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Libya’s National Transitional Council ‘will aid’ Lockerbie inquiry

New regime reassures Scottish prosecutors and UK police it will assist probe into bombing of Pan Am flight 103, Foreign Office says Libyan authorities have said they will co-operate with Scottish prosecutors and police investigating the Lockerbie bombing, the Foreign Office has said. The National Transitional Council (NTC) has reassured the UK government after reports suggested Libya’s interim justice minister had said the Lockerbie bombing case was “closed”. Mohammed al-Alagi was asked for his response at a press conference after Lord Advocate Frank Mulholland QC requested Libyan authorities hand over any information that could lead to a second trial over the atrocity, which killed 270 people in December 1988. Abdelbaset al-Megrahi is the only person to have been convicted of the bombing of Pan Am flight 103, which exploded over Lockerbie in Scotland. According to reports, Libya’s interim justice minister Mohammed al-Alagi, responding to news of the request, told a press conference in Tripoli: “The case is closed.” But the Foreign Office said: “NTC chairman Abdul Jalil has already assured the prime minister that the new Libyan authorities will co-operate with the UK in this and other ongoing investigations. Having spoken with the NTC we understand that this remains the case. “The police investigation into the Lockerbie bombing remains open, and the police should follow the evidence wherever it leads them.” Scottish prosecutors are seeking assistance from the NTC to gain evidence that could lead to the conviction of others involved. On Monday, the Crown Office, the prosecution service in Scotland, said it accepts Megrahi “did not act alone” and it is hopeful recent developments in Libya will mean the country will help with the inquiry. A spokesman said: “The trial court accepted that Mr Megrahi acted in furtherance of the Libyan intelligence services in an act of state-sponsored terrorism and did not act alone. “Lockerbie remains an open inquiry concerning the involvement of others with Mr

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Higher education white paper is provoking a winter of discontent

