Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

NI Haass talks end without agreement

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 31 Desember 2013 | 16.50

31 December 2013 Last updated at 03:43 ET
Dr Richard Haass

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Dr Richard Haass says "significant progress" has been made

Months of talks to resolve some of the most divisive issues that have hampered the Northern Ireland peace process have broken up without agreement.

Northern Ireland's five main parties met through the night in a final effort to settle differences over parades, flags and the legacy of the Troubles.

Former US diplomat Dr Richard Haass, who chaired the talks, said a final agreement was "not there" but there had been "significant progress".

He called it a "basis" for change.

'Strong endorsement'

The BBC's Andy Martin in Belfast said that although a positive spin had been emphasised by all those involved in the talks, the current proposals would need significant modification to be collectively adopted by all five main parties. "This process is not dead, but it is far from finished," he said.

The proposed deal won broad support from Sinn Féin, the largest nationalist party, but others including the unionist DUP, said unresolved issues over parades and flags meant more work was needed before consensus could be reached.

Dr Haass said: "All the parties support significant parts of the agreement. At the same time, all have some concerns."

Continue reading the main story

Although he is flying home without a deal, Richard Haass believes his efforts haven't all been in vain.

The former US diplomat reckons he has made significant progress, especially on potential new institutions to deal with Northern Ireland's troubled past.

Dr Haass hopes the Stormont parties can move these matters forward in the months ahead.

That said, the Stormont politicians don't have a great track record in resolving tough issues without outside assistance.

So there's good reason for scepticism about their ability to deliver progress now Dr Haass and his talks co-chair Professor Meghan O'Sullivan have declared their involvement in these negotiations over.

"We very much hope that the parties reflect on this, discuss it with their leadership and then come back with a strong endorsement. Over the next week we will know a lot more."

He said progress had been made in all three of the negotiating areas, especially the past, while flags and symbols had proven to be the "toughest area of negotiations".

Dr Haass, who was brought to Northern Ireland with co-chair Prof Meghan O'Sullivan in July by the first and deputy first ministers, said all five parties had "given it their best" and were "prepared to continue" with the process.

"It would have been nice to have come out here tonight and say we have got all five parties completely signed on to the text," he said.

"We are not there but I believe there is a real prospect that we will get several of the parties to sign on the text in full.

"Several of the other parties will endorse significant parts of it, and together this will provide a basis for a serious ongoing political process."

'Disappointment'

The overnight negotiations, which began at 10:00 GMT on Sunday and carried on until 05:00 GMT, were on a seventh set of draft proposals put forward during the talks.

The three key issues have been:

  • The past - more than 3,500 people died in the Troubles, and in almost 3,300 cases no-one was prosecuted. Reaching agreement on how to investigate these killings and what to do about other people affected by the Troubles has so far proved impossible
  • Flags - this issue was highlighted last year when Belfast City Council's decision to fly the union flag from city hall and other council buildings only on 18 designated days sparked street protests
  • Parades - though many are not contentious, some unionist parades that pass through or close to nationalist areas have been controversial. A small number of nationalist parades have also proved contentious in the past

After the talks, Sinn Féin's Gerry Adams said his negotiating team believed there was a "basis for a deal in the proposals put forward".

He said the team would recommend it to the party's executive, though he said the proposed deal was "not perfect".

"I'm sure there will be a lot of disappointment out there as people come to terms with the fact that there doesn't appear at this point to be an agreement," he said.

The DUP's Jeffrey Donaldson said that while the "broad architecture" of the agreement was acceptable, "some of the language and detail is not what we would have chosen and in some cases we strongly disapprove of the language".

"We entered into this process to get the right deal for the people of Northern Ireland, but not any deal," he added.

"We do not have an agreement this evening but we are committed to continuing this work beyond now in dialogue with others to try and resolve the outstanding issues that need to be addressed," he said.

"We owe that to the people of Northern Ireland, especially to the innocent victims of terrorism who have suffered so much over the decades."

Alliance Party deputy leader Naomi Long said the talks had moved negotiations forward but there were still major challenges over the issues of parades and flags.

"We have seen a huge sea change in the level of political agreement which has exceeded public expectation, particularly in delivering for the victims and the reconciliation process," Mrs Long added.

'Honest debate'

SDLP leader Alasdair McDonnell said despite some concerns he anticipated his party would accept the agreement.

He said: "We would anticipate a general endorsement from the SDLP in due course, that's not to say we're entirely happy... but we do welcome it as far as it goes."

Mike Nesbitt, leader of the UUP, said he had an opinion on the document but was unwilling to disclose it until his party had examined the proposals.

"We will have an honest debate and hopefully form a final opinion at the end of that debate," he said.

Northern Ireland Secretary Theresa Villiers expressed disappointment but said the failure to reach agreement did not spell an end to negotiations.

"I welcome the suggestion by Dr Haass that the parties should now lose no time in getting together to see how they can most constructively take things forward," she said.

"For our part, the UK government will look at how we can best facilitate this."

And Labour's Ivan Lewis, the shadow Northern Ireland secretary, said: "The failure to reach a final agreement is deeply disappointing. However, significant common ground has been identified which should be the basis for future progress."


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Five to 10 years' to restore trust

31 December 2013 Last updated at 04:43 ET

Barclays chief executive Antony Jenkins says he expects it to be five to 10 years before he can restore public trust in the bank.

It has been a difficult year for banks, with growing compensation claims for mis-selling as well as investigations into rigging parts of the market.

Mr Jenkins said that people in large organisations, "want to do the right thing - it's sometimes that they perceive the right thing differently".

He became Barclays boss in August 2012.

Continue reading the main story

A picture was painted of an industry whose instincts is to bend or break the rules, when there's money to be made and no-one's looking."

End Quote

Mr Jenkins was guest editor of the Today programme on Radio 4 on Tuesday.

He made the comments in a session with students at Brooke House Sixth Form College in East London, at an event organised by the charity Speakers for Schools, which was founded by BBC business editor Robert Peston.

The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby was also on Radio 4. He said that there had been a "progressive loss of vision of what banks are for".

He added that while many business leaders seemed to have realised the mistakes that had been made, some were clearly still "in denial" although he declined to name them.

When asked how far away banks are from serving society as a whole, rather than just the wishes of shareholders, the Archbishop said that the challenge of leadership was to make clear the urgency of a "massive cultural change" away from serving shareholders.

Mr Welby added that there was still refusal to accept the continued need for cultural transformation after the 2008 financial crisis from some in the banking sector.

"I came across senior members of the City who were still absolutely in denial about what happened in 2008" he said.

Mr Welby and Mr Jenkins appeared together on the programme, and spoke of the "similarities" between leadership of a bank and of the Church of England.

Mr Jenkins said that they shared views on "where banks need to go".


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mid Staffs campaigners honoured

30 December 2013 Last updated at 17:59 ET By James Gallagher Health and science reporter, BBC News

Two women who led the fight against one of the most shocking failings in NHS history have been recognised in the New Year honours list.

The care at Stafford Hospital left some patients drinking water from vases, it is claimed, and receptionists assessing emergency cases.

Julie Bailey, who set up the campaign group Cure the NHS after witnessing her mother's treatment, was made a CBE.

Helene Donnelly, a nurse who became a whistleblower, was made an OBE.

Figures suggested there were more deaths than would have been expected at Stafford Hospital between 2005 and 2008.

Patients needing pain relief either got it late or not at all, leaving them crying out for help, and there were cases where food and drinks were left out of reach.

Helene Donnelly worked in the A&E department at the hospital.

She raised nearly 100 complaints about the treatment of patients, turned whistleblower and was a key witness at the Stafford Hospital public inquiry.

She told the BBC she was "tremendously proud and honoured" to receive the CBE for services to the NHS, after what had been a "very difficult time personally and professionally".

Ms Donnelly said she was surprised when she found out: "It was rather surreal really, I was completely shocked, I thought is this some sort of mistake?"

She is now an ambassador for cultural change at the Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent Partnership NHS Trust and takes staff concerns directly to the chief executive.

"I hope this [honour] is recognition for lots of other people trying to raise concerns and this is also for the positive change we're trying to encourage now."

Campaign to cure

Julie Bailey, who led the campaign for a public inquiry into failings at the hospital, was given a CBE for "services to the care of older people".

Her 86-year-old mother Bella collapsed in the hospital in 2007 after being left without her oxygen supply.

Ms Bailey spent the next eight weeks sleeping on the ward after resolving that her mother should not be left alone in the hospital.

She said she witnessed "utter chaos" on the ward with patients drinking out of flower vases.

Her mother later died at the hospital and Ms Bailey set up the Cure the NHS campaign group with other relatives of patients who had died at the hospital.

Previous inquiries into care had been held in private. The group successfully campaigned for a full public inquiry which concluded in 2013.

Since then new rules, to make hospitals in England publish monthly details of whether they have enough nurses on their wards and making a criminal offence of wilful neglect to hold staff to account, have been announced.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Moshi Monsters boss honoured

30 December 2013 Last updated at 17:59 ET By Leo Kelion Technology reporter

The founder of Mind Candy, the creators of Moshi Monsters, has been awarded an OBE in the New Year Honours list.

Michael Acton Smith created the firm nearly a decade ago, but it was not until 2008 that he released the adopt-a-pet-monster online game.

The title - which targets six-to-12-year-olds - now has more than 80 million registered users worldwide.

ARM Holdings' Warren East was among the other tech leaders honoured.

The 52-year-old retired as the Cambridge-based computer chip designer's chief executive in July. He received a CBE.

Slow start

Mr Acton Smith was born in Marlow in Buckinghamshire. His first business was Firebox - an online retailer whose first product was a chess set that used shot glasses for pieces.

Continue reading the main story
  • 1974: Born in Marlow, Buckinghamshire
  • 1993: Studies geography at Birmingham University
  • 1998: Starts first business, the online gadget retailer Firebox.com
  • 2004: Forms entertainment company Mind Candy. Its first major project was Perplex City, an alternate reality treasure hunt game that launched the following year
  • 2007: Second season of Perplex City is indefinitely put on put on hold after firm's finances come under strain
  • 2008: Moshi Monsters is released to the public
  • 2011: Voted 12th in Wired Magazine's Top 100 of Britain's Digital Power List
  • 2011: Moshi Monsters announces it has 50 million users worldwide
  • 2013: Moshi Monsters wins Interactive Prize at the Children's Baftas

Its success helped convince investor Spark Ventures to back a second start-up, Mind Candy.

But the entertainment firm's first project, Perplex City, proved a harder sell. The alternate reality game used the internet, puzzle cards sold in shops, text messages and live events to lead players on a 15-month long global treasure hunt whose winner eventually netted a £100,000 prize.

The contest won awards of its own, but nearly bankrupted the firm, leading Mr Acton Smith to cancel a planned "second season".

Mind Candy then switched focus to create a simpler game for a younger audience.

Moshi Monsters launched in April 2008 allowing children to adopt, name and look after a virtual monster in Monstro City, an online world where kids can play games and communicate with other members. The basic version is free, but for a monthly fee members get access to extra features.

Disney's rival product - Club Penguin - had already proved popular, but initially it looked like the British game might become Mind Candy's second flop.

"We were getting hardly any sign-ups," Mr Acton Smith later recalled in a BBC interview.

"So, we created new characters, we created new features, new ways for kids to communicate.

"And it took about a year-and-a-half until the summer of 2009 when we hit our tipping point and things just exploded. It went viral and we started adding one new sign-up every second."

The brand now has its own magazine, spin-off smartphone app, music albums and toys. Earlier this month released its first animated movie.

Moshi Monsters also recently won the Interactive Prize in the Children's Bafta (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) Awards, which were announced in November.

Mr Acton Smith recently revealed Mind Candy was working on three non-Moshi projects, all of which were designed to be used on smartphones and tablets.

'Gadget luddite'

ARM's Warren East helped build the British chip designer into one of the world's most successful tech companies.

The firm's chip architectures power the vast majority of smartphones and tablets on the market, with clients including Samsung, Apple, Sony and LG.

Mr Smith also helped expand the firm into the computer server market, with Dell, AMD and HP among companies to begin using ARM-based processors to run data centre products.

Despite repeated rumours of the firm becoming a takeover target, Mr East has long defended its business model of staying independent and licensing its intellectual property to a broad range of customers.

"A partnership business model enables us to always work with the winners," he told the BBC last year.

"Somebody who might be the leading mobile phone supplier of the day is using our technology, but we're also working with other players who perhaps are more aspirant leaders."

ARM chief executive Warren East

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Warren East said 12 years was long enough to be in charge of ARM when he spoke to the BBC's Ben Thompson in March

Despite this, he once described himself to the Daily Telegraph as a "Luddite when it comes to gadgets".

Since stepping down from ARM, Mr East has joined the board of other tech firms including Dyson, Rolls-Royce and BT.

Netmums

Other tech-related names included in the honours list include:

  • Cathy Court, Siobhan Freegard and Sally Russell, co-founders of the parental support website Netmums (OBEs)
  • Joanna Shields, chief executive of Tech City UK, a government investment group for London-based start-ups (OBE)
  • Michael Bracken, executive director of the Government Digital Service, which brought public services together at the gov.uk website (CBE)
  • Dr Hamid Mughal, director of global manufacturing at engine maker Rolls-Royce (OBE)
  • Penny Power, founder of Ecademy, a business-focussed social network (OBE)
  • Dr Jenifer Tennison, technical director at the Open Data Institute, which advises the government and other organisations on how best to make data available to the public (OBE)
  • Margaret McKenna, co-founder of the online training provider Learning Pool (OBE)
  • Colette Bowe, chair of telecoms and media regulator Ofcom (CBE)
  • Richard Eyre, chairman of the Internet Advertising Bureau trade association (CBE)

16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Record New Year's Honours for women

30 December 2013 Last updated at 20:02 ET
Angela Lansbury and Penelope Keith

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Lizo Mzimba reports on those that have been recognised for honours in 2014

Actresses Angela Lansbury and Penelope Keith become dames in the New Year's Honours list, which features more women than men for the first time.

Women - 611 of them - make up the majority (51%) of the list - the previous highest proportion was 47%.

Football boss Karren Brady and ex-Wimbledon champion Ann Jones become CBEs, while Gavin and Stacey co-creator Ruth Jones becomes an MBE.

Angel of the North sculptor Antony Gormley receives a knighthood.

Gormley, 63, said he was "very humbled, but also delighted," and accepted his honour as "a recognition" for the art form.

Continue reading the main story

Notable recipients

Companion of Honour:

  • Sir Peter Maxwell Davies (music)

Knight/Dame:

  • Antony Gormley (arts)
  • Keir Starmer (law)
  • Michael Codron (theatre)
  • Angela Lansbury (acting)
  • Penelope Keith (acting)

CBE:

  • Michael Crawford (charity)
  • Julie Bailey (Campaigner)
  • David Bernstein (football)
  • Nicholas Parsons (charity)
  • Karren Brady (entrepreneur)

OBE:

  • Lynda Bellingham (charity)
  • Sandie Toksvig (broadcasting)
  • Katherine Jenkins (music)
  • Rachel Yankey (football)

MBE:

  • Kevin McCloud (design)
  • Barry and Margaret Mizen (young people)
  • Pete Tong (music)
  • Ruth Jones (arts, pictured)

Composer and conductor Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, who is Master of the Queen's Music, becomes a Companion of Honour, while DJ Pete Tong receives an MBE.

Penelope Keith, 73, who became a household name as Margot Leadbetter in 1970s sitcom The Good Life, said of her honour: "It's a recognition for not only my 54 years being an actress but also for all the charities with which I'm associated and I think they'll be thrilled."

Murder, She Wrote actress Angela Lansbury, 88, receives hers for services to drama and to charitable work and philanthropy. She told the BBC: "I'm joining a marvellous group of women I greatly admire like Judi Dench and Maggie Smith.

"It's a lovely thing to be given that nod of approval by your own country and I really cherish it."

Apprentice star Karren Brady, 43, vice-chairman of West Ham Football Club and former Birmingham City managing director, gets a CBE for services to entrepreneurship and women in business. She said she felt "very privileged and very proud, particularly to be recognised for the work I do for other women in business".

Other prominent women include actress Lynda Bellingham, singer Katherine Jenkins and writer and broadcaster Sandi Toksvig, plus the founders of parenting website Netmums.com, Siobhan Freegard, Cathy Court and Sarah Russell, who all receive OBEs.

In science, Met Office chief scientist Prof Julia Slingo becomes a dame for her services to weather and climate science.

Knighthoods

Former director of public prosecutions Keir Starmer QC receives a knighthood for services to law and criminal justice, with film and theatre producer Michael Codron and former Bank of England deputy governor Paul Tucker also receiving the honour.

CBEs go to ballet dancer Carlos Acosta, former FA chairman David Bernstein, actor Michael Crawford, who played Frank Spencer in 1970s sitcom Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em, and presenter Nicholas Parsons, host of the comedy radio game show Just A Minute.

Artist Derek Clarke, a member of the Royal Scottish Academy of Arts, whose career has spanned more than 70 years and who turns 101 on Tuesday, also receives an MBE.

Some 1,195 people have received an award and in total, 74% of awards in the New Year's Honours List are for people who are actively engaged in charitable or voluntary work within their local community.

Barry and Margaret Mizen, whose 16-year-old son Jimmy was murdered in London in May 2008, are created MBEs for services to young people. They set up the Jimmy Mizen Foundation to help young people play a positive role in their communities.

Mr Mizen said: "To us, it's about the hundreds and hundreds of people that support us, it's about all the work the rest of our family do, and it's in memory of a fine and decent young lad whose legacy will be one of peace and community cohesion."

Some other examples are:

  • Trevor Jarvis, Ambassador for Dementia with the Alzheimer's Society, who has used his own experiences to improve the lives of people affected by dementia.
  • Christina Selby, who founded Hats4Heroes in 2010 and has since sent nearly 10,000 knitted hats, each containing a chocolate bar, to the British forces in Afghanistan as a way of boosting morale.
  • Julie Bailey, who set up the campaign group Cure the NHS after being appalled by the care she witnessed her mother and others receive at Staffordshire General Hospital, and Helene Donnelly, a nurse at the hospital who became a whistleblower.

Ms Donnelly said: "I hope this [honour] is recognition for lots of other people trying to raise concerns and this is also for the positive change we're trying to encourage now."

Continue reading the main story

The Honours System

Commonly awarded ranks:

  • Knight or Dame
  • CBE - Commander of the Order of the British Empire
  • OBE - Officer of the Order of the British Empire
  • MBE - Member of the Order of the British Empire
  • BEM - British Empire Medal

The Order of Merit, which is awarded to individuals of great achievement in the fields of the arts, learning, literature and science goes to orchestra conductor Sir Simon Rattle and world-renowned heart surgeon Professor Sir Magdi Yacoub.

There can be only 24 OMs at any one time, making it highly-exclusive. Previous recipients include Florence Nightingale and Sir Winston Churchill, plus honorary members Mother Teresa and Nelson Mandela.

Doctor Marcus Setchell, who delayed his retirement after being asked by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge to oversee the birth of Prince George is made a Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (KCVO) - an honour in the personal gift of the Queen.

Awards for sport make up 4% of the total, with an OBE going to England and Arsenal Ladies footballer Rachel Yankey and former long-distance runner David Bedford, who was race director of the London Marathon for more than 20 years, while England women's rugby team captain Katy McLean gets an MBE.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Schumacher family in bedside vigil

31 December 2013 Last updated at 02:15 ET
Schumacher tributes

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

LIVE: Update from doctors at Grenoble University Hospital on the condition of Michael Schumacher

The family of German motor-racing champion Michael Schumacher is at his bedside as he fights for life following a skiing accident in the French Alps.

Schumacher's manager, Sabine Kehm, said his wife, Corinna, daughter Gina Maria and son Mick are in a state of shock at the Grenoble hospital.

The seven-time Formula 1 champion suffered head injuries on Sunday in a fall at the resort of Meribel.

He has been put in a medically-induced coma to relieve pressure on his brain.

"The family is not doing very well, obviously. They are shocked," Sabine Kehm told reporters.

Prof Jean-Francois Payen, of Grenoble University Hospital's intensive care unit, told a news conference that they could not give a prognosis for the 44-year-old driver.

"He is in a critical state in terms of cerebral resuscitation. We are working hour by hour," he said.

Prof Payen said that if Schumacher had not been wearing a helmet "he wouldn't be here now".

Continue reading the main story
  • Born: 3 January 1969
  • First GP win: Belgium 1992
  • Last GP win: China 2006
  • Races started: 303
  • Wins: 91 (155 podium finishes)
  • Championships: 7 (1994, 1995, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004)

"We had to operate urgently to release some pressure in his head," the anaesthetist said.

Neurosurgeon Stephan Chabardes said that a post-operative scan had shown "diffuse haemorrhagic lesions" on both sides of Schumacher's brain.

The BBC's Imogen Foulkes in Grenoble says there are precedents for people surviving such injuries.

Schumacher is likely to stay in an induced coma for at least 48 hours, or even several weeks, she adds - and there can be many months of therapy in order to achieve as full a recovery as possible.

Doctors have lowered Schumacher's body temperature to 34-35C (93.2-95F) as part of the coma, slowing his metabolism to help reduce inflammation.

The driver had been skiing off-piste with his teenage son when he fell and hit his head on a rock.

He was first evacuated to a hospital in the nearby town of Moutiers.

Prof Chabardes said the driver was in an "agitated condition" on arrival in Moutiers and his neurological condition "deteriorated rapidly".

He was taken from Moutiers to the larger facility in Grenoble.

Messages of support have come from around the world.

A spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she and her government were, like millions of Germans, "extremely shocked".

"We hope, with Michael Schumacher and with his family, that he can overcome and recover from his injuries," the spokesman said.

Former Ferrari teammate Felipe Massa, who recovered from life-threatening head injuries he suffered at the 2009 Hungarian Grand Prix, wrote on Instagram: "I am praying for you my brother! I hope you have a quick recovery! God bless you, Michael."

On Monday some fans had gathered outside the hospital in Grenoble.

Nuravil Raimbekov, a student from Kyrgyzstan who is studying nearby, described Schumacher as an inspiration.

"I'm worried, of course... but I still hope, and I will pray for him," he said.

Schumacher is held in a great deal of affection in the area, our correspondent says. He is seen as a kind and generous man who has done a lot for charity.

The former champion, who turns 45 on 3 January, retired from F1 for a second time in 2012.

He won seven world championships and secured 91 race victories during his 19-year career.

The driver won two titles with Benetton, in 1994 and 1995, before switching to Ferrari in 1996 and going on to win five straight titles from 2000.

He retired in 2006, and was seriously hurt in a motorcycling accident in Spain three years later, during which he suffered neck and spine injuries.

Schumacher managed to recover and made a comeback in F1 with Mercedes in 2010.

After three seasons which yielded just one podium finish, he quit the sport at the end of last year.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Antarctic rescue bid under threat

31 December 2013 Last updated at 04:43 ET

A rescue mission for a ship stuck in ice in Antarctica is under threat as reports have emerged that one of the assisting vessels may itself be stuck.

Fifty-two passengers and four crew members were due to be evacuated by helicopter from China's Xue Long ship as soon as conditions allowed.

However, the Xue Long has barely moved in a day and may be stuck in the ice.

The research vessel Akademik Shokalskiy has been trapped for nearly a week with 74 scientists, tourists and crew.

The ship is stocked with food and is in no danger, the team on board says.

The planned air evacuation required that the two icebreakers in the immediate area - the Xue Long and the Australian Aurora Australis - be positioned close to each other in open water, clear of the pack ice.

However, the captain of the Xue Long has told the Shokalskiy that he is keeping his vessel in a "holding position".

The Aurora Australis, is now understood to be planning to carve through the dense thick pack to assist the Xue Long.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Migrants to face NHS care charges

Written By Unknown on Senin, 30 Desember 2013 | 16.50

29 December 2013 Last updated at 19:56 ET

Migrants are to face new charges for some NHS services in England, ministers say.

They include extended prescription fees, the introduction of charges for some emergency care and higher rates for optical and dental services.

However, GP and nurse consultations will remain free, and nobody will be turned away in an emergency.

Ministers say they are keen to clamp down on any abuse of the system, but doctors' leaders have voiced concerns.

Other types of primary care services that are being considered for charging include minor surgery that is carried out by a GP and physiotherapy that has been referred through a GP.

There are also plans to introduce a new system for identifying and recording patients who should be charged for NHS services.

Continue reading the main story
  • Free NHS care is offered to anyone living in the UK who has temporary or permanent permission to do so
  • Asylum seekers, non-European Economic Area nationals who do not have permission to live in the UK, British expats, and visitors usually have to pay for treatment
  • The UK has reciprocal agreements with most European nations and 28 other countries, and under these visitors are given free NHS care
  • The NHS should claim these costs back from the relevant governments - but research suggests just £73m a year is recouped out of more than £460m at present.

The government said the changes would allow the NHS to recoup money, and encourage only those who need urgent and emergency care to attend.

Health Minister Lord Howe said: "Having a universal health service free at the point of use rightly makes us the envy of the world, but we must make sure the system is fair to the hardworking British taxpayers who fund it.

"We know that we need to make changes across the NHS to better identify and charge visitors and migrants. Introducing charging at primary care is the first step to achieving this.

"We are already looking at taking action and next year we will set out our detailed plans to clamp down on the abuse of our NHS."

'Unintended drawbacks'

The British Medical Association said it was concerned the proposals would require doctors and GPs to spend more time on paperwork and that it could cost more in administration charges than what it would recuperate.

Dr Mark Porter, chairman of the BMA Council, said: "The government's current proposals could create unintended drawbacks for the NHS and patients.

"They are likely to create a complex patchwork of charging and access entitlements where some services remain free, such as GP appointments, while others will be chargeable, including A&E visits and other services provided via many GP practices, such as physiotherapy."

Dr Chaand Nagpaul, who leads the BMA's GP committee, added: "We cannot have a situation where any patient with a serious health need is deterred from visiting a GP, especially if their condition raises a potential public health risk."

Labour shadow health minister Lord Hunt accused ministers of "putting spin before substance".

"Labour is in favour of improving the recovery of costs from people with no entitlement to NHS treatment," he said.

"Rather than more grand-standing, the government needs to deliver practical, thought-through changes to make that happen.

"Instead this out-of-touch government is left asking doctors and nurses to act as surrogate immigration officials."

The announcement follows a Department of Health study which estimated that up to £500m could be recovered from overseas visitors' and migrants' use of the NHS every year through better charging.

However, academics have argued that the extent of deliberate health tourism - where people travel to the UK specifically to use the NHS - has been hugely overstated and is responsible for only a small part of NHS expenditure.

Many changes will start to be introduced over the coming year.

The government has already announced a £200-a-year levy on migrants from outside the European Economic Area staying for between six months and five years.

A cost-recovery unit will help hospitals claw back money they are owed by other governments for treating foreign nationals visiting the UK.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Police to give unsolved crime detail

29 December 2013 Last updated at 21:46 ET

Police forces in England and Wales are to change the way they record offences from April to give the public a clearer idea about why crimes are not solved.

The "undetected" category will be replaced by a series of new ones such as "prosecution prevented", for example if a suspect is too ill to stand trial.

Ministers say it will discourage forces from claiming offences have been cleared up when they have not.

Labour said changes could not hide a recent decline in detection rates.

Home affairs correspondent Tom Symonds said the aim was to give a clearer picture of how police had dealt with a crime report by concentrating on outcomes rather than detections.

'Community resolution'

Currently police can record cases as resulting in a charge, a caution or as undetected. About 70% are recorded as undetected.

Other new categories replacing undetected will include: "community resolution" for when a suspect is dealt with without prosecution, such as when stolen items are given back; "evidential difficulties" for when witnesses are unwilling or unable to give evidence, and "prosecution not in the public interest".

Continue reading the main story

No amount of changing the statistics can get away from the fact that fewer prosecutions are taking place for domestic violence, child sex abuse and rape on this government's watch"

End Quote Labour's Diana Johnson

Police will also be able to mark an investigation as complete - unless further evidence emerges.

The government says the new framework could be especially useful in claims of historical sexual abuse where the alleged offender has died, is too ill to stand trial or a key witness does not want to give evidence.

Policing Minister Damian Green told BBC News: "Crime is definitely falling on all measures we have but clearly there've been some problems with measurement so we need to restore public confidence.

"But also, even more importantly, the police need to have information from the crime figures that actually enable them to cut crime."

The new system will come into force in Humberside on 1 January before being used in the rest of England and Wales from 1 April.

'Hollowing out'

Labour's shadow crime and security minister Diana Johnson said: "No amount of changing the statistics can get away from the fact that fewer prosecutions are taking place for domestic violence, child sex abuse and rape on this government's watch."

She said this was "despite more crime being recorded for these most serious crimes".

"And 30,000 fewer crimes of all types are being solved since 2010 given the decline in detection rates in the last three years," she added.

"There may be good reason for some of these changes but, given the government's track record in trying to hide the reality of the impact of their decisions on victims and the police, suspicions will remain that these changes are more about covering up the hollowing out of the police service the public now receive."


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

PM urged to keep border controls

29 December 2013 Last updated at 23:13 ET

Ninety senior Conservative activists have urged David Cameron not to lift border controls on Bulgarian and Romanian migrants on 1 January.

In a letter to the PM, they argue he could use a clause in EU law to prevent a "hugely disruptive and destabilising wave of mass immigration".

It allows countries to continue with border controls if they have "serious labour market disturbances", they add.

They say the UK needs "space and time" to reduce long-term youth unemployment.

Temporary restrictions

Bulgarians and Romanians gained the right to visa-free travel to the UK in 2007, when their countries joined the EU.

Continue reading the main story

How are local authorities going to be able to support unrestricted new immigrant individuals and entire families without additional financial support or increased local taxation?"

End Quote Tory activists' Letter

Since then, temporary restrictions have been in place meaning Romanians and Bulgarians have been able to work in the UK only if they are self-employed, have a job offer, or are filling specialist posts for which no British worker can be found.

These restrictions will be dropped on 1 January, having been extended to the maximum period of seven years.

Mr Cameron has said the government "can't stop these full transitional controls coming to an end".

But the letter, written by Conservative Grassroots chairman Robert Woollard and "backed by local association chairmen, former chairmen and other senior activists", says they "respectfully disagree" with the government's position.

It says a "safeguard clause" written into the EU accession treaty for the two countries "allows for the re-imposition of temporary restrictive measures in any member state if it is 'undergoing or foresees serious labour market disturbances'.

"Long-term UK youth unemployment - at 21% - is the third highest within EU and OECD [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development] countries," it adds.

'Social unrest'

The letter says it is therefore logical for the UK "to unilaterally exercise its opt-out on immigration matters under the Lisbon Treaty and extend the original restrictions to 2018 to allow the UK economy the space and time to reverse the long-term high youth unemployment trend".

"You must be aware that this is an untenable political position given the widespread opposition of the British people," it continues.

"It is also an unsustainable economic position in view of the huge pressure already placed on public services at a time when the country is still facing acute challenges within the economy."

The letter says: "How are local authorities going to be able to support unrestricted new immigrant individuals and entire families without additional financial support or increased local taxation?

"The fiscal position is simply untenable, irrational and grossly unfair - and may lead to social unrest."

Mr Woollard adds: "As a matter of urgency we urge you to call a special sitting of Parliament and bring forward a vote on Nigel Mills MP's proposed amendment to the Immigration Bill at the soonest."

More than 60 MPs have signed the Tory MP's amendment to extend the controls until 2018.

But earlier this month, Commons Leader Andrew Lansley announced the bill would not be debated until next year - after the controls expire.

Benefit claims

Ministers have refused to predict how many migrants might arrive from Romania and Bulgaria.

With eight other EU countries - including France, Germany and Spain - lifting restrictions at the same time, they say such forecasts are difficult.

Last week, the centre-left think tank the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) urged ministers to take practical steps to help public services cope with the arrival of Bulgarian and Romanian migrants.

It said there should be more funds for housing, schools and policing.

The Home Office said its focus was on cutting out the abuse of free movement between EU member states and addressing factors that drive European immigration to Britain.

Over the past month, the government has tightened the rules on benefit claims by EU citizens who come to the UK, amid growing concerns about a possible influx of Romanians and Bulgarians.

And on Monday, it also announced that overseas visitors and migrants are to face new charges for some NHS services in England.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

New deadly bomb strikes Russian city

30 December 2013 Last updated at 03:46 ET
Scene of second explosion

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

The blast took place at a busy time on a busy route, as Daniel Sandford explains

At least 14 people have been killed in a suicide bombing on a trolleybus in the Russian city of Volgograd, investigators say.

The blast comes a day after 17 people died in another suicide attack at the central station in the city.

Security has been tightened at railway stations and airports across Russia.

Moscow is concerned militant groups could be ramping up violence in the run-up to the 2014 winter Olympic Games in the city of Sochi.

The Olympic venue is close to Russia's volatile north Caucasus region.

A spokesman for Russia's Investigative Committee said both explosions were now being treated as acts of terrorism.

But a spokeswoman for the International Olympic Committee told Reuters news agency that the organisation had no doubt Russian authorities would provide adequate security for the games.

Busy market

The latest explosion took place near a busy market in Volgograd's Dzerzhinsky district.

Continue reading the main story
  • 29 December 2013: Suspected female suicide bomber kills at least 14 in attack at Volgograd-1 train station
  • 27 December 2013: Car bomb kills three in the southern city of Pyatigorsk
  • 21 October 2013: Suspected female suicide bomber kills six in attack on bus in Volgograd

Maksim Akhmetov, a Russian TV reporter who was at the scene of the blast, said the trolleybus was packed with people going to work in the morning rush hour.

He described the scene as "terrible", adding that the bus was "ravaged" and that there were "bodies everywhere, blood on the snow".

The explosion removed much of the bus's exterior and broke windows in nearby buildings.

The figures given for the number of dead and injured are still fluctuating, but investigators and the Russian Health Ministry told a press conference that 14 people had been killed.

"It is now possible to preliminarily say that the explosive device was set off by a suicide bomber - a man whose body fragments have been collected and sent for genetic testing," the Investigative Committee said in a statement.

The first blast rocked Volgograd-1 station at around 12:45 (08:45 GMT) on Sunday, at a time of year when millions of Russians are travelling to celebrate the New Year.

A nearby security camera facing the station caught the moment of the blast, showing a bright orange flash behind the station's main doors.

The explosion shattered windows and sent debris and plumes of smoke from the station entrance.

No group has yet said it was behind the blast.

An Islamist insurgency in the North Caucasus region has led to many attacks there in recent years. Insurgents have also attacked major Russian towns.

The attacks show that the bombers do not need to target Sochi directly to attract international attention - any part of Russia will do, says the BBC's Daniel Sandford in Moscow.

Volgograd lies about 900km (560 miles) south of Moscow, 650km north of the North Caucasus and 700km north-east of Sochi.

Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7624 800 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

Read the terms and conditions


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

CBI: Firms must pay workers more

30 December 2013 Last updated at 04:11 ET

The head of the UK's main business lobby group has said too many people are "stuck" in minimum wage jobs, despite an upturn in the UK economy.

John Cridland, director general of the CBI, said that businesses had to deliver "better pay and more opportunities" for their employees.

He said most firms would expand their workforce in 2014 for the first time since the recession began.

But many people could not see progression in their jobs, he said.

Mr Cridland added: "As the financial situation of many firms begins to turn a corner, one of the biggest challenges facing businesses is to deliver growth that will mean better pay and more opportunities for all their employees after a prolonged squeeze."

He added: "The good news is that wages will pick up in the year ahead, as growth beds down and productivity improves.

"But there are still far too many people stuck in minimum wage jobs without routes to progression, and that's a serious challenge that businesses and the government must address."

Rebuilding trust

In his annual new year message, Mr Cridland said businesses must support employees in "every part of the country" to progress in their careers and help young people get their first jobs.

He called for a vocational system, similar to Ucas, to help raise awareness about other routes to higher skills.

Mr Cridland said: "If 2013 was the year that business trust took a hammering on a range of issues from corporate taxation to energy prices, then 2014 must be the year that business leaders take action to rebuild that trust."

His comments came as the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) warned 2014 had to be a "year of productivity" if earnings were to rise sustainably.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Schumacher critical after ski fall

30 December 2013 Last updated at 04:25 ET
Michael Schumacher in 2006

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

The BBC's Andy Moore says fans have been gathering at the hospital

Michael Schumacher, the seven-time Formula 1 champion, is in a critical condition after a skiing accident, says the French hospital treating him.

The 44-year-old German suffered serious brain trauma, was in a coma on arrival and underwent immediate surgery.

He was skiing off-piste with his son in the French Alps on Sunday morning when the accident occurred.

The hospital in Grenoble will issue further information on his condition at 11:00 local time (10:00 GMT).

Schumacher was wearing a helmet when he fell and hit his head against a rock, his manager Sabine Kehm said.

Reports in French and German media say that the F1 legend underwent a second operation during the night.

Germany's Bild tabloid reported that his condition had worsened and surgeons had drilled holes in his skull to reduce the pressure on his brain.

Early reports had said his condition was not life-threatening and he reportedly walked away from the accident complaining only of feeling a bit shaken.

Continue reading the main story

Michael Schumacher

  • Born: 3 January 1969
  • First GP win: Belgium 1992
  • Last GP win: China 2006
  • Races started: 303
  • Wins: 91 (155 podium finishes)
  • Championships: 7 (1994, 1995, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004)

The accident took place in the French ski resort of Meribel.

The resort's director, Christophe Gernignon-Lecomte, said the former champion was attended to by two ski patrollers who requested helicopter evacuation to the nearby valley town of Moutiers.

He was subsequently moved to the bigger facility at Grenoble, in south-east France. His wife Corinna and two children are with him.

'Critical situation'

"Mr Schumacher was admitted to the University Hospital of Grenoble at 12:40 [11:40 GMT], following a skiing accident which occurred in Meribel in the late morning," the Grenoble hospital said in a statement.

Eddie Jordan

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

"He suffered a severe head injury with coma on arrival, which required immediate neurosurgical intervention. He remains in a critical situation."

The hospital statement was signed by the facility's neurosurgeon, the professor in charge of its anaesthesia/revival unit, and the hospital's deputy director, reports said.

Experts say it is likely that his brain began to swell and the urgent surgery was required to relieve the pressure, says the BBC's Hugh Schofield in Paris.

Drivers shocked
Continue reading the main story

Analysis

Michelle Roberts Health editor, BBC News online


The high profile death of actress Natasha Richardson - Liam Neeson's wife - following a skiing accident in Canada in March 2009 highlights how dangerous head injuries can be.

Unlike Michael Schumacher, she was not wearing a helmet. A helmet helps protect the skull, but injury is still possible.

Skiers who collide at speed with other people or hard objects, such as trees or rocks, can sustain serious damage.

Such injuries may include skull fractures and bleeding and swelling in and around the brain.

The build-up of pressure on the brain can cause serious complications needing urgent treatment.

Primary concerns include insuring a good oxygen and blood flow to the brain and the rest of the body, while controlling the pressure.

Professor Gerard Saillant, a close ally and friend of Schumacher, and his former Ferrari team boss Jean Todt are at the hospital.

Prof Saillant is an expert in brain and spine injury. He oversaw Schumacher's medical care when the driver broke his leg in the 1999 British GP.

The German, who turns 45 on 3 January, retired from F1 for a second time in 2012.

Schumacher won seven world championships and secured 91 race victories during his 19-year career.

He won two titles with Benetton, in 1994 and 1995, before switching to Ferrari in 1996 and going on to win five straight titles from 2000.

After Schumacher retired in 2006, he was seriously hurt in a motorcycling accident in Spain three years later, during which he suffered neck and spine injuries.

But Schumacher managed to recover and made a comeback in F1 with Mercedes in 2010.

After three seasons which yielded just one podium finish, he quit the sport at the end of last year.

F1 drivers from around the globe have expressed their shock at the news of the accident.

British ex-racer Martin Brundle, who was Schumacher's F1 teammate at Benetton, tweeted: "Come on Michael, give us one of those race stints at pure qualifying pace to win through, like you used to. You can do it."

Brazilian driver Felipe Massa posted a picture of himself and Schumacher on Instagram, with the Portuguese message: "I'm praying for God to protect you, brother!"


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Power companies 'let customers down'

30 December 2013 Last updated at 04:33 ET

Some power companies "let their customers down badly" over Christmas, the environment secretary has said.

Owen Paterson's comments came as the Energy Networks Association said all of the houses that lost power during the Christmas storms had been reconnected.

At the height of the storms, on Christmas Eve, more than 150,000 properties were cut off, with south-east England worst-hit.

Meanwhile, the Met Office has warned of more gales and heavy rain on Monday.

As well as the South East, tens of thousands of homes in north Wales and Cumbria were without power because of the storms, that also caused huge travel disruption and flooding in the run-up to Christmas.

About 600 homes still had no electricity at the start of Sunday.

The ENA tweeted on Sunday night: "Engineers have this evening reconnected those who lost power due to the severe weather damage."

Mr Paterson told BBC Breakfast power companies should have been aware that the Environment Agency was warning of severe weather.

"Quite clearly some of the power companies let their customers down badly," he said.

"It seems obvious at this stage that they let too many of their staff go away for the Christmas holiday, they didn't have enough people manning the call centres and that wasn't acceptable."

'Typical' winter storm

Forecasters say the latest storm pushing in from the Atlantic will cross the UK from west to east on Monday.

The Met Office has issued an amber warning for rain in Strathclyde and south-west Scotland and Lothian Borders, telling the public to be prepared for the risk of flooding.

There is also a yellow warning - the lowest of the three - for wind in Wales, north-west and north-east England, Yorkshire and Humber, the East Midlands, south-west England and London and the South East.

There are yellow warnings for rain in Wales, Northern Ireland, south-west England and much of Scotland.

BBC Weather forecaster Laura Gilchrist said although the Met Office had issued warnings, Monday's storm was "typical" for this time of year.

She said the rain was "not expected to cause further flooding in areas affected last week".

The Environment Agency has seven flood warnings in place in England where flooding is expected and 106 flood alerts, where people should be prepared for possible flooding.

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency has 20 flood warnings in place and nine flood alerts.

The unsettled weather looks set to continue into the new year after the Met Office issued a yellow warning for rain on New Year's Day, affecting southern England and western Scotland.

Mr Paterson said it was important that power companies and local councils had "adequate staff" to cope with any emergencies that might crop up.

He added: "We've made it very clear they have clear responsibilities to their customers and to their electors and we expect them to perform."

At the weekend, one of Britain's biggest power distributors, UK Power Networks, promised to increase compensation payments to customers who had lost power in the Christmas Eve storm.

The firm said it would will increase payments for 48-60 hour outages from £27 to £75 for those affected on Christmas Day.

Meanwhile, the Civil Aviation Authority said it was talking to Gatwick Airport to establish whether it could have done more to help passengers who were stranded over Christmas after power problems at its north terminal affected check-ins.

In more bad news for the airport's passengers, a landslip between Dorking and Horsham means there are currently no rail services between Gatwick and London.

A spokesman for Southern Railways told the BBC there would not be any services on the route for "a fair period of time", but was not able to give an estimation of how long that might be.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Smoking adverts highlight brain risk

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 29 Desember 2013 | 16.50

29 December 2013 Last updated at 03:02 ET
Man smoking a cigarette

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

A new advert highlights the dangers of toxins in smoke

A new public health campaign in England is highlighting the toxic damage tobacco smoke does to vital organs such as the brain, as well as the lungs.

The TV adverts warn how smoke makes blood "dirty and thick with toxins" which then circulate in the body, increasing the risks of a stroke.

"If you could see the damage, you'd stop", say the adverts, aimed at encouraging smokers to quit.

Smokers are twice as likely to die of stroke as non-smokers.

Continue reading the main story

Health benefits of quitting

  • After one year, your risk of a heart attack is half that of a smoker
  • After five years, your risk of stroke is significantly reduced to the same as a lifetime non-smoker
  • After 10 years, your risk of developing lung cancer falls to half that of a smoker

They are also at greater risk of developing memory problems and dementia.

The new campaign goes live on 30 December and offers support, advice and a range of tools for anyone looking to stop smoking.

'Not all doom'

Chief Medical Officer Prof Dame Sally Davies said: "We know about the serious affect smoking has on the heart and lungs but smokers need to be aware of how much potential damage is being done to the brain and other vital organs through toxins in cigarettes entering the blood.

"Smoking is the major cause of premature death, with one in two smokers dying prematurely from smoking-related diseases, and it is extremely worrying that people still underestimate the health harms associated with it.

Continue reading the main story

'Never start smoking'

Former smoker John Lee, who had a stroke at the age of 42 which paralysed his left side, told BBC News it had come "completely out of the blue".

"I had been playing golf in Portugal. I flew home, got in the shower, felt a bit light-headed and that was it.

"My twins were seven years old at the time... The children were devastated. It's really hard to explain the effect a stroke has.

It doesn't just affect you, it affects everyone around you.

"I was married at the time - since then my marriage has broken down, basically due to the stroke.

"The children have gone from having a dad that can run around and play football and do everything with them, to basically being able to do nothing.

"I would encourage anyone never to start smoking."

"However, it is not all doom and gloom for smokers looking to quit this New Year. Within five years of stopping smoking, your risk of stroke can be reduced to the same as a lifetime non-smoker."

Professor Kevin Fenton, national director for health and wellbeing for Public Health England, told BBC News: "Tar, arsenic, ammonia, hydrogen cyanide - these all have either effects that they can cause cancers or they can cause significant amounts of damage to the lining of blood vessels.

"We really want to draw attention to that toxic nature of cigarette smoke and the ways it can be dealt with - which are either to stop smoking or to switch to healthier nicotine delivery systems - for example nicotine patches etc."

Prof Fenton added more needed to be done to encourage people to quit smoking.

"That's why this campaign is so important - and doing it at the time of the New Year when people are making resolutions really will help to support many smokers to make that decision to quit."

Former smoker John Lee, who had a stroke at the age of 42 which paralysed his left side, told BBC News it had come "completely out of the blue" after he returned from playing golf in Portugal.

"The children have gone from having a Dad that can run around and play football and do everything with them, to basically being able to do nothing."

Around a quarter of adults in the UK smoke.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Burial for Lebanon former minister

29 December 2013 Last updated at 01:13 ET

Preparations are under way in Lebanon for the funeral of former minister and opposition figure Mohamad Chatah, who was killed by a car bomb on Friday.

He will be buried in the capital Beirut, where the attack took place.

Mr Chatah, a Sunni Muslim, was a staunch critic of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Lebanon's Shia Hezbollah movement that backs him.

Lebanon has been hit by a wave of attacks linked to heightened Sunni-Shia tensions over the Syrian war.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

Mr Chatah's killing deprives his political camp of a key strategist. It also sends a powerful, bloody message to Mr Hariri and the anti-Assad camp in Lebanon"

End Quote

No-one has claimed responsibility for Friday's bombing, which killed four people and injured at least 50 others.

Correspondents say Mr Chatah, who served as an adviser to former Prime Minister Saad Hariri, was seen as a moderate in the polarised country.

'Heinous crime'

Mr Chatah will be buried by a mosque on the edge of Martyr's Square near Mr Hariri's father, former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, himself killed in a massive car bomb in 2005.

Continue reading the main story

Profile: Mohamad Chatah

  • Former Lebanese ambassador to US
  • Close aide to assassinated ex-PM Rafik Hariri
  • Finance minister in government of Rafik Hariri's son, Saad, until Jan 2011
  • Remained senior adviser to Saad Hariri

Mr Chatah's allies, who include Christians and Muslims, have called for a big funeral turnout as a political statement, the BBC's Kim Ghattas in Beirut reports.

Saad Hariri implicitly accused Hezbollah of carrying out the bombing.

He blamed "those who are hiding from international justice and who have spread the regional fire to the [Lebanese] nation".

Hezbollah rejected the accusation, calling the bombing a "heinous crime, which comes in the context of a series of crimes and explosions aimed at sabotaging the country".

Syria also denied any involvement in the attack.

Mr Chatah was on his way to a meeting of the anti-Syrian March 14 bloc, led by Saad Hariri, when his convoy was hit.

The bomb went off at 09:00 (07:00 GMT) between the Starco Centre and Phoenicia Hotel, not far from the Lebanese parliament building.

The blast damaged several buildings and set several cars ablaze.

A 16-year-old who died in the attack will also be buried in Beirut on Sunday.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Portrait found to be Van Dyck work

28 December 2013 Last updated at 20:00 ET
Fiona Bruce and Father Jamie MacLeod with the Van Dyck painting

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

A hunch by presenter Fiona Bruce leads to the portrait being identified as a genuine Van Dyck

A painting bought for £400 and featured on the BBC's Antiques Roadshow has been revealed to be a Sir Anthony Van Dyck portrait worth about £400,000.

Father Jamie MacLeod, who runs a retreat house in north Derbyshire, took the artwork to Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire, in 2012.

He said he was now planning to sell the piece by the 17th Century Flemish artist to buy new church bells.

The BBC show's host Fiona Bruce said she was "thrilled" by the revelation.

The Van Dyck portrait was identified after Ms Bruce, who was making a show about the artist with expert Philip Mould, saw the painting and thought it might be genuine.

Following restoration, the painting was verified by Dr Christopher Brown - one of the world authorities on Van Dyck.

The portrait, originally bought at a Cheshire antiques shop, is the most valuable painting identified in the show's 36-year history.

'Exceptionally rare'
Continue reading the main story

See more of Van Dyck's paintings on the Your Paintings site, a partnership between the BBC and the PCF, which has published over 212,000 publicly owned art works online.

Father Jamie, who runs a retreat house in Whaley Bridge, in the Peak District, said: "It's been an emotional experience and it's such great news."

Van Dyck was the leading court painter in England under King Charles I and is regarded as one of the masters of 17th Century art.

The painting is a portrait of a Magistrate of Brussels which is believed to have been completed as part of the artist's preparation for a 1634 work showing seven magistrates.

Ms Bruce said: "It's everyone's dream to spot a hidden masterpiece, I'm thrilled that my hunch paid off, to discover a genuine Van Dyck is incredibly exciting. I'm so pleased for Father Jamie."

Mr Mould said: "Discoveries of this type are exceptionally rare.

"The painting's emergence from beneath layers of paint was dramatic. It's been revealed as a thrilling example of Van Dyck's skills of direct observation that made him so great a portrait painter."

A Van Dyck self-portrait that was recently sold to a collector who wants to take it abroad, has become subject to a temporary export ban.

The National Portrait Gallery is trying to raise £12.5m to keep it in the UK.

The portrait will be shown on Antiques Roadshow at 19:00 GMT on BBC One on Sunday.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Australia take 4-0 lead over England

Fourth Test, Melbourne (day four)

England 255 & 179 lost to Australia 204 & 231-2 by eight wickets

Match scorecard

Australia made it four wins out of four and moved closer to an Ashes whitewash with a dominant eight-wicket victory over England with a day to spare in Melbourne.

Led by an unruffled 116 from opener Chris Rogers and aided by three missed catches, they knocked off the remaining 201 runs they needed by mid-afternoon on a day that became a stroll in the Melbourne sunshine.

England had begun with hope of summoning up the spirit of 1998, when they bowled out Australia for just 162 on this ground to win by 12 runs.

Instead they created very little and blew what chances they did have as Australia, led home by the unbeaten Shane Watson (83) and Michel Clarke (six), cruised to the biggest fourth-innings target at this ground in 51 years.

"This will be the most satisfying victory for the Australian team because of the fact they have had to fight. They turned around a 51-run deficit and won so convincingly.

"It looks like the tall lads, Rankin, Finn and Tremlett, are not in any fit state to play but you might as well play one of them. Ian Bell has to bat at three, they have to admit they got that wrong. The tough call is to get rid of Carberry and say they made a mistake and put Root back to open.

"I don't know if it will make any difference. You could make changes but whatever team England put out in Sydney I just can't see how it's not going to 5-0 in this series."

With the final Test in Sydney starting in four days' time and England having been dismantled in every match so far, the odds on a 5-0 scoreline to match that of seven years ago must now be short.

What could have been a thrilling final battle was instead by the end an annihilation, another black day in a series of almost unremitting gloom for the shambolic tourists.

Midway through the third day here at the MCG, England had led by 116 runs with all 10 second innings wickets in hand.

But they ended this game once again hammered by a huge margin, unable to even get close to a side they beat 3-0 just four months ago.

Rogers played with calm authority on his adopted home ground as he steered his team to their target, his second Test century making him the sixth Australian in this series to make a hundred.

The 36-year-old was dropped twice en route, once on 19 by Alastair Cook at first slip from a catch that wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow should have claimed, and again on 81 when Bairstow failed to get a glove on a low chance to his left.

But he played beautifully, picking up eight boundaries behind square on the off side as he used the pace of the ball to glide run after run away to third man.

England had begun hoping for an early wicket to give them a chance of salvaging a win from the wreckage of the series so far.

But after Rogers' escape Cook then dropped the most straightforward chance a first slip could want off David Warner with the score on 53, and although Ben Stokes had the opener caught behind when he had made 25, there was never any prospect of more following soon after.

Cook made some curious captaincy decisions - taking off his best bowler, Stuart Broad, after only two overs, giving occasional off-spinner Joe Root a spell before turning to his specialist option Monty Panesar - and had to watch several poor mis-fields as Watson went on the attack.

Rogers was caught behind off Panesar with 31 needed but Watson thumped away in muscular fashion, crashing 12 boundaries, while Clarke went past 8,000 Test runs with the target only a few big blows away.

The end came at just before 2.30pm on the fourth day when Watson hoisted Panesar over midwicket for four in front of a celebrating Bay 13.

In an Ashes that has brought daily disappointment for England, this was perhaps the most painful defeat of all.

The losses in the first three Tests were one-sided affairs, but here at the MCG they had been in apparent control and favourites for victory. Yet they found a way to lose, and it will take a performance far superior to anything they have found on tour to escape the whitewash in the New Year.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Let Syrian refugees into UK - Farage

28 December 2013 Last updated at 23:11 ET
Nigel Farage

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Nigel Farage says the UK should honour its obligations under international law

The UK should take in some refugees from Syria's civil war, UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage has said.

He told BBC News that Western countries should agree to take an allocation, but he did not specify numbers.

Mr Farage, who has led opposition to allowing open immigration from Romania and Bulgaria in the new year, said refugees were "a very different thing".

The UK government is refusing to accept Syrian refugees, saying it is better to offer financial help.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

There is a responsibility on all of us in the free West to try and help some of those people fleeing Syria, literally in fear of their lives"

End Quote Nigel Farage

BBC political correspondent Arif Ansari said Mr Farage's call was likely to surprise many.

Mr Farage said: "I think refugees are a very different thing to economic migration and I think this country should honour the 1951 declaration on refugee status that was agreed.

"It was agreed with the UN and even through the European Court, which sadly has changed its role.

"But the original ideas of defining what a refugee is were good ones and I think, actually, there is a responsibility on all of us in the free West to try and help some of those people fleeing Syria, literally in fear of their lives."

'Miserably failing'

He said it was time for "a proper debate" about "the difference between a refugee - who fears for his or her life - or somebody moving simply for economic benefit".

While Mr Farage did not put a figure on the estimated nine million Syrians displaced by war who should be allowed into the UK, Labour wants to accept 400 to 500.

On Saturday, the leaders of Britain's three main political parties issued a joint statement backing a UN appeal to raise £4bn to help Syrian refugees.

David Cameron, Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg said the fate of a Syrian generation "hangs in the balance" with four million children caught up in the civil conflict.

The leaders said the UK would add to the £523m it had already committed and urged other nations to do the same.

Continue reading the main story

Where Syrian refugees are

  • 838,000 in Lebanon
  • 567,000 in Jordan
  • 540,000 in Turkey
  • 207,000 in Iraq
  • 129,000 in Egypt
  • 6.5 million others displaced inside Syria

(Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees)

The UK says its aid is providing support including food, medical care and relief items for people in Syria and to refugees in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and Iraq.

In a report released earlier this month, Amnesty International accused European Union leaders of "miserably failing" to provide a safe haven to Syrians.

Only 10 member states had offered to take in refugees and even then only 12,000, it complained.

Italy - like the UK - had offered no places at all, the organisation said.

More than 100,000 people are estimated to have been killed since the unrest began in Syria more than two years ago.


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More

Breast implants to be registered

29 December 2013 Last updated at 03:53 ET By James Gallagher Health and science reporter, BBC News

Every breast implant operation in England is to be recorded on a new register, ministers have announced.

A lack of records meant some surgeons were unable to tell their patients if they were affected by the recent scare over sub-standard PIP implants.

Ministers said they were cleaning up a "cowboy industry" steeped in "murky practices".

Health ministers in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland will decide if they are to join the register.

Continue reading the main story

James Gallagher Health and science reporter, BBC News


This could just be a tease of what is to come.

There has been widespread admission that regulations have not kept up with the increasing array and popularity of cosmetic procedures.

For example dermal fillers, to plump up the skin, and buttock implants are deemed to have no medical purpose so are regulated in the same way as toothbrushes and ball-point pens.

And procedures such as Botox injections, which have the potential to go horribly wrong, have become commonplace at "beauty parties".

A review made a series of recommendations including the breast implant register.

This should help women if there is a repeat of the PIP scandal.

The government still has to tackle the other recommendations such as calls for legislation to make fillers prescription only and formal qualifications for anyone injecting Botox.

The full response is expected early in the New Year.

Fresh efforts will also be made to regulate adverts to end the era of "win a boob-job" competitions.

The cosmetic procedures industry has been quietly booming. It was worth £750m in the UK in 2005, £2.3bn in 2010 and is forecast to reach £3.6bn by 2015.

However, the PIP implant scandal led doctors to describe the field as a poorly regulated "crisis waiting to happen".

The French company Poly Implant Prothese sold faulty implants containing sub-standard silicone gel with double the rupture rate of other implants.

It caused a global scare affecting 300,000 women.

'Data-free zone'

A review described the UK as a "data-free zone" with a serious lack of records about which women had been given PIP implants or what had happened to them.

The NHS and some private companies will trial a new system for registering implants, similar to the National Joint Registry for hip operations, before making it compulsory across England.

Dr Dan Poulter, health minister for England, told the BBC: "The PIP implant scandal has shone a light on what is sometimes a cowboy industry where there are some murky practices.

"What we need to do is more effectively track the quality of implants women receive and to make sure that when things go wrong with those implants, that can be acted on as quickly as possible - setting up a register will help us to do that."

The Department of Health also said it was working with the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) to tackle "irresponsible marketing" such as buy-one-get-one-free deals and competitions for men to "win a boob-job" for their girlfriends.

The ASA has already banned adverts from companies advertising "Boob jobs - more affordable than you may think" for "trivialising breast enhancement surgery".

Dr Poulter said: "That sort of marketing is irresponsible because it can change the way a woman looks for the rest of their life and we need to see greater responsibility from the cosmetic industry in how they advertise themselves and we're going to clamp down."

'Early warning system'

The Royal College of Surgeons will also create new qualifications and professional standards for cosmetic surgery.

Rajiv Grover, consultant plastic surgeon and president of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS), said: "Whilst we're pleased there is to be a clampdown on time-linked incentives that place undue pressure on the public, we continue to call for an outright ban on all advertising of medical procedures.

"People considering cosmetic surgery have a lot to think about: possible risks, their own expectations, the qualifications of the provider, recovery - whether there's a Christmas sale, a two-for-one if they book by Friday... should never play a part in a sensible decision-making process."

Vicky Ashton, who had PIP implants and is part of a campaign group for those women affected, told BBC News changes in the industry were not coming "far enough fast enough".

"What is taking the government so long and why on earth are they just piloting this scheme? It should have been rolled out months and months ago, and everybody should be forced to take part in it."

She added: "My main concern is this is great going forward, but what about the women that are affected now - what [is the government] doing for them?"

Mr Simon Withey, a consultant plastic surgeon and part of the panel which reviewed the industry, told the BBC: "The rhetoric is it's a cowboy industry. It's not. Most surgeons are excellent, but it doesn't take many poor ones to wreak havoc."

He said a breast implant register was "exactly the right thing to do".

"It acts as an early warning system of product failure which would have been helpful in PIP and it is now critical that if there are any product failures in the future that we can track patients as quickly as possible."


16.50 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger