions of Americans who have either given up looking for work or are getting fewer hours of employment than they would like, due to the still-tepid state of the labour market following the nation’s severe 2007-2009 recession.


Stein, who has talked about the risk of Fed bond buying leading to asset bubbles, said that one way to reduce uncertainty and accompanying market volatility would be to link cuts in bond buying directly to economic data.


“My personal preference would be to make future step-downs a completely deterministic function of a labour market indicator, such as the unemployment rate or cumulative payroll growth over some period,” Stein said. “For example, one could cut monthly purchases by a set amount for each further 10 basis point decline in the unemployment rate.”


This echoed a suggestion made earlier in the year by St. Louis Fed chief James Bullard, perhaps signalling growing support on the Fed’s policy-setting committee to adopt such an approach.


(Additional reporting by Pedro da Costa in Washington and Ann Saphir in Houghton, Michigan. Writing by Alister Bull in Washington; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)





Fed needs better way to signal policy, officials say

Rennard disciplinary probe resumes



The senior Liberal Democrat peer Lord Rennard is to face an internal party disciplinary inquiry into claims of sexual harassment after police said they would not press criminal charges.


The former Lib Dem chief executive – who strongly denies the allegations – welcomed the news he would not be prosecuted, describing the investigation as a “harrowing and deeply unpleasant” experience.


But the party immediately announced that the ending of the police inquiry meant that its own disciplinary process, led by Alistair Webster QC, could now resume.


“We consider the allegations made against Lord Rennard, which he strenuously denies, to be extremely serious and we can now continue with our internal inquiry into these allegations,” a spokesman said.


“We would encourage anyone who has information that could be relevant to the inquiry to get in touch.”


The claims relate to allegations by a number of women activists that the peer – who was a highly influential figure in Lib Dem circles – had exploited his position to make unwanted sexual advances and touch them inappropriately.


Earlier this year, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and two other Lib Dem ministers – Danny Alexander and Jo Swinson – were sharply criticised in a review of the party’s handling of their complaints.


Businesswoman Helena Morrissey, who conducted the inquiry, said that there should have been a formal investigation launched when his accusers first came forward.


In a statement, Lord Rennard, who was interviewed under caution in June after voluntarily attending a police station, said he was not surprised at the decision by the police not to bring charges.


“The last eight months have been harrowing and deeply unpleasant for me, my wife Ann, my family and friends,” he said.


“I am enormously thankful for the unfailing support I have received from people across the political spectrum but especially those within the Liberal Democrats who have stood by me throughout.


“My life’s work has been to support good people and good causes. I hope now to be able to continue doing that.”


Scotland Yard said that officers had “early investigative consultation” with the Crown Prosecution Service but that it was a police decision to take no further action.


“Following reports in the media in February, officers from the Specialist Crime and Operations Command launched an investigation into allegations of sexual touching,” the force said.


“Various inquiries were conducted – including meeting with officials from the Liberal Democrat party – and a number of individuals were spoken to as part of the investigation.


“Those inquiries have now concluded that there is insufficient evidence to support a prosecution; a decision which has been made by police.”





Rennard disciplinary probe resumes

Argentina, Spain join up to pressure Britain on Falklands, Gibraltar



BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) – Argentina and Spain agreed on Thursday to team up to pressure Britain to discuss their separate claims on British territories: the Falklands in the south Atlantic and Gibraltar near the southern tip of Spain.


Argentine Foreign Minister Hector Timerman and his Spanish counterpart, Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo, reached the agreement in New York on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly, the Argentine Foreign Ministry said.


“They discussed the common ground regarding sovereignty disputes over the Falklands and Gibraltar,” it said in a statement.


“They agreed on joint measures to press Great Britain to comply with the mandate from the United Nations to dialogue,” it said.


Argentina and Spain have been at odds since last year after Argentine President Cristina Fernandez nationalized YPF oil company, which was a unit of Spain’s Repsol.


But the two countries have a history of solidarity over Gibraltar and the Falklands, known to the Argentines as the Malvinas Islands.


London rejected last month a Spanish proposal for bilateral talks on Gibraltar, a rocky Mediterranean outpost that Spain ceded to Britain 300 years ago.


Britain says it will respect the wishes of Gibraltar’s 30,000 people, who have repeatedly stated they want to remain British. Similarly, London has said it will not discuss sovereignty of the Falklands without including the islanders.


Gibraltar and the Falklands are on a U.N. list of non-self-governing territories that are subject to a process of decolonization.


However, the U.N. also recognizes that the United Kingdom and Argentina dispute the sovereignty of the Falklands, which have been under British control since 1833.


Argentina and Britain went to war over the islands in 1982, a conflict that Argentina lost.


Tensions in Spain and Britain over Gibraltar escalated this summer in a spat over fishing rights and border controls.


(Reporting by Guido Nejamkis; Editing by Xavier Briand)





Argentina, Spain join up to pressure Britain on Falklands, Gibraltar

'I feel like an action hero!' Schoolboy, five, who lost arms and legs to meningitis can finally walk thanks to prosthetic legs



Brave schoolboy Marshall Janson is walking for the first time ever – thanks to his new prosthetic legs which make him feel ‘like an action hero’.


The five-year-old was left with no arms and legs after he suffered meningitis when he was a one-year-old baby.


But thanks to a pair of specially-made £12,000 prosthetic blades, the bubbly youngster can now run and leap around with his playmates for the first time.


Marshall’s bespoke limbs have been specially created to look like his favourite kids’ TV hero.


And after trying them on for the first time, thrilled Marshall told his proud mum Stephanie Harris: ‘I’m just like a real Power Ranger mummy’.


Stephanie, 33, a full-time house wife, said: ‘Marshall was ecstatic when he first saw his blades. He is Power Rangers-mad and his friends in school are all really impressed.


‘He is able to get around much easier now and is as fast as the other kids which he loves. He is also a lot taller now which is great. He feels like just like he’s a real action hero.’


Marshall, of Perranporth, Cornwall, was taken to hospital on Boxing Day 2008 – just six days after his first birthday.


He had playing with his new presents when Stephanie noticed he had a temperature and a strange bruise on his forehead.


The medical staff rushed him into intensive care and confirmed he had been struck down by Meningococcal Meningitis.


Stephanie Harris with daughter Lexi Janson aged 3, her partner Moss Janson and Marshall Janson aged 5. (SWNS)

The killer disease ravaged the little boy’s body and his vital organs began to fail and blood was no longer being circulated to his limbs.

They soon became dead and blackened due to the damage caused by septicaemia and doctors had no choice but to amputate his legs and half his arms.


[VIDEO: Brazilian boy, aged eight, filmed riding along busy carriageway on toy TRICYCLE]


But after four weeks in intensive care Marshall pulled through and crucially his brain remained undamaged.