As they publish their own ‘alternative white paper’ for higher education, academics claim the government’s plans are fundamentally misguided Hundreds of academics have signed a document, published today, that warns of dire consequences should the government’s white paper on higher education become law. The document, In Defence of Public Higher Education, endorsed by a wide range of prominent academics, including Stefan Collini, of Cambridge University, and Howard Hotson, of Oxford, offers an alternative to the government’s vision for the sector in the form of nine propositions about higher education’s value to society. Drawing on recent research, it also argues that the changes proposed are based on ideology rather than financial necessity, and will make no lasting savings. Campaigners hope it will lead to an autumn of debate and protest over the white paper’s proposals, which are due to come into effect next year. “The hope would be that it provides a well-formulated agenda on the future of higher education, in contrast to the one the government has railroaded through,” says Simon Szreter, professor of history and public policy at the University of Cambridge, who helped to draw up the document. “It is a counter to the breathtaking speed of the government programme and its reliance on an atrociously flimsy document, the Browne Review.” Today’s publication argues that the Independent Review of Higher Education Funding, chaired by former BP chief executive Lord Browne of Madingley, and the subsequent white paper, completely ignore the public value of higher education, concentrating instead on “the private benefits to individuals in the form of higher earnings deriving from investment in their human capital, and to the ‘knowledge economy’ in terms of product development and contribution of economic growth”. It suggests that this focus on students as consumers attacks the very values the prime minister believes would reverse the “moral decline” blamed for the recent riots. And it accuses the mission groups representing different kinds of universities, including the Russell Group and the 1994 Group of leading research universities, of lack of leadership and of failing to defend the values of public higher education while for-profit providers have successfully lobbied for their own interests. Nearly 400 academic campaigners, members of professional bodies such as the British Philosophical Association, and individuals have signed the “alternative white paper”, which was drawn up over the summer by a working group led by John Holmwood, professor of sociology at the University of Nottingham and founder of the Campaign for the Public University. He says: “The people signing up are very senior academics. They are saying, ‘At last there is a voice talking about public higher education and something other than questions of economic expediency’.” The document’s nine propositions are that higher education has public as well as private benefits and these public benefits require financial support; that public universities are necessary to build and maintain confidence in public debate; that public universities have a social mission and help to ameliorate social inequality; that public higher education is part of a generational contract in which an older generation invests in the wellbeing of future generations; that public institutions providing similar programmes of study should be funded at a similar level; that education cannot be treated as a simple consumer good; that training in skills is not the same as university education – something the title of a university should recognise; that a university is a community made up of different disciplines and of different activities of teaching, research and external collaboration; and finally that universities are not only global institutions, but also serve their local and regional communities. A separate appendix makes the case that switching the costs of tuition from grants to loan-backed fees may reduce the deficit in the short term, but is an accounting trick. In the long term, debt could increase as students default or write off loan repayments, and tax revenues from those who reject higher education as too expensive are lost. It also accuses the government of wanting eventually to introduce a pricing mechanism based on how much of the loans made to students studying specific degrees at specific institutions are repaid. “The commodification of higher education is at the secret heart of the white paper,” it argues. “The government seeks a differently funded sector, one which can provide new outlets for capital that struggles to find suitable opportunities for investment elsewhere.” Publication of the document comes a week after the end of formal consultation on the white paper and amid increasing criticism of government plans for HE. Responding to the consultation, Universities UK warned of “unintended consequences for students and universities” from the proposals, with potentially adverse effects on social mobility, student choice, institutional subject mix and the future viability of some institutions”. The 1994 Group warned that high-quality places for students could be lost, and science subjects could be badly affected. The Millennium+ thinktank called for the plans to introduce a market in university places to be withdrawn, while the British Academy, the UK’s national representative body for the humanities and social sciences, said the plans could damage the international reputation of UK higher education. Howard Hotson, professor of early modern intellectual history and a founding member of the Oxford University Campaign for Higher Education, says: “We offer fantastic value for money. The UK university system is astonishingly good. There is no intellectual justification whatsoever for radically overhauling it, and if you radically overhaul it, you can guarantee to make it worse.” He calls on academics and students to join forces to oppose the moves and predicts a “winter of discontent” including actions by students and academic unions. Campaigners expect further motions of no confidence in the universities minister, David Willetts, to follow votes at Oxford, Cambridge, Leeds and Bath earlier in the summer, and want to encourage parents and the general public to join the debate. The Local Schools Network has already backed today’s document. Melissa Benn, its co-founder, says: “Education is bigger than self-interest and a race to the top. If we sacrifice the idea of the education system being at the very centre of the social fabric we will pay a price in the long term.” Stefan Collini, professor of English literature and intellectual history at Cambridge, who has written a series of critiques of government higher education policy, warns that the proposals in the white paper misunderstand what universities are about. “It’s very important that academics who see the ways in which this policy is fundamentally flawed and misguided try to explain this and work for the long-term development of a better-grounded policy,” he says. “For that reason the alternative white paper makes a very valuable contribution.” Willetts has responded to critics by arguing that the success of British universities in research has been the result of a system that places intense competition in a wider legal framework and that the government’s proposals aim to achieve the same for teaching and the student experience. In a letter published in the London Review of Books in July he “pleaded guilty to believing in choice and competition”, but said that these should be rooted in a national culture, strong institutions and a set of moral understandings. University funding University administration University teaching Lecturers Access to university Students Higher education Education policy Harriet Swain guardian.co.uk

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BAE Systems confirms 3,000 UK job losses

