Home secretary pre-empts revised Prevent strategy aimed at thwarting homegrown terrorism and radicalisation of students The home secretary has criticised universities for their “complacency” in tackling radicalisation and Islamic extremism on campus. The remarks pre-empt publication of the government’s revised Prevent strategy, which was originally launched in 2007 to stop the growth of homegrown terrorism. In an interview with the Daily Telegraph, Theresa May said: “I think for too long there’s been complacency around universities. I don’t think they have been sufficiently willing to recognise what can be happening on their campuses and the radicalisation that can take place. I think there is more that universities can do.” The government has identified 40 English universities where there could be a “particular risk” of radicalisation or recruitment on campus, according to the Daily Mail, which said it had seen the updated strategy. “More than 30% of people convicted for al-Qaida-associated terrorist offences in the UK … are known to have attended university or a higher education institution,” the Mail quoted the report as saying. It is understood the document also raises concerns over the Federation of Student Islamic Societies and what is seen as an insufficient willingness to tackle extremism. May told the Telegraph: “They need to be prepared to stand up and say that organisations that are extreme or support extremism or have extremist speakers should not be part of their grouping.” The newspaper said the strategy would contain details of partnerships with YouTube and AOL aimed at combating extremism online, as well as moves to limit access to extremist websites from schools and public libraries. The report will also name the 25 boroughs most at risk from Islamist extremism, including areas of London, Birmingham, Leeds, Bradford and Manchester, it was reported. It is understood about 20 of the organisations which have received funding over the last three years will have their funding cut. May said: “It’s a result of a close look at the values of the organisations themselves.” In November, the home secretary launched the Prevent strategy review – which was overseen by the independent counter-terrorism reviewer Lord Carlile of Berriew – saying it was not working as well as it could be. The £60m government programme was adopted after the 7 July bombings, and aims to counter militant Islamism by supporting mainstream Muslim groups which offer an alternative to extremism. But Prevent was criticised by some Muslims who said they feared it was being used to spy on their communities, and by other ethnic groups who believed they were missing out on financial support by comparison. A Home Office spokesman said: “The government is currently reviewing the Prevent programme, which isn’t working as well as it could. We need a strategy that is effective and properly focused. The findings will be published shortly.” Among those arrested for terrorism offences who have been linked to British universities is Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the so-called “underwear bomber”. He was detained on Christmas Day 2009 accused of trying to blow up a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit. A year and a half earlier he had graduated from University College London, where he was also president of the Islamic Society. UK security and terrorism Terrorism policy Global terrorism Higher education Islam Religion Student politics Theresa May guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Unofficial results give Ollanta Humala a narrow lead with 51.3% of the vote against 48.7% for Keiko Fujimori Ollanta Humala appeared on course to narrowly win Peru’s presidential election on Monday after moderating his firebrand left-wing image and promising to rule from the centre. Unofficial results gave the former army officer 51.3% of the vote against 48.7% for Keiko Fujimori, the right-wing daughter of a disgraced former president, after a bruising campaign which polarised the country. Humala’s supporters celebrated on Sunday night hours after polls closed, and Fujimori said she would concede – and not demand a recount – if official results confirmed the exit polls and unofficial tallies. Bolivia’s President Evo Morales did not wait for that to welcome the arrival of a fellow left-wing leader. “The great victory of Humala is the result of the people’s struggle for dignity and sovereignty,” he said. Humala won overwhelming support from impoverished indigenous voters in Andean highlands who feel left out by Peru’s mining-driven economic boom. He promised to share wealth more equally without frightening investors. The government of outgoing President Alan Garcia said it had a “contingency plan” to stabilise markets lest they panic at the prospect of a leftist populist who in a previous election modelled himself on Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez. This time around Humala, 48, a former lieutenant colonel, traded red t-shirts and socialist rhetoric for sober suits and imitation of Brazil’s former president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Humala and Fujimori, 36, were reviled by many Peruvians as dangerous demagogues but centrist candidates