Blast at industrial estate in Boston engages local emergency services and kills ‘up to five people’ Police have begun a forensic investigation after five people were killed and at least one other injured in an explosion at an industrial unit in Lincolnshire . The explosion occurred shortly before 7.30pm in the Broadfield Lane estate in Boston, a collection of light industrial outlets including a mechanic’s workshop and a vehicle wrecking yard. “Five men have been confirmed dead,” a police spokeswoman said. She added that a sixth man had been taken to Boston Pilgrim hospital and later transferred to the Queen’s medical centre in Nottingham. “Inquiries are ongoing and will be ongoing throughout the night to establish the cause of this explosion,” the spokeswoman said. “The circumstances at the moment are still unclear. There will be a full forensic examination of the unit,” she added. A spokesman for East Midlands Ambulance Service said: “We took a 999 call at 7.22pm this evening to attend an address on Broadfield Lane, Boston, Lincolnshire. We dispatched one double-crewed ambulance and transported one patient to Boston hospital. The call was to an explosion within an industrial unit. There have been fatalities.” Shazia Gill, of nearby Peck Avenue, said she had heard ambulances at 7.30pm. Another witness said a large number of emergency service vehicles had been seen at the site of the blast. More details soon. Firefighters Police Barry Neild guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …After the biggest single reverse of his career, the News Corp chief faces an appearance before a judicial inquiry and a fight for the right to broadcast in the UK Rupert Murdoch capitulated to parliament and abandoned News Corporation’s £8bn bid for BSkyB, as he faced the prospect of appearing in front of a judicial public inquiry to salvage his personal reputation and the right for his company to continue to broadcast in the UK. After 10 days of sustained public outcry over phone hacking, and facing the prospect of a unanimous call by MPs to withdraw his bid for total ownership of the satellite broadcaster, Murdoch succumbed at a morning board meeting at his London HQ in Wapping. Company insiders indicated Murdoch was not making a tactical retreat and that a future bid for total control of BSkyB was now unlikely. The media giant said it was likely to “deploy our capital elsewhere” to avoid any more damaging battles in the UK. The News Corp deputy chairman, Chase Carey, said the bid had become “too difficult to progress in this climate”. The withdrawal represents the biggest single reverse of Murdoch’s mercurial career, but may presage even further commercial damage not just in the UK, but worldwide. On a cathartic day at Westminster in which politicians acted as if they had been liberated from the thrall of the Murdoch empire, David Cameron announced a sweeping public inquiry into widespread lawbreaking by the press, alleged corruption by police officers, and the failure of the initial police investigation into phone hacking. The prime minister said: “What has happened here is a massive firestorm of allegations that have got worse and worse.” The inquiry will also look at a new system of independent regulation of the press, the inadequacies of the previous Labour government to investigate newspaper malpractice and the potentially critical issue of future cross-ownership between press and television stations. There is certain to be renewed pressure to reduce the number of foreign owners of the British media, as well as a big Liberal Democrat push to impose stricter rules to prevent market domination. The public inquiry will be led by Lord Justice Leveson, and will have the power to summon witnesses, including proprietors, Cameron, past prime ministers and senior newspaper executives, even if some of them are in jail. In the first instance the judge, advised by a panel of experts, will look at future regulation before turning to specific allegations of corruption or lawbreaking. Cameron, regaining some of the political initiative after 10 days on the back foot, made it clear he expected Rupert Murdoch to give evidence, saying: “If you own the media in this country, you should be able to be called under oath.” The prime minister also vowed that he was willing to see those found guilty in any future court cases stripped of the right to run a media company. He said: “The people responsible – whether they are directly responsible for the wrongdoing, whether they sanctioned it or whether they covered it up, and however high or low they go – must not only be brought to justice; they must also have no future role in running a media company in our country.” Cameron also announced that he will be rewriting the ministerial code so ministers, permanent secretaries and special advisers will be required quarterly to record meetings with senior media executives, including social meetings. Cameron admitted the relationship between media executives and the politicians had become unhealthy. He said: “It was too close. Too much time was spent courting the media and not enough time confronting the problems.”He revealed a new anger towards his former No 10 communications director, Andy Coulson, the former News of the World editor who has always insisted he knew nothing of phone hacking during his editorship of the paper. As Ed Miliband described his appointment as a catastrophic misjudgment, Cameron said: “If it turns out he lied, it won’t just be that he shouldn’t have been in government, it will be that he should be prosecuted.” The Guardian has published fresh details of warnings the paper’s executives had given to Cameron’s chief of staff, Ed Llewellyn, over Coulson. Downing Street said Llewellyn could not recall an additional warning given in October 2010. In an extraordinary speech during the truncated Commons debate on BSkyB, a passionate and sometimes raw Gordon Brown defended himself from the charge that he had been complicit in acceding to the regulatory demands of News International during his premiership. He rounded on the cabinet secretary, Sir Gus O’Donnell, for opposing his plan to set up a judicial inquiry into phone hacking when he was in office. Quoting the confidential advice, he said O’Donnell admitted “there was a media culture permissive of unlawful activities and deliberate obfuscation by News International” but that “targeting the News of the World would have been deemed to be politically motivated because it was too close to the general election and would inevitably have raised questions over the motivation and urgency of an inquiry”. O’Donnell is understood to be seeking an urgent consultation with Brown to release the full memorandum. Some Labour sources said Brown lacked political support within his cabinet to set up the inquiry so close to a general election. Faced by its rout on Wednesday, News Corp and the Murdoch family now face a battle to ensure that Rupert’s son James, who was in charge of the British newspapers, can remain as chairman of BSkyB in the face of emerging City unrest. “James Murdoch’s position is a concern,” one investor said. Pension funds were being urged to call for him to go. Alan MacDougall, managing director of PIRC, which advises pension funds and councils, said: “In light of current events it is time for the board to review whether BSkyB and its shareholders would benefit from a new, independent chair. And if shareholders agree it is time for reform, they should say so.” Murdoch’s move capped a disastrous 10 days for a company that had been poised to win approval for the BSkyB takeover until the Guardian revealed that the News of the World had targeted the mobile phone of Milly Dowler, listening to and deleting messages left for her and giving her family false hope that she was alive when she had in fact been murdered. That triggered widespread public revulsion and an almost constant deluge of adverse media coverage, forcing Murdoch to close the News of the World. Mark Lewis, the lawyer who represents the Dowler family, and also brought the first phone-hacking cases, said: “This shows the power of the public to stand up to something – however big an organisation is, however far-reaching, however worldwide – and say no, something isn’t right.” Murdoch agreed to give up on the Sky bid before Cameron’s appearance at prime minister’s questions at noon, but no attempt was made to inform No 10. The announcement did not emerge until shortly after 2pm, when it was leaked to Sky News, a couple of hours before MPs were due to debate and vote. Shares in BSkyB fell 4% after the announcement, but rebounded as uncertainty about the company’s immediate future was lifted and closed 2% higher, at 705p. News Corp lost several billion dollars in market value after the scandal broke last week, but its shares rallied after the company said on Tuesday that it was buying back $5 billion of its own shares. On Wednesday shares rose 71 cents, or 4.6%, to $16.06 in afternoon trading in New York. Rupert Murdoch BSkyB Television industry BSkyB News Corporation Media business News International Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers News of the World Phone hacking David Cameron House of Commons Ed Miliband Gordon Brown Patrick Wintour Dan Sabbagh Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media A Republican lawmaker from Tennessee will have to pay to refurbish a desk that she vandalized in the state House chambers. “In the excitement of being a freshman at the end of session, Representative [Julia] Hurley etched her initials into her desk,” House Speaker Beth Harwell told The Associated Press Tuesday. “It was like 1 in the morning on the last day of the session,” Hurley explained. “I wasn’t thinking straight.” “I don’t understand why it’s news, and I don’t want to talk about the desk.” In February, the freshman lawmaker wrote that her time as a Hooters girl resulted in her success as a politician. Hurley found herself in the spotlight again in March when dash cam video revealed that she had argued with a Tennessee state trooper for 15 minutes over receiving a speeding ticket. “I can realize my mistakes and it should be apologized for,” she later admitted.
