Home » Posts tagged with » media (Page 41)
UK could introduce obesity tax, says David Cameron

Prime minister says ‘fat tax’ could help prevent health costs soaring and life expectancy falling The government will consider introducing a “fat tax” to tackle Britain’s growing obesity levels, the prime minister, David Cameron, has said. Cameron said drastic action was needed to prevent health costs soaring and life expectancy falling. Under measures introduced in Denmark recently, a surcharge is being placed on foods that contain more than 2.3% saturated fat. The levy targets high-fat products such as butter, milk, cheese, pizza, meat, oil and processed food. Danish consumers have criticised the move, which has left many retailers complaining of excessive bureaucracy. However, Cameron said the introduction of a similar idea in the UK should not be ruled out. “I think it is something that we should look at,” he told 5 News during a round of broadcast interviews at the Tory conference in Manchester. “The problem in the past when people have looked at using the tax system in this way is the impact it can have on people on low incomes. “But frankly, do we have a problem with the growing level of obesity? Yes. Do we have a kind of warning in terms of – look at America, how bad things have got there – what happens if we don’t do anything? Yes, that should be a wake-up call.” He added: “I am worried about the costs to the health service, [and] the fact that some people are going to have shorter lives than their parents.” He warned that obesity was on the verge of overtaking smoking and drinking as the biggest health challenge facing Britain. “Don’t rule anything out, but let’s look at the evidence and let’s look at the impact on families,” he added. Conservative conference 2011 David Cameron Health policy Tax and spending Conservative conference Obesity Health guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
UK could introduce obesity tax, says David Cameron

Prime minister says ‘fat tax’ could help prevent health costs soaring and life expectancy falling The government will consider introducing a “fat tax” to tackle Britain’s growing obesity levels, the prime minister, David Cameron, has said. Cameron said drastic action was needed to prevent health costs soaring and life expectancy falling. Under measures introduced in Denmark recently, a surcharge is being placed on foods that contain more than 2.3% saturated fat. The levy targets high-fat products such as butter, milk, cheese, pizza, meat, oil and processed food. Danish consumers have criticised the move, which has left many retailers complaining of excessive bureaucracy. However, Cameron said the introduction of a similar idea in the UK should not be ruled out. “I think it is something that we should look at,” he told 5 News during a round of broadcast interviews at the Tory conference in Manchester. “The problem in the past when people have looked at using the tax system in this way is the impact it can have on people on low incomes. “But frankly, do we have a problem with the growing level of obesity? Yes. Do we have a kind of warning in terms of – look at America, how bad things have got there – what happens if we don’t do anything? Yes, that should be a wake-up call.” He added: “I am worried about the costs to the health service, [and] the fact that some people are going to have shorter lives than their parents.” He warned that obesity was on the verge of overtaking smoking and drinking as the biggest health challenge facing Britain. “Don’t rule anything out, but let’s look at the evidence and let’s look at the impact on families,” he added. Conservative conference 2011 David Cameron Health policy Tax and spending Conservative conference Obesity Health guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

Investigation finds the media tycoon ‘brought bodily harm’ to fellow billionaire Sergei Polonsky on the TV programme Russian prosecutors have launched a criminal case against the media tycoon Alexander Lebedev on charges of hooliganism for punching a fellow billionaire on a television programme. Lebedev would be charged with hooliganism after a preliminary investigation found that the incident “brought bodily harm” to Sergei Polonsky, the Moscow investigative committee of the general prosecutor’s office said in a statement posted on its website. The charges could carry up to two years in prison, Russian news agencies said. Lebedev, owner of the Independent and London Evening Standard, punched the property developer during a chatshow on the NTV channel . The notoriously brash Polonsky had been arguing with guests on the show when he said he was “already worn out from the desire to give [him] a punch in the chops”, gesturing to Lebedev. Lebedev jumped from his seat and threw punches at Polonsky, knocking him backwards off his chair. After the attack Russia’s prime minister, Vladimir Putin, said the incident amounted to “hooliganism”. Lebedev later defended the move, while Polonsky immediately said he would consider legal action. Polonsky, the former owner of Mirax Group, one of Russia’s biggest property developers, posted photographs online showing a cut on his arm and a tear in his trousers after the brawl. Lebedev could not be immediately reached for comment. Alexander Lebedev Russia Europe Miriam Elder guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Amanda Knox verdict: we answer your questions

