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Janet Richardson, 73, who was being carried off the ship on a stretcher, dies after falling into sub-zero ocean A British tourist who fell into the North Sea in sub-zero conditions as she was being carried on a stretcher off a cruise ship has died. Janet Richardson, 73, from near Penrith, Cumbria, was taken ill on the Ocean Countess and fell into the sea while being stretchered onto a rescue vessel. She spent eight minutes in the water before being rescued and taken to hospital in Norway. The grandmother died on Thursday evening at Cumberland Infirmary, Carlisle. Richardson had begun to suffer internal bleeding on the voyage from Hull to Norway on a trip to see the Northern Lights with her husband George, 78. The captain of the Ocean Countess, operated by UK company Cruise and Maritime Voyages, had called for a rescue boat to take her to hospital. However, while the rescue teams were moving her on a stretcher to a rescue boat, she fell into the sea – which was about -3C at the time. The incident is under investigation by the cruise company and the Norwegian rescue authorities. She was eventually transported to hospital in Bodø, Norway, accompanied by her husband, who remained by her bedside for several days before she was airlifted to Cumberland infirmary. In a statement, North Cumbria University Hospitals said: “It is with regret that Mrs Janet Richardson passed away on Thursday evening, 21 April. Respecting the family’s wishes, we have no further comment at this time.” Norway Europe David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Chelsea v West Ham United

• Hit F5 in frustration because our auto-refresh is broken • Email scott.murray@guardian.co.uk sending chat, but no banter Referee: Phil Dowd (Staffordshire) West Ham United: Green, Jacobsen, Gabbidon, da Costa, Bridge, Spector, Noble, Hitzlsperger, Sears, Cole, Ba. Subs: Boffin, Tomkins, Boa Morte, Kovac, Piquionne, Obinna, Keane. Chelsea: Cech, Ivanovic, David Luiz, Terry, Cole, Essien, Mikel, Lampard, Kalou, Drogba, Malouda. Subs: Turnbull, Torres , Benayoun, Zhirkov, Ferreira, Bertrand, Anelka. While we’re waiting, time to address more serious issues. “Rodney wasn’t a Charlton fan, his Mum was,” insists Owen Worth, with reference to the fact that Charlton was also the character’s middle name. “He used to support Chelsea. There are many references to this in a number of episodes. Also I doubt Vince would have fitted in with the Shed End in the 1980s.” I take your point. Though Stamford Bridge has always been a broad church. I was looking at young Mr Pinner as a kind of prototype Tim Lovejoy. Team news: Fernando Torres is on the bench again. Oh Fernando! West Ham meanwhile will be missing Matthew Upson, out with a chest infection, joining Footballer of the Year Scott Parker on the sidelines. Full line-ups coming your way soon. Anyway, the football. Chelsea need to win, to retain a slim hope of winning the title. West Ham need to win, every point vital in their relegation battle. And poor Fernando Torres, dreaming of 2008, really needs a goal. This could be a cracker. Anyway, in lieu of a solemn hymn, here’s a blast of the original theme to Only Fools and Horses: It was written by Ronnie Hazlehurst, incidentally, subject of the only other Memorial Minute-By-Minute in the history of the Guardian . Big fan of Ronnie’s, but not sure the 1970s-style light entertainment segue into the episode works so well here. Probably for the best that it was replaced by Sullivan’s own themes (which have, on the DVDs, airbrushed Hazelhurst’s first-series theme totally out of the picture, a Stalinist revision that’s not really on, but now’s probably not the time). Anyway, all together now: God bless Hooky Street… None of the characters in Sullivan’s work appear to have supported either of the teams playing tonight. Wolfie Smith, eponymous star of Sullivan’s first hit, Citizen Smith, was a Fulham fan. Del Boy and Rodney, meanwhile, were Charlton Athletic supporters. No idea who Penny Warrender from Just Good Friends cheered on. Vince looked like he might have been a Chelsea fan, though. Yes, he could easily have been a Chelsea fan. John Sullivan RIP: A sad day for anyone who sat cross-legged in front of the television during the 1970s and 1980s, as one of the finest sitcom scriptwriters in the history of com dies. So this has got nothing to do with football? So sue me! West Ham United Chelsea Scott Murray guardian.co.uk

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Syrian MPs resign after mourners die in crackdown

Syria MPs Nasser al-Hariri and Khalil al-Rifae walk out of parliament as unease grows over government’s violent tactics At least 10 mourners were killed in Syria as pro-democracy protesters buried their dead after the bloodiest day yet of an uprising against the county’s authoritarian government. Two politicians also resigned from parliament in a sign of growing unease at the government’s use of lethal force. Nasser al-Hariri, a member of Syria’s parliament from Deraa, told al-Jazeera Arabic TV: “I can’t protect my people when they get shot at so I resign from parliament.” Minutes later a second politician, Khalil al-Rifae, also from Deraa, resigned live on the channel. The resignations – the first during this crisis – were a significant sign of unease at escalating violence. Security forces again opened fire at funerals for Friday’s victims, where large crowds of mourners were chanting anti-government slogans. A witness in Izraa told the Observer that five people from nearby Dael and Nawa were shot dead at the entrance to the town . “They were attempting to come to the funerals of 10 people killed on Friday,” he said. He insisted the security forces and army were responsible. News agencies reported that at least two mourners had been shot dead by snipers in Douma, a suburb of Damascus, and three in the district of Barzeh. Human rights organisations and activists said at least 76 people and possibly more than 100 were killed during the largest and bloodiest protests yet on Friday, as the unrest continued into its eighth week. Many were shot in the head and chest, and mosques were used as hospitals. Al-Jazeera reported accounts of Syrian security officers entering hospitals and clinics to take the dead and injured to military hospitals in an apparent attempt to cover up casualty figures. Local human rights organisations claimed some Syrian Christians were among the dead. Christians, who make up around 10% of Syria’s population of 22 million, are largely supportive of the regime due to fears of a backlash by the Sunni Muslim majority. The claims could not be independently verified. Easter celebrations, in which parades of children and families usually flood the streets of Damascus’s old city, have been cancelled. It is unclear whether this was a decision by Christian leaders or if the government had put pressure on them in a bid to prevent large gatherings. With the death toll since 18 March now above 280, international condemnation of Syria has begun to grow. Barack Obama issued a strongly worded statement calling the violence “outrageous” and said that it should “end now”. As in other protests that have swept the Arab world, social media have been one of the powerful tools of protest, subverting official channels. Amateur video footage of bloody scenes continued to emerge from the protests. In one video, posted on YouTube, a man tells how security forces killed his son and left him to die. As the situation escalates, Syrian observers said the government had made it clear that it intended to cling to power with the use of violence, despite attempts at reform. “They want to push demonstrators to the limits,” said Ayman Abdel Nour, a Syrian dissident based in Dubai. He still believed that President Bashar al-Assad had time to show that he was serious about reform. But after Assad recently lifted the country’s state of emergency, abolished the security court and appointed new governors in Latakia, Homs and Deraa, other commentators said he was running out of options. Protesters have responded with a new round of chants. “We want the toppling of the regime,” said a resident of Ezraa, a small southern town that saw one of the highest death tolls on Friday. “The blood of our martyrs makes this our responsibility now.” Activists acknowledged some concerns that protesters, who have been overwhelmingly peaceful so far, will be tempted to take up arms in self-defence. Syrians say weapons licences are hard to come by for non-Baath party members, but many people in the tribal southern region own guns. The regime still retains the loyalty of the military and leading businessmen as well as many among the country’s minority communities. In the streets of central Damascus, many say they would rather stick with stability than take a risk on what would come if Assad’s regime was to fall. Syria’s government, which has continued to blame the deaths on armed gangs, expressed “regret” at Obama’s sharp condemnation of Friday’s violence. “It isn’t based on a comprehensive and objective view of that is happening,” it said in a statement posted on the official Sana website. It added that Syria viewed Obama’s comments as “irresponsible”. The statement came as al-Jazeera correspondent Cal Perry was ordered to leave the country, adding to an almost total blackout on independent and foreign media. Katherine Marsh is the pseudonym of a journalist living in Damascus Syria Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Bashar Al-Assad Katherine Marsh guardian.co.uk

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Only Fools writer John Sullivan dies

BBC director general Mark Thompson says John Sullivan’s sitcoms ‘will live on for years to come’ Scriptwriter John Sullivan has died at the age of 64, the BBC announced today. Most famous for creating the sitcoms Only Fools and Horses, Citizen Smith and Roger Roger, the writer died after a short illness. Mark Thompson, the BBC director general, said: “John created some of the UK’s most-loved comedies, from Only Fools and Horses to his most recent work, Rock & Chips. He had a unique gift for turning everyday life and characters we all know into unforgettable comedy. “His work will live on for years to come. We will miss him and we send our condolences to his family.” More details soon… Comedy BBC guardian.co.uk

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Manchester United v Everton – live!