cancelled each other in the first round, putting the two populists from opposite ends of the political spectrum into Sunday’s run-off. Mario Vargas Llosa, the Nobel laureate, called it a choice between cancer and Aids but backed Humala to “save democracy” on the grounds Fujimori would restore vices from her father, Alberto, who is in jail for corruption and human rights abuses during his rule in the 1990s. “What’s important is that we have been freed from the return to power of a dictatorship that was terribly corrupt and bloody,” he told CPN radio. “We should congratulate ourselves and celebrate.” Fujimori dropped a pledge to pardon her father and said she would respect judicial independence and other institutions guaranteeing Peru’s democracy. She appeared to win most votes in the capital, Lima, and in other coastal areas but trailed badly in rural areas. Business elites and some big media groups backed the young senator as the best bet for keeping a status quo which has turned Peru into south America’s economic tiger. They accused Vargas Llosa of being duped by Humala’s newly professed moderation. Both candidates promised anti-poverty measures including free school meals and childcare. Humala also insisted on taxing windfall mining profits but dropped plans to renegotiate free trade agreements and rewrite the constitution with a leftist tilt. Tarred by Fujimori as Chavez’s poodle, during the campaign Humala swore on the Bible to respect democracy and press freedom. “I will be a president who acts only within the constitution and the rule of law,” he said. He promised to steer Peru closer to the United States and Brazil than to Venezuela and its leftist allies in the region. Bill Richardson, a former New Mexico governor who was in Lima as an Organisation of American States election observer, played down concerns about Humala. “He is a nationalist and an enigma with evolving views and a pragmatic streak,” he told reporters. “I think he’s educable and the business community should give him a chance.” Peru Rory Carroll guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …WASHINGTON (AP/The Huffington Post) — Sarah Palin says she didn’t mess up her history on Paul Revere. The potential 2012 presidential candidate was in Boston on Thursday as part of her bus tour when she was asked about the Revolutionary War hero. Palin said Revere “warned the British that they weren’t gonna be takin’ away our arms.” Palin, a paid Fox News contributor, told “Fox News Sunday” that she was correct. She says there were British soldiers in the area for years before Revere’s legendary ride, and that he was warning them, as well as his fellow colonists. “Part of his ride was to warn the British that were already there that ‘hey, you’re not going to take American arms, you are not going to beat our own well-armed persons individual private militia that we have.’” She blamed her previous answer on the media, saying it was a “gotcha question.” The Paul Revere House’s website says that on April 18, 1775, Dr. Joseph Warren instructed Revere to ride to Lexington, Mass., to warn Samuel Adams and John Hancock that British troops were marching to arrest them. Watch Palin speak about Revere at the Old North Church in Boston:
Continue reading …Prime minister supports Mothers’ Union report, but insists change comes through ‘social responsibility, not state control’ David Cameron has given strong backing to proposals to shield children from sexualised imagery across the media and tackle the commercialisation of childhood, but insisted that the way to bring about change is through “social responsibility, not state control”. An independent report by Reg Bailey, the chief executive of the Mothers’ Union , a Christian charity, will today set out a range of proposals to tackle the sexualisation and commercialisation of childhood. Retailers will be asked to sell “lad’s mags” in brown sleeves, the Advertising Standards Authority will look at ways to discourage billboards near schools and music videos will be given age-appropriate ratings under the plans , which were first revealed by the Guardian at the weekend. But Cameron appears to have rejected a recommendation to enforce the proposals with legislation if they were not voluntarily embarked on by retailers and publishers within 18 months. The prime minister today wrote to Bailey thanking him for his report. “I very much agree with the central approach you set out,” the letter says. “As you say, we should not try and wrap children up in cotton wool or simply throw our hands up and accept the world as it is. Instead, we should look to put ‘the brakes on an unthinking drift towards ever-greater commercialisation and sexualisation’.” But he does not commit to legislation with any of the recommendations, including toughening up the TV watershed. Bailey’s report asks for government and business to work together to tackle the problem – for example, by ending the sale of inappropriately “sexy” clothing for young children, such as underwired bras and T-shirts with suggestive slogans. But Bailey recommends that if progress is not made the government should force retailers to make the changes in 18 months. Cameron’s letter says: “I note that many of the actions you suggest are for business and regulators to follow rather than for government. I support this emphasis, as it consistent with this government’s overall approach and my long-held belief that the leading force for progress should be social responsibility, not state control.” Cameron highlights recommendations to reduce on-street advertising containing sexualised imagery near schools, moves to make it easier for parents to block adult and age-restricted material across all media, and a crackdown on companies paying children to promote their products in “peer-to-peer marketing”. He has called a meeting at Downing Street, to which retailers, advertisers, broadcasters, magazine editors, video games manufacturers, music producers, internet and phone companies and regulators will be invited to discuss progress on specific recommendations. In the meantime, a “whistleblowing” website for parents will be set up to inform them what they can do if they feel a programme, advertisement, product or service is inappropriate for their children. Children Child protection David Cameron Magazines Advertising Family Parents and parenting Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Now that Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann has thrown her hat in and said she’s participating in the GOP New Hampshire debate coming up this month, I guess we can expect more of this sort of lying demagoguery from her once those debates get started. Bachmann made an appearance at Ralph Reed’s event, the Faith and Freedom Coalition where apparently not just Bachmann, but just about every one of their party leaders showed up to kiss the feet of someone that I keep wondering why isn’t in prison right now due to his associations with Jack Abramoff. Bachmann decided to push the already discredited talking point that Planned Parenthood was involved in sex trafficking to throw some red meat to the crowd there, and apparently neither Bachmann or her audience have much use for the truth in this matter. If Bachmann thinks trafficking in lies such as this is a way to lead her to winning the GOP’s nomination for president, all I can say to her is good luck because I don’t think this sort of blatant lie will even make it past our sorry excuse for a corporate media once she enters the Republican debates or has the unfortunate incident of finding at least a few honest people in that corporate media willing to report on her lie here. That didn’t stop her from throwing this red meat to the audience there, added commentary mine. BACHMANN: And recently, this also I think has given rise to the steam that’s behind the issue of defunding Planned Parenthood. In a time when President Obama is calling on the Congress to give him authority to increase borrowing money that we don’t have, so borrow another, raise the debt ceiling by borrowing another 2.4 trillion, and we’re giving money to corrupt organizations like Planned Parenthood, that are committing crimes and enabling young minor girls and covering up issues I don’t even want to talk about it because it’s so distressing. (But of course she’s going to talk about the lie anyway, as “distressing” as it may be to her.) But this organization has by their own record performed 324,008 abortions in 2008 and 2009. And that’s in addition to the trafficking of under age girls that have gone on under Planned Parenthood’s nose. You think maybe we could start here by defunding this organization? I think so too. It couldn’t come soon enough. They’re a billion dollar a year organization. They need to stand on their own. Media Matters has more on why her attack on Planned Parenthood is bogus — HOAX VIDEO EXPOSED: Planned Parenthood Already Reported “Sex Trafficking” To FBI Of course what’s really disgusting about the GOP’s attack on Planned Parenthood is what they’re really attacking is the largest organization in the country that makes sure poor women have access to basic health care services and birth control. Every time I hear someone like Bachmann ranting on as she did here, I’m reminded of Al Franken’s statement that Republicans believe life begins at conception and ends at birth. Or as Randi Rhodes puts it, love the fetus, hate the child. These immoral Republicans who proclaim themselves to be “pro-life” like Bachmann have no care whatsoever for anyone in the working class after they’re born when you take a good look at their policies which do nothing at all but serve the will of their wealthy corporate campaign donors at the expense of the rest of us.
Continue reading …The Booker prize-winning novelist on her political activism in India, why she no longer condemns violent resistance – and why it doesn’t matter if she never writes a second novel This is not an ideal beginning. I bump into Arundhati Roy as we are both heading for the loo in the foyer of the large building that houses her publisher Penguin’s offices. There are some authors, V S Naipaul say, with whom this could be awkward. But not Roy, who makes me feel instantly at ease. A few minutes later, her publicist settles us in a small, bare room. As we take our positions on either side of a narrow desk I liken it to an interrogation suite. But she says that in India, interrogation rooms are a good deal less salubrious than this. Roy, who is 50 this year, is best known for her 1997 Booker prize-winning novel The God of Small Things , but for the past decade has been an increasingly vocal critic of the Indian state, attacking its policy towards Kashmir, the environmental destruction wrought by rapid development, the country’s nuclear weapons programme and corruption. As a prominent opponent of everything connected with globalisation, she is seeking to construct a “new modernity” based on sustainability and a defence of traditional ways of life. Her new book, Broken Republic, brings together three essays about the Maoist guerrilla movement in the forests of central India that is resisting the government’s attempts to develop and mine land on which tribal people live. The central essay, Walking with the Comrades, is a brilliant piece of reportage, recounting three weeks she spent with the guerrillas in the forest. She must, I suggest, have been in great personal danger. “Everybody’s in great danger there, so you can’t go round feeling you are specially in danger,” she says in her pleasant, high-pitched voice. In any case, she says, the violence of bullets and torture are no greater than the violence of hunger and malnutrition, of vulnerable people feeling they’re under siege. Her time with the guerrillas made a profound impression. She describes spending nights sleeping on the forest floor in a “thousand-star hotel”, applauds “the ferocity and grandeur of these poor people fighting back”, and says “being in the forest made me feel like there was enough space in my body for all my organs”. She detests glitzy, corporate, growth-obsessed modern Indian, and there in the forest she found a brief peace. There is intense anger in the book, I say, implying that if she toned it down she might find a readier audience. “The anger is calibrated,” she insists. “It’s less than I actually feel.” But even so, her critics call her shrill. “That word ‘shrill’ is reserved for any expression of feeling. It’s all right for the establishment to be as shrill as it likes about annihilating people.” Is her political engagement derived from her mother, Mary Roy, who set up a school for girls in Kerala and has a reputation as a women’s rights activist? “She’s not an activist,” says Roy. “I don’t know why people keep saying that. My mother is like a character who escaped from the set of a Fellini film.” She laughs at her own description. “She’s a whole performing universe of her own. Activists would run a mile from her because they could not deal with what she is.” I want to talk more about Mary Roy – and eventually we do – but there’s one important point to clear up first. Guerrillas use violence, generally directed against the police and army, but sometimes causing injury and death to civilians caught in the crossfire. Does she condemn that violence? “I don’t condemn it any more,” she says. “If you’re an adivasi [tribal Indian] living in a forest village and 800 CRP [Central Reserve Police] come and surround your village and start burning it, what are you supposed to do? Are you supposed to go on hunger strike? Can the hungry go on a hunger strike? Non-violence is a piece of theatre. You need an audience. What can you do when you have no audience? People have the right to resist annihilation.” Her critics label her a Maoist sympathiser. Is she? “I am a Maoist sympathiser,” she says. “I’m not a Maoist ideologue, because the communist movements in history have been just as destructive as capitalism. But right now, when the assault is on, I feel they are very much part of the resistance that I support.” Roy talks about the resistance as an “insurrection”; she makes India sound as if it’s ripe for a Chinese or Russian-style revolution. So how come we in the west don’t hear about these mini-wars? “I have been told quite openly by several correspondents of international newspapers,” she says, “that they have instructions – ‘No negative news from India’ – because it’s an investment destination. So you don’t hear about it. But there is an insurrection, and it’s not just a Maoist insurrection. Everywhere in the country, people are fighting.” I find the suggestion that such an injunction exists – or that self-respecting journalists would accept it – ridiculous. Foreign reporting of India might well be lazy or myopic, but I don’t believe it’s corrupt. She sounds like a member of a religious sect, I say, as if she has seen the light. “It’s a way of life, a way of thinking,” she replies without taking offence. “I know people in India, even the modern young people, understand that here is something that’s alive.” So why not give up the plush home in Delhi and the media appearances, and return to the forest? “I’d be more than happy to if I had to, but I would be a liability to them in the forest. The battles have to be fought in different ways. The military side is just one part of it. What I do is another part of the battle.” I question her absolutism, her Manichaean view of the world, but I admire her courage. Her home has been pelted with stones; the Indian launch of Broken Republic was interrupted by pro-government demonstrators who stormed the stage; she may be charged with sedition for saying that Kashmiris should be