The Guardian’s Italy correspondent, John Hooper, will be online live from 2pm to discuss the appeal decision The nightmare for Amanda Knox and her Italian former boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, cleared of murdering the British student Meredith Kercher, is now over, with Knox flying back to Seattle after her release from the prison where she spent four years. Another man, Rudy Guede, has been convicted of the sexual assault and murder of Kercher, and is currently in prison. But many questions remain: • Were others involved in the crime? • Will prosecutors pursue Knox and Sollecito, as they have said they will? • How did the police get it so wrong? John Hooper has reported extensively on the trial for the Guardian. He will be answering your questions about the case and what happens next from 2pm in the comments section below . Amanda Knox Meredith Kercher Italy Europe United States John Hooper James Walsh guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Conservatives crack down on jobseekers with tougher rules

Unemployed face losing benefit unless they spend several hours per day seeking work and accept any job within 90-mile radius Conservatives released plans to require the unemployed to look for a job for several hours a day and be willing to accept a job anywhere within a 90-mile radius of their home, or lose their benefit. A jobseeker who fails to take up a reasonable job offer three times will be debarred from receiving benefit for three years. A new DWP IT system will also make it easier for Jobcentre Plus staff to monitor the amount of jobseeking an unemployed person is undertaking, including how many job applications they have filled out. Trials will also be undertaken to require the jobless to sign on every week, rather than fortnightly. The proposals had been due to be in Monday’s speech delivered by Iain Duncan Smith, the work and pensions secretary, but were pulled at the last minute in the expectation that they would be owned by David Cameron in interviews the prime minister conducted on Tuesday. Unusually, neither the name Duncan Smith, nor any quote from him was included in the release issued by the Conservative party on Tuesday morning. There have also been suggestions that more radical proposals were shelved at the last minute. The Conservative plans cited research showing jobseekers’ allowance (JSA) claimants were spending very little time each day seeking work. They pointed to two studies. The first, published by Princeton economists for the Institute for the Study of Labor, found that jobseekers in the UK spend an average of eight minutes per day looking for jobs. This compares to 41 minutes per day in the United States and 27 minutes per day in France. The Conservatives also claimed that increased numbers of imposed conditions in the UK system signalled by the introduction of JSA were shown to have increased “the rate of exit” from benefit by around 9%. A study by OECD countries found that job-search reporting and regular interviews with advisers increase the probability of getting off benefit by between 15% to 30%. The Conservative party plan said: “Those who are making every effort to look for work have nothing to fear from these proposals. But for those who until now have tried to play the system, or thought they could get away with doing the bare minimum, this is a big push to do the right thing, take up the help available and get into work.” The plans also stated: “We will also introduce a clear framework for sanctions under which the more serious the failure the longer the sanction, and the more frequent the failures the longer the sanction.” Welfare Unemployment Conservative conference 2011 Conservative conference Conservatives Iain Duncan Smith Job hunting David Cameron Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Russian lawyer denied prison medical leave dies

Yukos executive Vasily Aleksanyan was jailed in 2006 and was refused leave to treat Aids and cancer A former Yukos oil executive whose struggle to win medical treatment for Aids and cancer came to symbolise the harshness of the Russian prison system, has died. Vasily Aleksanyan, a Harvard-educated lawyer who headed Yukos’s legal department and was briefly vice-president of the firm, was imprisoned in April 2006 as part of the sweep against the oil company. He was diagnosed with HIV shortly after his arrest, and later with tuberculosis and cancer of the liver, as well as severely limited vision. Prosecutors accused Aleksanyan of acting as an accomplice to embezzlement and money laundering, two of the charges levelled against his former boss Mikhail Khodorkovsky. Khodorkovsky was convicted of those charges last year , in a second trial his supporters say was designed to keep the former oligarch behind bars until at least 2017. Aleksanyan served as his lawyer after the tycoon’s arrest in 2003, on fraud and tax evasion charges. Aleksanyan waged a long struggle to win himself early release so he could seek treatment for the diseases that were killing him. As Russian courts considered his case, he was moved to a hospital bed, to which he was chained. His supporters said the conditions in which he was held were degrading and inhumane. In 2008, the European court of human rights in Strasbourg ordered Aleksanyan to be released on humanitarian grounds. A Russian court then demanded he post 50m roubles (£990,000) in bail. The charges against him were quietly dropped last year. Aleksanyan, 39, died at home of complications from Aids, his family told Dozhd, a Russian TV channel. Human rights activists have compared Aleksanyan’s treatment to that of Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer for the London-based investor William Browder, who was arrested while investigating alleged fraud by government officials. Magnitsky died in November 2009 after being denied treatment for a worsening stomach condition that he developed during his imprisonment in Butyrka prison, Moscow. On Tuesday, Russian journalists and bloggers began circulating a list of those involved in Aleksanyan’s arrest. The US and UK have issued informal visa bans for around 60 officials accused of involvement in the death of Magnitsky. Russia Europe Human rights Miriam Elder guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Prisoner admits attempted murder of Ian Huntley

Damien Fowkes pleads guilty to slashing Soham killer’s throat and admits manslaughter of child killer Colin Hatch A fellow prisoner has admitted trying to kill the Soham murderer, Ian Huntley. Damien Fowkes, 35, pleaded guilty at Hull crown court to slashing Huntley’s throat in Frankland prison, Durham, in March last year. Fowkes, from Northampton, also admitted the manslaughter of the child killer Colin Hatch, who was strangled at Full Sutton prison near York in February this year. He was initially charged with Hatch’s murder but his guilty plea to manslaughter was accepted on the grounds of diminished responsibility. Fowkes appeared before the court on Tuesday in a sealed dock surrounded by five prison officers. An application for him to come into court in handcuffs was rejected by the judge. The prisoner spoke to confirm his name and enter his pleas. He denied murdering Hatch but admitted manslaughter. Graham Reeds, prosecuting, said this plea was acceptable. The court heard how Fowkes shows “strong psychopathic traits”. Crime Prisons and probation Soham murders UK criminal justice guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Milan breaks ceasefire on fashion week schedules

London says Italians contravening 2008 accord with 2012 dates clash in a hullaballoo that underlines serious issues for industry After a summer of peace, hostilities have resumed between the rival cities of Paris, Milan, New York and Paris for supremacy in the fashion industry. The latest flashpoint is the catwalk calendar for next September. Milan fashion week has announced dates which clash with those of London. The organisers of London’s shows have been joined by those of New York’s in claiming that this directly contravenes an agreement in 2008, when this problem last flared. Mario Boselli, head of the Italian catwalks’ governing body, claims that the deal was only valid for three years. The British Fashion Council on Tuesday confirmed the standoff, saying: “Camera Nazionale della Moda [the Italian body] and Chambre syndicale [the French one] have announced dates for September 2012 that contravene the fashion week dates agreement of September 2008. “We are in direct discussion with our counterparts and hope to resolve the matter over the next few weeks. We have a great deal of support from both international and domestic media and retailers in retaining the dates agreement.” Behind the brinkmanship and ego-battles lie serious issues for the industry – and it is London fashion week that is most at risk, occupying as it does a vulnerable five-day slot directly between New York and Milan. New York is unwilling to move dates earlier next year, citing the closeness to Labor Day weekend, the US public holiday, which causes production issues, and London designers fear that dates too early in September will be logistically impossible in the immediate aftermath of the Olympics. Italian designers, however, feel that their 2012 dates (as designated in the 2008 agreement) do not allow enough time for production of the clothes in time for delivery to stores. With pressure at both ends, it is London whose slot stands most at risk of feeling the squeeze. The clashes also highlight the broader issue of an antiquated catwalk show calendar at odds with the needs of the modern fashion industry. Designers are looking for ways to steal a march on a set up where clothes are not on sale for six months after the catwalk shows, citing the opportunity this hands to fast-fashion chains to cash in on catwalk trends before designers can. Deliveries are moving earlier, “pre-season” collections becoming more important. Burberry customers watching the show online can order online direct from the catwalk and receive their clothes before they hit stores. There is a growing feeling in the industry that the traditional catwalk set up is creaking. It is propped up by a deep fondness for catwalk as theatre and, at times, art form. But the stately tour of four cities is rooted in a time when fashion was a more leisurely pursuit, and does not reflect the frenetic business it is today. Perhaps more crucially, there is a widening chasm between the once all-important front row – the makeup of which has changed only marginally in recent years – and the huge shift in the balance of power which has happened in fashion. The rise of power bloggers and online retailers expanding into the trendsetting territory which once belonged to glossy magazines has changed the industry in ways which makes the courtly seating arrangements of the catwalk look dated. All rows, front to back, will be busy on Tuesday in Paris debating the rights or wrongs of this battle. The Italians contend that they had assumed New York fashion week, which began on Thursday 8 September this year, would begin on Thursday 6 September next year. However, a global magazine company has sided with New York and London. The industry paper WWD reported on Tuesday that Jonathan Newhouse, chairman of Conde Nast International, has written to inform Boselli that Vogue editors worldwide like the current schedule. “We at Condé Nast do not want the schedule to be changed. We very much oppose moving the Milan shows earlier so that they overlap or conflict with the London fashion shows – or with the New York fashion shows or those of any market,” he siad. Newhouse even suggests that Vogue editors – including, potentially, the editor of Italian Vogue – would not attend the Milan shows if they were scheduled in conflict with London or New York. According to Boselli, Italian designers are showing a united front in “reflecting and rethinking the situation”. He predicts a decision will be reached “well before the end of the month.” Fashion weeks London fashion week Milan fashion week Paris fashion week autumn/winter 2011 Paris fashion week New York fashion week Jess Cartner-Morley guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Nobel Prize in Physics – live blog

The announcement from Stockholm of the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics is imminent 11.04am: Brian Schmidt: “It seemed too crazy to be right so we were a little scared. “I always look to Einstein because he got a lot right. Einstein’s idea that space itself has an energy is the simplest reason that the universe could be speeding up.” 11.02am: Nobel prize winner Brian Schmidt answering questions: “It feels like when my children were born…” 10.57am: More from the Nobel Assembly’s material: The growing rate of the expansion implies that the Universe is being pushed apart by an unknown form of energy embedded in the fabric of space. This dark energy makes up a large part of the Universe, more than 70 %, and it is an enigma, perhaps the greatest in physics today. No wonder, then, that cosmology was shaken at its foundations when two different research groups presented similar results in 1998. 10.54am: All three are relative youngsters for the Nobel prize. Perlmutter was born in 1959, Schmidt in 1967 and Reiss in 1969. 10.53am: One half of the prize goes to Saul Perlmutter at the Supernova Cosmology Project, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and University of California, Berkeley, California. The other half goes jointly to Brian Schmidt of the High-z Supernova Search Team at the Australian National University and Adam G. Riess at The High-z Supernova Search Team at Johns Hopkins University and Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore. 10.51am: This explanation from the Nobel Assembly: In 1998, cosmology was shaken at its foundations as two research teams presented their findings. Headed by Saul Perlmutter, one of the teams had set to work in 1988. Brian Schmidt headed another team, launched at the end of 1994, where Adam Riess was to play a crucial role. The research teams raced to map the Universe by locating the most distant supernovae. More sophisticated telescopes on the ground and in space, as well as more powerful computers and new digital imaging sensors (CCD, Nobel Prize in Physics in 2009), opened the possibility in the 1990s to add more pieces to the cosmological puzzle. The teams used a particular kind of supernova, called type Ia supernova. It is an explosion of an old compact star that is as heavy as the Sun but as small as the Earth. A single such supernova can emit as much light as a whole galaxy. All in all, the two research teams found over 50 distant supernovae whose light was weaker than expected – this was a sign that the expansion of the Universe was accelerating. The potential pitfalls had been numerous, and the scientists found reassurance in the fact that both groups had reached the same astonishing conclusion. For almost a century, the Universe has been known to be expanding as a consequence of the Big Bang about 14 billion years ago. However, the discovery that this expansion is accelerating is astounding. If the expansion will continue to speed up the Universe will end in ice. The acceleration is thought to be driven by dark energy, but what that dark energy is remains an enigma – perhaps the greatest in physics today. What is known is that dark energy constitutes about three quarters of the Universe. Therefore the findings of the 2011 Nobel Laureates in Physics have helped to unveil a Universe that to a large extent is unknown to science. And everything is possible again. 10.50am: The prize is for discovering the expansion of the universe. 10.49am: From the Nobel Assembly: What will be the final destiny of the Universe? Probably it will end in ice, if we are to believe this year’s Nobel Laureates in Physics. They have studied several dozen exploding stars, called supernovae, and discovered that the Universe is expanding at an ever-accelerating rate. The discovery came as a complete surprise even to the Laureates themselves. 10.45am The Nobel Prize in Physics 2011 goes to Saul Perlmutter, Brian P. Schmidt, Adam G. Riess 10.45am: More Nobel prize trivia from @Nobelprize_org on twitter: Marie Curie received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903 and Chemistry in 1911. 10.44am: From @Nobelprize_org on twitter: Facts: 188 individuals have received the #NobelPrize in #Physics since 1901, among them, 2 are women. 10.40am: As @simonfrantz points out on twitter, the last female Laureate in physics was Maria Goeppert-Mayer in 1963 . 10.37am: There have been some regrettable Nobel awards in the past. Perhaps the most worrying was the award in 1949 to Dr Egas Moniz of Portugal for discovering the therapeutic value of lobotomy. The New England Journal of Medicine hailed the procedure as the birth of a “new psychiatry”. The prize led to a rise in lobotomies, which were therapeutically worthless. 10.35am: Here is the live stream of the Nobel prize announcement. 10.22am: And so to day two of Nobel prize week and the pundits have been busy with their predictions as to who will be honoured with today’s award for contributions to physics. The Nobel Assembly is due to announce the winner, or winners, some time after 10.45am BST. We will follow events live here. Yesterday, three scientists won the Nobel prize in medicine for groundbreaking work on the immune system. The award was overshadowed with the sad news that one of the recipients, Ralph Steinman at Rockefeller University in New York, passed away a few days ago. The Nobel assembly was unaware of this when the award was announced and has ruled that the prize will stand. The prize earns the winner or winners 10 million Swedish kronor, or £934,000. So who are the hot favourites for today’s prize in physics? According to the news agency Associated Press, physicists working on quantum entanglement – which underpins hopes for superfast quantum computing – are strong contenders for this year’s prize. Those predictions draw on “> names put forward by the citation company, Thomson Reuters , which failed to predict the winners of yesterday’s prize. Last year, the Nobel prize in physics was won by two Russian-born scientists, Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov at Manchester University , for their experiments with graphene, the strongest and thinnest material known. Before becoming a Nobel prizewinner, Geim made headlines for levitating frogs , an achievement that earned him an Ig Nobel prize from the irreverent sister awards . The potential of graphene-based products prompted the UK government to announce a £50m Global Research and Technology Hub to commercialise graphene products. A live stream of the Nobel awards will appear here as soon as the video is available. Nobel prizes Science prizes Physics Particle physics Ian Sample guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Mogadishu bomb leaves dozens dead

Explosion outside government buildings in Somalia’s capital kills students, soldiers and civilians An explosion outside government buildings in Mogadishu has killed at least 65 people and wounded 50, the co-ordinator of the capital’s ambulance service has said. “We have carried 65 dead bodies and 50 injured people,” Ali Muse told Reuters. “Some are still lying there. Most of the people have burns.” He said students, soldiers and civilians were among the dead. Somalia Africa guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …