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Argentina 9-13 England | Rugby World Cup 2011 Pool B match report

• Argentina 9-13 England • Watch World Cup video highlights, interviews and more • Browse our interactive guide to the venues and fixtures England made the shakiest of starts to their Rugby World Cup campaign by edging out Argentina 13-9 in a desperately tight opening Pool B game in Dunedin. The Pumas, hugely combative and committed, had looked the likelier winners until a 66th-minute try by replacement scrum-half Ben Youngs dragged England back from the brink. It might have been a different story had Argentina not missed six penalty attempts at goal, although Jonny Wilkinson also failed with five of his own. England, for long periods, were deeply unimpressive but will be massively relieved to have wriggled off the hook. Had they lost they would have faced a major battle to reach the knock-out stages but victory over Scotland in Auckland on 1 October should now ensure they finish top of their pool. Until the Pumas started to fade in the final quarter, Martin Johnson’s side were in all sorts of strife. The first-half was particularly brutal. Argentina lost Felipe Contepomi and Gonzalo Tiesi to injury and hooker Mario Ledesma did well to play on following a nasty collision with Courtney Lawes. England also fell badly foul of the referee Bryce Lawrence, who awarded the Pumas a string of penalties and sent Dan Cole to the sin-bin in the 34th minute. Argentina’s kickers, though, could not take full advantage with Contepomi and Martin Rodriguez missing four penalties and a drop-goal between them in the first 40 minutes. England made little headway in attack and wasted their best scoring chance when Ben Foden broke clear only to fail to put Delon Armitage clear on the left. The Pumas extended their advantage to 9-3 five minutes after the interval courtesy of Rodriguez’s second successful penalty. On a bad night for kickers on both sides, however, Wilkinson missed four successive penalty attempts and England continued to look a side lacking wit and imagination. It took the arrival of Youngs and Matt Stevens to reverse the tide, much to Johnson’s relief. Rugby World Cup 2011 Argentina rugby union team England rugby union team Rugby union Robert Kitson guardian.co.uk

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Greece braced for mass protests as austerity cuts bite

Thousands of police have been mobilised amid fears of unrest over mass public sector job cuts and other measures More than 5,000 police have been mobilised in Athens amid government fears of a repetition of last June’s violent riots in the capital. Another 5,000 are being deployed in Thessaloniki where the Green prime minister George Papandreou is due to give a speech defending the harsh fiscal cuts pledged by his government. He is expected to face mass protests after he announced 10,000 immediate public sector job cuts as he comes under mounting pressure to save Greece’s position in the eurozone. Thessaloniki is preparing for huge unrest – police have erected metal barricades to prevent protesters from storming the grounds of the International Trade Fair, where Papandreou will deliver his speech. “The protests this year seem likely to be much bigger than in any past year,” said one police official in the city. “But the situation in Greece is very difficult, so there are more things to protest about.” Authorities from the IMF and the EU are demanding that Greece pushes ahead with its austerity cuts to secure its bailout money. Papandreou has responded by saying the 10,000 jobs that are going immediately will be followed by another 10,000 within weeks – the first ever mass dismissals of public sector workers. The giant public-sector shrinkage – as many as 120,000 public workers could lose their jobs – threatens to upend decades of cosy ties between the ruling Socialist party and those workers, who have long formed a key constituency. Taxi drivers, doctors and rubbish collectors have announced strike plans, signalling a new round of anti-austerity protests by unions and professional groups in the crisis-hit country. Taxi drivers have called a 24-hour strike for Thursday, after the government refused to amend plans to open up their profession to more competition. The vehicles were on strike for nearly three weeks this summer, causing havoc to parts of the key tourism industry. Greece Europe Protest European debt crisis Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

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Israel evacuates ambassador to Egypt after embassy attack

Egypt declares state of alert after three die and more than a thousand are injured as crowds storm the Israeli embassy in Cairo Israel has evacuated its Egyptian ambassador after crowds stormed the embassy in Cairo, plunging Egypt’s ruling army deeper into its worst diplomatic crisis since the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak. Egyptian prime minister Essam Sharaf is holding a crisis cabinet meeting and a state of alert has been declared as protesters remain on the streets following the violence on Friday, burning tyres and chanting slogans against the governing military council. A senior Egyptian official says at least three people died and more than 1,000 were hurt during street clashes with police and army troops after an angry mob attacked the embassy building. Deputy health minister, Hamid Abaza, says one of the three fatalities in the violence late on Friday was a man who died of a heart attack. Abaza told The Associated Press on Saturday he doesn’t know the cause of the other two deaths. He says at least 1,093 people were injured in the clashes. The protesters pelted the police and the military with rocks, prompting the troops to fire tear gas and shoot into the air. Only 38 of the injured remained in hospital. Earlier, the protesters tore down a security wall outside the Israeli mission and stormed the embassy’s offices. Police fired shots in the air and teargas to disperse the crowd. Early on Saturday morning around 500 demonstrators remained near the embassy, which overlooks the Nile, and a few threw stones at police and army vehicles. But police gradually pushed them back and secured the area. An Israeli official said the rampage marked a further deterioration of diplomatic ties between Israel and Egypt since the fall of Mubarak. The Israeli ambassador, Yitzhak Levanon, his family and most of the staff and their dependents some 80 people were evacuated out of the country by military aircraft overnight, the official added. Only the deputy ambassador remains in Egypt. “That the government of Egypt ultimately acted to rescue our people is noteworthy and we are thankful,” the official said. “But what happened is a blow to the peaceful relations, and of course, a grave violation of accepted diplomatic behaviour between sovereign states.” The incident was the second major eruption of violence at the embassy since five Egyptian border guards were killed last month during an Israeli operation against gunmen. That incident prompted Egypt briefly to threaten to withdraw its envoy. “This action shows the state of anger and frustration the young Egyptian revolutionaries feel against Israel especially after the recent Israeli attacks on the Egyptian borders that led to the killing of Egyptian soldiers,” Egyptian political analyst Nabil Abdel Fattah said. Israel is already embroiled in a diplomatic feud with Turkey, formerly one of its closest allies, over Israel’s armed assault on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla in which nine people were killed. Presidential candidate Hamdeen Sabahy called for the army to take a “serious stance matching the public anger” towards Israel but said violence sullied the image of Egypt’s uprising. Last month a man climbed up a flagpole on the Israeli embassy and took down the flag, replacing it with the Egyptian flag. Protests continued until Friday’s violence. Egypt Middle East Israel Africa Arab and Middle East unrest David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Oh, Wisconsin, again. In the latest adventure, a state employee has been fired because he sent an email to fellow workers encouraging them to tell the public how to get a free photo ID so they can vote, reports the Journal Sentinel . Confused? From the beginning: Republicans put into place…

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Amy Winehouse’s father says he thinks his daughter died after suffering a seizure related to alcohol detoxification and “there was nobody there to rescue her.” During a taping of Anderson Cooper’s new syndicated talk show, Mitch Winehouse said his daughter had been off drugs for two and a half years…

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A really unfortunate side effect of the massive power shortage that hit Southern California yesterday: Miles of shoreline fouled with sewage. Beaches in the San Diego area are expected to be closed for at least two days after the pumps failed at a wastewater plant, causing about 2 million gallons…

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Finding a pearl inside a clam is rare, but finding a bag of cocaine is rarer. Just ask Dulles International Airport customs officials who arrested a Central American man trying to enter the US with 15 bags of cocaine stashed in shells that had been opened, stuffed, and glued back…

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What’s worth more: An employee who’s worked for 18 years with an unblemished record, or a $1.39 bag of chips? For Walgreens, the latter. Josefina Hernandez, a diabetic employee at a San Francisco Walgreens store, grabbed a bag of chips to boost her blood sugar when she felt a…

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A magnitude-6.4 earthquake struck today off the coast of British Colombia, the US Geological Survey said. The quake struck at 12:41pm PDT about 173 miles west of Vancouver. No immediate reports have damage have surfaced. “It’s been felt pretty widely—we have reports of it being felt in…

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It turns out being a country mouse may be bad for your health. People who live in rural parts of the US may be significantly less healthy than those living in cities and suburbs, according to a new study from the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute. The study found…

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