• Cuts to fall in Lancashire and Yorkshire • Union leaders blame government defence cuts • Anger that job losses were leaked to media • Labour says government must act Defence giant BAE Systems will end days of speculation on Tuesday by announcing around 3,000 job cuts . Union leaders have expressed fury that workers have been kept waiting for confirmation of the job losses in the wake of the government’s defence cuts. The job losses are expected to be mainly at sites in its military aircraft division in Warton and Samlesbury in Lancashire, and Brough, East Yorkshire. There is speculation that 900 jobs will be cut at Brough, 820 at Warton and 560 at Samlesbury, with hundreds more at smaller BAE sites. Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper told BBC Breakfast that the job losses were “devastating”. “This is high-skilled jobs in Yorkshire and Lancashire. I think people will be very worried about this news,” she said. “I think what this really shows is the irresponsibility of having the scale of public sector cuts that we have been seeing at a time when the private sector is just not growing. “And so you haven’t got a whole series of private sector jobs, high-skilled jobs across the north for people to go into if they lose their jobs at BAE. “So I think the government does really need to respond to this and say what they are going to do about it.” The company said in a statement: “BAE Systems has informed its staff that we are reviewing our operations across various businesses to make sure the company is performing as effectively and efficiently as possible, both in delivering our commitments to existing customers and ensuring the company is best placed to secure future business. “Whilst there has been a lot of media speculation it has always been our intention to communicate the results of the review to employees as a priority, and this will take place on Tuesday 27 September.” Union officials said the government’s defence cuts were to blame for the job losses, which they described as a “hammer blow” to manufacturing, as orders for the Eurofighter Typhoon combat jet slow down. Paul McCarthy, regional officer of the GMB, said it was a “disgrace” that workers heard via a leak to the media over the weekend that thousands of job losses were imminent. “We are going to ask the company to launch a formal investigation to establish who leaked this information.” Dave Oglesby, another GMB officer, said a consultation on previously announced job cuts at Brough had only just finished. “Workers were told that the purpose of the cuts was to make Brough viable and save jobs for the future.” Unite national officer Ian Waddell said: “These job losses will be a hammer blow to the UK defence industry, which is already reeling with the consequences of the government’s ‘buy off the shelf’ policy.” Waddell called on the government to offer immediate support to BAE Systems to keep its order book strong and avert heavy job losses. Shadow defence secretary Jim Murphy said the news was “a devastating blow for Lancashire and Yorkshire and a real knock for UK manufacturing”, adding: “We need a fast response from ministers with a clear plan of action. “At a time when it is so hard to find a new job this is a dreadful moment to lose the one you have. “The defence industry is vital to the UK, supporting both our forces on the front line and the wider UK economy.” BAE has a 33% stake in the Eurofighter joint venture alongside EADS and Finmeccanica and has received orders for 550 planes from the four partner nations involved – the UK, Germany, Italy and Spain. Earlier this year BAE Systems said around 2,000 workers would leave voluntarily or move to other jobs in the company, but there will be 450 compulsory lay-offs at several military sites across the UK, including Woodford, near Manchester, Farnborough in Hampshire, RAF Kinloss in Scotland, RAF Cottesmore in Lincolnshire and Brough. The cuts were blamed on decisions such as the scrapping of the Nimrod and the accelerated retirement of the Harrier aircraft. After the announcement in March, union leaders blamed the government, with Unite claiming jobs were being lost as a direct result of decisions in last year’s defence review. BAE Systems Defence policy Manufacturing sector Job losses guardian.co.uk

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Universities should make lower offers to poorer students, exam board urges

AQA research shows students with lower A-levels from poorer schools do just as well as pupils from ‘favourable circumstances’ Universities should make it easier to admit A-level students from poorly performing schools, according to one of the country’s biggest exam boards. Dr Neil Stringer of the Assessment and Qualifications Alliance (AQA), said research suggested students from less privileged schools did just as well at university as those from “more favourable circumstances”. A report authored by Stringer, the senior research associate at AQA’s centre for education research and policy, cited a medical school at the University of London that offers lower A-level grades to pupils from poorer schools. St George’s offers results of BBC rather than AAB to students who perform 60% better than the average for their school. Dr Stringer said: “St George’s reports that students from poorly performing schools who are accepted into medical school with lower grades do just as well as their peers with higher grades.” “This strongly suggests that students admitted through the adjusted-criteria scheme learned enough at A-level and are able enough learners to compete successfully with students who achieved higher A-level grades under more favourable circumstances.” Claire Ellis from AQA said the paper was “very much a thought piece” at this stage. She added: “It is an idea of looking at backgrounds and schools, and having a composite score to look at students on a more level playing field.” The paper is being handed out at party conferences to encourage politicians to discuss ways to get pupils who show academic potential at weaker schools to continue with higher education. University administration Higher education Further education Education policy guardian.co.uk

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Australian military lets women into frontline roles

Women who can meet requirements will be allowed into positions such as infantry and clearance diving Australia has announced it will remove all gender barriers in its military over the next five years, opening up positions that had previously been considered too dangerous for women. The defence minister, Stephen Smith, said Australia would follow Canada and New Zealand in allowing women who meet physical and psychological criteria to perform any role. The reform will be phased in. Women can currently serve in 93% of employment categories in the Australian Defence Force, which includes the army, navy and air force. But some roles have been reserved for men, including infantry, artillery and naval clearance diving. “This is a significant and major cultural change,” Smith said. “That is why we’d rather err on the side of caution in expressing a five-year period.” The cabinet agreed to the change on Monday with the support of defence chiefs, Smith said. The Australian Defence Association, an influential security thinktank, had previously warned it could lead to heavy casualties. The association argued that biomechanical differences between the sexes differences in muscle distribution, centres of gravity and rate of recovery from physical exertion made even physically strong women more vulnerable than men in combat. Smith said the change would not affect the Australian military’s interoperability and personnel exchanges with its foremost ally, the US. “We will present our soldiers as potential embeds or potential third-party or third-country deployees on the basis of their capacity and their ability, not on the basis of their sex,” he said. Australia Gender guardian.co.uk

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Typhoon Nesat brings Philippines capital to a standstill

Financial markets closed as storm hits main island, leaving one dead and four missing Typhoon Nesat struck the Philippines’ main island on Tuesday, bringing the capital to a near standstill as it disrupted power supplies and closed financial markets, government offices, transport and schools. A 22-month-old boy died in the storm and four people were reported missing. Nesat was a category-3 typhoon with winds of about 125mph (200km/h) when it hit the northern provinces of Luzon island just before dawn. It lost some strength as it moved west-north-west. Large portions of the capital, Manila, a city of 13 million, were without power and the light rail networks were shut as a precaution, officials said, after high winds cut power lines and blew down electricity poles. Most domestic flights were cancelled. “This is only a temporary shut-off so that there will be no accidents, no short circuit, because if electric posts are toppled there might be short circuits,” said Benito Ramos, head of the national disaster agency. Strong winds tore off some billboards along major roads, with one slamming into three parked cars in the financial district. The waters of Manila Bay overflowed on to Roxas Boulevard, flooding streets and parks around the US embassy, central bank and finance department. At points the water was waist-deep, a Reuters cameraman said. Manila residents in low-lying areas waded through floodwaters to seek higher ground and evacuation centres. Winds tore the roof from a gymnasium used as an evacuation centre in the Tondo district in the capital, forcing evacuees to find new shelter. Nesat, with a diameter of 400 miles, dumped heavy rains on rice and corn-growing regions in central Luzon, with nearly all of the provinces on the main island under a typhoon alert. The weather bureau said the typhoon, known locally as Pedring, was dropping 15mm to 25mm of rain an hour. “The wind is very strong,” Faustino Dy, governor of Isabela province where Nesat made landfall, told national radio. He estimated 15% to 20% of rice crops in the province may be damaged by the typhoon. The one person confirmed killed in the storm was a 22-month-old boy who drowned on Monday night, while at least four fishermen were reported missing, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said. Authorities ordered the evacuation of more than 100,000 people on Monday. Philippines Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk

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European debt crisis: Markets rally ahead of crucial Greek talks

Asian markets rebound as George Papandreou and Angela Merkel prepare to discuss Greece’s bailout 7.55am: Here’s a few events to watch out for today: • Spain and Italy to auction government debt – this morning • Greek PM George Papandreou addresses a conference for the Federation of German Industries – this morning, Berlin • CBI Distributive Trades Survey (measuring UK retail sales in September): 11am • Greek property tax vote – 7pm CET, Athens • Papandreou/Merkel “working dinner” – evening, Berlin 7.45am: Japan’s finance minister has also hinted today that his country could offer some support to Europe “If there is a scheme that is based on a firm process, involves a reasonable amount of money and could provide the world and markets with a sense of security regarding a Greek bailout, I would not rule out the possibility of Japan sharing some of the burden,” Jun Azumi told Reuters. Japan has its own financial problems (including the biggest debt-to-GDP ratio in the G20), and its fiscal reduction plan partly depends on decent economic growth – unlikely if the EU debt crisis triggers a global downturn. Its exporters are already suffering from the strength of the yen, which hit a ten-year high against the euro on Monday. We know Azumi is serious, as last week he said Tokyo would “supportively think about” supporting Europe. How would this work in practice? It could buy up bonds from weaker eurozone nations, helping to drive down their borrowing costs. Or, as the second largest contributor to the International Monetary Fund, its support would be important if the IMF did increase its support for Europe. 7.35am: Good news – the financial markets are in upbeat mood. Asian markets have all risen today ( see the latest prices here ), and Japan’s Nikkei just closed 2.8% higher at 8,609.95. That’s a healthy rebound from Monday’s two-and-a-half-year low. City traders expect a strong start in London, with the FTSE 100 being called up more than 100 points. We saw yesterday that the markets are pretty jittery, and it probably wouldn’t take much to send share prices down again. Here’s the view of Chris Weston , institutional trader at IG Markets: Sentiment in equity markets changed markedly just after the European close last night, with traders suddenly becoming increasingly confident that European leaders can now reach an agreement to successfully contain the debt crisis. With stock prices having been decimated in recent days, this was sufficient to see the bargain hunters flood back into the market. We’re looking at some big upswings in Europe ahead of the open although sustaining these gains – and ensuring we can continue to grind higher – will rely on two key points. Investors must hold their nerve and at the same time central banks and finance ministers need to remain ‘on message’ as any suggestions that the rescue plans may go awry will likely be enough to see markets take fright once again 7.30am: Good morning, and welcome to our live coverage of another important day in the European debt saga. Greece is top of the agenda today. Prime minister George Papandreou is meeting Angela Merkel in Berlin tonight for dinner, to “discuss the economic situation in Europe”. Papandreou will also address a business conference during his visit to Berlin. And the Greek parliament will vote on an unpopular property tax – just one small part of its latest austerity package. Transport workers are organising strike action, and protesters are expected to gather in Athens to register their anger. Riot police clashed with demonstrators on Sunday – will we see a repeat? We’ll also be tracking the latest efforts to construct a rescue package for the eurozone. Last night, German officials were insisting that Europe is a long way from agreeing a plan – was the €2trn bailout that hit the headlines last weekend just wishful thinking? Is Europe as indecisive and divided as ever? European debt crisis Stock markets Euro Financial crisis Market turmoil Greece Germany European Central Bank Graeme Wearden guardian.co.uk

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Amazon road protests forces Morales to step in

Bolivian president halts work and calls referendum on highway, while condemning police crackdown on demonstrators The Bolivian president, Evo Morales, has halted work on a highway being built in the Amazon in the face of a month-long protest march and a police crackdown on demonstrators. Morale said work on the 185-mile (300km) highway would not be resumed unless it was approved in a referendum in the two provinces it was to link. “There needs to be national debate so the two provinces benefited or involved in this can decide. In the meantime the project is suspended,” said Morales, criticising the violence used by police to disperse marchers over the weekend. Police fired teargas and detained protesters when they raided an encampment in the Yucumo region 185 miles north of La Paz late on Sunday, local media said. The raid was criticised by opposition leaders, the ombudsman and several government officials including the defence minister, Cecilia Chacon, who quit in protest. “This is not the way! We agreed to do things differently,” Chacon wrote in her resignation letter, which was published by Bolivian media. Morales denied giving police the order to break up the march, condemned the “violence, excesses and abuse” and promised an investigation. Fierce opposition to the road proved especially uncomfortable for Morales because it was led by Indian communities who normally back his pro-indigenous reforms. Bolivia’s first president of indigenous descent, Morales has put the highway at the heart of his drive to boost infrastructure, but that has tested his commitment to conservation. The dispute over the $420m project has exposed differences within his Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) party. Some MAS legislators expressed support for the demonstration and the demands of the 12,000 residents of the Isiboro Secure Indigenous Territory and National Park, which lies in the path of the planned highway. Morales is highly popular among the Quechua and Aymara indigenous majority in the Andean highlands but opposition to his policies is strong in the eastern lowlands, even among indigenous groups. Violent protests are common in Bolivia but tensions that toppled two previous governments have eased since Morales was elected in late 2005. Bolivia Evo Morales Protest guardian.co.uk

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Title: Godzilla Artist: Blue Oyster Cult This video will surely start your week off right.

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Bloomberg Blames Lack of Confidence on the Threat of Bankers Going to Prison

Click here to view this media (h/t Heather at VideoCafe) Can I just state for the record that I’m sick and tired of this oligarchal fetish of the establishment media to ask people to opine on the economy simply because they’re wealthy. Seriously. Does anyone think that Michael Bloomberg (the 12th most wealthy American according to Forbes) really feels the pinch of the economy? Hell no, his standing has gone up a notch from the Forbes 400 in 2010. So where is Bloomberg’s priority, improving the economy for the little guys or protecting the status quo? If you haven’t guessed the answer by now, Bloomberg’s rationalization for the fact that bankers–despite getting bailed out by U.S. taxpayers AND offering record bonuses to executives–aren’t loaning money should clue you in: Well, nobody has any confidence. If you’re a bank and you have money, would you make a loan when people are talking about putting you in jail for what happened in the mortgage crisis three, four years ago? You hunker down. Wait….who is talking about putting bankers in jail–other than the protestors of OccupyWallStreet, who the media studiously ignores? And I love the dismissive way that Bloomberg refers to that silly little mortgage crisis three, four years ago….like it didn’t bring the entire world to the brink of financial collapse. How nitpicky to want anyone to be held accountable. If you’re a business, would you go take a loan and expand and hire more people when every day there’s talk about different regulation, different tax policy? Business has to know what it’s going to be in the future to plan because hiring people is a long-term commitment. Damnit, now I KNOW Bloomberg is full of crap. Repeat after me: businesses are not hiring because there’s not enough demand. It has NOTHING to do with regulations (help me, which regulations are these–the ones that limit your ability to sell off portions of mortgages as credit default swaps or the ones that try to protect the fragile ecosystem of the Gulf from another oil spill? Oh wait….) or taxes, which haven’t been raised on anyone. This shows how blind to the demand side Bloomberg and the elite class are in their continual grasping of even more of the nation’s wealth. If you’re an individual, would you go take that extra vacation, buy a new house and that sort of thing when you’re not sure whether Washington is going to do what’s right to keep job creation going in America? That’s the–in the end, it is confidence, confidence, confidence. Extra vacation? New house? Dude, those 50 percent of Americans who are not paying federal income taxes don’t know if they can pay rent AND buy groceries. There’s no confidence that the uber-wealthy won’t make things even more unequal, because without those regulations you fear-monger, there’s little stopping them. That’s where the lack of confidence comes from. But hey, let’s get another billionaire on television to grouse about the uncertainty of regulations and taxes being the cause of problems. I’m sure that’s EXACTLY what the corporate media wants you to believe.

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