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Kirsten Dunst: after the apocalypse

Melancholia won her an award at Cannes – and plunged her into controversy. The actor talks about Von Trier’s Nazi moment, her battle with depression – and Charlotte Gainsbourg’s breasts Melancholia begins with a wedding and ends with a funeral. Actually, the new film from Danish provocateur Lars von Trier ends with the apocalypse – a funeral for everyone, as a vast planet rears up on the near horizon, lighting up the lawn and setting the birds chattering. Watching the movie at this year’s Cannes film festival, Kirsten Dunst was surprised to find herself giggling, as if this was some sort of happy ending. “That’s one thing you can say for the end of the world,” she says. “It solves a lot of problems.” We’re drinking coffee in the basement of a London hotel, with embroidered snowflakes on the wallpaper and an Indian summer raging outside. The actor is attired as though for a night on the town – sheer black dress, jingling silver bracelet – even though it’s mid-morning and she has yet to eat breakfast. She confesses that she keeps staring at the snowflakes, her eyes glazing over, her mind zoning out. At lunchtime, she is due to board a flight home to New York, after which she has a clean slate for the rest of the year. You get the impression she can’t wait to put 2011 behind her. Certainly, Melancholia has been a torrid passage for its 29-year-old star: a typical Von Trier rollercoaster that places soaring triumph cheek-by-jowl with low-comedy disaster. On the upside is Dunst’s performance, a role that is worlds away from the studio fluff that has taken too much of her recent energies. She plays Justine, the brilliant, dark-eyed manic-depressive heroine, who stumbles through the worst wedding ceremony this side of Festen and then belatedly comes into her own as judgment day looms. It’s a devastating performance, and one that

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Amanda Knox arrives in Seattle – live

Amanda Knox, acquitted of murdering Meredith Kercher, has arrived in Seattle. Follow our live coverage of the event, including a scheduled press conference 1.39am BST: Amanda is now speaking saying she is reminded to speak in English. Visibly upset and shaking she says: I am really overwhelmed right now. I was looking down from the airplane and it seemed like everything wasn’t real. What’s important for me to say is just thank you to everyone who has believed in me, who has defended me, who has supported my family. My family is the most important thing to me right now and I just want to go and be with them, so thank you for being there for me. She sits back down next to her mother again, being consoled by her sister. 1.37am BST: Curt Knox is speaking: “We couldn’t have made it through without all of you who have supported us, and especially Amanda.” Amanda’s mother Edda Mellas is now speaking and also thanking all for support. 1.36am BST: Knox is holding her mother’s hand as they stand up to the podium to speak. 1.33am BST: Theodore Simon, a Philldephia lawyer, is at the microphone calling it a “trying and gruelling nightmarish marathon”. He says the family have demonstated “unquestioned and unparralleled patience”. They have relied upon their faith, he says, that “this unjust conviction would not stand”. He says they want a thorough inquiry into the facts. “Amanda Knox was wrongly convicted and she was not, absolutely not, responsible for the death of Meredith Kercher.” 1.32am BST: Amanda Knox has walked into the room where the press conference is to start. Huge cheers have gone up. She is introduced by a speaker who says: “A very joyous occasion for us today.” Amanda’s parents are to speak, he says, confirming Amanda will make a statement but will not take questions. 1.09am BST: Television footage is showing the British Airways flight that Amanda Knox is travelling on landing in Seattle. After four years in an Italian jail she has arrived back in the US. 1am BST: Amanda Knox is en route to her home in Seattle following her acquittal on appeal of the murder of Meredith Kercher. Knox and her former boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito were both freed following the verdict in Italy on Monday evening amid dramatic courtroom scenes. It is understood Knox will land in Seattle imminently. A spokesman for the Knox family has told various media outlets that the family will hold a news conference at Seattle airport at which Amanda may speak. Meredith Kercher’s family gave a press conference earlier on Tuesday in which they said they “accept the decision and respect the court” but are “left wondering” who did kill Meredith along with Rudy Guede: “For us it feels like we are back to square one.” Amanda Knox Meredith Kercher United States Italy Lee Glendinning guardian.co.uk

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Chris Christie today told the world what he’s been telling it all along: He’s not running for president. “For me, the answer was never ever anything but no,” he said, according to the Wall Street Journal . He admitted that he had considered the idea “because when as many serious people…

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One of five passengers – three of whom believed to be British – dies in crash that took place just after takeoff from Manhattan A sightseeing trip over Manhattan turned to tragedy after a helicopter carrying a number of British tourists plunged into New York’s East river, killing at least one female passenger. Police officers who reacted to the crash were hailed as heroes after they were involved in a dramatic rescue operation – much of it picked up by television cameras – hauling survivors from the submerged and overturned helicopter. The Bell helicopter encountered difficulties shortly after its takeoff from a helipad and spun into the water, turning upside down and sinking. Two passengers on board are believed to be a British couple living in Portugal while two other passengers, one of whom is also thought to be British, live in Australia, the city’s mayor, Michael Bloomberg, said. According to reports the tourists included a woman, her parents and a friend. Bloomberg said that the dead woman, a 40-year-old who lived in Sydney, had been trapped inside the helicopter . US reports named the pilot as Paul Dudley, director of Linden Airport in New Jersey, who also once piloted a Cessna light plane that made an emergency landing in a Brooklyn park in November 2006 after engine failure. “From what we know so far, the pilot reported having trouble keeping aloft, tried to turn back but crashed in the water just north of the landing pad,” Bloomberg told a press conference. He added: “A tragedy like this just breaks your heart.” “All New Yorkers feel for this family. It’s a sad day, and we wish it had not happened. Our prayers are for the deceased and for the three still in hospital who we hope will recover from their injuries,” Bloomberg said. Emergency services arrived to see only the helicopter’s skids showing on the surface after the crash just after 3.20pm local time, near East 34th Street in midtown Manhattan. The pilot and three passengers were bobbing in the chilly water and it looked as though a man was diving down and coming back up, possibly in an attempt to rescue the remaining passenger, according to witnesses. Counterterrorism officers responded first and jumped into the water. The pilot swam to the riverbank and was uninjured. Detective Martin Speechley of the New York Police Department told Sky News that the rescue had been carried out underwater in extremely testing circumstances. “You really can’t see more than a foot or two in front of your face, so most of the recovery effort would have been done by touch,” he said. Two of the woman, one of whom had suffered a cardiac arrest, were in critical condition at Bellevue Hospital that is located very close to the crash site. The passengers were understood to have known the pilot and were all friends. Witnesses described seeing the helicopter appear to spin out of control after takeoff. Jose Reyes, 58, told the New York Times: “I saw the helicopter start to spin, and then it went down. Three seconds, then boom.” He said two men were shouting for help. “They were screaming, ‘Three more inside.’” Dan Sweeney, manager at the nearby Water Club restaurant, said: “It went down pretty fast, you could see the splash, you could see the top of it and it just disappeared,” he said. “It looked like it was trying to land at the heliport and missed the landing.” Joy Garnett and her husband were on the dock waiting to take the East river ferry to Brooklyn when they heard the blades of a helicopter and saw it start to take off from the nearby helipad. She said that she saw it do “a funny curlicue.” “I thought, ‘Is that some daredevil move?’” she said. “But it was obviously out of control. The body spun around at least two or three times.” She said people on the dock started throwing in life jackets and buoys. “It didn’t make much noise,” she said. “It was just a splash and sunk.” The weather was clear but a little windy at the time of the crash. Carlos Acevedo, of Puerto Rico, who was with his wife at a nearby park, said: “It sank fast. In seconds. Like the water was sucking it in.” Lau Kamg was also walking nearby. “The sound got my attention,” he said. I saw it splash.” The helicopter was raised from the water hours later A spokesman for the British Embassy in Washington said last night: “We are urgently investigating with the authorities in New York.” New safety measures Before Tuesday’s fatal incident, two other high-profile air crashes in the waters around New York City preceded the introduction of stringent new rules governing pilot behaviour in the area. In August 2009, a small plane collided with a helicopter over the Hudson river, on the other side of Manhattan from the East river, killing nine people, including five Italian tourists. Hundreds of people on both sides of the mile-wide river witnessed the collision, which involved a helicopter operated by a sightseeing company engaged in flying tourists around sites such as the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, and a light plane that had taken off from Teterboro airport in New Jersey. A government safety panel found that an air traffic controller who was on a personal phone call had contributed to the accident. The Federal Aviation Administration changed its rules for aircraft flying over New York City’s rivers after that collision. Pilots must call out their positions on the radio and obey a 161mph speed limit. Before the changes, such radio calls were optional. Earlier that year, in what became known as the Miracle on the Hudson, an Airbus 320 airliner landed on the Hudson after hitting birds and losing both engines shortly after taking off from LaGuardia. Chesley Sullenberger, who was the captain of US Airways Flight 1549, was hailed a hero after all 155 passengers and crew were rescued. He reported a “double bird strike” less than a minute after takeoff and asked to return to the ground, before ditching in the Hudson. Ferryboats arrived shortly afterwards to rescue passengers who were taken from the wings or recovered from the river. United States New York Ben Quinn Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

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It could be a nasty December in the Antarctic: Japan says it will go ahead with its annual whale hunt and promises to ramp up security to protects its boats from activists, reports AP . The leading activist group, the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, promises to be back in full force….

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Kenya kidnap attacks by Somalis drive terrified tourists out of paradise islands

Britain and US advise travellers to avoid Lamu after woman’s abduction – drying up tourism and forcing hotels to lay off staff It has always been one of the most peaceful places in Kenya, and perhaps the most beautiful too – a Swahili island paradise of warm, deep-blue water, golden sands and ancient, narrow streets where cars are banned and donkeys rule. Even the commute from Lamu’s airport is spectacular, with wooden motorboats ferrying tourists to their hotels in the Old Town or further along the beach. But now the traffic is nearly all one way. “Few people coming,” said Mohamed Lali, 50, a boat captain wearing a faded T-shirt and a wrap. “Only people leaving.” The reason is fear. On Saturday morning a 66-year-old disabled French woman was kidnapped from her beach house in the Lamu archipelago by Somali gangsters who bundled her into a speedboat and escaped to mainland Somalia. The attack came two weeks after a British woman was abducted while on holiday further up the coast in Kiwayu, close to the Somali border. Her husband was killed. She is still missing. Following this weekend’s kidnapping several foreign governments immediately changed their travel advice. Britain and the US, which provide the biggest number of tourists to Kenya, warned their citizens to stay away from Lamu, as did France. At a stroke, the tourism sector here was shattered. Some guests took the first flight home. Others shortened their stays and cancellations poured in. At Lamu House, a high-end hotel on the Old Town seafront, there were 12 cancellations on Tuesday. Only one of the 10 rooms was occupied – by an expat couple on leave from their posts in Somalia. The hotel’s 45 staff members had gathered next to the swimming pool, listening to the Belgian owner, Frank Feremans. “I had to let half of them go,” he said, his eyes red with tears. “This is going to be a hard time for the people here.” Some hotels have shut altogether, especially on Manda island, where the French woman was kidnapped. Across the water in Shela, a village where super-wealthy Europeans, including Prince Albert of Monaco, own spectacular Swahili-style mansions, hotels have beefed up security. At Peponi Hotel, where the cheapest single room goes for £150, three armed police officers now keep watch at night, along with two watchmen on boats moored in front of the hotel. Lars Korschen, the owner, said there had been numerous cancellations, and though he had not yet laid off any of his 120 employees, the hotel was “way overstaffed”. “I can’t blame the governments for telling tourists not to come,” he said. “If it [the kidnapping] has happened twice, it could happen again.” The Kenyan authorities have been embarrassed by the kidnapping in Lamu. Though few locals had believed that the Somali kidnappers would be so brazen as to launch an attack here, there is a feeling that police were complacent. One hotel manager, who asked not to be named, said police had assured hotel owners after the Kiwayu kidnapping that security forces in Lamu were “on high alert, with all measures taken”. But even though there is a naval base in Lamu, the kidnappers were able to escape to Somalia, several hours away by boat. Two Kenyan naval officers drowned during the pursuit after their boat capsized. “The boats were not ready and the officers were not trained well,” the hotel manager said. Chastened, the Kenyan government sent the tourism minister and police chief to Lamu to try to allay fears of further attacks on tourists by Somali gangsters. Several police boats were in Lamu harbour on Tuesday, and a police aircraft waited on the airstrip. Fredrick Karenga, the district tourist officer, said a police helicopter would be stationed in town from now on, and officers were already positioned along the various coastal entry points to the main tourist areas. “We will not let Lamu die. We have learned our lesson and there will be no repeat,” Karenga said. But that is little consolation for Abdillahi Abubakar, a tour guide who has seen his business disappear overnight. It will be several months, and possibly much longer, before business returns to normal. But his loss has not been purely financial. “This place has always been peaceful. Everyone knew each other so we did not need police or much security. That’s how it was,” he said. Kenya Africa Somalia Piracy at sea Tourism, transport and travel Xan Rice guardian.co.uk

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Kenya kidnap attacks by Somalis drive terrified tourists out of paradise islands

Britain and US advise travellers to avoid Lamu after woman’s abduction – drying up tourism and forcing hotels to lay off staff It has always been one of the most peaceful places in Kenya, and perhaps the most beautiful too – a Swahili island paradise of warm, deep-blue water, golden sands and ancient, narrow streets where cars are banned and donkeys rule. Even the commute from Lamu’s airport is spectacular, with wooden motorboats ferrying tourists to their hotels in the Old Town or further along the beach. But now the traffic is nearly all one way. “Few people coming,” said Mohamed Lali, 50, a boat captain wearing a faded T-shirt and a wrap. “Only people leaving.” The reason is fear. On Saturday morning a 66-year-old disabled French woman was kidnapped from her beach house in the Lamu archipelago by Somali gangsters who bundled her into a speedboat and escaped to mainland Somalia. The attack came two weeks after a British woman was abducted while on holiday further up the coast in Kiwayu, close to the Somali border. Her husband was killed. She is still missing. Following this weekend’s kidnapping several foreign governments immediately changed their travel advice. Britain and the US, which provide the biggest number of tourists to Kenya, warned their citizens to stay away from Lamu, as did France. At a stroke, the tourism sector here was shattered. Some guests took the first flight home. Others shortened their stays and cancellations poured in. At Lamu House, a high-end hotel on the Old Town seafront, there were 12 cancellations on Tuesday. Only one of the 10 rooms was occupied – by an expat couple on leave from their posts in Somalia. The hotel’s 45 staff members had gathered next to the swimming pool, listening to the Belgian owner, Frank Feremans. “I had to let half of them go,” he said, his eyes red with tears. “This is going to be a hard time for the people here.” Some hotels have shut altogether, especially on Manda island, where the French woman was kidnapped. Across the water in Shela, a village where super-wealthy Europeans, including Prince Albert of Monaco, own spectacular Swahili-style mansions, hotels have beefed up security. At Peponi Hotel, where the cheapest single room goes for £150, three armed police officers now keep watch at night, along with two watchmen on boats moored in front of the hotel. Lars Korschen, the owner, said there had been numerous cancellations, and though he had not yet laid off any of his 120 employees, the hotel was “way overstaffed”. “I can’t blame the governments for telling tourists not to come,” he said. “If it [the kidnapping] has happened twice, it could happen again.” The Kenyan authorities have been embarrassed by the kidnapping in Lamu. Though few locals had believed that the Somali kidnappers would be so brazen as to launch an attack here, there is a feeling that police were complacent. One hotel manager, who asked not to be named, said police had assured hotel owners after the Kiwayu kidnapping that security forces in Lamu were “on high alert, with all measures taken”. But even though there is a naval base in Lamu, the kidnappers were able to escape to Somalia, several hours away by boat. Two Kenyan naval officers drowned during the pursuit after their boat capsized. “The boats were not ready and the officers were not trained well,” the hotel manager said. Chastened, the Kenyan government sent the tourism minister and police chief to Lamu to try to allay fears of further attacks on tourists by Somali gangsters. Several police boats were in Lamu harbour on Tuesday, and a police aircraft waited on the airstrip. Fredrick Karenga, the district tourist officer, said a police helicopter would be stationed in town from now on, and officers were already positioned along the various coastal entry points to the main tourist areas. “We will not let Lamu die. We have learned our lesson and there will be no repeat,” Karenga said. But that is little consolation for Abdillahi Abubakar, a tour guide who has seen his business disappear overnight. It will be several months, and possibly much longer, before business returns to normal. But his loss has not been purely financial. “This place has always been peaceful. Everyone knew each other so we did not need police or much security. That’s how it was,” he said. Kenya Africa Somalia Piracy at sea Tourism, transport and travel Xan Rice guardian.co.uk

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Alarming new research out of eastern and southern Africa, where both unplanned pregnancies and AIDS wreak havoc: The most popular contraceptive used by women there appears to double their risk of contracting HIV—and if a woman already has HIV, it doubles her risk of transmitting it to her partner…

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Amanda Knox case overturned on lack of motive and forensic errors, juror says

Lay judge says prosecution case over Meredith Kercher murder was fatally flawed, as victim’s brother questions appeal verdict A member of the jury that overturned the convictions of Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito for the murder of the British student Meredith Kercher told the Guardian the lack of a motive and errors made by forensic investigators fatally weakened the prosecution’s case. Fabio Angeletti, 40, a teacher from Terni, 55 miles south of Perugia, spoke as Knox flew back to the US and the prosecutor who led the investigation signalled he would seek to overturn the acquittals in Italy’s top appeals court. Celebrity publicist Max Clifford said the Seattle student, who spent four years in an Italian jail, could earn between £5m and £20m from her story. He suggested that she give some of the money to the Kerchers to avoid the impression she was profiting from the victim’s death. The Kerchers, who were due to fly out of Italy on Tuesday night, expressed bewilderment and frustration at the outcome. Lyle Kercher, Meredith’s brother, wanted to know “how a decision that was so certain two years ago has been so emphatically overturned now”. “As a father, I have a real feeling for the Kerchers’ pain,” said Angeletti. “But you need conclusive motives to condemn, as well as conclusive evidence. There were lots of mistakes by the forensic investigators that robbed the case of any certainty.” Angeletti was one of six jurors – technically lay judges – who joined two professional judges in upholding the appeal of Knox and her Italian former boyfriend against their 26- and 25-year sentences for murdering Kercher in Perugia in November 2007. Angeletti declined to be drawn on details of the deliberations, but said he had focused more on the hard evidence in the “large number of documents” provided to the court than on the dramatic speeches made by Knox protesting her innocence. The six jurors – Angeletti and five women – were selected using more demanding educational criteria than those at Knox’s and Sollecito’s first trial. The lay judges for the appeal had to have spent 13 years at school and obtained a high school diploma. Angeletti said he had heard appeals in four other murder trials. Knox left Capanne prison near Perugia on Monday night in a Mercedes with darkened windows. At Rome’s Fiumicino airport she boarded a flight to London en route for the US. “Those who wrote, those who defended me, those who were close, those who prayed for me, I love you,” Knox wrote in a letter released hours before leaving the country. Back in Perugia, Giuliano Mignini, the prosecutor who led the investigation, said he was confident the court of cassation, Italy’s highest appeals tribunal, “will deliver justice”. Though Knox was acquitted of murder, she was given an increased sentence for slandering her former employer, a Congolese bar owner. In a statement to police, signed without the assistance of a lawyer, she said Diya “Patrick” Lumumba, was the murderer. Lumumba spent a brief period in jail as a result. “What was the motive for the slander if she was not involved in the murder?” asked Mignini. A fourth person, Rudy Guede, was later found to have been at the scene of the crime. He was tried in separate proceedings, convicted of Kercher’s murder and lost two appeals. Mignini said the court of cassation had accepted Guede did not act alone, a point echoed by Lyle Kercher yesterday: at Tuesday’s press conference. “If the two who were released yesterday were not the guilty parties, we are left wondering who are the other person or people and for us it feels very much like back to square one,” he said. The Italian justice system envisages a trial, appeal and second appeal to the court of cassation. But the second appeal normally only considers points of law or procedure. An appeal to Italy’s supreme court is open to both sides in a case. But Lyle Kercher noted that Mignini would need authorisation from his superiors to go further. Amanda Knox Meredith Kercher Italy United States Europe John Hooper Tom Kington guardian.co.uk

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David Cameron to urge households to pay off debts

While urging the country not to become paralysed by gloom, prime minister admits the good times will be a long time coming David Cameron will urge the country not to become paralysed by gloom and fear even though he will admit the depth of the debt crisis means the good times will be a long time coming. In a delicate balancing act, he will try in his closing speech to the Conservative party conference on Wednesday to re-energise the country by insisting that despite the pessimism over the economy, politics and society, “the country’s best days are not behind us”. “Let’s bring on the can-do optimism,” he will say before claiming that his “leadership is about unleashing your leadership”. But despite the efforts to lift the mood of the country, Cameron will also provide a frank admission that the economy is not going to be fixed quickly. His aides openly admit that the country’s finances are in worse state than they had expected – a fact underlined by repeated downgrading of official growth forecasts. At one point he will even urge households to clear their debts: “The only way out of a debt crisis is to deal with your debts. That means households – all of us – paying off the credit card and store card bills.” In a frank assessment, he will tell delegates in Manchester: “We need to tell the truth about the overall economic situation. People understand that when the economy goes into recession, times get tough. But normally, after a while, things pick up. Strong growth returns. People get back into work. This time, it’s not like that. And people want to know why the good times are so long coming. “The answer is straightforward, but uncomfortable. This was no normal recession; we’re in a debt crisis. It was caused by too much borrowing, by individuals, businesses, banks – and, most of all, governments.” He will also warn there is a limit to what government can do to speed the process of rebuilding the foundations of the economy. “When you’re in a debt crisis, some of the normal things that government can do, to deal with a normal recession, like borrowing to cut taxes or increase spending, these things won’t work because they lead to more debt, which would make the crisis worse.” Cameron is not expected to make any new policy announcements. Plans to announce that convicted criminals might lose some benefits were withdrawn after they were deemed by civil servants to be as yet impractical. But the Conservatives revealed plans to require unemployed people to look for a job for several hours a day, and to be willing to accept a job within a 90-minute journey of their home or lose their benefits. Cameron did say he was considering the possibility of a “fat tax” to address the obesity crisis in the country but little detail has been advanced. He feels the need to lift the mood partly because he is concerned that talk of a return to recession could turn into a self-fulfilling prophecy as tumbling consumer confidence reduces demand, increases worklessness and lowers demand. He will say: “If we put in the effort, correct the mistakes, confront those vested interests and take on the failed ideas of the past then I know we can turn this ship around. Nobody wants false optimism. And I will never pretend there are short cuts to success. But success will come.” His officials identified the vested interests as trade unions, restrictive employment laws or companies that do not offer apprenticeships. In a key passage, he will say: “The truth is, right now, we need to be energised, not paralysed by gloom and fear. Half the world is booming, let’s go and sell to them. So many of our communities are thriving – let’s make the rest like them … hard working, pioneering, independent, creative, adaptable, optimistic and can do.” Amid dire economic figures, In a range of broadcast interviews on Tuesday Cameron pleaded that we must not “talk ourselves down further” but admitted: “I think it is a moment of danger. I think there are some very serious clouds on the horizon, chief among them is the problems in the eurozone where the French economy, the German economy have both stalled, and that is a real problem for the British economy.” Cameron indicated that he is to use negotiations on the future of the eurozone to demand “safeguards” to protect the position of the City of London. As EU finance minsters discussed the Greek sovereign debt crisis, gGovernment sources suggested that Britain is prepared to use its veto in future EU treaty negotiations to block any threats to the City. The prime minister has made clear in recent months that he will call for the repatriation of social and employment laws if EU leaders embark on a fresh round of treaty negotiations to shore up the eurozone. Germany may ask for greater fiscal co-ordination within the 17-strong eurozone to avoid a repeat of the crisis in Greece, a step that would have to be agreed by all 27 members of the EU in an amendment to the Lisbon Treaty. In an interview with Radio 4′s Today programme, Cameron said that Britain would also use these negotiations to protect Britain’s position in the single market – code for protecting the City. “We will need certain safeguards to make sure that what the eurozone countries are agreeing separately does not adversely affect the single market, which is in our interest to make work for the good of British business.” Ministers are currently involved in lengthy negotiations to protect the position of the City of London as Michel Barnier, the European internal market commissioner, presses for a series of financial services regulations. Britain is concerned about the European Markets Infrastructure regulation (Emir), which deals with derivatives, and the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (Mifid), which would create a new category of trading venue. David Cameron Conservative conference 2011 Conservative conference Conservatives Economic policy Recession Patrick Wintour Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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