Able Seaman Ryan Donovan appears at Winchester crown court accused of murdering officer on nuclear submarine A Royal Navy sailor has been remanded in custody at Winchester crown court accused of the murder of a colleague and the attempted murders of three other crew on board a nuclear submarine. Able Seaman Ryan Samuel Donovan, 22, of Dartford, Kent, was charged with murdering Lieutenant Commander Ian Molyneux, 36, who was fatally shot on HMS Astute at Southampton last Friday. He has also been charged with the attempted murders of Petty Officer Christopher Brown, 36, Chief Petty Officer David McCoy, 37, and Lieutenant Commander Christopher Hodge, 45. Judge Keith Cutler adjourned the case for a plea and case management hearing on 10 June. A hearing at Southampton magistrates court on Monday was told by Nick Hawkins, chief prosecutor for Hampshire Crown Prosecution Service, that the director of service prosecutions had agreed to hand over jurisdiction of the case to the civilian courts. Hawkins said the allegation against Donovan was that he fired an SA80 rifle six times, aiming at the four named victims, killing Molyneux. Molyneux’s widow, Gillian, described the father of four from Wigan as “utterly devoted to his family”. She added: “Everything he did was for us. He was very proud to be an officer in the Royal Navy submarine service.” The shootings took place as local dignitaries, including the city council’s mayor, chief executive and leader, were being given a tour of the submarine while it was berthed at Eastern Docks, on a five-day official visit to the Hampshire city. Astute was cleared to leave Southampton on Monday to return to its base at Faslane, Scotland. Military Crime guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Ivory Coast president says Laurent Gbagbo is being held at villa pending charges on ‘national and international level’ Ivory Coast’s president, Alassane Ouattara, has said the former leader Laurent Gbagbo will face charges “on a national and international level”. Gbagbo has been moved out of the Golf hotel, where he was taken after his capture on Monday . Ouattara said he would be kept in a villa and his rights as a former head of state would be respected. “Gbagbo is in a residence under surveillance somewhere in Ivory Coast,” Ouattara said. His justice minister was preparing for a possible prosecution of Gbagbo, but Ouattara gave no further details. “There will be charges [against Gbagbo] on a national level and an international level,” he said. Ouattara will settle into the presidential palace in the coming days, he said, and a swearing-in ceremony will take place at a later date. Gbagbo refused to cede power after losing an election in November, leading to a four-month standoff. More than 1 million people fled their homes amid the fighting, and the civilian death toll surpassed 1,500. New footage has emerged showing pro-Ouattara fighters storming Gbagbo’s residence. Fighters are seen walking through the front gate carrying firearms. Many are dressed in camouflage and wearing helmets, and some are crouched in shooting position. After orders from a commander, fighters enter the residence, shoot at the lock on an orange door and push inside. The footage, shot by a pro-Ouattara fighter, shows Gbagbo being given a camouflage flak jacket before he and his wife are escorted to a car. Gbagbo was then handed over to UN peacekeepers and taken to Ouattara’s Abidjan headquarters. The French defence minister, Gerard Longuet, said France would reduce its military force in the Ivory Coast from 1,700 to 980 troops as soon as possible. Longuet said French forces took a secondary role to Ouattara’s forces and the UN in capturing Gbagbo. The French will not make any decision on an eventual pullout until at least June, he said, because the future of the French force would depend on the UN’s decision in June on whether to renew the mandate for its force. “Patrols of Ivorian and French gendarmes will circulate in Abidjan to show that there is a state of law that is being put in place,” Longuet told a parliamentary hearing. He said the head of the Ivorian gendarme service, the director of police, the chief of staff of the armed forces and the chief of staff of the army had all offered their services to Ouattara. Laurent Gbagbo Alassane Ouattara Ivory Coast guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Met confirms Paul Stretford was almost certainly targeted by private investigator Glenn Mulcaire Wayne Rooney’s agent, Paul Stretford, is poised to add his name to the list of public figures suing the News of the World after the Metropolitan police confirmed he was almost certainly targeted by Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator who worked for the paper. Stretford, one of the UK’s most powerful and influential football agents, was shown documents on Monday by Scotland Yard, which indicates he was a person of interest to Mulcaire, the Guardian has learned. Copies of pages from Mulcaire’s notebooks contain Stretford’s mobile phone number and those of several associates and business partners. The notes also include dates which sources close to Stretford claim to correspond to the dates that stories about his clients were published by the News of the World. The documents were seized by police in a 2006 raid on Mulcaire’s home. Stretford is said by friends to be furious that he was targeted and is preparing to launch legal proceedings. Sources close to the agent point out that voicemail messages left on his phone during the period when Mulcaire was working for the paper