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Police recover £5m in stolen antiques in sleepy Yorkshire village

Two men arrested after items believed to have been taken in raids on stately homes discovered in caravan and garage Detectives have found more than £5m worth of antiques stolen from stately homes in a tatty caravan and neighbouring lock-up garage in a quiet Yorkshire village. Two men have been arrested for questioning over the haul which is thought to be part of a long-term and sophisticated targeting of mansions over the past five years. Items recovered from Tankersley, near Sheffield, include treasures taken in two thefts which attracted international publicity in 2009. A Chippendale table was taken from Newby Hall, near Ripon, for which it was specially made, and porcelain worth £1.3m went in a daring raid on Firle Place in Sussex. A member of the National Trust, 58-year-old George Harkin from Wakefield, was jailed for nine years in March for the Firle theft . Detectives said after the case that he had refused to co-operate over the whereabouts of the stolen goods, but by then a major investigation was well underway. All three Yorkshire forces and the regional organised crime unit worked with specialised roads crime officers to track suspected gang members to where the goods might be stashed. Inquiries led them to a nondescript store in Tankersley, a village probably best known for the crumbling fortified farm which featured in Ken Loach’s 1969 film Kes. Officers who broke into the lock-up and caravan found the George III rosewood table from Newby, a house which influenced the plot of the TV drama Downton Abbey. Antiques experts at the time of the theft described the piece by the UK’s best-known furniture-maker as having “worldwide importance”. Stored beside the Chippendale table was the Firle haul: a pair of Louis XVI ormolu and Sèvres bleu vases, with an insurance value of £950,000, a Meissen statue from the 1740s, The Indiscreet Harlequin, and a Sèvres Hollandois Nouveau vase from 1761, valued at £180,000 each. Nine other items recovered include an embellished bracket clock made by Daniel Delander of London around 1710 which was stolen from Sion Hill Hall in Northallerton, north Yorkshire, shortly before the two other thefts. Police also raided addresses in Tankersley and the Leeds suburb of Middleton. They are currently questioning a 68-year-old man from the former and a 44-year-old man from the later. The inquiry includes possible links to the illegal drugs trade. Detective Superintendent Steve Waite, head of regional intelligence for Yorkshire and the Humber, said: “We are so pleased and proud to have recovered these high-value antiques which have been described as true pieces of British heritage. We will now begin the formal process of identification and will eventually be in a position to reunite the pieces with their owners. “Only a couple of items have suffered minor damage in the ordeal but this just goes to show that those involved in the thefts were not in it for their love of antiques. In fact, recent trends indicate that these types of high-value items are actually being used by organised crime groups as currency or collateral in relation to serious criminality, often involving drugs.” Other items which form part of the operation’s continuing search include porcelain from 21 country house thefts since 2007. They include a Meissen teapot and bronze bust worth a total of £40,000 stolen in 2009 from Sutton Park near York, the home of the David Cameron’s in-laws, Sir Reginald and Lady Sheffield. There have been 15 similar attempted robberies which showed extensive knowledge of mansions and their security systems but failed. Crime Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk

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Longoria and Wilde Talk Politics on Red Carpet

Eva Longoria and Olivia Wilde were among the stars honored at Variety magazine’s 3rd annual ‘Women of Power’ event for their charitable work. While on the red carpet they discussed US presidential politics. (Sept. 26)

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May was warned of weak case against Sheikh Raed Salah

