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Ali Dizaei ‘reinstated as Met police commander’

The former police chief whose corruption convictions were quashed says he has returned to Scotland Yard Ali Dizaei, the former police chief who was dismissed over convictions for corruption only for them to be quashed, has been reinstated as a commander at Scotland Yard, he says. Dizaei, who spent more than a year in prison after being convicted of abusing his power as a senior police officer, still faces a retrial on the charges. He said a police appeal tribunal unanimously dismissed his sacking. “I am delighted to be reinstated. I have always wanted to be a Met police officer and now vow to clear my name.” There was no immediate comment from the Metropolitan Police Authority. Dizaei was jailed for four years in January 2010 after a jury at Southwark crown court found that he had tried to frame a young web designer in a row over £600. Dizaei was dismissed from the police service in disgrace, ending a 25-year career. But in May this year, the court of appeal ruled that new evidence “significantly discredits” the principal witness against him . Dizaei was a vocal critic of Scotland Yard’s record on race and some of his colleagues were said to have greeted his conviction by popping champagne corks. After his conviction his wife investigated the background of his main accuser, Waad al-Baghdadi, and found the jury at the original trial were asked to believe he was of good character, unaware he was allegedly using the name of his dead father to steal thousands of pounds from the British benefits system. Dizaei said the fact that his wife, who had no training in investigative skills, could uncover this, showed how poor the investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission had been. During the appeal hearing it also emerged that Baghdadi told the jury he was born and lived in Iraq, when he was born in Iran. Baghdadi had also given the jury the wrong information about his date of birth and had not testified under his real name. The court of appeal found he had “maintained those false details … on oath before the jury” and was helped to enter the UK by a false document as he escaped “the cauldron of Iraq/Iran”. Ali Dizaei Metropolitan police Police London Haroon Siddique guardian.co.uk

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European debt crisis: Austria votes on euro rescue deal

The Austrian parliament will debate the expansion of the European financial stability facility, after Germany yesterday became the latest country to back the plan 8.34am: Taking advice from George Soros is a little like inviting the fox round to help redecorate the hen house. But “The Man Who Broke the Bank of England” has written a very interesting editorial in the Financial Times, advising Europe’s leaders on how to tackle the crisis. Reassuringly titled ” How to stave off a second Great Drepression “, Soros argues that Europe’s leaders have lost their grip on the crisis – and presents a radical three-point plan to prevent a Greek default ripping through the EU. 1) Agree a new treaty creating a common treasury for the eurozone. 2) Give the European Central Bank temporary control of Europe’s major banks, in return for loan guarantees and “permanent recapitalisation” 3) Drive down Italy and Spain’s borrowing costs to around 1% while they rebuilt their finances (by making it profitable for banks to buy their debt and then bank these bonds with the ECB). Soros argues this would end the immediate “acute phase of the euro crisis”, and persuade the financial markets that a permanent fix could be agreed. The longer-term solution would be more complicated because the regime imposed by the ECB would leave no room for fiscal stimulus and the debt problem could not be resolved without growth. How to create viable fiscal rules for the euro would be left to the treaty negotiations. The course of action outlined here does not require leveraging or increasing the size of the EFSF but it is more radical because it puts the banks under European control. That is liable to arouse the opposition of both the banks and the national authorities. Only public pressure can make it happen. Public pressure – that’s you lot. Anyone reckon it would work? The whole article can be read behind the FT’s registration wall . 8.09am: Europe’s stock markets have opened, and it’s a sea of red electronic ink as most shares fall. The FTSE 100 is down 62 points at 5133, around 1.2% lower. Similar losses in other markets, with the German DAX falling 1.5% and the French CAC down 1.2%. Not major swings, but not terribly encouraging. The catalyst for the sell-off appears to be poor retail sales figures from Germany, which suffered their biggest fall in four years. The Federal Statistics Office reported that retail sales, adjusted for inflation and seasonal swings, slumped 2.9% in August compared with July. That has increased fears that Europe’s economic powerhouse is slowing down. These monthly retail figures are notoriously volatile, but economists warned that the euro crisis has probably deterred many German consumers from splashing out on ‘big-ticket’ items. As Christian Schulz from Berenberg Bank put it: Germany will only fully enjoy higher domestic demand once this uncertainty is lifted. 7.58am: Here’s the agenda for today’s main events. As well as the political action, there’s a clutch of important eurozone economic data • Austria starts debating the EFSF package – 10am CET (9am BST) • Eurozone consumer price index estimate for September – 11am CET (10am BST) • Eurozone unemployment rate for August – 11am CET (10am BST) • George Papandreou and Nicolas Sarkozy meet in Paris – 5pm CET (4pm BST) 7.47am: Political analysts are pretty confident that Austria will approve the EFSF expansion, as the ruling coalition has a healthy majority (it holds 108 out of the 183 seats in parliament). Reuters has the details: The Social Democrats and their conservative People’s Party coalition partners support the plan and need only a simple majority in the lower house. Nearly all members of the opposition Greens will also vote for the step, party finance spokesman Werner Kogler said, while far-right opposition parties oppose further bailouts in principle. If the EFSF is increased to €440bn then Austria’s contribution would almost double to €21.6bn euros, from €12.2bn. Last month, there was a brief wobble in the markets after an Austrian committee refused to fast-track the EFSF approval vote. 7.31am: Good morning. Today, it’s Austria ‘s turn to vote on the proposal to expand the European financial stability facility, and hand it new powers to help contain the euro crisis. For Greece , it’s another day of attempting to persuade international lenders to disgorge the next chunk of bailout cash. Prime minister George Papandreou is expected to meet with France’s Nicolas Sarkozy later today. Japan has responded to the crisis overnight by intervening in the currency markets again – more details to follow. And in the City, investors are still caught between hope and fear, with the FTSE 100 expected to drop a little this morning. With London basking in a little heat wave today, traders may not be in the mood for anything too energetic. Can we expect a quiet day on the trading floors? European debt crisis Euro Austria Greece Germany Europe European commission Banking Global economy Graeme Wearden Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk

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Sock puppets, twitterjacking and the art of digital fakery

From the ‘IRA video’ to Dick Cheney’s baboon, it’s getting easier than ever to lie in cyberspace – and harder to spot the truth In the 1970s, Italian philosopher Umberto Eco took a trip through the US. He stopped off at wax museums, Las Vegas and Disneyland and found a dense, semiotic landscape of fakes that trumped the relatively boring desert of the real. At one point on his journey, Eco wrote: “When, in the space of 24 hours, you go (as I did deliberately) from the fake New Orleans of Disneyland to the real one, and from the wild river of Adventureland to a trip on the Mississippi, where the captain of the paddle-wheel steamer says it is possible to see alligators on the banks of the river and then you don’t see any, you risk feeling homesick for Disneyland, where the wild animals don’t have to be coaxed. Disneyland tells us that technology can give us more reality than nature can.” I reread Eco’s Travels in Hyperreality recently when thinking about the manifold kinds of fakery in the digital age – fake Twitter feeds, phoney Facebook accounts, staged internet suicides , and those Wikipedia pages undetectably mined with lies. Today’s digital technology offers us even more chances than Disneyland ever could to revel in hyperreal – or perhaps that should read cyberreal – fakery. And we eagerly explore those opportunities for reasons about which Eco was unwittingly prescient when in 1975 he wrote “the frantic desire for the Almost Real arises only as a neurotic reaction to the vacuum of memories; the Absolute Fake is offspring of the unhappy awareness of a present without depth.” Hence, perhaps, some of my favourite satirical fake Twitter feeds. Such as ” Dick Cheney “: “Won a baboon on eBay. Condition as-is, but I’m going to use the little guy for parts anyway. Never know when the ticker might blow a valve.” Or ” Osama Bin Laden “: “Door-tag from UPS Ground says hazardous materials can’t be delivered – curse the infidels! Off to UPS depot.” Or Transformers director “Michael Bay”: “No, I don’t know who ‘Fellini’ is and quite frankly I don’t give a shit.” Hence, too, ITV’s risible recent booboo when it had to apologise for showing footage purporting to be from an IRA propaganda video that turned out to be footage from a video game. Its documentary Exposure was aimed at showing links between Gadaffi and the IRA. But what was hilarious about the story was not so much ITV’s apology, but what Marek Spanel, chief executive of the game’s developer Bohemia Interactive Studio , told games website Spong: “We consider this as a bizarre appreciation of the level of realism incorporated into our games.” The game looked so real that it could pass as something better than a fake. Or, too, phoney Facebook pages such as the one purporting to be that of a teacher in Bloomington, Indiana and including inappropriate messages to students, such as: “Happy birthday, you have my permission to get intoxicated.” Now police are considering bringing charges of identity theft – if they can find the culprit. Perhaps Jennie Bone should also ask the police about her identity theft. Earlier this year, her husband Peter Bone MP raised questions in the house about tweets purporting to be from his wife that were really concocted by some so-far unidentified satirist . The impersonator posted comments on Twitter such as, “All eyes on PMQs – will Mr Cameron do his best to give me pleasure today? I live in hope”; “Liberal euronut bias even in Daily Mail today – is nothing sacred? EU won’t bribe me with cheap phone bill”; and “Preparing stuffed marrow for dinner.” Peter Bone told the Commons that his wife’s twitterjacker “could put something racist or pornographic on at any time”. Perhaps, but it seems unlikely: many fake Twitter feeds risk diverging significantly from the impersonated’s real views or tones only at the risk of losing coveted plausibility. Last year, for instance, the great German philosopher Jürgen Habermas was twitterjacked. At 5.38pm on 29 January, “Jürgen Habermas” tweeted: “It’s true that the internet has reactivated the grass-roots of an egalitarian public sphere of writers and readers.” At 5.40pm: “It also counterbalances the deficits from the impersonal and asymmetrical character of broadcasting insofar as…” At 5.41pm: “…it reintroduces deliberative elements in communication. Besides that, it can undermine the censorship of authoritarian regimes…” At 5.44pm: “But the rise of millions of fragmented discussions across the world tend instead to lead to fragmentation of audiences into isolated publics.” I fed these tweets into Google and found that they were all taken from footnote three to the English translation of Habermas’s funtime 2006 paper Political Communication in Media Society: Does Democracy Still Enjoy an Epistemic Dimension? Somebody had tweeted Habermas’s real words without his imprimatur – hardly the hoax of the century. But Habermas told me later: “I t irritated me because the sender’s identity was a fake .” Neither fake Jennie Bone nor phoney Jürgen Habermas, though, was as contemptible as what Professor