Brave Marshall said his new legs make him feel ‘like an action hero’. (SWNS) The youngster was eventually able to return home where Stephanie and car painter dad Moss Janson, 35, nursed him back to full health and began planning his future.


Stephanie said: ‘It was heartbreaking when we first found out Marshall was going to lose his legs and arms.


‘He loves playing but used to say to me ‘mummy, I can’t keep up with my friends.”


After researching different types of prosthetic limbs Stephanie, who also has a daughter Lexi, three, came across Dorset Orthopaedic, one of the country’s leading providers of replacement limbs.


The firm’s engineers came up with a lightweight, state-of-the art design and colour scheme that let Marshall move – and look like – a Power Ranger.


Stephanie said: ‘When they said they could make the limbs with a Power Rangers theme we were thrilled as he’s such a huge fan.


‘Marshall loves both the gold and blue rangers so we opted for the blue one but with a gold stripe on the blades.


‘What’s even better is that he’s now able to fully join in with all the fun and games at school.’


Marshall’s space age blades last between six months and a year, depending on how fast he grows.


In the coming weeks he will be getting a second set that are specially designed to use when sitting and he will also need prosthetic arms when he’s older.


[Baby girl died after 'one emergency vehicle got lost and another stopped for petrol as they answered a 999 call']


The total cost throughout his childhood could be as high as  £950,000 so his family started the Handstand appeal in May 2009 which has raised over £300,000 to date.

Stephanie said: ‘It’s a lot of money but it’s making a world of difference to Marshall. It’s great that he’ll be able to get so much more out of his time at school – his favourite lesson is now PE.’


To donate towards Marshall’s appeal visit www.handstand.org.uk






'I feel like an action hero!' Schoolboy, five, who lost arms and legs to meningitis can finally walk thanks to prosthetic legs

Labour treads narrow path between populism and prudence



By Peter Griffiths


LONDON (Reuters) – An attack by British opposition leader Ed Miliband on energy companies, big corporations and landowners may give him a short-term lift in the polls, but could damage his Labour party’s bid to restore its economic credibility before the 2015 election.


Miliband said a freezing of energy bills for 20 months if he replaces Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron would help curb rising prices after years of cuts, stagnation and weak wage growth. It would compensate the public for high prices resulting from a lack of effective market competition.


The declaration, at a party conference, exposed the 43-year-old son of a Marxist academic to what his rivals see as their most damaging line of attack before the election: that a Labour party flirting with traditionalist state control cannot be trusted with the world’s sixth biggest economy.


One former minister with Labour accused him of “alarming populism” that would sacrifice Britain’s wealth on the “altar of tribal socialism”. Energy firm Centrica’s biggest shareholder called it “economic vandalism”.


Centrica and another utility SSE have lost 2.7 billion pounds ($4.34 billion) in market value since Miliband’s speech to his party on Tuesday.


“This is real 1960s, 1970s socialism, whipping up people to hate business,” Digby Jones, a former head of the Confederation of British Industry who worked for Labour as an independent trade minister, told Reuters.


“He doesn’t like wealth creation, he doesn’t like entrepreneurship. It will cost millions of jobs and denude Britain of investment.”


Labour, however, enjoyed a bounce in the polls after miliband’s speech, a reflection perhaps of popular discontent over falling living standards.


A YouGov/Sun newspaper survey on Thursday put Labour on 41 percent and the Conservatives on 32. That compared to a single point Labour lead last Friday, before the speech.


The polls also show Labour trailing on the economy, however.


Miliband’s pitch also reopened old Labour internal arguments over how a party founded by socialists and unions at the turn of the last century should handle business and globalised markets.


Former minister, Peter Mandelson, one of the architects of the reforms that turned Labour into the centrist, pro-market “New Labour” movement that won three elections under Tony Blair, said it could undermine the party’s reputation.


“Perceptions of Labour policy are in danger of being taken backwards,” he told the Guardian newspaper.


ECONOMIC PRUDENCE


While the “New Labour” reforms, including a much-vaunted commitment to economic prudence, brought electoral success after hard left policies turned voters off in the early 1980s, they alienated traditionalist core voters.


Miliband, whose personal ratings are far weaker than those of his party, had been accused of failing to explain his vision to a public that by an large does not see him yet as a future prime minister.


Supporters said his speech was an attempt to address that and widen the ideological gap between Labour and its rivals.


Critics saw it as a “lurch to the left” that could take Britain back to the 1970s, when strikes, blackouts and an IMF bailout hurt its reputation.


However, one of Blair’s closest advisers, former media chief Alastair Campbell, said Mandelson was wide of the mark.


“Peter M wrong re. energy policy being a shift to left. It is putting consumer first versus anti competitive force,” he Tweeted. “More New Deal than old Labour.”


Miliband said he was not anti-business: “I’m in favour of competition, I’m in favour of markets, but they’ve got to be effective.”


Labour, which says cuts delayed the recovery, saw its credibility undermined by the financial crisis and a record budget deficit during its time in office. Thirteen years of Labour ended in 2010 with its second worst defeat since 1918.


Labour said voters questioned in focus groups liked the energy bill freeze, plans to halt a corporation tax cut and to grab land that owners don’t develop.


“After 2010, the assumption was that we’d be out of power for two or three terms. Instead, we’ll be very competitive at the next election and have a good chance of winning,” a Labour source told Reuters.


Miliband will be helped by a split in the right-wing vote. The UK Independence Party, which wants to leave the European Union immediately, is on 11 percent, a poll said on Thursday. Much of their support comes from former Conservatives.


Three years of cuts should also give Labour a lift, while observers say Cameron has underestimated Miliband and voters’ financial hardship.


“Unless he (Cameron) can persuade voters that he’s on their side, there are enough left-wing voters in Britain to elect the most left-wing government of modern times,” commentator Tim Montgomerie wrote in the Times.


(Additional reporting by Andrew Osborn; editing by Ralph Boulton)





Labour treads narrow path between populism and prudence

'I feel like an action hero!' Schoolboy, five, who lost arms and legs to meningitis can finally walk thanks to prosthetic legs



Brave schoolboy Marshall Janson is walking for the first time ever – thanks to his new prosthetic legs which make him feel ‘like an action hero’.


The five-year-old was left with no arms and legs after he suffered meningitis when he was a one-year-old baby.


But thanks to a pair of specially-made £12,000 prosthetic blades, the bubbly youngster can now run and leap around with his playmates for the first time.


Marshall’s bespoke limbs have been specially created to look like his favourite kids’ TV hero.


And after trying them on for the first time, thrilled Marshall told his proud mum Stephanie Harris: ‘I’m just like a real Power Ranger mummy’.


Stephanie, 33, a full-time house wife, said: ‘Marshall was ecstatic when he first saw his blades. He is Power Rangers-mad and his friends in school are all really impressed.


‘He is able to get around much easier now and is as fast as the other kids which he loves. He is also a lot taller now which is great. He feels like just like he’s a real action hero.’


Marshall, of Perranporth, Cornwall, was taken to hospital on Boxing Day 2008 – just six days after his first birthday.


He had playing with his new presents when Stephanie noticed he had a temperature and a strange bruise on his forehead.


The medical staff rushed him into intensive care and confirmed he had been struck down by Meningococcal Meningitis.


Stephanie Harris with daughter Lexi Janson aged 3, her partner Moss Janson and Marshall Janson aged 5. (SWNS)

The killer disease ravaged the little boy’s body and his vital organs began to fail and blood was no longer being circulated to his limbs.

They soon became dead and blackened due to the damage caused by septicaemia and doctors had no choice but to amputate his legs and half his arms.


But after four weeks in intensive care Marshall pulled through and crucially his brain remained undamaged.


Vrave Marshall said his new legs make him feel ‘like an action hero’. (SWNS) The youngster was eventually able to return home where Stephanie and car painter dad Moss Janson, 35, nursed him back to full health and began planning his future.


Stephanie said: ‘It was heartbreaking when we first found out Marshall was going to lose his legs and arms.


‘He loves playing but used to say to me ‘mummy, I can’t keep up with my friends.”


After researching different types of prosthetic limbs Stephanie, who also has a daughter Lexi, three, came across Dorset Orthopaedic, one of the country’s leading providers of replacement limbs.


The firm’s engineers came up with a lightweight, state-of-the art design and colour scheme that let Marshall move – and look like – a Power Ranger.


Stephanie said: ‘When they said they could make the limbs with a Power Rangers theme we were thrilled as he’s such a huge fan.


‘Marshall loves both the gold and blue rangers so we opted for the blue one but with a gold stripe on the blades.


‘What’s even better is that he’s now able to fully join in with all the fun and games at school.’


Marshall’s space age blades last between six months and a year, depending on how fast he grows.


In the coming weeks he will be getting a second set that are specially designed to use when sitting and he will also need prosthetic arms when he’s older.


The total cost throughout his childhood could be as high as  £950,000 so his family started the Handstand appeal in May 2009 which has raised over £300,000 to date.


Stephanie said: ‘It’s a lot of money but it’s making a world of difference to Marshall. It’s great that he’ll be able to get so much more out of his time at school – his favourite lesson is now PE.’


To donate towards Marshall’s appeal visit www.handstand.org.uk






'I feel like an action hero!' Schoolboy, five, who lost arms and legs to meningitis can finally walk thanks to prosthetic legs

Mother 'sick with worry' - inquest



A woman claims midwives treated her as an “anxious new mum” just hours before her newborn son collapsed and died in hospital.


Jared McDowall died at St Michael’s Hospital in Bristol on January 17 last year, two days after he was born by emergency caesarean section.


Avon Coroner’s Court heard his mother, Natasha, complained to hospital staff that her son was reluctant to feed and crying unusually.


Mrs McDowall, of Longwell Green, Bristol, said she was “sick with worry” over her son’s condition, but midwives simply dismissed her concerns as “paranoia”.


Just hours later, Mrs McDowall discovered her son, who weighed six pounds, floppy and lifeless in his cot.


Resuscitation attempts were unsuccessful and he was pronounced dead at 2.45am.


An inquest into Jared’s death heard a root cause analysis investigation (RCA) found four failures in his care, including failures to recognise poor feeding and unusual crying.


The hearing was told it was not possible to ascertain an exact cause of death, but Jared could have suffered from hypoglycaemia or low blood sugar, which may have triggered a collapse.


Avon Coroner Maria Voisin, who reached a narrative conclusion, is writing a report referencing ways to improve care at St Michael’s Hospital raised during the inquest.


“It is of note that the recorded observations were generally normal and staff did not have concerns about Jared’s progress,” she said.


“The parents did have concerns about his feeding and his crying and raised these with staff.


“The staff said his level of feeding was typical for normal babies and not of concern to them.


“In relation to his crying, they did not believe it caused any concern and were reassured when his observations came back as normal.”


Ms Voisin said she considered reaching a conclusion of neglect but heard no evidence of “gross failures” in Jared’s care by hospital staff.


She will now write a report to the hospital following comments by Dr David Harding, who made a number of recommendations to the inquest.


These included a graph showing birth weight and gestation, better synthesis between doctors and midwives and education packs for hypoglycaemia.


The inquest was told Jared was born weighing 2.7kg – 200g under the “low birth weight” of 2.5kg – by caesarean section at St Michael’s Hospital at 2.57am on January 15 2012.


He appeared to be doing well for the first 24 hours, but the following morning, Mrs McDowall noticed he was crying in a “jerky way” and reluctant to feed.


Mrs McDowall told the inquest she reported her concerns to midwife Natasha Bridge but was made to feel like an “anxious new mum” and reassured that her son was fine.


“I was sick with worry and felt I was being treated as a paranoid mother,” she said.


“At the time I felt I was being brushed off.”


Both Jared and Mrs McDowall were examined through the day but all observations returned as normal, with a second midwife also reassuring the family.


But in the early hours of the following morning, Mrs McDowall discovered Jared “floppy and lifeless” in his cot and rushed him to the midwife station for help.


“I repeated that he was ill all day and none of them had listened to me,” she said.


“The alarm sounded and a lot of medical staff came rushing to Jared’s aid.”


Resuscitation efforts did not succeed and Jared was pronounced dead at 2.45am.


Pathologist Dr Craig Platt said post-mortem tests showed Jared had high insulin levels but could not ascertain his glucose levels before resuscitation, meaning it was impossible to say whether he was hypoglycaemic.


He said the cause of death was “unexpected death of a neonate” but that Jared’s raised insulin levels, low birth weight, a pulmonary haemorrhage and anisonucleosis in his pancreas – which could suggest a problem regulating insulin levels – should also be recorded.


Mrs McDowall told the inquest: “I feel completely let down by the medical professionals at St Michael’s Hospital, particularly the midwifery team who failed to listen to my concerns.”


Midwife Natasha Bridge, who qualified six months earlier, said there were “no warning triggers” to refer Jared to a different ward or care team.


Experienced colleagues agreed with her observations and said Jared appeared healthy, with his feeding chart similar to other newborns.


But Jared had four feeds in a 24 hour period – one breast feed and three 10ml servings of formula – two fewer than recommended, the inquest was told.


Staff also considered his cry to be “unusual” but not “abnormal”, which would have been noted on medical charts.


Sarah Windfeld, head of midwifery at the University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust, said charts now featured “unusual crying” as a result of Jared’s death.