Officials in the UK Border Agency warned home secretary not to deport Palestinian activist as case was ‘very finely balanced’ The home secretary, Theresa May, was warned by senior officials in the UK Border Agency not to deport a Palestinian activist accused of antisemitism, saying the evidence against him was disputed, open to legal challenge and that the case was “very finely balanced”. Sheikh Raed Salah, leader of the Northern branch of the Islamic Movement, who has been in Britain, in prison and on bail since his arrest three months ago, will appeal against his deportation before an immigration and asylum tribunal on Monday. Emails seen by the Guardian, show that May was determined to find a reason to exclude Salah, before the evidence against him had been verified. Just 17 minutes after receiving a report on the activist, prepared by Michael Whine of the Community Security Trust, a UK charity monitoring antisemitism, Faye Johnson, private secretary to the home secretary emailed about a parliamentary event Salah was due to attend: “Is there anything that we can do to prevent him from attending (eg could we exclude him on the grounds of unacceptable behaviour?)” she wrote. Whine’s report said Salah’s record of provocative statements carried a risk that his presence in the UK could have “a radicalising impact” on his audiences. Border Agency officials were dubious. Jon Rosenom-Lanng of the Special Cases Directorate (SCD) wrote to the home secretary on 21 June, saying that while there was evidence that would allow her to exclude Salah on the grounds of unacceptable behaviour, “the disputed underlying evidence could make an exclusion decision vulnerable to legal challenge”. He concluded: “We assess that this case is very finely balanced.” After the home secretary signed the order, a second official of the SCD, Andy Smith restated the Border Authority’s objections. He said the action would prolong Salah’s stay in the UK, raise his profile and give him a credibility he did not currently have. He warned of the cost of the case on their budget, “as it is not a case that would not have been undertaken if the SCD advice had been followed”. Tayab Ali, Saleh’s solicitor said: “When the secretary of state makes a decision to exclude someone from the UK, it is imperative the correct policy is followed. The home secretary made a decision and then searched for reasons to justify it. Its not for the home secretary to determine who should speak in parliament. This is an attack on parliamentary democracy.” Saleh’s legal team say the quotes he is alleged to have said and written were doctored to make them sound antisemitic. The Home Office presented four allegations of antisemitism against him, all drawn from the Israeli press: that Salah wrote a poem in which he described Jews as “criminal bombers of mosques, slaughterers of pregnant women and babies, robbers and germ in all time”; that he promoted martyrdom; that he invoked a blood libel invocation by saying that “blood had been mixed in the dough of Holy Bread” and that he referenced a fake document the Protocols of the Elders of Zion in saying that a third temple would be build on the ruins of the al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem. Salah’s lawyers say the poem was made up and the views expressed in it were abhorrent to Salah. A second version of the same poem has since been presented but with the admission that a reference to Jews was inserted. In other alleged quotes, words were interjected to change their meaning. In the blood libel accusation, the word Jewish was interjected, when the original referred to the murder of Christian and Muslim children during the Spanish Inquisition and a part of the speech in which Salah said defended the right of Jewish worship in synagogues deleted. On the allegation that he promoted suicide bombing by referring to martyrdom, he had been referring to incidents of Palestinian worshipers being martyred or killed at prayer by the Israeli security forces. The doctored quotes have been repeated by the Israeli Press, pro-Israeli websites, two British newspapers and the CST. No checks have been conducted, until now, on their veracity. Salah has served two terms of imprisonment in Israel, two years for funding proscribed charities and five months for spitting at a police officer during protests in 2007. He has not been convicted of incitement (although a case has been re-opened after the events in London) and the Islamic movement remains a legal organisation. An Islamic Movement spokesman said: “The Israeli establishment knows what the sheikh has said and they know they have no legal case against him. They have not been shy of pursuing him on other charges.” Salah was elected mayor of his town Umm al-Falm an Israeli-Arab city bordering the green line, three times. As a Palestinian with Israeli citizenship, he came to prominence for his defence of the Muslim holy sites and his participation on the Mavi Marmara, the Turkish boat that was stormed last year by Israeli navy as it attempted to break the siege of Gaza. Salah’s battle against deportation from Britain has prompted support from mainstream secular Palestinians. The prime minister in the West Bank, Salam Fayyad, said the Salah’s detention would harm the Palestinian Authority. Fatah, Dr Hanan Ashrawi, the Supreme Follow-up Committee of the Arab Community in Israel, the Palestinian National Assembly, Israeli Arab MPs Haneen Zoabi and Ahmed Tibi, and Talab al-Sana have all issued statements of support. Theresa May Palestinian territories Immigration and asylum David Hearst guardian.co.uk

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May was warned of weak case against Sheikh Raed Salah