Orlando Figes did. The historian posted disparaging reviews of books by rivals on Amazon, using the alias “historian” – and thus making him guilty of what’s known as sock puppetry . His posts described Rachel Polonsky’s book Molotov’s Magic Lantern “hard to follow” and Robert Service’s Comrades “awful”, while praising his study of Soviet family life, The Whisperers , for leaving ” the reader awed, humbled, yet uplifted “. To do a spot of sock puppetry or twitterjacking is so technically easy that, for some, it becomes irresistible. It can boost your reputation and damage someone else’s – until that horrible moment you get found out. One of the lures doing so is, as Eco found, dull reality gets trumped by fakery. In dreary reality, the lesbian blogger in Damascus is an uninterestingly heterosexual American studying in Edinburgh. It’s perhaps fitting that some of this fakery touched on the Middle East, since it was there that, according to the late French philosopher of the hyperreal Jean Baudrillard , one of the modern world’s biggest fakes, namely the first Gulf war, happened – or, rather, did not . Baudrillard argued that even though real violence happened in this alleged conflict, the US-led coalition was fighting a virtual war while the Iraqis tried to fight a traditional one – the two could not entirely meet. The suggestion that what happened in Kuwait and Iraq in 1990-91 amounted to war was therefore, Baudrillard contended, a fake: rather it was “an atrocity masquerading as war”. This is an age in which technology makes it easier than ever to lie or concoct fakes, but, quite often, makes it harder than ever to prevent oneself being found out. Michael Bay recently digitally inserted old footage of a chase sequence from his 2005 flop The Island in Transformers: Dark of the Moon – but was quickly exposed by bloggers. The speed with which a fake is exposed is perhaps the only heartening aspect of this story. In another example, adventurer Greg Mortenson was exposed for writing a bestseller that partially faked his experiences among Pakistani villagers. He was hardly the first faux memoirist; indeed, you could sense Guardian journalists shaking their heads sadly as they typed: “The troubled world of book publishing has become almost wearily accustomed to receiving yet more bad news of a critically acclaimed memoir that turns out to have been partly or entirely fabricated .” Mortenson is author of the bestselling Three Cups of Tea , a memoir so convincing and moving that not only did the book sell 4m copies, but Barack Obama gave $100,000 of his Nobel prize to Mortenson’s Central Asia Institute. It tells of how he stumbled into the village of Korphe, where locals saved his life and inspired him to give something back by devoting himself to building schools in the area. Only one problem: according to fellow adventurer Jon Krakauer, who has written an ebook called Three Cups of Deceit, none of that happened. “The first eight chapters of Three Cups of Tea are an intricately wrought work of fiction presented as fact,” Krakauer said, accusing Mortenson of “fantasy, audacity and an apparently insatiable hunger for esteem”. The extent of the fake is still being unravelled. A similar apparently insatiable hunger for esteem is, it is claimed, what motivated Independent journalist Johann Hari to plagiarise quotes for his interviews . In his initial mea culpa, Hari denied plagiarism : “When you interview a writer … they will sometimes make a point that sounds clear when you hear it, but turns out to be incomprehensible or confusing on the page. In those instances, I have sometimes substituted a passage they have written or said more clearly elsewhere on the same subject for what they said to me, so the reader understands their point as clearly as possible.” That was only part of his transgression. He also used a sock puppet “David r” to edit his Wikipedia profile and malign his critics. In one sense, perhaps, the Johann Hari who won many awards for his reporting is, like Disneyland’s fake New Orleans, a hyperreal construct. Possibly, the actual Johann Hari suspected his intolerable mediocrity and so re-presented himself through online fakery. And, just as Eco felt a nostalgia for the fake Mississippi paddle-steamer trip when going on the phoney Disneyland one, so the disgraced Johann Hari may feel nostalgia for his faked-up hyperreal self. Hari is yet another example of what human beings do given half the chance – namely, present themselves as what they are not. Remember Second Life? Me neither, but apparently it allowed mediocre muppets (such as myself) to reinvent themselves as sexy avatars, as hyperreal projections of their fantasies. The digital age facilitates the creation of such alternative identities in cyberspace. Philosopher Slavoj Žižek in The Cyberspace Real writes: “The ‘real’ upon which cyberspace encroaches is thus the disavowed fantasmatic ‘passionate attachment’, the traumatic scene which not only never took place in ‘real life,’ but was never even consciously fantasized”. Žižek writes that online we can create a “space of false disidentification”, by which he means we can put on a mask to reveal who we want to be if not who we truly are. “Is this logic of disidentification not discernible from the most elementary case of ‘I am not only an American (husband, worker, democrat, gay …), but, beneath all these roles and masks, a human being, a complex unique personality’ (where the very distance towards the symbolic feature that determines my social place guarantees the efficiency of this determination), up to the more complex case of cyberspace playing with one’s multiple identities?” Furthermore, online we can assume or play with fake identities – sadist, masochist, toxic blog-poster, cookie-jar-collecting weirdo – that we would never admit to or condone in the real world. But Žižek spots a lie in this purported revelation of our true selves online: “[T]he much celebrated playing with multiple, shifting personas (freely constructed identities) tends to obfuscate (and thus falsely liberate us from) the constraints of social space in which our existence is caught.” Facebook friends may well not be real ones; losing yourself in your World of Warfare avatars’ lifestyle issues wastes valuable time you could spend changing your real world. There is so much digital-age fakery that scepticism is readily engendered by anything that might seem phoney. When, for instance, Alex Thomas and Scott Jones were photographed snogging in the street during the Vancouver ice-hockey riots earlier this year, some thought the picture was fake . The shot looked so much like a photographer’s wish fulfilment, it had to be phoney . But it wasn’t. Viktor Mayer-Schönberger , professor of internet governance and regulation at the Oxford Internet Institute, says: “The digital age is difficult. We’re in a Foucauldian postmodern world where we can’t tell the truth from fakery.” Mayer-Schönberger argues that several things are happening in the digital age that undermine our ability to tell the fake from the real. “We see more and more of plagiarism in the digital age than in the analogue.” But what is more problematic, he argues, is when faked information or faked personas pose as authentic. “In George W Bush’s presidential campaign against John Kerry there was a report claiming Kerry’s military record was faked. The internet was very fast as revealing that document was a forgery. Because it was put online, several experts saw that the document was typed on a typewriter that didn’t exist in the 1970s and so the document was quickly exposed as a fake.” This is heartening – the internet being the solution to, rather than cause of, fakery. But, for Mayer-Schönberger, the problem in the digital era is that we don’t have heuristics or rules of thumb to expose its characteristic fakes. “In the digital world, by contrast with the analogue, the idea of original and copy doesn’t apply any more.” He points out that Adobe now advertises its flagship upgrade project as being able to take two photographs of a person and to transfer a smile seamlessly from one image to the other. There are also digital services in the US that will remove your ex-partner from your photos. “Is that fakery? Yes. Is that ethically problematic? I don’t know, but legally it could be odd. Imagine your ex is charged with murder and she comes to you asking for those photos of your trip to Hawaii – which were taken at the same time as the murder took place somewhere else – as evidence to clear her name. But you’ve had her erased from the images. The technical tools are powerful but the social or legal or ethical tools can’t keep up.” Cyberspace, he argues, is so riven with fakes and errors that institutions have been compelled to take remedial action to maintain their integrity. Take Wikipedia. It had a crowdsourcing model of information dissemination – whereby entries could be written and corrected by anybody, the hopeful aim being that this process would result in pages that were unimpeachably true (a beautiful dream, but beautiful nonetheless). “But there was a problem,” says Mayer-Schönberger, “that there was a lot inaccuracy and fake information. Wikipedia needed to develop structures to overcome this problem and basically this has involved the return to an old hierarchy that the crowdsourcing model was supposed to overcome. Now you trust not the editor but the super-editor or the super-super editor. It’s hierarchy of trust.” So what’s his prognosis for online fakery? “It’s going to get much worse because technical rules to stop it are often almost impossible to implement. When you send a jpeg you may have photoshopped it but there’s no way of the recipient determining what has been photoshopped. You could just say it has been cropped rather than that the content has been changed – somebody taken out of the picture, someone else put in – but it is almost impossible to prove. Increasingly, you can’t tell truth from lies in the digital age.” Mayer-Schönberger and I conducted this interview on Skype while he was holidaying in the Austrian Alps. At one point, he held up his webcam to show me marvellous views of lakes and mountains. Or did he? Given what digital tools are capable of, perhaps that wasn’t Austria or Viktor Mayer-Schönberger at all. Internet Philosophy Stuart Jeffries guardian.co.uk