Observations had also been increased, there was more supervision, extra training and support had been offered to staff and clearer ways to escalate concerns introduced, she added.


Speaking after the inquest, Jared’s parents Natasha, 37, who works in HR and Shaun, 43, an IT consultant, said they had suffered with depression after his death.


Mrs McDowall said: “We were absolutely disgusted at the care Jared and I were given and it has been very hard to relive the events during the inquest.


“Shaun and I knew something was seriously wrong with Jared and I was becoming more and more concerned because he wouldn’t feed, but the midwives made me feel like I was overreacting and that I was wasting their time.


“Jared was our first baby and we were so excited to bring him back to our family home but we never got chance to do this. His death still affects us every day and I’m not sure we’ll ever come to terms with it.


“To be honest what happened made us lose all faith in maternity services and we were terrified the same thing would happen again if I became pregnant.


“We just hope that Jared’s death was not in vain and that improvements are made in observational charts and training to ensure no other family has to go through the same ordeal.


“Nothing can bring Jared back but seeing improvements in maternity services might help us to begin the process of accepting what happened.”


Mr and Mrs McDowall have instructed medical law experts at Irwin Mitchell to investigate Jared’s death.


Julie Lewis, a partner at Irwin Mitchell’s Bristol office, who represents the family, said: “W e will now continue to work on behalf of Natasha and Shaun in liaising with the Trust to secure an admission of responsibility which we hope will help them to begin to come to terms with what happened and begin to rebuild their lives.”





Mother 'sick with worry' - inquest

Gibraltar 'the last colony in Europe' claims Spain



The row over ownership of Gibraltar ramped up today after Spain called on Britain to hand over “the last colony in Europe.”


Speaking at the UN, Spanish Mariano Rajoy described the territory as a “colonial anachronism” and an irresponsible tax haven.


“Once again, I must place before this Assembly the question of Gibraltar, a British colony, which this Organisation included, in 1963, in the list of Non-Self-Governing Territories awaiting decolonisation,” he told the UN general assembly in New York.


“This is the only such territory in Europe, and one that affects our own territorial integrity.”


Rajoy said Europe could not allow an irresponsible “tax haven” to remain at its heart.


“We can not have a tax haven in the heart of European Union and we have said-a territory that fails, as everyone knows, the most basic environmental standards,” he said.


Rajoy told the UN that Britain must be “direct and honest” on the issue, adding that “we have lost too many years”.


He called for four-way talks between Spain, Britain, Gibraltar and the regional government of Andalucia.


Rajoy’s speech is the latest in an increasingly tense row over Gibraltar’s sovereignty.


Spain imposed strict new border controls into Gibraltar in July after the territory dropped concrete blocks into the waters off the rock.


Gibraltar claimed the blocks were intented to create an artificial reef, but the Spanish claim it was an attempt to limit their fishing rights.


The border checks imposed by Spain led to chaos at the Gibraltar border and caused a major diplomatic row with Britain.


Last month the UK responded by sending a warship to the rock in an attempt to “focus the minds” of the Spanish government.


The Spanish government’s position on Gibraltar remains popular in the country.  


Spanish newspaper ABC today carried a front-page photo of Mr Rajoy at the UN, with the headline: “Gibraltar is the last colony in Europe in the 21st century.”





Gibraltar 'the last colony in Europe' claims Spain

Pilots Sleep At Controls: Union Warning



A pilots’ organisation says a case of two pilots falling asleep at the same time shows why EU changes to flight-time rules are “dangerous”.



In a report to the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), a pilot revealed that he and his co-pilot nodded off on the Airbus passenger jet while the aircraft was on autopilot last month.



The pilot said both had only five hours’ sleep the previous two nights.



A CAA spokesman said: “This was a serious incident but an isolated one. I think lessons will be learnt from this. We are circulating this report within the industry.



“We don’t know why the pilots had had so little sleep before this flight. They were taking it in turn to have rest periods, with the one always checking the autopilot and it looks as if both fell asleep at the same time.”



But UK pilots’ organisation Balpa said the incident “comes as no surprise”, adding that it had “repeatedly warned the CAA of the risk of both pilots falling asleep, including in a letter to each member of the CAA board last year”.



General secretary Jim McAuslan said: “British pilots want to make every flight a safe flight and tiredness is the biggest challenge they face.



“As the regulator responsible for UK flight safety, the CAA has been far too complacent about the levels of tiredness among British pilots and failing to acknowledge the scale of the under-reported problem.



“In fact, the CAA and Government are backing EU cuts to UK flight safety that will increase tiredness among pilots and the risk of dangerous incidents.”



Balpa says the planned EU flight rules will have a “grave impact” on aviation safety as the proposals are “flawed in many areas”.



The proposed regulations would see pilots being legally allowed to land an aircraft after being awake for 22 hours.



They would also mean pilots can operate longer-haul flights – such as from the UK to the US west coast – with only two crew rather than the current three.



The proposals would also see pilots working up to seven early starts in a row.



A news agency found out about the pilots falling alseep after asking the CAA for incidents of pilot fatigue.



The CAA did not say which airline was involved nor where the aircraft, an Airbus A330, was travelling.



Of the proposed EU changes, the CAA said: “We understand that Balpa are not happy with the proposals but we think overall it is a good package and not much different to what we have now.”





Pilots Sleep At Controls: Union Warning

Stuart Hall Questioned Over New Allegations



Detectives are preparing to question jailed broadcaster Stuart Hall over dozens of new rape allegations.



A woman has told police that Hall raped her regularly over several years when she was a young teenager.



The alleged victim is thought to be a relative of friends of the disgraced presenter.



Hall, 83, could be re-arrested in prison and, if charged and convicted, he may never be freed.



Hall was jailed this year for 15 months after admitting 14 charges of indecent assault on girls aged between nine and 17 between 1967 and 1985.



At the time, a single rape charge was not pursued and was left on the file.



His sentence was later doubled when the Attorney-General appealed after some of Hall’s victims complained he had been dealt with too leniently.



If Hall is charged with further offences, prosecutors would have to decide whether more expensive and time-consuming court action is in the public interest. 





Stuart Hall Questioned Over New Allegations

Ben Ainslie: America's Cup Comeback 'Amazing'



America’s Cup winner Sir Ben Ainslie has hailed his team’s “amazing” comeback and hinted at a British assault on one of sailing’s toughest competitions.



The Olympic hero was drafted in as tactician by Oracle Team USA ahead of race six with the squad in the doldrums.



The crew had won just one race to Emirates Team New Zealand’s four and at one stage were 8-1 down.



However, they rallied to win the Cup 9-8 in a thrilling finale that captured the imagination of sports fans the world over.



Sir Ben, a five-times Olympic medallist who won gold at London 2012, told Sky News: “It’s amazing to have had so many messages of support from back home.