• Hit F5 or refresh for the latest (sorry, auto-refresh down) • Email scott.murray@guardian.co.uk with your thoughts • Follow Cardiff v QPR in the Championship here • Keep up with all today’s goals on our live scoreboard The weather: It’s sunny in Manchester. You’ve got to say it while you can. Getting pelters in the papers tomorrow and Monday and Tuesday and Wednesday and Thursday and Friday and next Saturday: Peter Walton (Northamptonshire) The most in-form team in the league must do without Tim Cahill, who only makes the bench, and Mikel Arteta, who’s not involved at all: Howard, Hibbert, Jagielka, Distin, Baines, Coleman, Neville, Rodwell, Bilyaletdinov, Osman, Beckford. Subs: Mucha, Cahill, Gueye, Vellios, Anichebe, Mustafi, Duffy. Fabio, Darron Gibson and Jonny Evans are all called up for Manchester United as Fergie keeps one eye on Tuesday’s match with Schalke: Van der Sar, O’Shea, Ferdinand, Evans, Fabio Da Silva, Valencia, Gibson, Anderson, Nani, Rooney, Hernandez. Subs: Kuszczak, Evra, Brown, Owen, Giggs, Carrick, Rafael Da Silva. We’ll start finding out how things pan out at: 12.45pm. How much of this is relevant, though? None of it, that’s what, I’m just filling space. Possibly more to the point is this: United have won their last 12 home league games in a row, they didn’t create much at Newcastle in midweek, and Everton haven’t lost in the league since mid February. Actually, that doesn’t get us very far either. Like all good Godfearin’ folk, United have mixed feelings about Easter, unsure whether to celebrate or mourn. In 1992, they drew at Luton Town and lost at home to Nottingham Forest, handing the league to Leeds United. But twelve months later, Steve Bruce scored his 197th minute winner against Sheffield Wednesday on the same day their closest challengers Aston Villa drew at home to Coventry City, and never looked back. Manchester United like playing Everton at Old Trafford. Of the last 17 fixtures against the Toffees down Sir Matt Busby Way, they’ve won 14 and lost a big Anderson-shaped zero. Even the season before that run began brought good cheer. United lost 3-0 at the start of the 1992/93 campaign, their fans beginning to seriously wonder whether they’d ever win the league after the previous season’s late capitulation. And look what happened since. Premier League Manchester United Everton Scott Murray guardian.co.uk

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Belfast police make terrorism arrest

Suspect detained as Police Service of Northern Ireland warns public to be vigilant over Easter weekend Police in Northern Ireland have arrested a man in connection with loyalist terrorist activity. The arrest came after police warned the public to be vigilant over the Easter weekend because of the “severe threat posed by terrorists”. Security checkpoints and patrols are being stepped up as a result. The 40-year-old man was detained in the Donegall Road area of Belfast at about 9.30am on Saturday during a planned police operation. He was taken to the serious crime suite in Antrim for questioning. On Friday, officers investigating dissident republican activities recovered a substantial haul of guns and ammunition from a vehicle in Keady, County Armagh near the Irish border. Three men arrested at the scene remain in police custody. Just three weeks after the murder of Constable Ronan Kerr in Omagh , the Police Service of Northern Ireland warned that terrorist groups could be intent on trying to murder more officers in the coming days and weeks. A police spokesman said: “Dissident terrorist groups are continuing to identify officers and target them with the single objective of killing them. In so doing, their reckless actions will also put the lives of our wider communities at risk.” The warning came as thousands of mainstream republicans supporting Sinn Féin and the peace process prepared to hold dozens of commemoration parades throughout Ireland to mark the 1916 Rising. Northern Ireland UK security and terrorism David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Gaddafi’s forces attacked on retreat from Misrata

Rebels fight back in besieged city as Nato targets Muammar Gaddafi’s Tripoli compound Forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi claim to have come under fierce attack as they tried to retreat from the rebel-held city of Misrata. The Libyan government earlier said Nato air strikes may force it to withdraw from the port city, 120 miles east of Tripoli, and let tribes loyal to Gaddafi deal with rebels. Early this morning, Nato bombs hit what appeared to be a bunker in Gaddafi’s Tripoli compound. Government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said three people were killed by the “very powerful explosion” in a car park. Reuters reporters said they saw two large holes in the ground where the bombs had penetrated what appeared to be an underground bunker. The strike came after the most senior American military officer admitted the conflict was heading towards a “stalemate” despite more than a month of allied strikes against Gaddafi’s forces. Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US military’s joint chiefs of staff, said Gaddafi’s ground forces had been degraded by 30% to 40%. But he warned that Nato forces faced a protracted military engagement in the civil war-torn country. “It’s certainly moving towards a stalemate,” Mullen told American troops during a visit to Iraq’s capital, Baghdad, on Friday. “At the same time, we’ve attrited somewhere between 30% and 40% of his main ground forces, his ground force capabilities. Those will continue to go away over time.” He said the allies would “put the squeeze” on the Libyan dictator “until he’s gone”. “Gaddafi’s gotta go,” he said. A group of wounded Libyan soldiers captured by rebels in Misrata, the last large city held by rebels in the west of the country, said they had come under fierce attack from anti-Gaddafi forces as the army tried to retreat. “We have been told to withdraw. We were told to withdraw yesterday,” one soldier, Khaled Dorman, told Reuters. Ayad Muhammad, another soldier, said: “The rebels attacked us while we were withdrawing from Misrata near a bridge this morning,” Another serviceman told the news agency the Libyan government had lost control over Misrata, the country’s third largest city. Reuters reported that it was unclear how far out of Misrata the army had managed to withdraw. Earlier, the Libyan deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kaim, said the army had been given an “ultimatum” to stop the rebellion in Misrata, which has been under siege for nearly two months. Hundreds of people have died in shelling and fighting, petrol is scarce and thousands of migrant workers are trapped there. Libya Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Nato Muammar Gaddafi David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Sea change: 10 quirky cruises

If a super-luxe liner isn’t your thing, there are plenty of other fish in the sea – try pink dolphin-spotting on the Amazon or a trip round Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay in a wooden junk The small ship Among tour operator Noble Caledonian’s fleet of vessels is the Island Sky , a small, elegant ship that was refurbished last year. Noble Caledonian says: “We promise there will be no organised entertainment, fancy dress, deck games or any of the usual big ship experiences.” We like the look of the Island Retreats trip , a low-key journey from Portsmouth to the Scilly Isles, Channel Islands, Brittany and Normandy. • From £1,895pp for six nights’ full-board, including most shore excursions (020-7752 0000, noble-caledonia.co.uk ) The yoga cruise Star Clippers is offering two one-week yoga cruises in Greece and Turkey this summer on one of its tall sailing ships. The Southern Cyclades trip from 6 August and the Northern Cyclades trip from 13 August will both feature twice-daily yoga sessions on deck with a qualified teacher, plus meditation and lectures on the philosophy and practice of yoga. There will be a focus on vegetarian food. • From £1,295pp for seven nights, including flights from London and full board. Departures on 6 and 13 August (0845 200 6145, starclippers.co.uk ) The anti-cruise Hurtigruten’s fleet of ships has been carrying freight, fish and Norwegian families up and down the coast for more than 100 years, and tourists can tag along too. These days the ships have a few creature comforts, but are still a down-to-earth alternative to super-luxe cruise liners. • From £651pp for a full-board six-day cruise south from Kirkenes to Bergen, calling at 34 ports (0844 448 7654, hurtigruten.co.uk ) The river ride Aqua Expeditions was the first company to offer luxury cruises on the Amazon river in Peru, and it is launching a second vessel on 29 April. Passengers can fish for piranha, and take excursions into the remote Pacaya Samiria reserve, to view pink river dolphins, red howler monkeys and three-toed sloths. • From around £1,460pp (flights extra) for a three-night full-board Amazon Discovery Cruise (+51 1 368 3868, aquaexpeditions.com) The geology journey Aurora Expeditions is celebrating 15 years of exploring the European Arctic with a two-week voyage focused on geology from 2 September. A palaeontologist/geologist will be joining the Jewels of the Arctic trip, which visits Spitsbergen, Greenland and Iceland, to share his knowledge of volcanoes, fjords and rocks. • From around £4,980pp (flights extra)for 14 days, with meals and trips (+61 2 9252 1033, auroraexpeditions.co.uk ) The tropical tour The Tui Tai is a three-masted schooner that sails around remote islands in northern Fiji. The cruise is geared towards adventurous outdoorsy types who want to kayak to remote beaches and giant waterfalls, but appreciate a massage when they get back. • From £4,295pp for seven nights including flights from London, all meals and activities including scuba diving and spa treatments (01494 678400, turquoiseholidays.co.uk ) The gourmet cruise New wine and gastronomy cruises will be plying the Upper Rhine Valley between May and October this year. The four-day, three-night trips on recently built river cruisers are run by CroisiEurope and include a five-course dinner prepared by the ship’s chef, and a wine tasting with master sommelier Serge Dubs. • Around £375pp, starting in Strasbourg, including full board (+33 3 8876 4066, croisieurope.com ) The independent cruise Captain your own river cruiser on the river Sarthe in France, which has 82km of navigable waterways from Sablé-sur-Sarthe to Le Mans. Or try river cruise camping, where you sail by day in a small Skellig vessel and pitch your tent each night at campsites bordering the river. • From £660 for up to four for a week’s hire of a live-aboard cruiser, or £310 for three days on the smaller boat (+33 2 4395 1442, uk.anjou-navigation.com ) The bygone boat Almost 100 years ago, Emperor Khai Dinh sailed around Ha Long Bay in Vietnam in a wooden junk. Now you can too, with a number of operators offering one- or two-night cruises on authentic replica boats. • From around £88pp for a two-day/one night trip, including full board and excursions (+84 933 44 6542, bhayacruises.com ) The Cuban cruise Voyages Jules Verne has a new trip for 2011: a cruise right around Cuba, starting and finishing in Havana. You’ll stop off at four Cuban destinations – Isla de la Juventud, Trinidad, Santiago de Cuba and Cayo Saetie – and one on Jamaica, Ochos Rios. This is the first time that the Cuban authorities have granted permission for this particular itinerary, as cruises have previously only visited Havana and Santiago de Cuba, so it’s a unique holiday. • From £1,295pp for 14 days, including flights, seven nights’ full-board on the ship and six in a five-star Havana hotel (0845 166 7003, vjv.com ) Cruises Wildlife holidays Boating holidays Sailing holidays Cuba Vietnam Fiji Amazon Rachel Dixon guardian.co.uk

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Cameron gave neighbour internship

PM says it is ‘fine’ to offer his children’s friends work placements David Cameron has undermined one of Nick Clegg’s flagship policies for improving social mobility, saying it is “fine” to offer his children’s friends internships and even admitting that he has given a work placement to a neighbour. The government has put more accessible internships in desirable professions at the centre of a drive to give poorer children better opportunities. Earlier this month Clegg, the deputy prime minister, admitted securing a “definite leg-up internship” through his father’s influence in a Finnish bank. He said it was wrong that his career had been boosted by parental connections. But in an interview in the Telegraph Cameron said he was “very relaxed” about offering work placements to people he knew. “I’ve got my neighbour coming in for an internship,” he said. “In the modern world, of course you’re always going to have internships and interns – people who come and help in your office who come through all sorts of contacts, friendly, political, whatever.” Earlier this month Clegg, the deputy prime minister, told the Commons : “As a teenager, yes, I did receive an internship, as, I suspect, did many people around the chamber. Good for you if you did not. All of us should be honest and acknowledge that the way that internships have been administered in the private sector, the public sector, political parties and – I discovered when we came into government – in Whitehall as well, under 13 years of Labour, left a lot to be desired.” Clegg later claimed professional life should be “about what you know, not who you know”. He said: “The whole system was wrong. I’m not the slightest bit ashamed of saying that we all inhabited a system which was wrong.” The revelation that the deputy prime minister was helped through his father’s connections cast a shadow over the government’s announcement of the drive to end unpaid internships. Cameron said Clegg was “trying to make a fair point”, but happily admitted that as a young man he, like his deputy, was helped out by his family connections. The prime minister, who this week was also caught in a row over whether he will wear a morning suit at next week’s royal wedding, denied he was trying to rewrite his background. “People know who I am,” he said. “I’m not trying to rewrite my background. I went to a fantastic school, I adored my parents.” But he added: “I suppose when I got into politics I was always called the Old Etonian David Cameron. ” In the Telegraph interview Cameron also spoke about a recent visit he made to the grave of his son, Ivan, who died in 2009. He said: “The first person who says to you, ‘Soon you’ll think of the happy memories of him and you won’t be so sad’ … well, you want to deck them. But actually, it is true that, suddenly, some happy memories burst through the cloud.” Cameron also likened welcoming Lady Thatcher to No 10 as an “out of body experience”. David Cameron Conservatives Nick Clegg Liberal-Conservative coalition Social mobility Amy Fallon guardian.co.uk

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Video: Opening Segment from Hannity’s ‘Behind the Bias: The History of Liberal Media’

On Friday night, the Fox News Channel debuted a Hannity special, ‘Behind the Bias: The History of Liberal Media.’ The promo declared: “Double standards? Groundless attacks? Blatant bias? Sean calls out the mainstream media! Don’t miss Behind the Bias: The History of Liberal Media.” The Media Research Center made available to Fox News Channel producers video clips from our archive going back more than 20 years and they are scattered throughout the hour – as are soundbites from MRC President Brent Bozell. The hour began with what Sean Hannity described as “how and why this bias began,” illustrated with several classic examples of left-wing journalistic advocacy and/or denigration of conservatives. Watch the segment, about seven minutes in length, after the jump:

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