more than five years ago were likely to include commercially sensitive information about transfer dealings, contract negotiations, sponsorship deals and a host of other business matters. Stretford, a former vacuum cleaner salesman, has masterminded the career of Rooney, his star client, negotiating his big-money move from Everton, the club he supported as a child, to Manchester United in 2004 and securing a string of lucrative sponsorship deals with companies including Nike and McDonald’s. The Sunday Times rich list last year estimated his wealth at £33m. Stretford is not the only football agent to be targeted by the News of the World. Sky Andrew, who represents former England defender Sol Campbell, is one of eight people suing the paper whose owner, News International, offered to settle last week . • 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 . James Robinson guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …See which activists and dissidents have been detained, formally arrested or missing since February 2011 in the security drive apparently sparked by calls for a ‘jasmine revolution’
Continue reading …Conference delegates vote 99% in favour of motion as health secretary struggles to persuade public of merits of NHS reforms The Royal College of Nursing has overwhelmingly backed a motion of no confidence in Andrew Lansley’s handling of the NHS reforms. Delegates at the RCN conference in Liverpool voted 99% in favour of the motion as the beleaguered health secretary struggles to persuade the public of the merits of his health reforms. Nurses are angry that Lansley refused to deliver a keynote speech to the conference, opting instead to meet a group of around 60 nurses in Liverpool as part of the government’s “listening exercise” on the controversial reforms. However, the health secretary appeared unmoved by the almost unanimous dissent from a union traditionally seen as being more conservative in character than some. Responding to the vote, he insisted most NHS workers were “keen” on the reforms, despite the fact that unions including the British Medical Association have also condemned parts of the bill, as have patient groups, royal colleges and MPs from various parties. Pointing to the rare decision to “pause” the passage of the health and social care bill to listen to concerns about the plans and defy “myths” he claimed were being propagated, the health secretary said: “It’s not that the professions aren’t keen to do it. “What they are all keen to do, and particularly their representative bodies, is to make sure we get this legislation right. And I think we share that.” He said the government would amend the bill further to deal with “myths” and “misconceptions”, telling reporters: “Of course they’re substantive changes, because otherwise it would be trivial. We’re not here to do a trivial thing, we’re here to get it right. “This is a once in a generation opportunity to give patients greater control of the decisions being made about their care … greater opportunities for those in the frontline of the NHS not only to have resources get to the frontline but responsibility and freedom to use those resources better to improve care for patients. “That’s why actually the professions supported it, it’s why 90% of GPs’ surgeries across the country have stepped forward and said we want to be pathfinders, showing how we can do this. “We’ve already amended the bill and we will amend it further in order to make absolutely certain that some of the myths that are being propagated are dealt with, some of the misconceptions are dealt with.” NHS Health Nursing GPs Doctors Andrew Lansley Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Health policy Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …world news intro BBC World News Intro (made with Power director 9) SBS World News reports on lights out around the world for Earth Hour 2011 Clinton exhorts Arab states to embrace reform » World News Thomson Reuters іѕ thе world’s chief international multimedia news furnish, аѕ long аѕ investing news, world news , affair news, equipment news, headline news, tіnу affair news, news alerts, confidential finance, hаνе a give οf promote, … Texas schools get $830 million from federal budget deal » World News Thomson Reuters іѕ thе world’s chief international multimedia news furnish, аѕ long аѕ investing news, world news , affair news, equipment news, headline news, tіnу affair news, news alerts, confidential finance, hаνе a give οf promote, … Seminar addresses foreclosure options | Visible World News Seminar addresses foreclosure options Homeowners would breathe easier if they pursued options, members of the Coastal Association of Realtors told an audie… abcnewsradio: World News Podcast – April 12th, 2011 – World News … ABC News Radio Social Media, Status Updates, and Link Posts. Police identify remains as human in serial killer hunt » World News Thomson Reuters іѕ thе world’s chief international multimedia news furnish, аѕ long аѕ investing news, world news , affair news, equipment news, headline news, tіnу affair news, news alerts, confidential finance, hаνе a give οf promote, … singo405_news says: [GShare] [All News on 'The Twitter Times: singo405']ウクライナ:チェルノブイリ周辺農地、ナタネで土壌改良 放射性物質吸収 – 毎日jp(毎日新聞) B! http://bit.ly/hvlHal
Continue reading …Video games have never had a problem sitting alongside movie DVDs and music CDs (back when such things were distributed physically) in stores, so it’s frankly overdue to see them pop up in a mainstream awards show like the Grammys . The US Recording Academy has finally deigned to address video games and their aural landscapes as a separate class of entertainment, and has now amended four of its awards to spell that out. What was formerly known as “Motion, Television, or Other Visual Media” is now reclassified as “Motion, Television, Video Games Music, or Other Visual Media,” leading to there now being four awards that explicitly recognize excellence in video game music scores. Guess that was inevitable after Christopher Tin’s Baba Yetu won a Grammy this February, ostensibly because of its inclusion as one of the marquee songs on Civilization 4 , but in a category entirely unrelated to gaming. Skip past the break to hear it for yourself, along with a couple of other favorites of ours. Continue reading Four Grammy Awards renamed to include ‘video games music,’ underline its growing importance Four Grammy Awards renamed to include ‘video games music,’ underline its growing importance originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Apr 2011 03:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …There’s a new trend to give autobiographies silly titles. But can you match the titles in our quiz to the celebrity? The publishing brainboxes who dreamed up the title of the Apple founder’s authorised biography were presumably delighted that iSteve: The Book of Jobs works on so many levels. But seldom has a title been so excruciating on every one of them. Still, at least the name of Steve Jobs’s book gives some clue about the contents therein. The compulsion to ape various comics’ tossed-off tomes with a punning title is increasingly leading to otherwise serious autobiographies being given a title with a double meaning that has no meaning (step forward Christopher Hitchens and Hitch-22) or just an achingly dull joke. Then again, there is something lovable about a spectacularly awful pun. So in tribute to iSteve, can you match the following silly titles with the authors pictured above? 1 Dear Fatty 2 Look Back in Hunger 3 Cider with Roadies 4 Me and My Mouth 5 Trowel and Error 6 My Shit Life So Far ANSWERS 1D Dawn French; 2E Jo Brand; 3B Stuart Maconie; 4F Austin Healey; 5A Alan Titchmarsh; 6C Frankie Boyle Biography Celebrity Patrick Barkham guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The former foreign secretary proposes handing over responsibility for building a political solution to the UN The former foreign secretary David Miliband is to make a strong critique of the US-led strategy in Afghanistan, proposing instead handing over substantial responsibility for building a political solution to the UN, headed by a Muslim mediator capable of negotiating with the Taliban as well as partners throughout the region. In an opinion piece for the New York Times, Miliband urges a “whole new level of urgency, coherence and effort” in bringing about a political endgame away from a focus on ending military engagement, and including the possibility of appointing a safe third country for all Afghan parties to negotiate from. He writes: “It’s high time we stopped behaving as if there was a military solution and developed a political one. For that, politicians need to give a lead. That is the way forward in Afghanistan – working to mend it, not just rushing to end it.” The intervention comes as senior military figures predict a rough summer of fighting ahead. Miliband’s assessment of the situation chimes with the opinion of senior Pakistani officials who feel the imminent end of the international military campaign in Afghanistan looks likely to be replaced by little political process, with few indications as to who Pakistani officials should engage with. It also echoes the feeling inside Whitehall that US policy in Afghanistan is overly dominated by the military under General David Petraeus and that despite much talk about talks, American efforts to engage the Taliban diplomatically have made little progress so far. Miliband’s criticism of the US-led campaign marks a change from the supportive UK-US relationship he maintained as foreign secretary when relationships with US secretary of state Hilary Clinton were famously strong. Miliband acknowledges there are signs of significant shifts in American policy but nevertheless he goes on to write: “Deviations from the otherwise relentless focus on military operations, allied and Afghan, need to be taken to a whole new level of urgency, coherence and effort. Otherwise, our troops will be stuck in the front line of a strategy that has an end date but no clear end game. The 2014 end date set by Nato will prove illusory unless there is an endgame. “And that endgame must be negotiations, involving western powers led by the US, with all factions in the Afghan struggle, and their backers in the region.” Miliband warns that two international conferences on the horizon – in Kabul in the summer and Bonn in December – currently have “scant agenda”, but their outcome should be the agreement of the kind of political approach he outlines. “Our leverage will decline, not improve, as 2014 approaches. The insurgency can spread, outstripping the ability of international and Afghan forces to check its growth. The warlords can strengthen their grip. Inter-ethnic strife can come to look more and more like civil war.” Miliband proposes: • The UN security council appoints and empowers a UN mediator to faciliate talks “with a clear UN security council mandate setting out principles of the endgame and an open invitation to all to participate”. • The mediator should come from the Muslim world. “His job would be to canvass the views of all parties, and create confidence for and commitment to a process for serious talks about the future of Afghanistan”. • The mediator should “develop the idea of a safe place in a third country – an Arabian gulf state, Turkey or Japan – for all sides to talk. • Localised ceasefires must be proposed alongside security for development projects. • The new UN envoy should be responsible for regional engagement as well as internal talks, creating a council of regional stability that oversees compact between the neighbours and Afghanistan. This new structure should report to the US military and General Petraeus. He writes: “The job description would be to be President Karzai’s principal interlocutor, working closely with him on the end game strategy, liasing strongly with the commander of ISAF [International Security Assistance Force] to ensure that military strategy comes behind it, and creating a framework within which the political strength of the UN, and the development strengths of contributing nations, can bear full fruit.” Acknowledging movement from America, Miliband writes: “There are signs of a significant turn in policy. Secretary Clinton spoke in February of a “political surge”. Nato’s senior civilian representative, Mark Sedwill, said last month: “The time is now right to take the risk and pursue the political agenda with the same energy we have brought to the military and civilian surges.” The New Yorker reported that secret direct talks between the US and senior Taliban leaders had actually started. David Miliband Foreign policy Afghanistan US foreign policy United States New York Times Allegra Stratton Simon Tisdall guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …TUC hits out at creation of a ‘lost generation’ of young people unable to find jobs Youth unemployment is expected to reach a record high of close to 1m – one in five 16 to 24-year-olds – when the latest jobless figures are released at 9.30am on Wednesday. The TUC, which fears a “lost generation” of young people effectively locked out of the employment market, said Britain was likely to pass another “grim milestone”. Official jobless data is expected to show a significant rise in the overall number of people out of work and the TUC said it was concerned the latest earnings figures would continue to trail inflation, leaving workers to suffer an even longer period of real terms wages cuts. Figures for the quarter to January showed the number of unemployed 16- to 24-year-olds increased by 30,000 on the quarter to reach 974,000, the highest figure since comparable records began in 1992. In the same month, earnings were 2.9 percentage points less than the retail price index measure of inflation. The latest unemployment figure for the three months to February could show the earnings gap rising to more than three percentage points for the first time since June 2010. The headline figures for the claimant count and employment could improve on the previous month, boosted by the recruitment of 30,000 census workers. But Alan Clarke, economist at BNP Paribas, said the economic situation meant there was not enough private sector job hiring to compensate for public sector cuts and the overall employment picture was static. The TUC warned the figures disguised huge falls in real incomes, made worse by the loss of tax credits and cuts in government spending and services. TUC general secretary Brendan Barber said the declines in living standards were causing real pain to low- and middle-income families. “The country could be passing another grim milestone with youth unemployment hitting another record high. The government’s decision to scrap the Future Jobs Fund, months before its poorly funded replacement is due to start, has helped drive the rise in the number of young people out of work. “Scrapping Education Maintenance Allowance and hiking university tuition fees will only further reduce the job chances of young people and, with inflation rising at over twice the level of earnings, things aren’t looking pretty for those in work either. Employers have complained that one barrier to retaining young people in the workplace is the adult minimum wage, a requirement that boosts the wages of 21-year-olds. However, the National Institute for Economic and Social Research said evidence showed that as low-skilled young people became entitled to the higher adult rate of the minimum wage, their employment rate actually went up. The research, funded by the Low Pay Commission and the Economic and Social Research Council, shows that, on turning 22, the employment rate among low skilled individuals increases by about 2-4 percentage points. “In other words, a higher minimum wage – for this group, and in the relevant range – does not appear to harm their employment prospects – indeed, if anything, the opposite,” the report says. The independent thinktank said the findings seemed counterintuitive but “there are perfectly rational explanations”. It said the main focus was in a change in attitude among jobseekers rather than employers. “The results here are consistent with the hypothesis that on turning 22, young low-skilled people find work more attractive compared with when they were 21, because the wage on offer has increased. This may induce them to increase participation in the labour market, or to increase their job search intensity,” it said. Unemployment and employment statistics Economics Unemployment Social exclusion Public sector cuts Public sector pay Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk
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