given the right of self-determination. “They are trying to keep me destabilised,” she says. Does she feel threatened? “Anybody who says anything is in danger. Hundreds of people are in jail.” Roy has likened writing fiction and polemic to the difference between dancing and walking. Does she not want to dance again? “Of course I do.” Is she working on a new novel? “I have been,” she says with a laugh, “but I don’t get much time to do it.” Does it bother her that the followup to The God of Small Things has been so long in coming? “I’m a highly unambitious person,” she says. “What does it matter if there is or isn’t a novel? I really don’t look at it that way. For me, nothing would have been worth not going into that forest.” It’s hard to judge whether there will be a second novel. The God of Small Things drew so much on her own life – her charismatic but overbearing mother; a drunken tea-planter father whom her mother left when Roy was very young; her own departure from home in her late teens – that it may be a one-off, a book as much lived as written. She gives ambiguous answers about whether she expects a second novel to appear. On the one hand, she says she is engaged with the resistance movement and that it dominates her thoughts. But almost in the same breath she says others have “picked up the baton” and she would like to return to fiction, to dance again. What is certain is that little of the second novel has so far been written. She prefers not to tell me what it is about; indeed, she says it would not be possible to pinpoint the theme. “I don’t have subjects. It’s not like I’m trying to write an anti-dam novel. Fiction is too beautiful to be about just one thing. It should be about everything.” Has she been blocked by the pressure of having to follow up a Booker winner? “No,” she says. “We’re not children all wanting to come first in class and win prizes. It’s the pleasure of doing it. I don’t know whether it will be a good book, but I’m curious about how and what I will write after these journeys.” Are her agent and publisher disappointed still to be waiting for the second novel? “They always knew there wasn’t going to be some novel-producing factory,” she says. “I was very clear about that. I don’t see the point. I did something. I enjoyed doing it. I’m doing something now. I’m living to the edges of my fingernails, using everything I have. It’s impossible for me to look at things politically or in any way as a project, to further my career. You’re injected directly into the blood of the places in which you’re living and what’s going on there.” She has no financial need to write another novel. The God of Small Things, which sold more than 6m copies around the world, set her up for life, even though she has given much of the money away. She even spurned offers for the film rights, because she didn’t want anyone interpreting her book for the screen. “Every reader has a vision of it in their head,” she says, “and I didn’t want it to be one film.” She is strong-willed. Back in 1996, when The God of Small Things was being prepared for publication, she insisted on having control of the cover image because she didn’t want “a jacket with tigers and ladies in saris”. She is her indomitable mother’s daughter. I insist she tell me more about her Fellini-esque mother. She is, says Roy, like an empress. She has a number of buttons beside her bed which, when you press them, emit different bird calls. Each call signals to one of her retinue what she requires. Has she been the centre of her daughter’s life? “No, she has been the centre of a lot of conflict in my life. She’s an extraordinary women, and when we are together I feel like we are two nuclear-armed states.” She laughs loudly. “We have to be a bit careful.” To defuse the family tensions, Roy left home when she was 16 to study architecture in Delhi – even then she wanted to build a new world. She married a fellow student at the age of 17. “He was a very nice guy, but I didn’t take it seriously,” she says. In 1984 she met and married film-maker Pradip Krishen, and helped him bring up his two daughters by an earlier marriage. They now live separately, though she still refers to him as her “sweetheart”. So why separate? “My life is so crazy. There’s so much pressure and idiosyncrasy. I don’t have any establishment. I don’t have anyone to mediate between me and the world. It’s just based on instinct.” I think what she’s saying is that freedom matters more to her than anything else. She chose not to have children because it would have impinged on that freedom. “For a long time I didn’t have the means to support them,” she says, “and once I did I thought I was too unreliable. So many of the women in India who are fighting these battles don’t have children, because anything can happen. You have to be light on your feet and light in your head. I like to be a mobile republic.” Roy has in the past described herself as “a natural-born feminist”. What did she mean by that? “Because of my mother and the way I grew up without a father to look after me, you learned early on that rule number one was look out for yourself. Much of what I can do and say now comes from being independent at an early age.” Her mother was born into a