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Stone-age toddlers had art lessons, study says

Research on Dordogne cave art shows children learned to finger-paint in palaeolithic age, approximately 13,000 years ago Stone age toddlers may have attended a form of prehistoric nursery where they were encouraged to develop their creative skills in cave art, say archaeologists. Research indicates young children expressed themselves in an ancient form of finger-painting. And, just as in modern homes, their early efforts were given pride of place on the living room wall. A Cambridge University conference on the archaeology of childhood on Friday reveals a tantalising glimpse into life for children in the palaeolithic age, an estimated 13,000 years ago. Archaeologists at one of the most famous prehistoric decorated caves in France, the complex of caverns at Rouffignac in the Dordogne known as the Cave of a Hundred Mammoths, have discovered that children were actively helped to express themselves through finger fluting – running fingers over soft red clay to produce decorative crisscrossing lines, zig-zags and swirls. The stunning drawings, including 158 depictions of mammoths, 28 bisons, 15 horses, 12 goats, 10 woolly rhinoceroses, four human figures and one bear, form just a small proportion of the art found within the five-mile cave system. The majority of the drawings are flutings covering the walls and roofs of the many galleries and passages in the complex. One chamber is so rich in flutings by children it is believed to be an area set aside for them. The marks of four children, estimated to be aged between two and seven, have been identified there. “It suggests it was a special place for children. Adults were there, but the vast majority of artwork is by children,” said Jess Cooney, a PhD student at the university’s archaeology department. “It’s speculation, but I think in this particular chamber children were encouraged to make more art than adults. It could have been a playroom where the children gathered or a room for practice where they were encouraged to make these marks in order that they could grow into artists and make the beautiful paintings and engravings we find throughout the cave, and throughout France and Spain. Or it could have been a room used for a ritual for particular children, perhaps an initiation of sorts.” The presence of children’s art was first revealed in 2006 by archaeologists Leslie Van Gelder, of Walden University, in the US, and her husband Kevin Sharpe. Cooney, working alongside Van Gelder, has spent two years analysing the presence of the hunter-gatherer offspring. Flutings thought to be by a five-year-old girl are the most prolific throughout the cave system. Work by four adults has also been identified, though it is possible there were two further adults present. The juxtaposition of the flutings of individuals indicate the relationships between the cave dwellers, the researchers say. For example, the markings show that one seven-year-old girl was most often in the company of the smallest of the adults, probably a male and possibly an older brother. “Some of the children’s flutings are high up on walls and on the ceilings, so they must have been held up to make them or have been sitting on someone’s shoulders,” said Cooney. Flutings by the two-year-old suggest the child’s hand was guided by an adult. Cooney said: “The flutings and fingers are very controlled, which is highly unusual for a child of that age, and suggests it was being taught. The research shows us that children were everywhere, even in the deepest, darkest, caves, furthest from the entrance. They were so involved in the art you really begin to question how heavily they were involved in everyday life. “To be honest, I think there were probably very few restrictions on what children were allowed to do, and where they were allowed to go, and who they were allowed to go with. “The art shows us this is not an activity where children were running amok. It shows collaboration between children and adults, and adults encouraging children to make these marks. This was a communal activity.” The significance of finger flutings, also found in other caves in France, Spain, New Guinea and Australia, has been widely debated in archaeological circles. Some regard the marks as doodlings, prehistoric graffiti, while others suggest rituals. “We don’t know why people made them. We can make guesses like they were for initiation rituals, for training of some kind, or simply something to do on a rainy day,” said Cooney. “In addition to the simple, meandering lines, there are flutings of animals and shapes that appear to be crude outlines of faces, almost cartoon-like in appearance. There are hut shapes called tectiforms, markings thought to have a symbolic meaning which are only found in a very specific area of France. Cooney said the object of her research was “to allow prehistoric children to have a voice”, because so much archaeological study focused on men’s activities. “What I found in Rouffignac is that the children are screaming from the walls to be heard. Their presence is everywhere. And there is a five-year-old girl constantly shouting: ‘I wanna paint, I wanna paint’.” Archaeology France Europe Caroline Davies guardian.co.uk

