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Man gored to death in Spanish bull run

Father of one, 50, dies at Bous al Carrer fiesta near Valencia after taunting half-tonne bull with pink umbrella A Spanish man was gored to death at a fiesta after waving a pink umbrella at a charging half-tonne bull. The 50-year-old father of one taunted the animal as it came rampaging out of a pen but the prank backfired horribly when the bull charged straight at him, trampled him to the floor and gored him with its horns. The Bous al Carrer (“Bulls in the Street”) festival, similar to the Running of the Bulls in Pamplona, took place in the small town of Rafelbunyol, 16 miles north of Valencia on the east coast of Spain, on Saturday evening. The town’s narrow streets are sealed off on weekends between July and October as volunteers are chased by a bull, cheered on from overlooking windows and balconies. Bous al Carrer events have become increasingly popular in towns and villages in the Valencia region in recent years, with 486 people injured last year. A video posted on the ABC newspaper website [WARNING: graphic content] showed the man standing in the sand-covered street holding a pink umbrella in the air as the bull was released from the pen. An onlooker shouted “Olé” as the animal began to charge, and then it gored the man, piercing his chest and armpit. An eyewitness told the local newspaper Las Provincias: “Everything happened very quickly. The animal turned and went for him. The man sidestepped once but then he couldn’t get away. He fell to the floor and was charged.” A fellow bull runner tried to distract the animal by waving his hands in the air, but could do nothing to prevent the man’s death. The victim was certified dead on arrival at hospital, the emergency services in Valencia said. A second bull run, scheduled for later on Saturday night, was cancelled. Bullfighting Animals Spain Europe guardian.co.uk

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Stepping Hill hospital deaths: nurse makes court appearance

Rebecca Leighton held in custody on charges of endangering life by criminal damage in saline sabotage case A nurse charged with putting insulin in saline bags at a hospital where patients’ deaths are now under investigation has appeared in court via videolink. Rebecca Leighton, 27, was arrested in July by detectives investigating the deaths of patients at Stepping Hill hospital, in Hazel Grove, Stockport. The hearing took place on Monday morning at Manchester crown court. Leighton, who is being held in custody, is charged with three counts of criminal damage with intent to endanger life and three charges of being reckless as to whether life was being endangered. Peter Wright QC, prosecuting, said detectives were arranging to interview “several hundred” patients and staff as part of the inquiry. He said: “The inquiry is very wide-ranging. There are a very large number of individuals who have been identified by the police to be interviewed. “There are 600 exhibits that are also being examined in this case and a large number of documents that have been recovered from the hospital that are subject to examination, including patient records and also records in respect of the receipt, storage and subsequent use of various items.” Examining each exhibit in total would take months, he said. The interview process would also be lengthy, the court heard. “There are several hundred such interviews to be undertaken and concluded,” Wright said, adding that toxicology and pathology results in the case were still awaited. Simon Csoka QC, defending, said: “The defendant is anxious that this matter be tried as quickly as possible.” Neighbours and colleagues of Leighton were in the public gallery but her family did not attend the preliminary hearing. Leighton, who appeared via videolink from prison, spoke only to confirm her name and a provisional trial date was scheduled for 28 February. The charges relate to the alleged tampering of saline ampoules, saline bags and medical products. Leighton is also charged with theft of medicine. She is next due to appear in court on 17 October for a plea and case management hearing. Greater Manchester police have said they are no longer investigating the death of one of five patients. The family of 84-year-old George Keep, of Cheadle, was told his death no longer formed part of the inquiry. He died on 14 July after being admitted to hospital with a broken hip. Police continue to investigate the deaths last month of Tracey Arden, 44, Arnold Lancaster, 71, Derek Weaver, 83, and Vera Pearson, 84. The alarm was raised when a large number of patients were reported to have unexplained low blood sugar levels. The Nursing and Midwifery Council will hold a hearing on Tuesday over whether to impose an interim ban on Leighton working. Helen Carter guardian.co.uk

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August heatwave to be short, sweet and southern