Continue reading …Thousands of engineers and labourers have been lured by higher wages and a sense of duty The sun has only just risen in Iwaki-Yumoto when groups of men in white T-shirts and light blue cargo pants emerge blinking into the sunlight, swapping the comfort of their air-conditioned rooms for the fierce humidity of a Japanese summer. Four months on from the start of the world’s worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl, this hot-spring resort in north-east Japan has been transformed into a dormitory for 2,000 men who have travelled from across the country to take part in the clean-up effort 30 miles away at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant. Iwaki-Yumoto has come to resemble corporate Japan in microcosm. Among its newest residents are technicians and engineers with years of experience and, underpinning them all, hundreds of labourers lured from across Japan by the prospect of higher wages. They include Ariyoshi Rune, a tall, wiry 47-year-old truck driver whose slicked-back hair and sideburns are inspired by his idol, Joe Strummer. For five days a week, Rune is in thrall to the drudgery of life as a “nuclear gypsy”, the name writer Kunio Horie gave to contract workers who have traditionally performed the dirtiest, most dangerous jobs for Japan’s power utilities. The industry has relied on temporary workers for maintenance and repair work since the nuclear plant construction boom in the 1970s. Now, as then, those from the lowest rungs of Japanese society work for meagre wages, with little training or experience of hazardous environments. “I’ve never thought working at the plant was dangerous,” Rune tells the Guardian after a day’s work, for which he receives 12,000 yen (£95). “And I think my wage is fair for the kind of work I do. It’s more than I used to get driving a truck.” He arrived at Fukushima in early June after seeing an advertisement for labourers in a magazine. His 73-year-old mother knows her son is working in the area, but she has no idea he spends half of every day at the site of Japan’s worst-ever nuclear accident. Rune, who is divorced, generally gets two days off a week, when he travels to nearby Ibaraki prefecture to see his sons. “When I told them about my work the first thing they said was, ‘Please don’t get irradiated.’ They worry, but they also think that what I’m doing is kind of cool.” He says he has been exposed to five millisieverts (mSv) in little over a month – more than double the worldwide average background dose of 2.4mSv a year. While Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) engineers working inside reactor buildings are allowed an annual radiation dose of up to 250mSv, Rune’s firm has imposed a cut-off point of 30mSv for staff and 15mSv for casual labourers. “I have about two months left before I reach my limit, but I’m hoping they will make an exception and let me work for longer,” he says. The next morning, at 5.45am, the bus is already waiting when Rune emerges from his hotel, where he shares a room with five other workers. Before them lies a 45-minute journey to J-Village, a football training complex, where they will be briefed on their duties for the day before changing into radiation suits, masks and goggles, protective gloves and glass-encased monitors which they must carry with them at all times on site. At 8am they begin the first of two 90-minute shifts at Fukushima Daiichi, separated by a break of similar length. Radiation exposure and heat bring their working day to an end by early afternoon. Rune gave the Guardian a rare insight
Continue reading …Paul Lawrie, the 1999 Open Champion, assesses the challenge of each hole at the revamped Sandwich course Paddy Allen Lawrence Donegan
Continue reading …Corporation moves to ensure cover is on standby for key programmes during Friday’s planned 24-hour walkout The BBC is making preparations to try and avoid a blackout of news programmes during Friday’s planned 24-hour walkout by journalists. Negotiations with the National Union of Journalists over compulsory redundancies at BBC World Service and BBC Monitoring are going down to the wire, with news staff due to take industrial action from midnight on Thursday. The last time BBC News was hit by a strike in November 2010, stand-ins including former GMTV presenter Emma Crosby and the BBC’s own director of news Helen Boaden were drafted in to help keep shows on air. But, in what could be seen as a sign that the corporation does not intend to back down, preparations are under way to ensure cover is on standby for key programmes such as BBC Radio 4′s Today on Friday. Meanwhile, the NUJ has sent a memo to staff outlining why it is striking following a ballot over compulsory redundancies, and how it thinks the BBC could halt the walkout. “One of our members in the BBC World Service has already been dismissed. Two NUJ members at Monitoring, including our NUJ rep, will be forced to leave their jobs next week and the week after,” the union said. “One other member in Monitoring will be made compulsorily redundant in August, together with several others in the World Service and others to come in the weeks and months to follow. The BBC has mishandled these cases and has not shown the will to sort them out.” The NUJ memo added that the union believes