Officials in the UK Border Agency warned home secretary not to deport Palestinian activist as case was ‘very finely balanced’ The home secretary, Theresa May, was warned by senior officials in the UK Border Agency not to deport a Palestinian activist accused of antisemitism, saying the evidence against him was disputed, open to legal challenge and that the case was “very finely balanced”. Sheikh Raed Salah, leader of the Northern branch of the Islamic Movement, who has been in Britain, in prison and on bail since his arrest three months ago, will appeal against his deportation before an immigration and asylum tribunal on Monday. Emails seen by the Guardian, show that May was determined to find a reason to exclude Salah, before the evidence against him had been verified. Just 17 minutes after receiving a report on the activist, prepared by Michael Whine of the Community Security Trust, a UK charity monitoring antisemitism, Faye Johnson, private secretary to the home secretary emailed about a parliamentary event Salah was due to attend: “Is there anything that we can do to prevent him from attending (eg could we exclude him on the grounds of unacceptable behaviour?)” she wrote. Whine’s report said Salah’s record of provocative statements carried a risk that his presence in the UK could have “a radicalising impact” on his audiences. Border Agency officials were dubious. Jon Rosenom-Lanng of the Special Cases Directorate (SCD) wrote to the home secretary on 21 June, saying that while there was evidence that would allow her to exclude Salah on the grounds of unacceptable behaviour, “the disputed underlying evidence could make an exclusion decision vulnerable to legal challenge”. He concluded: “We assess that this case is very finely balanced.” After the home secretary signed the order, a second official of the SCD, Andy Smith restated the Border Authority’s objections. He said the action would prolong Salah’s stay in the UK, raise his profile and give him a credibility he did not currently have. He warned of the cost of the case on their budget, “as it is not a case that would not have been undertaken if the SCD advice had been followed”. Tayab Ali, Saleh’s solicitor said: “When the secretary of state makes a decision to exclude someone from the UK, it is imperative the correct policy is followed. The home secretary made a decision and then searched for reasons to justify it. Its not for the home secretary to determine who should speak in parliament. This is an attack on parliamentary democracy.” Saleh’s legal team say the quotes he is alleged to have said and written were doctored to make them sound antisemitic. The Home Office presented four allegations of antisemitism against him, all drawn from the Israeli press: that Salah wrote a poem in which he described Jews as “criminal bombers of mosques, slaughterers of pregnant women and babies, robbers and germ in all time”; that he promoted martyrdom; that he invoked a blood libel invocation by saying that “blood had been mixed in the dough of Holy Bread” and that he referenced a fake document the Protocols of the Elders of Zion in saying that a third temple would be build on the ruins of the al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem. Salah’s lawyers say the poem was made up and the views expressed in it were abhorrent to Salah. A second version of the same poem has since been presented but with the admission that a reference to Jews was inserted. In other alleged quotes, words were interjected to change their meaning. In the blood libel accusation, the word Jewish was interjected, when the original referred to the murder of Christian and Muslim children during the Spanish Inquisition and a part of the speech in which Salah said defended the right of Jewish worship in synagogues deleted. On the allegation that he promoted suicide bombing by referring to martyrdom, he had been referring to incidents of Palestinian worshipers being martyred or killed at prayer by the Israeli security forces. The doctored quotes have been repeated by the Israeli Press, pro-Israeli websites, two British newspapers and the CST. No checks have been conducted, until now, on their veracity. Salah has served two terms of imprisonment in Israel, two years for funding proscribed charities and five months for spitting at a police officer during protests in 2007. He has not been convicted of incitement (although a case has been re-opened after the events in London) and the Islamic movement remains a legal organisation. An Islamic Movement spokesman said: “The Israeli establishment knows what the sheikh has said and they know they have no legal case against him. They have not been shy of pursuing him on other charges.” Salah was elected mayor of his town Umm al-Falm an Israeli-Arab city bordering the green line, three times. As a Palestinian with Israeli citizenship, he came to prominence for his defence of the Muslim holy sites and his participation on the Mavi Marmara, the Turkish boat that was stormed last year by Israeli navy as it attempted to break the siege of Gaza. Salah’s battle against deportation from Britain has prompted support from mainstream secular Palestinians. The prime minister in the West Bank, Salam Fayyad, said the Salah’s detention would harm the Palestinian Authority. Fatah, Dr Hanan Ashrawi, the Supreme Follow-up Committee of the Arab Community in Israel, the Palestinian National Assembly, Israeli Arab MPs Haneen Zoabi and Ahmed Tibi, and Talab al-Sana have all issued statements of support. Theresa May Palestinian territories Immigration and asylum David Hearst guardian.co.uk

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French Socialists seize Senate in blow to Sarkozy

President Nicolas Sarkozy’s conservative party loses its majority in upper house for the first time in more than 50 years France’s left wrested the Senate from the right in indirect elections on Sunday, taking the majority of seats in the upper house of parliament for the first time in more than 50 years – a blow to conservative president Nicolas Sarkozy. Seven months before presidential elections, Sarkozy’s party downplayed what it said was a narrow win – up to three seats, according to officials from the president’s party. The minister for parliamentary relations, Patrick Ollier, said the results had “no national political significance”. Final results of the voting to fill half the seats in the 348-seat house were not in, but the Socialist party leader in the Senate announced the victory. “This is a day that will mark history,” Jean-Pierre Bel, head of the Senate’s Socialist party, said. The Senate president has a consequential role under the French constitution – as interim leader should the nation’s president become incapacitated. The upper house, a 17th-century palace at the foot of the Luxembourg gardens in Paris, is sometimes derided as an institution that specialises in handing out rubber stamps. Nevertheless it can initiate bills and slow down their passage. The right had controlled the Senate since the start of the Fifth Republic in 1958. “For the first time, change is in motion … This is a real affront to the right,” Bel said. He estimated the left had won 24 to 26 new seats. It needed 23 seats to gain a majority. Final results were not expected immediately. The result is a further blow to the profile of the already unpopular Sarkozy, providing the Socialist party with prestige and political capital. Senate president Gérard Larcher, of Sarkozy’s party, conceded the left “made a real push … larger than I thought” – but said he would seek to renew his mandate. Leading members of Sarkozy’s Union for a Popular Movement party, known as UMP, stressed the forthcoming vote on 1 October for the president of the chamber. Socialists attributed their success to discontent in France’s towns and rural heartland, the home bases of the 71,890 delegates – regionally and locally elected officials who cast ballots to fill the 170 seats. Senators who were elected on Sunday have six-year mandates. Jean-François Copé, head of Sarkozy’s UMP, said the election results were “a disappointment but not a surprise”. “In no way is it a disavowal of the politics of the government,” he said. In the presidential elections, the “totality of voters” will take part – not delegates voting to fill half a chamber, he said. The Socialist party entered the elections confidently after a string of leftist victories in regional and local elections since 2008. The party elections chief, Christophe Borgel, said local officials “have the feeling of being held in scorn”. A 2010 territorial reform will put several thousand regional and general councillors out of jobs. Some of these officials have complained government funds were not keeping up with increased responsibilities handed over to regions in a 2004 reform. François Hollande, a favourite among several Socialist party members seeking the party’s presidential candidacy, said a leftist Senate majority would serve a Socialist party president well because it would be the first time the party could work with a leftist majority in the Senate. Sarkozy will not be the first president to preside over the nation with opponents in control of at least one house of parliament. Socialist president François Mitterrand dealt for each of his 14 years in office with his political rivals in the Senate and was forced to cohabit during part of his mandate with a conservative prime minister, Jacques Chirac, who succeeded him as president. France Europe Nicolas Sarkozy guardian.co.uk

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French Socialists seize Senate in blow to Sarkozy

President Nicolas Sarkozy’s conservative party loses its majority in upper house for the first time in more than 50 years France’s left wrested the Senate from the right in indirect elections on Sunday, taking the majority of seats in the upper house of parliament for the first time in more than 50 years – a blow to conservative president Nicolas Sarkozy. Seven months before presidential elections, Sarkozy’s party downplayed what it said was a narrow win – up to three seats, according to officials from the president’s party. The minister for parliamentary relations, Patrick Ollier, said the results had “no national political significance”. Final results of the voting to fill half the seats in the 348-seat house were not in, but the Socialist party leader in the Senate announced the victory. “This is a day that will mark history,” Jean-Pierre Bel, head of the Senate’s Socialist party, said. The Senate president has a consequential role under the French constitution – as interim leader should the nation’s president become incapacitated. The upper house, a 17th-century palace at the foot of the Luxembourg gardens in Paris, is sometimes derided as an institution that specialises in handing out rubber stamps. Nevertheless it can initiate bills and slow down their passage. The right had controlled the Senate since the start of the Fifth Republic in 1958. “For the first time, change is in motion … This is a real affront to the right,” Bel said. He estimated the left had won 24 to 26 new seats. It needed 23 seats to gain a majority. Final results were not expected immediately. The result is a further blow to the profile of the already unpopular Sarkozy, providing the Socialist party with prestige and political capital. Senate president Gérard Larcher, of Sarkozy’s party, conceded the left “made a real push … larger than I thought” – but said he would seek to renew his mandate. Leading members of Sarkozy’s Union for a Popular Movement party, known as UMP, stressed the forthcoming vote on 1 October for the president of the chamber. Socialists attributed their success to discontent in France’s towns and rural heartland, the home bases of the 71,890 delegates – regionally and locally elected officials who cast ballots to fill the 170 seats. Senators who were elected on Sunday have six-year mandates. Jean-François Copé, head of Sarkozy’s UMP, said the election results were “a disappointment but not a surprise”. “In no way is it a disavowal of the politics of the government,” he said. In the presidential elections, the “totality of voters” will take part – not delegates voting to fill half a chamber, he said. The Socialist party entered the elections confidently after a string of leftist victories in regional and local elections since 2008. The party elections chief, Christophe Borgel, said local officials “have the feeling of being held in scorn”. A 2010 territorial reform will put several thousand regional and general councillors out of jobs. Some of these officials have complained government funds were not keeping up with increased responsibilities handed over to regions in a 2004 reform. François Hollande, a favourite among several Socialist party members seeking the party’s presidential candidacy, said a leftist Senate majority would serve a Socialist party president well because it would be the first time the party could work with a leftist majority in the Senate. Sarkozy will not be the first president to preside over the nation with opponents in control of at least one house of parliament. Socialist president François Mitterrand dealt for each of his 14 years in office with his political rivals in the Senate and was forced to cohabit during part of his mandate with a conservative prime minister, Jacques Chirac, who succeeded him as president. France Europe Nicolas Sarkozy guardian.co.uk

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The end of motoring

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The end of motoring

Young people today would rather have the latest smartphone than a flashy car. And the number of them who can drive is plummeting. Is Britain’s love-affair with the car really over? Liz Parle can’t drive. “I did try to learn,” says the 24-year-old, Birmingham-born cafe owner, “but I failed my test a few times.” Then she moved to London, where running a car can be a nightmare. Instead she cycles everywhere. “It’s cheap, keeps me fit, and is of course better for the environment.” Parle is by no means atypical. In Britain, the percentage of 17- to 20-year-olds with driving licences fell from 48% in the early 1990s to 35% last year. The number of miles travelled by all forms of domestic transport, per capita per year, has flatlined for years. Meanwhile, road traffic figures for cars and taxis, having risen more or less every year since 1949, have continued to fall since 2007. Motoring groups put it down to oil prices and the economy. Others offer a more fundamental explanation: the golden age of motoring is over. “The way we run cars is changing fast,” says Tim Pollard, associate editor at CAR magazine , “Car manufacturers are worried that younger people in particular don’t aspire to own cars like we used to in the 70s, 80s, or even the 90s. Designers commonly say that teenagers today aspire to own the latest smartphone more than a car. Even car enthusiasts realise we’ve reached a tipping point.” As hi-tech research and development budgets source to keep pace with the iPhone generation, Pollard says carmakers are also coming to terms with less possessive buyers. “Towards the end of the 20th century, manufacturers cottoned on to the fact that we were owning things for shorter periods.” This has led to a proliferation of different ownership and rental schemes such as Streetcar , Zipcar and Whipcar . In response, the latest deals from the big carmakers are very unlike your usual forecourt deal. “Peugeot, for instance, has launched a European project called Mu ,” says Pollard. “You become a member and can then rent whichever Peugeot best suits your mobility needs that day. So you can borrow a van to move house at the weekend. Then get into a 308 for the school run, Monday to Friday. Then hop into an electric car to scoot silently around town. Then borrow a Peugeot bicycle to cycle to the pub in the evening. It’s an attempt to second-guess how we’ll run cars in future, and a pilot scheme at present, but you can do this today in London. Other car manufacturers are studying similar ideas.” Stefan Liske helps shape these ideas. The German entrepreneur once worked as a car designer and mechanical engineer, but now runs PCH , a company that models and plans new developments for companies entering choppy waters – their clients include Mini, Audi, Volkswagen and Daimler. Liske presents a picture of an industry that is being forced to confront major changes at every level: batteries that are so heavy the rest of the car must become lighter and use new materials; environmental pressures that mean current models, in which only 10% of a car is made from natural material, will be junked in favour of parts and interiors using “rattan, coconut wool, bamboo, recycled plastics”. The most radical change is that “in big societies, there is a huge status shift happening, where we are losing the idea that you use a car to define your status. So the industry needs more flexible leasing, financing and car-sharing models. And second, they have to find new revenue streams.” The near future that Liske describes echoes the computer industry’s earlier shift from a business model based on hardware to one based on software. “Audi and Toyota have just invested $1bn in wind energy. If you’re leasing a car from them, they can sell you the energy – or they go in a different direction like BMW, who just invested $100m in start-up companies offering transport-related mobile services.” Underpinning all these innovations and ideas is what Liske sees as a major behavioural shift among the generation of “digital natives”. “They don’t care about owning things. Possession is a burden, and a car is a big investment for most people – not just the vehicle, but the permits, the parking space.” He points to BMW, which in mid-July announced its investment in parkatmyhouse.com , a UK-based online parking marketplace that matches local drivers with homeowners who have empty garages and driveways. “Really,” Liske says, “it was obvious a long time ago that something had to happen.” Crucially, these ideas aren’t forming in the ether of maybe/if science fiction, but are based on proven technology that is ready to be rolled out. “Cities such as London will, in 10 years, [have these vehicles] going along autonomously and you can hop in and out of them,” he says. A vehicle such as the one Liske describes is operating on the edge of the capital. The ULTra system consists of 21 electric vehicles running on a 4km elevated guideway from Heathrow’s Terminal 5 to two stations in the business parking lot. It replaces shuttle buses, which still serve the airport’s other parking lots. Passengers first boarded the ULTra pods in April, but was it officially launched last week. It’s the first commercial Personal Rapid Transport (PRT) system anywhere in the world, and, as it drifts off from its bay in the terminal, it brings to mind both the Docklands Light Railway in London and Legoland’s Sky Rider train. “I think it’s terrific,” says David Metz, visiting professor in UCL’s Centre for Transport Studies , as we glide to the parking bays. “It’s obvious. Really, it should be here. Though the big question is what are the long-run costs and what is the feasibility of putting it on to other environments.” BAA, which helped develop the system and now owns a 70% stake in the company, says it cost £30m, which was spent over six years. While the ULTra cars themselves are simple – using the same tyres and wheels as a Ford Ka – the control-and-command system represents the most costly. This is housed in a single-storey building in the car park’s compound and staffed by ex-Network Rail employees, erstwhile RAF air traffic controllers, as well as a mechanic from the Australian navy. Though the operation is small, Mark Griffiths, its head, says it is ready for expansion at Heathrow; it is tendering for a project at the Golden Temple in Amritsar, India, and have had interest from the local councils in Bristol and Bath. So could a set-up like ULTra slip into an ancient spa town? “As long as there are planning regulations,” says Griffiths. He outlines a number of scenarios that are currently within their reach: if, for example, a newly arrived passenger wanted to hire a car or book into a hotel, ULTra could present travellers with options on a touch screen, make reservations, and drive them straight into the lobby, where their room key will be waiting. “Zero emissions, you see.” Metz’s account of underlying transport trends is simple: ultimately, we don’t want to travel more. “Look at the [Department for Transport's] National Travel Survey , an annual poll of 20,000 people, dating back to the early 70s. The average travel time has not changed over that period. The number of journeys that people make in a year hasn’t altered. It’s about 1,000 journeys a year, and about an hour’s travel per day.” This figure for daily travel is remarkably consistent. Look at Tanzanian villagers in 1986 or Britons today, and we all seem to travel, on average, for about 66 minutes a day. What did rise, in Britain at least from the 70s through to the 90s, was the distance people covered. “In the early 70s, it’s about 4,500 miles per person per year, which includes all modes of travel except international travel by air, which is a different story,” says Metz. “It rose to about 7,000 miles per year by the mid 1990s, and it stayed steady at about that level since.” Metz also thinks a general satisfaction with the number of places people can go has lead to this levelling-off; he calls this the saturation of demand. “What is the benefit of travel?” he asks. “It’s about getting more choices of places to go – the choice we have of jobs, doctors, hospitals, schools for our kids. My hypothesis is that the growth of daily travel has come to an end because now we have quite good choice.” Other analysts agree. “There are these models used by international agencies, and oil companies and the like,” says Adam Millard-Ball , assistant professor at the department of geography of McGill University, Montreal. “They say as we get richer, we’ll want to travel more. There’s no limit. Our hunch was that this might not be the case.” Working with the late Lee Schipper, a senior research engineer at Stanford University, Millard-Ball examined travel figures dating back to the 70s, from as many industrialised countries as possible. “The data that we have shows fairly clearly that the growth in travel demand has stopped in every industrialised country that we looked at,” he says. Schipper and Millard-Ball published their work last November in the paper Are We Reaching Peak Travel? Trends in Passenger Transport in Eight Industrialized Countries, adding to a growing body of work, all drawing similar conclusions. If these trends continue, it is possibly foresee a decline in car travel and a stagnation in total travel per capita. Though he doesn’t have any firm evidence to back it up, Millard-Ball thinks infrastructure plays a big part. “During the 70s and 80s we were building a lot more roads, allowing people to go further and faster. That era has come to an end, especially in Britain and America.” He also suggests that a general satisfaction with travel options also plays a role. “Once there’s a set of places you can get to, it’s less useful to get to any more. If there’s a Sainsbury’s two miles from your house, are you really going to go to the Sainsbury’s four miles away?” Break down the figures further, and other tendencies arise. Metz says the proportion of men in their 30s who drive has remained steady, while twentysomethings appear to be putting off getting behind the wheel until it’s absolutely necessary. “It’s partly the cost of ownership, the cost of insurance,” he says. “Other factors that are more speculative are that there are more people in higher education, which typically takes place in urban centres where the car isn’t part of the mix. Then people stay on in these urban centres.” He also says retirees often give up driving once they begin to suffer from minor disabilities. “If you retire to a place with high population density, then mobility scooters come into their own.” These electric vehicles haven’t been thoroughly researched, and mass production hasn’t quite brought automobile-industry standards. Yet he believes they could become a viable transport option for many people, even if they can only do 8mph, “and that’s a bit fast for pavements”. Not everyone shares these rosy transport visions. Paul Watters, head of public affairs and roads policy for the AA, cautions against calling time on the car. “We are a small island with a very old road network, and a fairly complicated rail network. We haven’t invested enough in transport for generations. People driving less is good for the environment, but not good for the economy, and we’ve got to find a way to make the economy keep going.” Though he is willing to admit that the AA might be “late to the party” on more progressive trends such as online car sharing or new hire schemes, Watters says car ownership still matters to its members. He also doubts whether major technological changes will make much difference within the next decade. “We might see bigger penetration of electric and hybrid cars, but it won’t be a shattering change by 2020,” he says. He also cautions against abandoning the road network. “It’s going to be very hard to maintain the road network over the next few years. As the economy picks up, we could see horrible growth in traffic and horrible congestion.” Neither the blue-sky visions of ULTra nor the jam tomorrow predictions of Watters are inevitable. Social trends can lead to change, but our travel habits are shaped by government policy too: by road, rail and airport building, most obviously, but also by planning regulations. Greenfield development, or the construction of housing on undeveloped land, is favoured by developers because it’s cheaper to build and easier to sell. Yet this is often low-density, suburban-style housing that is poorly suited to public transport and more or less requires homeowners to drive. Brownfield building, though less profitable and less popular, often raises population density, making public transport more viable. Metz is unimpressed by the new National Planning Policy Framework , which makes little reference to transport issues, while removing the national priority for brownfield development. There’s nothing wrong with wanting a little house in the country, and a car to get you to and from it. Yet there is something reckless in restricting new buildings to a particular form of transport, especially if that form of transport shows signs of decline. “There’s this idea of a green metropolis, where land values are high so there’s less space to heat, and where electric vehicles are viable, because the trips taken are shorter. If we’re living in a world that is urbanising globally, this is worth considering.” It remains a compelling idea, though not everyone agrees its time has come. The car could be reaching the end of the road, or it could idle on for some time to come. Additional reporting by Justin Quirk Transport policy Motoring Alex Rayner guardian.co.uk

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Israel to pay family compensation over killing of Palestinian girl

Abir Aramin, 10, was killed by a rubber bullet fired by an Israeli border police officer as she went to buy sweets in 2007 The family of a 10-year-old Palestinian

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Ed Balls: I’m sorry for Labour failures on bank regulation

Balls seeks to restore public trust in Labour by apologising for failures that contributed to 2008 banking crisis and refusing to make premature tax and spending pledges Follow all the latest developments from the Labour conference on our live blog Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, has sought to restore Labour’s battered credentials on the economy as he expressed profound regret for the party’s failures which contributed to the banking crisis in 2008. Warning that the current economic situation was “the most dangerous time in the economy in my lifetime”, Balls refused to make promises about reversing tax rises and spending cuts, while he tried to rebuild public trust in Labour. “The banking crisis was a disaster,” he said. “All around the world the banks behaved irresponsibly, but regulation wasn’t tough enough. We were part of that. I’m sorry for that mistake, I deeply, deeply regret it.” He added: “The thing which we said at the time was, we wanted it to be risk-based, we wanted it to be lighter where there was less risk, tougher when there was more risk. What we failed around the world to see was the scale of those risks. I’m sorry about that. It’s also the case we made some mistakes in other areas – of course we didn’t spend every pound of public money well”. Balls’s positioning is designed to counter Tory accusations that as a former senior member of the cabinet under Gordon Brown, he has no credibility on the economy. He said that David Cameron and the chancellor, George Osborne, were “stuck in a false consciousness” about the economy, and Labour’s job was to “win the argument” about an alternative and “better way” forward. Balls conceded that Labour’s image took a battering on the economy and that it would be a tough task to turn public opinion around. Doing so would have to involve acknowledging Labour’s past mistakes. Part of restoring credibility meant not making promises now on tax and spend with little idea about the state of the economy in four years’ time, he added. “People are crying out for a better way, and opposition is about answering the big question. But I can’t answer that question unless people are trusting in our credibility and our ability to make tough decisions.” His comments come ahead of his keynote speech to the Labour party conference in Liverpool – his first as shadow chancellor – in which he will promise that before the next election he will set out demanding and independently scrutinised fiscal rules for cutting the deficit . He will also tell delegates that if there is any windfall from the sale of state-owned bank shares such as RBS, the cash will be used exclusively to pay down the deficit and not boost state spending. Balls will use his speech to outline a “five-point plan” though he refused to go into the detail about its contents ahead of addressing delegates. The call for VAT to be cut temporarily to 17.5% is likely to be one of the measures reiterated on Monday. He told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme said turning around public opinion was “hard”. “History shows it’s hard. It took the Conservatives [13 ] years after 1997, it took Labour 18 years after 1979 to restore credibility. We’ve not got 18 years, we have to do this in this parliament because the world is in such a dangerous place, the coalition’s economic plan is clearly not working and in Britain and around the world, people are crying out for a better way and opposition is about answering the big question. “But I can’t answer that question unless people are trusting in our credibility and our ability to make tough decisions and that means acknowledging things that went wrong as well.” In his speech to the conference, Balls will warn: “The country and the whole world is facing the threat of a lost decade of economic stagnation.” He will also challenge the Tories over their central claim that the economic crisis is simply one of excessive public debt, and instead warn of a global growth crisis, which is deepening and becoming more dangerous by the day. In a key passage of his speech, he will embrace the two fiscal goals set out by the coalition government – bringing the country’s current budget back into balance, and ensuring the national debt is on a downward curve as a proportion of GDP. He will also promise the route to achieving these aims will be monitored by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR). The OBR was set up after claims that Labour politicians – including Balls – put improper political pressure on Treasury officials to produce over-optimistic forecasts. But Balls will not spell out on Monday the speed with which he would bring the deficit into balance, arguing that it is too early to give such a detailed timetable. Ed Balls Economic policy Banking reform Banking Financial sector Labour conference 2011 Labour Labour conference Tax and spending Economic growth (GDP) Hélène Mulholland Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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Wangari Maathai, Nobel peace prize winner, dies at 71

Kenyan social activist and environmental crusader who founded the Green Belt Movement has died of cancer Wangari Maathai, the first African woman to win the Nobel peace prize, died on Sunday night of cancer. She was 71. A towering figure in Kenya, Maathai was renowned as a fearless social activist and an environmental crusader. Her Green Belt Movement, which she founded in 1977, planted tens of millions of trees. Maathai’s death was confirmed in a statement on the movement’s website . “It is with great sadness that the family of Professor Wangari Maathai announces her passing away on 25th September, 2011, at the Nairobi Hospital, after a prolonged and bravely borne struggle with cancer. Her loved ones were with her at the time.” Maathai was a pioneer from an early age and in many spheres. After winning a scholarship to study in the US, she returned to a newly independent Kenya, becoming the first woman in east and central Africa to obtain a PhD. Maathai was also the first woman professor the University of Nairobi, where she taught veterinary medicine. Her work with voluntary groups alerted her to the struggles of women in rural Kenya, and it quickly became her life’s cause. Noticing how the rapid environmental degradation was affecting women’s lives, she encouraged them to plant trees to ensure future supplies of firewood and to protect water sources and crops. Maathai’s agenda quickly widened as she joined the struggle against the repressive and corrupt regime of Daniel arap Moi. Her efforts to stop powerful politicians grabbing land, especially forests, brought her into conflict with the authorities, and she was beaten and arrested numerous times. Her bravery and defiance made her a hero in Kenya. In awarding Maathai the Nobel peace prize in 2004, the Nobel committee said that her “unique forms of action have contributed to drawing attention to political oppression – nationally and internationally”. Maathai served as an assistant minister in President Mwai Kibaki’s government from 2003 to 2005, but her refusal to keep silent on some issues saw her politically sidelined, and she lost her seat after a single term. Her work schedule remained hectic however, and she wrote several books and travelled widely. Maathai had been in and out of hospital this year, though most Kenyans were unaware of her illness until it was reported in the local media late last week. “Professor Maathai’s departure is untimely and a very great loss to all who knew her – as a mother, relative, co-worker, colleague, role model, and heroine; or who admired her determination to make the world a more peaceful, healthier, and better place,” the statement from her organisation said. Maathai is survived by her three children and a granddaughter. Wangari Maathai Kenya Africa Nobel peace prize Xan Rice guardian.co.uk

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