“It’s great to see how people have got behind the Cup and it’s great for sailing for people to see this kind of racing.”



The America’s Cup dates back to 1851 and was first contested off the coast of the Isle of Wight.



However, British involvement in the competition has faded in recent years and the Cup has been held almost exclusively by Australia, New Zealand and the US since the last British win in 1964.



Sir Ben said renewed interest in America’s Cup could see Britain mount a fresh challenge for the title.



“For sure, Britain can compete in the America’s Cup,” he said.



“We’ve had a lot of British sailors and designers across all of the teams racing in San Francisco, so we’ve got the talent. We just need to pull all of that together.



“Traditionally the America’s Cup has been expensive – it’s really been a billionaire’s game.



“But that’s changing now and the guys who are putting the sport together … see a future where teams can be run commercially through sponsorship.



“That’s great for the future of the America’s Cup and the future of sailing.”



Sir Ben was cheered to victory by fans in his home town of Lymington, Hampshire, as well as thousands of supporters who lined the coast of San Francisco as his catamaran zigzagged its way towards the Golden Gate Bridge.



He paid tribute to his friend and fellow British Olympic champion Andrew Simpson, who was killed in May while training for the Cup, saying he “would have loved” the gripping conclusion to the race.



He added: “It was an amazing comeback from our team. We were 8-1 down against the Kiwis and had a huge mountain to climb.



“We’re delighted. The final race was awesome … and it was great to have been part of it.”



:: Watch highlights of the 19th and final race of the America’s Cup on Sky Sports 2 at 11am, 4pm and 7pm





Ben Ainslie: America's Cup Comeback 'Amazing'

Ben Ainslie: America's Cup Comeback 'Amazing'



America’s Cup winner Sir Ben Ainslie has hailed his team’s “amazing” comeback and hinted at a British assault on one of sailing’s toughest competitions.



The Olympic hero was drafted in as tactician by Oracle Team USA ahead of race six with the squad in the doldrums.



The crew had won just one race to Emirates Team New Zealand’s four and at one stage were 8-1 down.



However, they rallied to win the Cup 9-8 in a thrilling finale that captured the imagination of sports fans the world over.



Sir Ben, a five-times Olympic medallist who won gold at London 2012, told Sky News: “It’s amazing to have had so many messages of support from back home.



“It’s great to see how people have got behind the Cup and it’s great for sailing for people to see this kind of racing.”



The America’s Cup dates back to 1851 and was first contested off the coast of the Isle of Wight.



However, British involvement in the competition has faded in recent years and the Cup has been held almost exclusively by Australia, New Zealand and the US since the last British win in 1964.



Sir Ben said renewed interest in America’s Cup could see Britain mount a fresh challenge for the title.



“For sure, Britain can compete in the America’s Cup,” he said.



“We’ve had a lot of British sailors and designers across all of the teams racing in San Francisco, so we’ve got the talent. We just need to pull all of that together.



“Traditionally the America’s Cup has been expensive – it’s really been a billionaire’s game.



“But that’s changing now and the guys who are putting the sport together … see a future where teams can be run commercially through sponsorship.



“That’s great for the future of the America’s Cup and the future of sailing.”



Sir Ben was cheered to victory by fans in his home town of Lymington, Hampshire, as well as thousands of supporters who lined the coast of San Francisco as his catamaran zigzagged its way towards the Golden Gate Bridge.



He paid tribute to his friend and fellow British Olympic champion Andrew Simpson, who was killed in May while training for the Cup, saying he “would have loved” the gripping conclusion to the race.



He added: “It was an amazing comeback from our team. We were 8-1 down against the Kiwis and had a huge mountain to climb.



“We’re delighted. The final race was awesome … and it was great to have been part of it.”



:: Watch highlights of the 19th and final race of the America’s Cup on Sky Sports 2 at 11am, 4pm and 7pm





Ben Ainslie: America's Cup Comeback 'Amazing'

Ben Ainslie: America's Cup Comeback 'Amazing'



America’s Cup winner Sir Ben Ainslie has hailed his team’s “amazing” comeback and hinted at a British assault on one of sailing’s toughest competitions.



The Olympic hero was drafted in as skipper by Oracle Team USA ahead of race six with the squad in the doldrums.



The crew had won just one race to Emirates Team New Zealand’s four and at one stage were 8-1 down.



However, they rallied to win the Cup 9-8 in a thrilling finale that captured the imagination of sports fans the world over.



Sir Ben, a five-times Olympic medallist who won gold at London 2012, told Sky News: “It’s amazing to have had so many messages of support from back home.



“It’s great to see how people have got behind the Cup and it’s great for sailing for people to see this kind of racing.”



The America’s Cup dates back to 1851 and was first contested off the coast of the Isle of Wight.



However, British involvement in the competition has faded in recent years and the Cup has been held almost exclusively by Australia, New Zealand and the US since the last British win in 1964.



Sir Ben said renewed interest in America’s Cup could see Britain mount a fresh challenge for the title.



“For sure, Britain can compete in the America’s Cup,” he said.



“We’ve had a lot of British sailors and designers across all of the teams racing in San Francisco, so we’ve got the talent. We just need to pull all of that together.



“Traditionally the America’s Cup has been expensive – it’s really been a billionaire’s game.



“But that’s changing now and the guys who are putting the sport together … see a future where teams can be run commercially through sponsorship.



“That’s great for the future of the America’s Cup and the future of sailing.”



Sir Ben was cheered to victory by fans in his home town of Lymington, Hampshire, as well as thousands of supporters who lined the coast of San Francisco as his catamaran zigzagged its way towards the Golden Gate Bridge.



He paid tribute to his friend and fellow British Olympic champion Andrew Simpson, who was killed in May while training for the Cup, saying he “would have loved” the gripping conclusion to the race.



He added: “It was an amazing comeback from our team. We were 8-1 down against the Kiwis and had a huge mountain to climb.



“We’re delighted. The final race was awesome … and it was great to have been part of it.”



:: Watch highlights of the 19th and final race of the America’s Cup on Sky Sports 2 at 11am, 4pm and 7pm





Ben Ainslie: America's Cup Comeback 'Amazing'

South Korea scales back key fiscal pledges as reality bites



By Se Young Lee


SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea’s President Park Geun-hye apologised to voters on Thursday after backtracking on welfare promises in her first budget, battling what she said were extraordinarily difficult conditions.


“I am regretful that not all the elders who have given me their trust will receive the benefits,” Park said at a cabinet meeting. “But this doesn’t mean that the pledge has been abandoned.”


A monthly subsidy programme that she initially said would cover all Koreans aged 65 or older will now exclude those in the top 30 percent in terms of income.


Park also backed away from a pledge to balance the budget within her five-year term. Her government will now seek to trim the fiscal deficit to 0.4 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2017, about a quarter of 2014′s projected shortfall.


A plan to pay half of college students’ tuition fees was pushed back to 2015.


This year’s tax revenue is projected to fall 7 trillion to 8 trillion won short of initial calculations, forcing the government to take on more debt to support the ailing economy.


The finance ministry says fiscal spending next year will rise by just 2.5 percent in annual terms to 357.7 trillion won ($333.6 billion), a far lower rise than this year’s 7.2 percent increase after accounting for a stimulus package passed in May.


Lawmakers from the opposition Democratic Party criticised the 2014 spending proposal, calling it too small to adequately counter the difficult economic environment.


TOO OPTIMISTIC?


Some analysts were sceptical about the administration’s plans, calling its projections of economic growth — 3.9 percent next year — and revenue overly optimistic.


SK Securities analyst Yum Sang-hoon said the government could be forced to draft another supplementary budget.


HSBC economist Ronald Man said: “If growth fails to pick up as strongly as the government expects, then funding pressures may increase. In such a case, we would expect the administration to scale back more of President Park’s campaign pledges, rather than take on more debt.”


The review process in parliament is also likely to be difficult. Democratic Party lawmakers on parliament’s budget committee criticised Thursday’s budget proposal, arguing that it will not do enough to meet the increasing social welfare needs of the rapidly-ageing population, or to boost growth.


The legislators called on the government to raise taxes on the wealthy to fund a boost to domestic demand, creating more jobs and expanding welfare.


But the Park administration has so far resisted calls for tax hikes, arguing that such increases would be counterproductive and further undercut economic momentum.


“The budget proposal for next year reflects strong determination from this government to revitalise the economy in the short term while ensuring fiscal soundness in the medium term,” Park said at the cabinet meeting.


Parliament is already in gridlock as the ruling Saenuri Party and the Democratic Party clash over issues such as reformation of the country’s intelligence agency.


The two parties have yet to agree on the schedule for reviewing the budget. They finally managed to pass this year’s spending bill in the early morning of New Year’s Day.


As economic weakness persists, data on Thursday showed consumer confidence is waning.


The Bank of Korea’s composite consumer index slipped to a five-month low of 102 in September. Though the reading indicates Koreans are still slightly more optimistic than pessimistic about their prospects, it still reflects some caution.


“Given fiscal spending is set to grow at a slower rate next year, this suggests that monetary policy will need to stay accommodative while the negative output gap persists,” said HSBC’s Man.


($1 = 1,072.3000 Korean won)


(Editing by Eric Meijer)





South Korea scales back key fiscal pledges as reality bites

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Six killed in militant attack in Indian Kashmir



SRINAGAR, India (Reuters) – Six people were killed in a raid on an Indian police station in Jammu and Kashmir state near the border with Pakistan on Thursday and militants then attacked a nearby army camp where a shootout was going on, police said.


The attack came as Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistan’s Nawaz Sharif were due to meet on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly meeting. They were expected to discuss the violence in the disputed Kashmir region.


After attacking the police station, the militants hijacked a truck, said Rajesh Kumar, an inspector general of police in the area.


“They abandoned the truck on the national highway and perhaps took another vehicle and carried out an attack on the army camp in Samba. The gunfight inside the camp is going on,” he said.


Television footage showed police officials taking positions and firing from just outside the camp’s walls and closing the main gate. Wounded policemen were being lifted out.


India has faced an insurgency in its part of Muslim-majority Kashmir since 1989 and has long accused Pakistan of supporting the militants fighting Indian rule.


Pakistan denies arming or training the militants, who cross the border from the Pakistani side of Kashmir into the Indian side, but says it offers moral support to the Muslim people of Kashmir who Pakistan says face rights abuses by Indian forces.


According to South Asia Terrorism Portal, which tracks violence in Kashmir, 128 people, including 44 security personnel were killed in the region this year, up to the latest attack. That compares with 117 people killed last year.


(Reporting by Fayaz Bukhari; Writing by John Chalmers and Anurag Kotoky; Editing by Paul Tait and Robert Birsel)





Six killed in militant attack in Indian Kashmir

James Bond Book: Day-Lewis Is Boyd's Ideal 007



William Boyd, who has written a new James Bond novel, has said Daniel Day-Lewis would be perfect to play the 007 he created.



The book, called Solo, takes the now 45-year-old spy into worn-torn Africa as the 1960s come to an end.



Boyd follows in the footsteps of authors including Kingsley Amis and Sebastian Faulks, who have both written new Bond books since the death of his creator, Ian Fleming, in 1964.



The book was launched at The Dorchester Hotel in central London with a suitably glamorous photocall involving sports cars and flight attendants, ahead of its publication on Thursday.



The author said: “If there was to be an actor to play my James Bond, I’d choose another actor who has also been in a film of mine and who I also know and who is also called Daniel – Daniel Day-Lewis – because I think Daniel Day-Lewis actually resembles the Bond that Fleming describes.”



He said Fleming once described Bond as “looking like the American singer-songwriter Hoagy Carmichael”, pointing out that Day-Lewis looks like Carmichael.



But Boyd, whose novel Restless was adapted for television last year, said it was “highly unlikely” Solo would be made into a film.



He explained: “It is set in 1969 and the Bond films are always set in the present day. They’ll never make a retro Bond, I suppose they can take my plot and update it, but then it would be different and because it’s set in the 1960s it gives it a particular flavour.”



Boyd said he was “intrigued” by Fleming, who he used as a character in his novel Any Human Heart, and had worked with three of the men who have played the secret agent – Sir Sean Connery, Pierce Brosnan and Daniel Craig.



He said: “The idea that these somewhat random connections with Fleming and Bond should culminate in my writing a new James Bond novel is irresistibly appealing.”



Boyd has written 11 novels, with many of them, including A Good Man In Africa and Any Human Heart, being adapted for film or television.



This year marks the 60th anniversary of the publication of Fleming’s first James Bond novel Casino Royale.



Fleming wrote 14 Bond books and the series has continued since his death with more than 100 million titles sold.



Sam Mendes, who directed the record-breaking Skyfall, has said he will also direct the 24th Bond film, which is due to be released in 2015.





James Bond Book: Day-Lewis Is Boyd's Ideal 007

Town in farewell to murdered April



The devastated family of April Jones will today finally pay an emotional farewell to the murdered schoolgirl – a year after she was brutally murdered.


The funeral service comes five days before the first anniversary of April’s murder and just 10 days after an inquest released her remains to her family.


Hundreds of mourners in the mid Wales market town of Machynlleth are expected to pay their respects to the five-year-old at midday.


A horse drawn hearse will carry the coffin containing April’s remains on a one mile journey from the Bryn-y-Gog estate, where she lived, to St Peter’s Church.


Parents Coral and Paul Jones and April’s sister and brother, Jazmin and Harley, will follow by car joined by mourners on foot. Many people are expected to wear pink, the schoolgirl’s favourite colour.


In a message to be read out at the service, the Bishop of Bangor, Andy John, says: “The Diocese of Bangor is holding you as a family and as a community in its prayers. You are not alone.”


April was taken from the Bryn-y-Gog estate on October 1 last year.


Paedophile Mark Bridger, 47, was convicted of the killing in May after a trial at Mold Crown Court and was sentenced to a whole life term in prison.


He insisted he had knocked down April accidentally in an alcohol-fuelled haze and had no memory of what he did with her body.


Search teams had previously combed the area around the town for more than six months looking for a trace of April without success.


Just 17 tiny pieces of bone, fragments of her skull, were recovered by detectives from the fireplace of Bridger’s cottage.


An inquest into her death, which concluded on September 16, allowed a death certificate to be issued so April’s funeral could take place.


Her family had been denied that right until the inquest concluded after Bridger refused to say what he did with her body.


Reverend Kathleen Rogers will conduct today’s funeral service and said she hopes it will be the start of a return to normality for the town.


“A funeral plays a significant part in the grieving process and the funeral of little April will be even more important for her family as the probability of such a service was very remote until the inquest two weeks ago,” she said on the eve of the service.


“Our prayer is that it will be a starting point for them as they travel the long and painful journey of healing. It will also, I think, give the community permission to bring some sort of normality back to our town.”


Her words came as it was announced that donations made at April’s funeral will be used to sponsor a five-year-old girl in a village in Uganda.


Rev Rogers said the parish would sponsor the child until she finishes her education “in an attempt to see some good out of this tragedy”.


She added: “April’s parents have kindly asked that donations from her funeral be donated to this sponsorship and we are very grateful to them.”


Justin Byworth, chief executive of World Vision UK, said: “We’re privileged that the church and April’s family have chosen to honour April’s memory by sponsoring a child through World Vision UK.


“We offer our sincerest condolences and we express our gratitude that, through these desperately sad circumstances, a five-year-old girl in Uganda will benefit.”





Town in farewell to murdered April

Asda 'Mental Patient' Costume Withdrawn



Supermarket chain Asda has withdrawn an item advertised online as a “mental patient fancy dress costume”, following a barrage of criticism.



The costume, which is designed to look like a blood-splattered straitjacket, was on sale for £20 through the supermarket’s clothing arm George.



Many people took to Twitter to express their disgust at the description, including former footballer Stan Collymore – who has suffered well-documented problems with depression.



He wrote: “Dear ASDA, nice stereotype of “Mental patients”. Something you’d expect from the ###. A f****** joke”.



“Do you actually realise how many people are hanging themselves because of being frightened of the stigma? Wording is CLEAR. MENTAL PATIENT.”



Charity Rethink Mental Illness posted on its Twitter account: “Hi @Asda please explain: ‘Everyone will be running away from you in fear in this mental patient fancy dress’.”



Former spin doctor Alistair Campbell also commented on the item on the social media website, writing: “Look what Asda’s selling… what possesses these people?”



And MP Mike Thornton tweeted: “This is unbelievable!!”



Asda was quick to react to the criticism by confirming the Halloween costume had been withdrawn from sale.



The chain posted on its own Twitter account: “We’re deeply sorry one of our fancy dress costumes has upset people. This was an unacceptable error – the product was withdrawn immediately.”



Asda added that: “We’d like to offer our sincere apologies for the offence it’s caused and will be making a sizeable donation to @MindCharity.”





Asda 'Mental Patient' Costume Withdrawn

Barclays to shut wealth management services in 130 countries



(Reuters) – Barclays Plc will stop offering wealth management services in about 130 countries by 2016 and cut jobs in the unit as part of an effort to rein in costs and boost profit.


“This is part of our new strategy, focusing on reducing complexity and competing where we can win,” a Barclays spokesman said in a statement.


“We don’t expect overall global headcount to change significantly, but some roles will fall away as a result of new segmentation and investment in technology.”


Barclays announced plans in April to restructure its wealth business so it works more closely with retail and corporate banking divisions.


The bank appointed Peter Horrell as the wealth and investment management unit’s chief executive on Monday. Horrell has held the position on an interim basis since May.


(Reporting by Abhirup Roy in Bangalore. Editing by Andre Grenon and Stephen Coates)





Barclays to shut wealth management services in 130 countries

Venezuela's Maduro considers legal action against Airbus over fault in plane



CARACAS (Reuters) – Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Wednesday said he was preparing legal action against Airbus due to a “serious fault” with the country’s presidential jet following five months of maintenance by the plane maker.


Maduro said he had been concerned about flying in the plane after it returned from maintenance in Paris, and ordered his own technicians to carry out an inspection.


“After 10 or 12 days, a serious fault appeared in one of the wings of the plane. After five months at Airbus in France – my God!” Maduro said during a televised broadcast.


“With the help of an international law firm, we’re preparing legal actions against Airbus of France.”


Maduro last week was briefly denied access to U.S. airspace on his way to China, which he described as an example of “U.S. aggression” against his socialist government.


U.S. authorities, who later approved his travel plan, said he had not been travelling in a state aircraft, which was required for diplomatic clearance. Maduro went in a Cuban plane.


In an address on live TV, Maduro added that he skipped a planned visit this week to New York for the U.N. General Assembly due to concerns about possible “provocations” against him from right-wing American opponents.


Since winning an April election to replace late Socialist leader Hugo Chavez, Maduro has been constantly alleging plots against him from opponents at home and abroad.


(Reporting by Brian Ellsworth; Editing by Stacey Joyce)





Venezuela's Maduro considers legal action against Airbus over fault in plane

Barclays to shut wealth management services in 130 countries - FT



(Reuters) – Barclays Plc will stop offering wealth management services in about 130 countries by 2016 and cut jobs in the unit as part of an effort to rein in costs and boost profit, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday, citing the British bank.


Barclays announced plans in April to restructure its wealth business so it works more closely with retail and corporate banking divisions. Further details on the wealth strategy had been expected.


The bank appointed Peter Horrell as the wealth and investment management unit’s chief executive on Monday. Horrell has held the position on an interim basis since May.


(Reporting by Abhirup Roy in Bangalore. Editing by Andre Grenon)





Barclays to shut wealth management services in 130 countries - FT

JPMorgan in talks to settle government probes for $11 billion - sources



By David Henry and Karen Freifeld


NEW YORK (Reuters) – JPMorgan Chase & Co is in talks with government officials to settle federal and state mortgage probes for $11 billion (6.84 billion pounds), two people familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.


The sum could include $7 billion in cash and $4 billion for consumers, said the sources, who asked not to be identified because the negotiations are private.


The talks are fluid and the $11 billion amount could change, the people familiar with the matter said. They said the discussions include the U.S. Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the New York State Attorney General.


The New York prosecutor’s office is participating in the talks because it is part of a working group formed by President Obama in January 2012 to investigate misconduct in mortgage securities that contributed to the financial crisis.


JPMorgan disclosed in August that lawyers from the U.S. Department of Justice in the Eastern District of California had preliminarily concluded that the company violated securities laws in the sale or securities backed by subprime and other risky mortgage loans.


U.S. Department of Justice lawyers from other areas of the country and state authorities have been investigating JPMorgan’s liability for mortgage securities sold by two other companies it acquired during the financial crisis, Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual.


The discussion of an $11 billion sum to settle multiple probes was reported earlier by The Associated Press.


The talks to reach a global settlement on the mortgage issues heated up this week after the Department of Justice told the bank that it was preparing to file a lawsuit on Tuesday.


JPMorgan is pressing to resolve its legal and regulatory issues after coming under intense scrutiny since disclosing in May 2012 that it was losing billions of dollars on derivatives trades from its London offices.


JPMorgan shares were up 2.7 percent for the day at the close of New York Stock Exchange trading on Wednesday.


(Editing by Andrew Hay and Grant McCool)





JPMorgan in talks to settle government probes for $11 billion - sources

ICAP fined £54 million over Libor, three former staff charged



By Kirstin Ridley, Clare Hutchison and Aruna Viswanatha


LONDON/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. and British authorities on Wednesday fined ICAP, the world’s biggest interdealer broker, $87 million (54.1 million pounds) and filed criminal charges against three former employees over the Libor interest rate rigging scandal.


The scandal, which has laid bare failings by regulators and bank bosses over several years, has triggered a sprawling global investigation that has already seen three banks fined a total of $2.6 billion, four other people charged, scores of institutions and traders interrogated and a spate of lawsuits launched.


The U.S. Department of Justice charged former ICAP derivatives broker Darrell Read, his supervisor Daniel Wilkinson, and cash broker Colin Goodman with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and two counts of wire fraud – offences carrying sentences of up to 30 years.


Simultaneously, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and Britain’s Financial Conduct Authority ordered ICAP’s ICAP Europe Ltd unit to pay $65 million and 14 million pounds ($22 million), respectively.


“These three men are accused of repeatedly and deliberately spreading false information to banks and investors around the world in order to fraudulently move the market and help their client fleece his counterparties,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Mythili Raman of the Justice Department’s criminal division.


ICAP called its former staff “rotten apples” and said it would improve systems to ensure compliance with regulations.


A central cog in the global financial system, the London interbank offered rate (Libor) is used as a benchmark against which hundreds of trillions of dollars worth of products, from complex derivatives to personal mortgages, are priced worldwide.


Based on a survey of what banks would charge each other for loans, traders colluded on answers that could nudge the reported rates by amounts that were tiny but translated into big profits.


Even as ICAP settled the civil probes, the firm could still face criminal charges from the Justice Department, which is continuing its investigation.


Multiple other banks and individuals also face potential prosecution for Libor manipulation. “We have a lot more to look at here,” Raman said in an interview with Reuters.


“LORD LIBOR”


ICAP, run by London businessman and former Conservative Party treasurer Michael Spencer, is the first interdealer broker sanctioned in the affair. Firms such as ICAP match buyers and sellers of bonds, currencies and derivative financial instruments, including swaps.


“ICAP and other interdealer brokers are expected to be honest middlemen,” David Meister, the CFTC’s enforcement director, said in a statement. “Here, certain ICAP brokers were anything but honest.”


Regulators and prosecutors painted a picture of brokers acting as conduits at the centre of the scheme, passing information – and misinformation – between banks that contribute to the Libor calculation.


Prosecutors highlighted the activities of Colin Goodman, a cash broker in ICAP’s London office nicknamed “Lord Libor” for his efforts. Goodman was in contact with derivatives traders at other institutions and sent out a daily email to them with “SUGGESTED LIBORS”, prosecutors said.


Those suggestions reflected biased rates, the government said, and were often based on requests by Tom Hayes, a former UBS and Citigroup trader who worked in Tokyo and is also facing criminal charges.


Hayes was the biggest client for ICAP’s yen-based derivatives brokers, which included Darrell Read and Daniel Wilkinson.


Read talked to Hayes almost daily, prosecutors said, and passed on his requests for Libor suggestions to Goodman, since a sizeable chunk of what the ICAP brokers earned was tied to the business from him.


Once in 2006, for example, Read asked Goodman to suggest a high 6-month rate, and promised a curry in exchange. If Goodman could get it above a certain number, Read told him, referring to Hayes: “the trader from ubs Tokyo will come over and buy you a curry himself!”


Even if “lord Libor” was out of the office, prosecutors said, brokers still tried to get Hayes’s requests met. “oh christ…try and bully (Goodman’s) colleague if you can dan…Tom hurting today and needs all the help he can,” Read said in an electronic chat in 2007.


Another time, when Goodman returned to the office, Read told him, “Welcome back M’Lord’ Tom has been like a little lost sheep without you!!”


The conduct stretched into 2010, according to court documents, well after allegations of Libor manipulation had surfaced in public.


Wilkinson – who now writes fiction for young adults, according to a LinkedIn profile in his name – and Goodman did not respond to requests for comment sent via the social media site. Read could not immediately be reached. Hayes’s lawyer, Lydia Jonson, did not respond to a request for comment.


“ROTTEN APPLE SITUATION”


Michael Spencer, who in 1986 founded one of the firms that make up today’s ICAP and has become one of the richest men in Britain, said all individuals linked to the wrongdoing had either left the company or were being disciplined.


“We deeply regret and strongly condemn the inexcusable actions of the brokers who sought to assist certain bank traders in their efforts to manipulate yen Libor,” he said.


But he denied the problems were cultural. “It is very sadly a rotten apple situation here,” he said.


Three banks – Britain’s Barclays and RBS and Switzerland’s UBS – have already paid about $2.6 billion to secure civil settlements for rate-rigging with British and U.S. regulators.


Britain’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has brought criminal charges against three people, and U.S. prosecutors have now charged five. Prosecutors on both sides of the Atlantic have charged Hayes, who once complained in a text message to The Wall Street Journal: “This goes much higher than me.”


The SFO has said it hopes to charge more people over Libor in the coming months and that it will not hesitate to also pursue senior industry figures or institutions.


(Additional reporting by Aruna Viswanatha and Douwe Miedema in Washington, Tommy Wilkes in London; Editing by Carmel Crimmins, Will Waterman and Ken Wills)





ICAP fined £54 million over Libor, three former staff charged