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Michael Jackson death trial hears of doctor’s panic

Bodyguard tells court Conrad Murray had him take away IV drip and medicines from near body A former bodyguard for Michael Jackson has testified that the pop star’s doctor asked him to grab vials of medicine and an IV bag before an ambulance was called for the singer on the day he died. Witnesses on the third day of the involuntary manslaughter trial of Dr Conrad Murray over Jackson’s 2009 death described a chaotic scene at the singer’s mansion. Prosecutors say Murray, who has admitted giving Jackson the powerful anaesthetic propofol that morning as a sleep aid, had discovered Jackson was not breathing at around 11.56am. Jackson’s personal chef described Murray running down the stairs at the singer’s Los Angeles mansion between 12.05pm and 12.10pm on 25 June 2009. “His energy was very nervous and frantic and he was shouting: ‘Get help, get security, get [Jackson's son] Prince,’” Kai Chase said. Bodyguard Alberto Alvarez said he was one of the first members of the household to arrive in Jackson’s bedroom. “While I was standing at the foot of the bed, he [Murray] reached over and grabbed a handful of vials and then he said ‘Here, put them in a bag,’” Alvarez said. Alvarez said Murray pointed at an IV stand by Jackson’s bed and told him to take away one of the saline bags hanging there. The drip bag contained “what appeared to me like a milky white substance. I recall seeing it at the bottom of the bag.” Prosecutors say the milky substance was propofol, which authorities deemed to be the main cause of Jackson’s death. Prosecutors have suggested Murray was trying to cover up evidence of the drugs he had given Jackson by having them bagged up and by not immediately calling for an ambulance. Murray’s defence lawyer, Ed Chernoff, asked Alvarez about how, according to his testimony, he had the time within a minute or less of walking into Jackson’s bedroom to usher the children out the door, bag up the drugs and take down an IV bag before calling for an ambulance at 12.20pm. “I’m very efficient, sir,” Alvarez replied. Asked why he complied with Murray’s request to remove the bag and vials of medicine, Alvarez told the court: “I thought we were packing to get him ready to go to the hospital.” Murray’s defence team has argued that Jackson gave himself sedatives and extra propofol when the doctor was out of the room and the additional dose killed him. The trial continues. Conrad Murray Michael Jackson United States guardian.co.uk