wealthy, conservative Christian community in Kerala, but put herself outside the pale by marrying Ranjit Roy, a Hindu from West Bengal. When she returned to her home state after her divorce she had little money and was thus doubly marginalised. The mother eventually triumphed over all these obstacles and made a success of the school she founded, but growing up an outsider has left its mark on her daughter. Roy says she has always been polemical, and points to her run-in with director Shekhar Kapur in the mid-1990s over his film Bandit Queen – she questioned whether he had the right to portray the rape of a living person on screen without that woman’s consent. It may be that the novel is the exception in a life of agitation, rather than the agitation an odd outcrop in a life of fiction-writing. But has she sacrificed too much for the struggle – the chance to dance, children, perhaps even her second marriage? “I don’t see any of these things as sacrifices,” she says. “They are positive choices. I feel surrounded by love, by excitement. They are not being done in some martyr-like way. When I was walking through the forest with the comrades, we were laughing all the time.” Arundhati Roy India Protest Cultural trips Stephen Moss guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Official register records fall of over 1,600 charities in coalition’s first year, with mergers seeing a 150% increase David Cameron’s pledge to bring more charities into the public sector through his “big society” initiative risks collapsing before it has begun, charity leaders have warned, as Guardian research reveals the total number of registered charities operating in the UK fell by more than 1,600 in the coalition’s first year. More than 8,000 charities have been removed from the official register, held by the Charity Commission, since May 2010, and only 6,400 new charities have been founded in their place. A commission spokeswoman said the number of charities on the register generally remained constant each year. The commission has seen a 150% increase in the number of cases its mergers unit has dealt with since 2009, driven in part by charities adapting to straitened economic circumstances. Charity bosses fear the reduction in the total number of charities is a portent of a contraction in the sector, which is only just beginning to be felt as billions of pounds in statutory support are cut. The number of charities fell by more than 700 in March alone, just before the first round of grant reductions resulting from drastic local authority budget cuts. Bringing in charities to provide public services to “tackle our most deep-rooted social problems” is a cornerstone of Cameron’s big society project, relaunched for the third time last month , but charity leaders have warned cuts in charitable grants could kill off the proposals. “The big society doesn’t come for free,” said Emily Holzhausen, policy director of Carers UK . “Community projects do need resources to get off the ground. If those aren’t there, or are even removed, it’s a real worry. Public grants make up a core part of many charities’ funding. Charities losing that part of their funding are often no longer viable, which affects services to some of the most vulnerable communities in the country. Anecdotally, we’ve heard of several organisations that now no longer exist. This research seems to back that up.” Holzhausen said cuts to charity grants could often be particularly devastating to vulnerable communities as charities supplement their statutory income with cash from donations and other sources, extra money which can be irrevocably lost if public core funding is withdrawn. The sector’s growing reliance on such funding is highlighted by an analysis of figures published by the Charities Aid Foundation (CAF), which reveals voluntary income – money from donations and similar sources – is falling at the UK’s largest 1,000 charities. Charities’ latest accounts, which cover 2010 and some of 2009, showed charitable incomes were beginning to recover from the hit many had taken during the depths of the recession, with an average above-inflation rise of 6.8%. But one in four charities’ incomes were already experiencing a year-on-year fall before the budget cuts, with voluntary donations experiencing a particular squeeze. They fell from an average of 35% of total income to 32.5%, making the sector more reliant on income from endowments and public sector grants, and leaving it especially vulnerable to cuts. Jane Arnott, senior advisory manager for CAF, said voluntary income was under pressure due to the tough economic climate. “Unemployment and inflation have the most obvious impact on charitable giving,” she said. “The income of public sector workers is frozen, while those in the private sector got around 3% this year. With inflation at 4.5%, incomes are under pressure. In this climate, charities may see voluntary income falling by more than they expected. “We are seeing more charities coming to us that have traditionally relied on income from donations and grants from trusts and local authorities looking to diversify.” She said “corporate support and high net worth individuals” remained as the “streams were not yet exhausted”. The figures reflect