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Chelsea v Everton | Evan Fanning

• Hit F5 to refresh or turn on the automatic widget below • Email your thoughts to evan.fanning.casual@guardian.co.u k • Follow Evan on Twitter, if that’s your thing • All today’s results from across the divisions • The latest Premier League tables and stats On a more (or less) serious note Gary Naylor writes: “One of the many iniquitous effects of the injection of external money into football (please let these debt rules be introduced as soon as possible and be enforced with an iron fist – no chance, I know) is that the billionaire’s playthings can buy second, even third string, players who would walk into 15 or so Premier League teams. The likes of Adam Johnson or Daniel Sturridge should be at a club like Everton or Villa, as they are second strings at their own clubs. Playing ninety minutes every week would enhance their England prospects too. The old Bill Shankly line about the second best team in England being Liverpool Reserves is being realised, albeit not at Liverpool. If Manchester City, Chelsea and Manchester United entered shadow squads in the Premier League, they’d all finish in the top half wouldn’t they? Too many games are just another step in a procession. Ho Hum.” Half-time Queen watch (including pictorial evidence): “Are you sure Tim Cahill met The Queen?” asks Gary Naylor. “Can we be sure it wasn’t Dame Edna?” “Mate,” says Jeremy Austin. “Rolf was sick (possibly chundering) and had to miss the Queen’s summons. I hear Elle was there, (she’s a hot Sheilah) which probably compensated.” Ryan Dunne writes: “Don’t know if it’s ever actually happened, but whenever The Queen meets Australia’s cricketers at the Lord’s Ashes test, I’m always worried that one of them will call Her Majesty a “sheila”.” Half time: Chelsea 2-0 Everton. The home side somehow have a comfortable lead despite Everton being the better team for much of the half. Goal! Chelsea 2-0 Everton (Terry 45) A simple goal for Chelsea as Terry glances Lampard’s inswinging free kick. The header wasn’t going goalwards but it hits Howards’s flailing arm and bounces into the net. Howard was all over the place there. Perhaps he even managed to camouflage himself. 45 + 1 min: Ashley Cole is fouled by Coleman and Chelsea have a free kick on the left whcih will be the last action of the half … 44 min: This is a decent spell from Everton as Baines finds Saha in the area. Saha can’t seem to make up his mind what to do and eventually tries to stab an effort goalwards but Terry blocks and Chelsea clear. 42 min: Tim Cahill met to Queen on Thursday, according to ESPN. He was one of a number of Australians “summoned”. Who else do you think was there? Rolf Harris? 41 min: Everton work the ball into a decent position on the left but Osman has knocked Sturridge over off the ball and the whistle goes. Baines then sticks out a leg and trips the tricks Sturridge who appeared to be auditioning for a role as stepover king Denilson and he picks up a yellow card. 36 min: Ashley Cole picks up a yellow card for taking down Hibbert after some nice crisp passing between the full-back and Coleman on Everton’s right flank. Baines’s resulting free kick is far too deep and Cech claims easily. 33 min: Mata looks in the mood now and nearly gets in behiond the Everton back four but Howard races off his line to gather. “What colour is Tim Howard’s jersey? I can’t distinguish it from its surroundings,” asks Damien Neva. It’s army fatigue. I think that’s the point. Goal!! Chelsea 1-0 Everton (Sturridge 30) Everton switch off for the first time and Daniel Sturridge gives Chelsea the lead. Mata clips the ball over the top to Ashley Cole who has got in behind the Everton defence. Cole cushions a cross on the half-volley and Sturridge is the only one who has reacted to the first ball and is rewarded with a simple header into an empty net. 24 min: Bosingwa crosses from the right but it’s far too close to Howard who catches easily. If clubs wanted an example of why they shouldn’t be allowed sell individual TV rights across the globe this game is it. “Following Amy Lawrence’s fabulous turn on yesterday’s Live Blog, why do you never get women officating MBM/OBOs?” asks Ryan Dunne who ruins his ‘pro-women in football’ viewpoint with the next sentence which reads: “Afterall, I’m sure there must be lots of (preferably hot and single) women who read and contribute to them! Man, I’m surprised Polly Toynbee’s never raised the issue.” 24 min: “I don’t think enough credit has been given to Ramires for the improvement in Chelsea’s play, with most people highlighting Mata who’s a more flashy player,” writes Brendan Large. “Ramires is like the new Lampard. Unfortunately Lampard is now the new Jon Obi Mikel, meaning we now have two slow, not very good defensive midfielders playing who can’t defend.” 21 min: Everton win another corner as Osman picks out Baines who finds Fellaini in the area. The afro-clad midfielder takes a touch but Mikel does well to get back and the put the ball behind for a corner which comes to nothing. 19 min: Bosingwa cuts in from the right flank and shoots with his weaker left foot but he drags the shot and it trickes harmlessly wide of Tim Howard’s post. 18 min: So far this game has all the edge of an episode of Glee. 17 min: The first glimpse of Drogba as an attacking threat as he spins Jagielka on the edge of the area but fails to drive into the area to explot the space and the Everton defender gets a block to his cross and the ball bounces clear. 14 min: Yellow card for Fellaini whio leaves his foot in as Ramires clears. It’s a needless challenge and a stupid yellow to pick up. “Evening Evan,” writes Julian Menz. “Everton might have dodgy-away-kit issues, but what were Chelsea thinking? Joan Collins-goes-gridiron-in-a-Birmingham City-hand-me-down: I’m a Chelsea fan and all, but it’s just nasty.” 13 min: Chelsea’s attacks are all rather toothless so far and Distin and Jagielka have yet to be tested in any serious way. It’s certainly not the kind of past-paced football seen at the Reebok in their last outing. 10 min: The best chance of the match so far and it’s gone Everton’s way. Osman picks up the ball just inside the Chelsea half and threads a perfectly weighted pass through to Saha on the left. The striker manages to avoid injury while cutting inside and firing a low right-footed shot which Cech needs two attempst to gather. 8 min: Coleman again finds space on the right and tries to beat Cole but has to settle for a corner. Baines swings the corner right under Cech’s crossbar but the Chelsea keeper does well to claw away while under pressure. 5 min: Everton have a half-chance to trouble, or at least they would have have if Cahill had spotted Coleman in acres of space outside him when he rose to head at the edge of the area. Instead he goes for goal and Cech gathers with ease. It’s a decent start from Everton. 4 min: Chelsea knock the ball round in the slow and measured manner that so delights Fernando Torres. Drogba drops deep and pings a ball over the top which Ramires races after but he’s eased out of the way by Distin. The Chelsea fans want a free kick but there’s no chance. Meanwhile Gary Naylor has supplied an entry from his book of proverbs. “There’s an old saying in football – “You can’t buy trophies”. It’s getting older all the time.” 2 min: Everton move onto the front foot early on as Cahill attempts to scamper into the area but Ivanovic snuffs out the danger. Ashley Cole then dallies in the area and Coleman blocks his clerance but Osman pushes Ivanovic in his hurry to get to the loose ball and the whistle goes. Peep!! Mike Jones blows his whistle and Chelsea kick off playing from right-to-left in their traditional blue. Ryan Dunne may be right. Everton are Gok Wan’s favourite team. Today they are decked out in their “glacier marl” third kit (grey to you and me) which as everybody knows is so hot right now, is the new black/brown/grey/green and, if it isn’t careful, will soon be adopted by Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt and will have to travel round with a bag over its head to avoid being photographed by those evil paparazzi. Or worse, it could have flat cap pulled over its head, which brings us back to square one. An email. In fact there are two emails but one was merely pointing out that the intro stated “David Moyes named an unchanged team from the side which lost to Everton” which is obviously not technically possible. The other is from Ryan Dunne who writes: “‘Sup Evan! It’s Ryan Dunne, from the internet, as featured on an MBM a few weeks back! Mad props to your colleague’s advice on Blink 182′s new album; I think that “Natives”, “Up All Night”, “Snake Charmer” and “Heart’s All Gone” are all superb! Everton surely don’t adhere to the ducks (and indeed Duckworth) stereotype you invoked so. Afterall, last season they had stylish PINK and CREAM away kits, whereas this season their goalie is decked out in army fatigue colours! Truly, if Gok Wan supported a Premiere League Side, it would be Everton (Yours, disappointed that the Glorious Glasgow Rangers have never had a pink away kit.” Hollywood’s Hugh Jackman has just narrated a segment about Everton midfielder and compatriot Tim Cahill’s fighting spirit. Obviously he also got a plug in for his new film Reel Steel, which is basically Rocky meets Robot Wars. Speaking of Hollywood, ESPN are showing off their new ESPN Arena which is basically a hologram version of Subbuteo. So Chelsea are the new Barcelona, eh? Or at least the new Arsenal, tip-tapping their opponents into submission with devastating displays of high-octane modern football. Everton, meanwhile, have pulled their flap cap firmly over their head and are refusing to embrace modern technology, travelling everywhere by push-bike, referring to women as “duck” and grumbling that everything was better when things didn’t cost so much. But Everton like playing at Chelsea. It’s five years since they last lost at Stamford Bridge although it’s even longer since they last won (1994). The last five meetings at the Bridge have been draws and another today would set a Premier League record. David Moyes has praised the job Andre Villas-Boas has done since moving to Chelsea and believes that in Juan Mata they have a player that can make a real differece. “Mata is probably as close to David Silva in the Premier League as I have seen,” Moyes said prior to the game. An odd statement given that Silva is in the Premier League so presumably he is the most like David Silva with Mata a close second? Unless there is some sort of Talented Mr Ripley situation developing, in which case hang on to your hats. Mata starts as Villas-Boas makes two changes from the side which was so impressive at Bolton two weeks ago. David Moyes barely has 11 players to pick from so he names an unchanged team from the side which lost to Liverpool with Jack Rodwell’s red card having been rescinded. Here are the two teams … Chelsea: Cech; Bosingwa, Ivanovic, Terry, Cole; Mikel, Lampard, Ramires; Sturridge, Drogba, Mata. Subs: Turnbull, Romeu, Malouda, Meireles, Lukaku, Alex, Anelka. Everton: Howard; Hibbert, Jagielka, Distin, Baines; Coleman, Fellaini, Rodwell, Osman; Cahill; Saha. Subs: Mucha, Heitinga, Bilyaletdinov, Drenthe, Stracqualursi, Neville, Vellios. Referee: Mike Jones (Cheshire) Premier League 2011-12 Chelsea Everton Evan Fanning guardian.co.uk

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Yemeni government loyalists kill 12 at protest rally in capital

Civilians shot and wounded at mass demonstration calling for resignation of President Ali Abdullah Saleh Twelve people were shot dead and dozens wounded on Saturday when security forces and plain-clothed government loyalists launched a coordinated attack opening fire on a mass rally in the Yemeni capital of Sana’a, calling for President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s resignation. The crackdown has dampened hopes for a negotiated political solution to the nine-month uprising and heightened fears that the impoverished country may be heading towards civil war. In an effort to pile further pressure on their autocratic ruler, who recently returned from Saudi Arabia after receiving treatment for injuries sustained in an assassination attempt, protesters launched an escalation campaign, calling for a mass demonstration on Saturday. At midday, a crowd of 100,000 men, women and children stormed out of the tented protest encampment, dubbed Change Square, and into the city. As they marched deeper into the dusty streets of Sana’a, a volley of bullets fired by snipers stationed in nearby buildings rained down on the crowd. As the shooting intensified, young men appeared on battered motorbikes and began ferrying the wounded away from the fighting. A few blocks away, soldiers could be seen distributing steel batons to mobs of plain-clothed government loyalists who closed in and began hurling rocks at the demonstrators. But the violence seemed only to embolden the protesters, who pressed on and marched into the heart of the city. Young men ripped open their shirts, bearing their chests at the security forces, as the crowd roared: “Oh Ali Saleh, the courts are waiting for you.” Blood trickled down the walls of a nearby mosque-turned-field-hospital in Change Square where a group of doctors and medical students struggled to find the floor-space, let alone the medical supplies, for the dozens of wounded being brought in. Mohammed Al-Qubati, a doctor working in a field hospital, told the Observer that people were dying because of a “shortage of medical supplies”. In the corner of the mosque, three brothers wept over the corpse of their father before kissing his forehead and closing his eyelids. “What did he do to deserve this brutality?” one of them shouted. “He was marching peacefully and they shot him in the chest.” As the afternoon wore on clashes erupted between the republican guard – an elite force head by Saleh’s son and heir-apparent Ahmed – and a division of renegade soldiers who have sided with the protesters. Black smoke billowed from the office of Al-Saeeda, one of Yemen’s few independent television stations, as the two sides hurled mortars at each others’ bases in the north of the capital. The Ministry of Defence issued a statement on its website on Saturday evening saying the Interior Ministry denied the allegation that 10 people were killed today. Amongst those wounded on Saturday was an Al-Jazeera Arabic cameraman who was shot in the kneecap. Three cameramen have been shot dead in the past month, prompting fears that the regime may be deliberately targeting them. Saturday’s crackdown comes just days before an expected vote by the UN Security council on a new resolution calling for Saleh’s immediate resignation in return for immunity from prosecution. Saleh, who returned to Sana’a on Friday, was airlifted to Saudi Arabia in June for emergency treatment, after a booby-trap explosion ripped through the mosque in his presidential compound. His prolonged stay in Riyadh gave false hopes to some that he might step down and allow a peaceful transition of power. Protesters are hoping to see decisive action from the security council. Many in the anti-Saleh camp accuse both Riyadh and Washington of supporting Saleh, who had once been their ally against al-Qaida’s Yemen-based wing. They accuse the west of adopting double standards by supporting the pro-democracy uprising in Libya but not in Yemen. “We ask the west and our neighbours in the Gulf to withdraw their support for Saleh and his sons in order to stop this blood from spilling,” said Dr Tariq Noman, a surgeon who has given up his job in a private hospital to treat the wounded. Meanwhile, the Yemeni government has urged the UN Security Council to avoid a resolution targeting the embattled president, calling on it instead to back a political solution to the country’s crisis. “The government of Yemen that follows closely the discussions over the situation in Yemen at the Security Council, stresses that the solution for the crisis does not come through issuing resolutions,” said an unnamed government official, quoted overnight on Wednesday by Saba state news agency. Yemen Middle East Protest Al-Jazeera al-Qaida Tom Finn guardian.co.uk

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Occupy Wall Street live: march on Times Square

• More than 950 protests held in over 80 countries • Protesters march on Times Square in New York • Police bar occupation of London Stock Exchange • Add your photos to the Guardian Flickr page •  Read our coverage from earlier today 1.31pm: One of the remarkable features of the Occupy movement is how it is now spreading across the world. One of the largest demonstrations today was in Spain – the Guardian’s correspondent, Giles Tremlett, has filed this dispatch from Madrid where more than 10,000 people have gathered today. Spain’s Indignados, who started the global protest movement in May, are out in some 60 cities today. I’m with at least 10,000 marchers who have gathered in the centre of Madrid at the Plaza de Cibeles. More people are arriving all the time as half a dozen different marches converge in a city where austerity measures have included cuts in teachers’ numbers. “Hands up! This is a robbery!” is one of the cries of the peaceful protest on a sunny autumn afternoon. Marchers are now heading towards the Puerta del Sol, where the global protests started with a massive spontaneous camp out on May 15. It looks like the crowd is now growing considerably. 1.28pm: Adam Gabbatt, who has been with protesters marching through Lower Manhattan today, thinks there may have been at least 1,000 and possibly 2,000 people on the march, which passed the offices of JP Morgan Chase, taking in a couple of Chase bank branches en route. (The investment bank JP Morgan Chase last year made a huge $4.6m donation to the New York city police federation, and Chase retail bank is number 1 in the foreclosures chart in the US, and is being investigated in New York for allegedly fraudulent foreclosures.) The march headed north up Broadway, making life difficult for participants of the Avon breast cancer 39.3 mile walk which is taking place today, before heading east to West Broadway, which leads up to the Washington square park destination. A student general assmbly took place there at 12 noon, and marchers will gather with their student cohorts ahead of the main event of the day – the 5pm convergence on the iconic Times Square which is being billed by organisers as an opportunity to “take Times Square”. It’s unlikely we’ll see a Zuccotti Park-esque camp springing up, but with the permanently-packed Times Square being one of the most popular tourist spots, it’ll certainly be interesting. 1.21pm: And in New York , it seems the Occupy movement is gathering strength. At one point on Thursday it seemed like it could all be over, when the owners of Zuccotti Park said they planned to clean up the plaza and prevent people from using sleeping bags and other camping gear – in effect, an eviction. The NYPD were standing by to enforce the new rules, leading to fears of an ugly confrontation. But, after intervention from, among others, New York state senator David Squadron in a late-night call to the Brookfield Properties CEO, the company backed down – and Paul Harris remarks on the protesters seem newly emboldened. Today’s march seems to show how the Occupy Wall Street movement continues to grow. Last week marchers were told to trickle up to Washington Square for a General Assembly. This week, perhaps emboldened by Friday mornings victory against eviction, they march right through lower Manhattan. The police seem very happy to just escort them. Watching them go through the wealthy TriBeCa neighbourhood it is slightly surreal to see brunching New Yorkers watch the march go by. Some wave and flash peace signs. Most just smile or look bemused. Nearly all take pics on their phone. 12.53pm: Adam Gabbatt writes: Protesters here in New York have been remarking on how the protests have spread to London and other places. 18-year-old Ethan McGarry, who had travelled down from Boston for the day. He said it was “fantastic” how the occupy movement had spread to the UK and elsewhere. “People identify with us, then hey will find reasons in their own community for action.” Lauren Zygmont had travelled from the Occupy Denver protest to New York a week ago ago. “Borders don’t matter at all,” she said. “Were all human beings, were all in this together. This is a global movement.” Dave Bonan, who was at OWS on day one, said it was “a little surreal” that the protest had spread. “I didn’t expect it to last more than 15 mins,” he said. “The fact it lasted more than a day inspired people all over the world to capitalise – no pun intended – on our success.” Bonan said the movement had spread because “folks are angrier, their wallets are getting hit now”. Asked if he had a message for protesters elsewhere in the world, he said: “Decentralized movements are mire effective than movements with leaders.” He added: “It’s good to have our brothers and sisters involved.” 12.45pm: Good afternoon and welcome to our continuing live coverage of the Occupy protests. As the focus switches from London to New York, here is a summary of events so far today. • More than 950 demonstrations against the global financial system and corporate greed are being held in more than 80 countries around the world today. Inspired by the huge rallies organised by 15-M movement in Spain and more recently Occupy Wall Street, tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets from as far afield as Seoul and Rome. • In New York Occupy Wall Street protesters have renewed their protests following yesterday’s celebrations after a planned “clean-up” of their camp in Zuccotti Park in Lower Manhattan was called off. A march this afternoon has taken in branches of JP Morgan Chase bank; later, there’s a plan to occupy Times Square. • In London about 1,000 protesters massed outside St Paul’s Cathedral in a bid to occupy the London Stock Exchange in the nearby Paternoster Square. But the square was closed off by police and private security and the demonstration remained focused on the steps around the cathedral after attempts to enter failed. Police moved in to contain the crowd and two people were arrested for assaults on officers. • Wikileaks founder Julian Assange addressed the crowd on the steps of St Paul’s Cathedral. He attacked a greedy and corrupt financial and political system that had united individuals from Cairo to London. Occupy Wall Street Occupy movement Occupy London United States Protest Matt Wells guardian.co.uk

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Somebody tell al-Qaeda to get out its checkbook. A federal judge yesterday ruled that the terrorist organization owes $9.3 billion for the damage caused to businesses and properties in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, reports the AP . Several insurance companies started their suit in 2003 versus a variety of…

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Apple is holding an invitation-only memorial service for Steve Jobs tomorrow night at Stanford, featuring some of the biggest names in Silicon Valley, reports the Wall Street Journal . Invitations ask that people RSVP through the Emerson Collective, a charity founded by Jobs’ wife. Apple will have another event “to celebrate…

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Occupy the London Stock Exchange – live coverage

Join us for continuing live coverage of the worldwide protests against corporate greed as the Occupy movement takes to the streets of London’s financial district 3.03pm: The Metropolitan Police have confirmed they have made only one arrest at the London protest. PA has spoken to a couple of people involved in the demonstration: A spokesman for the protesters said: “We are doing this to challenge the bankers and the financial institutions which recklessly gambled our economy. “This occupation and 20 other occupations all around the UK have been directly inspired by what’s happening all across America and especially Wall Street.” Activists carried banners with slogans such as “We are the 99%” and “Bankers got a bailout, we got sold out”. Among them was Lorena Fuentes, 27, a charity worker originally from Vancouver, Canada. She said: “I’m here today because I can’t see why you wouldn’t be and I feel that this is one of the few moments in history where it’s not a protest, it’s an actual movement that’s taken root. “We’re trying to challenge this myth that there are not enough resources to go around.” After the attempt to occupy Paternoster Square failed, protesters returned to their previous position in front of St Paul’s Cathedral. 2.58pm: Mark Townsend has filed this dispatch on Julian Assange’s appearance at the protest to Occupy the London Stock Exchange. Just after 2.30pm Julian Assange broke through the police kettle enclosing St Paul’s, then surrounded by an entourage of supporters and the media swept through the crowd towards the cathedral. Amid a cheering throng he fought his way through the packed ranks of protesters, turned half-way up the steps and addressed those gathered below. Assange began by lamenting the police tactics, noting hundreds more remained stranded outside the kettle. Then he began attacking a greedy and corrupt system that had united individuals from Cairo to London. “People are being ordered to Guantanamo Bay to obey the rule of law, and money is being laundered through the Caymen Islands and London to obey the rule of law. “This movement is not about the destruction of law, but the construction of law.” With that he stopped, the crowd hollering as a list of other occupations throughout the world was read out. 2.49pm: Spanish protesters have invited Crown Prince Filipe to join them at today’s demonstrations in Madrid, says Giles Tremlett Today’s protest in Madrid is expected to be one of the largest worldwide, with six marches set to converge at the Plaza de Cibeles later this afternoon. This will be followed by a rally on the Puerta del Sol in the early evening. There are protests today in around 60 other Spanish cities. 2.28pm: Julian Assange arrived at the London protest outside like a modern day messiah flanked by his disciples, says Lisa O’Carroll. “He pushed through the police kettle followed by an entourage shouting “Julian, Julian”. He is now on the steps of St Pauls.” Mark Townsend adds that the whole crowd went mental, chanting “Julian”. They also passed a vote allowing him to address the protest. He tweets: “Assange says had trouble getting through kettle, blames greed, corruption and money laundering in London for undermining rule of law.” And speaking of people who are not the messiah here a picture of Jesus amid the demonstrators on the steps of the cathedral . 2.17pm: It appears that Julian Assange was not arrested but was told he could not wear a mask. Lawyer Jen Robinson tweets: “assange NOT under arrest. Says we can’t wear masks and be anonymous but swiss bank accounts can be.” She later adds: “assange being kettled – can’t get through to speak.” 2.11pm: There are reports that Julian Assange has been arrested at the Occupy London protest. Jen Robinson, a lawyer with firm Stephen Finers and Innocent, tweets: “Here with #assange and police take him under section 60AA for wearing a mask to get into demo. Crazy. “Police refuse to let me through barricade to allow #assange a lawyer. Glen Goodman , business correspondent for ITV’s London Tonight, earlier posted a Twitpic of Assange speaking outside London Stock Exchange . 2.03pm: Despite the thousands of protesters gathered outside, it’s still business as usual for St Paul’s cathedral, writes Lisa O’Carroll. Staff tried to shepherd a bride and her father into the cathedral just across the road from the riot police. They arrived in a green and White volkswagon van and were ushered in through a side entrance. 1.55pm: The New York Times has a report on the protests in Asia and Euope today . Most events drew modest numbers across Asia — the largest crowd was in Sydney, Australia, where some news reports estimated up to 800 people were in attendance. Rallies in Hong Kong, Melbourne, Australia, Seoul, Taipei and Tokyo drew a few hundred people each. In Sydney, several hundred protesters, some carrying signs with slogans as disparate as “We are the 99%” and “Capitalism is Killing our Economy,” packed onto one of the art-deco style public thoroughfares outside the headquarters of the Reserve Bank of Australia in Sydney’s financial district. The atmosphere was lively, with a brass band providing music and hand-drawn chalk artworks springing up on the sidewalk. 1.52pm: The mood of the protest has changed dramatically as riot police move in to kettle the demonstrators, says Mark Townsend. He Tweets: “St Paul’s completely kettled. First arrests. Legal observers cannot access to “prevent breach of peace”. Rapid mood change.” Lisa O’Carroll adds that legal observers say one person has been arrested but this has not been confirmed. 1.36pm: The police are now changing into full riot gear, suggesting they may be about to adopt more forceful tactics with the protesters, says Mark Townsend. He Tweets: “Dozens of police changing into full riot garb. New Met commissioner pledged last wk to “win big days of action.” Strong tactics ahead.” 1.29pm: The Associated Press has a brief summary of some of the protests elsewhere in the world today. In Frankfurt, around 5,000 people took to the streets to protest in front of the European Central Bank. Hundreds marched through the Bosnian city of Sarajevo carrying pictures of Che Guevara and old communist flags that read “Death to capitalism, freedom to the people.” Several thousands are expected to protest in Rome a day after Premier Silvio Berlusconi survived a confidence vote. Hundreds of people also joined peaceful protests in Sydney, Tokyo, Manila, Hong Kong and Seoul. 1.27pm: There’s a more visible police presence around Paternoster square but still no sign of officers kettling protesters, writes Lisa O’Carroll. Police reinforcements now being drafted on New Gate street, home of the the London Stock Exchange, but for no apparent reason. Crowds swelling into the thousands but everyone is still milling round the area amiably with the occasional burst of sirens. Mark Townsend adds via Twitter: “Seven vans, riot gear unloaded Newgate St. Not sure why, couldn’t seem more relaxed.” 1.17pm: The police have just closed St Paul’s tube station as the crowds in the narrow streets surrounding it gather chanting “our streets, our streets”, writes Lisa O’Carroll. 1.08pm: Lisa O’Carroll has been speaking to a Spanish protester who has joined today’s demonstration in London. Tamara Wildash, 30, from Castellon in Spain, said she was protesting in solidarity with her friends and family who were also on the streets at home. “It’s very bad in Spain; 40% of young people are unemployed and salaries are very bad, really low and life is difficult. I was reading in a paper the other day that 1m families in Spain do not have an income, not in from the government and that is very sad,” she said. Castellon is a city of 200,000, 800 miles from Madrid and relied heavily on its porcelain tiling industry for employment. Wildash came to London three weeks “for a better life” and says she had not future at home. “Almost all the factories are closing down. It’s not only young people who are affected, it’s families and old people.” 1.05pm: There’s a rich international flavour to the London protests, writes Mark Townsend. Jungmin Choi, 40, from Seoul, South Korea, said she’d arrived in London several months later and was dismayed to find the economic disparity in the UK as pronounced as her homeland. “The poor are getting poorer and the rich are getting richer, it is the same here. The world is an unhappy place,” said Choi, an intern at a UK-based international peace group. 12.38pm: Here’s a gallery of some of the protests going on around the world today calling for democratic reform and an overhaul of the global financial system. Here’s another picture of the protest in London from Twitter. This photo shows the polite standoff between police and protesters at the entrances to Paternoster Square. 12.29pm: Lisa O’Carroll has just sent through this update from Paternoster Square, home of the London Stock Exchange: “Protesters have now moved on mass to Paternoster Square chanting, “We are the 99%”.” This is a reference to the 99% of people the Occupy movement says have paid a dear price so that 1% could become the wealthiest people in the world. She adds that a well prepared protester has just renamed Paternoster Square Tahrir Square – a sign of the Occupy movement’s solidarity with the pro-democracy campaigners in the uprisings across the Arab world. 12.20pm: My colleague Lisa O’Carroll has sent through this update from St Paul’s Cathedral. About 200-300 protesters have gathered in from of St Paul’s as part of the London protest against corporate greed. There seems to be as many media present as protesters. Paternoster Square, which the organisers hope to occupy, has been closed to the public with private security guards issuing warnings that people could be arrested if they try to enter. The police presence is quite muted. They’re keeping their distance – in groups of twos and threes – and there’s no sign of kettling or anything more sinster. The general good humour and camaraderie of the crowd is helped by the glorious sunshine and music. The protesters are very aware that this is an international day of protest. They’re hoping to raise awareness of the adverse impact of the global financial system and build up a global movement. 12.11pm: Mark Townsend has this update from the assembly point outside St Paul’s Cathedral: He Tweets: “Hundreds now sitting in bright sunshine on steps of St Paul’s. Occupation of a global landmark has begun. “Paternoster Sq by contrast deathly quiet. High Ct injunction banning entry granted yesterday by justice peter smith.” 11.51am: My colleague Mark Townsend has sent through this dispatch from the starting point of the London protest: Protesters are starting to assemble beneath the shadow of St Paul’s cathedral ahead of a planned occupation in the City of London. Energised by the success of similar tactics in New York, organisers are hoping to occupy Paternoster Square, home of the London Stock Exchange. Scores of police are currently inside the square alongside signs warning the site is private property and that any “licence” to enter can be “revoked forthwith.” Several thousand protesters are expected to congregate throughout the day and have been encouraged to bring tents. Those already gathered expect the policing strategy to be one of swift dispersal, aware that the successful occupation of New York’s Zuccotti Park shows that the longer demonstrators remain the harder it is to shift them. 11.20am: The worldwide protests, which combine anger at the bailout of the financial sector with disquiet at the faltering global economy and increased inequality, have their roots in mass marches earlier this year in Spain. The 15-M movement was the harbinger of the massive Israeli protests in the summer and the Occupy Wall Street movement in the US. Naomi Colvin, supporter of the Occupy the London Stock Exchange Movement, explained the movement’s concerns to BBC Radio 4′s Today programme this morning: We are concerned about the role the financial services industry plays in this country – and the relationship between the financial services industry and government. We need a flourishing financial services sector in order to recover as a country but what happened in 2008 is not a sign of a flourishing industry. It’s hard to think of failure on a more catastrophic scale. It’s difficult to have faith that that kind of thing couldn’t happen again, which isn’t good three years on. The first UK event took place in Manchester this month, timed to coincide with the Conservative party conference in the city. Up to 30 people remain in tents in the city’s Peace Gardens in St Peter’s Square. About a dozen other events are planned for Saturday around the UK, including Birmingham, Leeds, Bristol, Norwich, Glasgow and Edinburgh. Among events in other countries, 1,300 people have pledged via Facebook to occupy a central plaza in Sydney, with similar events planned for Saturday in Melbourne, Taipei, Seoul and Hong Kong. This website has a map and details of all today’s protests . The global movement has issued a manifesto , endorsed by Naomi Klein and Noam Chomsky, among others, calling for a democratisation of the global finance system and mentioning the Arab spring as an inspiration for mass action. 10.33am: Welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the continuing and growing worldwide protests against the global financial system and corporate greed. This is David Batty – you can follow me on Twitter @David_Batty. Today the Occupy movement , which has been protesting in New York for the past month, comes to the UK with a march on the London Stock Exchange . The demonstration in the city of London comes as G20 finance ministers are meeting in Paris to grapple with the eurozone crisis. Campaigners are to gather outside St Paul’s Cathedral at midday on Saturday before marching the short distance to Paternoster Square , home of the Stock Exchange , as well as the London head office of investment bank Goldman Sachs. There will be live video from the protest from midday. The protest has been organised on Facebook and Twitter pages that between them have picked up more than 15,000 followers. The organisers of Occupy London say they “intend to highlight and address social and economic injustice in the UK and beyond, as part of a global movement for real democracy.” My colleagues Mark Townsend (@TownsendMark) and Lisa O’Carroll (@lisaocarroll) will be at the London demonstration. It is one of a series of events planned around the UK as part of a global day of action, with 800-plus protests promised so far worldwide . We’ll be bringing you rolling coverage of the London demo and keeping you updated on the situation in New York, where the Occupy Wall Street protesters were yesterday celebrating after a planned “clean-up” of their camp in Zuccotti Park in Lower Manhattan was called off. We’ll be handing over to our colleagues in New York this evening, who will have a new live blog on the continuing protests there. Occupy London Occupy movement Occupy Wall Street Protest London New York David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Larry Hagman diagnosed with cancer

The 80-year-old actor, who starred as JR in long-running US series Dallas, will go ahead with filming TNT’s revival of the soap Larry Hagman has been diagnosed with cancer but says he will continue to shoot the new series of Dallas. The 80-year-old actor, best known for playing JR Ewing in the 1980s series Dallas, didn’t specify what type of cancer he had but said it was a “very common and treatable form”. “As JR, I could get away with anything – bribery, blackmail and adultery. But I got caught by cancer,” he said in a statement to America’s TV Guide. The actor is currently working on a new Dallas series for TNT and says he has no plans to pull out because of his illness. “I will be receiving treatment while working on the new Dallas series. I could not think of a better place to be than working on a show I love, with people I love. Besides, as we all know, you can’t keep JR down,” he said. The new Dallas series focuses on the Ewing offspring as they clash over the future of the family dynasty and will also star Patrick Duffy, Charlene Tilton and Linda Gray. New cast members include Jordana Brewster, Julie Gonzalo, Josh Henderson, Brenda Strong and Jesse Metcalfe. Hagman, who also started in the 1960s series I Dream of Jeannie, has had serious health issues in the past – he underwent a life-saving liver transplant operation in 1995 after admitting he had been a heavy drinker. Dallas started in 1978 and continued for 13 seasons to 1991. Hagman was the only actor to appear in all 357 episodes. United States US television industry Television industry Cancer Soap opera Television Drama Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

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Liverpool v Manchester United | Scott Murray

• Press refresh or hit auto-update for the latest action • Email scott.murray@guardian.co.uk with your thoughts • Keep up with all today’s games here Wayne Rooney on the bench for Manchester United, with Phil Jones in midfield: De Gea, Smalling, Ferdinand, Evans, Evra, Young, Jones, Fletcher, Park, Giggs, Welbeck. Subs: Lindegaard, Anderson, Rooney, Hernandez, Carrick, Nani, Valencia. Steven Gerrard starts his first match for Liverpool since this corresponding fixture last season: Reina, Kelly, Carragher, Skrtel, Jose Enrique, Kuyt, Lucas, Adam, Downing, Gerrard, Suarez. Subs: Doni, Agger, Carroll, Henderson, Spearing, Bellamy, Robinson. While we’re waiting, you’ll do well to read this piece on Steven Gerrard by the magnificent Barney Ronay: Steven Gerrard is a period piece out of kilter with modern mores. And what a headline. Only in the Guardian, eh. Now, despite United starting the season strongly, and Liverpool stuttering a wee bit, the home side will fancy their chances today. They’ve won their last three home league games against United, their best run since a streak of nine in a row between 1970/71 and 1979/80. The last time the teams met, Dirk Kuyt scored a hat-trick in this fixture last season, a game in which Luis Suarez was sensational. But United are due one against Liverpool at Anfield, where they’ve not won since December 2007, Carlos Tevez scoring the winner. And here’s a different way to analyse the recent form in this fixture: John O’Shea scored a last-minute winner the season before that, so suddenly United’s record at the home of their bitter rivals is two wins from five matches, which doesn’t look bad at all. In the meantime: United are at Anfield today, match starting at 12.45pm. Kick off in the big Liverpool v Norwich City clash: 5.30pm, Saturday 22 October. You can’t really argue with him – the fixtures between the two teams are always huge – but that’s not going to stop the gloriously stubborn Kenny Dalglish trying. “If that is what he thinks then fine. That is up to Fergie. For me, I’ve always said the most important game is the next one. It’s Manchester United this time and next week it will be Norwich City.” “I have always considered Manchester United versus Liverpool to be the game of the season in English football,” says Sir Alex Ferguson. “We are talking about the two most successful clubs in England historically, and a rivalry that goes back to how industry changed when they opened the Manchester Ship Canal.” Premier League 2011-12 Liverpool Manchester United Scott Murray guardian.co.uk

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Al-Qaida’s Yemen media chief dies in US drone attack

Egyptian-born Ibrahim al-Bana and six others killed in second airstrike to target group in as many weeks A US air strike has killed the media chief for al-Qaida’s Yemeni branch along with six other militants, the Ministry of Defence said on Saturday, in the second high-profile American missile attack in as many weeks to target the terror group in the country. A ministry statement said Egyptian-born Ibrahim al-Bana and six other militants were killed in the south-eastern province of Shabwa on Friday night. Security officials said an American drone carried out the airstrike, which was one of five overnight strikes that targeted suspected al-Qaida positions in Shabwa and the neighbouring province of Abyan in Yemen’s largely lawless south. Friday’s missile attack came two weeks after a US drone strike killed prominent American-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, a gifted Muslim preacher and savvy internet operator who became a powerful al-Qaida tool for recruiting in the West. Also killed was Samir Khan, a Pakistani-American who was a propagandist for Yemen’s al-Qaida branch: al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula. The latest airstrike underlines the growing use by the United States of drones to hit al-Qaida militants in Yemen in what appears to be a determined effort to remove the threat emanating from the group, blamed for plotting or inspiring a series of attacks on American soil and in neighbouring Saudi Arabia, a staunch Washington ally. Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has taken advantage of the political turmoil roiling Yemen. Embattled President Ali Abdullah Saleh has been struggling to stay in power in the face of eight months of massive street protests demanding his exit from power and the defection to the opposition of key aides and military commanders. Yemen al-Qaida Middle East United States Global terrorism US military guardian.co.uk

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Wales 8-9 France | Rugby World Cup semi-final match report

• Wales 8-9 France • Watch World Cup video highlights, interviews and more A stern decision by the Irish referee Alain Rolland, who reacted to Sam Warburton’s 18th minute tackle on Vincent Clerc by dismissing the Wales captain for dangerous play, gave the men in red a mountain too much to climb as they attempted to reach their first Rugby World Cup final. Trailing by 9-3 to the boot of Morgan Parra with almost an hour gone, Wales refused to submit and closed to within a point of the French thanks to a try by Mike Phillips. A man down for an hour, they dominated the second half but were let down by their kickers, the last of whom, Leigh Halfpenny, fell narrowly short with an attempt from the halfway line four minutes from time. In every other respect, whether with 15 men or 14, Wales were the braver, more adventurous and more accomplished side, and France can consider themselves extremely fortunate to be in the final once again. Wales had been looking for a chance to extend an early lead given to them by James Hook’s eighth-minute penalty and had just enjoyed their best moment with ball in hand — a scything break across France’s 22m line, involving Jamie Roberts and Shane Williams, ending with a wayward pass – when Warburton upended Clerc near the halfway line. The Welshman certainly executed the first half of a spear tackle as he turned Clerc upside down, but seemed to have let go of his opponent well before the winger hit the ground, taking the impact on the back of his neck and his shoulders. Immediately France’s players showed their anger and the Wales captain was trudging to the sidelines, there to be consoled by Adam Jones, who had left the field after 10 minutes with a leg injury. The sport’s rulers are, of course, quite right to try and eradicate the spear tackle from the game, and the nature of the occasion should have no effect on the referee’s decision on such an offence, but to many this will have seemed a marginal call by Rolland. Inevitably the mood of the match changed utterly while Wales regrouped and tried to work out how best to defend their 3-0 lead. Their cause would have been helped had Hook, replacing the injured Rhys Priestland, succeeded with two more penalties in the first half. Instead it was Morgan Parra, preparing to take his kicks against the ugly sound of booing from the Welsh fans, who put over a pair of attempts to give France a 6-3 advantage at the break. The second half was only seven minutes old when Stephen Jones replaced Hook at fly-half, but the old warhorse had been on the field only a matter of seconds when Paul James was penalised for pulling down a rolling maul, giving Parra the opportunity to maintain his perfect record to widen the gap to six points. Suddenly underpowered in the scrum and undermanned in defence, it was apparent that Wales would depend for any chance of recovery on the ability of Phillips, Roberts, Toby Faletau and George North, their most powerful ball-carriers, to drive holes in the French cover. With 58 minutes gone Phillips finally succeeded in making a lethal incursion as he burst around a scrum close to the line, evaded Pascal Papé’s attempted tackle and touched down. Disappointingly, Jones’s attempted conversion hit the outside of the upright. Wales remained on the front foot until the end, but were unable to manoeuvre Stephen Jones close enough to the posts a final, unrequited sequence of two dozen phases. Rugby World Cup 2011 Wales rugby union team France rugby union team Rugby union Richard Williams guardian.co.uk

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