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Ofsted tightens rules for rating schools as outstanding

Inspectors have been told to pay more attention to pupils’ behaviour, the quality of teaching, and children’s ability to read Fewer schools will be rated outstanding from next year, inspectors have said. The move comes after Michael Gove, the education secretary, said many schools awarded the ranking did not deserve it . Under rules coming into force in January, inspectors will pay more attention to pupils’ behaviour, the quality of teaching, and children’s ability to read. They will also spend more time scrutinising whether schools are narrowing the gap between disadvantaged pupils and their peers. Miriam Rosen, Ofsted’s chief inspector, said she expected it would become “more difficult to achieve the accolade of outstanding”. Ofsted’s most recent annual report , published in November, showed that 13% of schools in England were outstanding, 43% were good, 37% were satisfactory and 8% were inadequate. Earlier this month Gove told a conference on school leadership that it was “a worry to me that so many schools are still judged as outstanding overall when they have not achieved an outstanding in their teaching and learning”. Inspectors give an overall rating to schools, but also give individual verdicts on teaching and learning. Ofsted figures show that of 3,577 schools judged outstanding overall at their latest inspection, 923 would have been ranked as good or very good at teaching. The government has instructed Ofsted to pare down the inspection categories to four: the achievement of pupils; the quality of teaching and learning; the effectiveness of the leadership and management; and standards of behaviour and safety.. Schools will no longer receive separate verdicts on whether they are doing their best to achieve community cohesion or safeguard their pupils. Schools ranked outstanding will no longer have routine inspections unless there are concerns that standards may be slipping. Schools judged to be good will be inspected every five years, as they are now, while satisfactory schools will be inspected every three years. Ofsted also announced that from next month parents will be able to fill out a questionnaire on its website which includes questions such as “are pupils at your child’s school happy?” and post messages. The Ofsted site will be anonymous, with users only asked for an email address. Inspectors will consider the comments when making a judgment about a school. In extreme circumstances, a surge of negative comments could trigger an inspection. Rosen said Ofsted wanted to “give greater consideration to parents’, pupils’ and teachers’ views”. Brian Lightman, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders , said the site could “end up with as much credibility as the Rate My Teacher website”. Lightman said: “Allowing anyone to post comments anonymously leaves the system, and schools, open to abuse and puts the website’s credibility at risk.” Rosen said inspectors would also hear primary school pupils read. About one in five 11-year-olds are not reading at the expected level. A recent Ofsted report found the standard of reading and writing in the last year of primary school fell “stubbornly short of what is achievable”. The schools minister Nick Gibb said: “This new way of inspecting schools will allow Ofsted to spend more time in the classroom and to concentrate on things that really matter to parents, such as pupil behaviour and the quality of teaching.” Education policy Ofsted Schools Michael Gove Primary schools Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk

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Weekly bin rounds could return in many areas after £250m fund set up

Eric Pickles, the local government secretary, creates cash pot to encourage councils to deliver Conservatives’ pre-election pledge Councils are to be offered financial support to restore weekly rubbish collections as the Conservatives attempt to deliver on a party pledge made before they came to power. A £250m fund is being set up to help local authorities in England switch from fortnightly to weekly bin rounds under plans unveiled by Eric Pickles, the communities and local government secretary. The policy is seen by Conservatives as delivering on a pledge the party made in opposition after the coalition came in for fierce criticism in June following its waste review, when it was revealed councils would not have to bring back weekly waste collections. Labour then accused the government of breaking its pre-election promise to abandon fortnightly bin collections, branding it a “huge missed opportunity”. Unveiling the move ahead of the party conference in Manchester, Pickles said he believed every household in England had a right to have their rubbish collected every week. “Weekly rubbish collections are the most visible of all frontline services and I believe every household in England has a basic right to have their rubbish collected every week,” he said. “Our fund will help councils deliver weekly collections and in the process make it easier for families to go green and improve the local environment.” The £250m weekly collections support scheme is expected to begin from next April. Funding will be available to English councils who guarantee to retain or reinstate weekly collections for at least five years and make a pledge to improve recycling rates and provide other enviromental improvements, such as reducing fly-tipping and litter.Councils will be able to bid for funding individually or in groups and can include the private sector “where this increases value for money”, said Pickles. Local government Eric Pickles Waste Recycling Cherry Wilson guardian.co.uk