there are five ways the BBC can stop the strike. “Extend the leaving dates of those immediately at risk to allow for further talks; Agree to release volunteers; Cut the red tape when it comes to redeployment and make it happen; Use vacant posts to offset the costs of employing those at risk; Apply fairness across the BBC and treat people the same –wherever they work.” However, the BBC business operations director, Lucy Adams, told staff in a recent internal email: “Our financial position means that we are unable to agree to the NUJ’s demands for no compulsory redundancies and delaying taking action now means that we will be required to find even more money in the future, potentially affecting more jobs.” A further 24-hour strike is due to take place on 29 July. The NUJ declined to comment. The BBC said it remained in “continuous talks” with the NUJ. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook . BBC Media unions National Union of Journalists Television industry Radio industry Tara Conlan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New figures from the Office for National Statistics show a 2.4% increase in live births in the last year alone More midwives are urgently required as the birth rate reached a 40-year high, the Royal College of Midwives has said. New figures published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show a 2.4% increase in live births in the last year alone. There were 723,165 live births in England and Wales in 2010, compared with 706,248 in 2009, making it the highest figure in almost 40 years. In 1972, the birth rate was 725,440. The number of children women are having also increased between 2009 and 2010, with the total fertility rate (TFR) rising to 2.0 children per woman in 2010 from 1.96 in 2009. Nearly 4,700 more midwives are now needed to handle the increase, according to the Royal College of Midwives (RCM). Cathy Warwick, general secretary of the RCM, said: “The government has committed to protecting student midwife training places, but this is only for one year and does little good if there are not jobs for those midwives to go to. “Without central direction it is simply too easy for hard-pressed NHS organisations to save money by cutting midwifery jobs. This is a false economy and government backing is needed to ensure this does not happen. “All the reports on maternity services show that there is a direct link with midwifery staffing levels and the safety of services. Late last year I said I have real fears that the safety of maternity services was being compromised by the shortfall in midwife numbers; these new figures add even greater weight to that fear. “Midwives are working harder and doing more with less and maternity services and the quality of care is suffering. I appeal to David Cameron to accept what the figures are telling him and to honour his promise. Failing to do so is a disservice to midwives and, more importantly, a disservice to the women and babies those midwives care for.” The ONS figures also show a decrease in stillbirths between 2009 and 2010. In 2010, there were 5.1 per thousand live and stillbirths, down from 5.2 in 2009. There was, however, an increase in all deaths in England and Wales between 2009 and 2010, rising from 491,348 in 2009 to 493,243 in 2010, an increase of 0.4%. There were 3,140 infant deaths under one year of age registered in England and Wales, giving an infant mortality rate of 4.3 deaths per thousand live births, the lowest rate ever recorded. Midwifery Health NHS Childbirth Health & wellbeing Social trends guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media It seems Fox’s plan for filling the 5 pm EDT slot once held by Glenn Beck is to trot out some of its pundits and see which of them floats to the top. With, of course, a lone Democrat along for comic relief/punching bag duty. The show is called “The Five,” and it debuted Monday with a lineup that pretty much tells you Fox’s idea of a “fair and balanced” debate: four right-wingers and a lone Fox Democrat, in this case Bob Beckel, whose function as usual is to mealy-mouth the liberal position and give a lukewarm defense of the targeted liberals du jour . He was joined by a cast of right-wingers ranging from the usual smarmy Establishment type long favored at Fox (Dana Perino) to the haplessly juvenile frat/sorority types (Andrea Tantaros and Greg Gutfeld) to the simply execrable (Eric Bolling). This segment — featuring a discussion of whether or not Media Matters should be permitted to maintain its tax-exempt status because it takes an obvious liberal position, while the permeation of the Beltway with right-wing think tanks and Tea Party apparatchiks bothers them not one whit — was pretty representative of the quality of discussion to be had on the show. Which is to say, only a technician’s half-step away from being something I might run across late at night on my local access cable TV. It’s all part of Fox’s sad and pathetic attacks on Media Matters, which Karoli posted about yesterday, The hypocrisy here is profound: Fox and its hosts, after all, are fond of declaring that their critics — who merely criticize them — are out to “silence” them and shut them down . But these attacks on MM are in fact quite explicitly intended to silence the organization and shut it down.
Continue reading …• Hit refresh or the auto-update button for the latest posts • Send your thoughts to paul.doyle@guardian.co.uk 6 min: Wambach meets an American corner at the back post but, under pressure from two defenders, can’t get proper contact on it and her awkward header poses no threat. 5 min: It’s been a promising start by France, who seems determind to carry on their enterprising style. They’ve been the more lively and inventive so far but the Americans are tough and well-organised and keeping chances to a minimum. Or zero, to be exact. 3 min: The crowd is big but quiet so far – which means we can hear the players’ calls and yelps. Let’s hope that doesn’t give rise to lots of boring complaints like the ones that proliferate around Wimbledon. 1 min: France get the game under way. It doesn’t take the US long to win the ball off them, but they make poor use of it, hoofing long to the French keeper. 4:58pm: It looks like a bumper crowd in Monchengladbach and face-paint vendors appear to have been doing a roaring trade. Preamble Break out those liberty fries, folks, burn them baguettes and bury your berets – yes, we know you have berets – because it’s the United States against France for a shot at world domination. You must be either with one or against one. No, wait, that’s not right – there is a third way: you can tune in just to enjoy a high-quality, high-stakes game of football. Spoilsport. Americans love an underdog, it’s said, so everyone stateside will presumably be supporting the French, who have none of the US’s pedigree in this tournament nor their No1 world ranking and, as their manager Bruno Bini, pointed out yesterday, have far fewer players to call on than their counterparts (“we have 60,000 registered female players, they have 2.5 million so there is a better chance of them finding 21 good players than we do,” he explained, moments after barfing . Coincidentally, most people in France will also be supporting France – and we really mean most people: the hitherto neglected national women’s team has caught the public’s imagination because, according to the Le Parisien, perhaps making an implicit comparison to the country’s men’s team, “they don’t cheat, they play; they don’t take themselves for stars and they have a charismatic coach” (whose pre-match pep-talks, incidentally, often include him reciting poetry or breaking into song). Both sides came through taut thrillers in the last round. Who will prevail today? Teams France: Sapowicz, Georges, Meilleroux, Soubeyrang, Bompastor, Abily, Lepailleur, Necib, Bussaglia, Thiney, Delie Subs: Deville, Renard, Boulleau, Franco, Le Sommer, Thomis, Pizzala, Bretigny, Viguier, Phillipe USA: Solo, Rampone, Sauerbrunn, Lepeilbet, Boxx, Rodriguez, O’Reilly, Lloyd, Krieger, Cheney, Wambach Subs: Mitts, O’Hara, Morgan, Cox, Rapinoe, Lindsey, Heath. Barnhart, Loyden, Buehler. Ref: K Heikkinen (Finland, which reminds me of this magnificent opus Women’s World Cup 2011 Women’s football Paul Doyle guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Cryptic wood white revealed as annual Big Butterfly Count is launched A new species of butterfly previously unknown to science has been discovered flying in Northern Ireland. The cryptic wood white looks exactly the same as both the Réals wood white and the wood white, a delicate and increasingly rare insect found in English woodlands in summer. But scientists have discovered it is in fact a unique species that has far more chromosomes, different DNA and genetically is 70,000 years old – far older than the two other species. “It’s a very exciting discovery. We are going to have to rewrite the butterfly books,” said Martin Warren, chief executive of Butterfly Conservation . The discovery comes as the charity launches the world’s largest count of butterflies, the Big Butterfly Count, encouraging everyone to spend 15 minutes on a sunny day between 16 July and 31 July recording all the butterflies they spot in their garden, park or nearby countryside. Last year 10,000 people in the UK downloaded free identification guides and submitted sightings of 189,000 butterflies online at www.bigbutterflycount.org . Sir David Attenborough , the president of Butterfly Conservation, said butterflies rarely visited his suburban garden any more and the count was crucial to understand how and why butterflies were in decline. “I saw one peacock in my garden last year and that was a big day for me. I’ve even got to the stage where I welcome cabbage whites. They lift the heart but they are also crucial to the survival of British wildlife – for the birds that feed on their caterpillars and for pollinating flowers. If my heart is not going to be lifted by a butterfly because they’ve gone, my life is going to be much the poorer.” The count is being funded by Marks & Spencer with the retailer filling the breach left by an 85% cut in Butterfly Conservation’s funding from Natural England , the government’s conservation body, which is shedding 800 staff in the public sector cuts. As well as providing crucial information on common butterflies suffering steep declines, including the small tortoiseshell and the meadow brown, the information submitted by butterfly lovers could help solve other mysteries in the butterfly world – and find more cryptic species, which are so called because they are identical to existing species and therefore hidden within them. The cryptic wood white, which has the scientific name of Leptidea juvernica, was discovered by Spanish and Russian scientists who identified the new species across a swath of central Europe, including Germany, Romania and Northern Ireland. Mysteriously, it does not occur in Great Britain, where the wood white is one of our most endangered species. For the last 10 years in Northern Ireland the cryptic wood white was believed to be the Réal’s wood white, another so-called cryptic species which was only discovered in Europe in 1988. The cryptic wood white and Real’s wood white differ from the wood white found in Britain in one important aspect: the males have much larger genitalia, leading to the nickname “long-willied wood white” in Northern Ireland. Richard Fox of Butterfly Conservation said the discovery was important because it helped conservationists understand the distribution of rare insects and which species should be a conservation priority. “The fact that there have been two species hiding within the wood white is exciting,” said Fox. “It also begs the question of what else is out there?” Butterflies Wildlife Insects Northern Ireland Patrick Barkham guardian.co.uk
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