long-running trends in charitable giving, with recent research by the University of Bristol and Cass Business School having tracked 30 years of data to establish that fewer households than a generation ago donate. Also troubling for those trying to foster a giving culture in British society is the apathy of the young: older people are substantially more likely to donate and the share of donations from over 60s rose from 33% to 44% between 1978 and 2009. The Charity Commission said it was unable to provide a breakdown of the reasons behind removals from the charity register but pointed out it had become more systematic about removing inactive charities. Martin Brookes, of New Philanthropy Capital, suggested mergers were likely to be important. “Healthy companies merge when they spot synergies between their work, but charities do so to balance the books when they run out of money. Already this year, we have seen the youth charity Fairbridge, an organisation once praised by David Cameron, being swallowed up by the Prince’s Trust, a development which should worry anyone who cares about its valuable work.” Charities Voluntary sector Communities James Ball guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Death toll rises to 21 as number of cases increases to 2,200, with bean sprouts thought to be to blame German hospitals are struggling to cope with the surge in patients caused by the E coli outbreak, as the death toll from the virus rose to 21. The health minister, Daniel Bahr, said hospitals in northern Germany were finding it difficult to provide enough beds and treatment for patients, with the total number of cases increasing to 2,200. “We’re facing a tense situation with patient care,” Bahr said, “but we will manage it.” Agriculture officials said that bean sprouts grown in one organic farm between Hamburg and Hanover were the likely cause of the illness. Hospital authorities said blood supplies were running low and staff were exhausted and working round-the-clock, with the northern cities of Hamburg and Bremen the worst affected. “They [the doctors] voluntarily come in on weekends and even sleep here,” Oliver Grieve, a spokesman for the Kiel University hospital in northern Germany told Spiegel Online. Hamburg’s health minister, Cornelia Prüfer-Storcks, told a news conference the city was considering bringing doctors out of retirement. “We want to discuss with doctors about whether those who recently retired can be reactivated,” she said. Patients with less serious illnesses are now being moved to nearby hospitals and operations for non-threatening diseases are being postponed. A spokesman for Regio Clinics, the largest private hospital in the state of Schleswig Holstein, told Reuters: “All the hospitals in the region are pushing their limits. We can handle it but some of our patients have to be sent to other hospitals, especially those with HUS [haemolytic uraemic syndrome] or needing dialysis.” Extra nurses are being recruited from southern Germany to plug the gaps. Meanwhile patients have described “horrendous” conditions in some hospitals. One said poor hygiene standards were contributing to the problem. “All of us had diarrhoea and there was only one bathroom each for men and women, it was a complete mess,” Nicoletta Pabst told the Associated Press. “If I hadn’t been sick with E coli by then, I probably would have picked it up over there.” She said she had waited three hours to be seen before being sent home, apparently because her blood levels did not indicate that she had kidney failure. Her condition deteriorated and she had to call an ambulance the next morning, she said. She was hospitalised for a week at a different hospital. Despite the increase in the death toll, authorities said the number of new cases had started to decline. Meanwhile health inspectors continue testing samples from a restaurant in the northern city of Lübeck. Tucked away in the cellars of the city’s old town, the Kartoffel Keller became the focus of investigations over the weekend after a local newspaper revealed that up to 17 people who had eaten at the restaurant were infected with E coli , among them tourists from Denmark and a group of German civil servants. Two are seriously ill and a 47-year-old woman died. The Kartoffel Keller is still open for business as officials from Germany’s disease control authority, the Robert Koch Institute, are poised to release the results of samples taken from the kitchen of the restaurant. “We’ve taken salad off the menu and put up an official notice on the door to reassure customers that the food is safe to eat,” said the owner, Joachim Berger. “We’ve got nothing to hide,” he added. “So far all the tests have come up negative. But the guests are staying away.” But one journalist, Oliver Vogt, said locals were deliberately defying the hysteria. “People are coming as a show of support,” he said. “This is one of the best-loved restaurants here in Lübeck.” Just around the corner, the waiter at Lübeck’s only vegetarian cafe had a very different view. “They [Kartoffel Keller] have hit rock bottom,” he said. “You can lose your reputation so fast. It’s not so easy to get it back.” E coli Food safety Germany Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …