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Amanda Knox freed after four years in case that has no winners

American set to return home after verdict handed down amid extraordinarily tense courtroom scenes Rushed from the courtroom by police officers as she was racked with sobbing after she was cleared by the court, Amanda Knox was taken back to Capanne jail near Perugia and officially released with a speed that took her lawyers by surprise. Waiting for her in jail was Rocco Girlanda, an Italian MP who has campaigned for her release and who said Knox and her family would spend the night in Rome before taking a scheduled flight back to Seattle on Tuesday. “She was beside herself with joy and there was a huge cheer when she returned to the prison, an ovation from every cell,” he told journalists outside the jail minutes after Knox had sped off into the night in a black Mercedes laid on by Girlanda, on her way to meet her parents at an undisclosed location before driving to Rome. “Everyone was shouting ‘Libera, libera.’ It was like being in a football stadium and was something I will never forget. Amanda saluted the other prisoners with a timid wave – she didn’t really know how to react.” Knox took minutes to pack up her belongings before thanking the prison chaplain, Father Saulo Scarabattoli, with whom she had spent most of Monday between her final speech and her return to court to hear the sentence. “She spent the day in the chapel singing then pacing up and down to pass the time as the expected time for the verdict slipped,” said Girlanda. “She was nervously asking ‘Why do they need so much time?’” he added. “After the verdict I asked her ‘So what really did happen that night?’ and she said exactly the same thing she has always said – ‘I was at home with Raffaele’. Now the first thing she wants to do is stretch out on green grass,” he said. Earlier in the day Knox’s voice had choked with emotion – at times, to the point she was unable to continue until she had caught her breath – as she pleaded with the judges who cleared her and her Italian former boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, of the murder of Meredith Kercher. “I want to go home to my life,” she told the court. “I don’t want to be deprived of my life, my future, for something I have not done.” At the end of an intensely emotional plea, delivered entirely without notes and in near-perfect Italian, she said very quietly: “Do justice.” On Tuesday night, her request was answered. After a brief statement amid extraordinarily tense courtroom scenes, Knox and Sollecito were cleared of murder. The pair were free to go. Speaking above the roar of a crowd outside the court in Perugia, Deanna Knox, Amanda’s sister, said: “We’re thankful that Amanda’s nightmare is over. She has suffered for four years for a crime that she did not commit.” Deanna also thanked her sister’s legal team. “Not only did they defend her brilliantly, but they also loved her,” she said. “We are thankful for all the support we have received – people who took the time to research the case and could see that Amanda and Raffaele were innocent. And last, we are thankful to the court for having the courage to look for the truth and to overturn this conviction.” Knox’s lawyer, Carlo dalla Vedova, expressed his condolences to the Kercher family. Asked what Knox would do now, he said: “We’re looking forward to taking her back home as soon as possible.” Dalla Vedova told the BBC: “Justice has superseded and has rectified a mistake. It was a terrible tragedy at the beginning because of the death of Meredith. “Meredith was a friend of Amanda, so we should never forget this. We have to respect the sorrow of the family. But there’s no winner here. Justice has recognised that Amanda was not involved in the murder.” Luciano Ghirga, who also represented Knox, called the trial “the case of my life”, while Francesco Sollecito, the father of Raffaele Sollecito, said he had “allowed himself some tears” after his son’s acquittal. Speaking outside the court, he said Raffaele had “nothing to do with the death of Meredith Kercher”. He added: “I would have liked to talk to her relatives as well, as they have lost a daughter in a very cruel way. But tonight, they have given me back my son.” As the verdict announced in the courtroom in Perugia was broadcast around the world, there were cries of “She’s free!” and “we did it!” in a packed hotel room in downtown Seattle where a group of Knox’s friends and supporters had gathered for hours to await the news. People cheered and hugged as if they had just won the Super Bowl. Tom Wright, a screenwriter and friend of the Knox family, said: “To Amanda herself, we say, way to go kid. We will welcome you with open arms and open hearts.” John Lange, who taught Knox’s high school drama class at Seattle preparatory school, wiped away tears with a tissue. “It’s all good, I’m hugely relieved,” Lange said, describing Knox, who attended the school for four years before graduating in 2005, as sweet. “When I knew her she was kind, hard-working and a team player. There was not a mean bone in her body,” he said. In contrast, Kercher’s family appeared dazed as the judgment was read out. They consoled each as Sollecito’s relatives punched the air inches away from them in the hot courtroom, which was packed with plain clothes policemen. Chief prosecutor Giuliano Mignini, removed and folded his court room robes and left without commenting. Outside the court room in a packed piazza lit by television lights, there were shouts of “shame, shame” among the crowd. “She was there at the scene of crime, how can they just reduce her sentence from 26 years to zero?,” asked student Filomena Orlando, 23, who was in the crowd. Before the verdicts, at a hastily arranged press conference in Perugia, Kercher’s family said the “brutal death” of the British student had been overlooked. “I think Meredith has been hugely forgotten,” said Kercher’s sister, Stephanie, sitting alongside her mother Arline and brother Lyle. “Everyone needs to remember the brutality of what happened and everything she went through, the fear and the terror, and not knowing why.” “It is very hard to find forgiveness at this time,” said Lyle Kercher. “Four years is a very long time but on the other hand it is still raw. You would find it hard to forgive if that was your sibling.” Stephanie Kercher also suggested then that the family would accept the court’s decision if it were to overturn them. “If they decide on the information available to them and not on media hype, justice will be hopefully be done,” she said. “Whichever way that will be, we will have to deal with.” Asked if she would reach out to the Knox family, Arline Kercher said: “I don’t know. We need to find out what happened.” Meredith’s death had left a “huge absence” for the Kerchers, said her brother. “It is as if she went on an extended break and we haven’t seen her come back as yet,” he said. Knox had spent the morning in court making her final plea to the court. Standing in a packed but hushed courtroom, her hands raised with her fingertips touching, almost as if in prayer, the 24-year-old said: “I am not what they say [I am]. And I did not do the things they said I did. I didn’t kill. I didn’t rape. I didn’t rob.” Dressed in a green shirt, and black hooded jacket, the University of Washington student – who had been jailed for 26 years for the murder – said she had good relations with all her three flatmates, even if she was a bit untidy and inattentive. “I lived my life above all with Meredith. She was my friend. She was always kind to me,” she said. Kercher’s death had made her frightened and disbelieving, she said; the person “who had the bedroom next to me was killed. And if I had been there that evening, I would be dead. Like her. The only difference is that I was not there. I was with Raffaele.” Earlier, her former boyfriend had made an appeal for his own freedom. “I’ve never done anyone any harm. Never. In my whole life,” Sollecito told the court. He said he had thought the accusation would somehow evaporate. “Instead of which, it’s not been like that. I’ve had to put up with, go on in, a nightmare,” he said. He had spent more than 1,400 days in prison during which, like Knox, he had been confined “for almost 20 hours [a day] in a space measuring two-and-a-half metres by three”. He ended by asking to give the judges a bracelet, inscribed with the words “Free Amanda and Raffaele”, which he said he had not taken off since the day it was given to him, and which had yellowed with age in the meantime. It was, he said, “a concentrate of various emotions: desire for justice, and the effort, the path we have followed in this dark tunnel towards a light that seemed ever further away”. Amanda Knox Meredith Kercher Italy Europe United States John Hooper Tom Kington guardian.co.uk

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George Lopez: Cain ‘Darker Than Obama, But Whiter On The Inside’

On Monday's “Fox and Friends,” liberal comedian George Lopez all but threw the “Oreo” racial slur at Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain: ” The Republicans do know that he's darker than Barack Obama … but whiter on the inside .” Lopez also half-jokingly hinted that the Tea Party was racist after host Steve Doocy mentioned Cain had won a Tea Party straw poll: ” He wasn't serving the tea, 'cause that's crazy ” [audio available here ]. Lopez poked fun of the Republican presidential campaign at the bottom of the 8 am Eastern hour of the Fox News Channel morning show, and began by making fat jokes at the expense of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who is rumored to be considering a presidential run: ” Should he run, and should he jump in the pool? Not while I'm in there. Let me get out before he cannonballs everybody out of water .” [ Video clip available below the jump ]

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‘Occupy Wall Street’ Organizer Is Marketing Analyst Whose LinkedIn Lists Work For Investment Bankers

Trust him–he might be young, but he's a “professional sociologist.”

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The #Occupy movement has reached the little burg where we live, a sleepy little town called “Los Angeles,” located in the southern part of California, just east of Santa Monica. Lured by the smell of freedom, victory, and pizza , we went down this weekend to explore a nascent movement. The excitement around City Hall was palpable. Of course, were you watching any of the major traditional media sources you might be confused by certain elements of this movement–like whether or not it exists. The protests seem to suffer from what insider media sources often refer to as “complete f–king invisibility.” It’s easy to blame traditional media for doing what it does, it’s more difficult to blame the protesters. But what the hell, let’s give it a try. What could they do differently? How could they accommodate the expectations of a media system designed to ignore their needs? In the following video we take a hard look at the way a growing popular movement could look at completely rehashing itself in order to get Wolf Blitzer to cast his precious validation their way. It’s not easy massaging an activist message to make it acceptable to the media’s discerning eye–but the people, united, will never be defeated. Or at least, that’s what I heard. EDITOR’S NOTE: If you’d like to contribute to our fund to buy solidarity pizzas to the occupiers across the U.S. here’s the PayPal: If you can’t get out there and march – you can at least buy these people a slice. And we have $2500 worth of pizza has already been eaten. You guys are amazing!

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Chris Christie’s Heavy History: Do Extra Pounds Make Stronger Presidents?

Some called John McCain too old to be president. Now, is Chris Christie too fat to run? New Jersey Governor Chris Christie has not (and still might not) announced a 2012 presidential bid, but some of the buzz surrounding him has proven a little, uh, weighty. In response to concerns that Christie’s above-average weight may

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Pastor, Deacons Accused of Assaulting Gay Couple

Click here to view this media A gay Tennessee couple has filed complaints against against a pastor and four deacons who they say assaulted them while trying to attend Grace Fellowship Church in Fruitland late last month. Jerry Pittman Jr. and his boyfriend told WBBJ that they were attacked by several deacons at the request of his father, Pastor Jerry Pittman. “I went over to take the keys out of the ignition and all the sudden I hear someone say ‘sick ‘em,’” the younger Pittman explained. “My uncle and two other deacons came over to the car per my dad’s request. My uncle smash me in the door as the other deacon knocked my boyfriend back so he couldn’t help me, punching him in his face and his chest. The other deacon came and hit me through my car window in my back.” Pittman added that even after officers arrived, the deacons continued yelling anti-gay slurs. “If I was on the scene I would not have allowed that,” Gibson County Sheriff Chuck Arnold said. “The deputy should not have allowed it if he did.” Officers on the scene did not allow Pittman or his boyfriend to press charges while still at the church. The couple was finally able to file assault charges Friday against Deacons Billy Sims and Eugene McCoy. Additional charges were filed against Pastor Pittman and Deacon Patrick Flatt. The case will be go before a judge Wednesday.

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Obama is Hitler: Hank Williams Jr. Impersonates a Tea Party Sign on Fox & Friends

Click here to view this media Hank Williams Jr. joined the morning crew of Fox & Friends and meandered off the rails. It even had the Ailes puppet crew freaking out, causing them to disavow his comments at the end of the segment. Newshounds tipped me off on this this morning: Hank Williams, Jr. appeared on Fox & Friends this morning and, undoubtedly knowing that Williams is a Republican , the Curvy Couch Crew decided to probe his thoughts about the 2012 presidential election. The ensuing trainwreck as Williams compared President Obama to Hitler and called Obama “The Enemy!” proved too much even for these three hosts . It probably guarantees this will be the last time anyone on Fox asks for Williams’ political opinion again. How bad was it? Bad enough that Gretchen Carlson made a point of disavowing his comments after the segment was over. Williams was obviously in a hostile mood from the get go. He appeared in dark sunglasses and with his arms crossed as the interview opened. His bizarre answers that followed strongly suggested he was inebriated. That would be the best of the possibilities. Otherwise, what he said was just hostile, ungracious and offensive – even by Fox News standards. (H/T Aunty Em ). If Gretchen said that they disavowed his disgusting comments then you know it was way, way, way out there. And his remarks caused ESPN to pull him off of Monday Night Football tonight. I’m sure he’ll say that his first amendment rights were just violated by ESPN because that’s the standard tea party line of defense. I go after Rep. John Boehner’s obsession with golf, but I don’t consider him Pinochet because he spends almost as much time on the putting green as he does in Congress. If Gretchen said that they disavowed his disgusting comments then you know it was way, way, way out there. And his remarks caused ESPN to pull him off of Monday Night Football tonight. “While Hank Williams, Jr. is not an ESPN employee, we recognize that he is closely linked to our company through the open to Monday Night Football. We are extremely disappointed with his comments, and as a result we have decided to pull the open from tonight’s telecast.” I’m sure he’ll use the Dr. Schlessinger defense of saying his first amendment rights were just violated by ESPN On the heels of a controversy surrounding her repeated use of the N-word on the air, Dr. Laura Schlessinger announced last night that her decades-long career on talk radio will be coming to an end this December. “I made the decision not to do radio anymore,” Schlessinger said on CNN’s “Larry King Live.” “I want to regain my first amendment rights. I want to be able to say what is on my mind, in my heart, what I think is helpful and useful without somebody getting angry.” Dr. Laura Quits: Was She Forced Out or Were Her First Amendment Rights Really in Jeopardy? Amanda Edwards/Getty Images Dr. Laura Quits: Was She Forced Out or Were Her First Amendment Rights Really in Jeopardy? Just last week in a debate about racism on her radio program, the conservative host used a racial slur 11 times on the air. That’s the standard tea party line of defense for all their incendiary rhetoric.

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HIV could spread if birth control injections increase, warn scientists

Researchers call for new guidelines for women using family planning services in Aids-hit areas Campaigns to increase the number of women opting for long-lasting contraceptive injections in Aids-hit parts of the developing world could be helping to spread the epidemic, scientists are warning. New research shows that women who use hormonal contraceptives may double their risk of contracting HIV and of passing it to their male partner, throwing up a new dilemma for global development. The authors of the large-scale study, published in the journal Lancet Infectious Diseases , call for urgent guidance to be drawn up andgiven to women using family planning services in HIV-endemic areas. The study showed particularly that the risk of HIV transmission was raised by the long-lasting injections that are most widely used and most popular in the sub-Saharan regions worst hit by the Aids epidemic. The results present a significant problem for global health and development. Unwanted pregnancy is a threat to a woman’s life and can lead to greater poverty and deprivation for her family. The more children she has, the harder it will be to feed and educate them. While family planning is still resisted in parts of the developing world, campaigns to promote injectable contraception have met with some success. Many women have sought out the injections that last for months and that they can sometimes get without their husband’s knowledge if he refuses permission. But the study of 3,800 couples shows that there is a risk which has previously been suspected but unconfirmed. The risk was present for those who took the pill too, but it was not statistically significant because most women in the study had opted for injections. “These findings have important implications for family planning and HIV-1 prevention programmes, especially in settings with high HIV-1 prevalence”, said Jared Baeten from the University of Washington, Seattle, one of the study’s authors. “Recommendations regarding contraceptive use, particularly emphasising the importance of dual protection with condoms and the use of non-hormonal and low-dose hormonal methods for women with or at risk for HIV-1, are urgently needed,” said lead study author Renee Heffron, also from the University of Washington. More than 140 million women worldwide use some form of hormonal contraception. The study group comprised 3,790 couples where one partner had HIV (usually the woman) although the other did not. They were drawn from two existing studies of HIV incidence in seven African countries – Botswana, Kenya, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe. The researchers found that women who did not have HIV were twice as likely to be infected by their partner if they were using hormonal contraception. Those who had HIV themselves were twice as likely to give it to their partner. Tests showed that women with HIV using injectable contraception had raised concentrations of virus inside the cervix. Researchers are unclear why and a larger study specifically designed to look at this issue should be carried out, they say. Meanwhile women should be told there may be an increased risk of HIV infection if they use hormonal contraception and should be counselled that condoms will give them dual protection. In a comment published by the journal, Charles Morrison from Clinical Sciences, Durham, USA, said: “Active promotion of DMPA [injectable contraception] in areas with high HIV incidence could be contributing to the HIV epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa, which would be tragic. Conversely, limiting one of the most highly used effective methods of contraception in sub-Saharan Africa would probably contribute to increased maternal mortality and morbidity and more low birth weight babies and orphans—an equally tragic result. The time to provide a more definitive answer to this critical public health question is now; the donor community should support a randomised trial of hormonal contraception and HIV acquisition.” Aids and HIV Africa Botswana Kenya Rwanda South Africa Tanzania Uganda Zimbabwe Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk

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Factory slump and Greek debts bring double dip closer

Weak manufacturing data reported across Europe and far east, while Athens warns it is likely to miss targets on cutting deficit A dramatic slowdown in manufacturing output across Europe and Greece’s failure to control public spending fuelled fears on Monday that the continent stands on the edge of a double-dip recession that could ripple across to the US and Asia. European stock markets fell sharply after France and Germany joined Spain and Italy on the sick list of manufacturing nations, undermined by weak demand and a lack of business and consumer confidence. Measures of manufacturing activity in China and the far east also showed a weakness that unnerved investors, sending the FTSE 100 back below the 5,000 mark at one stage and leaving all the major European stock markets in the red. Markit’s closely watched eurozone-wide manufacturing purchasing managers index (PMI), which gauges changes in the activity of thousands of factories in the countries that share the euro, fell to a final reading of 48.5 in September from 49 in August. A figure below 50 indicates that the sector is contracting. French manufacturing was especially badly hit, with Spain and Ireland. A survey of British manufacturers found a decline since the summer had been reversed in September, giving the chancellor, George Osborne, a little autumn cheer . However, with little optimism among businesses, and export orders suffering a significant drop, the sector was unlikely to support growth in the wider economy or create jobs. The US proved more resilient, with manufacturing orders and employment up, adding to the recent rise in the value of the dollar and US government bonds. Economists said the gathering storm in the eurozone was the biggest factor weighing on the UK and should give Osborne some pause for thought. The chancellor, speaking in Manchester at the Conservative party conference , said he recognised the significance of the problem and would be pressing his message for action at a series of EU meetings in the coming weeks. He said: “Britain is not immune to all this instability. Indeed, the resolution of the eurozone debt crisis is the single biggest boost to confidence that could happen to the British economy this autumn. “They’ve got to get out and fix their roof, even though it’s already pouring with rain,” Osborne said. Greece warned over the weekend that it would struggle to contain its ballooning debts this year and next, adding pressure on Brussels to agree a package of measures capable of funding Athens – and possibly several other eurozone countries should they be forced to tap bailout funds. Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics, said the European Central Bank must share the blame for Europe’s struggling manufacturing sector. He said the ECB had taken up arms against inflation in a “phoney war” when a lack of growth outside a core of strong economies was the key problem. “There was a view that all the troubles in Greece, Spain and Portugal would not affect the major economies, but that is clearly no longer the case. Now the eurozone is slipping into recession, which means that consensus expectations are way too optimistic,” he said. The PMI for UK manufacturing rose to 51.1, when it was expected to show a further fall from its August level of 49.4. Back in January the survey stood at 61.4 and was heralded by government supporters as an indication that the Treasury’s focus on keeping international money markets at bay with severe austerity measures was working. Since the spring, confidence in the UK’s ability to grow has evaporated and manufacturers have joined other parts of the economy in decline. Many analysts fear the UK’s manufacturing sector shrank over the last three months, hitting tax receipts and raising unemployment, which in turn will make it harder for the Treasury to cut debt. Samuel Tombs, UK economist at Capital Economics, said: “Output in the industrial sector might have increased a bit – but it still seems likely that the sector remained in recession in the third quarter as a whole. “There are signs that the improvement in the survey in September will prove to be just a blip. A large part of the increase in output was only achieved by the fastest depletion in the backlog of work for two years. “The new orders balance only edged up from 48 to 50.5, reflecting the continued weakness of orders from overseas.” China’s factory activity typically rises in September as businesses prepare for the Golden Week holiday, but this year’s increase was smaller than the average. Yao Wei at Société Générale said: “There was no reason to be cheerful, as this was in fact the weakest September reading ever and was on tie with that in 2008.” European debt crisis European banks Financial crisis Global recession Banking Europe Europe Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk

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Factory slump and Greek debts bring double dip closer

Weak manufacturing data reported across Europe and far east, while Athens warns it is likely to miss targets on cutting deficit A dramatic slowdown in manufacturing output across Europe and Greece’s failure to control public spending fuelled fears on Monday that the continent stands on the edge of a double-dip recession that could ripple across to the US and Asia. European stock markets fell sharply after France and Germany joined Spain and Italy on the sick list of manufacturing nations, undermined by weak demand and a lack of business and consumer confidence. Measures of manufacturing activity in China and the far east also showed a weakness that unnerved investors, sending the FTSE 100 back below the 5,000 mark at one stage and leaving all the major European stock markets in the red. Markit’s closely watched eurozone-wide manufacturing purchasing managers index (PMI), which gauges changes in the activity of thousands of factories in the countries that share the euro, fell to a final reading of 48.5 in September from 49 in August. A figure below 50 indicates that the sector is contracting. French manufacturing was especially badly hit, with Spain and Ireland. A survey of British manufacturers found a decline since the summer had been reversed in September, giving the chancellor, George Osborne, a little autumn cheer . However, with little optimism among businesses, and export orders suffering a significant drop, the sector was unlikely to support growth in the wider economy or create jobs. The US proved more resilient, with manufacturing orders and employment up, adding to the recent rise in the value of the dollar and US government bonds. Economists said the gathering storm in the eurozone was the biggest factor weighing on the UK and should give Osborne some pause for thought. The chancellor, speaking in Manchester at the Conservative party conference , said he recognised the significance of the problem and would be pressing his message for action at a series of EU meetings in the coming weeks. He said: “Britain is not immune to all this instability. Indeed, the resolution of the eurozone debt crisis is the single biggest boost to confidence that could happen to the British economy this autumn. “They’ve got to get out and fix their roof, even though it’s already pouring with rain,” Osborne said. Greece warned over the weekend that it would struggle to contain its ballooning debts this year and next, adding pressure on Brussels to agree a package of measures capable of funding Athens – and possibly several other eurozone countries should they be forced to tap bailout funds. Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics, said the European Central Bank must share the blame for Europe’s struggling manufacturing sector. He said the ECB had taken up arms against inflation in a “phoney war” when a lack of growth outside a core of strong economies was the key problem. “There was a view that all the troubles in Greece, Spain and Portugal would not affect the major economies, but that is clearly no longer the case. Now the eurozone is slipping into recession, which means that consensus expectations are way too optimistic,” he said. The PMI for UK manufacturing rose to 51.1, when it was expected to show a further fall from its August level of 49.4. Back in January the survey stood at 61.4 and was heralded by government supporters as an indication that the Treasury’s focus on keeping international money markets at bay with severe austerity measures was working. Since the spring, confidence in the UK’s ability to grow has evaporated and manufacturers have joined other parts of the economy in decline. Many analysts fear the UK’s manufacturing sector shrank over the last three months, hitting tax receipts and raising unemployment, which in turn will make it harder for the Treasury to cut debt. Samuel Tombs, UK economist at Capital Economics, said: “Output in the industrial sector might have increased a bit – but it still seems likely that the sector remained in recession in the third quarter as a whole. “There are signs that the improvement in the survey in September will prove to be just a blip. A large part of the increase in output was only achieved by the fastest depletion in the backlog of work for two years. “The new orders balance only edged up from 48 to 50.5, reflecting the continued weakness of orders from overseas.” China’s factory activity typically rises in September as businesses prepare for the Golden Week holiday, but this year’s increase was smaller than the average. Yao Wei at Société Générale said: “There was no reason to be cheerful, as this was in fact the weakest September reading ever and was on tie with that in 2008.” European debt crisis European banks Financial crisis Global recession Banking Europe Europe Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk

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