‘Mixed weather’ to return by weekend as high temperatures allow for brief summer, though much of the country will miss out Sweet, short and largely southern, a three-day heatwave is warming the beginning of August after average weather in July for the fifth year in a row. Forecasters issued the good news larded with caution and warnings that mediocre conditions are expected to return across the UK before the weekend. Much of the country will also miss out on sweltering temperatures that are likely to reach the low 30Cs (mid-80Fs) in London and the south-east between now and Thursday. Thunderstorms will then signal a return to the traditional “mixed weather” familiar since the last really hot summer in 2006. Mark Seltzer, a forecaster at the Met Office, used two diminutives to avoid getting “staycation” holidaymakers excited, describing the hot spell as “a little mini-heatwave”. He said: “It looks good for south-east England now, but that’s going to break down quickly to changeable conditions, a few bits of rain and thunderstorms and freshening conditions coming from the west.” July did at least end with a warm weekend in many places, raising sea temperatures to 17C (63F) off the Channel coast where resorts from Bournemouth to Brighton enjoyed bumper business. Every hire deckchair and sunbed was taken along the seven miles of beach around Bournemouth, car parks were full by breakfast time and No Vacancies signs garlanded hotels and B&Bs. Coastguards newly saved from proposed government cuts were kept busy, with rescues including the salvage of a yacht belonging to the visiting Olympic sailing team from Brazil. The boat slipped her moorings in Portland harbour and was carried on to rocks in the bay. Tony Conlan, a forecaster at MeteoGroup, said that early hopes for July had faded as the month went by without significant spells of hot weather. He said: “The last really good summer we had was 2006 when we had the warmest July on record. That now seems a distant memory.” This year, July managed a maximum 27.50C (81F), appropriately at London’s Olympic park, but also saw a low of minus 0.80C (30F) at Kinbrace in Sutherland, Scotland. Rainfall was also the lowest since 2006 but there was little compensation from sunshine which was below average for the month at 188 hours. Weather Martin Wainwright guardian.co.uk

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HSBC confirms 30,000 jobs will go

• Worldwide workforce to be cut • New chief seeks $3.5bn in savings • First-half pre-tax profit up 3% to $11.5bn The jobs axe is to cut deeply through HSBC, which confirmed on Monday that 30,000 roles are to be lost across its global banking group over the next three years. The new chief executive Stuart Gulliver, who took the helm in January after 32 years at the bank, revealed that 5,000 roles had already gone so far this year and that another 25,000 would need to be removed from the 296,000 global workforce. Revealing the extent of the job cuts for the first time, Gulliver had signalled in May that roles would be shed as he set about achieving $3.5bn (£2.14bn) of savings within three years as he aims to bolster the bank’s return on equity to 12-15% from 9.5% in 2010. He stressed that some of the reductions would come through natural staff turnover and that the bank would continue to hire in some of its faster growing markets. Gulliver was speaking as the bank reported better than expected first-half pre-tax profits of $11.5bn, up 3%, with the fastest growth coming from Asia and Latin America. Shares in HSBC rose nearly 3% to 611.9p in the minutes after the figures were published at 9.15am . Some $2.1bn of profits were made in Europe but the majority is now generated in Hong Kong – some $3bn – and the rest of Asia Pacific – $3.7bn – where profits are up 32%. The troubled North American business managed a 5% increase in profits to $606m, the smallest generator of profit, with the Middle East bring in $747m and Latin America $1.1bn. Gulliver, who had announced in May after a day-long investor meeting that he had concluded that retail business in 39 out of 61 countries was “subscale”, said: “I am pleased with these results, which mark a first step in the right direction on what will be a long journey.” In total the bank has operations in 87 countries and Gulliver wants to strip out layers of management built up under previous regimes and focus on commercial and investment banking rather than retail operations in some countries. The bank is concerned about the impact of potential regulatory changes in the UK that could be made through the independent banking commission, chaired by Sir John Vickers, as well as global changes proposed by international banking regulators in Basel. Douglas Flint, chairman, said: “The pace and quantum of regulatory reform continues to increase at the same time as the global economy appears to be losing momentum in its recovery. We are concerned about the possible pro-cyclical impacts of further deleveraging of the global economy arising from the regulatory reform agenda, at the same time as sovereign credit concerns and fiscal consolidation challenges become more critical.” The loan impairment and other credit risk provisions were down 30% on the same period last year, reaching $5.3bn. A provision of $65m was made against HSBC’s holdings of Greek bonds but it has taken no fresh hits against its Irish or Portuguese debt. Gulliver said he felt confident the eurozone would hold together and hoped that the current US debt package would be approved by US politicians to “restore some confidence” in the markets. The second interim dividend for 2011 is US$0.09 per ordinary share – the equivalent of $1.6bn. HSBC Banking Job losses Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk

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Obama announces deal to end US debt crisis

Obama says a deal has been reached with Republican and Democratic Congressional leaders and urged members of Congress to get behind the proposed legislation Barack Obama declared on Sunday he had reached agreement with Republican and Democratic Congressional leaders aimed at ending the US debt deadlock that has threatened to throw the US and world economy into chaos. However, in an address from the White House, he added cautiously, “We are not done yet.” Although the Senate is almost certain to pass it, the vote in the House could be a nailbiter, facing opposition from both hardline Republicans and disenchanted, left-wing Democrats who feel Obama has conceded too much. Obama urged members of Congress to get behind the proposed legislation, which will raise the country’s debt ceiling and cut federal spending. With time fast running out, Congress may have left it too late to meet the Tuesday deadline set by the Treasury for raising the debt ceiling above its current $14.3tn limit. The US Treasury had said that if the ceiling was not lifted by 2 August, America would no longer have the cash needed to pay all its bills and faced the prospect of defaulting for the first time in its history. Obama, after weeks of frustrating negotiation in Washington, said: “This process has been messy and taken too long.” The White House hinted yesterday that the deadline could be extended for a few days to allow Congress to get legislation through. The Democratic leader in the Senate, Harry Reid, said he was “cautiously optimistic” a deal would be made, a view echoed by his Republican counterpart, Mitch McConnell. The Senate could vote on the proposed legislation Monday. The bill would then have to go to the House, where the vote could be tighter. McConnell has scheduled a meeting with Republican senators for Monday morning to discuss the details of the deal. Speaking minutes before the president, he said: “I think I can say with a high degree of confidence that there is now a framework to review that will ensure significant cuts in Washington spending. And we can assure the American people tonight that the United States of America will not for the first time in our history default on its obligations.” The deal will raise the country’s $14.3tn debt ceiling by about $2.4tn. It sparked an immediate backlash from the left of the Democratic party because it also includes about $2.5tn in spending cuts, much of it almost certain to come from welfare benefits. The left-leaning grassroots organisation MoveOn described it as “grotesquely immoral”. The White House and congressional leaders were anxious to get some sort of compromise under way, fearful that uncertainty could lead to huge market falls today. The Nikkei rose after Obama’s statement. Experts warned that even if a deal was struck, the world’s largest economy was likely to be stripped of its triple-A debt rating by Standard & Poor’s. The head of the world’s largest bond investor – Mohamed El-Erian of Pimco – told US broadcaster ABC: “Things that need to happen are not happening fast enough. If S&P sticks to what it said, it will downgrade.” Julian Jessop, chief international economist at Capital Economics, said: “It looks like they will get a deal done to lift the debt ceiling but it looks like none of the numbers are going to reassure the debt rating agencies. I’m pretty sure America will lose its triple-A rating.” Such a move is likely to prompt a big jump in the cost of borrowing for the US. The Democratic leader in the House, Nancy Pelosi, praised Obama’s for his role behind-the-scenes in securing the compromise but said that she had not seen the details yet. She was planning a meeting of House Democrats today to discuss the package and warned there should be nothing in it that hits benefits and working-class. “We all may not be able to support it, or none us may be able to support it,” Pelosi warned. Raising the debt ceiling is normally routine but Republican members of Congress, especially a hard core allied to the Tea Party movement, have used it over the last month to hold the White House hostage. David Plouffe, a White House adviser, told ABC yesterday it was not clear if there would be enough House Republicans to get a deal through. The deal is mainly a victory for Republicans whose mission has been to cut the huge federal spending budget and undermine Barack Obama in his bid for re-election next year. The crisis has already hurt Obama, with a poll last week showing his approval ratings drop from 45% to 40%. But the Republicans may be hurt, too, by their association with the Tea Party. The US’s financial reputation has suffered as well, particularly over the last week, and even though a debt ceiling rise is now on the cards, the country could still see its credit rating being downgraded. The deal also postpones a lot of the hard spending decisions by handing over negotiation to a bipartisan Congressional committe to decide. It is due to report by the end of November and will have to weigh cuts in military spending against cuts in benefits. The deal emerged late on Saturday after fractious public exchanges earlier in the day between Republicans and Democrats. Pelosi, in a feisty speech on Saturday, accused the Republican speaker, John Boehner, of having gone over to the “dark side” in courting Republicans allied to the Tea Party. But after a series of negotiations involving Obama, Joe Biden, the vice-president, Reid, McConnell, Boehner and Pelosi, they reached an agreement on the broad principles of a deal. The Senate, which remained in session over the weekend because of the crisis, voted on a mainly procedural issue yesterday to end a Republican filibuster on the subject. In what may be a last act of defiance on this issue, Republican senators mustered enough votes to block the Democratic move. Although that seemed ominous for bipartisan co-operation, Republican senators were on course to vote for the deal. United States US politics Democrats Republicans Obama administration US economy Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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President Obama: Deal Reached on Debt Ceiling by Party Leaders

Click here to view this media (h/t Heather for video ) I’m working on fumes right now, but President Obama just announced that Boehner, McConnell and Reid have reached an agreement on the debt ceiling bill so now it’s off to Congress to see if it will get passed. President Obama discussed the framework in a public statement at the White House Sunday evening, and urged members of both parties to support the plan. He also criticized Congress for touching off this crisis, and for being unable to arrive at a single grand bargain to improve the country’s fiscal situation (with spending cuts and tax increases) and raise the debt limit as well. “Is this the deal I would have preferred? No,” Obama said. “But this compromise does make a serious down payment on the deficit reduction we need.” The announcement came just as House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) hosted a conference call with his own, unruly caucus, to sell them on the same plan. Passing this bill will be a heavier lift in that caucus, where scores of Democrats and Republicans are expected to defect. Luke Russert has been all over MSNBC talking about Boehner’s conference call and saying it was like a pep-rally, you know..he had to go all Vince Lombardi on his members to try and persuade them to vote for this deal. VICTORY! Stevie B: The final hurdle was Speaker Boehner, who fought to lower the ratio on the trigger, away from a 50-50 split on the trigger we talked about earlier. As it turns out, Boehner lost that fight, and the White House told him there would be movement on this point, and the Speaker conceded the point. (He’d already won on so many other points, this was a minor setback.) And here (pdf), by the way, is the presentation Boehner made available to his caucus after endorsing the agreement. The Speaker clearly doesn’t love the plan, but in a hilarious twist, Boehner said failing to pass it would lead to a “job-killing default.” That would be the same default Boehner has been willing to pursue for the last several months. This plan still unfortunately kicks the can down to another frakkin’ Cat Food Committee in November where we’ll be debating the same stuff all over again. I’m hearing that the cuts tied to the trigger will be 50-50 on defense and non-defense spending and that the Big Three safety Net programs won’t have benefits cut. We’ll find out more hard info tomorrow. On FOX, Baier and Rosen were discussing the Balanced Budget amendment that will be voted down immediately as Rosen described it as a poison pill in the whole debt ceiling debate. Huckabee was saying what a wonderful idea it would be to alter the Constitution. Sorry, Huck, that sucks. I’m too burnt to write much more on this tonight myself. Nobody is happy with this deal, even the Tea Party cult because many of them want the US to default and the world markets to unravel. The NY Times has more info on the triggers and reactions from Senators and leaders from both parties.

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Compared with Europeans, British women are more likely to get cancer

Alcohol and obesity blamed for higher cancer rates in British women compared with their European counterparts British women are nearly a fifth more likely to develop cancer at some point during their lives than their European counterparts, with lifestyle factors such as obesity and alcohol consumption likely to be partly responsible, a cancer charity has said. The World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF), which campaigns on cancer and lifestyle issues, said data showed women in the UK had a 25.1% chance of developing any type of cancer by the time they reached 75, as against 21.4% of women elsewhere in Europe. The study is based on figures compiled by the International Agency for Research on Cancer , part of the UN’s World Health Organisation (WHO). British men have marginally better cancer rates than those elsewhere in Europe, with a 27.8% chance of being diagnosed by the age of 75 against 29.5% for men elsewhere in Europe. The WCRF, which estimates that about 80,000 UK cancer cases could be prevented each year through physical activity, better diet, lower alcohol use and reduced obesity, said it believed similar lifestyle factors played a role in these statistics. Earlier this year, a study in the Lancet found that British women had the highest average body mass index among 19 western European nations, of 26.9. This figure, which compares weight against height, counts as overweight by WHO guidelines. Various studies have also indicated that British women tend to drink more than those in many other European countries, particularly younger women, where the prevalence of diseases associated with alcohol abuse has soared. Dr Rachel Thompson of the WCRF said alcohol and obesity formed “one of the big public health challenges we face today”. She said: “They are not the only reasons for the differing cancer rates, but there is now very strong evidence that women who drink a lot of alcohol are at increased risk of developing the disease and that excess body fat is also an important risk factor.” Ciarán Devane, chief executive of Macmillan Cancer Support , said the WCRF figures were “very worrying”. He added: “Leading a healthy, active lifestyle and eating a diet of fresh fruit, vegetables and foods that are whole grain and also limiting alcohol intake may reduce the risk of getting cancer and cancer recurrence. However, it’s important to remember that cancer can also be caused by many other factors such as age, lifestyle habits and genetic make up. “The number of people who will get cancer is now well past one in three, and there are many more people with cancer today than there were 10 years ago. By making small adjustments to their diet and lifestyles both British men and women can go a long way to helping us tackle this ever growing issue.”ends Health Cancer Alcohol Obesity Cancer Europe Peter Walker guardian.co.uk

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Lindsey Graham Still Not Ready to Back Debt Ceiling Deal Even After it Appears GOP is Getting Everything They Wanted

Click here to view this media Par for the course, if it’s Sunday, we’re going to be treated to another interview by either John McCain or his BFF here, Lindsey Graham. Heaven forbid any actual progressive Democrats are allowed on the air to voice their opinions on this debt ceiling debacle. Apparently Sen. Lindsey Graham isn’t ready to get behind these compromises being offered during the debt ceiling negotiations because they didn’t get Democrats to just dismantle all of our social safety nets immediately. Heaven forbid it appears these guys already got concessions on just about everything they wanted and that still isn’t good enough for them. They should have raised the debt ceiling before this new House of Representatives got into office so they weren’t put in the position of negotiating with these hostage takers in the first place because it looks like Lindsey Graham and the Republicans’ idea of “winning” is the complete destruction of our middle class in America, which has been obvious to a lot of us for a long time now. Transcript via This Week : AMANPOUR: Every Republican congressman from your own state voted against Speaker Boehner’s plan… GRAHAM: They did. AMANPOUR: … even though it did contain the balanced budget amendment. GRAHAM: Yeah. AMANPOUR: Do you think they’ll get behind this current framework that we’ve been describing? GRAHAM: You know, I don’t see many conservatives getting behind this, quite frankly, because you don’t overall. I’ve learned in politics the hard way, don’t oversell, and don’t tell people they should feel good when they have a reason not to feel that great. AMANPOUR: Will it pass? Will enough get behind it? GRAHAM: I think half the conference in the Republican House must vote for this. To President Obama, to David… STEPHANOPOULOS: Only half? GRAHAM: I think that’s the minimum, because I like John Boehner. Maybe he can get more, but it’s a $3 trillion package that will allow $7 trillion to be added to the debt over the next decade. (CROSSTALK) STEPHANOPOULOS: But you know the politics as well as I do… GRAHAM: So how much celebrating can you do about that? STEPHANOPOULOS: In order to get something like this through that does not include — it looks like this will not include revenue increases… GRAHAM: No revenue. That’s a win. STEPHANOPOULOS: I know where you stand on that. GRAHAM: That’s a win. STEPHANOPOULOS: That is a win. It would only get half? GRAHAM: My belief is, what do I tell people at home who say, what did you do about getting us out of debt? I slowed down how much debt you add. Instead of adding $10 trillion, we’re going to add $7 trillion. I slowed down the growth of government, but it still grows every year. For those who came out to vote in 2010 to say, get the size and scope of Washington changed in the new direction… (CROSSTALK) STEPHANOPOULOS: If you only get half, this could go… (CROSSTALK) GRAHAM: It doesn’t go in the new direction. STEPHANOPOULOS: With only half the Republican conference, this could go down. GRAHAM: Well, I’ll tell you, our Democratic friends provided no votes to John. There’s no plan by the president. Harry Reid’s plan is going nowhere. AMANPOUR: But you say there’s no plan, sir, but he’s moved so far, in fact, entirely to your side. GRAHAM: His — his — his rhetoric has moved. The reason everybody’s moved in town… AMANPOUR: But this is all spending cuts. GRAHAM: Well, let me tell you. There’s people in my party moved. There are people in my party who really are not that excited about cutting government… STEPHANOPOULOS: You’re not ready to vote for this, are you? GRAHAM: I can’t — from — from a big picture, I’m not ready to vote for this. And let me tell you why — excuse me, George — the bottom line here is, the people who got elected are not excited about being Republicans or Democrats, particularly on the Republican side. They’re excited about results. And it is fair to say, we’ve achieved a significant change in the way Washington works by paying for the debt ceiling increase and not passing it onto the credit card. We have not achieved entitlement change. We have not reduced the size and scope of government. We’re going in the wrong direction at a slower pace, and for a lot of people, that is not winning.

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Public jury campaign launched to take power away from UK’s ‘feral elite’

Expenses, bonuses and hacking crises share origins, says campaign group that includes Greg Dyke and Philip Pullman Declaration: A new jury to put the British public interest first Britain is being run by a “feral” elite whose members are responsible for a series of crises – from phone hacking to the row over bankers’ bonuses – which have scarred the country, a new, non-party group headed by the author Philip Pullman claims. A 1,000-strong “public jury” should be selected at random to draw up a “public interest first” test to ensure that power is taken away from “remote interest groups” which currently treat the public with contempt, according to the group’s declaration. The call for a public jury , which has been signed by 56 academics, writers, trade unionists and politicians from Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the Green party, is published in the Guardian. Its signatories include Greg Dyke, former director general of the BBC, Caroline Lucas, the only Green MP who is also her party’s leader, and the civil liberties campaigner and Labour peer Lady Kennedy. Guardian columnists Polly Toynbee and Madeleine Bunting have also signed the declaration. Launched by Neal Lawson, a former adviser to Gordon Brown who chairs the left of centre Compass group, the group says that decisive action is needed to wrest power back from a small elite. “Something is unravelling before our eyes,” the group says. “From bankers to media barons, private interests have bankrupted and corrupted the public realm. Power, for so long hidden in the pockets of a cosy elite, has been exposed. Those who wield it have been found wanting – in scruples, in morals and in decency.” The group says that the three crises – MPs’ expenses, bankers’ bonuses and illegal phone hacking – share common origins. “Politicians, bankers and media moguls … share a common culture in which greed is good, everyone takes their turn at the trough, and private interest takes precedence over the public good.” In a Guardian article, the authors of the declaration warn of a “feral” elite. Lawson and Andrew Simms, fellow at the New Economics Foundation, write: “With no pressure for higher ethical standards, the new all-powerful elites were like kids left free in the sweetshop, going feral as they lost all self-control and all touch with society.” The group says that 1,000 citizens should be selected at random to sit on a public jury that will propose reforms to banking, politics. The jury, to be funded from the public purse, would examine: • Media ownership. • The financial sector’s role in the crash. • MP selections and accountability. • Policing and public interest. • How to apply a “public interest first” test more generally to British political and corporate life. The declaration’s main critique of Britain – that power is concentrated in the hands of a small elite – echoes the thinking of Ed Miliband. The Labour leader, who has been praised for shaping the public response to the phone-hacking scandal, recently said that too much power in the media and other industries is concentrated in the hands of too few people. “The powerful are very good at talking about the responsibilities of the powerless but they aren’t very good at looking at their own responsibilities,” Miliband told the Times on 23 July as he called for the “big six” energy companies to be broken up. “Labour is the party of the grafters, the people who work hard and do the decent thing but don’t feel they get a very fair deal out of society.”The declaration is also signed by Lord Wood, an Oxford don who is a senior adviser to Miliband. MPs’ expenses Labour Liberal Democrats Green party Caroline Lucas Ed Miliband Executive pay and bonuses Banking Phone hacking Greg Dyke Police Protest Philip Pullman Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

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Greece debt crisis: The ‘we won’t pay’ anti-austerity revolt

With Greece in financial meltdown and the country rocked by protests we offer a beginner’s guide to the crisis Among the chic bars along Thessaloniki’s historic waterfront, one restaurant stands out. “We want our money!” reads a banner dangling from the terrace of an American-themed diner and grill. Inside, 12 staff have changed the locks, are serving cans of supermarket beer to supporters and taking it in turns to sleep nights on the restaurant floor in protest at months of unpaid wages and the restaurant’s sudden closure. This is the new symbol of Greece’s spiralling debt crisis: a waiters’ squat. Margarita Koutalaki, 37, a softly spoken waitress, divorced with an 11-year-old daughter, worked here part-time for eight years, earning about €6.50 (£5.70) an hour. Now she is taking turns to sleep on an inflatable mattress in an upstairs room, guarding the squat, while her parents babysit her child. “I’m owed about €3,000 in unpaid wages,” she says, warning her plight is shared by legions of workers all over Greece who are waiting for months for outstanding pay from struggling business owners. “At first we were told we’d be paid the following month, then the pay stopped completely and we were told by phone that the restaurant was closing. We’re still working, we’re keeping the place going, providing food and drinks to our supporters. We’ve got more clients than before. This protest is all we can do. It comes naturally.” The waiters serve cheap drinks and cut-price dinners to a new clientele of leftists and protesters from the four-month-old “indignants” movement, who would previously never have set foot in this bastion of imperialism, the Greek franchise of US giant Applebee’s. A banner in English tempts tourists with cheap souvlaki and meatballs “in support of the workers”. It is one month since Greece was paralysed by a general strike over harsh austerity measures, with mass street demonstrations and running battles between police and protesters in Syntagma Square, Athens. Greeks are more distrustful than ever of their political class and its ability to lead them out of the crippling financial crisis. Polls show growing contempt for all parties and the discredited political system. Unemployment is at a record high of 16% – far higher for young people. Those lucky enough to still have a job have suffered dramatic salary cuts and tax increases. Doctors and nurses recently staged walkouts over hospital cuts. Taxi drivers have hobbled Greece with strikes in the past two weeks, protesting at government plans to open up the industry. Their tactics included blocking ports and opening the Acropolis ticket office to let tourists in free. Crucially, Greece’s long-running “civil disobedience” movement, where ordinary citizens refuse to pay for anything from road tolls and bus tickets to extra doctors’ charges, has not fizzled out in the summer holidays. The “We Won’t Pay” offensive is championed as the purest form of “people’s power”. Organisers warn it could gain renewed force in September as the government launches a new round of financial restraint. On the main Athens-Thessaloniki road, as drivers file back into Thessaloniki from a Sunday at the beach, a crowd of civilians in fluorescent orange safety bibs stand guard at the barriers to the main road toll into Greece’s second city. Their jackets are emblazoned with “Total Disobedience”. They push aside the red-and-white barriers and wave drivers through without paying the €2.80 toll. Banners read: “We won’t pay”, and “We won’t give money to foreign bankers”. Drivers gratefully drive through, some giving the thumbs up. “We’ll see a resurgence of civil disobedience in the autumn,” says Nikos Noulas, a civil engineer from Thessaloniki, in a city centre cafe as he rolls out a series of posters championing the refusal to pay. Living a 40-minute drive from the city centre, he commutes by motorbike for what scarce work remains, but avoids paying for bus tickets or tolls. He also stages supermarket ambushes, handing shoppers big protest stickers to place on any goods they consider ludicrously expensive. Milk is a favourite. Noulas and his group fill trolleys with goods and ask the manager for a 30% discount. When refused, they abandon the full trolleys at the till. He acknowledges that a recent police clampdown has made things harder: “If a police officer is watching, there’s little choice but to pay a road toll.” But he says breaking the law by not paying small tolls or bus fares is far less serious than corrupt politicians and cartels which, he claims, ran Greece for decades with impunity. “This has taught us that the Greek people can resist. It has ignited public sentiment,” he says. The road-toll protest movement began more than two years ago outside Athens to counter what is seen as an extortionate and corrupt road toll system, with drivers expected to pay for stretches of road that have yet to be built. Some residents face paying more than €1,500 a year in tolls to get around their own neighbourhoods. By the start of this year, the movement was flourishing and included refusals to pay for Athens metro tickets, with protesters covering ticket machines with plastic bags, as well as a long-running bus fare boycott in Thessaloniki after price rises by state-subsidised private firms. Others refuse to pay their TV licences. Leftwing parties became involved, boosting the campaign’s visibility. By March, more than half of the Greek population supported the “We Won’t Pay” notion. The government heaped criticism on what it deemed an irresponsible “freeloader” mentality, warning that the non-payers would bring the country into disrepute and were starving the state of vital revenue from transport services. New laws were brought in on ticket evasion and police cracked down. George Bakagiannis, an IT manager from the Athens area, has avoided paying road tolls for two years, simply stepping out of his car and pushing open the barrier at toll booths. His group stages toll-booth ambushes for two to three hours several times a week, waving drivers through without charge. He has branched out into demonstrations against the €5 fee for doctors’ consultations. He says: “We go to the hospital and close the cashier’s room, telling people, ‘Don’t pay, we’re here.’ This isn’t our crisis, it’s the government’s crisis. They steal our money; they’re stealing our lives. Now they want us to believe even our savings aren’t safe in the bank. This movement will grow in this autumn because things are so bad now that people genuinely don’t have the money to pay.” The social commentator and writer, Nikos Dimou, says: “It’s the beginning of a divorce between the Greeks and their politicians. That’s what all these movements have in common: they are all about a loathing and abhorring of the political class.” In Thessaloniki, Greece’s second city, feelings run high. The “indignants” had their tents forcibly cleared from Athens’ Syntagma Square this weekend, but Thessaloniki’s ancient waterfront fortification, the White Tower, is still surrounded by protest tents and draped in banners reading “For sale” and “Not for sale.” Northern Greece has been badly hit by the crisis. Businesses began closing long before the full force of the financial meltdown. So many people are too poor to regularly use their cars and so many businesses have ground to a halt that Thessaloniki’s municipality has claimed a vast improvement in the air quality of the notoriously congested city. On 10 September, when the Greek prime minister George Papandreou appears at Thessaloniki’s famous international fair to unveil his new economic measures, he will be met by demonstrations. Thessaloniki protesters are using flash-mobbing, where crowds turn up unexpectedly to picket banks and public buildings. The latest target was the German consulate, where dozens of demonstrators chanted and spray-painted the pavement, demanding the European Union did more for Greece as plainclothes police looked on. At the demo on 20 July, Barbara, 30, a Greek language teacher, who did not want to give her surname, said she was serving coffee in a bar for €30 per nine-hour shift on the black economy. She lives with her father, a pensioner, and mother, a shop owner who is deeply in

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