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Unpublicised E coli outbreak leaves 250 ill and one dead

An eight-month E coli outbreak across the UK left was not publicised at the time because its origins were unknown An eight-month E coli outbreak across the UK left 250 people ill and one dead but was not publicised at the time because its origins were unknown, health officials say. After six months of investigations the infection was ultimately linked to people handling loose raw leeks and potatoes in their homes, said the Health Protection Agency (HPA), which has only now acknowledged the outbreak. The cases began last December and continued until July. In total 250 victims – 100 of them under 16 – were left sick with vomiting and diarrhoea. Of those, 74 needed hospital treatment, including four who developed a rare digestive disorder which can lead to kidney failure in children. One unnamed patient, who the HPA said had underlying health problems, died. The 74 in hospital were treated for haemolytic uraemic syndrome, a serious but rare complication of E coli infection, although most people recover from it. The outbreak involved a rare strain of E coli 0157 called Phage Type 8 (PT8). It affected 193 people in England, 44 in Scotland and 14 in Wales. While 40% of the 250 were under-16s, 69% were female. In each of the past three years an average of 81 people across the UK have been infected with E coli 0157 PT8. The HPA said it, Health Protection Scotland and Public Health Wales began becoming aware of increased numbers of E coli cases from December onwards. An initial inquiry, which asked all those affected about their food intake and places they had visited, proved inconclusive. Unlike other E coli outbreaks it was not possible to identify one source for the outbreak, such as a commercial or children’s farm, or food producer. It was only after a second round of in-depth interviews with 30 sufferers that investigators realised that victims were 40 times more likely to have been in a home where people handled leeks sold loose and 12 times more likely to have been in a household where potatoes bought in or sold from sacks had been handled, compared with a control group of 62 unaffected people. “Our study showed a statistically significant association with raw loose leeks and potatoes from sacks, but these vegetables may not be the only source of contamination,” said Dr Bob Adak, an HPA gastrointestinal expert who led the multi-agency outbreak control team that investigated it. Soil on the vegetables is thought to have been the likely source of the E coli bacteria. “In this outbreak, which is now over, the vegetables could have carried traces of contaminated soil. It is possible people caught the infection from cross-contamination in storage, inadequate washing of loose vegetables, insufficient hand washing after handling the vegetables or by failing to thoroughly clean kitchen equipment, utensils or surfaces after preparing the vegetables.” A spokeswoman said the HPA did not alert the public to the ongoing outbreak because they did not know where it had originated and therefore could offer no useful public health advice. “At the outset it was not clear what was causing the outbreak and we had no information that would have enabled the public to take any steps to protect themselves,” she said. “It was only following extensive and complex epidemiological investigations and analysis that a cause emerged. “Although the outbreak is over, we feel it is still important to share our findings with the public so that they can take the appropriate action to guard against any possible recurrence. “As the number of new cases had declined significantly by June, and there was not an immediate need to issue a health alert to the public, we waited until FSA’s customary consultation processes with industry and consumer organisations were completed before making this information public. “During the upcoming autumn and winter months, people are more likely to be using these types of vegetable in their cooking, so it was also decided that now was the right time to make this information public.” Dr Andrew Wadge, chief scientist at the Food Standards Agency (FSA), which was also involved in the outbreak control team, said: “It’s sadly a myth that a little bit of dirt doesn’t do you any harm; soil can sometimes carry harmful bacteria and, although food producers have good systems in place to clean vegetables, the risk can never be entirely eliminated. Control of infection from E coli O157 relies on an awareness of all potential sources of the bacteria and high standards of hygiene where it may be present. “This outbreak is a timely reminder that it is essential to wash all fruits and vegetables, including salad, before you eat them, unless they are labelled ‘ready to eat’, to ensure that they are clean. It is also important to wash hands thoroughly as well as clean chopping boards, knives and other utensils after preparing vegetables to prevent cross contamination”, Wadge added. E coli Health Health policy Denis Campbell guardian.co.uk

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She’s either running for President or she’s a crazy person? To quote Jon Stewart, “I know the answer to that one!” Open thread below….

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She’s either running for President or she’s a crazy person? To quote Jon Stewart, “I know the answer to that one!” Open thread below….

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